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  • Title: Poems of Adoration
  • Author: Michael Field
  • Katherine Bradley
  • Emma Cooper
  • Release Date: January 1, 2020 [EBook #61070]
  • Language: English
  • Character set encoding: UTF-8
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  • POEMS OF ADORATION
  • POEMS OF ADORATION
  • BY
  • MICHAEL FIELD
  • SANDS & CO. LONDON & EDINBURGH
  • CONTENTS
  • POEMS OF ADORATION
  • PAGE
  • DESOLATION 1
  • ENTBEHREN SOLLST DU 3
  • FREGIT 5
  • SICUT PARVULI 6
  • AURUM, THUS, ET MYRRHA--ALLELUIA! 7
  • HOLY COMMUNION 8
  • OF SILENCE 9
  • REAL PRESENCE 11
  • FROM THE HIGHWAY 13
  • “THAT HE SHOULD TASTE DEATH FOR EVERY MAN” 14
  • NIMIS HONORATI SUNT 16
  • BLESSED ARE THE BEGGARS 17
  • THE BLESSED SACRAMENT 19
  • THE BLESSED SACRAMENT 20
  • COLUMBA MEA 22
  • VIRGO POTENS 23
  • ANOTHER LEADETH THEE 25
  • THE GARDEN OF LAZARUS 28
  • HOLY CROSS 30
  • PURGATORY 31
  • FORTITUDO EGENIS 32
  • PAX VOBISCUM 33
  • PURISSIMÆ VIRGINI SACELLUM 34
  • IN THE BEGINNING 36
  • AN ANTIPHONY OF ADVENT 37
  • ANNUNCIATIONS 40
  • STONES OF THE BROOK 41
  • RELICS 43
  • ON CAUCASUS 47
  • IN THE SEA 49
  • “COMMUNICANTES ET MEMORIAM VENERANTES
  • ... JOANNIS ET PAULI” 52
  • IN MONTE FANNO 55
  • MACRINUS AGAINST TREES 57
  • PASCHAL’S MASS 59
  • A SNOW-CAVE 61
  • PROPHET 63
  • LOOKING UPON JESUS AS HE WALKED 65
  • A DANCE OF DEATH 67
  • OBEDIENCE 71
  • GARDENS ENCLOSED 72
  • GARDEN-SEED 73
  • UNIVERSA COHORS 74
  • IN EXTREMIS 76
  • A LIGNO 78
  • ONE REED 80
  • CRYING OUT 81
  • AD MORTEM 83
  • THE FLOWER FADETH 85
  • FEAR NOT 87
  • RECOGNITION 88
  • VENIT JESUS 89
  • ASCENSION 90
  • CONFLUENCE 91
  • IMPLE SUPERNA GRATIA 92
  • WORDS OF THE BRIDEGROOM 93
  • A MAGIC MIRROR 94
  • DESCENT FROM THE CROSS 96
  • UNSURPASSED 99
  • WASTING 101
  • THE HOUR OF NEED 102
  • EXTREME UNCTION 103
  • AFTER ANOINTING 105
  • VIATICUM 106
  • A GIFT OF SWEETNESS 108
  • IN CHRISTO 109
  • SIGHTS FOR GOD 110
  • TRANSIT 113
  • DESOLATION
  • Who comes?...
  • O Beautiful!
  • Low thunder thrums,
  • As if a chorus struck its shawms and drums.
  • The sun runs forth
  • To stare at Him, who journeys north
  • From Edom, from the lonely sands, arrayed
  • In vesture sanguine as at Bosra made.
  • O beautiful and whole,
  • In that red stole!
  • Behold,
  • O clustered grapes,
  • His garment rolled,
  • And wrung about His waist in fold on fold!
  • See, there is blood
  • Now on His garment, vest and hood;
  • For He hath leapt upon a loaded vat,
  • And round His motion splashes the wine-fat,
  • Though there is none to play
  • The Vintage-lay.
  • The Word
  • Of God, His name ...
  • But nothing heard
  • Save beat of His lone feet forever stirred
  • To tread the press--
  • None with Him in His loneliness;
  • No treader with Him in the spume, no man.
  • His flesh shows dusk with wine: since He began
  • He hath not stayed, that forth may pour
  • The Vineyard’s store.
  • He treads
  • The angry grapes ...
  • Their anger spreads,
  • And all its brangling passion sheds
  • In blood. O God,
  • Thy wrath, Thy wine-press He hath trod--
  • The fume, the carnage, and the murderous heat!
  • Yet all is changed by patience of the feet:
  • The blood sinks down; the vine
  • Is issued wine.
