Poems (Piatt)/Volume 1/Aunt Annie

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4617749Poems — Aunt AnnieSarah Piatt
AUNT ANNIE.
The old house has, for being sweet,
Some sweeter reason than the rose
Which, red or white, about the feet
Of many a nested home-bird grows.

And sadder reason than the rain
On the quaint porch, for being sad,
(Oh, human pity, human pain!)
The old house, in its shadows, had.

I sat within it as a guest,
I who went from it as a wife;—
The young days there, though not the best,
Had been the fairest of my life:

For love itself must ever seem
More precious, to our restless youth,
When hovering subtly in its dream
Than when we touch its nestling truth.

I sat there as a guest, I said—
Holding the loveliest boy on earth,
With his fair, sleepy, yellow head
Close to the pleasant shining hearth.

He laughed out in his sleep, and I
Laughed too, and kissed him—when I heard
A wise and very cautious sigh;
And once again the dimples stirred.

Aunt Annie looked at him awhile;
Then shook her head at her own fears,
With more of sorrow in her smile
Than I could ever put in tears.

"He is a pretty boy I know—
The prettiest in the world? Ah, me!
One other, fifty years ago,
Was quite as pretty, dear, as he.

"Now I am eighty. Twenty-five
Are gone since last we heard from James.
I sometimes think he is alive."
She hushed, and looked into the flames.

"He used to tell me, when a child,
Of far, strange countries, where they say
The flowers bloom all the year"—she smiled—
"I can't believe it, to this day!

"And still I think he may have crossed
The sea—and stayed the other side.
His letters may have all been lost—
'Who knows? Who knows¢ The world is wide.

"I often think, if you could know
How much he makes me think of him,
You 'd guess why I love Victor so."
Again the troubled eyes were dim.

"If your child, such a night, were out
Lost in this dark and snow and sleet,
You would go wild, I do not doubt."
I almost heard her own heart beat.

"Yet long, on stormier nights than this,
Mine has been out—why should I care
How many a winter now it is?
Mine has been out—and He knows where."