To A Beautiful Friendless Child single work   poetry   "DID shock of birth-bliss slay thy mother?"
Issue Details: First known date: 1888... 1888 To A Beautiful Friendless Child
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Notes

  • Epigraph: Aged Four Years

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon The Centennial Magazine vol. 1 no. 5 December 1888 Z611736 1888 periodical issue 1888 pg. 327
    Note: Editor's note: The occasion of these verses will be fresh in the minds of many of our readers. A few weeks ago a poor man whose wife had recently died came to the Premier of New South Wales with an adopted child whom he was no longer able to support. Sir Henry Parkes heard the story, which was pathetic in the extreme, and being no less pleased with the gentleness of the boy than with the generous conduct of his foster parent, determined to see what could be done for the advantage of each. It struck him as a touching instance of how the poor help the poor. A man and his wife hear of a child whom somebody wants rid of. They have no children of their own, and without discovering its parents they offer it a home, and, what is almost as important, a name - for hitherto it had none. Time passes. The child grows into a boy four years old. Its foster mother dies, and in vain the husband tries to care for him. But that is impossible. 'I couldn't leave him, even to go and look for work,' he said. The Cabinet Council was stting at the Colonial Secretary's Office when the pair arrived. Sir Henry took the little fellow by the hand and introduced him to his colleagues, who immediately formed a subscription of £50 towards his future maintenance. Then he sent him downstairs to the head messenger's wife for a good 'square meal.' When the meal was over, his hostess enquired if he would like to stop with her altogether, 'No,' he replied, 'I should not. There are too many fathers here.' The expression was childlike in its very suggestiveness. He had known two fathers already, but the idea that there could be more that one mother never entered his mind. He had known but one, and she was a foster mother and - dead.
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon The Illawarra Mercury vol. 34 no. 31 11 December 1888 Z1929978 1888 newspaper issue 1888 pg. 4
  • Appears in:
    y separately published work icon Fragmentary Thoughts Henry Parkes , Sydney : Samuel E. Lees , 1889 Z386474 1889 selected work poetry Sydney : Samuel E. Lees , 1889 pg. 19-21

Works about this Work

The Centennial Magazine 1888 single work column
— Appears in: The Illawarra Mercury , 11 December vol. 34 no. 31 1888; (p. 4)
The Centennial Magazine 1888 single work column
— Appears in: The Illawarra Mercury , 11 December vol. 34 no. 31 1888; (p. 4)
Last amended 21 Jan 2021 13:43:04
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