MISCELLANEOUS POEMS

By Charles Sangster


 

GENTLE MARY ANN.



The artless and the beautiful,
     The fairest of the fair,
Around her shoulders clustering
     Her sunny, light-brown hair,
Her meek blue eye intelligent,

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     God’s wondrous works would scan,
And a smile would animate the face
     Of our Gentle Mary Ann.

The parted lip, betokening
     The peaceful soul within,

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That soul as yet unsullied,
     Unendangered by a sin;
The brow where earnest thoughtfulness
     Some goodly work would plan,
Combined to make us idolize

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     Our Gentle Mary Ann.

And thus for sixteen summers,
     She grew upon our sight,
A patient girl of tenderness,
     A sinless child of light;

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As free from worldly wilfulness
     As when her life began,
Was this, our lovely charge from heaven,
     Our Gentle Mary Ann.

The angels from their starry homes,

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     Looked on her smiling face, [Page 90]
And beckoned our darling child
     Unto their resting-place;
When, lo! from out the graceful throng
     An infant cherub ran,

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And nestled in the guileless breast
     Of our Gentle Mary Ann.

“Sister,” she said, “we wait for thee,
     Yon angel host and I,
To bear thee in thy innocence

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     To our dwelling in the sky.”
The heavens, slowly opening,
     A psalm of love began,
And the cherub, pointing upwards,
     Said, “come, Gentle Mary Ann.”

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Calmly she faded from our sight,
     In that infant soul’s embrace,
And we watched her passing upwards
     With a smile upon her face,—
Passing upward towards heaven,

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     Upward to the Son of Man,
In whose bosom rests the spirit
     Of our Gentle Mary Ann. [Page 91]