Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Children's Heaven. by George MacDonald
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The Children's Heaven.

    By George MacDonald



        The infant lies in blessed ease
            Upon his mother's breast;
        No storm, no dark, the baby sees
            Invade his heaven of rest.
        He nothing knows of change or death--
            Her face his holy skies;
        The air he breathes, his mother's breath;
            His stars, his mother's eyes!

        Yet half the soft winds wandering there
            Are sighs that come of fears;
        The dew slow falling through that air--
            It is the dew of tears;
        And ah, my child, thy heavenly home
            Hath storms as well as dew;
        Black clouds fill sometimes all its dome,
            And quench the starry blue!

        "My smile would win no smile again,
            If baby saw the things
        That ache across his mother's brain
            The while to him she sings!
        Thy faith in me is faith in vain--
            I am not what I seem:
        O dreary day, O cruel pain,
            That wakes thee from thy dream!"

        Nay, pity not his dreams so fair,
            Fear thou no waking grief;
        Oh, safer he than though thou were
            Good as his vague belief!
        There is a heaven that heaven above
            Whereon he gazes now;
        A truer love than in thy kiss;
            A better friend than thou!

        The Father's arms fold like a nest
            Both thee and him about;
        His face looks down, a heaven of rest,
            Where comes no dark, no doubt.
        Its mists are clouds of stars that move
            On, on, with progress rife;
        Its winds, the goings of his love;
            Its dew, the dew of life.

        We for our children seek thy heart,
            For them we lift our eyes:
        Lord, should their faith in us depart,
            Let faith in thee arise.
        When childhood's visions them forsake,
            To women grown and men,
        Back to thy heart their hearts oh take,
            And bid them dream again.



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