Classic and Contemporary Poetry
BETTER MOMENTS, by NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS Poet's Biography First Line: My mother's voice, how often creeps Last Line: Subdued and humble as a child. Subject(s): Mothers; Voices | ||||||||
MY Mother's voice, how often creeps Its cadence on my lonely hours! Like healing sent on wings of sleep, Or dew to the unconscious flowers. I can forget her melting prayer When leaping pulses madly fly, But in the still, unbroken air Her gentle tone comes stealing by, And years, and sin, and manhood flee, And leave me at my Mother's knee. The book of nature, and the print Of beauty on the whispering sea, Give aye to me some lineament Of what I have been taught to be. My heart is harder, and perhaps My manliness hath drunk up tears; And there's a mildew in the lapse Of a few swift and chequer'd years - But nature's book is even yet With all my mother's lessons writ. I have been out at eventide Beneath a moonlight sky of spring, When earth was garnish'd like a bride, And night had on her silver wing - When bursting leaves, and diamond grass, And waters leaping to the light, And all that makes the pulses pass With wilder fleetness, throng'd the night - When all was beauty - then have I With friends on whom my love is flung Like myrrh on winds of Araby, Gazed up where evening's lamp is hung, And when the beautiful spirit there Flung over me its golden chain, My mother's voice came on the air, Like the light dropping of the rain - And resting on some silver star The spirit of a bended knee, I've poured out low and fervent prayer That our eternity might be To rise in heaven, like stars at night, And tread a living path of light. I have been on the dewy hills, When night was stealing from the dawn, And mist was on the waking rills, And tints were delicately drawn In the gray East - when birds were waking, With a low murmur in the trees, And melody by fits was breaking Upon the whisper of the breeze - And this when I was forth, perchance As a worn reveller from the dance - And when the sun sprang gloriously And freely up, and hill and river Were catching upon wave and tree The arrows from his suble quiver - I say a voice has thrilled me then, Heard on the still and rushing light, Or, creeping from the silent glen, Like words from the departing night, Hath stricken me, and I have press'd On the wet grass my fever'd brow, And pouring forth the earliest First prayer, with which I learned to bow, Have felt my mother's spirit rush Upon me as in by-past years, And, yielding to the blessed gush Of my ungovernable tears, Have risen up - the gay, the wild - Subdued and humble as a child. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...VOICES OF THE AIR by KATHERINE MANSFIELD FIVE EASY POEMS; FOR ANNE-MARIE ALBIACH: 4 (MEZZA VOICE) by MICHAEL PALMER A SINGING VOICE by KENNETH REXROTH A VOICE FROM THE SWEAT-SHOPS (A HYMN WITH RESPONSES) by LOUIS UNTERMEYER ANDRE'S LAST REQUEST [OR, REQUEST TO WASHINGTON] [OCTOBER 1, 1780] by NATHANIEL PARKER WILLIS |
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