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Title: Dreams and Images - An Anthology of Catholic Poets
Author: Various
Language: English
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DREAMS AND IMAGES

AN ANTHOLOGY OF CATHOLIC POETS



DREAMS AND IMAGES

AN ANTHOLOGY

_of_

CATHOLIC POETS

_Edited by_

JOYCE KILMER

TORONTO

THE MUSSON BOOK COMPANY

LIMITED



Copyright, 1917,

Boni & Liveright, Inc.


Printed in the U. S. of America



ACKNOWLEDGMENT


For advice and assistance in collecting and arranging these poems,
I am grateful to many friends, especially to Mr. T. R. Smith, Miss
Caroline Giltinan and Mr. John Bunker. The publishers, editors and
authors who have kindly consented to let me use copyright material
are numerous and I assure them of my deep sense of obligation. In
particular I desire to thank the following publishers for their
generous permission to use all that I required from their lists:
Charles Scribner’s Sons, John Lane Company, Small, Maynard & Company,
P. J. Kennedy Sons, Frederick A. Stokes Company, _The Catholic
World_, Houghton Mifflin Company, The Encyclopaedia Press, Henry
Holt & Company, The Devin-Adair Company, Little, Brown & Company, The
Macmillan Company, Elkin Mathews, _The Ave Maria_, Laurence Gomme, and
Wilfrid Meynell.

  J. K.



            To

  REV. JAMES J. DALY, S.J.



INTRODUCTION


This is not a collection of devotional poems. It is not an attempt
to rival Orby Shipley’s admirable “Carmina Mariana” or any other
similar anthology. What I have tried to do is to bring together the
poems in English that I like best that were written by Catholics since
the middle of the Nineteenth Century. There are in this book poems
religious in theme; there are also love-songs and war songs. But I
think that it may be called a book of Catholic poems. For a Catholic is
not a Catholic only when he prays; he is a Catholic in all the thoughts
and actions of his life. And when a Catholic attempts to reflect in
words some of the Beauty of which as a poet he is conscious, he cannot
be far from prayer and adoration.

The Church has never been without her great poets. And in the
Nineteenth Century there was a splendid renascence of Catholic poetry
written in English. It had already begun when Francis Thompson
wrote his Essay on Shelley, in which he longed for the by-gone days
when poetry was “the lesser sister and helpmate of the Church; the
minister to the mind, as the Church to the soul.” The members of the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood were not Catholics, but their movement was
related to the renascence of Catholic poetry--it was an attempt to
restore to art and letters some of the glory of the days before what
is called the Reformation. Coventry Patmore carried the theories of the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood to their logical conclusion, as Newman did
those of the Tractarians. Coventry Patmore became a Catholic, and found
in his Faith his inspiration and his theme. And his disciple Francis
Thompson, born to the Faith which Patmore reached by way of the divine
adventure of conversion, with art even greater than that of his master,
made of the language of Protestant England an instrument of Catholic
adoration.

A few of the poets represented in this book were not yet Catholics when
they wrote the poems I have quoted. But I do not think that anyone will
find fault with me for including Newman and Hawker among the Catholic
poets. I am very sorry that the limitations of space have made me
exclude many poems dear to me, many poems that are part of the world’s
literary heritage. There should be many Catholic anthologies.

The poet sees things hidden from other men, but he sees them only in
dreams. A poet is (by the very origin of the word) a maker, but a
maker of images, not a creator of life. This is a book of reflections
of the Beauty which mortal eyes can see only in reflection, a book of
dreams of that Truth which one day we shall waking understand. A book
of images it is, too, containing representations carved by those who
worked by the aid of memory, the strange memory of men living in Faith.

          JOYCE KILMER.

  August, 1917.
      165th Regiment, Camp Mills, Mineola, New York.



CONTENTS


                                                                    PAGE

  BELLOC, HILAIRE
    Our Lord and Lady                                                  1
    To the Balliol Men Still in Africa                                 2
    The South Country                                                  3
    The Early Morning                                                  6
    The Prophet Lost in the Hills at Evening                           6
    The Birds                                                          7
    Courtesy                                                           8
    Noel                                                               9

  BENSON, ROBERT HUGH
    After a Retreat                                                   10
    The Teresian Contemplation                                        11

  BLUNT, WILFRED SCAWEN
    How Shall I Build                                                 12
    Song                                                              13
    The Desolate City                                                 13

  BRAYTON, TERESA
    A Christmas Song                                                  16

  CAMPBELL, NANCY
    Like One I Know                                                   18

  CARBERY, ETHNA
    Mea Culpa                                                         19
    In Tir-na’n-Og                                                    20

  CARROLL, P. J.
    Lady Day in Ireland                                               22
    St. Patrick’s Treasure                                            23

  CASEY, D. A.
    The Spouse of Christ                                              24

  COLUM, PADRAIC
    Christ the Comrade                                                25
    An Old Woman of the Roads                                         25

  CONWAY, KATHERINE ELEANOR
    The Heaviest Cross of All                                         26
    Saturninus                                                        28

  COX, ELEANOR ROGERS
    Dreaming of Cities Dead                                           29
    Death of Cuchulain                                                30
    Gods and Heroes of the Gael                                       32
    At Benediction                                                    34

  CUSTANCE, OLIVE
    Primrose Hill                                                     34
    Twilight                                                          35

  DALY, THOMAS A.
    To a Thrush                                                       36
    To a Plain Sweetheart                                             40
    To a Robin                                                        40
    The Poet                                                          41
    October                                                           42

  DE VERE, AUBREY
    Sorrow                                                            43
    Human Life                                                        44
    Cardinal Manning                                                  45
    Song                                                              45

  DOLLARD, JAMES B.
    The Sons of Patrick                                               46
    Song of the Little Villages                                       48
    The Soul of Karnaghan Buidhe                                      49

  DONAHUE, D. J.
    The Angelic Chorus                                                51

  DONNELLY, ELEANOR
    Ladye Chapel at Eden Hall                                         52
    Mary Immaculate                                                   52

  DOWNING, ELEANOR
    The Pilgrim                                                       53
    On the Feast of the Assumption                                    54
    Mary                                                              55

  DOWSON, ERNEST
    Extreme Unction                                                   58
    Benedictio Domini                                                 58
    Carthusians                                                       58

  DRANE, AUGUSTA T.
    Maris Stella                                                      60

  EARLS, S.J., MICHAEL
    An Autumn Rose Tree                                               62
    To a Carmelite Postulant                                          63

  EDEN, HELEN PARRY
    A Purpose of Amendment                                            64
    The Confessional                                                  65
    An Elegy                                                          66
    Sorrow                                                            70

  EDMUND, C.P., FATHER
    Our Lady’s Death                                                  71

  EGAN, MAURICE FRANCIS
    Vigil of the Immaculate Conception                                71
    The Old Violin                                                    72
    Maurice de Guerin                                                 73
    He Made Us Free                                                   73

  FABER, FATHER
    Grandeur of Mary                                                  75
    Right Must Win                                                    77

  FITZPATRICK, JOHN
    Mater Dolorosa                                                    79

  FURLONG, ALICE
    Yuletide                                                          79

  GAFFNEY, O.P., FRANCIS A.
    Our Lady of the Rosary                                            81

  GARESCHÉ, S.J., EDWARD F.
    At the Leap of the Waters                                         81
    Niagara                                                           83

  GILTINAN, CAROLINE
    Communion                                                         85

  GRIFFIN, GERALD
    The Nightingale                                                   86

  GUINEY, LOUISE IMOGEN
    Tryste Noel                                                       86
    The Wild Ride                                                     87
    Ode for a Master Mariner Ashore                                   89
    In Leinster                                                       91

  HAWKER, ROBERT STEPHEN
    Aunt Mary                                                         92
    King Arthur’s Wassail                                             93

  HAYES, JAMES M.
    Old Nuns                                                          94
    The Mother of the Rose                                            95
    Transfiguration                                                   96

  HICKEY, EMILY M.
    Beloved, It Is Morn                                               97
    A Sea Story                                                       98

  HOPKINS, S.J., GERARD
    The Starlight Night                                               99
    The Habit of Perfection                                          100
    Spring                                                           101

  IRIS, SCHARMEL
    The Friar of Genoa                                               102

  JOHNSON, LIONEL
    The Dark Angel                                                   103
    Te Martyrum Candidatus                                           105
    Christmas and Ireland                                            106
    To My Patrons                                                    108
    Our Lady of the Snows                                            109
    Cadgwith                                                         111
    A Friend                                                         112
    The Statue of King Charles at Charing Cross                      113

  KELLY, BLANCHE MARY
    The Housewife’s Prayer                                           115
    Brother Juniper                                                  116

  KELLEY, MGR., F. C.
    The Throne of the King                                           117

  LATHROP, GEORGE PARSONS
    The Child’s Wish Granted                                         127
    Charity                                                          128

  LATHROP, ROSE HAWTHORNE
    A Song Before Grief                                              128
    The Clock’s Song                                                 129

  LEAMY, SIR EDMUND
    Ireland                                                          130

  LEAMY, EDMUND (Senior)
    Music Magic                                                      132
    Gethsemane                                                       133
    My Lips Would Sing----                                           134
    My Ship                                                          135
    Visions                                                          135

  LESLIE, SHANE
    Ireland, Mother of Priests                                       137

  LINDSAY, RUTH TEMPLE
    The Hunters                                                      138

  LIVINGSTON, FATHER
    In Cherry Land                                                   140

  M. S. M.
    Surrender                                                        141

  MANGAN, JAMES CLARENCE
    Pentecost                                                        142
    Dark Rosaleen                                                    143

  MACDONAGH, THOMAS
    What is White?                                                   146
    Wishes for My Son                                                147

  MACMANUS, SEUMAS
    Resignation                                                      148
    In Dark Hour                                                     150

  MAYNARD, THEODORE
    A Song of Colours                                                151
    The World’s Miser                                                152
    Cecidit, Cecidit, Babylon Magna                                  153
    A Song of Laughter                                               154
    Apocalypse                                                       155

  MCCARTHY, DENIS A.
    St. Brigid                                                       156
    Rosa Mystica                                                     160
    The Poor Man’s Daily Bread                                       161

  MCGEE, THOMAS D’ARCY
    To Ask Our Lady’s Patronage                                      162

  MEYNELL, ALICE
    A General Communion                                              163
    The Shepherdess                                                  163
    Christ in the Universe                                           164
    “I Am the Way”                                                   165
    Via, et Veritas, et Vita                                         166
    Unto Us a Son is Given                                           166
    To a Daisy                                                       167
    The Newer Vainglory                                              168

  MEYNELL, WILFRID
    The Folded Flock                                                 168

  MORIARTY, HELEN L.
    Convent Echoes                                                   169

  NEWMAN, JOHN HENRY
    England                                                          170
    The Pillar of the Cloud                                          171
    The Greek Fathers                                                171
    Relics of Saints                                                 172
    The Sign of the Cross                                            173

  O’DONNELL, C.S.C., CHARLES L.
    The Son of God                                                   173
    To St. Joseph                                                    174
    The Dead Musician                                                175

  O’HAGAN, THOMAS
    Giotto’s Campanile                                               178

  O’REILLY, JOHN BOYLE
    Name of Mary                                                     179

  O’REILLY, MARY A.
    A Christmas Carol                                                180

  O. SHEEL, SHAEMAS
    Roma Mater Sempaeterna                                           182
    Mary’s Baby                                                      183
    They Went Forth to Battle                                        183
    He Whom A Dream Hath Possessed                                   184

  PALLEN, CONDÉ BENOIST
    Maria Immaculata                                                 186
    The Raising of the Flag                                          191
    The Babe of Bethlehem                                            194

  PATMORE, COVENTRY
    The Toys                                                         195
    “If I Were Dead”                                                 197
    Departure                                                        197
    Regina Cœli                                                      199

  PEARSE, P. H.
    Ideal                                                            199

  PHILLIPS, CHARLES
    Music                                                            200

  PLUNKETT, JOSEPH M.
    I See His Blood Upon the Rose                                    202
    The Stars Sang in God’s Garden                                   202

  PROBYN, MAY
    Is It Nothing to You?                                            203
    The Bees of Myddleton Manor                                      204

  PROCTOR, ADELAIDE ANNE
    A Legend                                                         210
    The Sacred Heart                                                 211
    The Annunciation                                                 214
    Our Daily Bread                                                  216

  RANDALL, JAMES RYDER
    My Maryland                                                      217
    Magdalen                                                         220
    Why the Robin’s Breast Was Red                                   221

  REPPLIER, AGNES
    Le Repos in Egypte--The Sphinx                                   221

  ROCHE, JAMES JEFFREY
    Andromeda                                                        222
    Nature the False Goddess                                         223
    Three Doves                                                      224
    The Way of the World                                             225

  ROONEY, JOHN JEROME
    Ave Maria                                                        225
    Revelation                                                       227
    Marquette on the Shores of the Mississippi                       229
    The Empire Builder                                               230
    The Men Behind the Guns                                          233

  RUSSELL, S.J., MATTHEW
    A Thought From Cardinal Newman                                   234

  RYAN, ABRAM J.
    The Conquered Banner                                             235
    A Child’s Wish                                                   237
    Sword of Robert E. Lee                                           238
    Song of the Mystic                                               239

  SETON, E.
    Mary, Virgin and Mother                                          242

  SIGERSON DORA
    The Wind on the Hills                                            242

  SPALDING, JOHN LANCASTER
    Believe and Take Heart                                           244

  STODDARD, CHARLES WARREN
    Ave Maria Bells                                                  245
    Stigmata                                                         246
    The Bells of San Gabriel                                         247

  STRAHAN, G.S.C., SPEER
    The Poor                                                         249
    The Promised Country                                             250
    Holy Communion                                                   250

  SWAN, CAROLINE D.
    Stars of Cheer                                                   251

  TABB, JOHN BANNISTER
    Christ and the Pagan                                             252
    Out of Bounds                                                    253
    Father Damien                                                    253
    Recognition                                                      253
    “Is Thy Servant a Dog?”                                          254

  THOMPSON, FRANCIS
    Lilium Regis                                                     254
    To the English Martyrs                                           255
    The Hound of Heaven                                              261
    The Dread of Height                                              267
    To My Godchild                                                   270

  TYNAN, KATHERINE
    Michael the Archangel                                            272
    Planting Bulbs                                                   274
    Sheep and Lambs                                                  275
    The Making of Birds                                              276
    The Man of the House                                             278

  WALSH, THOMAS
    Cœlo et in Terra                                                 279
    Egidio of Coimbra                                                281



Dreams and Images



OUR LORD AND OUR LADY

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    They warned Our Lady for the Child
      That was Our Blessed Lord,
    And She took Him into the desert wild,
      Over the camel’s ford.

    And a long song She sang to Him
      And a short story told:
    And She wrapped Him in a woolen cloak
      To keep Him from the cold.

    But when Our Lord was grown a man
      The Rich they dragged Him down,
    And they crucified Him in Golgotha,
      Out and beyond the Town.

    They crucified Him on Calvary,
      Upon an April day;
    And because He had been her little Son
      She followed Him all the way.

    Our Lady stood beside the Cross,
      A little space apart,
    And when She heard Our Lord cry out
      A sword went through Her Heart.

    They laid Our Lord in a marble tomb,
      Dead, in a winding sheet.
    But Our Lady stands above the world
      With the white Moon at Her feet.



TO THE BALLIOL MEN STILL IN AFRICA

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    Years ago when I was at Balliol,
      Balliol men--and I was one--
    Swam together in winter rivers,
      Wrestled together under the sun.
    And still in the heart of us, Balliol, Balliol,
      Loved already, but hardly known,
    Welded us each of us into the others:
      Called a levy and chose her own.

    Here is a House that armours a man
      With the eyes of a boy and the heart of a ranger,
    And a laughing way in the teeth of the world
      And a holy hunger and thirst for danger:
    Balliol made me, Balliol fed me,
      Whatever I had she gave me again:
    And the best of Balliol loved and led me,
      God be with you, Balliol men.

    I have said it before, and I say it again,
      There was treason done, and a false word spoken,
    And England under the dregs of men,
      And bribes about, and a treaty broken:
    But angry, lonely, hating it still,
      I wished to be there in spite of the wrong.
    My heart was heavy for Cumnor Hill
      And the hammer of galloping all day long.

    Galloping outward into the weather,
      Hands a-ready and battle in all:
    Words together and wine together
      And song together in Balliol Hall.
    Rare and single! Noble and few!...
      Oh! they have wasted you over the sea!
    The only brothers ever I knew,
      The men that laughed and quarrelled with me.

           *       *       *       *       *

    Balliol made me, Balliol fed me,
      Whatever I had she gave me again;
    And the best of Balliol loved and led me,
      God be with you, Balliol men.



THE SOUTH COUNTRY

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    When I am living in the Midlands
      That are sodden and unkind,
    I light my lamp in the evening:
      My work is left behind;
    And the great hills of the South Country
      Come back into my mind.

    The great hills of the South Country
      They stand along the sea;
    And it’s there walking in the high woods
      That I could wish to be,
    And the men that were boys when I was a boy
      Walking along with me.

    The men that live in North England
      I saw them for a day:
    Their hearts are set upon the waste fells,
      Their skies are fast and grey;
    From their castle-walls a man may see;
      The mountains far away.

    The men that live in West England
      They see the Severn strong,
    A-rolling on rough water brown,
      Light aspen leaves along.
    They have the secret of the Rocks,
      And the oldest kind of song.

    But the men that live in the South Country
      Are the kindest and most wise,
    They get their laughter from the loud surf,
      And the faith in their happy eyes
    Comes surely from our Sister the Spring
      When over the sea she flies;
    The violets suddenly bloom at her feet,
      She blesses us with surprise.

    I never get between the pines
      But I smell the Sussex air;
    Nor I never come on a belt of sand
      But my home is there.
    And along the sky the line of Downs
      So noble and so bare.

    A lost thing could I never find,
      Nor a broken thing mend:
    And I fear I shall be all alone
      When I get towards the end.
    Who will there be to comfort me
      Or who will be my friend?

    I will gather and carefully make my friends
      Of the men of the Sussex Weald,
    They watch the stars from silent folds,
      They stiffly plough the field.
    By them and the God of the South Country
      My poor soul shall be healed.

    If I ever become a rich man,
      Or if ever I grow to be old,
    I will build a house with deep thatch
      To shelter me from the cold,
    And there shall the Sussex songs be sung
      And the story of Sussex told.

    I will hold my house in the high wood
      Within a walk of the sea,
    And the men that were boys when I was a boy
      Shall sit and drink with me.



THE EARLY MORNING

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    The moon on the one hand, the dawn on the other:
    The moon is my sister, the dawn is my brother,
    The moon on my left and the dawn on my right.
    My brother, good morning: my sister, good night.



THE PROPHET LOST IN THE HILLS AT EVENING

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    Strong God which made the topmost stars
      To circulate and keep their course,
    Remember me; whom all the bars
      Of sense and dreadful fate enforce.

    Above me in your heights and tall,
      Impassable the summits freeze,
    Below the haunted waters call
      Impassable beyond the trees.

    I hunger and I have no bread.
      My gourd is empty of the wine.
    Surely the footsteps of the dead
      Are shuffling softly close to mine!

    It darkens. I have lost the ford.
      There is a change on all things made.
    The rocks have evil faces, Lord,
      And I am awfully afraid.

    Remember me! the Voids of Hell
      Expand enormous all around.
    Strong friend of souls, Emmanuel,
      Redeem me from accursed ground.

    The long descent of wasted days,
      To these at last have led me down;
    Remember that I filled with praise
    The meaningless and doubtful ways
      That lead to an eternal town.

    I challenged and I kept the Faith,
      The bleeding path alone I trod;
    It darkens. Stand about my wraith,
      And harbour me--almighty God!



THE BIRDS

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    When Jesus Christ was four years old,
    The angels brought Him toys of gold,
    Which no man ever had bought or sold.

    And yet with these He would not play.
    He made Him small fowl out of clay,
    And blessed them till they flew away:
          _Tu creasti Domine_.

    Jesus Christ, Thou child so wise,
    Bless mine hands and fill mine eyes,
    And bring my soul to Paradise.



COURTESY

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


    Of Courtesy, it is much less
    Than Courage of Heart or Holiness,
    Yet in my Walks it seems to me
    That the Grace of God is in Courtesy.

    On Monks I did in Storrington fall,
    They took me straight into their Hall;
    I saw Three Pictures on a wall,
    And Courtesy was in them all.

    The first Annunciation;
    The second the Visitation;
    The third the Consolation,
    Of God that was Our Lady’s Son.

    The first was of Saint Gabriel;
    On Wings a-flame from Heaven he fell;
    And as he went upon one knee
    He shone with Heavenly Courtesy.

    Our Lady out of Nazareth rode----
    It was her month of heavy load;
    Yet was Her face both great and kind,
    For Courtesy was in Her Mind.

    The third it was our Little Lord,
    Whom all the Kings in arms adored;
    He was so small you could not see
    His large intent of Courtesy.

    Our Lord, that was Our Lady’s Son,
    Go bless you, People, one by one;
    My Rhyme is written, my work is done.



NOEL

BY HILAIRE BELLOC


I

    On a winter’s night long time ago
      (_The bells ring loud and the bells ring low_),
    When high howled wind, and down fell snow
      (Carillon, Carilla).
    Saint Joseph he and Notre Dame,
    Riding on an ass, full weary came
    From Nazareth into Bethlehem,
      And the small child Jesus smile on you.


II

    And Bethlehem inn they stood before
      (_The bells ring less and the bells ring more_),
    The landlord bade them begone from his door
      (Carillon, Carilla).
    “Poor folk” (says he), “must lie where they may,
    For the Duke of Jewry comes this way,
    With all his train on a Christmas Day.”
      And the small child Jesus smile on you.


III

    Poor folk that may my carol hear
      (_The bells ring single and the bells ring clear_),
    See! God’s one child had hardest cheer!
      (Carillon, Carilla).
    Men grown hard on a Christmas morn;
    The dumb beast by and a babe forlorn.
    It was very, very cold when our Lord was born.
      And the small child Jesus smile on you.


IV

    Now these were Jews as Jews may be
      (_The bells ring merry and the bells ring free_).
    But Christian men in a band are we
      (Carillon, Carilla).
    Empty we go, and ill be-dight,
    Singing Noel on a Winter’s night.
    Give us to sup by the warm firelight,
      And the small child Jesus smile on you.



AFTER A RETREAT

BY ROBERT HUGH BENSON


    What hast thou learnt to-day?
    Hast thou sounded awful mysteries,
    Hast pierced the veiléd skies,
    Climbed to the feet of God,
    Trodden where saints have trod,
    Fathomed the heights above?
          _Nay,
    This only have I learnt, that God is love._

    What hast thou heard to-day?
    Hast heard the Angel-trumpets cry,
    And rippling harps reply;
      Heard from the Throne of flame
    Whence God incarnate came
    Some thund’rous message roll?
          _Nay,
    This have I heard, His voice within my soul._

    What hast thou felt to-day?
    The pinions of the Angel-guide
    That standeth at thy side
    In rapturous ardours beat,
    Glowing, from head to feet,
    In ecstasy divine?
          _Nay,
    This only have I felt, Christ’s hand in mine._



THE TERESIAN CONTEMPLATIVE

BY ROBERT HUGH BENSON


    She moves in tumult; round her lies
      The silence of the world of grace;
    The twilight of our mysteries
      Shines like high noonday on her face;
    Our piteous guesses, dim with fears,
    She touches, handles, sees, and hears.

    In her all longings mix and meet;
      Dumb souls through her are eloquent;
    She feels the world beneath her feet
      Thrill in a passionate intent;
    Through her our tides of feeling roll
    And find their God within her soul.

    Her faith and awful Face of God
      Brightens and blinds with utter light;
    Her footsteps fall where late He trod;
      She sinks in roaring voids of night;
    Cries to her Lord in black despair,
    And knows, yet knows not, He is there.

    A willing sacrifice she takes
      The burden of our fall within;
    Holy she stands; while on her breaks
      The lightning of the wrath of sin;
    She drinks her Saviour’s cup of pain,
    And, one with Jesus, thirsts again.



HOW SHALL I BUILD

BY WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT


    How shall I build my temple to the Lord,
      Unworthy I, who am thus foul of heart?
    How shall I worship who no traitor word
      Know but of love to play a suppliant’s part?
      How shall I pray, whose soul is as a mart,
    For thoughts unclean, whose tongue is as a sword
      Even for those it loves, to wound and smart?
    Behold how little I can help Thee, Lord.

    The Temple I would build should be all white,
      Each stone the record of a blameless day;
    The souls that entered there should walk in light,
      Clothed in high chastity and wisely gay.
    Lord, here is darkness. Yet this heart unwise,
    Bruised in Thy service, take in sacrifice.



SONG

BY WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT


    O fly not, Pleasure, pleasant-hearted Pleasure;
      Fold me thy wings, I prithee, yet and stay:
        For my heart no measure
        Knows, or other treasure
      To buy a garland for my love to-day.

    And thou, too, Sorrow, tender-hearted Sorrow,
      Thou gray-eyed mourner, fly not yet away:
        For I fain would borrow
        Thy sad weeds to-morrow,
      To make a mourning for love’s yesterday.

    The voice of Pity, Time’s divine dear Pity,
      Moved me to tears: I dared not say them nay,
        But passed forth from the city,
        Making thus my ditty
      Of fair love lost forever and a day.



THE DESOLATE CITY

BY WILFRID SCAWEN BLUNT


    Dark to me is the earth. Dark to me are the heavens.
      Where is she that I loved, the woman with eyes like stars?
    Desolate are the streets. Desolate is the city.
      A city taken by storm, where none are left but the slain.

    Sadly I rose at dawn, undid the latch of my shutters,
      Thinking to let in light, but I only let in love.
    Birds in the boughs were awake; I listen’d to their chaunting;
    Each one sang to his love; only I was alone.

    This, I said in my heart, is the hour of life and pleasure.
      Now each creature on earth has his joy, and lives in the sun,
    Each in another’s eyes finds light, the light of compassion,
      This is the moment of pity, this is the moment of love.

    Speak, O desolate city! Speak, O silence in sadness!
      Where is she that loved in my strength, that spoke to my soul?
    Where are those passionate eyes that appealed to my eyes in passion?
      Where is the mouth that kiss’d me, the breast that I laid to my
          own?

    Speak, thou soul of my soul, for rage in my heart is kindled.
      Tell me, where didst thou flee in the day of destruction and fear?
    See, my arms enfold thee, enfolding thus all heaven,
      See, my desire is fulfilled in thee, for it fills the earth.

    Thus in my grief I lamented. Then turned I from the window,
      Turn’d to the stair, and the open door, and the empty street,
    Crying aloud in my grief, for there was none to chide me,
      None to mock my weakness, none to behold my tears.

    Groping I went, as blind. I sought her house, my beloved’s.
      There I stopp’d at the silent door, and listen’d and tried the
          latch.
    Love, I cried, dost thou slumber? This is no hour for slumber,
      This is the hour of love, and love I bring in my hand.

    I knew the house with its windows barr’d, and its leafless fig-tree,
      Climbing round by the doorstep, the only one in the street;
    I knew where my hope had climbed to its goal and there encircled,
      All those desolate walls once held, my beloved’s heart.

    There in my grief she consoled me. She loved when I loved not.
      She put her hand in my hand, and set her lips to my lips.
    She told me all her pain and show’d me all her trouble.
      I, like a fool, scarce heard, hardly return’d her kiss.

    Love, thy eyes were like torches. They changed as I beheld them.
      Love, thy lips were like gems, the seal thou settest on my life.
    Love, if I loved not then, behold this hour thy vengeance;
      This is the fruit of thy love and thee, the unwise grown wise.

    Weeping strangled my voice. I call’d out, but none answered;
      Blindly the windows gazed back at me, dumbly the door;
    She whom I love, who loved me, look’d not on my yearning,
      Gave me no more her hands to kiss, show’d me no more her soul.

    Therefore the earth is dark to me, the sunlight blackness,
      Therefore I go in tears and alone, by night and day;
    Therefore I find my love in heaven, no light, no beauty,
      A heaven taken by storm, where none are left but the slain!



A CHRISTMAS SONG

BY TERESA BRAYTON


    O Lord, as You lay so soft and white,
      A Babe in a manger stall,
    With the big star flashing across the night,
      Did you know and pity us all?
    Did the wee hands, close as a rosebud curled,
      With the call of their mission ache,
    To be out and saving a weary world
      For Your merciful Father’s sake?

    Did You hear the cries of the groping blind,
      The woe of the leper’s prayer,
    The surging sorrow of all mankind,
      As You lay by Your Mother there?
    Beyond the shepherds, low bending down,
      The long, long road did You see
    That led from peaceful Bethlehem town
      To the summit of Calvary?

    The world grown weary of wasting strife,
      Had called for the Christ to rise;
    For sin had poisoned the springs of life
      And only the dead were wise.
    But, wrapped in a dream of scornful pride,
      Too high were its eyes to see
    A Child, foredoomed to be crucified,
      On a peasant Mother’s knee.

    But, while the heavens with glad acclaim
      Sang out the tale of Your birth,
    A mystic echo of comfort came
      To the desolate souls of earth.
    For the thrill of a slowly turning tide
      Was felt in that grey daybreak,
    As if God, the Father, had sanctified
      All sorrow for One Man’s sake.

    O Child of the Promise! Lord of Love!
      O Master of all the earth!
    While the angels are singing their songs above,
      We bring our gifts to Your birth.
    Just the blind man’s cry, and the lame man’s pace,
      And the leper’s pitiful call;
    On these, over infinite fields of space,
      Look down, for You know them all.



LIKE ONE I KNOW

BY NANCY CAMPBELL


    Little Christ was good, and lay
    Sleeping, smiling in the hay;
    Never made the cows round eyes
    Open wider at His cries;
    Never when the night was dim,
    Startled guardian Seraphim,
    Who above Him in the beams
    Kept their watch round His white dreams;
    Let the rustling brown mice creep
    Undisturbed about His sleep.
    Yet if it had not been so--
    Had He been like one I know,
    Fought with little fumbling hands,
    Kicked inside His swaddling bands,
    Puckered wilful crimsoning face--
    Mary Mother, full of grace,
    At that little naughty thing,
    Still had been a-worshipping.



MEA CULPA

BY ETHNA CARBERY


    Be pitiful, my God!
      No hard-won gifts I bring--
    But empty, pleading hands
      To Thee at evening.

    Spring came, white-browed and young,
      I, too, was young with Spring.
    There was a blue, blue heaven
      Above a skylark’s wing.

    Youth is the time for joy,
      I cried, it is not meet
    To mount the heights of toil
      With child-soft feet.

    When Summer walked the land
      In Passion’s red arrayed,
    Under green sweeping boughs
      My couch I made.

    The noon-tide heat was sore,
     I slept the Summer through;
    An angel waked me--“Thou
      Hast work to do.”

    I rose and saw the sheaves
      Upstanding in a row;
    The reapers sang Thy praise
      While passing to and fro.

    My hands were soft with ease,
      Long were the Autumn hours;
    I left the ripened sheaves
      For poppy-flowers.

    But lo! now Winter glooms,
      And gray is in my hair,
    Whither has flown the world
      I found so fair?

    My patient God, forgive!
      Praying Thy pardon sweet
    I lay a lonely heart
      Before Thy feet.



IN TIR-NA’N-OG

BY ETHNA CARBERY


                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    Summer and spring go hand in hand, and in the radiant weather
    Brown autumn leaves and winter snow come floating down together.

                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    The sagans sway this way and that, the twisted fern uncloses,
    The quicken-berry hides its red above the tender roses.

                        _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                        In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    The blackbird lilts, the robin chirps, the linnet wearies never,
    They pipe to dancing feet of _Sidhe_ and thus shall pipe forever.

                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    All in a drift of apple blooms my true love there is roaming,
    He will not come although I pray from dawning until gloaming.

                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    The _Sidhe_ desired my Heart’s Delight, they lured him from my
        keeping,
    He stepped within a fairy ring while all the world was sleeping.

                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    He hath forgotten hill and glen where misty shadows gather,
    The bleating of the mountain sheep, the cabin of his father.

                      _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                      In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    He wanders in a happy dream thro’ scented golden hours,
    He flutes, to woo a fairy love, knee deep in fairy flowers.

                    _In Tir-na’n-Og,
                    In Tir-na’n-Og,_
    No memory hath he of my face, no sorrow for my sorrow,
    My flax is spun, my wheel is hushed, and so I wait the morrow.



LADY DAY IN IRELAND

BY P. J. CARROLL, C.S.C.


    Through the long August day, mantled blue with a sky of Our Lady,
      They are there at the well from the dawn till the sea birds go
          home;
    And the trees bending down with broad leaves offer spots that are
        shady,
      Where the heart is at rest, sighing prayers till the shadows are
          come.

    The brown beads and the crucifix pass in procession through fingers
      That are pale as the snow or are hardened from labor and pain.
    In each _Ave_ they whisper the deep Celtic tenderness lingers,
      Like a sweet phrase in song that is echoed and echoed again.

    Marching down the white road with the sun in the noon of his
        splendor
      Are the children, with joy in the blue of their innocent eyes;
    In their hearts is a song, breaking forth into words that are
        tender,
      Unto her with the gold of the stars and the blue of the skies.

    In the still summer air there’s a chorus of minstrelsy breaking,
      There are flashes of gold with a flutter and waving of wings:
    Mary’s birds are they, come with the dawn, all the green woods
        forsaking,
      Every heart in them breaking for love with the message it brings.

    Through the calm August day, with Our Lady’s blue sky far above
        them,
      And beyond the grey mountains where slumbers the Irish green sea,
    There they speak to her, weep while they pray to her, beg her to
        love them,
      Till beyond the bright stars where their home and their treasure
          shall be.



ST. PATRICK’S TREASURE

BY P. J. CARROLL, C.S.C.


    Called son by many lands,
      Thou art a father unto one.
    Of all these mothers claiming thee,
    By honored titles naming thee,
      We ask: Where is thy priceless birthright gone?

    That blessed faith of thine,
      They mothering thee have sold.
    But she, thy daughter dutiful,
    Has kept thy treasure beautiful
      Through many sorrows in her heart of gold.



THE SPOUSE OF CHRIST

BY D. A. CASEY


    He came to her from out eternal years,
    A smile upon His lips, a tender smile
    That, somehow, spoke of partings and of tears.

    ’Twas eventide, and silence brooded low
    On earth and sky--the hour when haunting fears
    Of mystery pursue us as we go.

    Strange, mystic shadows filled the temple dim,
    But on the Golden Door the ruby glow
    Spoke orisons more sweet than vesper hymn.

    No human accents voiced His gentle call,
    No crashing thunderbolts did wait on Him,
    As when of old He deigned to summon Saul.

    But heart did speak to heart, an unseen chord
    In Love’s own scale did sweetly rise and fall;
    Nor questioned she, but meekly answered “Lord!”

    To-night some household counts a vacant chair,
    But far on high Christ portions the reward,
    A hundred-fold for each poor human care.



CHRIST THE COMRADE

BY PADRAIC COLUM


    Christ, by Thine own darkened hour
      Live within my heart and brain!
      Let my hands not slip the rein.

    Ah, how long ago it is
    Since a comrade rode with me!
      Now a moment let me see

    Thyself, lonely in the dark,
    Perfect, without wound or mark.



AN OLD WOMAN OF THE ROADS

BY PADRAIC COLUM


    Oh, to have a little house,
      To own the hearth and stool and all--
    The heaped-up sods upon the fire,
      The pile of turf against the wall!

    To have a clock with weights and chains,
      And pendulum swinging up and down!
    A dresser filled with shining delph,
      Speckled and white and blue and brown!

    I could be busy all the day
      Clearing and sweeping hearth and floor,
    And fixing on their shelf again
      My white and blue speckled store.

    I could be quiet there at night
      Beside the fire and by myself,
    Sure of a bed, and loth to leave
      The ticking clock and shining delph.

    Och! but I’m weary of mist and dark,
      And roads where there’s never a house or bush,
    And tired I am of bog and road,
      And the crying wind and the lonesome hush.

    And I am praying to God on high,
      And I am praying Him night and day,
    For a little house--a house of my own--
      Out of the wind’s and the rain’s way.



THE HEAVIEST CROSS OF ALL

BY KATHERINE ELEANOR CONWAY


    I’ve borne full many a sorrow, I’ve suffered many a loss--
    But now, with a strange, new anguish, I carry this last dread cross;
    For of this be sure, my dearest, whatever thy life befall,
    The cross that our own hands fashion is the heaviest cross of all.

    Heavy and hard I made it in the days of my fair strong youth,
    Veiling mine eyes from the blessed light, and closing my heart to
        truth.
    Pity me, Lord, whose mercy passeth my wildest thought,
    For I never dreamed of the bitter end of the work my hands had
        wrought!