  • O task
  • Of sacrifice,
  • That we may bask
  • In clemency and keep an undreamt Pasch!
  • O Treader lone,
  • How pitiful Thy shadow thrown
  • Athwart the lake of wine that Thou hast made!
  • O Thou, most desolate, with limbs that wade
  • Among the berries, dark and wet,
  • Thee we forget!
  • ENTBEHREN SOLLST DU
  • ’Neath the Garden of Gethsemane’s
  • Olive-wood,
  • Thou didst cast Thy will away from Thee
  • In Thy blood.
  • Through the shade, when torches spat their light,
  • And arms shone,
  • Thou didst find Thy lovers and Thy friends
  • Were all gone.
  • In the Judgment Hall, Thy hands and feet
  • Bound with cord,
  • Thou didst lose Thy freedom’s sweetness--all
  • Thy freedom, Lord.
  • In the Soldiers’ Hall, Thy Sovereignty
  • Laughed to naught,
  • Thou wert scourged, Thy brow by bramble-wreath
  • Sharply caught.
  • Stripped of vest and garments Thou didst lie,
  • Mid hill-moss,
  • Naked, helpless as a nurse’s child,
  • On Thy cross.
  • Raised, Thou gavest to another son,
  • Standing by,
  • Her who bore Thee once, and, deep in pain,
  • Watched Thee die.
  • All was cast away from Thee; and then,
  • With wild drouth,
  • “Why dost Thou forsake me, Father?” broke
  • From Thy mouth.
  • Everything gone from Thee, even daylight;
  • None to trust;
  • Thou didst render up Thy holy Life
  • To the dust.
  • Help me, from my passion, to recall
  • Thy sheer loss,
  • And adore the sovereign nakedness
  • Of Thy Cross!
  • FREGIT
  • On the night of dedication
  • Of Thyself as our oblation,
  • Christ, Belovèd, Thou didst take
  • In Thy very hands and break....
  • O my God, there is the hiss of doom
  • When new-glowing flowers are snapt in bloom;
  • When shivered, as a little thunder-cloud,
  • A vase splits on the floor its brilliance loud;
  • Or lightning strikes a willow-tree with gash
  • Cloven for death in a resounded crash;
  • And I have heard that one who could betray
  • His country and yet face the breadth of day,
  • Bowed himself, weeping, but to hear his sword
  • Broken before him, as his sin’s award.
  • These were broken; Thou didst break....
  • Thou the Flower that Heaven did make
  • Of our race the crown of light;
  • Thou the Vase of Chrysolite
  • Into which God’s balm doth flow;
  • Thou the Willow hung with woe
  • Of our exile harps; Thou Sword
  • Of the Everlasting Word--
  • Thou, betrayed, Thyself didst break
  • Thy own Body for our sake:
  • Thy own Body Thou didst take
  • In Thy holy hands--and break.
  • SICUT PARVULI
  • With me, laid upon my tongue,
  • As upon Thy Mother’s knee
  • Thou wert laid at Thy Nativity;
  • And she felt Thee lie her wraps among.
  • Tenderest pressure, dint of grace,
  • All she dreamed and loved in God,
  • As a shoot from an old Patriarch’s rod,
  • Laid upon her, felt by her embrace.
  • O my God, to have Thee, feel Thee mine,
  • In Thy helpless Presence! Love,
  • Not to dream of Thee in power above,
  • But receive Thee, Little One divine!
  • As the burthen of a seal
  • May give kingdoms with its touch,
  • Lo, Thy meek preponderance is such,
  • I am straight ennobled as I kneel.
  • Teach me, tiny Godhead, to adore
  • On my flesh Thy tender weight,
  • As Thy Mother, bowing, owned how great
  • Was the Child that unto us she bore.
  • AURUM, THUS, ET MYRRHA--ALLELUIA!
  • O Gift, O Blessèd Sacrament--_my Gold_,
  • All that I live by royally, the power,
  • Like gold, that buys life for me, hour by hour,
  • And crowns me with a greatness manifold
  • Such that my spirit scarce hath spring to hold
  • Its treasure and its sovereignty of dower!
  • O Blessèd Sacrament--_my Frankincense_,
  • God raised aloft in His Divinity,
  • Sweet-smelling as the dry and precious tree,
  • That spreads round sacrifice an odour dense,
  • Hiding with mystic offering our offence;
  • O holy Balm of God that pleads for me!
  • O Gift, O Blessèd Sacrament--_my Myrrh_!
