C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
The Mother
By Giosuè Carducci (18351907)
S
summoning the farmers to the still gray fields,
it saw her barefooted, with quick step passing
among the dewy odors of the hay.
as, with broad shoulders bent o’er the yellow winrows,
she challenges in cheery song the grasshoppers,
whose hoarse chirping rings from the hot hillsides.
her sun-browned face with glossy curls surrounded,
how then thy vesper fires, O Tuscany,
did richly tinge with color her bold figure!
the lusty child whom her naked breasts have just sated;
tosses him on high and prattles sweetly with him,
while he, with eye fixed on the shining eyes of his mother,
his tiny fingers imploring; then loud laughs the mother,
and into the one great embrace of love
lets him fall, clasped close to her bosom.
tremulous nod the oats on the green hillsides;
one hears the distant mooing of the ox,
and on the barn-roof the gay plumed cock is crowing.
Nature has her brave ones, who for her despise
the masks of glory dear to the vulgar throng.
’Tis thus, O Adrian, with holy visions
thou comfortest the souls of fellow-men.
thou putt’st in stone the ages’ ancient hope,
the lofty hope that cries, “Oh, when shall labor
be happy, and faithful love secure from harm?
say in the face of the sun, ‘Shine no more
on the idle ease and the selfish wars of tyrants,
but on the pious justice of labor?’”