The Mother’s Prayer Poem by Thomas Hill

The Mother’s Prayer



Thou knowest, O God, my griefs,
Thou see’st my bitter tears,
Thou knowest all my sufferings past,
And my foreboding fears.

My husband they have sold;
Alas! the bitter day!
Too true to leave me willingly,
They forced him far away.

Our prattling infants, too,
Most piercing thought of all,
Sold into strangers’ cruel hands,
What evils may befall!

I pray, O God, that thou
Wouldst take them from the earth,
I ask their death, who once from thee,
More madly, asked their birth.

O’er me, weighed down by care,
Pierced through by sorrow’s stings,
O’er me, from day to day the same,
The slave-whip ceaseless swings.

I pray, O God, for him
Who causes all this woe;
Though he no mercy has for us,
To him thy mercy show.

No vengeance would I ask,
Let not thy wrath be felt,
But let thy goodness touch his heart,
Its stubborn hardness melt.

One thing at least I trust,
My only hope it is,
There’ll be no slavery in the world
That follows after this.

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