  • Thou art to die for me--a holy Thing,
  • That will preserve my soul from festering,
  • Nor may it feel mortality, the stir
  • And motion into dust, if Thou confer
  • On it Thy bitter strength of cherishing!
  • HOLY COMMUNION
  • In the Beginning--and in me,
  • Flesh of my flesh, O Deity,
  • Bone of my bone;
  • In me alone
  • Create, as if on Thy sixth day,
  • I, of frail breath and clay,
  • Were yet one seed with Thee,
  • Engendering Trinity!
  • My Lord, the honour of great fear
  • To be Thy teeming _fiat_ here;
  • In blood and will
  • Urged to fulfil
  • Thy rounded motion of behest;
  • One with Thy power and blest
  • To act by aim and right
  • Of Thy prevenient might!
  • OF SILENCE
  • “Be it done unto me
  • According to Thy word....”
  • Into Mortality
  • Slips the Eternal Word,
  • When not a sound is heard.
  • She spake those words, and then
  • Was silent in her heart;
  • Mother of Silence, when
  • Her will spake from her heart
  • Her lips had done their part.
  • And only once we hear
  • Her words that intercede;
  • Her will so sweetly clear
  • Those lips should intercede,
  • And help men in their need.
  • Out of her silence grew
  • The Word, and as a man
  • He neither cried nor knew
  • The strivings of a man,
  • When doom for Him began.
  • And after He had gone
  • From Earth to Heaven away,
  • He came and lingered on;
  • He would not pass away,
  • But with His people stay.
  • Son of the Silent Maid,
  • He chose her silence too.
  • In dumbness He hath stayed,
  • Dumbness unbroken too,
  • Past measure--as night-dew.
  • O quiet, holy Host,
  • Our pondering Joy and Light,
  • In Thy still power engrossed,
  • As a mute star pleads light,
  • Thou pleadest, Infinite!
  • REAL PRESENCE
  • I approach Thy Altar.... Stay!
  • Let me break away!
  • Level stones of marble, brazen lights,
  • Linen spread, flowers on the shelves and heights--
  • I bow down, I kneel ...
  • And far away, where the sun sets, would reel!
  • For from forth Thy altar Thou
  • Strikest on me now,
  • Strikest on me, firm and warm to thrill,
  • With the charm of one whose touch could kill;
  • Giving me desire
  • Toward substance, yet for flight the lightning’s fire.
  • So, if close a lover kneels,
  • Praying close, one feels
  • All the body’s flow of life reined tight,
  • As when waters struggle at their height;
  • From Thy altar-stone,
  • Thou in my body bodily art known.
  • And I fear Thee worse than death,
  • As we fear Love’s breath:
  • Thou art as a tiger round a camp;
  • And I kindle, terrified, my lamp,
  • Since I cannot fly,
  • But to hold Thee distant, lest I die.
  • Thou art God, and in the mesh,
  • Close to me, of flesh;
  • And we love and we have been in range
  • Of wild secrecies of interchange:
  • Could I bear Thee near
  • I should be humble to Thee--but I _fear_!
  • FROM THE HIGHWAY
  • King of Kings, Thou comest down the street
  • To my door ...
  • As from ankles of the heavenly feet
  • Of wild angels, tinkling pedals sweet,
  • And sweet bells;
  • As if water-carriers from bright wells
  • Jangled freshets to a dewless land,
  • Thou art called upon the air,
  • As Thou mountest to me, stair by stair:
  • In my presence Thou dost stand,
  • And Thou comest to me on my bed....
  • Lord, I live and am not dead!
  • I should be dead--
  • I, a sinner! And Thou comest swift....
  • Woe, to wake such love to roam about,
  • Wandering the street to find me out,
  • Bringing wholesome balm for gift,
  • As, in contrariety,
  • Come to Magdalen, not she,
  • O Pure, to Thee!
  • “THAT HE SHOULD TASTE DEATH FOR EVERY MAN”
  • In all things Thou art like us and content,
  • Bowing, receiv’st Thy sacrament.
  • What is it?--that Thou kneelest meek?
  • And what the gift that Thou dost seek
  • Beside us at Thy altars? Hour by hour,
  • What is it lays up in Thee holy power?
  • Christ, if Thou comest suppliant
  • It is to Death, the Celebrant!
  • Death gives the wafer of his dust;
  • The ashes of his harvest thrust
  • Upon Thy tongue Thou tastest, then
  • Dost swallow for the sake of men.
  • O Brightness of the Heavens, to save
  • Thy creatures Thou dost eat the grave!
