Page:The Cornhill magazine (Volume 1).djvu/351

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A Changeling.

A little changeling Spirit
  Crept to my arms one day.
I had no heart or courage
  To drive the child away.

So all day long I soothed her
  And hushed her on my breast;
And all night long her wailing
  Would never let me rest.

I dug a grave to hold her,
  A grave both dark and deep:
I covered her with violets,
  And laid her there to sleep.

I used to go and watch there,
  Both night and morning too;
It was my tears, I fancy,
  That kept the violets blue.

I took her up: and once more
  I felt the clinging hold,
And heard the ceaseless wailing
  That wearied me of old.

I wandered and I wandered
  With my burden on my breast,
Till I saw a church door open,
  And entered in to rest.

In the dim, dying daylight,
  Set in a flowery shrine,
I saw the kings and shepherds
  Adore a Child divine.

I knelt down there in silence;
  And on the Altar-stone
I laid my wailing burden,
  And came away,—alone.

And now that little Spirit
  That sobbed so all day long,
Is grown a shining Angel,
  With wings both wide and strong.

She watches me from heaven,
  With loving, tender care,
And one day, she has promised
  That I shall find her there.

A. A. P.