The Little Woman

By Edgar Albert Guest

The little woman, to her I bow

And doff my hat as I pass her by;

I reverence the furrows that mark her brow,

And the sparkling love light in her eye.

The little woman who stays at home,

And makes no bid for the world's applause;

Who never sighs for a chance to roam,

But toils all day in a grander cause.

The little woman, who seems so weak,

Yet bears her burdens day by day;

And no one has ever heard her speak

In a bitter or loud complaining way.

She sings a snatch of a merry song,

As she toils in her home from morn to night.

Her work is hard and the hours are long

But the little woman's heart is light.

A slave to love is that woman small,

And yearly her burdens heavier grow,

But somehow she seems to bear them all,

As the deep'ning lines in her white cheeks show.

Her children all have a mother's care,

Her home the touch of a good wife knows;

No burden's too heavy for her to bear,

But, patiently doing her best, she goes.

The little woman, may God be kind

To her wherever she dwells to-day;

The little woman who seems to find

Her joy in toiling along life's way.

May God bring peace to her work-worn breast

And joy to her mother-heart at last;

May love be hers when it's time to rest,

And the roughest part of the road is passed.

The little woman — how oft it seems

God chooses her for the mother's part;

And many a grown-up sits and dreams

To-day of her with an aching heart.

For he knows well how she toiled for him

And he sees it now that it is too late;

And often his eyes with tears grow dim

For the little woman whose strength was great.