  • Our Sacrament--oh, generous!--of wheat,
  • The dust that out of corn we eat,
  • Whiteness of Life’s fair grain! O Christ,
  • No grinding of the cornfield had sufficed
  • To lay upon our tongues Thy holy Bread,
  • Unless Thou hadst Thyself so harshly fed
  • With grindings of the bone of death, the grit
  • That once was beauty and the form of it;
  • Once welcome, now so sharp to taste;
  • Once featured, now the dregs of waste;
  • Of hope once filled, now lacking aught
  • Of treasure to be sold or bought--
  • Dust of our substance Thou each day
  • Dost taste of in its fated clay....
  • O soul, take thought! It is thy God
  • That to His lips presses this choking sod!
  • NIMIS HONORATI SUNT
  • “Cast not your pearls down before swine!”
  • The words are Thine!--
  • Listen, cast not
  • The treasure of a white sea-grot,
  • An uncontaminate, round loveliness,
  • A pearl of ocean-waters fathomless,
  • A secret of exceeding, cherished light,
  • A dream withdrawn from evening infinite,
  • A beauty God gave silence to--cast not
  • This wealth from treasury of Indian seas,
  • Or Persian fisheries,
  • Down in the miry dens that clot
  • The feet of swine, who trample, hide and blot.
  • To us Thy words!... But, see,
  • In Thy idolatry
  • Of us, all thought
  • Of counsel fails and falls to nought!
  • Pearl of Great Price, within the monstrance set,
  • Why wilt Thou for Thyself Thy charge forget?
  • O Love, from deeps before the world began,
  • O Sheltered of God’s Bosom, why for man
  • Wilt Thou so madly in the slough be cast,
  • Concealed ’mid tramplings and disgrace of swine?
  • O Host, O White, Benign!
  • Why spend in rage of love at last
  • Thy wisdom all eternity amassed?
  • BLESSED ARE THE BEGGARS MATT. v. 3
  • I
  • Take me along with thee, O blessed, seeking one!
  • Take me along with thee! Thou art not poor;
  • Arimathea doth thy wealth immure;
  • Thou hast a garden in the country sun;
  • Thou hast a new, clean-chiselled grave awaits thee,
  • A grave, self-chosen, neither low nor narrow;
  • And thou couldst bring excess of myrrh and aloe
  • As gift where thou dost love,
  • If thou thy love wouldst prove:
  • Yet must thou beg. A beggar Pilate rates thee,
  • Coming to beg the body of thy Lord,
  • Cast from the Cross by men, of thee adored.[A]
  • [A] “This man went unto Pilate, and begged the body of Jesus.”--Luke
  • xxiii. 52.
  • II
  • Take me along with thee, and let me learn thy prayer!
  • Take me along with thee! I must prevail.
  • For all that I possess is void and stale
  • Unless I have God’s Body in my care.
  • Kneeling together, make for both petition!
  • Only upon our knees shall we receive Him,
  • Only by importunity achieve Him,
  • And crying with one need.
  • Prompt in thy grace, give heed!
  • I am a beggar of thy wild condition:
  • I huddle to thy side, my hope is thine,
  • Thy will my will--His Body must be mine.
  • THE BLESSED SACRAMENT
  • Lo, from Thy Father’s bosom Thou dost sigh;
  • Deep to Thy restlessness His ear is bent:--
  • “Father, the Paraclete is sent,
  • Wrapt in a foaming wind He passeth by.
  • Behold, men’s hearts are shaken--I must die:
  • Sure as a star within the firmament
  • Must be my dying: lo, my wood is rent,
  • My cross is sunken! Father, I must die!”
  • Lo, how God loveth us, He looseth hold....
  • His Son is back among us, with His own,
  • And craving at our hands an altar-stone.
  • Thereon, a victim, meek He takes his place;
  • And, while to offer Him His priests make bold,
  • He looketh upward to His Father’s Face.
  • THE BLESSED SACRAMENT
  • I
  • Gather, gather,
  • Drawn by the Father,
  • Drawn to the dear procession of His Son!
  • They are bearing His Body.... Run
  • To the Well-Belovèd! Haste to Him,
  • Who down the street passeth secretly,
  • Adorned with Seraphim,
  • Still as the blooms of an apple-tree.
  • II
  • Gather, gather,
  • Drawn by the Father!
  • Not now He dwelleth in the Virgin’s womb:
  • In the harvests He hath His room;
  • From the lovely vintage, from the wheat,
  • From the harvests that we this year have grown,
  • He giveth us His flesh to eat,
  • And in very substance makes us His own.
  • III
  • Gather, gather,
  • Drawn by the Father!
  • The sun is down, it is the sundown hour.
