No Message

By Mary Hannay Foott

Born 9/26/1846


She heard the story of the end,
         Each message, too, she heard;
And there was one for every friend;
         For her alone -- no word.

And shall she bear a heavier heart,
         And deem his love was fled;
Because his soul from earth could part
         Leaving her name unsaid?

No -- No! -- Though neither sign nor sound
         A parting thought expressed --
Not heedless passed the Homeward-Bound
         Of her he loved the best.

Of voyage-perils, bravely borne,
         He would not tell the tale;
Of shattered planks and canvas torn,
         And war with wind and gale.

He waited till the light-house star
         Should rise against the sky;
And from the mainland, looming far,
         The forest scents blow by.

He hoped to tell -- assurance sweet! --
         That pain and grief were o'er --
What blessings haste the soul to meet,
         Ere yet within the door.

Then one farewell he thought to speak
         When all the rest were past --
As in the parting-hour we seek
         The dearest hand the last.

And while for this delaying but
         To see Heaven's opening Gate --
Lo, it received him -- and was shut --
         Ere he could say "I wait."

DayPoems Poem No. 877
<a href="http://www.daypoems.net/poems/877.html">No Message by Mary Hannay Foott</a>

The DayPoems Poetry Collection, www.daypoems.net
Timothy Bovee, editor

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