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1791–1865

MADAM WHITING,

Lydia Howard Sigourney

Life's work well done, how beautiful to rest. Aye, lift your little ones to see her face, So calmly smiling in its coffin-bed! There is no wrinkle there,— no rigid gloom

To make them turn their tender glance away; And when they say their simple prayer at night With folded hands,— instruct their innocent lips Meekly to say: “Our Father! may we live,

And die like her.” Her more than fourscore years Chill'd not in her the genial flow of thought Or energy of deed. The earnest power

To advance home-happiness, the kindly warmth Of social intercourse, the sweet response Of filial love, rejoicing in her joy, And reverencing her saintly piety,

Were with her, unimpair'd, until the end. A course like this, predicted close serene, And so it was. There came no cloud to dim

Her spirit's light, when at a beckoning brief She heavenward went. Miss'd is she here, and mourn'd; From hall, from hearthstone, and from household board,

A beauty and a dignity have fled,— And the heart's tears as freely flowed for her, As for the loved ones, in their prime of days. Age justly held in honor, hath a charm

Peculiarly its own, a symmetry Of nearness to the skies. And these were hers, Whose life was duty, and whose death was peace.

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MADAM WHITING, · Lydia Howard Sigourney · Poetry Cove