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The
Dread Voyage Poems
by
William Wilfred Campbell
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THE
MOTHER
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I.
IT was April, blossoming
spring,
They buried me, when the birds did sing;
Earth, in clammy wedging earth,
They banked my bed with a black, damp girth.
Under the damp and under the mould,
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I kenned
my breasts were clammy and cold.
Out from the red beams, slanting and bright,
I kenned my cheeks were sunken and white.
I was a dream, and the world was a dream,
And yet I kenned all things that seem.
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I was a dream, and the world was a dream,
But you cannot bury a red sunbeam.
For though in the under-grave’s doom-night
I lay all silent and stark and white,
Yet over my head I seemed to know
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The
murmurous moods of wind and snow,
The snows that wasted, the winds that blew,
The rays that slanted, the clouds that drew
The water-ghosts up from lakes below,
And the little flower-souls in earth that grow.
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Under earth, in the grave’s stark night,
I felt the stars and the moon’s pale light.
I felt the winds of ocean and land
That whispered the blossoms soft and bland.
Though they had buried me dark and low,
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My soul
with the season’s seemed to grow.
II.
I was a bride in my sickness sore,
I was a bride nine months and more.
From throes of pain they buried me low,
For death had finished a mother’s woe.
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But under the sod, in the grave’s dread doom,
I dreamed of my baby in glimmer and gloom.
I dreamed of my babe, and I kenned that his rest
Was broken in wailings on my dead breast.
I dreamed that a rose-leaf hand did cling:
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Oh,
you cannot bury a mother in spring.
When the winds are soft and the blossoms are
red
She could not sleep in her cold earth-bed.
I dreamed of my babe for a day and a night,
And then I rose in my grave-clothes white.
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I rose like a flower from my damp earth-bed
To the world of sorrowing overhead.
Men would have called me a thing of harm,
But dreams of my babe made me rosy and warm.
I felt my breasts swell under my shroud;
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No stars
shone white, no winds were loud;
But I stole me past the graveyard wall,
For the voice of my baby seemed to call;
And I kenned me a voice, though my lips were
dumb:
Hush, baby, hush! for mother is come.
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I passed the streets to my husband’s home;
The chamber stairs in a dream I clomb;
I heard the sound of each sleeper’s breath,
Light waves that break on the shores of death.
I listened a space at my chamber door,
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Then
stole like a moon-ray over its floor.
My babe was asleep on a stranger arm,
“O baby, my baby, the grave is so warm,
“Though dark and so deep, for mother is
there!
O come with me from the pain and care!
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“O come with me from the anguish of earth,
Where the bed is banked with a blossoming girth,
“Where the pillow is soft and the rest
is long,
And mother will croon you a slumber-song,
“A slumber-song that will charm your eyes
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To a
sleep that never in earth-song lies!
“The loves of earth your being can spare,
But never the grave, for mother is there.”
I nestled him soft to my throbbing breast,
And stole me back to my long, long rest.
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And here I lie with him under the stars,
Dead to earth, is peace and its wars;
Dead to its hates, its hopes, and its harms,
So long as he cradles up soft in my arms.
And heaven may open its shimmering doors,
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And
saints make music on pearly floors,
And hell may yawn to its infinite sea,
But they never can take my baby from me.
For so much a part of my soul he hath grown
That God doth know of it high on His throne.
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And here I lie with him under the flowers
That sun-winds rock through the billowy hours,
With the night-airs that steal from the murmuring
sea,
Bringing sweet peace to my baby and me.
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