THE PRAYER.

They talk of money and of fame,

Would make a fortune or a name,

And gold and laurel both must be

For ever out of reach of me.

And if I asked of God or fate

The gift most gracious and most great,

It would not be such gifts as these

That I should pray for on my knees.

No, I should ask a greater grace—

A little, quiet, firelit place,

Warm-curtained, violet-sweet, where she

Should hold my baby on her knee.

There she should sit and softly sing

The songs my heart hears echoing;

And I, made pure by joy, should come

Not all unworthy to our home.

But if I dared to ask this grace,

Would not God laugh out in my face?

Since gold and fame indeed are His

To give, but, ah! not this, not this!