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Poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox Relics This is her crochet-work, just as she left it, The spool, with the needle caught into its side, And the edging wound up in a neat little bundle; She had been knitting, the day that she died. This is her dress, hanging here in the closet, The last one she hung here; 'twill never be moved; She wore it the morn of the day that she sickened, And it constantly speaks of the maiden we loved. This is her glove, lying here on the table, Bearing the marks of her fingers, you see; Just as she tossed it aside, I shall leave it; It is more than a diamond, or topaz, to me. This is the last book her eye ever glanced in, The blue ribbon mark shows how far she had read. That morn, she was better, she said, and was reading Aloud; and at a dusk, the same day, she was dead. This is a letter: begun, but not finished; Her head ached, she said, and she laid it aside. And these little relics, so sacredly guarded, Are all that are left of the dear girl that died. 1869 Ella Wheeler Wilcox Ella Wheeler Wilcox's other poems:
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