  • He, who set the fair sun to flower,
  • And the stars to rise and fall--
  • Kneel, and your garments before Him spread!
  • Kneel, He loveth us all;
  • He is come in the breaking of Bread.
  • IV
  • Gather, gather
  • (Drawn by the Father),
  • To our God who is shown to us so mild,
  • Borne in our midst, a child!
  • He is King and with an orb so small:
  • And not a word will He say,
  • Nor on the Angels call,
  • Though we trample Him down on the way.
  • On the Holy Angels He will not call....
  • Oh, guard Him with breasts impregnable!
  • _Sept. 25-26, 1908_
  • COLUMBA MEA
  • “_Una est Columba mea, perfecta mea._”
  • Dove of the Holy Dove,
  • His one, His mate--
  • One art thou, single in thy mortal state
  • To be the chosen of Love,
  • His one, white Dove,
  • For whom He left His place in Trinity,
  • Letting His pinions fall
  • Low to the earth, that His great power might be
  • Around thee, nor appal,
  • But, soft in singleness of strength, might bring
  • The glory of the Father and the Son
  • To thee, the chosen One,
  • Amid the sounding clash of each vast wing.
  • His Perfect, thou art made
  • Immaculate;
  • For thou with dovelike whiteness must elate
  • That Heavenly Spouse arrayed,
  • Beyond all shade,
  • In whiteness of the Godhead of God’s throne,
  • That loves in utter white
  • From Person unto Person, and alone
  • Had dwelt in His pure light,
  • Until one day the Holy Dove was sent
  • To Thee, O Mary, thee, O Dove on earth,
  • And God the Son had birth
  • Of thee, Perfection of thy God’s intent.
  • VIRGO POTENS
  • Young on the mountains and fresh
  • As the wind that thrills her hair,
  • As the dews that lap the flesh
  • Of her feet from cushions of thyme;
  • While her feet through the herbage climb,
  • Growing hardier, sweeter still
  • On rock-roses and cushions of thyme,
  • As she springs up the hill!
  • A goat in its vaultings less lithe,
  • From rock, to a tuft, to a rock;
  • As the young of wild-deer blithe,
  • The young of wild-deer, yet alone:
  • Strong as an eaglet just flown,
  • She wanders the white-woven earth,
  • As the young of wild-deer, yet alone,
  • In her triumph of mirth.
  • She will be Mother of God!
  • Secret He lies in her womb:
  • And this mountain she hath trod
  • Was later in strength than is she,
  • Who before its mass might be
  • Was chosen to bear her bliss:
  • Conceived before mountains was she,
  • Before any abyss.
  • The might that dwells in her youth
  • Is song to her heart and soul,
  • Of joy that, as joy, is truth,
  • That magnifies, and leaps
  • With its jubilant glee and sweeps,
  • O fairest, her breast, her throat,
  • Her mouth, and magnanimous leaps,
  • As the mountain-lark’s note!
  • Across the old hills she springs,
  • With God’s first dream as her crown:
  • She scales them swift, for she brings
  • Elizabeth news of grace.
  • The charity of her face
  • Is that of a lovely day,
  • When the birds are singing news of grace,
  • And the storms are away.
  • ANOTHER LEADETH THEE
  • In whose hands, O Son of God,
  • Was Thy earthly Mission held?
  • Not in Thine, that made earth’s sod,
  • And the ocean as it welled
  • From creation to the shore;
  • Not in Thine, whose fingers’ lore
  • Checked the tide with golden bars,
  • Ruled the clouds and dinted stars--
  • Not in Thine, that made fresh leaves,
  • And the flourished wheat for sheaves;
  • Grapes that bubbled from a spring,
  • Where the nightingale might sing
  • From the blood of her wild throat;
  • Not in Thine that struck her note;
  • Maned the lion and wrought the lamb;
  • Breathed on clay, “Be as I am!”
  • And it stood before Thee fair,
  • Thinking, loving, furnished rare,
  • Like Thee, so beyond compare....
  • Not within Thy hands!--Behold,
  • By a woman’s hand unrolled
  • All the mystery sublime
  • Of Thy ableness through Time!
  • Thou, in precious Boyhood, knew
  • For Thy Father what to do;
  • And delayed Thyself to hear
  • Questions and to answer clear
  • To the Doctors’ chiming throng,
  • Thou, admired, wert set among.
  • Straight Thy Mission was begun,
  • As the Jewish Rabbis spun
  • Round Thy fetterless, sweet mind
  • Problems no one had divined.