    In the sweet morn’s flush and fragrance I wandered o’er dewy
        meadows,
    And I hid from the fervid noontide glow in the cool green woodland
        shadows;
    And I never recked, as I sang aloud in my wilful, selfish glee,
    Of the mighty woe that was drawing nigh to darken the world for me.

    But it came at last, my dearest--what need to tell thee how?
    Mayst never know of the wild, wild woe that my heart is bearing now!
    Over my summer’s glory crept a damp and chilling shade,
    And I staggered under the heavy cross that my sinful hands had made.

    I go where the shadows deepen, and the end seems far off yet--
    God keep thee safe from the sharing of this woeful late regret!
    For of this be sure, my dearest, whatever thy life befall,
    The crosses we make for ourselves, alas! are the heaviest ones of
        all.



SATURNINUS

BY KATHERINE ELEANOR CONWAY


    He might have won the highest guerdon that heaven to earth can give,
    For whoso falleth for justice--dying, he yet shall live.

    He might have left us his memory to flame as a beacon light,
    When clouds of the false world’s raising shut the stars of heaven
        from sight.

    He might have left us his name to ring in our triumph song
    When we stand, as we’ll stand at to-morrow’s dawn, by the grave of a
        world-old wrong.

    For he gave thee, O mother of valiant sons, thou fair, and sore
        oppressed,
    The love of his youth and his manhood’s choice--first-fruits of his
        life, and best.

    Thine were throb of his heart and thought of his brain and toil of
        his strong right hand;
    For thee he braved scorn and reviling, and loss of gold and land,

    Threat and lure and false-hearted friend, and blight of a broken
        word--
    Terrors of night and delay of light--prison and rack and sword.

    For thee he bade death defiance--till the heavens opened wide,
    And his face grew bright with reflex of light from the face of the
        Crucified.

    And his crown was in sight and his palm in reach and his glory all
        but won,
    And then--he failed--God help us! with the worst of dying done.

    Only to die on the treacherous down by the hands of the tempters
        spread--
    Nay, nay--make way for the strangers! we have no right in the dead.

    But oh, for the beacon quenched, that we dreamed would kindle and
        flame!
    And oh, for the standard smirched and shamed, and the name we dare
        not name!

    Over the lonesome grave the shadows gather fast;
    Only the mother, like God, forgives, and comforts her heart with the
        past.



DREAMING OF CITIES DEAD

BY ELEANOR ROGERS COX


    Dreaming of cities dead,
    Of bright Queens vanished,
    Of kings whose names were but as seed wind-blown
    E’en when white Patrick’s voice shook Tara’s throne,
    My way along the great world-street I tread,
    And keep the rites of Beauty lost, alone.

    Cairns level with the dust--
    Names dim with Time’s dull rust--
    Afar they sleep on many a wind-swept hill,
    The beautiful, the strong of heart and will--
    On whose pale dreams no sunrise joy shall burst,
    No harper’s song shall pierce with battle-thrill.

    Long from their purpled heights,
    Their reign of high delights,
    The Queens have wended down Death’s mildewed stair,
    Leaving a scent of lilies on the air,
    To gladden Earth through all her days and nights,
    That once she cherished anything so fair.



DEATH OF CUCHULAIN

BY ELEANOR ROGERS COX


    Silent are the singers in the purple halls of Emain,
      Silent all the harp-strings untouched of any hand,
    Wan as twilight roses the radiant, royal women,
      Black unto the hearthstone the erstwhile flaming brand.

    Inward far from ocean the storm’s white birds are flying,
      Darting, like dim wraith flames across the falling night.
    Winds like a _caoine_ through the quicken groves are sighing,
    On no lip is laughter, in no heart delight.

    For thitherwards witch-wafted athwart the sundering spaces,
      Lo, a word doom-freighted unto Conchubar has come,
    Whispering of one who in far-off, hostile places
      Strikes a last defending blow for king and home.

    And the King pacing lone in his place of High Decision,
      Gazing with rapt eyes on that far-flung battle-plain,
    Through the red rains rising beholds with startled vision
      Sight such as man’s eye shall not see again.

    For one there is dying, of his foes at last outnumbered,
      One whose soul a sword was, shaped by God’s own hand,
    One who guarded Ulaidh when all her knighthood slumbered,
      Prone beneath the curse laid of old upon the land.

    And dying so, alone, of all mortal aid forsaken,
      Dead his peerless war steeds, dead his charioteer,
    Yet the high splendor of his spirit all unshaken,
      Shines morning-bright through the Death-mists drawing near.

    And radiant round his brow yet the hero-flame is gleaming,
      And firm yet his footstep upon the reddened sod,
    As with sword uplifted towards the day’s last beaming,
      Forth goes the spirit of Cuchulain unto God.

    Leaving to his land and the Celtic race forever
      That which shall not fail them throughout the fading years,
    Heritage of faith unchanged, of fear-undimmed endeavor,
      And a quenchless laughter ringing down the edge of hostile spears.



GODS AND HEROES OF THE GAEL

BY ELEANOR ROGERS COX


    Forth in shining phalanx marching from the shrouding mists of time,
      Bright the sunlight on their foreheads, bright upon their golden
          mail,
    Lords of beauty, lords of valor, lords of Earth’s unconquered prime,
      Come the gods, the kings, the heroes of the Gael.

    Lugh, the splendor of whose shining lit the forest and the fen,
      He whose smile at first illuming all the shadow-haunted space
    Of the vast, primeval ranges, death-engirdled, shunned of men,
      Over virgin seas to Erin led our race.

    Mananaan, great lord of Ocean--he whose fair domain outspread
      Wheresoever tides foam-flowered to the moon’s high mandate move,
    Aengus, clothed in youth immortal, on immortal ardors fed,
      Who of old in golden Brugh reigned lord of Love.

    And his name a knightly pennon on the ramparts of the world,
      And his fame a fire unfailing on Time’s utmost purple height,
    Erin’s peerless gage of courage to the vaunting ages hurled--
      Sunward evermore Cuchulain holds his flight.

    They are coming with the silver speech of Erin on their lips;
      The speech that once of all the mighty Celtic race made kin,
    They are coming with the laughter that has known no age-eclipse,
      They are coming with the songs beloved of Finn.

    Yea, with gifts regenerating to all men of women born--
      Flame of courage that shall fade not, flame of truth that shall
          not fail,
    To the music of a thousand harps they’re marching through the Morn,
      Deathless gods and kings and heroes of the Gael!



AT BENEDICTION

BY ELEANOR ROGERS COX


    Joy, beauty, awe, supremest worship blending
      In one long breath of perfect ecstasy,
    Song from our hearts to God’s own Heart ascending,
      The mortal merged in immortality.
    There, veiled beneath that sacramental whiteness,
      The wonder that all wonders doth transcend,
    The Word that kindled chaos into brightness,
      Our Lord, our God, our origin, our end.

    Light, light, a sea of light, unshored, supernal,
      Is all about our finite being spread,
    Deep, soundless waves of harmonies eternal
      Their balm celestial on our spirits shed.
    O Source of Life! O Fount of waters living!
      O Love, to whom all powers of mind and soul,
    We give, and find again within the giving,
      Of Thee renewed, made consecrate and whole.



PRIMROSE HILL

BY OLIVE CUSTANCE


    Wild heart in me that frets and grieves,
    Imprisoned here against your will ...
    Sad heart that dreams of rainbow wings ...
    See! I have found some golden things!
    The poplar trees on Primrose Hill
    With all their shining play of leaves ...
    And London like a silver bride,
    That will not put her veil aside!

    Proud London like a painted Queen,
    Whose crown is heavy on her head ...
    City of sorrow and desire,
    Under a sky of opal fire,
    Amber and amethyst and red ...
    And how divine the day has been!
    For every dawn God builds again
    This world of beauty and of pain....

    Wild heart that hungers for delight,
    Imprisoned here against your will;
    Sad heart, so eager to be gay!
    Loving earth’s lovely things ... the play
    Of wind and leaves on Primrose Hill ...
    Or London dreaming of the night ...
    Adventurous heart, on beauty bent,
    That only Heaven could quite content!



TWILIGHT

BY OLIVE CUSTANCE


    Spirit of Twilight, through your folded wings
      I catch a glimpse of your averted face,
    And rapturous on a sudden, my soul sings
      “Is not this common earth a holy place?”

    Spirit of Twilight, you are like a song
      That sleeps, and waits a singer,--like a hymn
    That God finds lovely and keeps near Him long,
      Till it is choired by aureoled cherubim.

    Spirit of Twilight, in the golden gloom
      Of dreamland dim I sought you, and I found
    A woman sitting in a silent room
      Full of white flowers that moved and made no sound.

    These white flowers were the thoughts you bring to all,
      And the room’s name is Mystery where you sit,
    Woman whom we call Twilight, when night’s pall
      You lift across our Earth to cover it.



TO A THRUSH

BY T. A. DALY


              Sing clear, O! throstle,
              Thou golden-tongued apostle
    And little brown-frocked brother
              Of the loved Assisian!
    Sing courage to the mother,
              Sing strength into the man,
    For they, who in another May
              Trod Hope’s scant wine from grapes of pain,
    Have tasted in thy song to-day
              The bitter-sweet red lees again.
    To them in whose sad May-time thou
    Sang’st comfort from thy maple bough,
            To tinge the presaged dole with sweet,
    O! prophet then, be prophet now
            And paraclete!

    That fateful May! The pregnant vernal night
      Was throbbing with the first faint pangs of day,
    The while with ordered urge toward life and light,
      Earth-atoms countless groped their destined way;
            And one full-winged to fret
            Its tender oubliette,
    The warding mother-heart above it woke,
      Darkling she lay in doubt, then, sudden wise,
    Whispered her husband’s drowsy ear and broke
      The estranging seal of slumber from his eyes:
      “My hour is nigh: arise!”

    Already, when, with arms for comfort linked,
      The lovers at an eastward window stood,
    The rosy day, in cloudy swaddlings, blinked
      Through misty green new-fledged in Wister Wood.
            Breathless upon this birth
            The still-entranced earth
    Seemed brooding, motionless in windless space.
      Then rose thy priestly chant, O! holy bird!
    And heaven and earth were quickened with its grace;
      To tears two wedded souls were moved who heard,
      And one, unborn, was stirred!

    O! Comforter, enough that from thy green
      Hid tabernacle in the wood’s recess
    To those care-haunted lovers thou, unseen,
      Should’st send thy flame-tipped song to cheer and bless.
            Enough for them to hear
            And feel thy presence near;
    And yet when he, regardful of her ease,
      Had led her back by brightening hall and stair
    To her own chamber’s quietude and peace,
      One maple-bowered window shook with rare,
      Sweet song--and thou wert there!

    Hunter of souls! the loving chase so nigh
      Those spirits twain had never come before.
    They saw the sacred flame within thine eye;
      To them the maple’s depths quick glory wore,
            As though God’s hand had lit
            His altar-fire in it,
    And made a fane, of virgin verdure pleached,
      Wherefrom thou might’st in numbers musical
    Expound the age-sweet words thy Francis preached
      To thee and thine, of God’s benignant thrall
      That broodeth over all.

    And they, athirst for comfort, sipped thy song,
      But drank not yet thy deeper homily.
    Not yet, but when parturient pangs grew strong,
      And from its cell the young soul struggled free--
            A new joy, trailing grief,
            A little crumpled leaf,
    Blighted before it burgeoned from the stem--
      Thou, as the fabled robin to the rood,
    Wert minister of charity to them;
      And from the shadows of sad parenthood
      They heard and understood.

    Makes God one soul a lure for snaring three?
      Ah! surely; so this nursling of the nest,
    This teen-touched joy, ere birth anoint of thee,
      Yet bears thy chrismal music in her breast.
            Five Mays have come and sped
            Above her sunny head,
    And still the happy song abides in her.
      For though on maimed limbs the body creeps,
    It doth a spirit house whose pinions stir
      Familiarly the far cerulean steeps
      Where God His mansion keeps.

            So come, O! throstle,
            Thou golden-tongued apostle
    And little brown-frocked brother
      Of the loved Assisian!
    Sing courage to the mother,
      Sing strength into the man,
    That she who in another May
      Came out of heaven, trailing care,
    May never know that sometimes gray
      Earth’s roof is and its cupboards bare.
    To them in whose sad May-time thou
    Sang’st comfort and thy maple bough,
      To tinge the presaged dole with sweet,
    O! prophet then, be prophet now
      And paraclete!



TO A PLAIN SWEETHEART

BY T. A. DALY


    I love thee, dear, for what thou art,
      Nor would I wish thee otherwise,
    For when thy lashes lift apart
      I read, deep-mirrored in thine eyes,
    The glory of a modest heart.

    Wert thou as fair as thou art good,
      It were not given to any man,
    With daring eyes of flesh and blood,
      To look thee in the face and scan
    The splendor of thy womanhood.



TO A ROBIN

BY T. A. DALY


    I heard thee, joyous votary,
      Pour forth thy heart in one
    Sweet simple strain of melody
      To greet the rising sun,
    When he across the morning’s verge his first faint flare had flung
    And found the crimson of thy breast the whisp’ring leaves among,
            In thine own tree
            Which sheltered thee,
      Thy mate, thy nest, thy young.

    I marked thee, sorrow’s votary,
      When in the noon of day
    Young vandals stormed thy sacred tree
      And bore thine all away;
    The notes of grief that rent thy breast touched kindred chords in
        mine,
    For memories of other days, though slumbering still confine
            In mine own heart
            The bitter smart
      Of sorrow such as thine.

    I hear thee now, sweet votary,
      Beside thy ruined nest,
    Lift up thy flood of melody
      Against the crimsoned west,
    Forgetful of all else in this, thy one sweet joyous strain.
    I thank thee for this ecstasy of my remembered pain;
            Thou liftest up
            My sorrow’s cup
      To sweeten it again.



THE POET

BY T. A. DALY


    The truest poet is not one
    Whose golden fancies fuse and run
    To moulded phrases, crusted o’er
    With flashing gems of metaphor;
    Whose art, responsive to his will,
    Makes voluble the thoughts that fill
    The cultured windings of his brain,
    Yet takes no soundings of the pain,
    The joy, the yearnings of the heart
    Untrammeled by the bonds of art,
    O! poet truer far than he
    Is such a one as you may be,
    When in the quiet night you keep
    Mute vigil on the marge of sleep.

    If then, with beating heart, you mark
    God’s nearer presence in the dark,
    And musing on the wondrous ways
    Of Him who numbers all your days,
    Pay tribute to Him with your tears
    For joys, for sorrows, hopes and fears
    Which he has blessed and given to you,
    You are the poet, great and true.
    For there are songs within the heart
    Whose perfect melody no art
    Can teach the tongue of man to phrase.
    These are the songs His poets raise,
    When in the night they keep
    Mute vigil on the marge of sleep.



OCTOBER

BY T. A. DALY


    Come, forsake your city street!
    Come to God’s own fields and meet October.
    Not the lean, unkempt and brown
    Counterfeit that haunts the town,
    Pointing, like a thing of gloom,
    At dead summer in her tomb;
    Reading in each fallen leaf
    Nothing but regret and grief.
    Come out, where, beneath the blue,
    You may frolic with the true October.

    Call his name and mark the sound,
    Opulent and full and round: “October.”
    Come, and gather from his hand
    Lavish largesse of the land;
    Read in his prophetic eyes,
    Clear as skies of paradise,
    Not of summer days that died,
    But of summer fructified!
    Hear, O soul, his message sweet.
    Come to God’s own fields and meet October.



SORROW

BY AUBREY DE VERE


    Count each affliction, whether light or grave,
      God’s messenger sent down to thee; do thou
    With courtesy receive him; rise and bow;
    And, ere his shadow pass thy threshold, crave
    Permission first His heavenly feet to lave;
      Then lay before Him all thou hast; allow
      No cloud or passion to usurp thy brow,
    Or mar thy hospitality; no wave
      Of mortal tumult to obliterate
      Thy soul’s marmoreal calmness. Grief should be
    Like joy, majestic, equable, sedate;
      Confirming, cleansing, raising, making free;
    Strong to consume small troubles; to commend
    Great thoughts, grave thoughts, thoughts lasting to the end.



HUMAN LIFE

BY AUBREY DE VERE


    Sad is our youth, for it is ever going,
    Crumbling away beneath our very feet;
    Sad is our life, for onward it is flowing,
    In current unperceived because so fleet;
    Sad are our hopes, for they were sweet in sowing,
    But tares, self-sown, have overtopped the wheat;
    Sad are our joys, for they were sweet in blowing;
    And still, O still, their dying breath is sweet;
    And sweet is youth, although it hath bereft us
    Of that which made our childhood sweeter still;
    And sweeter our life’s decline, for it hath left us
    A nearer Good to cure an older Ill;
    And sweet are all things, when we learn to prize them
    Not for their sake, but His who grants them or denies them.



CARDINAL MANNING

BY AUBREY DE VERE


    I learn’d his greatness first at Lavington:
    The moon had early sought her bed of brine,
    But we discours’d till now each starry sign
    Had sunk: our theme was one and one alone:
    “Two minds supreme,” he said, “our earth has known;
    One sang in science; one served God in song;
    Aquinas--Dante.” Slowly in me grew strong
    A thought, “These two great minds in him are one;
    ‘Lord, what shall this man do?’” Later at Rome
    Beside the dust of Peter and of Paul
    Eight hundred mitred sires of Christendom
    In Council sat. I mark’d him ’mid them all;
    I thought of that long night in years gone by
    And cried, “At last my question meets reply.”



SONG

BY AUBREY DE VERE


    Seek not the tree of silkiest bark
      And balmiest bud,
    To carve her name while yet ’tis dark
      Upon the wood!
    The world is full of noble tasks
      And wreaths hard won:
    Each work demands strong hearts, strong hands,
      Till day is done.

    Sing not that violet-veined skin,
      That cheek’s pale roses,
    The lily of that form wherein
      Her soul reposes!
    Forth to the fight, true man! true knight!
      The clash of arms
    Shall more prevail than whisper’d tale,
      To win her charms.

    The Warrior for the True, the Right,
      Fights in Love’s name;
    The love that lures thee from that flight
      Lures thee to shame:
    That love which lifts the heart, yet leaves
      The spirit free,--
    That love, or none, is fit for one
      Man-shap’d like thee.



THE SONS OF PATRICK

BY JAMES B. DOLLARD


    Into the mists of the Pagan island
      Bearing God’s message great Patrick came;
    The Druid altars on plain and highland
      Fell at the sound of his mighty name!

    Swift was the conquest--with hearts upswelling
      The Faith they took, and to God they swore:
    That precious spark from their bosoms’ dwelling,
      Man’s guile or torture should snatch no more.

    And ever since, while the wide world wonders
      This steadfast people their strength reveal,
    As Time Earth’s kingdoms and empires sunders,
      They stand by Patrick in ranks of steel!

    The nations mock them, like Christ’s tormentors;
      “Descend,” they cry, “from your cross of shame;
    Abjure the Faith--see the road that enters
      The groves of pleasure and wealth and fame!”

    Like those that passed where the Cross rose dimly
      Their wise beards wagging--“What fools!” they say;
    But the Sons of Patrick make answer grimly:
      “Our God we’ve chosen--the price we’ll pay.

    “Ever about us the foes’ commotion,
      The anguish sweat on our brows ne’er dry;
    Our martyr’s bones strew the land and ocean,
      Lone deserts echo our exiles’ cry.

    “Unto our hearts is earth’s pride forbidden,
      Unto our hands is its gold denied;
    We do not question the Purpose hidden--
      Let Him who fashioned our souls decide!

    “Yet though once more to us choice were given,
      And the long aeons were backward rolled,
    We’d walk again before Earth and Heaven
      The blood-stained pathway we walked of old!”



SONG OF THE LITTLE VILLAGES

BY JAMES B. DOLLARD


    The pleasant little villages that grace the Irish glynns
    Down among the wheatfields--up amid the whins,
    The little white-walled villages crowding close together,
    Clinging to the Old Sod in spite of wind and weather:
      Ballytarsney, Ballymore, Ballyboden, Boyle,
      Ballingarry, Ballymagorry by the Banks of Foyle,
      Ballylaneen, Ballyporeen, Bansha, Ballysadare,
      Ballybrack, Ballinalack, Barna, Ballyclare.

    The cozy little villages that shelter from the mist,
    Where the great West Walls by ocean spray are kissed;
    The happy little villages that cuddle in the sun
    When blackberries ripen and the harvest work is done.
      Corrymeela, Croaghnakeela, Clogher, Cahirciveen,
      Cappaharoe, Carrigaloe, Cashel and Coosheen,
      Castlefinn, Carrigtohill, Crumlin, Clara, Clane,
      Carrigaholt, Carrigaline, Cloghjordan and Coolrain.

    The dreamy little villages, where by the fires at night,
    Old Sanachies with ghostly tale the boldest hearts affright;
    The crooning of the wind-blast is the wailing Banshee’s cry,
    And when the silver hazels stir they say the fairies sigh,
      Kilfenora, Kilfinnane, Kinnity, Killylea,
      Kilmoganny, Kiltamagh, Kilronan and Kilrea,
      Killashandra, Kilmacow, Killiney, Killashee,
      Killenaule, Killmyshall, Killorglin and Killeagh.

    Leave the little villages, o’er the black sea go,
    Learn the stranger’s welcome, learn the exile’s woe,
    Leave the little villages, but think not to forget,
    Afar they’ll rise before your eyes to rack your bosoms yet.
      Moneymore, Moneygall, Monivea and Moyne,
      Mullinahone, Mullinavatt, Mullagh and Mooncoin,
      Shanagolden, Shanballymore, Stranorlar and Slane,
      Toberaheena, Toomyvara, Tempo and Strabane.

    On the Southern Llanos,--north where strange light gleams,
    Many a yearning exile sees them in his dreams;
    Dying voices murmur (passed all pain and care),
    “Lo, the little villages, God has heard our prayer.”
      Lisdoonvarna, Lissadil, Lisdargan, Lisnaskea,
      Portglenone, Portarlington, Portumna, Portmagee,
      Clondalkin and Clongowan, Cloondara and Clonae,
      God bless the little villages and guard them night and day!



THE SOUL OF KARNAGHAN BUIDHE

BY JAMES B. DOLLARD


    It was the soul of Karnaghan Buidhe
      Left his lips with a groan.
    Like arrowy lightning bolt released
      It sprang to the Judgment throne.

    Spoke the Judge: “For as many years
      As the numbered drops of the sea
    I grant you heaven--but thenceforth hell,
      Your bitter lot shall be.”

    Prayed the soul of Karnaghan Buidhe
        (_The trembling soul of Karnaghan Buidhe_)
      “Dear Lord, who died on Calvary,
        Too brief that span of heaven for me.”

    Then spoke the Lord: “For as many years
      As numbered sands on the shore,
    The joys of heaven I give--but thence
      You’ll see my face no more.”

    Pleaded the soul of Karnaghan Buidhe
        (_The shuddering soul of Karnaghan Buidhe_)
      “Blessed Lord who died on the shameful tree,
        Too brief that span of heaven for me.”

    Once more the Judge: “The blades of grass
      That earth-winds ever blew
    A year of heaven I’ll count for each
      Till hell shall yawn for you.”

    Prayed the soul of Karnaghan Buidhe
      (_The anguished soul of Karnaghan Buidhe_)
    “Kind Lord, who died in agony,
      Too brief that spell of heaven for me.

    But this I ask, O Christ--a year
      Of hell for each of these:
    The blades of grass, the grains of sand,
      The drops that make the seas!
    And after this, sweet Lord, with Thee
    In heaven for all eternity!”

    Spoke the Judge, and His smile of love
    Gladdened the waiting choir above:
    “Sin and sorrow forever past,
    Heaven I grant you, first and last!”



THE ANGELIC CHORUS

BY D. J. DONAHOE


    At midnight from the zenith burst a light
      More radiant and more beautiful than dawn,
      And the meek shepherds on the shadowy lawn
    Gazed upward in mute wonder on the sight;
    The stars sank back in pallor, and the skies
    Trembled responsive to rich harmonies.

    And lo! an angel spake, “Be not afraid!
      I bear glad tidings; for this happy morn
      A Saviour and a King to man is born;
    He sleepeth in a manger lowly laid.”
    Then rolled along the heavens the glad refrain;
    “Glory to God on high and peace to men!”

    Soon from the skies the streaming light was gone,
      And Night and Silence rested on the hill;
      But the mute shepherds, looking upward still,
    Could hear the heavenly echoes rolling on.
    So evermore the listening world can hear
    The Angelic Chorus ringing sweet and clear.



LADYE CHAPEL AT EDEN HALL

BY ELEANOR C. DONNELLY


    Close to the Sacred Heart, it nestles fair--
    A marble poem; an aesthetic dream
    Of sculptured beauty, fit to be the theme
    Of angel fancies; a Madonna-prayer
    Uttered in stone. Round columns light as air,
    And fretted cornice, Sharon’s Rose is wreathed--
    The passion-flower, the thorn-girt lily rare,
    The palm, the wheat, the grapes in vine-leaves sheathed.
    Tenderly bright, from mullioned windows glow
    Our Lady’s chaplet-mysteries. Behold,
    Her maiden statue in that shrine of snow,
    Looks upward to the skies of blue and gold;
    Content that in the crypt, beneath her shining feet,
    The holy ones repose in dreamless slumber sweet.



MARY IMMACULATE

BY ELEANOR C. DONNELLY


    “Pure as the snow,” we say. Ah! never flake
      Fell through the air
      One-tenth as fair
    As Mary’s soul was made for Christ’s dear sake.
      Virgin Immaculate,
    The whitest whiteness of the Alpine snows,
    Beside thy stainless spirit, dusky grows.

    “Pure as the stars.” Ah! never lovely night
      Wore in its diadem
      So pure a gem
    As that which fills the ages with its light.
      Virgin Immaculate,
    The peerless splendors of thy soul by far
    Outshine the glow of heaven’s serenest star.



THE PILGRIM

BY ELEANOR DOWNING


    Behind me lies the mistress of the East,
      Golden in evening, fairy dome on dome
      Poised and irised like the far-flung foam
      Lashed on the ribs of some forsaken coast.
      Wicked and lovely temptress, fruitless boast
    Of all that man may build and little be,
    Mart of the world’s base passions, where thy feast
    Of shame was spread, thy sin encompassed me,
      Where all desires and all dreams were rife
      With lust of flesh and eye and pride of life,
      Lo! I have reft thy carnal mastery--
      I have gone forth and shut the gates of thee.

    Before me lies the desert and the night,
      White star and gold above a pathless waste,
      Blue shade and gray to where the world effaced
      Flings loose its shadows on the lap of God.
      Briars and dust upon my brow, unshod,
    In pilgrim weeds athwart a vineless land,
    My feet shall pass and mark the path aright,
    For lo! Thy staff and rod are in my hand;
      And with the light Thy city shall unfurl
      Its golden oriflames and tents of pearl--
      Dead Babylon, thy gilden clasp I flee;
      Jerusalem, lift up thy gates to me!



ON THE FEAST OF THE ASSUMPTION

BY ELEANOR DOWNING


    “Mary, uplifted to our sight
    In cloudy vesture stainless-white,
    Why are thine eyes like stars alight,
      Twin flames of charity?”
    “Mine eyes are on His glorious face
    That shone not on earth’s darkened place,
    But clothed and crowned me with grace--
      The God who fathered me!”

    “Mary, against the sinless glow
    Of angel pinions white as snow,
    Why are thy fair lips parted so
      In ecstasy of love?”
    “My lips are parted to His breath
    Who breathed on me in Nazareth
    And gave me life to live in death--
      My Spouse, the spotless Dove!”

    “Mary, whose eager feet would spurn
    The very clouds, whose pale hands yearn
    Toward rifted Heaven that fires burn
      Where once was fixed the sword?”
    “The fires I felt when His child head
    Lay on this mother’s heart that bled,
    And when it lay there stark and dead--
      My little Child, my Lord!”



MARY

BY ELEANOR DOWNING


    A garden like a chalice-cup,
      With bloom of almond white and pink,
      And starred hibiscus to the brink,
    From which sweet waters bubble up.
    A garden walled with ilex-trees
      And topped with blue, white clouds between
      Save where the glossed leaves’ twinkling green
    Is stirred by some soft-footed breeze
    A place apart, a watered glade,
      Where sin and sorrow have not been,
      And earth’s complaint grows hushed within
    Its greening aisles of sacred shade.

    The circling arms, the flower face,
      Such were they to the Child soft-pressed,
      Who drew all sweetness from the breast
    Of her whom angels crowned with grace.

    A night of storm and wailing stress,
      A coast that cradles to the shock
      Of waves that lap the pitted rock,
    And winds that shriek their wrathfulness;
    A night of all wild things unpent,
      Strange voices and strange shapes that beat
      To chill the heart and snare the feet.
    And through the tempest, beacon-bent
    To shelter from the driving damp
      Bespeaking warmth and sweet repose
      Within its sanctuary close,
    The welcome of a red shrine-lamp.

    So unto Him Who, weary, pressed
      Through the fierce storm of wrath and hate,
      Shone Mary’s love, a chapel-gate
    Where He might enter Him and rest.

    A desert filled with shining sand,
      And still as death the skies that bend
      Where to horizon without end
    The rounding distances expand.
    A desert white with burning heat
      And parched silence without stir,
      And at its heart a voyager,
    Where Death and daggered noonday meet;
    And Thirst that grips him by the throat;
      When from the distance wreathing blue,
      No mirage, but a dream come true,
    Crowned palm-tree and pale waters float.

    To Christ upon the rood, when dim
      Fell on His brow the Shade accurst,
      So Mary slaked His burning thirst
    With her white soul held up to Him.



EXTREME UNCTION

BY ERNEST DOWSON


    Upon the eyes, the lips, the feet,
      On all the passages of sense,
    The atoning oil is spread with sweet
      Renewal of lost innocence.

    The feet, that lately ran so fast
      To meet desire, are soothly sealed;
    The eyes, that were so often cast
      On vanity, are touched and healed.

    From troublous sights and sounds set free
      In such a twilight hour of breath,
    Shall one retrace his life, or see,
      Through shadows, the true face of death?

    Vials of mercy! Sacring oils!
      I know not where nor when I come,
    Nor through what wanderings and toils,
      To crave of you Viaticum.

    Yet, when the walls of flesh grow weak,
      In such an hour, it well may be,
    Through mist and darkness, light will break,
      And each anointed sense will see.



BENEDICTIO DOMINI

BY ERNEST DOWSON


    Without, the sullen noises of the street!
      The voice of London, inarticulate,
    Hoarse and blaspheming, surges in to meet
      The silent blessing of the Immaculate.

    Dark is the church, and dim the worshippers,
      Hushed with bowed heads as though by some old spell,
    While through the incense-laden air there stirs
      The admonition of a silver bell.

    Dark is the church, save where the altar stands,
      Dressed like a bride, illustrious with light,
    Where one old priest exalts with tremulous hands
      The one true solace of man’s fallen plight.

    Strange silence here: without, the sounding street
      Heralds the world’s swift passage to the fire;
    O Benediction, perfect and complete!
      When shall men cease to suffer and desire?



CARTHUSIANS

BY ERNEST DOWSON


    Through what long heaviness, assayed in what strange fire,
      Have these white monks been brought into the way of peace,
    Despising the world’s wisdom and the world’s desire,
      Which from the body of this death bring no release?

    Within their austere walls no voices penetrate;
      A sacred silence only, as of death, obtains;
    Nothing finds entry here of loud or passionate;
      This quiet is the exceeding profit of their pain.

    From many lands they came, in divers fiery ways;
      Each knew at last the vanity of earthly joys;
    And one was crowned with thorns, and one was crowned with bays,
      And each was tired at last of the world’s foolish noise.

    It was not theirs with Dominic to preach God’s holy wrath,
      They were too stern to bear sweet Francis’ gentle sway;
    Theirs was a higher calling and a steeper path,
      To dwell alone with Christ, to meditate and pray.

    A cloistered company, they are companionless,
      None knoweth here the secret of his brother’s heart:
    They are but come together for more loneliness,
      Whose bond is solitude and silence all their part.

    O beatific life! Who is there shall gainsay,
      Your great refusal’s victory, your little loss,
    Deserting vanity for the more perfect way,
      The sweetest service of the most dolorous Cross.

    Ye shall prevail at last! Surely ye shall prevail!
      Your silence and your austerity shall win at last:
    Desire and Mirth, the world’s ephemeral lights shall fail,
      The sweet star of your queen is never overcast.

    We fling up flowers and laugh, we laugh across the wine;
      With wine we dull our souls and careful strains of art;
    Our cups are polished skulls round which the roses twine:
      None dares to look at Death who leers and lurks apart.

    Move on, white company, whom that has not sufficed!
      Our viols cease, our wine is death, our roses fail:
    Pray for our heedlessness, O dwellers with the Christ!
      Though the world fall apart, surely ye shall prevail.



MARIS STELLA

BY AUGUSTA THEODOSIA DRANE


    Mary, beautiful and bright
                  “Velut Maris Stella,”
    Brighter than the morning light,
                  “Parens et Puella,”
    I cry to thee, look down on me;
    Ladye, pray thy Son for me,
                  “Tam pia,”
    That thy child may come to thee,
                  “Maria.”

    Sad the earth was and forlorn,
                  “Eva peccatrice,”
    Until Christ our Lord was born
                  “De te Genitrice”;
    Gabriel’s “Ave” chased away
    Darksome night, and brought the day
                  “Salutis”;
    Thou the Fount whence waters play
                  “Virtutis.”

    Ladye, Flower of living thing,
                  “Rosa sine spina”;
    Mother of Jesus, heaven’s King,
                  “Gratia divinia”;
    ’Tis thou in all dost bear the prize,
    Ladye, Queen of Paradise,
                  “Electa,”

    Maiden meek and Mother wise,
                  “Effecta.”
    In care thou counsellest the best,
                  “Felix fecundata”;
    To the weary thou are rest,
                  “Mater honorata”;
    Plead in thy love to Him who gave
    His precious Blood the world to save
                  “In cruce,”
    That we our home with Him may have
                  “In luce.”

    Well knows he, that he is thy Son,
                  “Ventre quem portasti”;
    All thou dost ask Him, then, is won,
                  “Partum quem lactasti”;
    So pitiful He is and kind,
    By Him the road to bliss we find
                  “Superni”;
    He doth the gates of darkness bind
                  “Inferni.”



AN AUTUMN ROSE-TREE

BY MICHAEL EARLS, S.J.


    It seemed too late for roses
      When I walked abroad to-day,
    October stood in silence,
      By the hedges all the way:
    Yet did I hear a singing,
      And I saw a red rose-tree:--
    In fields so gray with autumn
      How could song or roses be?

    Oh, it was never maple
      Nor the dogwood’s coat afire,
    No sage with scarlet banners,
      Nor the poppy’s vested choir:
    The breeze that may be music
      When the summer lawns are fair
    Will have no heart for singing
      In the autumn’s mournful air.

    As I went up the roadway,
      Under cold and lonely skies,
    A song I heard, a rose-tree
      Waved to me in glad surprise:--
    A red cloak and a ribbon,
      (Round the braided hair of jet)
    And redder cheeks than roses
      Of a little Margaret.

    Now God is good in autumn,
      He can name the birds that sing,
    He loves the hearts of children
      More than flowery fields of spring:
    And when the years of winter
      Gray with Margaret will be,
    God will find her love still blossom
      Like a red rose-tree.



TO A CARMELITE POSTULANT

(San Francisco, May, 1910)

BY MICHAEL EARLS, S.J.


    Oh, the banks of May are fair,
      Charm of sound and sight,
    Breath of heaven fills the air,
      To the world’s delight.

    Far more wondrous is a bower,
      Fairer than the May,
    Love-of-God it wears in flower,
      Blooming night and day.

    Love-of-God within the heart
      Multicolored grows,
    Now a lily’s counterpart,
      Now the blood-red rose.

    Come the sun or chilling rain,
      Come the drought or dew,
    Crocus health or violet pain,
      Love-of-God is true.

    Hard may be the mountain-side,
      Soft the valley sod,
    Yet will fragrance sure abide
      With the Love-of-God.

    Where the grace of Heaven leads,
      There it makes a home,
    Hills a hundred and the meads
      Will its pathway roam.

    Carmel by the western sea
      Holds your blessed bower:
    Love-of-God eternally
      Keep your heart a-flower.



A PURPOSE OF AMENDMENT

BY HELEN PARRY EDEN


    He who mangold-patch doth hoe,
    Sweating beneath a sturdy sun,
    Clearing each weed-disguised row
    Till day-light and the task be done,

    Standeth to view his labour’s scene--
    Where now, within the hedge-row’s girth,
    The little plants untrammeled green
    Stripes the brown fabric of the earth.

