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Monologue Of A Mother

Topics: classic

This is the last of all, this is the last!     I must hold my hands, and turn my face to the fire,     I must watch my dead days fusing together in dross,     Shape after shape, and scene after scene from my past     Fusing to one dead mass in the sinking fire     Where the ash on the dying coals grows swiftly, like heavy moss.     Strange he is, my son, whom I have awaited like a lover,     Strange to me like a captive in a foreign country, haunting     The confines and gazing out on the land where the wind is free;     White and gaunt, with wistful eyes that hover     Always on the distance, as if his soul were chaunting     The monotonous weird of departure away from me.     Like a strange white bird blown out of the frozen seas,     Like a bird from the far north blown with a broken wing     Into our sooty garden, he drags and beats     From place to place perpetually, seeking release     From me, from the hand of my love which creeps up, needing     His happiness, whilst he in displeasure retreats.     I must look away from him, for my faded eyes     Like a cringing dog at his heels offend him now,     Like a toothless hound pursuing him with my will,     Till he chafes at my crouching persistence, and a sharp spark flies     In my soul from under the sudden frown of his brow,     As he blenches and turns away, and my heart stands still.     This is the last, it will not be any more.     All my life I have borne the burden of myself,     All the long years of sitting in my husband's house,     Never have I said to myself as he closed the door:     "Now I am caught! - You are hopelessly lost, O Self,     You are frightened with joy, my heart, like a frightened mouse."     Three times have I offered myself, three times rejected.     It will not be any more. No more, my son, my son!     Never to know the glad freedom of obedience, since long ago     The angel of childhood kissed me and went. I expected     Another would take me, - and now, my son, O my son,     I must sit awhile and wait, and never know     The loss of myself, till death comes, who cannot fail.     Death, in whose service is nothing of gladness, takes me;     For the lips and the eyes of God are behind a veil.     And the thought of the lipless voice of the Father shakes me     With fear, and fills my eyes with the tears of desire,     And my heart rebels with anguish as night draws nigher,

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"This is the last of all, this is the last!..."

Exploring the themes of classic, D. H. Lawrence (David Herbert Richards) delivers a powerful performance in "Monologue Of A Mother"... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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"The chime of the bells, and the church clock strik..."

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