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				Title:     The Madonna Of The Curb 
			    
Author: Christopher Morley [
More Titles by Morley]		                
			    
On the curb of a city pavement,
      By the ash and garbage cans,
    In the stench and rolling thunder
      Of motor trucks and vans,
    There sits my little lady,
      With brave but troubled eyes,
    And in her arms a baby
      That cries and cries and cries.
    She cannot be more than seven;
      But years go fast in the slums,
    And hard on the pains of winter
      The pitiless summer comes.
    The wail of sickly children
      She knows; she understands
    The pangs of puny bodies,
      The clutch of small hot hands.
    In the deadly blaze of August,
      That turns men faint and mad,
    She quiets the peevish urchins
      By telling a dream she had--
    A heaven with marble counters,
      And ice, and a singing fan;
    And a God in white, so friendly,
      Just like the drug-store man.
    Her ragged dress is dearer
      Than the perfect robe of a queen!
    Poor little lass, who knows not
      The blessing of being clean.
    And when you are giving millions
      To Belgian, Pole and Serb,
    Remember my pitiful lady--
      Madonna of the Curb!
[The end]
Christopher Morley's poem: Madonna Of The Curb
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