    So when the absolution’s said
    Behind the grille, and I may go,
    And all the flowers of sin are dead,
    And all the stems of sin laid low,

    And I am come to Mary’s shrine
    To lay my hopes within her hand--
    Ah, in how fair and green a line
    The seedling resolutions stand.



THE CONFESSIONAL

BY HELEN PARRY EDEN


    My Sorrow diligent would sweep
    That dingy room infest
    With dust (thereby I mean my soul)
    Because she hath a Guest
    Who doth require that self-same room
    Be garnished for His rest.

    And Sorrow (who had washed His feet
    Where He before had been)
    Took the long broom of Memory
    And swept the corners clean,
    Till in the midst of the fair floor
    The sum of dust was seen.

    It lay there, settled by her tears,
    That fell the while she swept--
    Light fluffs of grey and earthly dregs;
    And over these she wept,
    For all were come since last her Guest
    Within the room had slept.

    And, for nor broom nor tears had power
    To lift the clods of ill,
    She called one servant of her Guest
    Who came with right good will,
    For, by his sweet Lord’s bidding, he
    Waiteth on Sorrow still;

    So, seeing she had done her part
    As far as in her lay
    And had intent to keep the place
    More cleanly from that day,
    Did with his Master’s dust-pan come
    And take the dust away.

    She thanked him, and Him who sent
    Such succor, and she spread
    Fair sheets of Thankfulness and Love
    Upon her Master’s bed,
    Then on the new-scoured threshold stood
    And listened for His tread.



AN ELEGY, FOR FATHER ANSELM, OF THE ORDER OF REFORMED CISTERCIANS,
GUEST-MASTER AND PARISH PRIEST

“Et pastores erant in regione eadem vigilantes”

BY HELEN PARRY EDEN


    You to whose soul a death propitious brings
    Its Heaven, who attain a windless bourne
    Of sanctity beyond all sufferings,
    It is not ours to mourn;

    For you, to whom the earth could nothing give,
    Who knew no hint of our inspired pride,
    You could not very well be said to live
    Until the day you died.

    ’Tis upon us--father and kindly friend,
    Holy and cheerful host--the unbidden guest
    You welcomed and the souls you would amend,
    The weight of sorrow rests.

    From Sarum in the mesh of her five streams,
    Her idle belfries and her glittering vanes,
    We are clomb to where the cloud-race dusks and gleams
    On turf of upland plains.

    Southward the road through juniper and briar
    Clambers the down, untrodden and unworn
    Save where some flock pitted the chalky mire
    With little feet at dawn.

    Twice in a week the hooded carrier’s lamp,
    Flashing on wayside flints and grasses, spills
    Its misty radiance where the dews lie damp
    Among the untended hills;

    Here lies the hamlet ringed with grassy mound
    And brambled barrow where, superbly dead,
    The dust of pagans turned to holy ground
    Beneath your humble tread.

    Here we descend at drooping dusk the side
    Of the stony down beneath the planted ring
    Of beeches where you showed with pastoral pride
    The folded lambs in spring;

    Here pull at eve the self-same bell that hastened
    Your rough-shod feet behind the hollow door--
    Yet never see you stand, the chain unfastened,
    Your lantern on the floor.

    Others will spread the board now you are gone
    Here where you smiled and gave your guests to eat,
    Learning your menial kingliness from One
    Who washed His servant’s feet;

    Along the slumbering corridors betimes
    Others will knock and other footsteps pass
    Down the wet lane e’er the thin shivering chimes
    Toll for the early mass.

    Yet in the chapel’s self no sorrows sing
    In the strange priest’s voice, nor any dolour grips
    The heart because it is not you who bring
    Your Master to its lips.

    Here let us leave the things you would not have--
    Vain grief and sorrow useless to be shown--
    “God’s gift and the Community’s I gave
    And nothing of my own,”

    You would have said, self-deemed of no more worth
    That then green hands that guard a poppy’s grace--
    Blows the eternal flower and back to earth
    Tumbles the withered case.

    Nay, but Our Lord hath made renouncement vain,
    Himself into those humble hands let fall,
    Guerdon of willing poverty and pain,
    The greatest gift of all;

    To you and all who in that life austere
    Mid fields remote your harsher labours ply
    Singing His praise, girt round from year to year
    With sheep-bells and the sky--

    This, that to you is larger audience given
    Where prayer and praise with sighing pinions shod
    Piercing the starry ante-rooms of Heaven
    Sway the designs of God:

    And now yourself, standing where late hath stood
    The echo of your voice, are prayer and praise--
    O sweet reward and unsurpassing good
    For that small gift of days.

    Yourself, who now have heard such summoning
    And seen such burning clarities alight
    As broke the vigilant shepherds’ drowsy ring
    On the predestined night,

    Who made such haste as theirs who rose and trod
    To Bethlehem the dew-encumbered grass,
    Trustful to see the showing forth of God
    And the Word come to pass;

    With how much more than home-spun Israelites’
    Poor hungry glimpse of Godhead are you blest
    Whom Mary shows for more than mortal nights
    The Jewel on her breast.

    Yet, as one kneeling churl might chance to think
    Of the wan herd behind their wattled bars,
    Moving unshepherded with bells that clink
    And stir beneath the stars,

    And, for the thought’s space wishing he were back,
    Pray, to that Sum of Sweetness for his sheep--
    “Take them, O Thou that dost supply our lack,
    Into Thy hands to keep.”

    So you who in His presence move and live
    Recall amid your glad celestial cares,
    Your chosen office, to your children give
    The charity of prayers.



SORROW

BY HELEN PARRY EDEN


    Of Sorrow, ’tis as Saints have said--
    That his ill-savoured lamp shall shed
    A light to Heaven, when, blown about
    By the world’s vain and windy rout,
    The candles of delight burn out.

    Then usher Sorrow to thy board,
    Give him such fare as may afford
    Thy single habitation--best
    To meet him half-way in his quest,
    The importunate and sad-eyed guest.

    Yet somewhat should he give who took
    My hospitality, for look,
    His is no random vagrancy;
    Beneath his rags what hints there be
    Of a celestial livery.

    Sweet Sorrow, play a grateful part,
    Break me the marble of my heart
    And of its fragments pave a street
    Where, to my bliss, myself may meet
    One hastening with piercèd feet.



OUR LADY’S DEATH

BY FATHER EDMUND, C.P.


      And didst thou die, dear Mother of our Life?
        Sin had no part in thee; then how should death?
        Methinks, if aught the great tradition saith
      Could wake in loving hearts a moment’s strife
    (I said--my own with her new image rife),

       ’Twere this. And yet ’tis certain, next to faith
        Thou didst lie down to render up thy breath:
      Though after the seventh sword, no meaner knife

      Could pierce that bosom. No, nor did: no sting
        Of pain was there; but only joy. The love,
          So long thy life ecstatic, and restrained
      From setting free thy soul, now gave it wing;
        Thy body, soon to reign with it above,
          Radiant and fragrant, as in trance, remained.



VIGIL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

BY MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN


    A sword of silver cuts the fields asunder--
      A silver sword to-night, a lake in June--
    And plains of snow reflect, the maples under,
      The silver arrows of a wintry noon.

    The trees are white with moonlight and with ice-pearls;
      The trees are white, like ghosts we see in dreams;
    The air is still: there are no moaning wind-whirls;
      And one sees silence in the quivering beams.

    December night, December night, how warming
      Is all thy coldness to the Christian soul:
    Thy very peace at each true heart is storming
      In potent waves of love that surging roll.

    December night, December night, how glowing
      Thy frozen rains upon our warm hearts lie:
    Our God upon this vigil is bestowing
      A thousand graces from the silver sky.

    O moon, O symbol of our Lady’s whiteness;
      O snow, O symbol of our Lady’s heart;
    O night, chaste night, bejewelled with argent brightness,
      How sweet, how bright, how loving, kind thou art.

    O miracle: to-morrow and to-morrow,
      In tender reverence shall no praise abate;
    For from all seasons shall we new jewels borrow
      To deck the Mother born Immaculate.



THE OLD VIOLIN

BY MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN


    Though tuneless, stringless, it lies there in dust,
      Like some great thought on a forgotten page;
    The soul of music cannot fade or rust,--
      The voice within it stronger grows with age;
    Its strings and bow are only triffling things--
      A master-touch!--its sweet soul wakes and sings.



MAURICE DE GUERIN

BY MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN


    The old wine filled him, and he saw, with eyes
      Anoint of Nature, fauns and dryads fair
      Unseen by others; to him maidenhair
    And waxen lilacs, and those birds that rise
    A-sudden from tall reeds at slight surprise,
      Brought charmed thoughts; and in earth everywhere
      He, like sad Jaques, found a music rare
    As that of Syrinx to old Grecians wise.
    A pagan heart, a Christian soul had he,
      He followed Christ, yet for dead Pan he sighed,
      Till earth and heaven met within his breast;
    As if Theocritus in Sicily
      Had come upon the Figure crucified
      And lost his gods in deep, Christ-given rest.



HE MADE US FREE

BY MAURICE FRANCIS EGAN


    As flame streams upward, so my longing thought
              Flies up with Thee,
    Thou God and Saviour who hast truly wrought
    Life out of death, and to us, loving, brought
    A fresh, new world; and in Thy sweet chains caught,
              And made us free!

    As hyacinths make way from out the dark,
              My soul awakes,
    At thought of Thee, like sap beneath the bark;
    As little violets in field and park
    Rise to the trilling thrush and meadow-lark,
              New hope it takes.

    As thou goest upward through the nameless space
              We call the sky,
    Like jonquil perfume softly falls Thy grace;
    It seems to touch and brighten every place;
    Fresh flowers crown our wan and weary race,
              O Thou on high.

    Hadst Thou not risen, there would be no more joy
              Upon earth’s sod;
    Life would still be with us a wound or toy,
    A cloud without the sun,--O Babe, O Boy,
    A Man of Mother pure, with no alloy,
              O risen God!

    Thou, God and King, didst “mingle in the game,”
              (Cease, all fears; cease!)
    For love of us,--not to give Virgil’s fame
    Or Croesus’ wealth, not to make well the lame,
    Or save the sinner from deserved shame,
              But for sweet Peace!

    For peace, for joy,--not that the slave might lie
              In luxury,
    Not that all woe from us should always fly,
    Or golden crops with Syrian roses vie
    In every field; but in Thy peace to die
              And rise,--be free!



THE GRANDEURS OF MARY

BY FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER, D.D.


    What is this grandeur I see up in heaven,
      A splendour that looks like a splendour divine?
    What creature so near the Creator is throned?
      O Mary, those marvellous glories are thine.

    But who would have thought that a creature could live
      With the fires of the Godhead so awfully nigh?
    Oh, who could have dreamed, mighty Mother of God,
      That ever God’s power could have raised thee so high?

    What name can we give to a queenship so grand?
      What thought can we think of a glory like this?
    Saints and angels lie far in the distance, remote
      From the golden excess of thine unmated bliss.

    Thy person, thy soul, thy most beautiful form,
      Thine office, thy name, thy most singular grace--
    God hath made for them, Mother, a world by itself,
      A shrine all alone, a most worshipful place.

    Mid the blaze of those fires, eternal, unmade,
      Thy Maker unspeakably makes thee his own;
    The arms of the Three Uncreated, outstretched,
      Round the Word’s mortal Mother in rapture are thrown.

    Thy sinless conception, thy jubilant birth,
      Thy crib and thy cross, thine assumption and crown,
    They have raised thee on high to the right hand of Him
      Whom the spells of thy love to thy bosom drew down.

    I am blind with thy glory; in all God’s wide world
      I find nothing like thee for glory and power:
    I can hardly believe that thou grewest on earth,
      In the green fields of Juda, a scarce-noticed flower.

    And is it not really eternal, divine?
      Is it human, created, a glorified heart,
    So like God, and not God? Ah, Maker of men,
      We bless thee for being the God that thou art.

    O Mary, what ravishing pageants I see,
      What wonders and works centre round thee in heaven,
    What creations of grace fall like light from thy hands,
      What creator-like powers to thy prudence are given.

    What vast jurisdiction, what numberless realms,
      What profusion of dread and unlimited power,
    What holy supremacies, awful domains,
      The Word’s mighty Mother enjoys for her dower.

    What grand ministrations of pity and strength,
      What endless processions of beautiful light,
    What incredible marvels of motherly love,
      What queenly resplendence of empire and right.

    What sounds as of seas flowing all round thy throne,
      What flashings of fire from thy burning abode,
    What thunders of glory, what tempests of power,
      What calms, like the calms in the Bosom of God.

    Inexhaustible wonder; the treasures of God
      Seem to multiply under thy marvellous hand;
    And the power of thy Son seems to gain and to grow,
      When He deigns to obey thy maternal command.

    Ten thousand magnificent greatnesses blend
      Their vast oceans of light, at the foot of thy throne;
    Ten thousand unspeakable majesties grace
      The royalty vested in Mary alone.

    But look, what a wonder there is up in God:
      One love, like a special perfection, we see;
    And the chief of thy grandeurs, great Mother, is there--
      In the love the Eternal Himself has for thee.



THE RIGHT MUST WIN

BY FREDERICK WILLIAM FABER, D.D.


    Oh, it is hard to work for God,
      To rise and take His part
    Upon this battlefield of earth,
      And not sometimes lose heart.

    He hides Himself so wondrously,
      As though there were no God;
    He is least seen when all the powers
      Of ill are most abroad.

    Or He deserts us at the hour
      The fight is all but lost;
    And seems to leave us to ourselves
      Just when we need Him most.

    Ill masters good; good seems to change
      To ill with greatest ease;
    And, worst of all, the good with good
      Is at cross-purposes.

    Ah! God is other than we think;
      His ways are far above,
    Far beyond reason’s height, and reached
      Only by child-like love.

    Workman of God! Oh, lose not heart,
      But learn what God is like;
    And in the darkest battle-field
      Thou shalt know where to strike.

    Thrice blessed is he to whom is given
      The instinct that can tell
    That God is on the field when He
      Is most invisible.

    Blessed too, is he who can divine
      Where real right doth lie,
    And dares to take the side that seems
      Wrong to man’s blindfold eye.

    For right is right, since God is God;
      And right the day must win;
    To doubt would be disloyalty,
      To falter would be sin.



MATER DOLOROSA

BY JOHN FITZPATRICK, O.M.I.


    She stands, within the shadow, at the foot
      Of the high tree she planted: thirty-three
      Full years have sped, and such has grown to be
    The stem that burgeoned forth from Jesse’s root.
    Spring swiftly passed and panted in pursuit
      The eager summer; now she stands to see
      The only fruit-time of her only tree:
    And all the world is waiting for the Fruit.

    Now is faith’s sad fruition: this one hour
      Of gathered expectation wears the crown
        Of the long grief with which the years were rife;
    As in her lap--a sudden autumn shower--
      The earthquake with his trembling hand shakes down
        The red, ripe Fruitage of the Tree of Life.



YULETIDE

BY ALICE FURLONG


    In a stable bare,
    Lo, the great Ones are.
    Strew the Ivy and the Myrtle
    Round about the Virgin’s kirtle!

    Ass and oxen mild
    Breathe soft upon the Child!
    Blow the scent of bygone summer
    On your breath to the New-comer!

    Be ye well content
    To be straitly pent
    Backwards in the rocky chamber
    From the angel’s wings of amber!

    Rapt the seraphs sit,
    With godly faces lit
    In a radiance shining solely
    From the Christ-child, meek and holy.

    High they chant and clear
    Of the lovely cheer
    Ring down the new evangels
    Of the mystic, midnight angels.

    Faring with good will
    From the misty hill,
    Every shepherd sacrificeth
    To the prophet that ariseth.

    Joseph, Mary’s spouse,
    Prince of David’s House,
    Bendeth low in adorations
    To the Ruler of the Nations.

    Who doth sweetly rest
    On his Mother’s breast,
    Lord of the lightnings and the thunders!
    Mary’s heart keeps all these wonders.



OUR LADY OF THE ROSARY

BY FRANCIS A. GAFFNEY, O.P.


    Lepanto marks the spot of victory,
      O’er crescent cruel and strong, by forces weak,
      Of hallowed cross; of which, “if sign you seek,”
    ’Tis not of man but a Divinity.
    The white-robed Pius Fifth the Rosary
      Uplifted like the rod of Moses, meek;
      Whilst Ottomans on Christians wrath would wreak
    And, as of old, engulfed them in the sea.

    O Lady of the Rosary to-day,
      Thy clients all beseech thee, hear their prayer,
        And beg the Christ Who raging storms did quell,
    Bid warring nations cease their bloody fray;
    His power and thine honor, we declare,
      O Thou All-Fair, thou joy of Israel.



AT THE LEAP OF THE WATERS

BY EDWARD F. GARESCHÉ, S.J.


    How the swift river runs bright to its doom,
      Placid and shining and smooth-flowing by,
    Blue with the gleam of the heavenly room,
      Smiling and calm with the smile of the sky!
    Ah, but the plunge! and the shock and the roar,
      The spray of vast waters that hurl to the deep,
    The churn of its foam, as the measureless pour
      Of that wide-brimming torrent leaps sheer from the steep!
    Look ye; it reaches small fingers of spray
      To clutch at the brink, as unwilling to go
    Through the perilous air, and be fretted away
      In the tumult of vapor that boileth below.
    List ye! the voice of the huge undertone
      That murmurs in pain from the cataract’s breast,
    Where the bruised, shattered waters perpetual moan
      And wander and toss in a weary unrest.
    Feel ye the breath of the cool-spraying mist,
      Cloudy and gray from the depths of its pain;
    Not as when sunbeams the waters have kissed,
      Rising in vapor to gather in rain,
    But fiercely and madly flung forth on the air,
      A shroud for this river that leaps to its death,
    A veil o’er the throes of the cataract there,
      And rolling and rent with its agonized breath!
    Wild torrent! God put thee to thunder His name!
      With the roar of thy waters to call to the sky
    Of His might, Who hath set thee forever the same,
      To topple in foam to the gulfs from on high.
    Loud hymn of the lake-lands! from shore unto shore,
      Still clamor His praises Who called thee to be,
    Till the ears of the nations are tuned to thy roar,
      And they hear the vast message He trusted to thee.



NIAGARA

BY EDWARD F. GARESCHÉ, S.J.


    God, in His ages past the dawn of days,
    Writ one white line of praise,
    Which now, in this great stress and hour of need,
    I bend my soul to read.
    I break the sullen bonds of wearying time,
    And with one leap sublime,
    Force my astounded soul go back and stand
    In the primaeval land!

    The tresses of the ancient flood are kissed
    With virginal, white mist.
    The same soft, thunderous sound
    Thrills the wild woods around,
    But oh the vast and mighty peace that broods
    On these green solitudes,
    Where the great land, with one tremendous tone,
    Litanies to God, alone!

    Tongue of the continent! Thou whose hymning shakes
    The bosom of the lakes!
    O sacrificial torrent, keen and bright,
    Hurled from thy glorious height!
    Thou sacerdotal presence, clothed in power,
    At once the victim and the white-robed priest,
    Whose praise throughout these ages hath not ceased,
    Whose altar steams with incense every hour!
    Lo, in all days, from thy white waters, rise
    The savors of perpetual sacrifice!
    I see pale prophecy of Christ’s dear blood!--
    The transubstantiation of thy flood!

    Oh the wild wonder of the vast emotion
    Of the perturbed wave,
    That cries and wanders like the fearful ocean,
    Seeking, with none to save!
    In their wide agony the rapids roam,
    A world of waves, an universe of pain!
    The vexed, tumultous clamor of their foam
    Crying to God with agonized refrain,
    Where the sad rocks their quivering summits hide
    In the loud anguish of the refluent tide.

    Yet, with a willingness that leaps to sorrow
    Swift run the ragged surges to the height,
    And from their pain is born a pure delight--
    The fear to-day, the snowy peace to-morrow!--
    Cleaving like darts their swift and silvery way
    With sudden gleams, and barbs of glittering spray,
    They hurry to the brink, and swift are lost
    In that stupendous leap, that infinite holocaust!

    Oh Christ-like glory of the praying water
    That leaps forever to its mystic death!
    And from the anguish of that sobbing slaughter
    Lifts the clear glory of the torrent’s breath,
    Where like a paean of rapturous victory calls
    The solemn jubilation of the falls!

    O alabastrine priest--thy splendor spraying
    More lasting than the immemorial hills!
    O monument of waves, O undecaying
    While God’s right hand thy flowing chalice fills!
    Under the transient world’s astonished eyes
    Thou offerest abiding sacrifice!

    In the pale morning, when the rising sun
    Flatters thy pouring flood with slanting beams,
    Most reverent thy duteous waters run,
    And hymn to God with all their thousand streams.
    And in the blazing majesty of noon,
    Still lifts thy wave its sacrificial tune,
    And spills, like jewels of some eastern story,
    Its bright, impetuous avalanche of glory!

    And in the stilly spaces of the night,
    While heaven wonders with its wakeful stars,
    Thou prayest still, beneath the solemn light,
    In booming tones that reach to heaven’s bars,
    Keeping thy vigils, while the angelic moon
    Walks on thy perilous verge with glorious shoon,
    Chanting from foam and spray without encease
    Thy yearning immemorial prayer for peace!



COMMUNION

BY CAROLINE GILTINAN


    Mother Mary, thee I see
    Bringing Him, thy Babe, to me,
    Thou dost say, with trusting smile:
    “Hold Him, dear, a little while.”
    Mother Mary, pity me,
    For He struggles to be free!
    My heart, my arms--He finds defiled:
    I am unworthy of thy Child.
    Mary, Mother, charity!
    Bring thy Baby back to me!



THE NIGHTINGALE

BY GERALD GRIFFIN


    As the mute nightingale in closest groves
      Lies hid at noon, but when day’s piercing eye
      Is locked in night, with full heart beating high
    Poureth her plain-song o’er the light she loves;
    So, Virgin Ever-pure and Ever-blest,
      Moon of religion, from whose radiant face
      Reflected streams the light of heavenly grace
    On broken hearts, by contrite thoughts oppressed:
    So, Mary, they who justly feel the weight
      Of Heaven’s offended Majesty, implore
        Thy reconciling aid with suppliant knee:
    Of sinful man, O sinless Advocate,
      To thee they turn, nor Him they less adore;
        ’Tis still His light they love, less dreadful seen in thee.



TRYSTE NOEL

BY LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY


    The Ox he openeth wide the doore,
      And from the Snowe he calls her inne,
    And he hath seen her smile therefore,
      Our Ladye without Sinne.
        Now soone from Sleep
        A Starre shall leap,
    And sonne arrive both King and Hinde:
                _Amen, Amen_:
    But O the place co’d I but finde!

    The Ox hath hushed his voyce and bent
      Trewe eyes of Pitty ore the Mow,
    And on his lovelie Neck, forspent,
      The Blessed layes her Browe.
        Around her feet,
        Full Warme and Sweete,
    His bowerie Breath doth meeklie dwell:
                _Amen, Amen_:
    But sore am I with Vaine Travel!

    The Ox is Host in Judah stall
      And Host of more than onlie one,
    For close she gathereth withal
      Our Lorde her littel Sonne.
        Glad Hinde and King
        Their Gyfte may bring,
    But wo’d to-night my Teares were there,
                _Amen, Amen_:
    Between her Bosom and His hayre!



THE WILD RIDE

BY LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY


    _I hear in my heart, I hear in its ominous pulses
    All day, on the road, the hoofs of invisible horses,
    All night, from their stalls, the importunate pawing and neighing._

    Let cowards and laggards fall back! but alert to the saddle,
    Weatherworn and abreast, go men of our galloping legion,
    With a stirrup-cup each to the lily of women that loves him.

    The trail is through dolor and dread, over crags and morasses;
    There are shapes by the way, there are things that appal or entice
        us:
    What odds? We are Knights of the Grail, we are vowed to the riding.

    Thought’s self is a vanishing wing, and joy is a cobweb,
    And friendship a flower in the dust, and glory a sunbeam:
    Not here is our prize, nor, alas! after these our pursuing.

    A dipping of plumes, a tear, a shake of the bridle,
    A passing salute to this world and her pitiful beauty:
    We hurry with never a word in the track of our fathers.

    _I hear in my heart, I hear in its ominous pulses
    All day, on the road, the hoofs of invisible horses,
    All night, from their stalls, the importunate pawing and neighing._

    We spur to a land of no name, outracing the stormwind;
    We leap to the infinite dark like the sparks from the anvil.
    Thou leadest, O God! All’s well with Thy troopers that follow.



ODE FOR A MASTER MARINER ASHORE

BY LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY


    There in his room, whene’er the moon looks in,
    And silvers now a shell, and now a fin,
    And o’er his chart glides like an argosy,
    Quiet and old sits he.
    Danger! he hath grown homesick for thy smile.
    Where hidest thou the while, heart’s boast,
    Strange face of beauty sought and lost,
    Star-face that lured him out from boyhood’s isle?
    Blown clear from dull indoors, his dreams behold
    Night-water smoke and sparkle as of old,
    The taffrail lurch, the sheets triumphant toss
    Their phosphor-flowers across.
    Towards ocean’s either rim the long-exiled
    Wears on, till stunted cedars throw
    A lace-like shadow over snow,
    Or tropic fountains wash their agates wild.

    Awhile, play up and down the briny spar
    Odors of Surinam and Zanzibar,
    Till blithely thence he ploughs, in visions new,
    The Labradorian blue;
    All homeless hurricanes about him break;
    The purples of spent day he sees
    From Samos to the Hebrides,
    And drowned men dancing darkly in his wake.

    Where the small deadly foam-caps, well descried,
    Top, tier on tier, the hundred-mountained tide,
    Away, and far away, his pride is borne,
    Riding the noisy morn,
    Plunges, and preens her wings, and laughs to know
    The helm and tightening halyards still
    Follow the urging of his will,
    And scoff at sullen earth a league below.

    Mischance hath barred him from his heirdom high,
    And shackled him with many an inland tie,
    And of his only wisdom made a jibe
    Amid an alien tribe:
    No wave abroad but moans his fallen state,
    The trade-wind ranges now, the trade-wind roars!
    Why is it on a yellowing page he pores?
    Ah, why this hawser fast to a garden gate?

    Thou friend so long withdrawn, so deaf, so dim,
    Familiar Danger, O forget not him!
    Repeat of thine evangel yet the whole
    Unto his subject soul,
    Who suffers no such palsy of her drouth,
    Nor hath so tamely worn her chain,
    But she may know that voice again,
    And shake the reefs with answer of her mouth.

    O give him back, before his passion fail,
    The singing cordage and the hollow sail,
    And level with those aged eyes let be
    The bright unsteady sea;
    And move like any film from off his brain
    The pasture wall, the boughs that run
    Their evening arches to the sun,
    The hamlet spire across the sown champaign;
    And on the shut space and the trivial hour,
    Turn the great floods! and to thy spousal bower,
    With rapt arrest and solemn loitering,
    Him whom thou lovedst bring:
    That he, thy faithful one, with praising lip,
    Not having, at the last, less grace
    Of thee than had his roving race,
    Sum up his strength to perish with a ship.



IN LEINSTER

BY LOUISE IMOGEN GUINEY


    I try to knead and spin, but my life is low the while.
    Oh, I long to be alone, and walk abroad a mile;
    Yet if I walk alone, and think of naught at all,
    Why from me that’s young should the wild tears fall?

    The shower-stricken earth, the earth-colored streams,
    They breathe on me awake, and moan to me in dreams;
    And yonder ivy fondling the broke castle-wall,
    It pulls upon my heart till the wild tears fall.

    The cabin-door looks down, a furze-lighted hill,
    And far as Leighlin Cross the fields are green and still;
    But once I hear the blackbird in Leighlin hedges call,
    The foolishness is on me, and the wild tears fall!



AUNT MARY

A Christmas Chant

BY ROBERT STEPHEN HAWKER


      Now, of all the trees by the king’s highway,
        Which do you love the best?
      O! the one that is green upon Christmas Day,
        The bush with the bleeding breast.
    Now the holly with her drops of blood for me:
    For that is our dear Aunt Mary’s tree.

      Its leaves are sweet with our Saviour’s Name,
        ’Tis a plant that loves the poor:
      Summer and winter it shines the same
        Beside the cottage door.
    O! the holly with her drops of blood for me:
    For that is our kind Aunt Mary’s tree.

      ’Tis a bush that the birds will never leave:
        They sing in it all day long;
      But sweetest of all upon Christmas Eve
        Is to hear the robin’s song.
    ’Tis the merriest sound upon earth or sea:
    For it comes from our own Aunt Mary’s tree.

      So, of all that grows by the king’s highway,
        I love that tree the best;
      ’Tis a bower for the birds upon Christmas Day,
        The bush of the bleeding breast.
    O! the holly with her drops of blood for me:
    For that is our sweet Aunt Mary’s tree.



KING ARTHUR’S WAES-HAEL

BY ROBERT STEPHEN HAWKER


    Waes-hael for knight and dame;
      O merry be their dole;
    Drink-hael! In Jesu’s name
      We fill the tawny bowl;
    But cover down the curving crest,
    Mould of the Orient Lady’s breast.

    Waes-hael! yet lift no lid:
      Drain ye the reeds for wine.
    Drink-hael! the milk was hid
      That soothed that Babe divine;
    Hush’d, as this hollow channel flows,
    He drew the balsam from the rose.

    Waes-hael! thus glowed the breast
      Where a God yearned to cling;
    Drink-hael! so Jesu pressed
      Life from its mystic spring;
    Then hush and bend in reverend sign
    And breathe the thrilling reeds for wine.

    Waes-hael! in shadowy scene
      Lo! Christmas children we:
    Drink-hael! behold we lean
      At a far Mother’s knee;
    To dream that thus her bosom smiled,
    And learn the lip of Bethlehem’s Child.



OLD NUNS

BY JAMES M. HAYES


    Our Lady smiles on youthful nuns,
      She loves them well.
    Our Lady’s smile like sunshine floods
      Each convent cell,
    But fondest falls Our Lady’s smile
      Where old nuns dwell;

    Old nuns whose hearts are young with love
      For Mary’s Son,
    Old nuns whose prayers for faltering souls
      Have victory won,
    Old nuns whose lives are beautiful
      With service done.

    Their love a loveless world has saved
      From God’s dread rod,
    The paths where Sorrow walks with Sin
      Their feet have trod,
    Their knees have worn the flags that pave
      The house of God.

    Our Lady smiles on youthful nuns,
      She loves them well;
    Our Lady’s smile like sunshine floods
      Each convent cell;
    But fondest falls Our Lady’s smile
      Where old nuns dwell.



THE MOTHER OF THE ROSE

BY JAMES M. HAYES


    I kneel on Holy Thursday with the faithful worshipping
    Where Christ is throned in splendor as the sacramental King.

    I ever will remember it, that wondrous full-blown rose
    Among the burning tapers on the altar of repose.

    O blessed among roses all, to bloom in beauty there,
    To give your heart unto your God and in His glory share.

           *       *       *       *       *

    In quiet fields beyond the town, near where the river flows
    There is a humble garden where a gentle rose-tree grows.

    To-night Our Lord remembers on the altar of repose
    This rose-tree in the fields afar, the mother of the rose.



THE TRANSFIGURATION

BY JAMES M. HAYES


    He seeks the mountains where the olives grow,
      The Lord of Glory, veiled in humble guise;
    His soul is shadowed with a coming woe,
      The grief of all the world is in His eyes:
    His spirit struggles in the dark caress
    Of anguish, pain and utter loneliness.

    He always loved the mountain tops, for there
      Away from earth, He treads the mystic ways,
    And sees the vision of the Fairest Fair,
      As Heaven dawns upon His raptured gaze;
    The loneliness, the pain, the grief depart;
    Surpassing gladness fills His Sacred Heart.

    That day He stood upon the olive hill,
      And Peter, James and John in wonder saw
    The burning glories of the God-head fill
      His soul with grandeur, and in holy awe
    They fell upon the ground and cried for grace,
    Lest they should die beholding God’s own Face.

    As minor chords that sob from strings of gold
      The Master speaks in accents sweet and sad:
    The vision past, the chosen three behold
      No one but Jesus and their souls are glad.
    The awe, the splendor and the glory gone,
    How sweet the face of Christ to look upon!



BELOVED, IT IS MORN

BY EMILY H. HICKEY


    Beloved, it is morn!
      A redder berry on the thorn,
      A deeper yellow on the corn,
    For this good day new-born.
        Pray, Sweet, for me
        That I may be
        Faithful to God and thee.

    Beloved, it is day!
      And lovers work, as children play,
      With heart and brain untired alway:
    Dear love, look up and pray.
        Pray, Sweet, for me
        That I may be
        Faithful to God and thee.

    Beloved, it is night!
      Thy heart and mine are full of light,
      Thy spirit shineth clear and white,
    God keep thee in His sight!
        Pray, Sweet, for me
        That I may be
        Faithful to God and thee.



A SEA STORY

BY EMILY H. HICKEY


    Silence. A while ago
      Shrieks went up piercingly;
    But now is the ship gone down;
      Good ship, well manned, was she.
    There’s a raft that’s a chance of life for one,
      This day upon the sea.

    A chance for one of two;
      Young, strong, are he and he,
    Just in the manhood prime,
      The comelier, verily,
    For the wrestle with wind and weather and wave,
      In the life upon the sea.

    One of them has a wife
      And little children three;
    Two that can toddle and lisp,
      And a suckling on the knee:
    Naked they’ll go, and hunger sore,
      If he be lost at sea.

    One has a dream of home,
      A dream that well may be:
    He never has breathed it yet;
      She never has known it, she.
    But some one will be sick at heart
      If he be lost at sea.

    “Wife and kids at home!--
      Wife, kids, nor home has he!--
    Give us a chance, Bill!” Then,
      “All right, Jem!” Quietly
    A man gives up his life for a man,
      This day upon the sea.



THE STARLIGHT NIGHT

BY GERARD HOPKINS, S.J.


    Look at the stars! look, look up at the skies!
      O look at all the fire-folk sitting in the air!
      The bright boroughs, the quivering citadels there!
    The dim woods quick with diamond wells; the elf-eyes!
    The grey lawns cold where quaking gold-dew lies!
      Wind-beat white-beam; airy abeles all on flare!
      Flake-doves sent floating out at a farmyard scare!--
    Ah well! it is a purchase and a prize.

    Buy then! Bid then!--What?--Prayer, patience, alms, vows,--
    Look, look! a May-mess, like on orchard boughs;
      Look! March-bloom, like on mealed-with-yellow sallows.--
    These are indeed the barn: within-doors house
    The shocks. This piece-bright paling hides the Spouse
      Christ, and the mother of Christ and all his hallows.



THE HABIT OF PERFECTION

BY GERARD HOPKINS, S.J.


    Elected Silence, sing to me
    And beat upon my whorled ear,
    Pipe me to pastures still and be
    The music that I care to hear.

    Shape nothing, lips; be lovely-dumb:
    It is the shut, the curfew sent
    From there where all surrenders come
    Which only make you eloquent.

    Be shelled, eyes, with double dark
    And find the uncreated light;
    This ruck and reel which you remark
    Coils, keeps, and teases simple sight.

    Palate, the hutch of tasty lust,
    Desire not to be rinsed with wine:
    The can must be so sweet, the crust
    So fresh that come in fasts divine!

    Nostrils, your careless breath that spend
    Upon the stir and keep of pride,
    What relish shall the censers send
    Along the sanctuary side!

    O feel-of-primrose hands, O feet
    That want the yield of plushy sward,
    But you shall walk the golden street,
    And you unhouse and house the Lord.

    And, Poverty, be thou the bride
    And now the marriage feast begun,
    And lily-colored clothes provide
    Your spouse not labored-at, nor spun.



SPRING

BY GERARD HOPKINS, S.J.


    Nothing is so beautiful as spring--
      When weeds, in wheels, shoot long and lovely and lush:
        Thrush’s eggs look little low heavens, and thrush
    Through the echoing timber does so rinse and wring
    The ear, it strikes like lightnings to hear him sing;
      The glassy pear-tree leaves and blooms, they brush
      The descending blue; that blue is all in a rush
    With richness; the racing lambs too have fair their fling.

    What is all this juice and all this joy?
      A strain of the earth’s sweet being in the beginning
    In Eden garden. Have, get, before it cloy,
      Before it cloud, Christ, lord, and sour with shining,
    Innocent mind and Mayday in girl and boy,
      Most, O maid’s child, thy choice and worthy the winning.



THE FRIAR OF GENOA

BY SCHARMEL IRIS


    In Genoa a friar walked;
    Of every sacred tale he talked;
    Alone he dwelt, in prayer he knelt;
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    From dawn till dusk he sang.

