Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Miscellaneous Poems. III. A Tragedy (II)Edith (Nesbit) Bland (18581924)
I
Now you are gone;
I loved to see your white gown mid the flowers,
While, hours on hours,
I studied—toiled to weave a crown of fame
About your name.
To hear you sing
About the house while I sat reading here,
My child, my dear;
To know you glad with all the life-joys fair
I dared not share.
My love, you know,
When I could lay with laurels at your feet
Love’s roses sweet;
I thought I could taste love when fame was won—
Now both are done!
The passionate kiss,
Which I dared never give, lest love should rise
Mighty, unwise,
And bind me, with my life-work incomplete,
Beside your feet.
My one chance went;
You died, my little one, and are at rest—
And I, unblest,
Look at these broken fragments of my life,
My child, my wife.