The Widow

A. Mary F. Robinson

1857 to 1944

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Track 1

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Or haply, if a sudden ray
Her deep fidelity unchanged
On each she sets a dewy-pearled
Her loving mercies overbrim
She sits beyond our ken apart,
Comes gliding through the winter gloom
She hath no children, and no heart
And rain or sunshine find her there.
O'er all the tombs that neighbour him;
She plants her blue forget-me-not
A peace exalted and estranged.
Some sweet "Ten years ago to-day!
And here, as softly as a ghost,
Here in the long light summer weather
To say her prayer beside the tomb
If sometimes when we talk with her
She thinks: "'Twill make the roses blow
In all our hurrying anxious life;
Those absent eyes light up awhile
But some remembrance tremulous,
She brings the books they chose together
Sweet pink or fernlet fresh-uncurled;
And all we others barely seem
Where nothing moves but memory;
With hands but half unclasped from prayer;
On some sad island full of flowers
It is not of our world nor us
In the beginning of a smile,
Unmoved, unconscious of our strife;
The phantom figures of a dream
And here if anywhere forgets
Set all her window in a glow,
Shipwrecked beyond these coasts of ours,
Here, where she used to sob for hours,
She plucks the withering violets;
His tomb is all her garden-plot,
I planted at his feet to-day.
And her set lips consent to stir
Where no one lives but only he;
The emptiness of all the world.
One dreams and says, "It cannot be!
And reads the verse he liked the most;
Of him she loves and never lost.
Hath found a calm that is not ours,

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