| Poems by Women |
LITTLE WILD BABY
Through the fierce fever I nursed him, and then he said
I was the woman -
I! - that he would wed;
He sent a boat with men for his own white
priest,
And he gave my father horses, and made a feast.
I am his wife: if
he has forgotten me,
I will not live for scorning eyes to see.
(Little
wild baby, that knowest not where thou art going,
Lie still! lie still!
Thy mother will do the rowing.)
Three moons ago - it was but three moons ago -
He took his gun, and
started across the snow;
For the river was frozen, the river that still goes
down
Every day, as I watch it, to find the town;
The town whose name I
caught from his sleeping lips,
A place of many people and many
ships.
(Little wild baby, that knowest not where thou art going,
Lie
still! lie still! Thy mother will do the rowing.)
I to that town am going, to search the place,
With his little white son in
my arms, till I see his face.
Only once shall I need to look in his
eyes,
To see if his soul, as I knew it, lives or dies.
If it lives, we
live, and if it is dead, we die,
And the soul of my baby will never ask me
why.
(Little wild baby, that knowest not where thou art going,
Lie still!
lie still! Thy mother will do the rowing.)
I have asked about the river: one answered me,
That after the town it goes
to find the sea;
That great waves, able to break the stoutest bark,
Are
there, and the sea is very deep and dark.
If he is happy without me, so best,
so best;
I will take his baby and go away to my rest.
(Little wild baby,
that knowest not where thou art going,
Lie still! lie still! Thy mother
will do the rowing.
The river flows swiftly, the sea is dark and
deep:
Little wild baby, lie still! Lie still and sleep.)
Margaret Thomson Janvier [1845-1913]
From: Stevenson, Burton Egbert.
The Home Book of Verse.
This poet:
[Author index]
This collection assembled by Jone Johnson Lewis.
Collection © 1999-2002 Jone Johnson Lewis.
Citing poems from these pages:
| Author. "Poem Title." Women's History: Poems by Women. Jone Johnson Lewis, editor. URL: (date of logon) |