  • But Thy Mother came that way,
  • Who had sought Thee day by day,
  • And her crystal voice reproved
  • Thy new way with Thy beloved.
  • In Thy wisdom-widened eyes
  • Throbbed a radiance of surprise:
  • But, Thy Mother having chidden,
  • Thou in Nazareth wert hidden;
  • And Thy Father’s Work begun
  • Stayed full eighteen years undone,
  • Till Thou camest on Thine hour,
  • When Thy Mother loosed Thy power
  • For Thy Father’s business, said,
  • In a murmur softly spread,
  • Rippling to a happy few,
  • “What He says unto you do!”
  • As the spring-time to a tree,
  • Sudden spring she was to Thee,
  • When her strange appeal began
  • Thy stayed Mission unto man;
  • Stayed but by her earlier blame,
  • When from three days’ woe she came;
  • Yet renewed when she gave sign
  • “Son, they have not any wine!”
  • Holy trust and love! She gave
  • For Thy sake oblation brave
  • Of her will, her spotless name:
  • Thou for her didst boldly tame
  • God the Word to wait on her;
  • God’s own Wisdom might not stir
  • Till her lovely voice decreed.
  • Thou wouldst have our hearts give heed,
  • And revere her lovely voice;
  • Wait upon her secret choice,
  • Stay her pleasure, as didst Thou,
  • With a marvel on Thy brow,
  • And a silence on Thy breath.
  • We must cherish what she saith;
  • As she pleadeth we must hope
  • For our deeds’ accepted scope,
  • Humble as her Heavenly Son,
  • Till our liberty be won.
  • THE GARDEN OF LAZARUS
  • In a garden at Bethany,
  • O Mother, Mother, Mother!
  • Amid the passion-flowers and olive-leaves--
  • His Mother--
  • Yet, behold, how tranquilly
  • She is sad and grieves,
  • Though her Son is gone away,
  • And she knows Passover Day
  • Will not leave her Lamb, her Child unslain!
  • He hath spoken to deaf ears,
  • All save hers, of mortal pain
  • And of parting, yet she has no tears....
  • He is gone away
  • With His chosen few to eat the Pasch,
  • Leaving in the eyes, she raised to ask,
  • Mute assurance He would come no more
  • Back to Bethany, nor Lazarus’ door.
  • O Mother, Mother, Mother!--
  • But she keeps so many things apart
  • In their silence, pondering them by heart;
  • Always she has pondered in her heart;
  • And it knows her Son is Son of God....
  • Silently she gazes where He trod
  • Down the valley to Jerusalem--
  • His Mother!
  • Round her birds are at their parting song
  • To the light that will not strike them long;
  • And the flowers are very gold
  • With the light before whose loss they fold.
  • Keen the song, as on each wing,
  • And on each rose and each rose-stem
  • Full the burnishing.
  • She hath crossed her hands around her breast,
  • And it seems her heart is taking rest
  • With some Mystery her spirit heeds....
  • Song of Songs the birds now chaunt,
  • And the lilies vaunt
  • How among them, white, He feeds,
  • Who but now hath left her--fair and white
  • As the lover of the Sunamite.
  • . . . .
  • In the city, in an upper room,
  • As fair Paschal Bread He breaks and gives
  • Unto men His Body while He lives--
  • Then seeks out a Garden for His Doom.
  • HOLY CROSS
  • Mysterious sway of mortal blood,
  • That urges me upon Thy wood!--
  • O Holy Cross, but I must tell
  • My love; how all my forces dwell
  • Upon Thee and around Thee day and night!
  • I love the Feet upon thy beam,
  • As a wild lover loves his dream;
  • My eyes can only fix upon that sight.
  • O Tree, my arms are strong and sore
  • To clasp Thee, as when we adore
  • The body of our dearest in our arms!
  • Each pang I suffer hath for aim
  • Thy wood--its comfort is the same--
  • A taint, an odour from inveterate balms.
  • My clasp is filled, my sight receives
  • The compass of its power; pain grieves
  • About each sense but as a languid hum:
  • And, out of weariness, at length,
  • My day rejoices in its strength,
  • My night that innocence of strife is come.
  • PURGATORY
  • Perfection of my God!--
  • With hands on the same rod,
  • With robes that interfold,
  • One weft together rolled;
  • With two wings of one Dove
  • Stretched the royal heads above--
  • God severs from His Son,
  • That what is not be won;
  • Immortal, mortal grow,
  • God entering manhood know
  • What was not and shall be
  • Of cogent Deity.