    His bruised and blistered feet were bare;
    His head burned in the sunlight’s glare.
    On stones he slept, and worked and wept,
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    In every blow or pang.

    Out of his dole he clothed the poor,
    And every hardship did endure;
    He blessed the meek and nursed the weak
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    With each succeeding day.

    And begged for alms for those in need,
    A kind word spoke with every deed,
    With sinners dined and led the blind--
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    Until he passed away.

    And is his work done? Ah, surprise!
    Out of the tomb where low he lies
      A perfume blows, as of a rose:
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    It sings in shade or sun.

    And he who breathes it, him it feeds,
    And stirs his heart to noble deeds;
    And one has said, “He is not dead--
          “Ave Maria, Ave Maria!”
    His life has just begun!”



THE DARK ANGEL

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    Dark Angel, with thine aching lust
    To rid the world of penitence:
    Malicious Angel, who still dost
    My soul such subtile violence!

    Because of thee, no thought, no thing,
    Abides for me undesecrate:
    Dark Angel, ever on the wing,
    Who never reachest me too late!

    When music sounds, then changest thou
    Its silvery to a sultry fire:
    Nor will thine envious heart allow
    Delight untortured by desire.

    Through thee, the gracious Muses turn
    To Furies, O mine Enemy!
    And all the things of beauty burn
    With flames of evil ecstasy.

    Because of thee, the land of dreams
    Becomes a gathering place of fears:
    Until tormented slumber seems
    One vehemence of useless tears.

    When sunlight glows upon the flowers,
    Or ripples down the dancing sea:
    Thou, with thy troop of passionate powers,
    Beleaguerest, bewilderest, me.

    Within the breath of autumn woods,
    Within the winter silences:
    Thy venomous spirit stirs and broods,
    O Master of impieties!

    The ardour of red flame is thine,
    And thine the steely soul of ice:
    Thou poisonest the fair design
    Of nature, with unfair device.

    Apples of ashes, golden bright;
    Waters of bitterness, how sweet!
    O banquet of a foul delight,
    Prepared by thee, dark Paraclete!

    Thou art the whisper in the gloom,
    The hinting tone, the haunting laugh:
    Thou art the adorner of my tomb,
    The minstrel of mine epitaph.

    I fight thee, in the Holy Name!
    Yet, what thou dost, is what God saith:
    Tempter! should I escape thy flame,
    Thou wilt have helped my soul from Death:

    The second Death, that never dies,
    That cannot die, when time is dead:
    Live Death, wherein the lost soul cries,
    Eternally uncomforted.

    Dark Angel, with thine aching lust!
    Of two defeats, of two despairs:
    Less dread, a change to drifting dust,
    Than thine eternity of cares.

    Do what thou wilt, thou shalt not so,
    Dark Angel! triumph over me:
    _Lonely, unto the Lone I go;
    Divine, to the Divinity._



TE MARTYRUM CANDIDATUS

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    Ah, see the fair chivalry come, the companions of Christ!
    White Horsemen, who ride on white horses, the Knights of God!
    They, for their Lord and their Lover who sacrificed
    All, save the sweetness of treading, where He first trod!

    These through the darkness of death, the dominion of night,
    Swept, and they woke in white places at morning tide:
    They saw with their eyes, and sang for joy of the sight,
    They saw with their eyes the Eyes of the Crucified.

    Now, whithersoever He goeth, with Him they go:
    White Horsemen, who ride on white horses, oh fair to see!
    They ride, where the Rivers of Paradise flash and flow,
    White Horsemen, with Christ their Captain: forever He!



CHRISTMAS AND IRELAND

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    The golden stars give warmthless fire,
      As weary Mary goes through night:
    Her feet are torn by stone and briar;
      She hath no rest, no strength, no light:
    O Mary, weary in the snow,
        Remember Ireland’s woe!

    O Joseph, sad for Mary’s sake!
      Look on our earthly Mother too:
    Let not the heart of Ireland break
      With agony the ages through:
    For Mary’s love, love also thou
        Ireland, and save her now!

    Harsh were the folk, and bitter stern,
      At Bethlehem, that night of nights.
    _For you no cheering hearth shall burn:
      We have no room here, you no rights._
    O Mary and Joseph; hath not she,
        Ireland, been even as ye?

    The ancient David’s royal house
      Was thine, Saint Joseph! wherefore she,
    Mary, thine Ever Virgin Spouse,
      To thine own city went with thee.
    Behold! thy citizens disown
        The heir of David’s throne!

    Nay, more! The very King of Kings
      Was with you, coming to His own:
    They thrust Him forth to lowliest things;
      The poor, meek beasts of toil alone
    Stood by, when came to piteous birth
        The God of all the earth.

    And she, our Mother Ireland, knows
      Insult, and infamies of wrong:
    Her innocent children clad with woes,
      Her weakness trampled by the strong:
    And still upon her Holy Land
        Her pitiless foemen stand.

    From Manger unto Cross and Crown
      Went Christ: and Mother Mary passed
    Through Seven Sorrows, and sat down
      Upon the Angel Throne at last.
    Thence, Mary! to thine own Child pray,
        For Ireland’s hope this day!

    She wanders amid winter still,
      The dew of tears is on her face:
    Her wounded heart takes yet its fill
      Of desolation and disgrace.
    God still is God! And through God she
        Foreknows her joy to be.

    The snows shall perish at the spring,
      The flowers pour fragrance round her feet:
    Ah, Jesus! Mary! Joseph! bring
      This mercy from the Mercy Seat!
    Send it, sweet King of Glory, born
        Humbly on Christmas Morn!



TO MY PATRONS

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    Thy spear rent Christ, when dead for me He lay:
      My sin rends Christ, though never one save He
    Perfectly loves me, comforts me. Then pray,
      Longinus Saint! the Crucified, for me.

    Hard is the holy war, and hard the way:
      At rest with ancient victors would I be.
    O faith’s first glory from our England! pray,
      St. Alban! to the Lord of Hosts, for me.

    Fain would I watch with thee, till morning gray,
      Beneath the stars austere: so might I see
    Sunrise, and light, and joy, at last. Then pray,
      John Baptist Saint! unto the Christ, for me.

    Remembering God’s coronation day;
      Thorns for His crown; His throne, a Cross: to thee
    Heaven’s kingdom dearer was than earth’s. Then pray
      Saint Louis! to the King of kings, for me.

    Thy love loved all things: thy love knew no stay,
      But drew the very wild beasts round thy knee.
    O lover of the least and lowest! pray,
      Saint Francis! to the Son of Man, for me.

    Bishop of souls in servitude astray,
      Who didst for holy service set them free:
    Use still thy discipline of love, and pray.
      Saint Charles! unto the world’s High Priest, for me.



OUR LADY OF THE SNOWS

(Upon reading the poem of that name in the Underwoods of Mr. Stevenson)

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    Far from the world, far from delight,
    Distinguishing not day from night;
    Vowed to one sacrifice of all
    The happy things, that men befall;
    Pleading one sacrifice, before
    Whom sun and sea and wind adore;
    Far from earth’s comfort, far away,
    We cry to God, we cry and pray
    For men, who have the common day.
    Dance, merry world! and sing: but we,
    Hearing, remember Calvary:
    Get gold, and thrive you! but the sun
    Once paled; and the centurion
    Said: _This dead man was God’s own Son_.
    Think you, we shrink from common toil,
    Works of the mart, works of the soil;
    That, prisoners of strong despair,
    We breathe this melancholy air;
    Forgetting the dear calls of race,
    And bonds of house, and ties of place;
    That, cowards, from the field we turn,
    And heavenward, in our weakness, yearn?
    Unjust! unjust! while you despise
    Our lonely years, our mournful cries:
    You are the happier for our prayer;
    The guerdon of our souls, you share.
    Not in such feebleness of heart,
    We play our solitary part;
    Not fugitives of battle, we
    Hide from the world, and let things be:
    But rather, looking over earth,
    Between the bounds of death and birth;
    And sad at heart, for sorrow and sin,
    We wondered, where might help begin.
    And on our wonder came God’s choice,
    A sudden light, a clarion voice,
    Clearing the dark, and sounding clear:
    And we obeyed: behold us, here!
    In prison bound, but with your chains:
    Sufferers, but of alien pains.
    Merry the world, and thrives apace,
    Each in his customary place:
    Sailors upon the carrying sea,
    Shepherds upon the pasture lea,
    And merchants of the town; and they,
    Who march to death, the fighting way;
    And there are lovers in the spring,
    With those, who dance, and those, who sing:
    The commonwealth of every day,
    Eastward and westward, far away,
    Once the sun paled; once cried aloud
    The Roman, from beneath the cloud:
    _This day the Son of God is dead_!
    Yet heed men, what the Roman said?
    They heed not: we then heed for them,
    The mindless of Jerusalem;
    Careless, they live and die: but we
    Care, in their stead, for Calvary.
    O joyous men and women! strong,
    To urge the wheel of life along,
    With strenuous arm, and cheerful strain,
    And wisdom of laborous brain:
    We give our life, our heart, our breath,
    That you may live to conquer death;
    That, past your tomb, with souls in health,
    Joy may be yours, and blessed wealth;
    Through vigils of the painful night,
    Our spirits with your tempters fight:
    For you, for you, we live alone,
    Where no joy comes, where cold winds moan:
    Nor friends have we, nor have we foes;
    Our Queen is of the lonely Snows.
    Ah! and sometimes, our prayers between,
    Come sudden thoughts of what hath been:
    Dreams! And from dreams, once more we fall
    To prayer: _God save, Christ keep, them all_.
    And thou, who knowest not these things,
    Hearken, what news our message brings!
    Our toils, thy joy of life forgot:
    Our lives of prayer forget thee not.



CADGWITH

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    My windows open to the autumn night,
    In vain I watched for sleep to visit me:
    How should sleep dull mine ears, and dim my sight,
    Who saw the stars, and listened to the sea?

    Ah, how the City of our God is fair!
    If, without sea and starless though it be,
    For joy of the majestic beauty there,
    Men shall not miss the stars, nor mourn the sea.



A FRIEND

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    All, that he came to give,
    He gave, and went again:
    I have seen one man live,
    I have seen one man reign,
    With all the graces in his train.

    As one of us, he wrought
    Things of the common hour:
    Whence was the charmed soul brought,
    That gave each act such power;
    The natural beauty of a flower?

    Magnificence and grace,
    Excellent courtesy:
    A brightness on the face,
    Airs of high memory:
    Whence came all these, to such as he?

    Like young Shakespearian kings,
    He won the adoring throng:
    And, as Apollo sings,
    He triumphed with a song:
    Triumphed, and sang, and passed along.

    With a light word he took
    The hearts of men in thrall:
    And, with a golden look,
    Welcomed them, at his call
    Giving their love, their strength, their all.

    No man less proud than he,
    Nor cared for homage less;
    Only, he could not be
    Far off from happiness:
    Nature was bound to his success.

    Weary, the cares, the jars
    The lets, of every day:
    But the heavens filled with stars,
    Chanced he upon the way:
    And where he stayed, all joy would stay.

    Now, when sad night draws down,
    When the austere stars burn:
    Roaming the vast stars burn:
    My thoughts and memories yearn
    Toward him, who never will return.

    Yet I have seen him live,
    And owned my friend, a king:
    And that he came to give,
    He gave, and I, who sing
    His praise, bring all I have to bring.



BY THE STATUE OF KING CHARLES AT CHARING CROSS

BY LIONEL JOHNSON


    Sombre and rich, the skies;
      Great glooms and starry plains.
    Gently the night wind sighs;
      Else a vast silence reigns.

    The splendid silence clings
      Around me: and around
    The saddest of all kings
      Crowned, and again discrowned.

    Comely and calm, he rides
      Hard by his own Whitehall:
    Only the night wind glides:
      No crowds, nor rebels, brawl.

    Gone, too, his Court: and yet,
      The stars his courtiers are;
    Stars in their stations set;
      And every wandering star.

    Alone he rides, alone,
      The fair and fatal king:
    Dark night is all his own,
      That strange and solemn thing.

    Which are more full of fate:
      The stars; or those sad eyes?
    Which are more still and great:
      Those brows; or the dark skies?

    Although his whole heart yearn
      In passionate tragedy:
    Never was face so stern
      With sweet austerity.

    Vanquished in life, his death
      By beauty made amends:
    The passing of his breath
      Won his defeated ends.

    Brief life, and hapless? Nay:
      Through death, life grew sublime.
    _Speak after sentence?_ Yea:
      And to the end of time.

    Armoured he rides, his head
      Bare to the stars of doom:
    He triumphs now, the dead,
      Beholding London’s gloom.

    Our wearier spirit faints,
      Vexed in the world’s employ:
    His soul was of the saints;
      And art to him was joy.

    King, tried in fires of woe!
      Men hunger for thy grace:
    And through the night I go,
      Loving thy mournful face.

    Yet, when the city sleeps;
      When all the cries are still:
    The stars and heavenly deeps
      Work out a perfect will.



THE HOUSEWIFE’S PRAYER

BY BLANCHE MARY KELLY


    Lady, who with tender word
    Didst keep the house of Christ the Lord,
    Who didst set forth the bread and wine
    Before the Living Wheat and Vine,
    Reverently didst make the bed
    Whereon was laid the holy Head
    That such a cruel pillow prest
    For our behoof, on Calvary’s crest;
    Be beside me while I go
    About my labors to and fro.
    Speed the wheel and speed the loom,
    Guide the needle and the broom,
    Make my bread rise sweet and light,
    Make my cheese come foamy white,
    Yellow may my butter be
    As cowslips blowing on the lea.
    Homely though my tasks and small,
    Be beside me at them all.
    Then when I shall stand to face
    Jesu in the judgment place,
    To me thy gracious help afford,
    Who art the Handmaid of the Lord.



BROTHER JUNIPER

BY BLANCHE MARY KELLY


    As unto Francis Poverty,
    So Folly was a bride to thee.
    Not the jade that fashions quips
    For the smiles of mocking lips,
    And in the face of stony Death
    Capers till she’s out of breath,
    But the maid that moves and sings
    About divinely foolish things,
    She that gives her substance all
    For love, and laughs to find it small,
    She that drew God’s Son to be
    A butt, a jest on Calvary,
    And ’neath the leper’s guise doth know
    The King in his incognito.

    The world is grown too wise, and we
    Go our sad ways sensibly.
    O, would that our lean souls might win
    Some grace of thine, God’s harlequin,
    Whose days were lavished like fool’s gold
    Upon His pleasures manifold.
    “Would God,” cried Francis, on his knees,
    “I had a forest of such trees!”



THE THRONE OF THE KING

BY FRANCIS CLEMENT KELLEY


    The sun was setting, and its golden glow
    Deepened the shadows on the village street,
    And reverent touched the beauty of the head
    Of Him who sat, in thought, beside the well
    Of Nazareth. Two women came to fill
    Their earthen jars; and sent their burdens down
    To where the water lay; then drew them up.
    But still the Boy, unmoved, gazed steadily
    Upon the distant hills, that girded round
    Jerusalem, the City of the Soul.

    His eyes were deep as some unfathomed sea,
    That tosses wreckage on its billowed crest;
    But hides its treasures ever in the caves,
    That men shall never touch, or touching die.
    “How strange the Boy,” one woman softly said
    As back they went, their burdens on their heads.
    “Yet He is Joseph’s Son,” the other spoke,
    “And Joseph is my neighbor, a just man;
    But not more lettered than the other men,
    Your own and mine. He is not priest nor scribe
    That he could teach such wisdom to his Son.
    And it doth sometimes seem the Boy is wise
    Beyond His years, with knowledge overmuch.”
    “His mother, whom I know,” her friend replied,
    “As Mary, sweeps the shavings from the floor,
    Cooks the poor fare for Joseph and her Son,
    Cares for the water, and her jar brings here
    As we do every day, who know not much
    Beyond the things we hear from holy men.
    Yet strange is Mary too; I know not where
    To match the peace that’s on her tranquil brow;
    Though, through it all, I’ve seen the Shadow there
    The dread of days to come, though all resigned.
    So like His mother is this only Son
    In beauty, in the peace that’s on His face;
    But sometimes, deeper still, the Shadow falls
    Across His features. Look! behold it now.
    For it doth speak the dread of awful things,
    More awful than the ruin of a world!”

    A-down the street there rang a clatter loud
    Of horses dashing in a maddened run,
    And sounds of wheels swift rolling on the pave.
    The women shrank affrighted to the wall,
    And cowered there in trembling, mortal fear.
    In view the charging horses passed along
    Straight to the well, no driver grasped the reins,
    For he had fallen to the stony street.
    Yet never moved the Boy, nor turned His eyes
    From off the hills that held them so intent.
    But from a doorway rushed a stranger lad
    Who grasped the bit of one, and held him fast.
    The others, panting, stopped so near the Boy
    That, on His face He must have felt the heat
    Which steaming rose from their perspiring flanks,
    As now they stood, foam-flecked and trembling by.
    The driver came and meekly murmured thanks,
    Before he led his charges back again
    To where his master waited for the steeds.
    “He gave me naught but words, and I did save
    The steeds. The chariot, too, would have been dashed
    All broken on the stones, had I not come.”
    The lad was angered, but the Boy moved not,
    Though from the distant hills His gaze was drawn.
    “Dost thou not know,” the lad said, wonderingly,
    “How near was Death to thee a moment since?”

    The Boy, now fully aroused, smiled at the lad
    All kindly, as a loving father smiles
    Upon his child that waked him unaware,
    Whose sleep nor storm nor clatter could affect,
    Yet at the touch of little baby hands
    Opens wide his eyes, that twinkle joyfully.
    “No nearer to grim Death,” the Boy replied,
    “Was I than thou, my friend, art near it now.
    Thou seekest Joseph and hast wandered far
    From distant Jaffa, where thy father died.
    Thou’rt Fidus named. From Joseph thou wouldst learn
    The craftsman’s art, and how to handle tools
    To work with wood, that thou thyself may’st be
    Like him, a craftsman skilled in his own trade.”
    “A prophet Thou!” the lad in wonder cried.
    “Come with me,” made He answer. “I am known
    As Joseph’s Son; so I will speak for thee.”

    As evening fell on Nazareth’s burning street
    Each day these two would wander out alone;
    And by the well, or in a quiet glade
    Seated, would hold their talk, with none to hear.
    Yet converse scarce it was; with ears intent,
    Fidus did always listen, while the Boy
    Poured out a tale of Kings and Prophets old;
    Of marvels that they worked to testify
    Unto a King whom yet the earth would see,
    A King of all Judea and the world;
    Whose glory, mounting even to the stars
    Would dim with rich effulgence, their great light.
    The Sun of Justice He, the Moon of night
    That had for ages settled o’er the earth.
    He told of wonders that the King would do
    Before He mounted to His mighty throne.
    He told of love surpassing every love
    That earth had seen, and of His Kingdom wide;
    Till all on fire Fidus hung’red to see
    The King Himself, and worship at His throne.
    “A Roman though I am,” he oft would cry,
    “Thy King I’d welcome and for Him I’d serve.”
    “Yet thou art craftsman and no soldier thou.”
    “A craftsman too can serve his loyal due.”
    “How wouldst thou serve?” the Boy inquiring spoke.
    “When Joseph bids me go, that I can learn no more,
    This I can do--to build for Him His throne.”
    The Shadow swept across the boyish face--
    The Shadow Fidus once had seen before;
    And he was silent, for in awe he stood
    When that mysterious shade shut off the light
    That shone out from the radiant brow.
    The Shadow was not fear, nor dread of death;
    But dread of something worse than death could bring.
    It was as if a lily, broken, bent,
    But yet unsullied, now was stained with filth
    By impious hand; more cruel far than death
    The marring of the whiteness death had spared:
    Or like a stream, that through its mountain bed
    Had raced unfettered, toward the amber sea,
    And o’er the rapids and the pebbles dashed
    Clear, cold and placid when the mouth is reached;
    Then, death unfeared before it, ready now
    To give back to the ocean all it gave,
    Into its pureness poured a stream so dark
    That tainted all its life, when life was lost.
    ’Twas thus the Shadow seemed; but soon it passed,
    And smiling boyhood turned a happy face
    The while he said: “So thou wouldst build His throne?
    But dost thou know the form that throne will take?”

    “’T will be a throne,” Fidus replied, “so high
    That all may see Him, while from it He reigns,
    And know that He has come unto His own.”

    “Aye,” quick the Boy made answer, “it shall be
    Uplifted high that every man may see;
    Not Jews alone but even ye of Rome;
    And men from Britain too, on farthest shore
    Of Rome’s great Empire: they shall see and know
    The King who reigns upon that living throne;
    And in the Islands of unchartered seas
    The King shall lifted be, that all may know;
    And worlds still undiscovered shall bow down
    To do Him homage, yet shall hate His name.
    For homage goes with hate, and hate will be
    The measure of the homage that shall swell
    In pæans great around the royal throne.”

    Fidus looked wond’ring at the Boy Who spoke,
    As if the right to build the throne were His
    And He could give it to the friend who asked
    This only boon, as pledge of love untold.

    “And I would build it strong so it could go
    O’er sea and land, and last for aye and aye.”

    “So thou wouldst build the throne?” again the Boy
    Half musing spoke. Across His face once more
    The Shadow fell; and, as he stood, His hands
    He lifted up and out, as if in prayer.
    Another Shadow fell upon the ground,
    The arms and body strangely like a Cross.
    Fidus was silent till the prayer was done.
    The sun now set, and all the shadows passed.
    They, arm in arm, ran fast to Joseph’s house.
    But, at the door they paused and, said the Boy:
    “Thou must remember ever this thy day
    When I the promise gave that I can keep,
    For thou shalt build His throne!”

    The years passed on,
    And Fidus to the Roman hosts returned
    Where, welcomed as a soldier’s clever son,
    He wrought in wood for all the legions there
    In Jaffa, where his father had been killed.
    For eighteen years he stayed beside the sea
    And, working at the trade that Joseph taught,
    He never once forgot the precious pledge
    The Boy had made. But never saw nor heard
    Aught of his friend. Then he was sent away
    By Pilate’s call, unto Jerusalem.

    The evening of the day when he arrived
    Great turmoil swept along the Jaffa road,
    And near the Gate of Gardens, where the hill
    Called Calvary lifted up its rocky head.
    He heard the crowds discuss a Wonder-Man
    The priests had taken, and was on His way
    To judgment. “Out on such a King,” cried one,
    “Himself He can not save from shameful death.
    To-morrow’s sun will see Him lifted up
    Above the hill, and throw the Shadow of
    A Cross upon you fools who thought Him King.”

    And on the faces dark of all around,
    Fidus saw Hate he could not understand.
    Then up a vision rose of Nazareth
    When evening fell; a Boy of beauty rare,
    With a strange Shadow on His lovely face,
    Standing with arms outstretched in prayer,
    The glory of the setting sun upon His head.
    But long and grim the shadow of a Cross
    Before Him as He stood. Then to his mind
    Came swift the stories of the mighty King,
    And then the promise: “Thou shalt build His throne.”
    Alas! the long and wav’ring years had swept
    The dreams of youth away; but still remained
    The love, that hungered now to feel the hand
    Within his own of Mary’s Son. The day
    Rose brightly in the East. At Pilate’s door
    He met by chance a captain he had known
    In Jaffa, who bade him attentive wait
    Within the hall, amongst the soldiers there.
    But soon a tumult rose without the doors;
    The Wonder-Man was coming to be judged.
    Then, as the cries increased, his friend came in.
    “Make thou a Cross,” he said, “We have but two
    And, if I judge aright, three shall be sent
    Beyond the wall this day to Calvary.”

    No more of shouting Fidus heard, for he
    Alone made ready a great Cross of wood;
    And, that his craftsman skill should be confessed,
    He made it well, both strong and workmanlike.
    “’Tis fit,” he said, “to serve a King,” and smiled
    At his grim jest; then went he on his way.

    Out in the streets the crowd was surging on
    Along the way that leads to Calvary’s hill.
    And o’er it Fidus saw his Cross; and then,
    Sometimes, a thorn-crowned head with waving hair
    Blood-clotted now, and stained a deeper hue;
    And Hate seemed in the air vibrating round.
    When sudden, like a bell that sweetly rings
    Above a storm, and seems a messenger
    Of Peace and Love, there woke upon his soul
    From out the sleeping past, some prophet words:
    “For homage goes with hate, and hate shall be
    The measure of the homage that shall swell
    In pæans great around the royal throne.”

    The surging crowd hid from his eyes the things
    He did not care to see, but faint he heard
    The hammer strokes, that seemed to drive the nails
    Deep in his heart. Then turned he to a man
    Who silent stood beside him, and he said:
    “A stranger I, from Jaffa, yesternight
    I came. This man? What evil hath He done?”
    “I know not any wrong that He hath done,”

    Came answer fast. “I only know the good
    That He had wrought. Behold my eyes that see!
    Once they were dark. He passed me by one day
    And loud I cried: ‘O Son of David, mercy show
    That I may see.’ He touched me and I saw.”
    Another silent man near Fidus stood,
    To him he spoke, “And friend, what knowest thou?”
    “I know that now I live though I was dead;
    For I had gone into the ending tomb
    All spiced for rest and bound with linen bands;
    And He did come, and He did call me forth.
    I heard His voice that sounded far away,
    As if I stood within a valley deep,
    And some one, from the mountain crest,
    Kept calling me. Then clearer was the Voice;
    As if on wings, I soared aloft to Him,
    Who had the Power to bid me come or stay.
    Again my heart did beat and vital blood
    Surged through my wid’ning veins. I lived again.”

    Then Fidus quick recalled a wondrous thing:
    He saw the Boy in Joseph’s little shop,
    A sick lamb refuged in His tender arms.
    He gently stroked the lamb and then the pain
    Was gone from out its piteous pleading eyes.
    And, lo, the man felt hot tears on his cheeks.

    The Cross was raised, and faint the outline stood
    ’Twixt Fidus and the lurid, murky sky
    That threatened from afar a terror dark.
    Then swift it came, for all of darkness dread
    That air could hold, fell down upon the earth.
    The stumbling crowd in panic slunk away;
    But Fidus groped through darkness to the Cross.

    He heard a moan of sorrow. Well he knew
    The voice of Mary, she of Joseph’s house.
    His heart stood still; the Vision came again:
    That evening fair--the Boy--the distant hills--
    The Shadow of the Cross upon the earth
    As He stood silent all absorbed in prayer--
    The promise that himself should build a throne.
    “Aye,” so the Boy had said, “for it shall be
    Raised up on high that every man may see,
    Not Jews alone, but even ye of Rome;
    And men from Britain too, on farthest shore
    Of Rome’s great Empire: they shall see and know
    The King Who reigns upon that living throne;
    And, in the Islands of uncharted seas
    The King shall lifted be that all may know;
    And worlds still undiscovered shall bow down
    To do Him homage, yet shall hate His name.
    For homage goes with hate, and hate will be
    The measure of the homage that shall swell
    In pæans great around His royal throne.”
    A lightning flash! The rocks asunder rent,
    The tombs burst open and the dead arose.
    One moment Fidus saw the Crucified
    Ere darkness fell again around the Cross.
    But in that moment a new vision rose;
    He saw the hill rise high, and higher still,
    Till over all the mountains of the world
    It towering stood; and nations, worshipping
    Gazed on a mighty throne that bore a King!
    Blood red the jewels in His crown of thorns,
    With ermined pain that wrapped Him all about,
    Deep in His hands the orb and sceptre nails,
    Quite gone the Shadow of the primal sin
    And, on His brow, fulfilled the ancient pledge
    Of Earth’s Redemption.



THE CHILD’S WISH GRANTED

BY GEORGE PARSONS LATHROP


    Do you remember, my sweet, absent son,
    How in the soft June days forever done
    You loved the heavens so warm and clear and high;
    And, when I lifted you, soft came your cry,--
    “Put me ’way up,--’way up in blue sky”?

    I laughed and said I could not,--set you down
    Your gray eyes wonder-filled beneath that crown
    Of bright hair gladdening me as your raced by,
    Another Father now, more strong than I,
    Has borne you voiceless to your dear blue sky.



CHARITY

BY GEORGE PARSONS LATHROP


    Unarmed she goeth, yet her hands
    Strike deeper awe than steel-caparisoned bands,
    No fatal hurt of foe she fears,--
    Veiled, as with mail, in mist of gentle tears.

    ’Gainst her thou canst not bar the door;
    Like air she enters; where none dared before.
    Even to the rich she can forgive
    Their regal selfishness,--and let them live!



A SONG BEFORE GRIEF

BY ROSE HAWTHORNE LATHROP


    Sorrow, my friend,
    When shall you come again?
    The wind is slow, and the bent willows send
    Their silvery motions wearily down the plain.
    The bird is dead
    That sang this morning through the summer rain!

    Sorrow, my friend,
    I owe my soul to you.
    And if my life with any glory end
    Of tenderness for others, and the words are true,
    Said, honoring, when I’m dead,--
    Sorrow, to you, the mellow praise, the funeral wreath, are due.

    And yet, my friend,
    When love and joy are strong,
    Your terrible visage from my sight I rend
    With glances to blue heaven. Hovering along,
    By mine your shadow led,
    “Away!” I shriek, “nor dare to work my new-sprung mercies wrong!”

    Still, you are near:
    Who can your care withstand?
    When deep eternity shall look most clear,
    Sending bright waves to kiss the trembling land,
    My joy shall disappear,--
    A flaming torch thrown to the golden sea by your pale hand.



THE CLOCK’S SONG

BY ROSE HAWTHORNE LATHROP


    Eileen of four,
    Eileen of smiles;
    Eileen of five,
    Eileen of tears;
    Eileen of ten, of fifteen years,
    Eileen of youth
    And woman’s wiles;
    Eileen of twenty,
    In love’s land,
    Eileen all tender
    In her bliss,
    Untouched by sorrow’s treacherous kiss,
    And the sly weapons in life’s hand,--
    Eileen aroused to share all fate,
    Eileen a wife,
    Pale, beautiful,
    Eileen most grave and dutiful,
    Mourning her dreams in queenly state.
    Eileen! Eileen!...



IRELAND

BY EDMUND LEAMY (Senior)


    I loved a love--a royal love--
      In the golden long ago;
    And she was fair as fair could be.
    The foam upon the broken sea,
    The sheen of sun, or moon, or star,
    The sparkle from the diamond spar,
    Not half so rare and radiant are
      As my own love--my royal love--
        In the golden long ago.

    And she had stately palace halls--
      In the golden long ago;
    And warriors, men of stainless swords,
    Were seated at her festive boards,
    Fierce champions of her lightest words,
    While hymned the bard the chieftain’s praise,
    And sang their deed of battle days,
      To cheer my love, my royal love,
        In the golden long ago.

    She wore a stately diadem--
      In the golden long ago;
    Wrought by a cunning craftsman’s hand,
    And fashioned from a battle brand,
    Full fit for the queen of a soldier land;
    Her sceptre was a sabre keen,
    Her robe a robe of radiant green,
      My queenly love, my royal love,
        In the golden long ago.

    Alas for my love, my royal love,
      Of the golden long ago!
    For gone are all her warrior bands,
    And rusted are her battle brands,
    And broken her sabre bright and keen,
    And torn her robe of radiant green,
    A slave where she was a stainless queen,
      My own love, my royal love,
        Of the golden long ago.

    But there is hope for my royal love
    Of the golden long ago;
    Beyond the broad and shining sea
    Gathers a stubborn chivalry,
    That yet will come to make her free,
    And hedge her round with gleaming spears,
    And crown her queen of all the years,
      My own love, my royal love,
        Of the golden long ago.



MUSIC MAGIC

BY EDMUND LEAMY


    _Perhaps there is no magic in this dull old world of ours;
    Perhaps there are no Fairy Tales to gladden heart-break hours;
    Perhaps there is no beauty, and perhaps all things are wrong;
    But still there is the wonder of a little, old-time song!_

    A squeaking and battered old organ, rattling a moss-covered tune,
    Stood in the street of the city, there, in the heat of the noon;
    Banging of roses and sunshine, thrilling of lands far away,
    Whispering songs of my childhood,--sorrowful, simple and gay;
    I was a child for a moment, filled with a child’s petty fears,
    Dreaming, and dreaming, and dreaming, never a thought of the tears.
    Then as the music softened, singing of love and of life,
    Brought it back thought of the old days, far from the toil and the
        strife,
    Glimmer of gold in the star-light, shimmer of silk by the sea;
    Words that were whispered, half-spoken, dreams that were never to
        be.

    Sweet intermingled with sadness, what is as dear as the past?
    Is there a day in the future that is as fair as the last?
    Music, oh, music the master, there in the heat of the noon,
    A squeaking and battered old organ, rattling a moss-covered tune,
    Carried me back in my dreaming, far, to the long, long ago;
    Feeling, ’way down in my heart-chords, hope I thought never could
        glow;
    Brought to me, who was a failure, beaten and crossed in the fight,
    Help in the hour of the darkness--pointed the way to the light.

    _Perhaps there is no magic in this dull, old world of ours;
    Perhaps there are no Fairy Tales to gladden heart-break hours;
    Perhaps there is no beauty and perhaps all things are wrong;
    But still there is the wonder of a little, old-time song!_



GETHSEMANE

BY EDMUND LEAMY


    Breathes there a man who claimeth not
      One lonely spot,
        His own Gethsemane,
    Whither with his inmost pain
    He fain
      Would weary plod,
    Find the surcease that is known
    In wind a-moan
      And sobbing sea,
    Cry his sorrow hid of men,
    And then--
      Touch hands with God.



MY LIPS WOULD SING----

BY EDMUND LEAMY


    My lips would sing a song for you, a soulful little song for you,
      A plaintive little song for you, upon a summer’s day;
    But for the very life of me, the merry, merry life of me,
      The laughter-loving life of me, I cannot but be gay.

    For oh, the sun is shining, Dear, and who could be repining, Dear,
      And who would be unhappy, Dear, when all the world is young?
    So I will hum a melody, a mirthful little melody,
      A joyous little melody that never yet was sung.

    And you shall hear of Fairyland, of Kings and Queens of Fairyland,
      Of men and maids of Fairyland, and Love shall be the theme,
    And straight before your brimming eyes, a golden glint of Paradise
      Shall steal, My Dear, to still your sighs, and give you back your
          dream.

    And you will taste of happiness, a tiny bit of happiness,
      A wistful bit of happiness, upon a summer’s day;
    And just a little smile from you, a sunny little smile from you,
      A trembly little smile from you shall be a poet’s pay!



MY SHIP

BY EDMUND LEAMY


    My ship is an old ship and her sails are grey and torn,
    And in the dim and misty night she seems a thing forlorn;
    Her battered sides are beetle black, her decks are scarred and old,
    And heavy rise the musty scents from out her crumbling hold.

    The young ships in the tide-way with a sneering smile sail by,
    And fair they flash their white sails against a sun-drenched sky,
    And fleet they run before the clouds that usher in a blow,
    But could a storm coerce my ship whene’er she wished to go!

    My ship is an old ship and her sails are torn and grey,
    And she’s not white and beautiful, nor fragile such as they,
    But she has sailed o’er every sea to every land a-gleam,
    And on her decks make merry now the wraiths of youthful dream!



VISIONS

BY EDMUND LEAMY


    _I never watch the sun set a-down the Western skies
    But that within its wonderness I see my mother’s eyes;
    I never hear the West wind sob softly in the trees
    But that there comes her broken call far o’er the distant seas;
    And never shine the dim stars but that my heart would go
    Away and back to olden lands and dreams of long ago._

    A rover of the wide world, when yet my heart was young
    The sea came whispering to me in well-beloved tongue,
    And oh! the promises she held of golden lands a-gleam
    That clung about my boy-heart and filled mine eyes with dream,
    And Wanderlust came luring me till ’neath the stars I swore
    That I would be a wanderer for ever, ever more.

    A-rover of the wide world, I’ve seen the Northern lights
    A-flashing countless colours in the knife-cold wintry nights;
    I’ve watched the Southern Cross ablaze o’er smiling, sunny lands,
    And seen the lazy sea caress palm-sheltered, silvery sands;
    Still wild unrest is scouring me, the Wanderlust of yore,
    And I must be a wanderer for ever, ever more.

