Alfred H. Miles, ed. Women Poets of the Nineteenth Century. 1907.
By Twilight Hours. I. Sospiri Volate (Selection)Sarah Williams (Sadie) (18411868)
Quietness
(Margaret)
Looking out here through geranium leaves,
We can see the sky all rosy grace,
And can feel, what one of us believes,
That He giveth His belovèd sleep—
Not in death alone we cease to weep.
While the blue shows deeper in between,
And the very sunset leaves a glow
Lovelier than all rays the day has seen:
Flecks of light make blossoms on the floor.
Silent music wraps us o’er and o’er.
As the centre of all motion rests;
So we breathe away those hours of balm,
Rise with strengthened hearts within our breasts.
Go, dear, but remember, through all weather,
We are friends—we were in Heaven together.
Youth and Maidenhood
(Gregory)
Laid upon her soft and rosy palm,
Turned whichever way her hand doth turn,
Trembling in an ecstasy of calm.
Held within her close and burning clasp,
Breathing only dying sweetness out,
Withering beneath the fatal grasp.
Growing into beauty near the sun,
Gaining rainbow hues in her embrace,
Melting into tears when it is done.
Dumb, without the hand that sweeps its strings;
Though the hand be careless or be cruel,
When it comes, my heart breaks forth and sings.