Page:Poems Trask.djvu/133

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LITTLE GRAY BESS.
123
And the leaves of the sycamore quiver and shake,
And the sea-gulls are flying in thick to the shore!
I told him God speed, and I buckled his sword,
And enjoined him to ever be loyal and true,
To yield up his life ere the flag he saw lowered,
And trailed in the dust its red, white, and blue!
And I bade him remember this work was the best
That God and his country had called him to do!

When he departed, he patted your head,
Little gray Bess; and I'll never forget
The voice of my boy, as he halted, and said,
"Mother, be kind to my poor little pet."
Ah, little kitten! you listen in vain!
Listening, and waiting, and watching, are o'er!
Wail, pitiless wind! fall, pitiless rain!
And beat, wild sea-billows, upon the sharp shore!
Let me shut tight the window, little gray Bess:
He will come in through the wicket no more!

Oh, I remember the fate-burdened day
When they brought me a letter unsullied and white,
Writ in a strange hand,—endorsed "No Delay!"
When I touched it, how swiftly the day changed to night!
Only a line, but the letters glowed red
As with blood,—no more and no less:
"Shot through the heart!" Oh, my brave, noble dead!
But we miss him so sorely, little gray Bess!
And it's lonely and sad, for the nights are so long,
And but you and I left in the house, little Bess!