Uzhur Grannies

Babushka

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This site is dedicated to Uzhur's grandmothers.Grandmother must be in every family because she as well as other famile members helps her family.

Babushka sits before the fire

Upon a winter's night;

The driving winds heap up the snow,

Her hut is snug and tight;

The howling winds--they only make

Babushka's fire more bright!


She hears a knocking at the door:

So late--who can it be?

She hastes to lift the wooden latch,

No thought of fear has she;

The wind-blow candle in her hand

Shines out on strangers three.


Their beards are white with age, and snow

That in the darkness flies;

Their floating locks are long and white,

But kindly are their eyes

That sparkle underneath their brows,

Like stars in frosty skies.


"Babushka, we have come from far,

We tarry but to say,

A little Prince is born this night,

Who all the world shall sway.

Come join the search; come, go with us,

Who go our gifts to pay."


Babushka shivers at the door;

"I would I might behold

The little Prince who shall be Kings

But ah! the night is cold,

The wind so fierce, the snow so deep,

And I, good sirs, am old."


The strangers three, no word they speak,

But fade in snowy space!

Babushka sits before her fire,

And dreams, with wistful face:

"I would that I had requested them,

So I the way might trace!"


When morning comes with blessed light,

I'll early be awake;

My staff in hand I'll go--perchance,

Those strangers I'll o'ertake;

And, for the Child some little toys

I'll carry, for His sake."


The morning came, and, staff in hand,

She wandered in the snow,

She asked the way of all she met,

But none the way could show.

"It must be farther yet," she sighed;

"Then farther will I go."


And still, 'tis said, on Christmas Eve,

When high the drifts are piled,

With staff, with basket on her arm,

Babushka seeks the Child:

At every door her face is seen--

Her wistful face and mild!


Her gifts at every door she leaves;

She bends and murmurs low,

Above each little face half-hid

By pillows white as snow:"

And is He here?" Then softly sighs,

"Nay, farther must I go."


Edith M. Thomas, 1907

The source: http://readrussianbooks.blogspot.ru/2010/12/babushka-poem-by-edith-m-thomas-i-found.html


The graphics by Anna Kovalyova