    _And yet, I see the sun set a-down the Western skies
    And glimpse within the wonderness my mother’s pleading eyes;
    And yet I hear the West wind sob softly in the trees,
    That vainly cloaks her broken call far o’er the distant seas;
    And still when shine the dim stars my wander heart would go
    Away and back to her side, and dreams of long ago._



IRELAND, MOTHER OF PRIESTS

BY SHANE LESLIE


    The fishwife sits by the side
    Of her childing bed,
    Her fire is deserted and sad,
    Her beads are long said;
    Her tears ebb and flow with the sea,
    Her grief on the years,
    But little she looks to the tide,
    And little she hears:
    For children in springtime play round
    Her sorrowing heart,
    To win them their feeding she loves
    To hunger apart;
    Her children in summer she counts
    Awhile for her own;
    But winter is ever the same,
    The loved ones are flown.
    Far over the sea they are gone,
    Far out of her ken
    They travel the furthest of seas
    As fishers of men.
    Yet never a word to her sons
    To keep them at home,
    And never a motherly cry
    Goes over the foam;
    She sits with her head in her hands,
    Her eyes on the flame,
    And thinks of the others that played,
    Yet left her the same,
    With vesture she wove on the loom
    Four-coloured to be,
    And lanterns she trimmed with her hair
    To light them to sea.
    Oh, far have the living ones gone,
    And further the dead,
    For spirits come never to watch
    The fisherwife’s bed;
    And sonless she sits at the hearth,
    And peers in the flame,
    She knows that their fishing must come
    As ever it came--
    A fishing that never set home,
    But seaways it led,
    For God who has taken her sons
    Has buried her dead.



THE HUNTERS

BY RUTH TEMPLE LINDSAY


    “The Devil, as a roaring lion, goeth about seeking whom he may
        devour.”

    The Lion, he prowleth far and near.
      Nor swerves for pain or rue;
    He heedeth nought of sloth nor fear,
      He prowleth--prowleth through
    The silent glade and the weary street,
      In the empty dark and the full noon heat;
    And a little Lamb with aching feet--
      He prowleth too.

    The Lion croucheth alert, apart--
      With patience doth he woo;
    He waiteth long by this shuttered heart,
      And the Lamb--He waiteth too.
    Up the lurid passes of dreams that kill,
      Through the twisting maze of the great Untrue,
    The Lion followeth the fainting will--
      And the Lamb--He followeth too.

    From the tickets dim of the hidden way
      Where the debts of Hell accrue,
    The Lion leapeth upon his prey:
      But the Lamb--He leapeth too.
    Ah! loose the leash of the sins that damn,
      Mark Devil and God as goals,
    In the panting love of a famished Lamb,
      Gone mad with the need of souls.

    The Lion, he strayeth near and far;
      What heights hath he left untrod?
    He crawleth nigh to the purest star,
      On the trail of the saints of God.
    And throughout the darkness of things unclean,
      In the depths where the sin-ghouls brood,
    There prowleth ever with yearning mien--
      A lamb as white as Blood!



IN CHERRY LANE

BY REV. WILLIAM LIVINGSTON


    In Cherry Lane the blossoms blow
      In wreaths of white around the trees,
    And spread their petals wide, as though
      They longed for nectar-seeking bees.

    O’erhead, the arching boughs that spring
      From pillar trunks look down and smile
    On lowly currant shrubs that cling
      Around their feet along the aisle.

    In Cherry Lane the sunbeams steal
      Through many a leaf and branch above,
    And tender shoots come forth to feel
      The touches of a wondrous love.

    And life grows warmer with the hours,
      Unmoved, unchilled by human pang,
    Till from the stems now robed in flowers
      The great red drops in clusters hang.

    Ah, Mother mine! white blossoms came
      And filled my soul with thoughts of thee,
    Who art to those that love thy name
      What honeyed buds are to the bee.

    Thou art the floweret white and fair,
      A virgin from thy stainless birth,
    The fruitful stem designed to bear
      A Saviour to our sinful earth.

    And when the cherries, ripe and red,
      Come forth upon the breast of June,
    They’ll tell me of a heart that bled,
      By men forgotten all too soon.

    Ah, precious drops! through future days
      Preserve my soul from spot or stain,
    With tender thoughts of love and praise
      That once were mine in Cherry Lane.



SURRENDER

BY S. M. M.


    If thou art merely conscious clay--ah, well,
      Tire not such stuff with futile, tread-mill climb
      Which lifts to leave thee level with the slime;
    Nor think that death can break thy earth-born spell;
    Clay hath no heel Achillean, vulnerable.
      Be animate till some deliberate time
      Shall choke and crunch thee to potential grime,
    For thou art fit for neither heaven nor hell.

    But He Who made thee cousin to the clod
     First plunged thee in the Spirit Which is He,
    Whence thou hast risen, divinely armed and shod
     To scale the ramparts of eternity.
    Already stricken with the shafts of God,
     Thou fallest prisoner to the Deity.



HYMN FOR PENTECOST

BY JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN


    Pure Spirit of the always-faithful God,
    Kindler of Heaven’s true light within the soul!
    From the lorn land our sainted fathers trod,
    Ascends to Thee our cry of hope and dole.
    Thee, Thee we praise;
    To Thee we raise
    Our choral hymn in these awakening days:
    O send us down anew that fire
    Which of old lived in David’s and Isaiah’s lyre.

    Centuries had rolled, and earth lay tombed in sleep,
    The nightmare-sleep of nations beneath kings;
    And far abroad o’er liberty’s great deep
    Death’s angel waved his black and stilling wings.
    Then struck Thine hour!
    Thou, in Thy power,
    But breathedst, and the free stood up, a tower;
    And tyranny’s thrones and strongholds fell,
    And men made jubilee for an abolished hell.

    And she, our mother-home, the famed, the fair,
    The golden house of light and intellect,
    Must she still groan in her intense despair?
    Shall she lie prone while Europe stands erect?
    Forfend this, Thou
    To whom we vow
    Souls even our giant wrongs shall never bow:
    Thou wilt not leave our green flag furled,
    Nor bear that we abide the byword of the world.

    Like the last lamp that burned in Tullia’s tomb
    Through ages, vainly, with unwaning ray;
    Our star of hope lights but a path of gloom
    Whose false track leads us round and round alway.
    But Thou canst open
    A gate from hope
    To victory! Thou canst nerve our arms to cope
    With looming storm and danger still,
    And lend a thunder-voice to the land’s lightning will.

    Descend, then, Spirit of the Eternal King!
    To Thee, to Him, to His avenging Son,
    The Triune of God, in boundless trust we cling;
    His help once ours, our nationhood is won.
    We watch the time
    Till that sublime
    Event shall thrill the free of every clime.
    Speed, mighty Spirit! speed its march,
    And thus complete for earth mankind’s triumphal arch.



DARK ROSALEEN

BY JAMES CLARENCE MANGAN


    O my dark Rosaleen,
      Do not sigh, do not weep!
    The priests are on the ocean green,
      They march along the deep.
    There’s wine from the royal Pope
      Upon the ocean green,
    And Spanish ale shall give you hope,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    Shall glad your heart, shall give you hope,
    Shall give you health, and help, and hope,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    Over hills and through dales
      Have I roamed for your sake;
    All yesterday I sailed the sails
      On river and on lake.
    The Erne, at its highest flood,
      I dashed across unseen,
    For there was lightning in my blood,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    Oh! there was lightning in my blood,
    Red lightning through my blood,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    All day long, in unrest,
      To and fro do I move,
    The very soul within my breast
      Is wasted for you, love!
    The heart in my bosom faints
      To think of you, my Queen,
    My life of life, my saint of saints,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    To hear your sweet and sad complaints,
    My life, my love, my saint of saints,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    Woe and pain, pain and woe,
      Are my lot, night and noon,
    To see your bright face clouded so,
      Like to the mournful moon.
    But yet will I rear your throne
      Again in golden sheen;
    ’Tis you shall reign, shall reign alone,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    ’Tis you shall have the golden throne,
    ’Tis you shall reign, and reign alone,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    Over dews, over sands,
      Will I fly for your weal:
    Your holy, delicate white hands
      Shall girdle me with steel.
    At home in your emerald bowers,
      From morning’s dawn till e’en,
    You’ll pray for me, my flower of flowers,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    You’ll think of me through daylight’s hours,
    My virgin flower, my flower of flowers,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    I could scale the blue air,
      I could plough the high hills,
    Oh, I could kneel all night in prayer,
      To heal your many ills!
    And one beamy smile from you
      Would float like light between
    My toils and me, my own, my true,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    Would give me life and soul anew,
    A second life, a soul anew,
      My dark Rosaleen!

    Oh! the Erne shall run red
      With redundance of blood,
    The earth shall rock beneath our tread,
      And flames wrap hill and wood,
    And gun-peal and slogan-cry
      Wake many a glen serene,
    Ere you shall fade, ere you shall die,
      My dark Rosaleen!
      My own Rosaleen!
    The Judgment Hour must first be nigh,
    Ere you shall fade, ere you can die,
      My dark Rosaleen!



WHAT IS WHITE?

BY THOMAS MACDONAGH


    What is white?
      The soul of the sage, faith-lit,
    The trust of Age,
      The infant’s untaught wit.
    What more white?
      The face of Truth made known,
    The Voice of Youth
      Singing before her throne.



WISHES FOR MY SON

Born on St. Cecilia’s Day, 1912

BY THOMAS MACDONAGH


    Now, my son, is life for you--
    And I wish you joy of it,--
    Joy of power in all you do,
    Deeper passion, better wit
    Than I had who had enough,
    Quicker life and length thereof,
    More of every gift but love.

    Love I have beyond all men,
    Love that now you share with me--
    What have I to wish you then
    But that you be good and free,
    And that God to you may give
    Grace in stronger days to live?

    For I wish you more than I
    Ever knew of glorious deed,
    Though no rapture passed me by
    That an eager heart could heed,
    Though I followed heights and sought
    Things the sequel never brought.

    Wild and perilous holy things
    Flaming with a martyr’s blood,
    And the joy that laughs and sings
    Where a foe must be withstood,
    Joy of headlong happy chance
    Leading on the battle dance.

    But I found no enemy,
    No man in a world of wrong,
    That Christ’s word of Charity
    Did not render clean and strong--
    Who was I to judge my kind,
    Blindest groper of the blind?

    God to you may give the sight
    And the clear undoubting strength
    Wars to knit for single right,
    Freedom’s war to knit at length,
    And to win, through wrath and strife,
    To the sequel of my life.

    But for you, so small and young,
    Born on Saint Cecilia’s Day,
    I in more harmonious song
    Now for nearer joys should pray--
    Simple joys: the natural growth
    Of your childhood and your youth,
    Courage, innocence and truth:

    These for you, so small and young,
    In your hand and heart and tongue.



RESIGNATION

BY SEUMAS MACMANUS


    Be still, sad soul, be still,
    Bend you to Heaven’s high will.
    When the toilsome race is run,
    And the summit strove for won--
    When secrets are unsealed,
    All hidden things revealed,
    All mysteries made known,
    The good we doubted shown,
    Vexed questionings at rest,
    I’ll say, “Well, God knew best.”

           *       *       *       *       *

    Me thought you went full soon,
    In the rapture of the noon,
    In the glory of the sun,
    Your noble work begun--
    In your grasp the magic wand
    That would raise a stricken land--
    A while you fain would stay;
    But the call brooked no delay:
    You sighed, and bowed your head,
    And they put you with the dead.

    Our God is kind, and He
    Will blunt the shaft to me;
    Will stay the dripping woe
    Ere the chalice overflow;
    May let me end the race
    With the high sun on my face,
    And the hot blood bounding free,
    Through the beating veins of me.
    At most but some sad hours
    And He’ll call me when Night lowers.

    Oh, at the Trysting Gate,
    With radiant face you’ll wait!
    With arms in love outspread
    To take a weary head,
    And clasp it to your breast
    Where always it found rest.
    You’ll speak no word for joy,
    But, crooning o’er your boy,
    Draw him into the Light,
    Where nevermore comes Night.



IN DARK HOUR

BY SEUMAS MACMANUS


    I Turn my steps where the Lonely Road
      Winds far as the eye can see,
    And I bend my back for the burden sore
      That God has reached down to me.

    I have said farewell to the sun-kissed plains,
      To joy I gave good-bye;
    Now the bleak wide wastes of the world are mine,
      And the winds that wail in the sky.

    No bright flower blooms, no sweet bird calls,
      Nor hermit ever abode,
    Not a green thing lifts one lowly leaf,
      O God, on the Lonely Road!

    The thick dank mists come stealing down,
      And press me on every side.
    With never a voice to cheer me on,
      And never a hand to guide.

    I shall cry in my need for a Voice and Hand,
      And the solace of love-wet eyes--
    And an icy clutch will close on my heart,
      When Echo, the mocker, replies.

    I know my good soul will fail me not,
      When Forms from the Dark round me creep,
    And whisper ’twere sweet to journey no more,
      But lay down the burden and sleep.

    (_Look onward and up, O Heart of my Heart,
      Where the road strikes the skies afar!
    To cheer you, and guide, thro’ your darkest hour,
      Behold yon beckoning Star!_)

    I set my face to the grey wild wastes,
      I bend my back to the load--
    Dear God be kind with the heart-sick child
      Who steps on the Lonely Road.



A SONG OF COLOURS

BY THEODORE MAYNARD


    Gold for the crown of Mary,
      Blue for the sea and sky,
    Green for the woods and the meadows
      Where small white daisies lie,
    And red for the colour of Christ’s blood
      When He came to the cross to die.

    These things the high God gave us
      And left in the world He made--
    Gold for the hilt’s enrichment,
      And blue for the sword’s good blade,
    And red for the roses a youth may set
      On the white brows of a maid.

    Green for the cool, sweet gardens
      Which stretch about the house,
    And the delicate new frondage
      The winds of spring arouse,
    And red for the wine which a man may drink
      With his fellows in carouse.

    Blue and green for the comfort
      Of tired hearts and eyes,
    And red for that sudden hour which comes
      With danger and great surprise,
    And white for the honour of God’s throne
      When the dead shall all arise.

    Gold for the cope and chalice,
      For kingly pomp and pride,
    And red for the feathers men wear in their caps
      When they win a war or a bride,
    And red for the robe which they dressed God in
      On the bitter day He died.



THE WORLD’S MISER

BY THEODORE MAYNARD


I

    A miser with an eager face
    Sees that each roseleaf is in place.

    He keeps beneath strong bolts and bars
    The piercing beauty of the stars.

    The colours of the dying day
    He hoards as treasure--well He may!--

    And saves with care (lest they be lost)
    The dainty diagrams of frost.

    He counts the hairs of every head,
    And grieves to see a sparrow dead.


II

    Among the yellow primroses
    He holds His Summer palaces,

    And sets the grass about them all
    To guard them as His spearmen small.

    He fixes on each wayside stone
    A mark to show it as His own,

    And knows when raindrops fall through air
    Whether each single one be there,

    That gathered into ponds and brooks.
    They may become His picture books,

    To show in every spot and place
    The living glory of His face.



CECIDIT, CECIDIT BABYLON MAGNA!

BY THEODORE MAYNARD


    The aimless business of your feet,
      Your swinging wheels and piston rods,
    The smoke of every sullen street
      Have passed away with all your Gods.

    For in a meadow far from these
      A hodman treads across the loam,
    Bearing his solid sanctities
      To that strange altar called his home.

    I watch the tall, sagacious trees
      Turn as the monks do, every one;
    The saplings, ardent novices,
      Turning with them towards the sun,

    That Monstrance held in God’s strong hands,
      Burnished in amber and in red;
    God, His Own priest, in blessing stands;
      The earth, adoring, bows her head.

    The idols of your market place,
      Your high debates, where are they now?
    Your lawyers’ clamour fades apace--
      A bird is singing on the bough!

    Three fragile, sacramental things
      Endure, though all your pomps shall pass--
    A butterfly’s immortal wings,
      A daisy and a blade of grass.



A SONG OF LAUGHTER

BY THEODORE MAYNARD


    The stars with their laughter are shaken;
      The long waves laugh at sea;
    And the little Imp of Laughter
      Laughs in the soul of me.

    I know the guffaw of a tempest,
      The mirth of a blossom and bud--
    But I laugh when I think of how Cuchulain laughed
      At the crows with their bills in his blood.

    The mother laughs low at her baby,
      The bridegroom with joy in his bride--
    And I think that Christ laughed when they Took Him
          with staves
      On the night before He died.



APOCALYPSE

“_And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the
first earth are passed away._”--Apoc. xxi. I.

BY THEODORE MAYNARD


    Shall summer wood where we have laughed our fill;
      Shall all your grass so good to walk upon;
    Each field that we have loved, each little hill,
      Be burnt like paper--as hath said Saint John?

    Then not alone they die! For God hath told
      How all His plains of mingled fire and glass,
    His walls of hyacinth, His streets of gold,
      His aureoles of jewelled light shall pass,

    That He may make us nobler things that these,
      And in her royal robes of blazing red
    Adorn His bride. Yea, with what mysteries
      And might and mirth shall she be diamonded.

    And what new secrets shall our God disclose;
      Or set what suns of burnished brass to flare;
    Or what empurpled bloom to oust the rose;
      Or what strange grass to glow like angels’ hair!

    What pinnacles of silvery tracery,
      What dizzy, rampired towers shall God devise
    Of topaz, beryl and chalcedony
      To make Heaven pleasant to His children’s eyes!

    And in what cataclysms of flame and foam
      Shall the first Heaven sink--as red as sin--
    When God hath cast aside His ancient home
      As far too mean to house His children in.



ST. BRIGID

BY DENIS A. MCCARTHY


    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, she wasn’t like other young things,
    Dreaming of lads for her lovers, and twirling her bracelets and
        rings;
    Combing and coiling and curling her hair that was black as the
        sloes,
    Painting her lips and her cheeks that were ruddy and fresh as the
        rose.
    Ah, ’twasn’t Brigid would waste all her days in such follies as
        these--
    Christ was the Lover she worshipped for hour after hour on her
        knees;
    Christ and His Church and His poor,--and ’twas many a mile that she
        trod
    Serving the loathsomest lepers that ever were stricken by God.

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, she sold all her jewels and gems,
    Sold all her finely-spun robes that were braided with gold to the
        hems;
    Kept to her back but one garment, one dress that was faded and old,
    Gave all her goods to the poor who were famished with hunger and
        cold.
    Ah, ’twasn’t Brigid would fling at the poor the hard word like a
        stone--
    Christ the Redeemer she saw in each wretch that was ragged and lone;
    Every wandering beggar who asked for a bite or a bed
    Knocked at her heart like the Man who had nowhere to shelter His
        head.

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, she angered her father at last.
    “Where are your dresses, my daughter? Crom Cruach! You wear them out
        fast!
    Where are the chains that I bought you all wrought in red gold from
        the mine?
    Where the bright brooches of silver that once on your bosom would
        shine?”
    Ah, but ’twas he was the man that was proud of his name and his
        race,
    Proud of their prowess in battle and proud of their deeds in the
        chase!
    Knew not the Christ, the pale God Whom the priests from afar had
        brought in,
    Held to the old Gaelic gods that were known to Cuchullin and Finn.

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, made answer, “O father,” said she,
    “What is the richest of raiment, and what are bright jewels to me?
    Lepers of Christ must I care for, the hungry of Christ must I feed;
    How can I walk in rich robes when His people and mine are in need?”
    Ah, but ’twas she didn’t fear for herself when he blustered and
        swore,
    Meekly she bowed when he ordered his chariot brought to the door;
    Meekly obeyed when he bade her get in at the point of his sword,
    Knowing whatever her fate she’d be safe with her Lover and Lord.

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, was brought to the court of the King,
    (Monarch of Leinster, MacEnda, whose praises the poets would sing).
    “Hither, O monarch,” said Duffy, “I’ve come with a maiden to sell;
    Buy her and bind her to bondage--she’s needing such discipline
        well!”
    Ah, but ’twas wise was the King. From the maid to the chieftain he
        turned;
    Mildness he saw in her face, in the other ’twas anger that burned;
    “This is no bondmaid, I’ll swear it, O chief, but a girl of your
        own.
    Why sells the father the flesh of his flesh and the bone of his
        bone?”

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, was mute while her father replied--
    “Monarch, this maid has no place as the child of a chieftain of
        pride.
    Beggars and wretches whose wounds would the soul of a soldier
        affright,
    Sure, ’tis on these she is wasting my substance from morning till
        night!”
    Ah, but ’twas bitter was Duffy; he spoke like a man that was vext.
    Musing, the monarch was silent; he pondered the question perplexed.
    “Maiden,” said he, “if ’tis true, as I’ve just from your father
        heard tell,
    Might it not be, as my bondmaid, you’d waste all my substance as
        well?”

    Brigid, the daughter of Duffy, made answer. “O monarch,” she said,
    “Had I the wealth from your coffers, and had I the crown from your
        head--
    Yea, if the plentiful yield of the broad breasts of Erin were mine,
    All would I give to the people of Christ who in poverty pine.”
    Ah, but ’twas then that the King felt the heart in his bosom upleap,
    “I am not worthy,” he cried, “such a maiden in bondage to keep!
    Here’s a king’s sword for her ransom, and here’s a king’s word to
        decree
    Never to other than Christ and His poor let her servitude be!”



ROSA MYSTICA

BY DENIS A. MCCARTHY


    O Mystic Rose, in God’s fair garden growing,
    O Mystic Rose, in Heaven’s high courtyard blowing--
    Make sweet, make sweet the pathway I am going,
          O Mystic Rose!
    The darkling, deathward way that I am going,
          O Mystic Rose!

    O Rose, more white than snow-wreath in December!
    O Rose, more red than sunset’s dying ember,
    My sins forget, my penitence remember,
          O Mystic Rose!
    Though all should fail, I pray that thou remember,
          O Mystic Rose!

    O Mystic Rose, the moments fly with fleetness;
    To judgment I, with all my incompleteness--
    But thou, make intercession by thy sweetness,
          O Mystic Rose!
    Be near to soothe and save me by the sweetness,
          O Mystic Rose!



THE POOR MAN’S DAILY BREAD

BY DENIS A. MCCARTHY


    Not only there where jewelled vestments blaze,
      And princely prelates bow before Thy shrine,
    Where myriads line the swept and garnished ways
      Through which is borne Thy Majesty Divine--
    O Jesus of the ever loving heart,
      Not only there Thou art!

    But where the lowliest church its cross uplifts
      Above the city’s sordidness and sin;
    Where all unheeded human wreckage drifts
      And drowns amid the foulness and the din--
    There, too, anear the very gates of hell,
    O Saviour, dost Thou dwell!

    Oh, meet it is that round Thy altar thrones,
      Thy highest priests should ministering throng
    With silken robe, with gold and precious stones,
      With solemn chant and loud triumphant song:
    What beauty that the world could give would be
    Too beautiful for Thee?

    And yet to those that work with grimy hands
      And sweaty brows in ditches and in drains,
    Thou comest with a love that understands
      Their labor ill-requitted, and their pains.
    Who knows so well as Thou what they endure,
      O Father of the poor?

    And so, deep-hid in many a city street,
      Or far where lonely workers break the soil,
    Are shrines where Thou, the Merciful, dost meet,
      In love’s embrace, the weary ones that toil.
    For them Thy hospitable board is spread,
      With Thee, Thy very Self, their Daily Bread!



TO ASK OUR LADY’S PATRONAGE FOR A BOOK ON COLUMBUS: A FRAGMENT

BY THOMAS D’ARCY MCGEE


    Star of the Sea, to whom, age after age,
      The maiden kneels whose lover sails the sea;
    Star, that the drowning death-pang can assuage,
      And shape the soul’s course to eternity;
    Mother of God, to Egypt’s realm exiled,
      Mother of God, in Bethlehem’s crib confined,
    Thee do I ask to aid my anxious mind,
      And make this book find favour with thy Child.

    Of one who lived and laboured in thy ray,
      I would rehearse the striving and success;
    Through the dense past I ne’er shall find my way,
      Unless thou helpest, hold Comfortress;
    A world of doubt and darkness to evade;
      An ocean all unknown to Christian kind;
    Another world by nature’s self arrayed,
      O’er the wide waste of waves, I seek to find.



A GENERAL COMMUNION

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    I saw the throng, so deeply separate,
      Fed at one only board--
    The devout people, moved, intent, elate,
      And the devoted Lord.

    Oh struck apart! not side from human side,
      But soul from human soul,
    As each asunder absorbed the multiplied,
      The ever unparted whole.

    I saw this people as a field of flowers,
      Each grown at such a price
    The sum of unimaginable powers
      Did no more than suffice.

    A thousand single central daisies they,
      A thousand of the one;
    For each the entire monopoly of day;
      For each, the whole of the devoted sun.



THE SHEPHERDESS

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    She walks--the lady of my delight--
      A shepherdess of sheep.
    Her flocks are thoughts. She keeps them white;
      She guards them from the steep;
    She feeds them on the fragrant height,
      And folds them in for sleep.

    She roams maternal hills and bright,
      Dark valleys safe and deep.
    Into that tender breast at night
      The chastest stars may peep.
    She walks--the lady of my delight--
      A shepherdess of sheep.

    She holds her little thoughts in sight,
      Though gay they run and leap.
    She is so circumspect and right;
      She has her soul to keep.
    She walks--the lady of my delight--
      A shepherdess of sheep.



CHRIST IN THE UNIVERSE

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    With this ambiguous earth
    His dealings have been told us. These abide:
    The signal to a maid, the human birth,
    The lesson, and the young Man crucified.

              But not a star of all
    The innumberable host of stars has heard
    How He administered this terrestrial ball.
    Our race have kept their Lord’s entrusted Word.

              Of His earth-visiting feet
    None knows the secret, cherished, perilous,
    The terrible, shamefast, frightened, whispered, sweet,
    Heart-shattering secret of His way with us.

              No planet knows that this
    Our wayside planet, carrying land and wave,
    Love and life multiplied, and pain and bliss,
    Bears, as chief treasure, one forsaken grave,

              Nor, in our little day,
    May his devices with the heavens be guessed,
    His pilgrimage to tread the Milky Way
    Or His bestowals there be manifest.

              But in the eternities,
    Doubtless we shall compare together, hear
    A million alien Gospels, in what guise
    He trod the Pleiades, the Lyre, the Bear.

              O, be prepared, my soul!
    To read the inconceivable, to scan
    The million forms of God those stars enroll
    When, in our turn, we show to them a Man.



“I AM THE WAY”

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    Thou art the Way.
    Hadst Thou been nothing but the goal,
              I cannot say
    If Thou hadst ever met my soul.

              I cannot see--
    I, child of process--if there lies
              An end for me,
    Full of repose, full of replies.

              I’ll not reproach
    The road that winds, my feet that err.
              Access, approach
    Art Thou, Time, Way, and Wayfarer.



VIA, ET VERITAS, ET VITA

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    “You never attained to Him.” “If to attain
    Be to abide, then that may be.”
    “Endless the way, followed with how much pain!”
    “The way was He.”



UNTO US A SON IS GIVEN

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    Given, not lent,
    And not withdrawn--once sent,
    This Infant of mankind, this One,
    Is still the little welcome Son.

    New every year,
    New born and newly dear,
    He comes with tidings and a song,
    The ages long, the ages long;

    Even as the cold
    Keen winter grows not old,
    As childhood is so fresh, foreseen,
    And spring in the familiar green.

    Sudden as sweet
    Come the expected feet.
    All joy is young, and new all art,
    And He, too, Whom we have by heart.



TO A DAISY

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    Slight as thou art, thou art enough to hide
      Like all created things, secrets from me,
      And stand a barrier to eternity.
    And I, how can I praise thee well and wide

    From where I dwell--upon the hither side?
      Thou little veil for so great mystery,
      When shall I penetrate all things and thee,
    And then look back? For this I must abide.

    Till thou shalt grow and fold and be unfurled
    Literally between me and the world.
      Then I shall drink from in beneath a spring.

    And from a poet’s side shall read his book.
    O daisy mine, what will it be to look
      From God’s side even of such a simple thing?



THE NEWER VAINGLORY

BY ALICE MEYNELL


    Two men went up to pray; and one gave thanks,
            Not with himself aloud,
    With proclamation, calling on the ranks
            Of an attentive crowd.

    “Thank God, I clap not my own humble breast,
            But other ruffians’ backs,
    Imputing crime--such is my tolerant haste--
            To any man that lacks.

    “For I am tolerant, generous, keep no rules,
            And the age honors me.
    Thank God, I am not as these rigid fools,
            Even as this Pharisee.”



THE FOLDED FLOCK

BY WILFRID MEYNELL


    I saw the shepherd fold the sheep,
    With all the little lambs that leap.

    O Shepherd Lord, so I would be
    Folded with all my family.

    Or go they early, come they late,
    Their mother and I must count them eight.

    And how, for us, were any heaven
    If we, sore-stricken, saw but seven?

    Kind Shepherd, as of old Thou’lt run
    And fold at need a straggling one.



CONVENT ECHOES

BY HELEN LOUISE MORIARTY


    Clear on the air, their pulsing cadence pealing,
      I hear a sweet refrain,
    While o’er my thoughts a gentle mist is stealing,
      And mem’ries come again,

    Of quiet halls where dusk is slow descending,
      Where peace has spread her wings.
    Soft music in the distance only lending
      More charms where twilight clings.

    Anon appear the black robed nuns, their faces
      Serene in sweet repose;
    Across their brows the world has left no traces
      Of earthly dreams or woes.

    Now loud on air the organ music swelling,
      They reach the chapel door--
    The sweet faint incense stealing upward, telling
      ’Tis Benediction’s hour.

    Now low-bowed heads, and hearts to Him ascending
      On incense laden air.
    Ah surely Heaven must smile with ear attending
      The nun’s low whispered prayer.

    Fond memory lingers on those dim old hallways--
      Lingers and drops a tear,
    And kind affection drapes the picture always
      Through each succeeding year.



ENGLAND

BY JOHN HENRY NEWMAN


    Tyre of the West, and glorying in the name
      More than in Faith’s pure fame!
    O trust not crafty fort nor rock renown’d
      Earn’d upon hostile ground;
    Wielding Trade’s master-keys, at thy proud will
    To lock or loose its waters, England! trust not still.

    Dread thine own power! Since haughty Babel’s prime,
      High towers have been man’s crime.
    Since her hoar age, when the huge moat lay bare,
      Strongholds have been man’s snare.
    Thy nest is in the crags; ah, refuge frail!
    Mad counsels in its hour, or traitors, will prevail.

    He who scann’d Sodom for His righteous men
      Still spares thee for thy ten;
    But, should vain tongues the Bride of Heaven defy,
      He will not pass thee by;
    For, as earth’s kings welcome their spotless guests,
    So gives He them by turn, to suffer or be blest.



THE PILLAR OF THE CLOUD

BY JOHN HENRY NEWMAN


    Lead, Kindly Light, amid the encircling gloom,
          Lead Thou me on!
    The night is dark, and I am far from home--
          Lead Thou me on!
    Keep Thou my feet; I do not ask to see
    The distant scene,--one step enough for me.

    I was not ever thus, nor pray’d that Thou
          Shouldst lead me on.
    I lov’d to choose and see my path; but now
          Lead Thou me on!
    I lov’d the garish day, and, spite of fears,
    Pride rul’d my will: remember not past years.

    So long Thy power hath bless’d me, sure it still
          Will lead me on,
    O’er moor and fen, o’er crag and torrent, till
          The night is gone;
    And with the morn those angel faces smile
    Which I have lov’d long since, and lost awhile.



THE GREEK FATHERS

BY JOHN HENRY NEWMAN


    Let heathen sing thy heathen praise,
    Fall’n Greece! the thought of holier days
          In my sad heart abides;
    For sons of thine in Truth’s first hour
    Were tongues and weapons of His power,
    Born of the Spirit’s fiery shower,
        Our fathers and our guides.

    All thine is Clement’s varied page;
    And Dionysius, ruler sage,
        In days of doubt and pain;
    And Origen with eagle eye;
    And saintly Basil’s purpose high
    To smite imperial heresy,
        And cleanse the Altar’s stain.

    From thee the glorious preacher came,
    With soul of zeal and lips of flame,
        A court’s stern martyr-guest;
    And thine, O inexhaustive race!
    Was Nazianzen’s heaven-taught grace;
    And royal-hearted Athanase,
        With Paul’s own mantel blessed.



RELICS OF SAINTS

BY JOHN HENRY NEWMAN

 “He is not the God of the dead, but of the living; for all live unto
 Him.”


    “The Fathers are in dust, yet live to God:”
      So says the Truth; as if the motionless clay
    Still held the seeds of life beneath the sod,
      Smouldering and straggling till the judgment day.

    And hence we learn with reverence to esteem
      Of these frail houses, though the grave confines;
    Sophist may urge his cunning tests, and deem
      That they are earth;--but they are heavenly shrines.



THE SIGN OF THE CROSS

BY JOHN HENRY NEWMAN


    Whene’er across this sinful flesh of mine
      I draw the Holy Sign,
    All good thoughts stir within me, and renew
      Their slumbering strength divine;
    Till there springs up a courage high and true
      To suffer and to do.

    And who shall say, but hateful spirits around,
     For their brief hour unbound,
    Shudder to see, and wail their overthrow?
      While on far heathen ground
    Some lonely Saint hails the fresh odour, though
      Its source he cannot know?



THE SON OF GOD

BY CHARLES L. O’DONNELL, C.S.C.


    The fount of Mary’s joy
      Revealed now lies,
    For, lo, has not the Boy
      His Father’s eyes?



TO ST. JOSEPH

BY CHARLES L. O’DONNELL, C.S.C.


    St. Joseph, when the day was done
      And all your work put by,
    You saw the stars come one by one
      Out in the violet sky.

    You did not know the stars by name,
      But there sat at your knee
    One who had made the light and flame
      And all things bright that be.

    You heard with Him birds in the tree
      Twitter “Good-night” o’erhead,--
    The Maker of the world must see
      His little ones to bed.

    Then when the darkness settled round,
      To Him your prayers were said;
    No wonder that your sleep was ground
      The angels loved to tread.



THE DEAD MUSICIAN

    In memory of Brother Basil,
    Organist for half a century at Notre Dame

BY CHARLES L. O’DONNELL, C.S.C.


    He was the player and the played upon,
    He was the actor and the acted on,
    Artist, and yet himself a substance wrought;
    God played on him as he upon the keys,
    Moving his soul to mightiest melodies
    Of lowly serving, hid austerities,
    And holy thought that our high dream out-tops,--
    He was an organ where God kept the stops.
              Naught, naught
    Of all he gave us came so wondrous clear
    As that he sounded to the Master’s ear.

    Wedded he was to the immortal Three,
    Poverty, Obedience and Chastity,
    And in a fourth he found them all expressed,
    For him all gathered were in Music’s breast,
            And in God’s house
    He took her for his spouse,--
    High union that the world’s eye never scans
            Nor world’s way knows.
    Not any penny of applauding hands
    He caught, nor would have caught,
              Not any thought
              Save to obey
    Obedience that bade him play,
            And for his bride
      To have none else beside,
    That both might keep unflecked their virgin snows.

    Yet by our God’s great law
    Such marriage issue saw,
    As they who cast away may keep,
              Who sow not reap.
              In Chastity entombed
              His manhood bloomed,
              And children not of earth
              Had spotless birth.
    With might unmortal was he strong
              That he begot
              Of what was not,
    Within the barren womb of silence, song.
              Yea, many sons he had
          To make his sole heart glad--
    Romping the boundless meadows of the air,
    Skipping the cloudy hills, and climbing bold
    The heavens’ nightly stairs of starry gold.
              Nay, winning heaven’s door
              To mingle evermore
    With deathless troops of angel harmony.
              He filled the house of God
              With servants at his nod,
    A music-host of moving pagentry.
    Lo, this priest, and that an acolyte:
              Ah, such we name aright
              Creative art,
    To body forth love slumbering at the heart ...
              Fools, they who pity him,
              Imagine dim
    Days that the world’s glare brightens not.
              Until the seraphim
    Shake from their flashing hair
    Lightnings, and weave serpents there,
              His days we reckon fair....

              Yet more he had than this;
              Lord of the liberative kiss,
              To own and yet refrain,
              To hold his hand in reign.
    High continence of his high power,
    That turns from virtue’s very flower,
              In loss of that elected pain
              A greater prize to gain.
    As one who long had put wine by
              Would now himself deny
              Water, and thirsting die.
    So, sometimes he was idle at the keys,
    Pale fingers on the aged ivories;
              Then, like a prisoned bird,
              Music was seen, not heard,
    Then were his quivering hands most strong
    With blood of the repressed song,--
      A fruitful barrenness. Oh, where
              Out of angelic air,
      This side the heavens’ spheres
      Such sight to start and hinder tears.
    Who knows, perhaps while silence throbbed
    He heard the De Profundis sobbed
      By his own organ at his bier to-day,--
      It is the saints’ anticipative way,
      He knew both hand and ear were clay.
              That was one thought
              Never is music wrought,
    For silence only could that truth convey.
    Widowed of him, his organ now is still,
    His music-children fled, their echoing feet yet fill
    The blue, far reaches of the vaulted nave,
    The heart that sired them, pulseless in the grave.
    Only the song he made is hushed, his soul,
    Responsive to God’s touch, in His control
    Elsewhere shall tune the termless ecstasy
      Of one who all his life kept here
              An alien ear,
    Homesick for harpings of eternity.