  • Perfection of my soul!--
  • How shall I reach my goal,
  • Unless I leave His Face,
  • Who is my dwelling-place,
  • Unless in exile do
  • His will a short while through,
  • To the time’s sharpest rim:
  • Unless, deprived of Him,
  • I may achieve Him, lie
  • His victim, sigh on sigh,
  • Bearing consummate pain,
  • Supremely to attain?
  • FORTITUDO EGENIS
  • Lover of Souls, Immaculate,
  • Mary, by thy Immaculate Conception,
  • Thy soul and body white for God’s reception,
  • Beyond the ridg’d snows on the sky;
  • Beyond the treasure of white beams that lie
  • Within the golden casket of the sun;
  • By the excelling franchise of thy state,
  • Plead for the Holy Souls, O Holiest One!
  • Till they be cleansed grief hath no date!
  • Them, through thy spotless grace, embolden
  • To passion for their God, but once beholden,
  • Nor ever more beheld till pain
  • Hath made their souls’ recesses bright from stain.
  • Plead they may swiftly see Him, nor may shun
  • The Vision, each achieved immaculate!
  • Pure from the first, plead for them, Holiest One!
  • PAX VOBISCUM
  • TO NOTRE DAME DE BOULOGNE
  • My heart is before thee, Queen,
  • As a mariner at sea--
  • It vows its sighs that swell to thee,
  • Sighs as great as against waves may be.
  • For thou art above the waves,
  • On their summits thou dost float;
  • Thy locks of gold along thy throat;
  • Thou more gold than gold upon thy boat.
  • Pomp of thy body, thy Child--
  • On thy arm, small-crowned and sweet;
  • Thou, large-crowned! Where billows meet,
  • Why these crowns, like shocks of golden wheat?
  • The Prince of Peace He is....
  • As a mariner at sea,
  • When waves are high and thronging free,
  • High my heart entreats thy Son and thee.
  • PURISSIMÆ VIRGINI SACELLUM
  • It is new in the air from the sea and the height,
  • New as a nest by a sea-bird fashioned....
  • O Carmel, thy mound the rock-site!...
  • And roofless our chapel, the home we, impassioned,
  • Have built for her coming, O Gift from the Sea!
  • Elijah, our father, descend to thy mountain,
  • Where once was thy shrine, God created by flame;
  • Where from a land dry in well as in fountain
  • Thou did’st keep vigil--as we--till she came,
  • The Cloud from God’s Bosom, the Grace of His favour,
  • The sweetness of Rain! O balm, oh, the savour
  • Of air on the throat! O Desire from the Sea!
  • Surrounded by roses and lilies of valleys,
  • Sweeter than myrrh, or than balsam in chalice,
  • Queen of the East, O Magnificent, bring
  • The sweetness familiar as rain to man’s cry;
  • Murmur as rain round our hearts lest we die,
  • White Cloud of felicity, Voice to our ears!
  • Girt with vale-lilies and roses a spring-day appears,
  • But Thou, Queen of Carmel, art Spring.
  • Surely the last, we are first in our glory:
  • Splendid out-broke in our desert the story
  • How flame that fell down on our shrine at the call
  • Of our father Elijah had fallen down on all.
  • So Christ is received of us, Carmel receives Him,
  • The stones and the dust and the sea-winds believe Him:
  • But after God’s Fire there is hope of God’s Rain.
  • To us art thou come, O Abundance of Rain!
  • Thy little, roofless sanctuary, Queen,
  • Finds us in winds, in sunset or at night,
  • With stars to help our candles, wild and free
  • As Pagans by their Virgin of moonlight,
  • Diana of the Hunters’ rocks: so we
  • Upon the heights, and in the breeze are seen,
  • And called the Brothers of thy lovely name,
  • Blest Mary of Mount Carmel. Asia, cry
  • Her splendour! Cry to her, O Eastern Kings,
  • Encompass her! She is our very own,
  • In mercy manifest to us alone,
  • Our Cloud of Mercy that from seaward springs,
  • And crouched Elijah sought for, sigh on sigh.
  • And for our thanks ... O Eastern Kings, your treasure
  • In this may serve us, that a pearl may lurk,
  • Or in your chests there may be jewel-work
  • That, as she is a Queen, might give her pleasure.
  • We are her monks, we have no precious things.
  • Close round her, Kings!
  • With frankincense and myrrh,
  • Open a fount for her!
  • With cloth of gold proclaim her and enthrone!
  • Afar off we will weep--she is our own.
  • IN THE BEGINNING
  • How still these two!
