Evelyn Sampson |
Happy Thanksgiving to my American readers, and to everyone
else.
Today, I am honoured to present a poem written by my
beautiful mother-in-law, Evelyn Sampson, who died in 1974, long before I met
her son. Her gentle and loving spirit has been with us always. She was a poet
as a young adolescent, and many of her poems were published in Chicago
newspapers. Recently, when I was reading her poetry, I came across one about
the pilgrims, which gave me chills considering that her only child was to be
born on American Thanksgiving, and that her grandson would be a Mayflower
descendant.
Pilgrim Fathers
They came for peace and happiness,
The sisters, sons, and mothers.
For freedom in a far-away land
They came, those Pilgrim fathers!
Much they suffered and endured
For liberty’s dear sake.
And many loved ones were laid to rest
From a sleep they would never wake.
But in them was a spirit true,
And tho the bitter cold made them numb,
They determined in, stay and pave a way
For the generations to come.
Ah, gone are they now - gone forever -
‘Neath the cool green grass for many a day.
Yet the spirit so true that has sprung from them
Shall never fade away.
By
Evelyn Sampson
2 comments:
Thank you for sharing this, dear.
Jerry Sampson
Fantastic!!
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