GIOTTO’S CAMPANILE

BY THOMAS O’HAGAN


    O pulsing heart with voice attuned
      To all the soul builds high,
    Framing in notes of love divine
      A drama of the sky,
    Across the Arno’s flowing tide
      The notes chime on the air,
      Deep as the mysteries of God
      And tender as a prayer.

    Here, where the Poet of Sorrows dwelt,
      Whose altar Love had built,
    And framed his morn in dreams so pure
      That knew not stain nor guilt:
    O _Vita Nuova_! Earthly Love
      Then changed to love Divine;
    Transfigured at the wedding-feast,
      Earth’s grapes are heavenly wine.

    Where cowled monk with soul of fire
      Struck vice athwart the face,
    With God’s anointed sword of truth
      That flashed with beams of grace.
    O bitter days of war and strife!
      Heaven’s ardor was too great;
    The Empire of the earth held sway
      And sealed with saddest fate.

    Methinks I hear from thy strong lips,
      O century-dowered bell!
    The story of the Whites and Blacks,
      As banners rose or fell;
    Methinks I hear an epic voice,
      Full of God’s love and power,
    With accent of an Exile sad
      Speaking from out thy tower!



NAME OF MARY

BY JOHN BOYLE O’REILLY


    Dear, honored name, beloved for human ties,
      But loved and honored first that One was given
    In living proof, to erring mortal eyes,
      That our poor flesh is near akin to heaven.

    Sweet word of dual meaning: one of grace,
      And born of our kind Advocate above;
    And one, by mercy linked to that dear face
      That blessed my childhood with its mother-love,

    And taught me first the simple prayer: “To thee,
      Poor banished sons of Eve, we send our cries.”
    Through mist of years, those words recall to me
      A childish face upturned to loving eyes.

    And yet, to some the name of Mary bears
      No special meaning and no gracious power;
    In that dear word they seek for hidden snares,
      As wasps find poison in the sweetest flower.

    But faithful hearts can see, o’er doubts and fears,
      The Virgin-link that binds the Lord to earth;
    Which, to the upturned trusting face, appears
      Greater than angel, though of human birth.

    The sweet-faced moon reflects, on cheerless night,
      The rays of hidden sun that rise to-morrow;
    So, unseen God still lets his promised light,
      Through holy Mary, shine upon our sorrow.



A CHRISTMAS CAROL

BY MARY A. O’REILLY


    Night in the far Judean land,
      The pregnant air is still,
    The sky one blue unclouded band,
      Seems drooping o’er each hill.
    The hills then toward each other bend,
    Some mighty secret to portend.
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.

    The sheep in near-by pastures browse,
      Some bleat as if in pain;
    The youthful shepherds watch and drowse,
      Then drowse and watch again;
    When lo! a light from Heaven appears
    Which makes them huddle in their fears.
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.

    God’s glory shone around them there,
      And then an angel cried--
    “Fear not, for I good tidings bear
      To you, and all beside.
    For unto you is born this day
    A Savior, Christ the Lord.” We pray--
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.

    Then swinging from the skies there came
    Groups of the heavenly host,
      Praising the Lord in sweet acclaim--
      The burden of their toast--
    “Glory to God on High,” again--
    His “Peace on earth, good will to men.”
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.

    Within a stable sweet with hay,
      And warm with breath of kine,
    The Baby and His Mother lay,
      O, mystery divine!
    The bed of straw a cloud appears,
    We hear the music of the spheres.
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.

    Dear maiden mother, let us now,
      While to your breast He clings,
    In humble adoration bow
      With shepherds and with kings,
    And at His feet our off’ring be
    Praise, love, faith, hope and charity.
      Gloria in excelsis Deo.



ROMA MATER SEMPAETERNA

BY SHAEMAS O. SHEEL


    The blue skies bend and are about her furled,
      A maiden mantle; and with lilies bright
      The sun daywhiles doth crown her, and at night
    With stars her garment’s border is empearled.
    Not a king’s favorite, perfumed and curled,
        Is half so fair; no queen of martial might
      So potent as the Mother of the Light,
    The Mary of the Cities of the World!

    Eternal Mother, at whose breasts of white
      The infant Church was suckled and made strong
          With the sweet milk of heavenly Truth and Love,
        O thou that art all nations set above,
      Strengthen us still because the way is long,
    Mary of Cities, Mother of the Light!



MARY’S BABY

BY SHAEMAS O. SHEEL


    Joseph, mild and noble, bent above the straw:
    A pale girl, a frail girl, suffering, he saw;
    “O my Love, my Mary, my bride, I pity thee!”
    “Nay, Dear,” said Mary, “All is well with me!”
      “Baby, my Baby, O my Babe,” she sang.
      Suddenly the golden night all with music rang.

    Angels leading shepherds, shepherds leading sheep:
    The silence of worship broke the mother’s sleep.
    All the meek and lowly of the world were there;
    Smiling she showed them that her Child was fair.
      “Baby, my Baby,” kissing Him she said.
      Suddenly a flaming star through the heavens sped.

    Three old men and weary knelt them side by side,
    The world’s wealth forswearing, majesty and pride;
    Worldly might and wisdom before the Babe bent low:
    Weeping, maid Mary said “I love Him so!”
      “Baby, my Baby,” and the Baby slept.
      Suddenly on Calvary all the olives wept.



THEY WENT FORTH TO BATTLE

BY SHAEMAS O. SHEEL


    They went forth to battle, but they always fell;
      Their eyes were fixed above the sullen shields;
    Nobly they fought and bravely, but not well,
    And sank heart-wounded by a subtle spell.
      They knew not fear that to the foeman yields,
      They were not weak, as one who vainly wields
    A futile weapon, yet the sad scrolls tell
    How on the hard-fought field they always fell.

    It was a secret music that they heard,
      A sad sweet plea for pity and for peace;
    And that which pierced the heart was but a word,
    Though the white breast was red-lipped where the sword
      Pressed a fierce cruel kiss, to put surcease
      On its hot thirst, but drank a hot increase.
    Ah, then by some strange troubling doubt were stirred,
    And died for hearing what no foeman heard.

    They went forth to battle but they always fell;
      Their might was not the might of lifted spears;
    Over the battle-clamor came a spell
    Of troubling music, and they fought not well.
      Their wreaths are willows and their tribute, tears;
      Their names are old sad stories in men’s ears;
    Yet they will scatter the red hordes of Hell,
    Who went to battle forth and always fell.



HE WHOM A DREAM HATH POSSESSED

BY SHAEMAS O. SHEEL


    He whom a dream hath possessed knoweth no more of doubting,
      For mist and the blowing of winds and the mouthing of words he
          scorns;
    Not the sinuous speech of schools he hears, but a knightly shouting,
      And never comes darkness down, yet he greeteth a million morns.

    He whom a dream hath possessed knoweth no more of roaming;
      All roads and the flowing of waves and the speediest flight he
          knows,
    But wherever his feet are set, his soul is forever homing,
      And going he comes, and coming he heareth a call and goes.

    He whom a dream hath possessed knoweth no more of sorrow,
      At death and the dropping of leaves and the fading of suns he
          smiles,
    For a dream remembers no past and scorns the desire of a morrow,
      And a dream in a sea of doom sets surely the ultimate isles.

    He whom a dream hath possessed treads the impalpable marches,
      From the dust of the day’s long road he leaps to a laughing star,
    And the ruin of worlds that fall he views from eternal arches,
      And rides God’s battle-field in a flashing and golden car.



MARIA IMMACULATA

BY CONDÉ BENOIST PALLEN


I

    How may I sing, unworthy I,
    Our Lady’s glorious sanctity?
    She whose celestial shoon
    Rest on the horned moon
    In Heaven’s highest galaxy;
    She whom the poet sang of old
    In that rare vision told
    In soft Tuscan speech of gold,
    The spotless spouse and mother-maid
    The goodliest sapphire in Heaven’s floor inlaid,
    Around whom wheels the circling flame
    Of the rapt seraph breathing Mary’s name,
    While choir to choir replies
    In growing harmonies
    Through all the glowing spheres of Paradise,
    Till universal Heaven’s glad estate
    Rings jubilation to their queen immaculate.


II

    Ah me! Unworthy I to sing
    The stainless mother of my King,
    My King and Lord,
    The Incarnate Word,
    Heaven itself comprest
    Within her virgin breast!
    How may my faltering rhyme
    Sing of Eternity in time,
    Omnipotence in human frailty exprest,
    Our earthly garden fragrant with celestial thyme.
    What Muse, though great Urania guide her flight,
    May dare the sacrosanct and awful height
    Of that mysterious sublime
    Within the secret counsels of the Infinite!
    Omniscence there supreme and sole
    Clasps the beginning and the whole
    Of Love beyond created sight,
    Uncreate and quintessential light!
    Before the splendor of that ray
    Cherub and seraph fall away
    Dazzled and broken by excess
    Of everpowering blessedness,
    Yet panting for the fulness of the bliss
    That breathes consuming fire from Love’s unkenned abyss.
    Not through that fiery sphere my way,
    But here where shines the veiléd day,
    The flames of mystery insteeped
    In this our mortal clay;
    For in her maiden breast asleep
    Lies all the Love of Heaven’s deep,
    The holy circle of her zone
    Incarnate Love’s terrestrial throne.


III

    The great archangel veils his face
    Before her: “Hail, full of grace!”
    And Heaven is clasped of earth;
    While all the wheeling spheres with all their choirs
    Around her wheel seraphic fires.
    Eden rises to its second birth;
    Again the prime estate
    Of man is renovate,
    And all the elder worth renewed in her immaculate;
    Virgin and spouse of Him
    Who breathes the virtue of the Seraphim,
    Virgin and mother of the Eternal Son,
    Daughter, Virgin, Spouse in one!
    The spotless mate of spotless Dove,
    The one great miracle of God’s love,
    From all eternity the chosen bride,
    Save only her none, none
    Exempt from sin’s dominion;
    Save only her of Adam’s race
    Or heavenly line, none full of grace;
    On her alone, on her alone
    The torrent of His love poured down
    The deep abundance of its flood
    Into the pure channels of her maidenhood,
    The fleckless mirror of her grace
    Reflecting all the beauty of His Face.


IV

    She looks with human eyes
    Into the eyes of Paradise;
    Upon her virgin breast the Babe Divine
    Gazes again into her eyne;
    O vanity of words to tell
    The wonder of that spell,
    The ravishment of bliss
    Upwelling from the deep abyss
    Of Love incarnate gazing in the eyes
    Of his terrestrial paradise!
    See Heaven within her arms,
    Gathered against all harms,
    Innocence by innocence addrest,
    Virgin love by virgin love carest,
    The sinless mother and the sinless Son
    For Heaven and earth to gaze upon!
    Her living image on her knee,
    O the depths of her maternity!
    Her God, her Infant at her breast,
    O Love beyond all utterance exprest,
    The Eternal Word in virgin flesh made manifest!


V

    Ye sons of Adam rejoice
    With exultant voice!
    Shake off your chains! Arise!
    The ancient dragon has no power
    O’er Jesse’s virgin flower,
    And stricken ’neath a maiden’s sandal lies.
    Nor may his venomed breath so much
    As her garment’s outer margin touch;
    And sin’s torrential flood,
    That whelmed all Adam’s flesh and blood,
    Its loathsome stream turns back
    Before her footsteps’ radiant track.


VI

    Rejoice, children of men!
    Behold again
    Your flesh rejuvenate
    In her immaculate!
    Rejoice with exceeding joy,
    For in her free from sin’s alloy
    Your renovated race
    In plentitude of grace
    Dare look again unshamed upon its Maker’s Face!
    Chosen to bear the Eternal Word,
    In her your more than dignity restored;
    In her the more than golden worth
    Of Eden’s prime when Heaven was linked with earth;
    Unstained by Adam’s guilty forfeiture,
    In her your long corrupted flesh made pure;
    For of her, flesh of flesh and bone of bone,
    Eternal Love builds up His stainless throne!


VII

    Rejoice and be glad this day!
    In jubilation lay
    Your tribute at her feet,
    Spotless and most meet,
    The mystic rose of Jesse’s root,
    To bear the heavenly fruit;
    Wisdom’s seat and Heaven’s gate,
    Our surest advocate,
    Mother of God immaculate!
    Be glad, O Adam’s clay,
    Be glad this happy day.
    And with accordant voice acclaim
    Our spotless Lady’s stainless fame;
    Be ye exceeding glad and sing
    The mother of our King.
    And though unworthy be my strain,
    She is too tender not to deign
    To lend a gracious ear
    To this her children’s humble prayer:
    _Mother of Mercy, hear!
    Mother whose face is likest His,
    Who our Redeemer is,
    Grant us one day to share
    Thy happiness in gazing on His Face,
    Who found thee without spot and full of grace!_



THE RAISING OF THE FLAG

BY CONDÉ BENOIST PALLEN


    Lift up the banner of our love
    To the kiss of the winds above,
    The banner of the world’s fair hope,
    Set with stars from the azure cope,
    When liberty was young,
    And yet unsung
    Clarioned her voice among
    The trodden peoples, and stirred
    The pulses with her word,
    Till the swift flood red
    From the quick heart sped,
    Flushing valour’s cheek with flame
    At sounding of her august sacred name!

    Lift up the banner of the stars,
    The standard of the double bars,
    Red with the holy tide
    Of heroes’ blood, who died
    At the feet of liberty,
    Shouting her battle-cry
    Triumphantly
    As they fell like sickled corn
    In that first resplendent morn
    Of freedom, glad to die
    In the dawn of her clear eye!

    Lift up the flag of starry blue
    Caught from the crystal hue
    Of central heaven’s glowing dome,
    Where the great winds largely roam
    In unrestrainéd liberty;
    Caught from the cerulean sea
    Of midmost ocean tossing free,
    Flecked with the racing foam
    Of rushing waters, as they leap
    Unbridled from the laughing deep
    In the gulfs of liberty!

    Lift up the banner red
    With the blood of heroes shed
    In victory!
    Lift up the banner blue
    As heaven, and as true
    In constancy!
    Lift up the banner white
    As sea foam in the light
    Of liberty;
    The banner of the triple hue,
    The banner of the red and white and blue,
    Bright ensign of the free!

    Lift up the banner of the days to come,
    When cease the trumpet and the rolling drum;
    When peace in the nest of love
    Unfolds the wings of the dove,
    Brooding o’er the days to-be,
    Peace born of freedom’s might,
    Peace sprung from the power of right,
    The peace of liberty!

    Lift up the flag of high surprise
    To greet the gladdened eyes
    Of peoples far and near,
    The glorious harbinger
    Of earth’s wide liberties,
    Streaming pure and clear
    In freedom’s lofty atmosphere!

    Lift up our hearts to Him who made to shine
    In Heaven’s arch the glorious sign
    Of mercy’s heavenly birth
    To all the peoples of the earth,
    The pledge of peace divine!
    And let our glorious banner, too,
    The banner of the rainbow’s hue,
    In heaven’s wide expanse unfurled,
    Be for a promise to the world
    Of peace to all mankind;
    Banner of peace and light,
    Banner of red and blue and white,
    Red as the crimson blood
    Of Christ’s wide brotherhood,
    Blue with the unchanging hope
    Of heaven’s steadfast sun,
    White as the radiant sun
    The whole earth shining on!



THE BABE OF BETHLEHEM

BY CONDÉ BENOIST PALLEN


    O cruel manger, how bleak, how bleak!
      For the limbs of the Babe, my God;
    Soft little limbs on the cold, cold straw;
      Weep, O eyes, for thy God!

    Bitter ye winds in the frosty night
      Upon the Babe, my God,
    Piercing the torn and broken thatch;
      Lament, O heart, for thy God!

    Bare is the floor, how bare, how bare
      For the Babe’s sweet mother, my God;
    Only a stable for mother and Babe;
      How cruel thy world, my God!

    Cast out, cast out, by his brother men
      Unknown the Babe, my God;
    The ox and the ass alone are there;
      Soften, O heart, for thy God!

    Dear little arms and sweet little hands,
      That stretch for thy mother, my God;
    Soft baby eyes to the mother’s eyes;
      Melt, O heart, for thy God!

    Waxen touches on mother’s heart,
      Fingers of the Babe, my God;
    Dear baby lips to her virgin breast,
      The virgin mother of God.

    The shepherds have come from the hills to adore
      The Babe in the manger, my God;
    Mary and Joseph welcome them there;
      Worship, O soul, thy God!

    But I alone may not come near
      The Babe in the manger, my God;
    Weep for thy sins, O heart, and plead
      With Mary the mother of God.

    May I not come, oh, just to the door,
      To see the Babe, my God;
    There will I stop and kneel and adore,
      And weep for my sins, O God!

    But Mary smiles, and rising up,
      In her arms the Babe, my God,
    She comes to the door and bends her down,
      With the Babe in her arms, my God!

    Her sinless arms in my sinful arms
      Place the Babe, my God;
    “He has come to take thy sins away;”
      Break, O heart, for thy God!



THE TOYS

BY COVENTRY PATMORE


    My little son, who look’d from thoughtful eyes
    And mov’d and spoke in quiet grown-up wise,
    Having my law the seventh time disobey’d,
    I struck him, and dismiss’d
    With hard words and unkiss’d,
    His Mother, who was patient, being dead.
    Then fearing lest his grief should hinder him sleep
    I visited his bed,
    But found him slumbering deep,
    With darken’d eyelids, and their lashes yet
    From his late sobbing wet.
    And I, with moan,
    Kissing away his tears, left others of my own;
    For, on a table drawn beside his head,
    Fie had put, within his reach,
    A box of counters and a red-vein’d stone,
    A piece of glass abraded by the beach,
    And six or seven shells,
    A bottle with bluebells
    And two French copper coins, ranged there with careful art,
    To comfort his sad heart.
    So when that night I pray’d
    To God, I wept, and said:
    Ah, when at last we lie with trancéd breath,
    Not vexing Thee in death,
    And Thou rememberest of what toys
    We made our joys,
    How weakly understood
    Thy great commanded good,
    Then, fatherly not less
    Than I whom Thou hast moulded from the clay,
    Thou’lt leave Thy wrath, and say,
    “I will be sorry for their childishness.”



“IF I WERE DEAD”

BY COVENTRY PATMORE


    “If I were dead, you’d some time say, Poor Child!”
    The dear lips quiver’d as they spake,
    And the tears break
    From eyes, which, not to grieve me, brightly smiled.
    Poor Child, poor Child!
    I seem to hear your laugh, your talk, your song.
    It is not true that Love will do no wrong.
    Poor Child!
    And did you think, when you so cried and smiled,
    How I, in lonely nights, should lie awake,
    And of those words your full avengers make?
    Poor Child, poor Child!
    And now, unless it be
    That sweet amends thrice told are come to thee,
    O God, have Thou no mercy upon me!
    Poor Child!



DEPARTURE

BY COVENTRY PATMORE


    It was not like your great and gracious ways!
    Do you, that have nought other to lament,
    Never, my Love, repent
    Of how, that July afternoon,
    You went,
    With sudden, unintelligible phrase,
    And frightened eye,
    Upon your journey of so many days
    Without a single kiss, or a good-bye?
    I knew, indeed, that you were parting soon;
    And so we sate, within the low sun’s rays,
    You whispering to me, for your voice was weak,
    Your harrowing praise.
    Well, it was well
    To hear you such things speak,
    And I could tell
    What made your eyes a growing gloom of love,
    As a warm South-wind sombres a March grove.
    And it was like your great and gracious ways
    To turn your talk on daily things, my Dear,
    Lifting the luminous, pathetic lash
    To let the laughter flash,
    Whilst I drew near,
    Because you spoke so low that I could scarcely hear.
    But all at once to leave me at the last,
    More at the wonder than the loss aghast,
    With huddled, unintelligible phrase,
    And frighten’d eye,
    And go your journey of all days
    With not one kiss, or a good-bye,
    And the only loveless look the look with which you passed;
    ’Twas all unlike your great and gracious ways.



REGINA CŒLI

BY COVENTRY PATMORE


    Say, did his sisters wonder what could Joseph see
    In a mild, silent little Maid like thee?
    And was it awful, in that narrow house,
    With God for Babe and Spouse?
    Nay, like thy simple, female sort, each one
    Apt to find Him in Husband and in Son,
    Nothing to thee came strange in this.
    Thy wonder was but wondrous bliss:
    Wondrous, for, though
    True Virgin lives not but does know,
    (Howbeit none ever yet confess’d,)
    That God lies really in her breast,
    Of thine He made His special nest!
    And so
    All mothers worship little feet,
    And kiss the very ground they’ve trod;
    But, ah, thy little Baby sweet
    Who was indeed thy God!



IDEAL

BY P. H. PEARSE

(Translated from the Irish by Thomas MacDonagh)


    Naked I saw thee,
      O beauty of beauty!
    And I blinded my eyes
      For fear I should flinch.

    I heard thy music,
      O sweetness of sweetness!
    And I shut my ears
      For fear I should fail.

    I kissed thy lips,
      O sweetness of sweetness!
    And I hardened my heart
      For fear of my ruin.

    I blinded my eyes,
      And my ears I shut,
    I hardened my heart
      And my love I quenched.

    I turned my back
      On the dream I had shaped,
    And to this road before me
      My face I turned.

    I set my face
      To the road here before me,
    To the work that I see,
      To the death that I shall meet.



MUSIC

BY CHARLES PHILLIPS


    There is a hunger in my heart to-night,
      A longing in my soul, to hear
    The voice of heaven o’er the noise of earth
      That doth assail mine ear.

    For we are exiled children of the skies,
      Lone and lost wanderers from home ...
    The stars come out like lamps in windows lit
      Far, far from where we roam;

    Like candles lit to show the long late way,
      Dear kindly beacons sure and bright;
    But O, the heavy journeying, and O
      The silence of the night!--

    The dark and vasty silences that lie
      Between the going and the goal!
    Will not God reach a friendly hand to lift
      And land my weary soul?

    Will not God speak a friendly word to me
      Above the tumult and the din
    Of earthly things--one little word to hush
      The voice of care and sin?...

    He speaks! He answers my poor faltering prayer!
      He opens heaven’s lattice wide;
    He bids me bathe my brow in heavenly airs
      Like to a flowing tide!

    He calls; He gives unto my famished soul,
      Unto my eager heart, its meed:
    He breathes upon me with the breath of song,
      And O, my soul is freed,

    And I am lifted up and up, and held
      A little while--a child, to see
    The beauties of my Father’s house, which shall
      No more be shut from me!



I SEE HIS BLOOD UPON THE ROSE

BY JOSEPH MARY PLUNKETT


    I see His blood upon the rose
      And in the stars the glory of His eyes,
    His Body gleams amid eternal snows,
      His tears fall from the skies.

    I see His face in every flower;
      The thunder and the singing of the birds
    Are but His voice--and carven by His power
      Rocks are His written words.

    All pathways by His feet are worn,
      His strong heart stirs the ever-beating sea,
    His crown of thorns is twined with every thorn,
      His cross is every tree.



THE STARS SANG IN GOD’S GARDEN

BY JOSEPH MARY PLUNKETT


    The stars sang in God’s garden;
    The stars are the birds of God;
    The night-time is God’s harvest,
    Its fruits are the words of God.

    God ploughed His fields at morning,
    God sowed His seed at noon,
    God reaped and gathered in His corn
    With the rising of the moon.

    The sun rose up at midnight,
    The sun rose red as blood,
    It showed the Reaper, the dead Christ,
    Upon His cross of wood.

    For many live that one may die,
    And one must die that many live--
    The stars are silent in the sky
    Lest my poor songs be fugitive.



“IS IT NOTHING TO YOU?”

BY MAY PROBYN


    We were playing on the green together,
      My sweetheart and I--
    Oh, so heedless in the gay June weather,
      When the word went forth that we must die.
    Oh, so merrily the balls of amber
      And of ivory tossed we to the sky,
    While the word went forth in the King’s chamber,
      That we both must die.

    Oh, so idly, straying through the pleasaunce,
      Plucked we here and there
    Fruit and bud, while in the royal presence
      The King’s son was casting from his hair
    Glory of the wreathen gold that crowned it,
      And, ungirding all his garment fair,
    Flinging by the jewelled clasp that bound it,
      With his feet made bare,

    Down the myrtled stairway of the palace,
      Ashes on his head,
    Came he, through the rose and citron alleys,
      In the rough sark of sackcloth habited,
    And in a hempen halter--oh! we jested,
      Lightly, and we laughed as he was led
    To the torture, while the bloom we breasted
      Where the grapes grew red.

    Oh, so sweet the birds, when he was dying,
      Piped to her and me--
    Is no room this glad June day for sighing--
      He is dead, and she and I go free!
    When the sun shall set on all our pleasure
      We will mourn him--What, so you decree
    We are heartless?--Nay, but in what measure
      Do you more than we?



THE BEES OF MYDDLETON MANOR

17th Century

BY MAY PROBYN


    Buzzing, buzzing, buzzing, my golden-belted bees:
    My little son was seven years old--the mint-flower touched his
        knees;
      Yellow were his curly locks;
      Yellow were his stocking-clocks;
    His plaything of a sword had a diamond in its hilt;
      Where the garden beds lay sunny,
      And the bees were making honey,
    “For God and the king--to arms! to arms!” the day long would he
        lilt.
    Smock’d in lace and flowered brocade, my pretty son of seven
    Wept sore because the kitten died, and left the charge uneven.
      “I head one battalion, mother--
      Kitty,” sobbed he, “led the other!
      And when we reach’d the bee-hive bench
      We used to halt and storm the trench:
      If we could plant our standard here,
      With all the bees a-buzzing near,
      And fly the colors safe from sting,
      The town was taken for the king!”
    Flirting flitting over the thyme, by bees with yellow band--
    My little son of seven came close, and clipp’d me by the hand;
      A wreath of mourning cloth was wound
      His small left arm and sword-hilt round,
    And on the thatch of every hive a whisp of black was bound.
    “Sweet mother, we must tell the bees, or they will swarm away:
    Ye little bees!” he called, “draw nigh, and hark to what I say,
    And make us golden honey still for our white wheaten bread,
        Though never more
        We rush on war
        With Kitty at our head:
        Who’ll give the toast
        When swords are cross’d,
        Now Kitty lieth dead?”
    Buzzing, buzzing, buzzing, my bees of yellow girth:
    My son of seven changed his mood, and clasp’d me in his mirth.
    “Sweet mother, when I grow a man and fall on battlefield,”
    He cried, and down in the daisied grass upon one knee he kneel’d,
    “I charge thee, come and tell the bees how I for the king lie dead;
    And thou shalt never lack fine honey for thy wheaten bread!”

           *       *       *       *       *

    Flitting, flitting, flitting, my busy bees, alas!
    No footsteps of my soldier son came clinking through the grass.
      Thrice he kiss’d me for farewell;
      And far on the stone his shadow fell;
    He buckled spurs and sword-belt on, as the sun began to stoop,
    Set foot in stirrup, and sprang to horse, and rode to join his
        troop.
      To the west he rode, where the winds were at play,
      And Monmouth’s army mustering lay;
      Where Bridgewater flew her banner high,
      And gave up her keys, when the Duke came by;
      And the maids of Taunton paid him court
      With colors their own white hands had wrought;
      And red as a field, where blood doth run,
      Sedgemoor blazed in the setting sun.

    Broider’d sash and clasp of gold, my soldier son, alas!
    The mint was all in flower, and the clover in the grass:
          “With every bed
          In bloom,” I said,
        “What further lack the bees,
          That they buzz so loud,
          Like a restless cloud,
        Among the orchard trees?”
      No voice in the air, from Sedgemoor field,
      Moan’d out how Grey and the horse had reel’d;
      Met me no ghost, with haunting eyes,
      That westward pointed ’mid its sighs,
      And pull’d apart a bloody vest,
      And show’d the sword-gash in his breast.

    Empty hives, and flitting bees, and sunny morning hours;
    I snipp’d the blossom’d lavender, and the pinks, and the
        gillyflowers;
      No petal trembled in my hold--
      I saw not the dead stretched stark and cold
      On the trampled turf at the shepherd’s door,
      In the cloak and the doublet Monmouth wore,
      With Monmouth’s scarf and headgear on,
      And the eyes, not clos’d, of my soldier son;
    I knew not how, ere the cocks did crow, the fight was fought in the
        dark,
    With naught for guide but the enemy’s guns, when the flint flash’d
        out a spark,
    Till, routed at first sound of fire, the cavalry broke and fled,
    And the hoofs struck dumb, where they spurn’d the slain, and the
        meadow stream ran red;
    I saw not the handful of horsemen spur through the dusk, and out of
        sight,
    My soldier son at the Duke’s left hand, and Grey that rode on his
        right.
    Buzzing, buzzing, buzzing, my honey-making bees,
    They left the musk, and the marigolds and the scented faint sweet
        peas;
    They gather’d in a darkening cloud, and sway’d, and rose to fly;
    A blackness on the summer blue, they swept across the sky.
    Gaunt and ghastly with gaping wounds--(my soldier son, alas!)
    Footsore and faint, the messenger came halting through the grass.
    The wind went by and shook the leaves--the mint-stalk shed its
        flower--
    And I miss’d the murmuring round the hives, and my boding heart beat
        slower.
      His soul we cheer’d with meat and wine;
      With woman’s craft and balsam fine
      We bathed his hurts, and bound them soft,
      While west the wind played through the croft,
      And the low sun dyed the pinks blood red,
      And, straying near the mint-flower shed,
      A wild bee wantoned o’er the bed.

    He told how my son, at the shepherd’s door, kept watch in Monmouth’s
        clothes,
    While Monmouth donned the shepherd’s frock, in hope to cheat his
        foes.
      A couple of troopers spied him stand,
      And bade him yield to the king’s command:
      “Surrender, thou rebel as good as dead,
      A price is set on thy traitor head!”
      My soldier son, with secret smile,
      Held both at bay for a little while,
      Dealt them such death blow as he fell,
      Neither was left the tale to tell;
      With dying eyes that asked no grace,
      They stared on him for a minute’s space,
      And felt that it was not Monmouth’s face.
    Crimsoned through was Monmouth’s cloak, when the soldier dropped at
        their side--
    “Those knaves will carry no word,” he said, and he smiled in his
        pain, and died.
    “Two days,” told the messenger, “did we lie
      Hid in the fields of peas and rye,
      Hid in the ditch of brake and sedge,
      With the enemy’s scouts down every hedge,
    Till Grey was seized, and Monmouth seized, that under the fern did
        crouch,
    Starved and haggard, and all unshaved, with a few raw peas in his
        pouch.”

           *       *       *       *       *

    No music soundeth in my ears, but a passing bell that tolls
    For gallant lords with head on block--sweet Heaven receive their
        souls!
      And a mound, unnamed, in Sedgemoor grass,
      That laps my soldier son, alas!
        The bloom is shed--
        The bees are fled--
      Middleton luck it’s done and dead.



A LEGEND

BY ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER


I

    The Monk was preaching: strong his earnest word,
      From the abundance of his heart he spoke,
    And the flame spread,--in every soul that heard
      Sorrow and love and good resolve awoke:--
    The poor lay Brother, ignorant and old,
      Thanked God that he had heard such words of gold.


II

    “Still let the glory, Lord, be thine alone,”--
      So prayed the Monk, his heart absorbed in praise:
    “Thine be the glory: if my hands have sown
      The harvest ripened in Thy mercy’s rays,
    It was Thy blessing, Lord, that made my word
      Bring light and love to every soul that heard.”


III

    “O Lord, I thank Thee that my feeble strength
      Has been so blest; that sinful hearts and cold
    Were melted at my pleading,--knew at length
      How sweet Thy service and how safe Thy fold:
    While souls that loved Thee saw before them rise
      Still holier heights of loving sacrifice.”


IV

    So prayed the Monk: when suddenly he heard
      An Angel speaking thus: “Know, O my Son,
    The words had all been vain, but hearts were stirred,
      And saints were edified, and sinners won,
    By his, the poor lay Brother’s humble aid
      Who sat upon the pulpit stair and prayed.”



THE SACRED HEART

BY ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER


    What wouldst thou have, O soul,
      Thou weary soul?
    Lo! I have sought for rest
    On the Earth’s heaving breast,
      From pole to pole.
    Sleep--I have been with her,
      But she gave dreams;
    Death--nay, the rest he gives
      Rest only seems.
    Fair nature knows it not--
      The grass is growing;
    The blue air knows it not--
      The winds are blowing:
    Not in the changing sky,
      The stormy sea,
    Yet somewhere in God’s wide world
      Rest there must be.
    Within thy Saviour’s Heart
      Place all thy care,
    And learn, O weary soul,
      Thy Rest is there.

    What wouldst thou, trembling soul?
      Strength for the strife,--
    Strength for this fiery war
      That we call Life.
    Fears gather thickly round;
      Shadowy foes,
    Like unto armed men,
      Around me close.
    What am I, frail and poor,
      When griefs arise?
    No help from the weak earth,
      Or the cold skies.
    Lo! I can find no guards,
      No weapons borrow;
    Shrinking, alone I stand,
      With mighty sorrow.
    Courage, thou trembling soul,
      Grief thou must bear,
    Yet thou canst find a strength
      Will match despair;
    Within thy Saviour’s Heart--
      Seek for it there.

    What wouldst thou have, sad soul,
      Oppressed with grief?--
    Comfort: I seek in vain,
      Nor find relief.
    Nature, all pitiless,
      Smiles on my pain;
    I ask my fellow-men,
      They give disdain.
    I asked the babbling streams,
      But they flowed on;
    I asked the wise and good,
      But they gave none.
    Though I have asked the stars,
      Coldly they shine.
    They are too bright to know
      Grief such as mine.
    I asked for comfort still,
      And I found tears,
    And I have sought in vain
      Long, weary years.
    Listen, thou mournful soul,
      Thy pain shall cease;
    Deep in His sacred Heart
      Dwells joy and peace.

    Yes, in that Heart divine
      The Angels bright
    Find, through eternal years,
      Still new delight.
    From thence his constancy
      The martyr drew,
    And there the virgin band
      Their refuge knew.
    There, racked by pain without,
      And dread within,
    How many souls have found
      Heaven’s bliss begin.
    Then leave thy vain attempts
      To seek for peace;
    The world can never give
      One soul release;
    But in thy Saviour’s Heart
      Securely dwell,
    No pain can harm thee, hid
      In that sweet cell.
    Then fly, O coward soul,
      Delay no more:
    What words can speak the joy
      For thee in store?
    What smiles of earth can tell
      Of peace like thine?
    Silence and tears are best
      For things divine.



THE ANNUNCIATION

BY ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER


    How pure, and frail, and white,
      The snowdrops shine!
    Gather a garland bright
      For Mary’s shrine.

    For, born of winter snows,
      These fragile flowers
    Are gifts to our fair Queen
      From Spring’s first hours.

    For on this blessèd day
      She knelt at prayer;
    When, lo! before her shone
      An Angel fair.

    “Hail, Mary!” thus he cried,
      With reverent fear:
    She, with sweet wondering eyes,
      Marvelled to hear.

    Be still, ye clouds of Heaven!
      Be silent, Earth!
    And hear an Angel tell
      Of Jesus’ birth,

    While she, whom Gabriel hails
      As full of grace,
    Listens with humble faith
      In her sweet face.

    Be still,--Pride, War, and Pomp,
      Vain Hopes, vain Fears,
    For now an Angel speaks,
      And Mary hears.

    “Hail, Mary!” lo, it rings
      Through ages on;
    “Hail Mary!” it shall sound,
      Till Time is done

    “Hail, Mary!” infant lips
      Lisp it to-day;
    “Hail, Mary!” with faint smile
      The dying say.

    “Hail, Mary!” many a heart
      Broken with grief,
    In that angelic prayer
      Has found relief.

    And many a half-lost soul,
      When turned at bay,
    With those triumphant words
      Has won the day.

    “Hail, Mary, Queen of Heaven!”
      Let us repeat,
    And place our snowdrop wreath
      Here at her feet.



OUR DAILY BREAD

BY ADELAIDE ANNE PROCTER


    Give us our daily Bread,
      O God, the bread of strength!
    For we have learnt to know
      How weak we are at length.
    As children we are weak,
      As children must be fed;--
    Give us Thy Grace, O Lord,
      To be our daily Bread.

    Give us our daily Bread:--
      The bitter bread of grief.
    We sought earth’s poisoned feasts
      For pleasure and relief;
    We sought her deadly fruits,
      But now, O God, instead,
    We ask thy healing grief
      To be our daily Bread.

