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Literary January 20, 1830

Daily Richmond Whig

Richmond, Virginia

What is this article about?

A first-person poem narrating a child's experience of maternal neglect due to lack of beauty compared to her sister, culminating in redemption through devoted care during the sister's illness, forging a bond of friendship.

Clipping

OCR Quality

95% Excellent

Full Text

[From the Literary Souvenir.]

THE NEGLECTED CHILD.

I never was a favorite;—
My mother never smiled on me:
With half the tenderness
That blessed her fairer child;

I've seen her kiss my sister's cheek
While fondled on her knee:
I've turned away to hide my tears,
There was no kiss for me!

And yet I strove to please, with all
My little store of sense:
I strove to please, and infancy
Can rarely give offence:

But when my artless efforts met
A cold, ungenteel check,
I did not dare to throw myself
In tears upon her neck.

How blessed are the beautiful!
Love watches o'er their birth:
Oh! beauty! in my nursery
I learned to know thy worth;

For even there, I often felt
Forsaken and forlorn:
And wished—for others wished it too—
I never had been born!

I am sure I was affectionate,—
But in my sister's face,
There was a look of love that claimed
A smile or an embrace.

But when I raised my lip, to meet
The pressure children prize,
None knew the feelings of my heart,—
They spake not in my eyes.

But oh! that heart too keenly felt
The anguish of neglect:
I saw my sister's lovely form
With gems and roses decked;

I did not covet them; but oft,
When wantonly reproved,
I envied her the privilege
Of being so beloved.

But soon a time of triumph came,
A time of sorrow too,
For sickness o'er my sister's form
Her venom'd mantle threw,—

The features once so beautiful
Now wore the hue of death;
And former friends shrank fearfully
From her infectious breath.

'Twas then, unwearied, day and night
I watched beside her bed.
And fearlessly upon my breast
I pillowed her poor head.

She lived!—she loved me for my care!
My grief was at an end;
I was a lonely being once,
But now I have a friend!

From Ackermann's Forget Me Not, for 1830.

What sub-type of article is it?

Poem

What themes does it cover?

Moral Virtue Friendship Death Mortality

What keywords are associated?

Neglected Child Sibling Affection Beauty Privilege Family Neglect Illness Care

Literary Details

Title

The Neglected Child.

Key Lines

I Never Was A Favorite;— My Mother Never Smiled On Me: With Half The Tenderness That Blessed Her Fairer Child; How Blessed Are The Beautiful! Love Watches O'er Their Birth: Oh! Beauty! In My Nursery I Learned To Know Thy Worth; She Lived!—She Loved Me For My Care! My Grief Was At An End; I Was A Lonely Being Once, But Now I Have A Friend!

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