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A LULLABY

Eugene Field

The stars are twinkling in the skies,

The earth is lost in slumbers deep;

So hush, my sweet, and close thine eyes,

And let me lull thy soul to sleep.

Compose thy dimpled hands to rest,

And like a little birdling lie

Secure within thy cozy nest

Upon my loving mother breast,

And slumber to my lullaby,

So hushaby--O hushaby.

 

The moon is singing to a star

The little song I sing to you;

The father sun has strayed afar,

As baby's sire is straying too.

And so the loving mother moon

Sings to the little star on high;

And as she sings, her gentle tune

Is borne to me, and thus I croon

For thee, my sweet, that lullaby

Of hushaby--O hushaby.

 

There is a little one asleep

That does not hear his mother's song;

But angel watchers--as I weep--

Surround his grave the night-tide long.

And as I sing, my sweet, to you,

Oh, would the lullaby I sing--

The same sweet lullaby he knew

While slumb'ring on this bosom too--

Were borne to him on angel's wing!

So hushaby--O hushaby.

 

 

 

"THE OLD HOMESTEAD"

 

JEST as atween the awk'ard lines a hand we love has penn'd

Appears a meanin' hid from other eyes,

So, in your simple, homespun art, old honest Yankee friend,

A power o' tearful, sweet seggestion lies.

We see it all--the pictur' that our mem'ries hold so dear--

The homestead in New England far away,

An' the vision is so nat'ral-like we almost seem to hear

The voices that were heshed but yesterday.

 

Ah, who'd ha' thought the music of that distant childhood time

Would sleep through all the changeful, bitter years

To waken into melodies like Chris'mas bells a-chime

An' to claim the ready tribute of our tears!

Why, the robins in the maples an' the blackbirds round the pond,

The crickets an' the locusts in the leaves,

The brook that chased the trout adown the hillside just beyond,

An' the swallers in their nests beneath the eaves--

They all come troopin' back with you, dear Uncle Josh, to-day,

An' they seem to sing with all the joyous zest

Of the days when we were Yankee boys an' Yankee girls at play,

With nary thought of "livin' way out West"!

 

God bless ye, Denman Thomps'n, for the good y' do our hearts,

With this music an' these memories o' youth--

God bless ye for the faculty that tops all human arts,

The good ol' Yankee faculty of Truth!