In Flanders Fields and Other Poems by John McCrae
page 32 of 121 (26%)
page 32 of 121 (26%)
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He found two waifs in an attic bare;
-- A single crust was their meagre fare -- One strove to quiet the other's cries, And the love-light dawned in her famished eyes As she kissed the child with a motherly air: "I don't need mine, you can have my share." Then the angel knew that the earthly cross And the sorrow and shame were not wholly loss. At dawn, when hushed was earth's busy hum And men looked not for their Christ to come, From the attic poor to the palace grand, The King and the beggar went hand in hand. The Night Cometh Cometh the night. The wind falls low, The trees swing slowly to and fro: Around the church the headstones grey Cluster, like children strayed away But found again, and folded so. |
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