Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Little All-Aloney by Eugene Field
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Little All-Aloney

    By Eugene Field



    Little All-Aloney's feet
    Pitter-patter in the hall,
    And his mother runs to meet
    And to kiss her toddling sweet,
    Ere perchance he fall.
    He is, oh, so weak and small!
    Yet what danger shall he fear
    When his mother hovereth near,
    And he hears her cheering call:
    "All-Aloney"?

    Little All-Aloney's face
    It is all aglow with glee,
    As around that romping-place
    At a terrifying pace
    Lungeth, plungeth he!
    And that hero seems to be
    All unconscious of our cheers -
    Only one dear voice he hears
    Calling reassuringly:
    "All-Aloney!"

    Though his legs bend with their load,
    Though his feet they seem so small
    That you cannot help forebode
    Some disastrous episode
    In that noisy hall,
    Neither threatening bump nor fall
    Little All-Aloney fears,
    But with sweet bravado steers
    Whither comes that cheery call:
    "All-Aloney!"

    Ah, that in the years to come,
    When he shares of Sorrow's store, -
    When his feet are chill and numb,
    When his cross is burdensome,
    And his heart is sore:
    Would that he could hear once more
    The gentle voice he used to hear -
    Divine with mother love and cheer -
    Calling from yonder spirit shore:
    "All, all alone!"



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