    Give us our daily Bread
      To cheer our fainting soul;
    The feast of comfort, Lord,
      And peace, to make us whole:
    For we are sick of tears,
      The useless tears we shed;--
    Now give us comfort, Lord,
      To be our daily Bread.

    Give us our daily Bread,
      The Bread of Angels, Lord,
    For us, so many times,
      Broken, betrayed, adored:
    His Body and His Blood;--
      The feast that Jesus spread:
    Give Him--our life, our all--
      To be our daily Bread!



MY MARYLAND

BY JAMES RYDER RANDALL


    The despot’s heel is on thy shore,
          Maryland!
    His torch is at thy temple door,
          Maryland!
    Avenge the patriotic gore
    That flecked the streets of Baltimore,
    And be the battle-queen of yore,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Hark to an exiled son’s appeal,
          Maryland!
    My Mother State, to thee I kneel,
          Maryland!
    For life and death, for woe and weal,
    Thy peerless chivalry reveal,
    And gird thy beauteous limbs with steel,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Thou wilt not cower in the dust,
          Maryland!
    Thy beaming sword shall never rust,
          Maryland!
    Remember Carroll’s sacred trust,
    Remember Howard’s warlike thrust,
    And all thy slumberers with the just,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Come! ’tis the red dawn of the day,
          Maryland!
    Come with thy panoplied array,
          Maryland!
    With Ringgold’s spirit for the fray,
    With Watson’s blood at Monterey,
    With fearless Lowe and dashing May,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Dear Mother, burst the tyrant’s chain,
          Maryland!
    Virginia should not call in vain,
          Maryland!
    She meets her sisters on the plain,--
    “_Sic semper!_” ’tis the proud refrain
    That baffles minions back amain,
          Maryland!
    Arise in majesty again,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Come! for thy shield is bright and strong,
          Maryland!
    Come! for thy dalliance does thee wrong,
          Maryland!
    Come to thine own heroic throng
    Stalking with Liberty along,
    And chant thy dauntless slogan-song,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    I see the blush upon thy cheek,
          Maryland!
    For thou wast ever bravely meek,
          Maryland!
    But lo! there surges forth a shriek,
    From hill to hill, from creek to creek,
    Potomac calls to Chesapeake,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    Thou wilt not yield the Vandal toll,
          Maryland!
    Thou wilt not crook to his control,
          Maryland!
    Better the fire upon thee roll,
    Better the shot, the blade, the bowl,
    Than crucifixion of the soul,
          Maryland, my Maryland!

    I hear the distant thunder hum,
          Maryland!
    The Old Line’s bugle, fife and drum,
          Maryland!
    She is not dead, nor deaf, nor dumb;
    Huzza! she spurns the Northern scum!
    She breathes! She burns! She’ll come! She’ll come!
          Maryland, my Maryland!



MAGDALEN

BY JAMES RYDER RANDALL


    The Hebrew girl, with flaming brow,
      The banner-blush of shame,
    Sinks at the sinless Saviour’s Knees
      And dares to breathe His name.
    From the full fountain of her eyes
      The lava-globes are roll’d--
    They wash His feet; she spurns them off
      With her ringlet-scarf of gold.

    The Meek One feels the eloquence
      Of agonizing prayer,
    The burning tears, the suppliant face,
      The penitential hair;
    And when, to crown her brimming woe,
      The ointment box is riven--
    “Rise, daughter, rise! Much hast thou loved,
      Be all thy sins forgiven!”

    Dear God! The prayer of good and pure,
      The canticles of light,
    Enrobe Thy throne with gorgeous skies,
      As incense in Thy sight;
    May the shivered vase of Magdalen
      Soothe many an outcast’s smart,
    Teaching what fragrant pleas may spring
      From out a _broken heart_!



WHY THE ROBIN’S BREAST WAS RED

BY JAMES RYDER RANDALL


    The Saviour, bowed beneath His Cross, climbed up the dreary hill,
    And from the agonizing wreath ran many a crimson rill;
    The cruel Roman thrust Him on with unrelenting hand,
    Till, staggering slowly ’mid the crowd, He fell upon the sand.

    A little bird that warbled near, that memorable day,
    Flitted around and strove to wrench one single thorn away;
    The cruel spike impaled his breast,--and thus ’tis sweetly said,
    The robin has his silver vest incarnadined with red.

    Ah, Jesu! Jesu! Son of man! my dolor and my sighs
    Reveal the lesson taught by this winged Ishmael of the skies.
    I, in the palace of delight or cavern of despair,
    Have plucked no thorns from Thy dear brow, but planted thousands
        there!



LE REPOS IN EGYPTE: THE SPHINX

BY AGNES REPPLIER


    All day I watch the stretch of burning sand;
      All night I brood beneath the golden stars;
    Amid the silence of a desolate land,
      No touch of bitterness my reverie mars.
    Built by the proudest of a kingly line,
      Over my head the centuries fly fast;
    The secrets of the mighty dead are mine;
      I hold the key of a forgotten past.
    Yet, ever hushed into a rapturous dream,
      I see again that night. A halo mild
    Shone from the liquid moon. Beneath her beam
      Traveled a tired young Mother and the Child.
    Within mine arms she slumbered, and alone
      I watched the Infant. At my feet her guide
    Lay stretched o’er-wearied. On my breast of stone
      Rested the Crucified.



ANDROMEDA

BY JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE


    They chained her fair young body to the cold and cruel stone;
    The beast begot of sea and slime had marked her for his own;
    The callous world beheld the wrong, and left her there alone.
    Base caitiffs who belied her, false kinsmen who denied her,
          Ye left her there alone!
    My Beautiful, they left thee in thy peril and thy pain;
    The night that hath no morrow was brooding on the main:
    But, lo! a light is breaking of hope for thee again;
    ’T is Perseus’s sword a-flaming, thy dawn of day proclaiming
          Across the western main.
    O Ireland! O my country! he comes to break thy chain!



NATURE THE FALSE GODDESS

BY JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE


    The vilest work of vilest man,
      The cup that drugs, the sword that slays,
    The purchased kiss of courtesan,
      The lying tongue of blame of praise,

    The cobra’s fang, the tiger’s tongue,
      The python’s murderous embrace--
    The wrath of any living thing
      A man may fear but bravely face.

    But thou, cold Mother, knowest naught
      Of love, of hate, or joy, or woe;
    Thy bounties come to man unsought,
      Thy curses fall on friend and foe.

    Thou bearest balm upon thy breath,
      Or sowest poison in the air;
    And if man reapeth life or death,
      Thou dost not know, thou dost not care.

    Thou art God’s instrument of fate,
      Obedient, mighty, soulless, blind,
    No demon to propitiate,
      No deity in love enshrined.

    Let him who turns from God away
      To Bel or Moloch bend the knee;
    Defile his soul to wood or clay,
      Or thrill with Voodoo’s ecstasy.

    Seek any fetich undivine,
      Be any superstition’s thrall,
    From Heaven or Hell will come a sign;
      But thou alone art deaf to all.



THREE DOVES

BY JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE


    Seaward, at morn, my doves flew free;
    At eve they circled back to me.
    The first was Faith; the second, Hope;
    The third, the whitest, Charity.

    Above the plunging surges play
    Dream-like they hovered, day by day.
    At last they turned, and bore to me
    Green signs of peace thro’ nightfall gray,

    No shore forlorn, no loveliest land
    Their gentle eye had left unscanned,
    ’Mid hues of twilight-heliotrope
    Or daybreak fires by heaven-breath fanned

    Quick visions of celestial grace,--
    Hither they waft, from earth’s broad space,
    Kind thoughts for all humanity,
    They shine with radiance from God’s face.

    Ah, since my heart they choose for home,
    Why loose them,--forth again to roam?
    Yet look; they rise with loftier scope
    They wheel in flight toward Heaven’s pure dome.

    Fly, messengers that find no rest
    Save in such toil as makes man blest!
    Your home is God’s immensity;
    We hold you but at His behest.



THE WAY OF THE WORLD

BY JAMES JEFFREY ROCHE


    The hands of the King are soft and fair
      They never knew labor’s strain
    The hands of the Robber redly wear
      The bloody brand of Cain.
    But the hands of the Man are hard and scarred
      With the scars of toil and pain.

    The slaves of Pilate have washed his hands
      As white as a kings might be.
    Barrabas with wrists unfettered stands
      For the world has made him free.
    But Thy palms toil-worn by nails are torn,
      O Christ, on Calvary.



AVE MARIA

BY JOHN JEROME ROONEY


    Lady, thy soldier I would be,
      This day I choose thy shield,
    And go, thrice-armored for the fight,
      Forth to the world’s wide field.

    There I shall meet the dark allies,
      The Flesh, the Fiend, the World,
    And fiercely shall their darts of fire
      Upon my heart be hurled.

    But I will raise my buckler strong
      Betwixt me and the foe,
    And, with the spirit’s flaming sword,
      Shall give them blow for blow.

    Lady, thy sailor I would be,
      This day I sign my name
    To sail the high seas of the earth
      For glory of thy fame.

    The tempest may besiege my bark,
      The pirate lie in wait:
    The perils of the monstrous deep
      May tempt o’erwhelming fate:

    Yet, wheresoe’er my ship may steer
      Upon the waters wide,
    Thy name shall be my compass sure,
      Thy star my midnight guide.

    Thy poet, Lady, I would be
      To sing thy peerless praise;
    Thy loyal bard, I’d bring to thee
      Heart-music from all lays.

    Soft melody, outpoured in June
      By God’s dear feathered throng,
    Would mingle with the organ’s roll
      To glorify my song;

    And Dante’s voice and Petrarch’s strain
      And Milton’s matchless line
    Would lend to my poor minstrel note
      A harmony divine.

    Lady, I choose to be thy son;
      For Mother thee I choose;
    O, for thy sweet and holy Child,
      Do not my claim refuse!

    Alone and motherless am I:
      Tho’ strong, I long for rest--
    The thunder of the world’s applause
      Is not a mother’s breast.

    Ave Maria! Shield us all.
      Thy sons we choose to be.
    Mother of grace, we raise our hearts,
      Our hearts, our love to thee!



REVELATION

“_And I saw a new heaven and a new earth: for the first heaven and the
first earth were passed away_.”--Revelation XXI:1

BY JOHN JEROME ROONEY


    The Lord God said to His angel: “Let the old things pass away.
    They have heaped the earth with slaughter their sin obscures the
        day.
    Roll up the night on a curtain: let the stars fade one by one:
    Out of the face of the heavens my anger shall blot the sun.
    For the man I made and breathed on, filled with my breath of breath,
    Hath sown the seas with hatred, his skies are dark with death.
    The babe is slain at the bosom, the babe who beholds my face;
    A welter of woe he leaves it,--the dream of my love and grace.

    “Love was the dower I gave him, love the light of his days,
    Love the core of his being, love, and the upward gaze.
    Hate is the meat he feeds on, hate is his daily bread:
    His drink is the blood of his brother, whom Cain hath stricken dead.
    I said to the man in the Garden: ‘Where is thy brother, Cain?’
    ‘Am I my brother’s keeper?’ now comes the answer again.”
    The Lord God said to His angel: “This Thing is accursed and a lie:
    It hath sinned from the Law I gave it, and surely it shall die.”

    “The Beasts of the field are patient, the birds rejoice in song,--
    But what is this Thing of blood-lust, and where does it belong?
    Lo, I shall establish a judgment: Let the old things pass away:
    They have heaped the fields with slaughter: their sin defiles the
        day.
    They have laid on the weak sore burdens, on the just, their whips
        and ban:
    For a handful of crimsoned silver they have kissed the Son of Man.
    Roll back the scroll of the heavens; from out of the womb of birth
    Come forth new heavens untainted; come forth, renewed, the Earth!”



MARQUETTE ON THE SHORES OF THE MISSISSIPPI

On seeing the original manuscript map of the Mississippi River by its
discoverer, Father Marquette

BY JOHN JEROME ROONEY


    Here, in the midnight of the solemn wood,
      He heard a roar as of a mighty wind,--
      The onward rush of waters unconfined
    Trampling in legions thro’ the solitude.
    Then lo! before him swept the conquering flood,
      Free as the freedom of the truth-strong mind
      Which hills of Doubt could neither hide nor bind,
    Which, all in vain, the valley mounds withstood!

    With glowing eye he saw the prancing tide
      With yellow mane rush onward thro’ the night
        Into the vastness he had never trod:
    Nor dreamt of conquest of that kingdom wide
      As down the flood his spirit took its flight
        Seeking the long-lost children of his God!



THE EMPIRE BUILDER

(On the death of a Catholic gentleman)

BY JOHN JEROME ROONEY


I

    This is the song of the Empire Builder,
      Who out of the ends of the earth,
    Thro’ travail of war and of carnage
      Brings strange, new realms to birth.

    This is the boast of the Empire Builder:
      Give heed to the deeds of his hands
    And scorn thou not the glory he hath
      In his gold and his wasted lands.

    He hath counted his neighbors’ cattle
      With the cold, gray eye of greed:
    He hath marked for his own the fields of wheat
      Where he never had sown the seed:

    The vine-clad cot by the hillside,
      Where the farmer’s children play,--
    “This shall fit in my plan,” he said;
      “What use for such as they?”

    And so, in the dusk of evening,
      He brought his arméd men,
    And where had shone the clustering grapes
      There stretched a waste again.

    Homeless, the children wandered
      Thro’ the fields their father won:
    No more shall they feel his clasp and kiss--
      Aye, never beneath the sun.

    Vex, vex not the Empire Builder,
      Nor babble of Mercy’s shield;
    Hath he not his vaster issue--
      The linking of field to field?

    Hath he not noted the boundary
      That lies ’twixt “mine and thine”?
    Hath he not said, “’Twere better for thee
      If thine henceforth be mine”?

    And so doth the Empire Builder,
      From out of the ends of the earth,
    Thro’ travail of war and of carnage
      Bring strange, new realms to birth--

    Realms builded on broken hearthstones,
      The triumph of Rapine’s hour--
    That one may boast in the halls of Fame
      And sit in the seats of Power!


II

    This is the song of the Empire Builder,
      Who built not of wasted lands,
    But who builded a kingdom of golden deeds
      And of things not made by hands!

    The fields of the spirit were his to roam,
      The paths where the love-flowers grew:
    He felt the breath of the spirits’ spring
      In every wind that blew:

    It came not laden with dying groans
      And homeless orphans’ cries:
    It blew from the mountains of the Lord
      And the fields of Paradise.

    This is the boast of the Empire Builder
      Who built not of mouldering clay:
    That the kingdom He built, not made by hands,
     Shall never pass away!

    The mind cannot measure its boundaries,
      All Space is its outer gate:
    It is broader than ever a man conceived
      And more durable than Fate.

    This is the Empire our brother built,
      In His little hour of Earth,
    Thro’ the spirit’s travail of righteous deeds
      And the spirit’s glad rebirth.

    He had silenced the boast of the Empire Builder,
      With his gold and wasted lands,
    By his deathless kingdom of golden deeds
      And of things not made by hands.

    This is the kingdom our brother built:
      It is good: it hath sufficed;--
    For who can measure the glory he keeps
      With our Elder Brother, Christ?



THE MEN BEHIND THE GUNS

BY JOHN JEROME ROONEY


    A cheer and salute for the Admiral, and here’s to the Captain bold,
    And never forget the Commodore’s debt when the deeds of might are
        told!
    They stand to the deck through the battle’s wreck when the great
        shells roar and screech--
    And never they fear when the foe is near to practice what they
        preach:
    But off with your hat and three times three for Columbia’s true-blue
        sons,
    The men below who batter the foe--the men behind the guns!

    Oh, light and merry of heart are they when they swing into port once
        more,
    When, with more than enough of the “green-backed stuff,” they start
        for their leave-o’-shore;
    And you’d think, perhaps, that the blue-bloused chaps who loll along
        the street
    Are a tender bit, with salt on it, for some fierce “mustache” to
        eat--
    Some warrior bold, with straps of gold, who dazzles and fairly stuns
    The modest worth of the sailor boys--the lads who serve the guns.

    But say not a word till the shot is heard that tells the fight is
        on,
    Till the long, deep roar grows more and more from the ships of
        “Yank” and “Don,”
    Till over the deep the tempests sweep of fire and bursting shell,
    And the very air is a mad Despair in the throes of a living hell;
    Then down, deep down, in the mighty ship, unseen by the midday suns,
    You’ll find the chaps who are giving the raps--the men behind the
        guns!

    Oh, well they know the cyclones blow that they loose from their
        cloud of death,
    And they know is heard the thunder-word their fierce ten-incher
        saith!
    The steel decks rock with the lightning shock, and shake with the
        great recoil,
    And the sea grows red with the blood of the dead and reaches for his
        spoil--
    But not till the foe has gone below or turns his prow and runs
    Shall the voice of peace bring sweet release to the men behind the
        guns!



A THOUGHT FROM CARDINAL NEWMAN[A]

BY MATTHEW RUSSELL, S. J.


    The world shines bright for inexperienced eyes,
      And death seems distant to the gay and strong,
      And in the youthful heart proud fancies throng,
    And only present good can nature prize.
    How then shall youth o’er these low vapours rise,
      And climb the upward path so steep and long?
      And how, amid earth’s sights and sounds of wrong,
    Walk with pure heart and face raised to the skies?

    By gazing on the Infinitely Good,
      Whose love must quell, or hallow every other--
    By living in the shadow of the Rood,
      For He that hangs there is our Elder Brother,
    Who dying gave to us Himself as food,
      And His own Mother as our nursing Mother.

[A] In the last of his “Discourses to Mixed Congregations,” Dr. Newman
calls the Blessed Virgin the Mother of Emanuel, and says: “It is the
boast of the Catholic religion that it has the gift of making the young
heart chaste; and why is this, but that it gives us Jesus for our food
and Mary for our nursing Mother?”



THE CONQUERED BANNER

BY ABRAM J. RYAN


    Furl that Banner, for ’tis weary;
    Round its staff ’tis drooping dreary:
      Furl it, fold it,--it is best;
    For there’s not a man to wave it,
    And there’s not a sword to save it,
    And there’s not one left to lave it
    In the blood which heroes gave it,
    And its foes now scorn and brave it:
      Furl it, hide it,--let it rest!

    Take that Banner down! ’tis tattered;
    Broken is its staff and shattered;
    And the valiant hosts are scattered,
      Over whom it floated high.
    Oh, ’tis hard for us to fold it,
    Hard to think there’s none to hold it,
      Now must furl it with a sigh!

    Furl that Banner!--furl it sadly!
    Once ten thousands hailed it gladly,
    And ten thousands wildly, madly,
      Swore it should forever wave;
    Swore that foeman’s sword should never
    Hearts like theirs entwined dissever
    Till that flag should float forever
      O’er their freedom or their grave!

    Furl it! for the hands that grasped it,
    And the hearts that fondly clasped it,
      Cold and dead are lying low;
    And that Banner--it is trailing
    While around it sounds the wailing
      Of its people in their woe.

    For, though conquered, they adore it,--
    Love the cold, dead hands that bore it,
    Weep for those who fell before it,
    Pardon those who trailed and tore it;
    And oh, wildly they deplore it.
      Now to furl and fold it so!

    Furl that Banner! True, ’tis gory,
    Yet ’tis wreathed around with glory,
    And ’twill live in song and story
      Though its folds are in the dust!
    For its fame on brightest pages,
    Penned by poets and by sages,
    Shall go sounding down the ages--
      Furl its folds though now we must.

    Furl that Banner, softly, slowly!
    Treat it gently--it is holy,
      For it droops above the dead.
    Touch it not--unfold it never;
    Let it droop there, furled forever,--
      For its people’s hopes are fled!



A CHILD’S WISH

BY ABRAM J. RYAN


    I wish I were the little key
      That locks Love’s Captive in,
    And lets Him out to go and free
      A sinful heart from sin.

    I wish I were the little bell
      That tinkles for the Host,
    When God comes down each day to dwell
      With hearts He loves the most.

    I wish I were the chalice fair,
      That holds the Blood of Love,
    When every gleam lights holy prayer
      Upon its way above.

    I wish I were the little flower
      So near the Host’s sweet face,
    Or like the light that half an hour
      Burns on the shrine of grace.

    I wish I were the altar where,
      As on His mother’s breast,
    Christ nestles, like a child, fore’er
      In Eucharistic rest.

    But, oh, my God, I wish the most
      That my poor heart may be
    A home all holy for each Host
      That comes in love to me.



THE SWORD OF ROBERT LEE

BY ABRAM J. RYAN


    Forth from its scabbard, pure and bright
      Flashed the sword of Lee!
    Far in the front of the deadly fight,
    High o’er the brave in the cause of Right,
    Its stainless sheen, like a beacon bright,
      Led us to Victory.

    Out of its scabbard, where, full long,
      It slumbered peacefully,
    Roused from its rest by the battle’s song,
    Shielding the feeble, smiting the strong,
    Guarding the right, avenging the wrong,
      Gleamed the sword of Lee.

    Forth from its scabbard, high in air
      Beneath Virginia’s sky--
    And they who saw it gleaming there,
    And knew who bore it, knelt to swear
    That where that sword led they would dare
      To follow--and to die.

    Out of its scabbard! Never hand
      Waved sword from stain as free,
    Nor purer sword led braver band,
    Nor braver bled for a brighter land,
    Nor brighter land had a cause so grand,
      Nor cause a chief like Lee!

    Forth from its scabbard! How we prayed
      That sword might victor be;
    And when our triumph was delayed,
    And many a heart grew sore afraid,
    We still hoped on while gleamed the blade
      Of noble Robert Lee.

    Forth from its scabbard all in vain
      Bright flashed the sword of Lee;
    ’Tis shrouded now in its sheath again,
    It sleeps the sleep of our noble slain,
    Defeated, yet without a stain,
      Proudly and peacefully.



SONG OF THE MYSTIC

BY ABRAM J. RYAN


    I walk down the Valley of Silence--
      Down the dim voiceless Valley--alone!
    And I hear not the fall of a footstep
      Around me, save God’s and my own;
    And the hush of my heart is as holy
      As hovers where angels have flown!

    Long ago was I weary of voices
      Whose magic my heart could not win;
    Long ago was I weary of noises
      That fretted my soul with their din;
    Long ago was I weary of places
      Where I met but the human--and sin.

    I walked through the world with the worldly;
      I craved what the world never gave;
    And I said: “In the world, each Ideal
      That shines like a star on life’s wave,
    Is wrecked on the shores of the Real,
      And sleeps like a dream in a grave.”

    And still did I pine for the Perfect,
      And still found the false with the true;
    I sought ’mid the human for heaven,
      And caught a mere glimpse of its blue;
    And I wept when the clouds of the mortal
      Veiled even that glimpse from my view.

    And I toiled on, heart-tired of the Human;
      And I moaned ’mid the mazes of men;
    Till I knelt, long ago, at an altar
      And heard a voice call me. Since then
    I walk down the Valley of Silence
      That lies far beyond human ken.

    Do you ask what I found in the Valley?
      ’Tis my trysting-place with the Divine;
    And I fell at the feet of the Holy,
      And above me a voice said: “Be mine!”
    And there rose from the depths of my spirit
      An echo--“My heart shall be thine.”

    Do you ask how I live in the Valley?
      I weep--and I dream--and I pray.
    But my tears are as sweet as the dewdrops
      That fall on the roses in May;
    And my prayers, like a perfume from censers,
      Ascendeth to God, night and day.

    In the hush of the Valley of Silence,
      I dream all the songs that I sing;
    And the music floats down the dim Valley,
      Till each finds a word for a wing,
    That to men, like the Dove of the Deluge,
      A message of Peace they may bring.

    But far on the deep there are billows
      That never shall break on the beach;
    And I have heard songs in the Silence
      That never shall float into speech;
    And I have had dreams in the Valley
      Too lofty for language to reach.

    And I have seen Thoughts in the Valley--
      Ah, me! how my spirit was stirred!
    And they wear holy veils on their faces,
      Their footsteps can scarcely be heard;
    They pass through the Valley, like virgins
      Too pure for the touch of a word!

    Do you ask me the place of the Valley,
      Ye hearts that are harrowed by Care?
    It lieth afar, between mountains,
      And God and His angels are there;
    And one is the dark mount of Sorrow,
      And one the bright mountain of Prayer.



MARY, VIRGIN AND MOTHER

BY E. SETON


    Oh, Virgin Joy of all the world art thou,
      In whose white, fragrant steps the countless throng
      On souls elect doth follow God with song:
    Creation’s Queen, whose bright and holy brow
    The multitude of Saints, like stars, endow
      With changeful splendors, flashing far and strong:
      The Maid unshadow’d by the primal wrong:
    God’s Lily, chosen in His shrine to bow.

    All these thy glories are, and still a grace
      More high, more dread, and yet more sweet and fair,
        Doth bind thy royal brows, O Mary blest.
    God called thee Mother; yea, His sacred face
      The tender likeness of thine own doth wear.
        And thou art ours--we trust Him for the rest.



THE WIND ON THE HILLS

BY DORA SIGERSON


    Go not to the hills of Erin
      When the night winds are about;
    Put up your bar and shutter,
      And so keep the danger out.

    For the good-folk whirl within it,
      And they pull by the hand,
    And they push you by the shoulder,
      Till you move to their command.

    And lo! you have forgotten
      What you have known of tears,
    And you will not remember
      That the world goes full of years;

    A year there is a lifetime,
      And a second but a day;
    And an older world will greet you
      Each morn you come away.

    Your wife grows old with weeping,
      And your children one by one
    Grow grey with nights of watching,
      Before your dance is done.

    And it will chance some morning
      You will come home no more;
    Your wife sees but a withered leaf
      In the wind about the door.

    And your children will inherit
      The unrest of the wind;
    They shall seek some face elusive,
      And some land they never find.

    When the wind is loud, they sighing
      Go with hearts unsatisfied,
    For some joy beyond remembrance,
      For some memory denied.

    And all your children’s children,
      They cannot sleep or rest,
    When the wind is out in Erin
      And the sun is in the West.



BELIEVE AND TAKE HEART

BY JOHN LANCASTER SPALDING


    What can console for a dead world?
    We tread on dust which once was life;
    To nothingness all things are hurled:
    What meaning in a hopeless strife?
            Time’s awful storm
            Breaks but the form.

    Whatever comes, whatever goes,
    Still throbs the heart whereby we live;
    The primal joys still lighten woes,
    And time which steals doth also give.
            Fear not, be brave:
            God can thee save.

    The essential truth of life remains,
    Its goodness and its beauty too,
    Pure love’s unutterable gains,
    And hope which trills us through and through:
            God has not fled,
            Souls are not dead.

    Not in most ancient Palestine,
    Nor in the lightsome air of Greece,
    Were human struggles more divine,
    More blessed with guerdon of increase:
            Take thou thy stand
            In the workers’ band.

    Hast then no faith? Thine is the fault:--
    What prophets, heroes, sages, saints,
    Have loved, on thee still makes assault,
    Thee with immortal things acquaints.
            On life then seize:
            Doubt is disease.



AVE MARIA BELLS

BY CHARLES WARREN STODDARD


      At dawn, the joyful choir of bells,
      In consecrated citadels,
    Flings on the sweet and drowsy air
    A brief, melodious call to prayer;
      For Mary, Virgin meek and lowly,
      Conceived of the Spirit Holy,
    As the Lord’s angel did declare.

      At noon, above the fretful street,
      Our souls are lifted to repeat
    The prayer, with low and wistful voice:
    “According to thy word and choice,
      Though sorrowful and heavy laden,
      So be it done to thy Handmaiden”;
    Then all the sacred bells rejoice.

      At eve with roses in the west,
      The daylight’s withering bequest,
    Ring, prayerful bells, while blossom bright
    The stars, the lilies of the night:
      Of all the songs the years have sung us,
      “The Word made Flesh had dwelt among us,”
    Is still our ever-new delight.



STIGMATA

BY CHARLES WARREN STODDARD


    In the wrath of the lips that assail us,
      In the scorn of the lips that are dumb,
    The symbols of sorrow avail us,
      The joy of the people is come.
    They parted Thy garments for barter,
      They follow Thy steps with complaint;
    Let them know that the pyre of the martyr
      But purges the blood of the saint!

    They have crucified Thee for a token,
      For a token Thy flesh crucified
    Shall bleed in a heart that is broken
      For love of the wound in Thy side;
    In pity for palms that were pleading,
      For feet that were grievously used,
    There is blood on the brow that is bleeding
      And torn, as Thy brow that was bruised!

    By Thee have we life, breath, and being;
      Thou hast knowledge of us and our kind;
    Thou hast pleasure of eyes that are seeing,
      And sorrow of eyes that are blind;
    By the seal of the mystery shown us--
      The wound that with Thy wounds accord--
    O Lord, have mercy upon us!
      Have mercy upon us, O Lord!



THE BELLS OF SAN GABRIEL

BY CHARLES WARREN STODDARD

(The Mission of San Gabriel Archangel, near Los Angeles, founded in
1771, was, for a time, the most flourishing mission in California)


    Thine was the corn and the wine,
      The blood of the grape that nourished;
    The blossom and fruit of the vine
      That was heralded far away.
      When the wine and fig-tree flourished,
    The promise of peace and of glad increase
      Forever and ever and aye.
    What then wert thou, and what art now?
      Answer me, O, I pray!

            And every note of every bell
            Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!
          In the tower that is left the tale to tell
            Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

    Oil of the olive was thine;
      Flood of the wine-press flowing,
    Blood of the Christ was the wine--
      Blood of the Lamb that was slain.
    Thy gifts were fat of the kine
      Forever coming and going
    Far over the hills, the thousand hills--
      Their lowing a soft refrain.
    What then wert thou, and what art now?
      Answer me once again!

            And every note of every bell
            Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!
          In the tower that is left the tale to tell
            Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

    Seed of the corn was thine--
      Body of Him thus broken
    And mingled with blood of the vine--
      The bread and the wine of life.
    Out of the good sunshine
      They were given to thee as a token--
    The body of Him, and the blood of Him,
      When the gifts of God were rife.
    What then wert thou, and what art now?
      After the weary strife?

            And every note of every bell
            Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!
          In the tower that is left the tale to tell
            Of Gabriel the Archangel.

    Where are they now, O bells?
      Where are the fruits of the Mission?
    Garnered, where no one dwells,
      Shepherd and flock are fled.
    O’er the Lord’s vineyard swells
      The tide that with fell perdition
    Sounded their doom and fashioned their tomb
      And buried them with the dead.
    What then wert thou, and what art now?
      The answer is still unsaid.

            And every note of every bell
            Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!
          In the tower that is left the tale to tell
            Of Gabriel, the Archangel.

    Where are they now, O tower!
      The locusts and wild honey?
    Where is the sacred dower
      That the bride of Christ was given?
    Gone to the wielders of power,
      The misers and minters of money;
    Gone for the greed that is their creed--
      And these in the land have thriven.
    What then wert thou, and what art now,
      And wherefore hast thou striven?

            And every note of every bell
            Sang Gabriel! rang Gabriel!
          In the tower that is left the tale to tell
            Of Gabriel, the Archangel.



THE POOR

BY SPEER STRAHAN, C.S.C.


    The poor I saw at the cloister gate
      Mutely beg with their patient eyes
    An alms, for the love of Him who sate
      And supped with the poor in human guise.

    And there were monks saw the nails’ deep scars
      In the shrunken hands that reached for bread,
    Who heard a Voice from beyond the stars
      In the broken thanks of them they fed.

    I, too, at the gates of God each day
      Seek for an alms of strength and grace,
    Beggar am I that wait and pray
      To feast my soul on His beauteous Face.



THE PROMISED COUNTRY

BY SPEER STRAHAN, C.S.C.


    Fair must that promised country be
    Whose streams rise from eternity
    And One doth lead upon that way
    Whose footfalls are the paths of day.

    Nor lurking fear pursues them there,
    As forward in the morning air
    With Him the blessed ransomed go,
    Their garments washen white as snow.

    Alas! my days are very dim
    That look up to the Seraphim.
    Ah, Lord, some dawning may I be
    One of that shining company!



HOLY COMMUNION

BY SPEER STRAHAN, C.S.C.


    Disguised He stands without in the street;
    Far come is He on heavy feet.
    O heart of mine, open thy gate;
    For darkness falls, and it is late!

    Lord of the heaven’s fairest height,
    Homeless in the traveler’s night,
    Begging my hearth, my board, my cup,
    That I, not He, may richly sup.

    O soul of mine, the board begin,
    And let this wondrous Beggar in!



STARS OF CHEER

BY CAROLINE D. SWAN


    The silent Christmas stars shine cool and clear
      Above a world of mingled joy and woe;
      On peaceful cottage homes, with thanks aglow
    For royal bounty of the grape-crowned year;
    And on red fields of blood, where many a tear
      Is wiped away by Death, a gentle foe,
      More merciful than they who bade it flow.
    Shine, silver stars, rain down your blessed cheer!

    Comfort the mourner with your Angel song!
    The Christ-Child reigns. Behold His tiny hand
      Upraised in benediction warm and sweet!
    O’er every joy and every bitter wrong
      The Babe of Bethlehem hath supreme command;
        Come, worship, kings and peoples, at His feet!



CHRIST AND THE PAGAN

BY JOHN B. TABB


    I had no God but these,
    The sacerdotal Trees,
    And they uplifted me.
    “_I hung upon a tree._”

    The sun and moon I saw,
    And reverential awe
    Subdued me day and night.
    “_I am the perfect light._”

    Within a lifeless Stone--
    All other gods unknown--
    I sought Divinity.
    “_The Corner-Stone am I._”

    For sacrificial feast
    I slaughtered man and beast,
    Red recompense to gain.
    “_So I, a Lamb, was slain._

    _Yea; such My hungering Grace
    That where ev’r My face
    Is hidden, none may grope
    Beyond eternal Hope._”



OUT OF BOUNDS

BY JOHN B. TABB


    A little Boy of heavenly birth,
      But far from home to-day,
    Comes down to find His ball, the Earth,
      That Sin has cast away.
    O comrades, let us one and all
    Join in to get Him back His ball!



FATHER DAMIEN

BY JOHN B. TABB


    O God, the cleanest offering
    Of tainted earth below,
    Unblushing to Thy feet we bring--
    “_A leper white as snow_!”



RECOGNITION

BY JOHN B. TABB


    When Christ went up to Calvary,
      His crown upon His head,
    Each tree unto its fellow-tree
      In awful silence said:
    “Behold the Gardener is He
    Of Eden and Gethsemane!”



“IS THY SERVANT A DOG?”

BY JOHN B. TABB


    So _must_ he be, who in the crowded street,
    Where shameless Sin and flaunting Pleasure meet,
    Amid the noisome footprints finds the sweet
    Faint vestige of Thy feet.



LILIUM REGIS

BY FRANCIS THOMPSON


    O Lily of the King, low lies thy silver wing,
      And long has been the hour of thine unqueening;
    And thy scent of Paradise on the night-wind spends its sighs,
      Nor any take the secrets of its meaning.
    O Lily of the King, I speak a heavy thing,
      O patience, most sorrowful of daughters!
    Lo, the hour is at hand for the troubling of the land,
      And red shall be the breaking of the waters.

    Sit fast upon thy stalk, when the blast shall with thee talk,
      With the mercies of the King for thine awning,
    And the Just understand that thine hour is at hand,
      Thine hour at hand with power in the dawning.
    When the nations lie in blood, and their kings a broken brood,
      Look up, O most sorrowful of daughters!
    Lift up thy head and hark what sounds are in the dark,
      For His feet are coming to thee on the waters.

    O Lily of the King, I shall not see that sing,
      I shall not see the hour of thy queening!
    But my Song shall see, and wake like a flower that dawn-winds shake,
      And sigh with joy the odours of its meaning.
    O Lily of the King, remember then the thing
      That this dead mouth sang; and thy daughters,
    As they dance before His way; sing there on the Day
      What I sang when night was on the waters!



TO THE ENGLISH MARTYRS

BY FRANCIS THOMPSON


    Rain, rain on Tyburn tree,
    Red rain a-falling;
    Dew, dew on Tyburn tree,
    Red dew on Tyburn tree,
    And the swart bird a-calling.
    The shadow lies on England now
    Of the deathly-fruited bough:
    Cold and black with malison
    Lies between the land and sun;
    Putting out the sun, the bough
    Shades England now!

