Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.
III. AdversityGuilty, or Not Guilty?
AnonymousS
A creature wan and wild,
In form too small for a woman,
In feature too old for a child.
For a look so worn and pathetic
Was stamped on her pale young face,
It seemed long years of suffering
Must have left that silent trace.
With kindly look, yet keen,
“Is—?” “Mary McGuire, if you please, sir.”
“And your age?” “I am turned fifteen.”
“Well, Mary—” And then from a paper
He slowly and gravely read,
“You are charged here—I am sorry to say it—
With stealing three loaves of bread.
And I hope that you can show
The charge to be false. Now, tell me,
Are you guilty of this, or no?”
A passionate burst of weeping
Was at first her sole reply;
But she dried her tears in a moment,
And looked in the judge’s eye.
My father and mother are dead,
And my little brothers and sisters
Were hungry, and asked me for bread.
At first I earned it for them
By working hard all day,
But somehow the times were hard, sir,
And the work all fell away.
The weather was bitter cold;
The young ones cried and shivered
(Little Johnnie ’s but four years old).
So what was I to do, sir?
I am guilty, but do not condemn;
I took—oh, was it stealing?—
The bread to give to them.”
Graybeard and thoughtless youth—
Knew, as he looked upon her,
That the prisoner spake the truth.
Out from their pockets came kerchiefs,
Out from their eyes sprang tears,
And out from the old faded wallets
Treasures hoarded for years.
The strangest you ever saw,
As he cleared his throat and murmured
Something about the law.
For one so learned in such matters,
So wise in dealing with men,
He seemed on a simple question
Sorely puzzled just then.
When at last these words they heard,
“The sentence of this young prisoner
Is for the present deferred.”
And no one blamed him, or wondered,
When he went to her and smiled,
And tenderly led from the court-room,
Himself, the “guilty” child.