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Heredity
I am the family face;Flesh perishes, I live on,Projecting trait and traceThrough time to times anon,And leaping from place to placeOver oblivion.The years-heired feature that canIn curve and voice and eyeDespise the human spanOf durance - that is I;The eternal thing in man,That heeds no call to die.
Thomas Hardy
Comrades
LifeYou have been good to me....You have not made yourself too dearto juggle with.
Lola Ridge
To Hope
Here's to Hope,the child of Care,And pretty sisterof Despair!Here's hoping thatHope's children shan'tTake after their Grandmaor Aunt!
Oliver Herford
Single Life Most Secure.
Suspicion, discontent, and strifeCome in for dowry with a wife.
Robert Herrick
One Flesh
Lying apart now, each in a separate bed,He with a book, keeping the light on late,She like a girl dreaming of childhood,All men elsewhere, it is as if they waitSome new event: the book he holds unread,Her eyes fixed on the shadows overhead.Tossed up like flotsam from a former passion,How cool they lie. They hardly ever touch,Or if they do it is like a confessionOf having little feeling, or too much.Chastity faces them, a destinationFor which their whole lives were a preparation.Strangely apart, yet strangely close together,Silence between them like a thread to holdAnd not wind in. And time itself's a featherTouching them gently. Do they know they're old,These two who are my father and my motherWhose fire from which I came, has...
Elizabeth Jennings
Kinship
I.There is no flower of wood or lea,No April flower, as fair as she:O white anemone, who hastThe wind's wild grace,Know her a cousin of thy race,Into whose faceA presence like the wind's hath passed.II.There is no flower of wood or lea,No Maytime flower, as fair as she:O bluebell, tender with the blueOf limpid skies,Thy lineage hath kindred tiesIn her, whose eyesThe heav'n's own qualities imbue.III.There is no flower of wood or lea,No Juneday flower, as fair as she:Rose, odorous with beauty ofLife's first and best,Behold thy sister here confessed!Whose maiden breastIs fragrant with the dreams of love.
Madison Julius Cawein
Lines
TO THE MEMORY OF PATRICK KELLEY, WHO BY HIS MANY GOOD QUALITIES DURING SOME YEARS' RESIDENCE IN MY FAMILY, GREATLY ENDEARED HIMSELF TO ME AND MINE.From Erin's fair Isle to this country he came,And found brothers and sisters to welcome him here;Though then but a youth, yet robust seemed his frame,And life promised fair for many a long year.A place was soon found where around the same board,He with two of his sisters did constantly meet;And when his day's work had all been performed,At the same fireside he found a third seat.His faithfulness such, so true-hearted was he,That love in return could not be denied;As one of the family - he soon ceased to beThe stranger, who lately for work had applied.Youth passed into manhoo...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
Domestic Relations
There was a young man of Dunbar,Who playfully poisoned his Ma; When he'd finished his work, He remarked with a smirk,"This will cause quite a family jar."
Unknown
To Our Parents
WRITTEN BY REQUEST, FOR A GOLDEN WEDDINGFull fifty years together - Father and mother dear -Through pleasant summer weather, Or wintry tempests drear, -Thro' sunshine and thro' shadow, Oft travel sore and tried,Yet strong to aid each other, You've journeyed side by sideA few brief years of climbing, - One glad, exultant glanceAt the sun bright world around you, At the smiling heaven's expanse, -And then, the slow descending Into the vale below,Where the light with shade is blending, And the deamy waters flowFull fifty years of travel - Then, on your worn staves rest,And welcome home your children, And many an honored guest, -We come to give you greeting, -...
Pamela S. Vining (J. C. Yule)
Brotherhood
Is brotherhood to flesh confined?Is there no kinship of the soul?To have it thus, I am resigned,If 'tis my God-appointed goal;For there are those whom I hold dear,Who claim with me a common sire,That we, with one accord, revere,And love holds out midst flood and fire.But is the family so smallOf which I fondly claim a part?Is there no other I may callA brother, and within my heartCherish for him, whate'er his name,Or rank, or color, or his creed,A love of pure and changeless flame,And feel I render but his meed?Thank God for brotherhood so broadThat all the human race may shareA kinship, never yet outlawed,Tho' types of it have been too rare.But bigotry is doomed to die,And hate, a relic of the past;
Joseph Horatio Chant
Time's Changes In A Household.
They grew together side by side,They filled one house with gleeTheir graves are severed far and wide -By mountain stream and tree.Mrs. HemansThey were as fair and bright a band as ever filled with prideParental hearts whose task it was children beloved to guide;And every care that love upon its idols bright may showerWas lavished with impartial hand upon each fair young flower.Theirs was the father's merry hour sharing their childish bliss,The mother's soft breathed benison and tender, nightly kiss;While strangers who by chance might see their joyous graceful play,To breathe some word of fondness kind would pause upon their way.But years rolled on, and in their course Time many changes brought,And sorrow in that household gay ...
Rosanna Eleanor Leprohon