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Home  »  library  »  Song  »  Gerald Massey (1828–1907)

C.D. Warner, et al., comp.
The Library of the World’s Best Literature. An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.

Gerald Massey (1828–1907)

Little Willie

POOR little Willie,

With his many pretty wiles;

Worlds of wisdom in his looks,

And quaint, quiet smiles;

Hair of amber, touched with

Gold of heaven so brave;

All lying darkly hid

In a workhouse grave.

You remember little Willie:

Fair and funny fellow! he

Sprang like a lily

From the dirt of poverty.

Poor little Willie!

Not a friend was nigh,

When, from the cold world,

He crouched down to die.

In the day we wandered foodless,

Little Willie cried for bread;

In the night we wandered homeless,

Little Willie cried for bed.

Parted at the workhouse door,

Not a word we said:

Ah, so tired was poor Willie,

And so sweetly sleep the dead.

’Twas in the dead of winter

We laid him in the earth;

The world brought in the New Year,

On a tide of mirth.

But for lost little Willie

Not a tear we crave:

Cold and hunger cannot wake him

In his workhouse grave.

We thought him beautiful,

Felt it hard to part;

We loved him dutiful:

Down, down, poor heart!

The storms they may beat;

The winter winds may rave;

Little Willie feels not,

In his workhouse grave.

No room for little Willie;

In the world he had no part;

On him stared the Gorgon-eye

Through which looks no heart.

Come to me, said Heaven;

And if Heaven will save,

Little matters though the door

Be a workhouse grave.