Death of the Flower By Abram Joseph Ryan

    I love my mother, the wildwood,
     I sleep upon her breast;
    A day or two of childhood,
     And then I sink to rest.

    I had once a lovely sister —
     She was cradled by my side;
    But one Summer day I missed her —
     She had gone to deck a bride.

    And I had another sister,
     With cheeks all bright with bloom;
    And another morn I missed her —
     She had gone to wreathe a tomb.

    And they told me they had withered,
     On the bride’s brow and the grave;
    Half an hour, and all their fragrance
     Died away, which heaven gave.

    Two sweet-faced girls came walking
     Thro’ my lonely home one day,
    And I overheard them talking
     Of an altar on their way.

    They were culling flowers around me,
     And I said a little prayer
    To go with them — and they found me —
     And upon an altar fair,

    Where the Eucharist was lying
     On its mystical death-bed,
    I felt myself a-dying,
     While the Mass was being said.

    But I lived a little longer,
     And I prayed there all the day,
    Till the evening Benediction,
     When my poor life passed away.