Harriet Monroe, ed. (1860–1936). The New Poetry: An Anthology. 1917.
A Little GirlMary Aldis
On a white stone door-step.
In the street are other children running about;
The shadows of the waving trees flicker on their white dresses.
And speaks to the child on the steps.
She looks up and asks an eager question:
The figure shakes her head and shuts the door;
The child covers up her face
To hide her tears.
Two boys and an awe-struck little girl.
They have plastered the summer-house with clay,
Making it an unlovely object.
The little girl runs to her
Asking the same question, “Where is my mother?”
The grown-up person does not make any answer.
She looks at the summer-house and passes along the path.
And climbs the stairs.
A white-haired lady of whom she is afraid
Comes to find her and tell her a joyful thing.
The young nurse is doing her hair in front of the glass—
The little girl sees how white her neck is
And her uplifted arms.
They are going to find Her.
The young nurse turns and smiles,
And takes the little girl in her arms.
Everything rushes by very fast—
Houses, and children in front of them,
Children who are just staying at home.
The little girl is saying over and over again,
“My mother—my onliest mother—
I am coming to you, coming very fast.”
With a great doorway.
It opens and she is led in,
Looking all about her.
A lady in a white dress and white cap comes.
A man in a black coat comes in.
He says, “She is not well enough, I am afraid.”
The little girl is led away.
She always remembers the words
The man in the black coat said.
In the house of the white-haired lady,
At the end of the path she can see the summer-house
With its queer gray cover.
The hands must go all around again
Before the mother will come.
The little girl is lying in her bed.
There is a piano going somewhere downstairs.
She is telling herself a story and waiting—
Soon She will come in at the door.
Across the floor,
And She will come in with a rustling sound.
She will lie down on the bed,
And the little girl will stroke her dress and crinkle it
To make the sound again.
And quietly turn the handle.
The little girl will speak and stop her
Asking something she has asked many times before—
“My Father?”
But the mother has never anything to answer.
Outside there is snow.
A woman with a big white apron
Comes to the door of the room and speaks.
And runs down the stairs.
The little girl stands at the head of the stairs
And cries out, “My Father!” but no one hears,
They pass along the hall…..
But the door is closed.
Held so tightly it hurts her.
She moves herself free.
And there is a taste of salt on her tongue.
A bed with high curtains,
A woman sits bowed over.
Her hair streams over her shoulders;
Her arms are about two children.
The little girl wants to slip away—
There are so many people at the foot of the bed.
There are houses climbing up the hillside.
The little girl wonders if anything like this
Is happening in any of those houses.
Are standing behind their chairs around a bright table,
Waiting for the youngest child to say grace.
To get the big words out properly.
The little girl interrupts and says the grace quickly.
Is angry.
The little girl breaks away and runs
To the room of the bed with the high curtains.
The room is empty.
She comes back to the table,
But she does not dare to ask the question.
She remembers the great red building
With the great doorway.
There is nobody in the garden,
There is nobody in the house but the white-haired lady.
She does not want to see him—
She is afraid.
There is rain, and leaves are whirling about.
A carriage with two horses,
And a coachman high up, holding a long whip,
Stands waiting in front of the door.
They take away her hands from the banisters
And lead her to the carriage in front of the door.
Someone gets in behind her,
The carriage door is shut,
The little girl draws herself to the far corner;
They drive away.
The little girl looks back out of the window.
Where there are young men called uncles
Who talk to her and laugh.
A large lady sits by the table and knits and smiles.
In her basket are different colored balls of wool—
Pretty colors, but not enough to make a pattern.
There is a curly soft little black dog
That hides under the table.
The uncles pull him out
And he tries to hold to the carpet with his claws.
The little girl laughs—
But at the sound she turns away
And goes up to her room and shuts the door.
Pretty soon the large lady comes to her
And takes her on her lap and rocks and sings.