Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Bob by Henry Kendall
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Bob

    By Henry Kendall



    Singer of songs of the hills
    Dreamer, by waters unstirred,
    Back in a valley of rills,
    Home of the leaf and the bird!
    Read in this fall of the year
    Just the compassionate phrase,
    Faded with traces of tear,
    Written in far-away days:

    “Gone is the light of my lap
    (Lord, at Thy bidding I bow),
    Here is my little one’s cap,
    He has no need of it now,
    Give it to somebody’s boy
    Somebody’s darling” she wrote.
    Touching was Bob in his joy
    Bob without boots or a coat.

    Only a cap; but it gave
    Capless and comfortless one
    Happiness, bright as the brave,
    Beautiful light of the sun.
    Soft may the sanctified sod
    Rest on the father who led
    Bob from the gutter, unshod
    Covered his cold little head!

    Bob from the foot to the crown
    Measured a yard, and no more
    Baby alone in the town,
    Homeless, and hungry, and sore
    Child that was never a child,
    Hiding away from the rain,
    Draggled and dirty and wild,
    Down in a pipe of the drain.

    Poor little beggar was Bob
    Couldn’t afford to be sick,
    Getting a penny a job,
    Sometimes a curse and a kick.
    Father was killed by the drink;
    Mother was driven to shame;
    Bob couldn’t manage to think
    He had forgotten their name.

    God was in heaven above,
    Flowers illumined the ground,
    Women of infinite love
    Lived in the palaces round
    Saints with the character sweet
    Found in the fathers of old,
    Laboured in alley and street
    Baby slept out in the cold.

    Nobody noticed the child
    Nobody knew of the mite
    Creeping about like a wild
    Thing in the shadow of night.
    Beaten by drunkards and cowed
    Frightened to speak or to sob
    How could he ask you aloud,
    “Have you a penny for Bob?”

    Few were the pennies he got
    Seldom could hide them away,
    Watched by the ravenous sot
    Ever at wait for his prey.
    Poor little man! He would weep
    Oft for a morsel of bread;
    Coppers he wanted to keep
    Went to the tavern instead.

    This was his history, friend
    Ragged, unhoused, and alone;
    How could the child comprehend
    Love that he never had known?
    Hunted about in the world,
    Crouching in crevices dim,
    Crust with a curse at him hurled
    Stood for a kindness with him.

    Little excited his joy
    Bun after doing a job;
    Mother of bright-headed boy,
    Think of the motherless Bob!
    High in the heavens august
    Providence saw him, and said
    “Out of the pits of the dust
    Lift him, and cover his head.”

    Ah, the ineffable grace,
    Father of children, in Thee!
    Boy in a radiant place,
    Fanned by the breeze of the sea
    Child on a lullaby lap
    Said, in the pause of his pain,
    “Mother, don’t bury my cap
    Give it to Bob in the lane.”

    Beautiful bidding of Death!
    What could she do but obey,
    Even when suffering Faith
    Hadn’t the power to pray?
    So, in the fall of the year,
    Saint with the fatherly head
    Hunted for somebody’s dear
    “Somebody’s darling,” he said.

    Bob, who was nobody’s child,
    Sitting on nobody’s lap,
    Draggled and dirty and wild
    Bob got the little one’s cap.
    Strange were compassionate words!
    Waif of the alley and lane
    Dreamed of the music of birds
    Floating about in the rain.

    White-headed father in God,
    Over thy beautiful grave
    Green is the grass of the sod,
    Soft is the sound of the wave.
    Down by the slopes of the sea
    Often and often will sob
    Boy who was fostered by thee
    This is the story of Bob.



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