AN IRISH MOTHER

Poems » adelaide crapsey » an irish mother

AN IRISH MOTHER

A wee slip drawin’ water,
    Me ould man at the plough,
No grown-up son nor daughter,
    That’s the way we’re farmin’ now.
‘No work and little pleasure’
    Was the cry before they wint,
Now they’re gettin’ both full measure,
    So I ought to be contint.

Great wages men is givin’
    In the land beyant the say,
But ‘tis lonely -- lonely livin’
    Whin the childher is away.

Och, the baby in the cradle,
    Blue eyes and curlin’ hair,
God knows I’d give a gra’dle
    To have little Pether there;
No doubt he’d find it funny
    Lyin’ here upon me arm,
Him -- that’s earnin’ the good money,
    On a Californy farm.

Six pounds it was or sivin
    He sint last quarter day,
But ‘tis lonely -- lonely livin’
    When the childher is away.

God is good -- none betther,
    And the Divil might be worse,
Each month there comes a letther
    Bringing somethin’ for the purse.
And me ould man’s heart rejoices
    Whin I read they’re doin’ fine,
But it’s oh! to hear their voices,
    And to feel their hands in mine.

To see the cattle drivin’
    And the young one’s makin’ hay,
‘‘Tis a lonely land to live in
    When the childher is away.’

Whin the shadders do be fallin’
    On the ould man there an’ me,
‘Tis hard to keep from callin’
    â€˜Come in, childher, to yer tea!’
I can almost hear them comin’
    Mary, Kate and little Con, --
Och! but I’m the foolish woman,
    Sure they’re all grown up an’ gone.

That our sins may be forgiven,
    An’ not wan go asthray,
I doubt I’d stay in Heaven
    If them childher was away.