The Dying Girl
Come, kindly Death!
Dear Angel of the gentle Lord
Who loveth us, O speak, with softest breath,
The softly musical word,
At whose light summons stirr’d,
My darling’s soul may fly this earthly reign
Of cruel Pain!
With many a moan
Wrung from the palpitating breast,
She hath hung quivering on the awful zone
Between this death’s unrest
And that life of the blest
Where spirits, slipp’d from the clay’s straight’ning girth,
Re-gladden earth.
Pale, thin and cold,
Her bloodless hand in mine hath lain,
Save when the Torturer with his burning hold
Clenching her quivering brain,
Sent the hot blood again,
Boiling and purple with its freight of pangs,
From his keen fangs.
I sought for hope,
But every day a strength’ning Trust
Strained up, the gates of other life to ope,
As a Hand, dear and just,
Shook out her hour’s light dust
From the clear crystal of her victor Soul
Anear its goal.
In broken beams
Between the shattering bolts of flame,
How sweet and beautiful the childlike gleams
Of her young spirit came,
Lighting her tremulous frame
With a prophetic glow, too softly pure
Long to endure.
O God! how oft
I begg’d that she might live with me!
How painfully my heart hath climb’d aloft
To this high trust in Thee,
This strong self-mastery,
Till I, by loss, can find her mine yet more
Than e’er before!
This gulf of fire,
This burning barrier of keen pain,
With its strong billow flings my old desire
Back on my heart again
Broken and scorched and slain,
And heaves me far from her imprisoned soul
With its sea-roll.
O Death, I know
Thou wilt be tender of her, there,
Where thou dost lead her, and when she may go
Into our Father’s care,
Our nearer souls shall wear
A closer bond, by thee made more divine
Than earth can twine.
I thirst to feel again
Her spirit answer me in bliss,
Wreathing me with her presence, sweeter then
Than warmest touch or kiss
Of the pained body is;
For soul to soul is fuller fellowship
Than lip to lip.
Come, gentle Death
And bear my darling to the arm
Of our dear Lord, who dearly cherisheth
And guardeth us from harm;
Thy touch cannot alarm
Nor sever us, to whom thy bands will be
Life’s Liberty!
- Title
- The Dying Girl
- Description
- Hymns for a Mother - II
- Alternative Title
- Come, kindly Death!
- Bibliographic Citation
- Poems by George and Ruth Burleigh, edited by Mary Louise Brown, 1941, held by Little Compton Historical Society, Box A47.24
- In this Brown collection, this is a published piece, not a manuscript
- Date
- Date tbd
- Subject
- Young Girls
- Death
- Maternal Loss
- note
- Do not know the relationship of this "Hymns for a Mother" with the earlier set by that name.
-
Hymns for a Mother
- This poem may reflect on the loss of George and Ruth's daughter.
-
Ruth Burgess Burleigh
-
Lillian Burleigh
- Creator
-
George Shepard Burleigh