Page:Mary Lamb (Gilchrist 1883).djvu/65

Rh And all the dull desertions of the heart,

With which I hung o'er my dead mother's corse?

Where be the blest subsidings of the storm

Within? The sweet resignedness of hope

Drawn heavenward, and strength of filial love

In which I bowed me to my Father's will?

Mary's was a silent grief. But those few casual pathetic words written years afterwards speak her life-long sorrow,—"my dear mother who, though you do not know it, is always in my poor head and heart." She continued quiet in her lodgings, free from relapse till toward the end of the year.

On the 10th December Charles wrote in bad spirits,—"My teasing lot makes me too confused for a clear judgment of things; too selfish for sympathy. My sister is pretty well, thank God. We think of you very often. God bless you. Continue to be my correspondent, and I will strive to fancy that this world is not 'all barrenness.

But by Christmas Day she was once more in the asylum. In sad solitude he gave utterance, again in verse form, to his overflowing grief and love:—

I am a widow'd thing now thou art gone!

Now thou art gone, my own familiar friend,

Companion, sister, helpmate, counsellor!

Alas! that honour'd mind whose sweet reproof

And meekest wisdom in times past have smooth'd

The unfilial harshness of my foolish speech,

And made me loving to my parents old

(Why is this so, ah God! why is this so?)

That honour'd mind become a fearful blank,

Her senses lock'd up, and herself kept out

From human sight or converse, while so many

Of the foolish sort are left to roam at large,

Doing all acts of folly and sin and shame?

Thy paths are mystery!