Towards democracy
The House of Childhood 501
, were so seldom permitted to look ; this was the daily routine . of life which for some inscrutable reason was so rigidly - adhered to;
These are the stairs where up and down moved such queer processions—funerals and weddings, and bustling visitors and elderly aunts and uncles, and the parson and the doctor in their turn;
And you were bade stand aside since you could not understand—
But now you understand it all.
Now, leaving it all,
The window truly for you will never stand open again, nor the sweet night-air through it blow—never again for you on the little coverlet of your bed will the moonlight fall ;
And yet mayhap for the first time will the wind really blow and the moonlight fali,
For the first time shall you really see the face of your father whom you used to meet so often on the stairs.
All the spaces and corners of the house, and the swinging of the doors, and the tones and voices of those behind them, shall be full of meanings which were hidden from you while
you dwelt among them.
Nor shall they ever leave you.
Never so long as yourself lasts shall you forget your mother smoothing out the pillow under your head, last thing at night, and kissing you as you slept;
Nay, every year so long as you live shall you understand