Sunday, January 7, 2018

Mother's Day Index

Mother's Day cards most often
depicted white carnations, during
the earlier half of the 20th
Century.

       Mother's Day is a day set apart in the United States to honor mothers. The second Sunday in May has been thus selected, and the day is observed generally in churches by special sermons or other exercises. Miss Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia was the first to suggest the idea of observing Mother's Day, on which everyone pas tribute to the best mother in the world -- his or her own. 
       Over one hundred years ago the wearing of white carnations on Mother's Day was the most popular tradition aside from attending church. Today Americans take their mother's out for a meal in a local restaurant for breakfast, lunch or dinner, most usually after attending a church service, if they are inclined to religious observance. Read more...

Artifacts for Mother's Day:
Celebration of Mothers Everywhere:
Poems About Motherhood:
Mother's Day Card Crafts:

A Woman's Heart

A Woman's Heart

God's angels took a little drop of dew
Fresh fallen from the heaven's far-off blue.
And a white violet, so pure and bright,
Shedding its fragrance in the morn's soft light,
And a forget-me-not laid altogether gently out of sight
Within the chalice of a lily white.
With humbleness and grace they covered it,
Made purity and sadness near to sit.
And added pride to this and fears a few,
One wish, but half a hope, and bright tears, too,
Courage and sweetness in misfortune's smart,
And out of this they molded woman's heart

A Mother's Love by Montgomery

A Mother's Love 
by Montgomery

I loved thee, daughter of my heart!
My child, I loved thee dearly!
And though we only met to part!
How sweetly! how severely!
Nor life nor death can sever
My soul from thine forever.

Thy days, my little one, were few
An angel's morning visit.
That came and vanished with the dew,
Twas here - 'tis gone - where is it?
Yet didst thou leave behind thee
A clue for love to find thee.
Darling! my last, my youngest love.
The crown of every other I
Though thou art born in heaven above
I am thine only mother I
Nor will affection let me
Believe thou canst forget me.

Then - thou in heaven and I on earth -
May this our hope delight us,
That thou wilt hail my second birth.
When death shall reunite us;
When worlds no more can sever
Mother and child forever.

Maternal Love

       If there is one mortal feeling free from the impurities of earthly frailty that tells in its slightest breathings of its celestial origin, it is that of a mother's love - a mother's chaste, overwhelming and everlasting love of her children.
       The name of a mother is our childhood's talisman, our refuge and safeguard in all our mimic misery; 'tis the first half-formed word that falls from a babbling tongue; the first idea that dawns upon the mind; the first, the fondest and the most lasting tie in which affection can bind the heart of man.
       It is not a feeling of yesterday or to-day ; it is from the beginning the same and unchangeable ; it owes its being to this world, but is independent and self-existent, enduring while one pulse of life animates the breast that fosters it; and if there be anything of mortality which survives the grave, surely its best and noble passion will never perish.
"Maternal Affection" print from 1846.
       Oh! it is a pure and holy emanation from Heaven's mercy, implanted in the breast of woman for the dearest and wisest purposes, to be at once her truest and most sacred pleasure, and the safety and blessing of her offspring.
       'Tis not selfish passion, depending for its permanency on the reciprocation of its advantages; but in its sincerity it casteth out itself, and when the welfare of that object is at stake, it putteth away fear, and knoweth not weariness. It is not excited by form or feature, but rather, by a happy perversion of perception, imbues all things with imaginary beauty. It watches over our helpless infancy with the ceaseless benignity of a guardian angel, anticipates every childish wish, humors every childish fancy, soothes every transient sorrow, sings our sweet lullaby to rest, and cradles us on its warm and throbbing breast, and when pain and sickness prey upon the fragile form, what medicine is there like a mother's kiss, what healing pillow like a mother's bosom!
       And when launched upon the wide ocean of a tempestuous world, what eye gazes on our adventurous voyage with half the eagerness of maternal fondness. amid the sad yet not unpleasing contest of hopes, and fears, and deep anxieties?
       When the rugged path of life has been bravely, patiently and nobly trodden - when prosperity has smiled upon us - when virtue has upheld us amid the world's temptations - virtue which she herself first planted in us - and when fame has bound her laurels round us, is there a heart that throbs with a more lively or greater pleasure?
       Yet it is not prosperity, with her smile and beauty, that tries the purity and fervor of a mother's love; it is in the dark and dreary precincts of adversity, amid the cold frowns of an unfeeling world, in poverty and despair, in sickness and in sorrow, that it shines with a brightness beyond mortality, and, stifling the secret of its own bosom, strives but to pour balm and consolation on the wounded sufferer; and the cup of misery, filled to overflowing, serves but to bind them more firmly and dearly to each other, as the storms of winter bid the sheltering ivy twine itself more closely round the withering oak.
       Absence cannot chill a mother's love, nor can even vice itself destroy a mother's kindness. The lowest as degradations of human frailty cannot wholly blot out the remembrance of the first fond yearnings of your affection, or the faint memorial of primeval innocence; nay, it seems as if the very consciousness of the abject state of her erring child more fully developed the mighty force of that mysterious passion, which can forget and forgive all things; and though the youth of her fairest hopes may be as one cast off from God and man, yet will she not forsake him, but participate in all things save his wickedness!
       I speak not of a mother's agonies when bending over the bed of death! nor of Rachel weeping for her children, because they were not!
       The love of a father may be as deep and sincere, yet it is calmer, and, perhaps, more calculating, and more fully directed in the great periods and ends of life; it cannot descend to those minutiae of affection, those watchful cares for the minor comforts and gratifications of existence, which a mother, from the finer sensibilities of her nature, can more readily appreciate.
       The pages of history abound with the records of maternal love in every age and clime, and every rank of life ; but it is a lesson of never-ending presence, which the heart can feel and acknowledge, and needs not example to teach how to venerate.
       Can there be a being so vile and odious, so dead to nature's impulse, who, in return for constant care, such unvarying kindness, can willingly or heedlessly wound the heart that cherished him, and forsake the lonely one who nursed and sheltered him; who can madly sever the sweetest bonds of human union, and bring down the gray hairs of his parents with sorrow to the grave; who can leave them in their old age to solitude and poverty, while he wantons in the pride of undeserved prosperity?
       If there be, why let him abjure the name of man and herd with the beasts that perish, or let him feel to distraction that worst of human miseries.

