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Someone’s Mother

Robert Service

Someone’s Mother trails the street
Wrapt in rotted rags;
Broken slippers on her feet
Drearily she drags;
Drifting in the bitter night,
Gnawing gutter bread,
With a face of tallow white,
Listless as the dead.

Someone’s Mother in the dim
Of the grey church wall
Hears within a Christmas hymn,
One she can recall
From the h so long ago,
When divinely far,
in the holy alter glow
She would kneel in prayer.

Someone’s Mother, huddled there,
Had so sweet a dream;
Seemed the sky was Heaven’s stair,
Golden and agleam,
Robed in gown Communion bright,
Singingly she trod
Up and up the stair of light,
And thee was waiting—God.

Someone’s Mother cowers down
By the old church wall;
Soft above the sleeping town
Snow begins to fall;
Now her rags are lily fair,
but unproud is she:
Someone’s Mother is not there . . .
Lo! she climbs the starry stair
Only angels see.
Online text © 1998-2010 Poetry X. All rights reserved.
From Rhymes of a Roughneck
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