    The troubled heavens so wan with care,
    And burdened with the earth’s despair
    Shiver a-cold; the starved heaven
    Has want, with wanting men bereaven.
    Blest fruit of the unblest bough,
    Aid the land that smote you, now!
    That feels the sentence and the curse
    Ye died if so ye might reverse.
    When God was stolen from out man’s mouth,

    Stolen was the bread; then hunger and drouth
    Went to and fro; began the wail,
    Struck root the poor-house and the jail,
    Ere cut the dykes, let through that flood,
    Ye writ the protest with your blood;
    Against this night--wherein our breath
    Withers, and the toiled heart perisheth,--
    Entered the _caveat_ of your death.
    Christ in the form of His true Bride,
    Again hung pierced and crucified,
    And groaned, “I thirst!” Not still ye stood,--
    Ye had your hearts, ye had your blood;
    And pouring out the eager cup,--
    “The wine is weak, yet, Lord Christ, sup.”
    Ah, blest! who bathed the parched Vine
    With richer than His Cana-wine,
    And heard, your most sharp supper past:
    “Ye kept the best wine to the last!”

    Ah, happy who
    That sequestered secret knew,
    How sweeter than bee-haunted dells
    The blosmy blood of martyrs smells!
    Who did upon the scaffold’s bed,
    The ceremonial steel between you, wed
    With God’s grave proxy, high and reverend Death;
    Or felt about your neck, sweetly,
    (While the dull horde
    Saw but the unrelenting cord)
    The Bridegroom’s arm, and that long kiss
    That kissed away your breath, and claimed you His.
    You did, with thrift of holy gain,
    Unvenoming the sting of pain,
    Hive its sharp heather-honey. Ye
    Had sentience of the mystery
    To make Abaddon’s hooked wings
    Buoy you up to starry things;
    Pain of heart, and pain of sense,
    Pain the scourge, ye taught to cleanse;
    Pain the loss became possessing;
    Pain the curse was pain the blessing.

    Chains, rack, hunger, solitude,--these,
    Which did your soul from earth release,
    Left it free to rush upon
    And merge in its compulsive Sun.
    Desolated, bruised, forsaken,
    Nothing taking, all things taken,
    Lacerated and tormented,
    The stifled soul, in naught contented,
    On all hands straitened, cribbed, denied,
    Can but fetch breath o’ the Godward side.
    Oh, to me, give but to me
    That flower of felicity,
    Which on your topmost spirit ware
    The difficult and snowy air
    Of high refusal! and the heat
    Of central love which fed with sweet
    And holy fire i’ the frozen sod
    Roots that ta’en hold on God.

    Unwithering youth in you renewed
    Those rosy waters of your blood,--
    The true _Fons Juventutis_; ye
    Pass with conquest that Red Sea,
    And stretch out your victorious hand
    Over the Fair and Holy Land.
    O by the Church’s pondering art
    Late set and named upon the chart
    Of her divine astronomy,
    Through your influence from on high
    Long shed unnoted! Bright
    New cluster in our Northern night,
    Cleanse from its pain and undelight
    An impotent and tarnished hymn,
    Whose marish exhalations dim
    Splendours they would transfuse! And thou
    Kindle the words which blot thee now,
    Over whose sacred corse unhearsed
    Europe veiled her face, and cursed
    The regal mantle grained in gore
    Of genius, freedom, faith, and More!

    Ah, happy Fool of Christ, unawed
    By familiar sanctities,
    You served your Lord at holy ease!
    Dear Jester in the Courts of God----
    In whose spirit, enchanting yet,
    Wisdom and love together met,
    Laughed on each other for content!
    That an inward merriment,
    An inviolate soul of pleasure,
    To your motions taught a measure
    All your days; which tyrant king,
    Nor bonds, nor any bitter thing,
    Could embitter or perturb;
    No daughter’s tears, nor, more acerb,
    A daughter’s frail declension from
    Thy serene example, come
    Between thee and thy much content.
    Nor could the last sharp argument
    Turn thee from thy sweetest folly;
    To the keen _accolade_ and holy
    Thou didst bend low a sprightly knee,
    And jest Death out of gravity
    As a too sad-visaged friend;
    So, jocund passing to the end
    Of thy laughing martyrdom;
    And now from travel art gone home
    Where, since gain of thee was given,
    Surely there is more mirth in heaven!

      Thus, in Fisher and in thee,
    Arose the purple dynasty,
    The anointed Kings of Tyburn tree;
    High in act and word each one:
    He that spake--and to the sun
    Pointed--“I shall shortly be
    Above yon fellow,” He too, he
    No less high of speech and brave,
    Whose word was: “Though I shall have
    Sharp dinner, yet I trust in Christ
    To have a most sweet supper.” Priced
    Much by men that utterance was
    Of the doomed Leonidas,--
    Not more exalt than these, which note
    Men who thought as Shakespeare wrote.
      But more lofty eloquence
    Than is writ by poet’s pens
    Lives in your great deaths: O these
    Have more fire than poesies!
    And more ardent than all ode,
    The pomps and raptures of your blood!
    By that blood ye hold in fee
    This earth of England; Kings are ye:
    And ye have armies--Want, and Cold,
    And heavy Judgments manifold
    Hung in the unhappy air, and Sins
    That the sick gorge to heave begins,
    Agonies and Martyrdoms,
    Love, Hope, Desire, and all that comes
    From the unwatered soul of man
    Gaping on God. These are the van
    Of conquest, these obey you; these,
    And all the strengths of weaknesses,
    That brazen walls disbed. Your hand,
    Princes, put forth to the command,
    And levy upon the guilty land
    Your saving wars; on it go down,
    Black beneath God’s and heaven’s frown;
    Your prevalent approaches make
    With unsustainable grace, and take
    Captive the land that captived you;
    To Christ enslave ye and subdue
    Her so bragged freedom: for the crime
    She wrought on you in antique time,
    Parcel the land among you; reign,
    Viceroys to your sweet Suzerain!
    Till she shall know
    This lesson in her overthrow:
    Hardest servitude has he
    That’s jailed in arrogant liberty;
    And freedom, spacious and unflawed,
    Who is walled about with God.



THE HOUND OF HEAVEN

BY FRANCIS THOMPSON


    I fled Him, down the nights and down the days;
      I fled Him down the arches of the years;
    I fled Him down the labrinthine ways
      Of my own mind; and in the midst of tears
    I hid from Him, and under running laughter.
              Up vistaed hopes I sped;
              And shot, precipitated,
      Adown Titanic glooms of chasmed fears,
    From those strong Feet that followed, followed after.
              But with unhurrying chase,
              And unperturbed pace,
        Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
              They beat--and a Voice beat
              More instant than the Feet--
        “All things betray thee, who betrayest Me.”

              I pleaded, outlaw-wise,
    By many a hearted casement, curtained red,
      Trellised with intertwining charities;
    (For, though I knew His love Who followed,
              Yet was I sore adread
    Lest, having Him, I must have naught beside);
    But, if one little casement parted wide.
        The gust of His approach would clash it to.
    Fear wist not to evade, as Love wist to pursue.
    Across the margent of the world I fled,
        And troubled the gold gateway of the stars,
        Smiting for shelter on their clanged bars;
              Fretted to dulcet jars
    And silvern chatter the pale ports o’ the moon.
    I said to dawn, Be sudden; to eve, Be soon;
        With thy young skiey blossoms heap me over
              From his tremendous Lover!
    Float thy vague veil about me, lest He see!
        I tempted all His servitors, but to find
    My own betrayal in their constancy,
    In faith to Him their fickleness to me,
        Their traitorous trueness, and their loyal deceit.
    To all swift things for swiftness did I sue;
        Clung to the whistling mane of every wind.
            But whether they swept, smoothly fleet,
        The long savannahs of the blue;
              Or whether, Thunder-driven,
        They clanged his chariot ’thwart a heaven
    Plashy with flying lightnings round the spurn o’ their feet:--
        Fear wist not to evade as Love wist to pursue.
              Still with unhurrying chase,
              And unperturbed pace,
        Deliberate speed, majestic instancy,
              Came on the following Feet,
              And a Voice above their beat--
        “Naught shelters thee, who wilt not shelter Me.”

    I sought no more that after which I strayed
        In face of man or maid;
    But still within the little children’s eyes
        Seems something, something that replies;
    _They_ at least are for me, surely for me!
    I turned me to them very wistfully;
    But, just as their young eyes grew sudden fair
        With dawning answers there,
    Their angel plucked them from me by the hair.
    “Come then, ye other children, Nature’s--share
    With me” (said I) “your delicate fellowship;
              Let me greet you lip to lip,
              Let me twine with you caresses,
                Wantoning
              With our Lady-Mother’s vagrant tresses,
                Banqueting
              With her in her wind-walled palace,
              Underneath her azured dais,
              Quaffing, as your taintless way is,
                From a chalice
    Lucent-weeping out of the day spring.”
                So it was done:
    _I_ in their delicate fellowship was one--
    Drew the bolt of Nature’s secrecies.
    _I_ knew all the swift importings
              On the wilful face of skies;
              I knew how the clouds arise
              Spumed of the wild sea-snortings;
                All that’s born or dies
              Rose and drooped with--made them shapers
    Of mine own moods, or wailful or divine--
              With them joyed and was bereaven.
              I was heavy with the even,
              When she lit her glimmering tapers
              Round the day’s dead sanctities.
              I laughed in the morning’s eyes.
    I triumphed and I saddened with all weather,
              Heaven and I wept together,
    And its sweet tears were salt with mortal mine;
    Against the red throb of its sunset-heart
              I laid my own to beat,
              And share commingling heat;
    But not by that, by that, was eased my human smart.
    In vain my tears were wet on Heaven’s grey cheek.
    For ah, we know not what each other says
        These things and I; in sound _I_ speak--
    _Their_ sound is but their stir, they speak by silences.
    Nature, poor stepdame, cannot slake my drought;
        Let her, if she would owe me,
    Drop yon blue bosom-veil of sky, and show me
        The breasts of her tenderness:
    Never did any milk of hers once bless
              My thirsting mouth.
              Nigh and nigh draws the chase,
              With unperturbed pace,
        Deliberate speed, majestic instancy;
              And past those noised fleet--
              A Voice comes yet more fleet--
      “Lo! naught contents thee who content’st not Me.”

    Naked I wait Thy love’s uplifted stroke!
    My harness piece by piece Thou hast hewn from me,
        I am defenceless utterly.
        I slept, methinks, and woke,
    And, slowly gazing, find me stripped in sleep.
    In the rash lustihead of my young powers,
        I shook the pillaring hours
    And pulled my life upon me; grimed with smears,
    I stand amid the dust o’ the mounded years--
    My mangled youth lies dead beneath the heap.
    My days have crackled and gone up in smoke,
    Have puffed and burst as sun-starts on a stream.
        Yea, faileth now even dream
    The dreamer, and the lute the lutanist;
    Even the linked fantasies, in whose blossomy twist
    I swung the earth a trinket at my wrist,
    Are yielding; cords of all too weak account
    For earth with heavy griefs so overplussed.
              Ah! is Thy love indeed
    A weed, albeit an amaranthine weed,
    Suffering no flowers except its own to mount?
              Ah! must--
              Designer infinite!--
    Ah! must Thou char the wood ere Thou canst limn with it?
    My freshness spent its wavering shower i’ the dust;
    And now my heart is as a broken fount,
    Wherein tear-drippings stagnate, spilt down ever
              From the dank thoughts that shiver
    Upon the sighful branches of my mind.
              Such is; what is to be?
    The pulp so bitter, how shall taste the rind?
    I dimly guess what Time in mists confounds;
    Yet ever and anon a trumpet sounds
    From the hid battlements of Eternity;
    Those shaken mists a space unsettle, then
    Round the half-glimpsed turrets slowly wash again.
        But not ere him who summoneth
        I first have seen enwound
    With glooming robes purpureal, cypress-crowned;
    His name I know, and what his trumpet saith.
    Whether man’s heart or life it be which yields
        Thee harvest, must Thy harvest fields
        Be dunged with rotten death?

              Now of that long pursuit
              Comes on at hand the bruit;
        That Voice is round me like a bursting sea:
              “And is thy earth so marred,
              Shattered in shard on shard?
        Lo! all things fly thee, for thou fliest Me!
        Strange, piteous, futile thing,
    Wherefore should any set thee love apart?
    Seeing none but I makes much of naught” (He said)
    “And human love needs human meriting:
        How hast thou merited--
    Of all man’s clotted clay the dingiest clot?
        Alack, thou knowest not
    How little worthy of any love thou art!
    Whom wilt thou find to love ignoble thee
        Save Me, save only Me?
    All which I took from thee I did but take,
        Not for thy harms,
    But just that thou might’st seek it in My arms.
        All which thy child’s mistake
    Fancies as lost, I have stored for thee at home:
        Rise, clasp My hand, and come!”

              Halts by me that footfall:
              Is my gloom, after all,
        Shade of His hand, outstretched caressingly?
              “Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest,
              I am He Whom thou seekest!
        Thou dravest love from thee, who dravest Me.”



THE DREAD OF HEIGHT

BY FRANCIS THOMPSON

    “_If ye were blind, ye should have no sin: but now ye say;
            We see: your sin remaineth._”--John ix. 41


    Not the Circean wine
    Most perilous is for pain:
    Grapes of the heaven’s star-loaden vine,
    Whereto the lofty-placed
    Thoughts of fair souls attain,
    Tempt with a more retributive delight,
    And do disrelish all life’s sober taste.

    ’Tis to have drunk too well
    The drink that is divine,
    Maketh the kind earth waste,
    And breath intolerable.

    Ah, me!
    How shall my mouth content it with mortality?
    Lo, secret music, sweetest music,
    From distances of distance drifting its lone flight,
    Down the arcane where Night would perish in night,
    Like a god’s loosened locks slips undulously:
    Music that is too grievous of the height
    For safe and low delight,
    Too infinite
    For bounded hearts which yet would girth the sea!
    So let it be,
    Though sweet be great, and though my heart be small:
    So let it be,
    O music, music, though you wake in me
    No joy, no joy at all;
    Although you only wake
    Uttermost sadness, measure of delight,
    Which else I could not credit to the height,
    Did I not know,
    Did I not know,
    That ill is statured to its opposite;
    And even of sadness so,
    Of utter sadness, make
    Of extreme sad a rod to mete
    The incredible excess of unsensed sweet,
    And mystic wall of strange felicity.
    So let it be,
    Though sweet be great, and though my heart be small,
    And bitter meat
    The food of Gods for men to eat;
    Yea, John ate daintier, and did tread
    Less ways of heat,
    Than whom to their wind-carpeted
    High banquet hall,
    And golden love-feasts, the fair stars entreat.

    But ah! withal,
    Some hold, some stay,
    O difficult joy, I pray,
    Some arms of thine,
    Not only, only arms of mine!
    Lest like a weary girl I fall
    From clasping love so high,
    And lacking thus thine arms, then may
    Most hapless I
    Turn utterly to love of basest rate;
    For low they fall whose fall is from the sky.

    Yea, who me shall secure
    But I, of height grown desperate,
    Surcease my wing, and my lost fate
    Be dashed from pure
    To broken writhings in the shameful slime:
    Lower than man, for I dreamed higher,
    Thrust down, by how much I aspire,
    And damned with drink of immortality?
    For such things be,
    Yea, and the lowest reach of reeky Hell
    Is but made possible
    By foreta’en breath of Heaven’s austerest clime.

    These tidings from the vast to bring
    Needeth not doctor nor divine,
    Too well, too well
    My flesh doth know the heart-perturbing thing;
    That dread theology alone
    Is mine,
    Most native and my own;
    And ever with victorious toil
    When I have made
    Of the delfic peaks dim escalade,
    My soul with anguish and recoil
    Doth like a city in an earthquake rock,
    As at my feet the abyss is cloven then,
    With deeper menace than for other men,
    Of my potential cousinship with mire;
    That all my conquered skies do grow a hollow mock,
    My fearful powers retire,
    No longer strong,
    Reversing the shook banners of their song.

    Ah, for a heart less native to high Heaven,
    A hooded eye, for jesses and restraint,
    Or for a will accipitrine to pursue!--
    The veil of tutelar flesh to simple livers given,
    Or those brave-fledging fervours of the Saint,
    Whose heavenly falcon-craft doth never taint,
    Nor they in sickest time their ample virtue mew.



TO MY GODCHILD--FRANCIS M. W. M.

BY FRANCIS THOMPSON


    This labouring, vast, Tellurian galleon,
    Riding at anchor off the orient sun,
    Had broken its cable, and stood out to space
    Down some froze Arctic of the aerial ways:
    And now, back warping from the inclement main,
    Its vapourous shroudage drenched with icy rain,
    It swung into its azure roads again;
    When, floated on the prosperous sun-gale, you
    Lit, a white halcyon auspice, ’mid our frozen crew.

    To the Sun, stranger, surely you belong,
    Giver of golden days and golden song;
    Nor is it by an all-unhappy plan
    You bear the name of me, his constant Magian.
    Yet, ah! from any other that it came,
    Lest fated to my fate you be, as to my name.
    When at the first those tidings did they bring,
    My heart turned troubled at the ominous thing:
    Though well may such a title him endower,
    For when a poet’s prayer implores a poet’s power.
    The Assisian, who kept plighted faith to three,
    To Song, to Sanctitude, and Poverty,
    (In two alone of whom most singers prove
    A fatal faithfulness of during love!);
    He the sweet Sales, of whom we scarcely ken
    How God he could love more, he so loved men;
    The crown and crowned of Laura and Italy;
    And Fletcher’s fellow--from these, and not from me,
    Take you your name, and take your legacy!

    Or, if a right successive you declare
    When worms, for ivies, intertwine my hair,
    Take but this Poesy that now followeth
    My clayey best with sullen servile breath,
    Made then your happy freedman by testating death.
    My song I do but hold for you in trust,
    I ask you but to blossom from my dust.
    When you have compassed all weak I began,
    Diviner poet, and ah! diviner man--
    The man at feud with the perduring child
    In you before song’s altar nobly reconciled--
    From the wise heavens I half shall smile to see
    How little a world, which owned you, needed me.
    If, while you keep the vigils of the night,
    For your wild tears make darkness all too bright,
    Some lone orb through your lonely window peeps,
    As it played lover over your sweet sleeps,
    Think it a golden crevice in the sky,
    Which I have pierced but to behold you by!

    And when, immortal mortal, droops your head,
    And you, the child of deathless song, are dead;
    Then, as you search with unaccustomed glance
    The ranks of Paradise for my countenance,
    Turn not your tread along the Uranian sod
    Among the bearded counsellors of God;
    For, if in Eden as on earth are we,
    I sure shall keep a younger company:
    Pass where beneath their ranged gonfalons
    The starry cohorts shake their shielded suns,
    The dreadful mass of their enridged spears:
    Pass where majestical the eternal peers,
    The stately choice of the great Saintdom, meet--
    A silvern segregation, globed complete
    In sandalled shadow of the Triune feet;
    Pass by where wait, young poet-wayfarer,
    Your cousined clusters, emulous to share
    With you the roseal lightnings burning ’mid their hair;
    Pass the crystalline sea, the Lampads seven:--
    Look for me in the nurseries of Heaven.



MICHAEL THE ARCHANGEL

BY KATHERINE TYNAN


    Not woman-faced and sweet, as look
    The angels in the picture-book;
    But terrible in majesty,
    More than an army passing by.

    His hair floats not upon the wind
    Like theirs, but curled and closely twined;
    Wrought with his aureole, so that none
    Shall know the gold curls from the crown.

    His wings he hath put away in steel,
    He goes mail-clad from head to heel;
    Never moon-silver hath outshone
    His breastplate and his morion.

    His brows are like a battlement,
    Beautiful, brave and innocent;
    His eyes with fires of battle burn--
    On his strong mouth the smile is stern.

    His horse, the horse of Heaven, goes forth,
    Bearing him off to South and North,
    Neighing far off, as one that sees
    The battle over distances.

    His fiery sword is never at rest,
    His foot is in the stirrup prest;
    Through all the world where wrong is done
    Michael the Soldier rideth on.

    Michael, Commander! Angels are
    That sound the trumpet and that bear
    The banners by the Throne, where is
    The King one nameth on his knees.

    Angels there are of peace and prayers,
    And they that go with wayfarers,
    And they that watch the house of birth,
    And they that bring the dead from earth.

    And mine own Angel. Yet I see,
    Heading God’s army gloriously,
    Michael Archangel, like a sun,
    Splendid beyond comparison!



PLANTING BULBS

BY KATHERINE TYNAN


    Setting my bulbs a-row
      In cold earth under the grasses,
    Till the frost and the snow
      Are gone and the Winter passes--

    Sudden a footfall light,
      Sudden a bird-call ringing;
    And these in gold and in white
      Shall rise with a sound of winging.

    Airy and delicate all,
      All go trooping and dancing
    At Spring’s call and footfall,
      Airily dancing, advancing.

    In the dark of the year,
      Turning the earth so chilly,
    I look to the day of cheer,
      Primrose and daffodilly.

    Turning the sods and the clay
      I think on the poor sad people
    Hiding their dead away
      In the churchyard, under the steeple.

    All poor women and men,
      Broken-hearted and weeping,
    Their dead they call on in vain,
      Quietly smiling and sleeping.

    Friends, now listen and hear,
      Give over crying and grieving,
    There shall come a day and a year
      When the dead shall be as the living.

    There shall come a call, a footfall,
      And the golden trumpeters blowing
    Shall stir the dead with their call,
      Bid them be rising and going.

    Then in the daffodil weather
      Lover shall run to lover;
    Friends all trooping together;
      Death and Winter be over.

    Laying my bulbs in the dark,
      Visions have I of hereafter.
    Lip to lip, breast to breast, hark!
      No more weeping, but laughter!



SHEEP AND LAMBS

BY KATHERINE TYNAN


    All in the April evening,
      April airs were abroad;
    The sheep with their little lambs
      Passed me by on the road.

    The sheep with their little lambs
      Passed me by on the road;
    All in the April evening
      I thought on the Lamb of God.

    The lambs were weary, and crying
      With a weak, human cry.
    I thought on the Lamb of God
      Going meekly to die.

    Up in the blue, blue mountains
      Dewy pastures are sweet;
    Rest for the little bodies,
      Rest for the little feet.

    But for the Lamb of God
      Up on a hilltop green
    Only a cross of shame
      Two stark crosses between.

    All in the April evening,
      April airs were abroad;
    I saw the sheep with their lambs,
      And thought on the Lamb of God.



THE MAKING OF BIRDS

BY KATHERINE TYNAN


    God made Him birds in a pleasant humour;
      Tired of planets and suns was He.
    He said: “I will add a glory to summer,
      Gifts for my creatures banished from Me!”

    He had a thought and it set Him smiling
      Of the shape of a bird and its glancing head,
    Its dainty air and its grace beguiling:
      “I will make feathers,” the Lord God said.

    He made the robin; He made the swallow;
      His deft hands moulding the shape to His mood,
    The thrush and the lark and the finch to follow,
      And laughed to see that His work was good.

    He Who has given men gift of laughter,
      Made in His image; He fashioned fit
    The blink of the owl and the stork thereafter,
      The little wren and the long-tailed tit.

    He spent in the making His wit and fancies;
      The wing-feathers He fashioned them strong;
    Deft and dear as daisies and pansies,
      He crowned His work with the gift of song.

    “Dearlings,” He said, “make songs for my praises!”
      He tossed them loose to the sun and the wind,
    Airily sweet as pansies and daisies;
      He taught them to build a nest to their mind.

    The dear Lord God of His glories weary--
      Christ our Lord had the heart of a boy--
    Made Him birds in a moment merry,
      Bade them soar and sing for His joy.



THE MAN OF THE HOUSE

BY KATHERINE TYNAN


    Joseph, honoured from sea to sea,
    This is your name that pleases me,
            “Man of the House.”

    I see you rise at the dawn and light
    The fire and blow till the flame is bright.

    I see you take the pitcher and carry
    The deep well-water for Jesus and Mary.

    You knead the corn for the bread so fine,
    Gather them grapes from the hanging vine.

    There are little feet that are soft and slow,
    Follow you whithersoever you go.

    There’s a little face at your workshop door,
    A little one sits down on your floor:

    Holds His hands for the shavings curled,
    The soft little hands that have made the world.

    Mary calls you: the meal is ready:
    You swing the Child to your shoulder steady.

    I see your quiet smile as you sit
    And watch the little Son thrive and eat.

    The vine curls by the window space,
    The wings of angels cover the face.

    Up in the rafters, polished and olden,
    There’s a Dove that broods and his wings are golden.

    You who kept Them through shine and storm,
    A staff, a shelter kindly and warm,

    Father of Jesus, husband of Mary,
    Hold us your lilies for sanctuary!

    Joseph, honoured from sea to sea,
    Guard me mine and my own roof-tree,
            “Man of the House”!



COELO ET IN TERRA

BY THOMAS WALSH


    Earth is a jealous mother; from her breast
    She will endure no separation long
    From aught she bore;
    So one by one
    She claimeth evermore
    The parent and the friend--
    The loveliest and the best,
    The meek, the faithful, and the strong,--
    Till, link by golden link undone,
    The very tomb that seems
    To youth the dismal gulf of all that’s fair,
    Becomes the chosen hearthstone of our dreams,
    The wonder-house of all most rare,
    Most deathless, and most dear;
    Where the bereaved heart,
    Life’s exile held apart,
    Would turn for love-warmth and abiding cheer.
    Yea,--earth can be so kind,--
    Then ye that rule the wind,
    Are ye of less appeal?
    Ye spirits of the stars
    And regions where the suns
    Themselves as atoms wheel
    Beneath your thundering cars?
    Cerulean ones!--
    Or goddesses, or saints,
    Or demiurge, or Trinities,
    Wherewith heaven highest faints!
    Are ye less kind than these
    Dim vaults of clay,
    Ye boasts and fathers of the ancient day?
    Thou god Avernian, Dis!--behold
    What timid form and old
    Adown thy purple gulf descends
    Unto the arch of Death--(Grim friend of friends!
    Be thou placated!) ’Tis a mother, see,
    Takes her first step--a child--into eternity!
    Leave her not fearful there
    Who was of love entire,
    So gentle and so fair!--
    Thy majesty and dread withhold
    For the high head and bold,--
    Imperial Death, mock not thyself with ire!
    Nay,--then it was not fear
    That stayed her foot the while;
    For now her lovely eyes,
    Unclouded, brown,
    Are lighted with their greeting smile--
    The Hand awaited through the gloom
    Is seen!--her whitened forehead lies
    Upon the Shepherd’s shoulder down--
    Yea,--her own Jesus comes,--to lead
    Unto the meadows where is Peace indeed!



EGIDIO OF COIMBRA--1597 A.D.

BY THOMAS WALSH


    The rumor came to Frei Egidio
    In cloistered Santa Cruz, that out of Spain
    King Philips secret courier had fared
    With orders under seal suspending all
    The statutes of Coimbra that controlled
    The contests for the prefessorial chairs,
    And ordering the Faculty to grant
    Padre Francisco Suarez primacy
    Among the masters theological.
    And Frei Egidio, whose ancient name
    Fonseca was relinquished when at court
    It shone its brightest, who had ceaseless toiled
    His score of years in cloister and in schools,
    Unravelling knotty texts, disputing long
    With monk and doctor of the Carmelites,
    Dominicans and Trinitarians,
    Consulting with the students, visiting,
    Fawning and banqueting--himself and all
    His faction in the University--
    Now in the iron mandate from Madrid
    Saw failure blight his hopes, and Santa Cruz
    Eclipsed, through imposition unforeseen
    Of Suarez de Toledo--only half
    A monk!--a fledgling doctor in the Schools!--
    And Frei Egidio unsleeping schemed
    To check the rising of this Spanish star
    Within Coimbra,--and his henchmen went
    Stealthy and sure to sow malignant seed
    To choke the Hapsburg’s new autocracy.
    Stately was Frei Egidio, robust,
    Swarthy and smooth his cheek; his raven locks
    Piling about his tonsure in a crown.
    Dark flashed his eye whene’er he rose to cast
    His syllogistic spear across the lists,
    Where many a mighty crest Minerva-crowned
    Was forced to yield, or learnt the rapier thrust
    Of his _distinguo_ and _non-sequiter_.
    Still more he shone when in procession moved
    The doctors, masters, and licentiates,
    With tufted caps, and rainbow gowns, and stoles,
    And ring, and book across the steeps and squares,
    While gallant youths pressed round on horse or foot
    Holding his robe or stirrup through the town--
    The _Catedratico da Vespera_.
    But now this little shrivelled man sent out
    From Salamanca,--Philip’s paragon!--
    To rule Coimbra in theology!--
    One of Loyola’s strange and restless band
    In the Collegio de Jesus,--reproach
    To every gorgeous doctor in the halls.
    ’Twas true he hid away within his house,
    Came seldom to the festival or Acts,
    Nor oft asserted his high presidence
    O’er Frei Egidio--in craft or scorn,
    It mattered not--for Frei Egidio
    Would pluck him forth; no signet of the King
    Could serve him here; the doctors of the Schools
    Should learn how he, Fonseca, had been wronged.
    With formal placards soon they smeared the walls
    Of shrine and college, telling day and hour
    And place, where Doutor Frei Egidio
    Da Presentacao, of the Eremites
    Of Sao Agostinho, titular
    _Da Vespera_, would his conclusions hold
    “_De Voluntario et Involuntario_”
    Against all-comers, and imprimis there,
    The Doutor Padre Suarez, titular
    _Da Prima_ of Coimbra, theologue
    Of the _Collegia_ and _Compania
    De Jesus_. From near and far they came,
    And took their stated rank, and filed
    Into the Hall of Acts; the Chancellor
    And Rector in their robes of silk, and fur,
    And velvet, and great chains and seals of state;
    The Bishop, and Inquisitor, and Dean,
    And Chapter, in their purple; Canonists
    In green; and Jurists in their scarlet gowns;
    Frei Luiz of the Chair of Holy Writ,
    In black and white of the Dominicans;
    Frei Manoel of the Chair of Scotus, garbed
    In white and brown of Carmel; titulars
    In Peter Lombard and Durandus,--sons
    Of Bernard, Francis and Saint Benedict.
    When each in order of his ancientry
    Was seated in the tribune, and below
    Ranged the licentiates, and bachelors,
    And, out beyond, the thousand students,--gay
    In plumes and ruffs, or rags and disrepair,--
    There entered Bacharel Frei Constantino
    Citing the _obligations_; whereupon
    Egidio began his argument
    With exposition and arrangement clear,
    And summary abrupt and crushing, as
    His old experience in the courts had taught,--
    So free in tone and doctrine that the throng
    Swayed on their benches, beating noisily
    Great tomes together like the roll of drums.
    Then silence for Suarez’s _quodlibet_;
    As half-reluctant, without emphasis,
    His cold unwavering voice proposed the plan
    Of his objection,--When uproarious
    Upon the instant, Frei Egidio
    In tones of thunder shouted o’er the hall,--
    “_Nego majorem!_”--the scholastic world’s
    Unmitigated insult! How would he,
    Spain’s boasted theologian, reply
    To Portugal’s? The Jesuits around
    Suarez’s rostrum marvelled, whispered, turned,
    And hid their faces, when they saw him bowed
    Silent a moment, ere descending, calm,
    He led them home across the jeering town.
    Then the mad acclamations; bells of shrine
    And monastery on the hills; the sweep
    Of robes prelatical, the cavalcade
    Of gorgeous nobles into Santa Cruz;
    The blare of trumpets, and the lanterns strung
    Yellow beneath the moon; the beggar throngs;
    The maskers down the lanes; the nightingales
    And river-songs of students wafted far
    Across Mondego’s Hills of Loneliness
    And Meditation where Coimbra slept.
    Thus triumphed Frei Egidio. But high
    In the Collegio de Jesus the blow
    Was red on every cheek; the Rector rose
    In the community and said: “Padre
    Francisco, not in fifty years have we
    In our Coimbra known such sore defeat;
    Tell me, I pray, had you no thought to save
    Your honor and the honor of our schools--
    You, boast of Rome and Salamanca’s halls.--
    You, to whom all the dialectic arts
    Have been as play--could you not parry, feint,
    Or bait Egidio until some chance
    Or newer turn might save your argument?”
    Suarez bowed and answered: “Better far
    That we be humbled than a great man fall
    To utter shame and ruin! Had I told
    Egidio there that in denying thus
    My proposition he was challenging
    A solemn canon, word for word, prescribed
    At Constance by the Universal Church--
    Fetch me the Book of Councils--he was lost.”
    Scarce was the secret spoken, ere it stole
    In rumor through the novice-court, and thence
    Below to Santa Cruz,--stole, like a cloud,
    Black, ominous, across the starlit dome
    Above the black _mosteiro_, where the moon
    Revelled amid the sculptured lattices,--
    The marble ropes and palms memorial
    Of old Da Gama and his caravels,--
    Upon the rose-paths and the trickling pools
    Along the Cloister do Silencio.
    There paced Fonseca, solitary guest
    To catch the final crumbs, the laughter, far
    Adown the stream, of lutes that mourned his feast,
    When lo! a billet in his path!--“_Awake_,--”
    He read,--“_at Constance ’twas decreed. Thy voice
    Hath mocked the very words of Holy Church._”--
    No more,--yet in foreboding he made haste
    To find his taper,--fumbled through the stacks
    In dust and chill,--unclasped the folio
    _Liber Conciliorum_,--saw his doom--
    Perchance the rack and Secret Prisons--writ
    Upon the parchment!--Silence, mocking lutes!
    Come, rain! come, whirlwind, blot the lanterns out:
    Now knew he their insidious subterfuge--
    The slippery Pharisees--to undermine
    Coimbra’s last bright paragon,--they claimed
    Another victim!--But his rage gave way
    To grief; his scorn was all to blame; no scheme
    Was theirs; Suarez spoke the Council’s words
    As duty bound him,--With the break of day
    Came self-renouncement to Egidio;
    And in amaze to greet his ashen face
    The sacristan laid out for him the alb
    And chasuble of Requiem; resigned,
    Like some bowed reed the storm has swept by night,
    He took the chalice, veiled it ’gainst his breast,
    And ’mid the first faint glimmer down the nave
    Crept forth unto his mystic Calvary.



TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE


This eBook makes the following corrections to the printed text:

    Acknowledgment
        Small, Maynard Company
        Small, Maynard & Company
    Acknowledgment
        Houghton, Mifflin Company
        Houghton Mifflin Company
    Pg x
        The Soul of Kernaghan
        The Soul of Karnaghan
    Pg xi
        Garesche, S.J., Edward F.
        Garesché, S.J., Edward F.
    Pg xiii
        MacDonough, Thomas
        MacDonagh, Thomas
    Pg 4
        Moved “The men that live in West England” to following stanza
    Pg 6
        My brother, good morniing
        My brother, good morning
    Pg 7
        Stands about my wraith
        Stand about my wraith
    Pg 13
        with eyes like stars??
        with eyes like stars?
    Pg 14
        Started new stanza after “this is the moment of love.”
    Pg 26
        The tickling clock
        The ticking clock
    Pg 41
        vandals stormed, thy sacred tree
        vandals stormed thy sacred tree
    Pg 51
        “... peace to men!’
        “... peace to men!”
    Pg 54
        His glorous face
        His glorious face
    Pg 66
        Started new stanza after “Waiteth on Sorrow still;”
    Pg 118
        And Joseph is my neighbor
        “And Joseph is my neighbor
    Pg 120
        ‘A prophet Thou!”
        “A prophet Thou!”
    Pg 120
        ‘Come with me,”
        “Come with me,”
    Pg 120
        ‘Yet ... and no soldier thou.”
        “Yet ... and no soldier thou.”
    Pg 120
        ‘How wouldst thou serve?”
        “How wouldst thou serve?”
    Pg 123
        Himself He can not
        “Himself He can not
    Pg 135
        Within it’s wonderness
        Within its wonderness
    Pg 143
        Started new stanza after “lightning will”
    Pg 152
        the bitter day He died
        the bitter day He died.
    Pg 166
        “Endless ... with how much pain!
        “Endless ... with how much pain!”
    Pg 167
        praise thee well and wide
        praise thee well and wide.
    Pg 172
        ‘The Fathers ... live to God:”
        “The Fathers ... live to God:”
    Pg 181
        Praising the Iord
        Praising the Lord
    Pg 210
        every soul that heard.
        every soul that heard.”
    Pg 215
        Be stilll,--Pride
        Be still,--Pride
    Pg 234 (footnote)
        Newman calls the Blesed Virgin
        Newman calls the Blessed Virgin
    Pg 246
        Started new stanza after “that was bruised!”
    Pg 262
        Naught shelters thee ...”
        “Naught shelters thee ...”
    Pg 266
        ‘Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest
        “Ah, fondest, blindest, weakest
    Pg 268
        Of utter sadnes
        Of utter sadness
    Pg 270
        their ample virtue mew
        their ample virtue mew.
    Pg 271
        ivies, interwine my hair
        ivies, intertwine my hair
    Pg 278
        Follow you withersoever you go.
        Follow you whithersoever you go.



*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Dreams and Images - An Anthology of Catholic Poets" ***

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