"How sharper than a serpent's tooth it is
To have a thankless child." - Shakespeare.  

"A babe is a mother's anchor." - Beecher

Japanese Lullaby

Japanese Lullaby 
by Eugene Field

Sleep, little pigeon, and fold your wings,-
Little blue pigeon with velvet eyes;
Sleep to the singing of mother-bird swinging-
Swinging the nest where her little one lies.

Away out yonder I see a star,-
Silvery star with a tinkling song;
To the soft dew falling I hear it calling-
Calling and tinkling the night along.

In through the window a moonbeam comes,-
Little gold moonbeam with misty wings;
All silently creeping, it asks: "Is he sleeping-
Sleeping and dreaming while mother sings?"

Up from the sea there floats the sob
Of the waves that are breaking upon the shore,
As though they were groaning in anguish, and moan-
ing-
Bemoaning the ship that shall come no more.

But sleep, little pigeon, and fold your wings,-
Little blue pigeon with mournful eyes;
Am I not singing? - see, I am swinging-
Swinging the nest where my darling lies.

The Gift

       I want to give you something child, for we are drifting in the stream of the world. Our lives will be carried apart, and our love forgotten. But I am not so foolish as to hope that I could buy your heart with gifts. Young is your live, your path long, and you drink the love we bring you at one draught and turn and run away from us. You have your play and your playmates. What harm is there if you have no time or thought for us?
       We, indeed, have leisure enough in old age to count the days that are past, to cherish in our hearts what our hands have lost forever.
       The river runs swift with a song, breaking through all barriers. But the mountain stays and remembers, and follows her with his love. by Rabindranath Tagore.

Widow and Child by Alfred Tennyson

 Widow and Child 
by Alfred Tennyson

Home they brought her warrior dead;
She nor swooned, nor uttered cry;
All her maidens, watching, said,
"She must weep or she will die."

Then they praised him soft and low,
Called him worthy to be loved,
Truest friend and noblest foe;
Yet she neither spoke nor moved.

Stole a maiden from her place,
Lightly to the warrior stept,
Took a face-cloth from the face,
Yet she neither moved nor wept.

Rose a nurse of ninety years,
Set his child upon her knee-
Like summer tempest came her tears-
"Sweet my child, I live for thee."

"A sad but very beautiful lullaby. After the execution of the Clan Chief MacGregor of Glenstrae in 1570, his widow composed and sang this lullaby lament to her child."