The Waifby A. C. SmithHe went into the bush, and passedOut of the sight of living men,None knows the nook that held him last,None ever saw his face again.It may be, in the wildering woodHe wandered, weary, spent of breath,Till the all-mastering solitudeSank to the deeper hush of death.Perchance he crawled where the low bush,More verdant, whispered streams were nigh,Hopeful, but desperate, made a rush,And found, O God! the bed was dry!He was a waif, and friends had none;Who knows but in some distant landA mother mourns her errant son,A sister longs to clasp his hand?He was a waif, but with him diedA world of yearnings deep within—Yearning to loftiest things allied,But wrecked by cruel fate, or sin.None heard the lone one’s dying prayerSave Infinite Pity bending o’er,Who, haply, bore him quietly whereThey hunger and they thirst no more.O ye vast woods! what fond life-dreamsYe close! what broken lives ye hide!Darkly absorbed, like hopeful streams,That in dry desert lands subside.Stranger the tales ye could unfoldThan wild romancer ever penned,Remaining buried in the mouldTill time shall cease, and mystery end!
Thursday, September 21, 2023
The Waif
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