Love Letters of the Bachelor Poet James Whitcomb Riley to Miss Elizabeth Kahle

Cover Love Letters of the Bachelor Poet James Whitcomb Riley to Miss Elizabeth Kahle
Love Letters of the Bachelor Poet James Whitcomb Riley to Miss Elizabeth Kahle
Riley, James Whitcomb, 1849-1916
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I think you are wholly good, and you have my fullest confidence.
*Mrs. Brunn (nee Kahle) says that this "interview" was not preserved, and that she has no recollection of what it was, or what became of it.
[79] God bless you and keep you always glad; and with all gratitude and warm esteem, believe me, Your true friend, J. W. RILEY HOPE* HOPE, bending o er me one time, snowed the flakes Of her white touches on my folded sight, And whispered, half rebukingly, "What makes My little girl so sorrowf
...ul tonight?" scarce did I unclasp my lids, or lift Their tear-glued fringes, as with blind embrace 1 caught within my arms the mother-gift, And with wild kisses dappled all her face.
That was a baby-dream of long ago. My fate is fanged with frost, and tongued with flame : My woman-soul, chased naked through the snow, Stumbles and staggers on without an aim.
And yet, here in my agony, sometimes A faint voice reaches down from some far height, And whispers through a glamoring of rhymes, "What makes my little girl so sad to-night?" J.


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