Cape Cod Ballads, and Other Verse by Joseph Crosby Lincoln
page 103 of 126 (81%)
page 103 of 126 (81%)
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But hid in my heart is an altar, apart,
To the little old house by the shore. For its portal so bare was a Paradise rare, With the blossoms that clustered above, When a mother's dear face gave a charm to the place As she sang at her labor of love. And the breeze, as it strays through the window and plays With the dust and the leaves on the floor, Is a memory sweet of the pattering feet In the little old house by the shore. And again in my ears, through the dream of the years, They whisper, the playmates of old, The brother whose eyes were a glimpse of the skies, The sister with ringlets of gold; And Father comes late to the path at the gate, As he did when the fishing was o'er, And the echoes ring out, at our welcoming shout, From the little old house by the shore. But the night-wind has blown and the vision has flown, And the sound of the children is still, And the shadowy mist, like a spirit, has kissed The graves by the church on the hill; But softly, afar, sing the waves on the bar, A song of the sunshine of yore: A lullaby deep for the loved ones who sleep Near the little old house by the shore. |
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