A Prodigal Son
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Does that lamp still burn in my Father’s house, Which he kindled the night I went away? I turned once beneath the cedar boughs, And marked it gleam with a golden ray; Did he think to light me home some day? Hungry here with the crunching swine, Hungry harvest have I to reap; In a dream I count my Father’s kine, I hear the tinkling bells of his sheep, I watch his lambs that browse and leap. There is plenty of bread at home, His servants have bread enough and to spare; The purple wine-fat froths with foam, Oil and spices make sweet the air, While I perish hungry and bare. Rich and blessed those servants, rather Than I who see not my Father’s face! I will arise and go to my Father:— “Fallen from sonship, beggared of grace, Grant me. Father, a servant’s place.”
Next 10 Poems
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Study ( A Soul )
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Triad
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A White Hen
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Wintry Sonnet
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Word For The Dumb
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : After Death
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : Aloof
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : An Alphabet
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : An Apple-gathering
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : An Echo From Willowwood
Previous 10 Poems
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Portrait
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Pin
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Pause
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Handy Mole
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Discovery
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Daughter Of Eve
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A City Plum
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Birthday
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Better Resurrrection
- Christina Georgina Rossetti : A Better Resurrection