CHILD ANGELS.
BY ADELAIDE A. E. PROCTOR.
Our God in heaven, from that holy place, To each of us an angel guide has given; But mothers of dead children have more grace, for they give angels to their God and heaven. How can a mother's heart feel cold or weary, Knowing her dearer self, safe, happy, warm? How can she feel her road too dark or dreary Who knows her treasure sheltered from the storm? How can she sin ? Our hearts may be unheeding, Our God forgot, our holy saints defied ; But can a mother hear her dead child pleading, And thrust those little angel hands aside?— Those little hands stretched down to draw her ever Nearer to God by mother love. We all Are blind and weak ; yet surely she can never, With such a stake in heaven, fail or fall. She knowß, that, when the mighty angels raise Chorus in heaven, one little silver tone Is hers forever ; that one little praise, One little happy voice, is all her own. We may not see her sacred crown of honor ; But all the angels, flitting to and fro, Pause smiling rs they pass ; they look upon her As mother of an angel whom they know. * * * * * Ah ! saints in heaven may pray with earnest will And pity for their weak and erring brothers ; Yet there is prayer in heaven more tender still — The little children pleading for their mothers.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/periodicals/NZT18760728.2.9.1
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New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 174, 28 July 1876, Page 6
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239CHILD ANGELS. New Zealand Tablet, Volume IV, Issue 174, 28 July 1876, Page 6
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