  • Christ with far eyes, John with the fond eyes closed,
  • And close unto
  • The breast wherefrom is peace--
  • No slumber that shall cease,
  • But charmed safety of a faith as sure
  • As a mountain’s founding to endure:
  • And warm as sleep John’s love
  • For the rapt Face above.
  • Far-rapt, Christ’s eyes,
  • In strength, remember His own resting-place,
  • Where, in this wise,
  • He, the Eternal Word,
  • Had kept deep lull unstirred,
  • Upon the bosom of the Father laid;
  • And, of that peace divined,
  • Knew the Eternal mind.
  • Then the raised Face
  • Breaks soft and the eyes droop and bend above
  • The sweet head’s place,
  • Where from closed eyelids John
  • Setteth his love upon
  • God, his Lord, his Thought, his Lover dear:
  • And, in lapse of silence falling clear,
  • One heareth only this--
  • On the sweet head, a kiss.
  • AN ANTIPHONY OF ADVENT
  • AD LAUDES
  • I
  • Come to a revel, happy men!
  • Far away on the hills a wine of joy
  • Makes golden dew in drops, that cloy
  • The fissures of the glen,
  • The crevices of rock;
  • Caught in its sweetness thyme and cistus lock;
  • The hills are white and gold
  • In every fold;
  • The hills are running milk and honey-rivers;
  • Yet not a thyrsus on a mountain quivers.
  • II
  • Does not the distant city cry,
  • As if filled with an unexpected rout,
  • _Alleluia_, shout on shout?
  • Nor can the city high
  • Exult in song enough,
  • Tuning to smoothness all her highways rough.
  • And yet the Bromian god
  • Hath never trod
  • With choir the pavements, nor each grape-haired dancer
  • Given to the mountain-streams a city’s answer.
  • III
  • Behold, O men, a vivid light!
  • Is it the lightning-fire that blazes wide,
  • Or torches lit on every side
  • That turn the sky so bright?
  • Through this great, sudden day,
  • No levin-gendered god’s triumphant way
  • The brands of pine confess:
  • A loveliness
  • Within that mighty light of larger story
  • Is come among us with exceeding glory.
  • IV
  • Ye that would drink, come forth and drink!
  • Within the hills are rivers white and gold;
  • Clear mid the day a portent to behold.
  • Stoop at the water’s brink,
  • Seek where the light is great!
  • Why should the revellers for revel wait?
  • Now ye can drink as thirsty stags
  • Where no source flags.
  • Forth to the water-brooks, forth in the morning;
  • Forth to the light that out of light is dawning!
  • V
  • Tiresias, with thy wreath, not thou!
  • Gray prophet of the fount of Thebes, behold
  • A prophet neither blind nor old,
  • Spare and of solemn brow,
  • Is risen to make all young:
  • He dwells among
  • The freshets of the stream. Come to the Waters;
  • O Sons of Adam, haste, and Eva’s daughters!
  • This revel, children, is a revelry
  • Ascetic, of a joy that cannot be
  • Unless we fast and pray and wear no wreaths,
  • Nor brandish cones the forest-fir bequeathes,
  • Nor make a din--but sweet antiphonies--
  • Nor blow through organ-reeds to sing to these,
  • But of ourselves make song: it is a feast,
  • That by the breath of deserts is increased;
  • And by ablution in the river lifts
  • Its grain to crystal--earth so full of gifts
  • Most exquisite, breaths that are infinite
  • Of infinite judgment, hesitations light
  • Of infinite choiceness, life so fine, so fine,
  • Since of our flesh we welcome the Divine;
  • Since by our fast and reticence, our food
  • From honey-bees in haunts of solitude,
  • O mighty Prophet of the river-bank,
  • We see that light that makes the sun a blank,
  • As a white dove makes a whole region dim;
  • See in the greatness of the great Light’s rim
  • One we must fall down under would we win
  • The ecstasy of revel--all our sin
  • Borne from us by the Wine-Cup in a hand
  • That bleeds about the vessel’s golden stand,
  • Bleeds as the white throat of a lamb just slain.
  • Behold! No _Evoe_ at that poured red stain,
  • No _Evoe_--_Alleluia!_ He is dumb:
  • But let us laud Him, Eleutherius come!
  • ANNUNCIATIONS
  • “Blessèd art Thou among women, Mary!”
  • Through white wings,
  • The angel brings
  • Of a Saviour’s birth annunciation--
  • Tidings of great joy to one afraid.
  • “Blessèd art thou Simon, son of Jonah!”
  • In his power,
  • His smile as dower,
  • Of His Church’s birth, annunciation
  • Is by God Himself, no angel, made.
  • Blessèd art Thou, Mary; blessèd, Peter!
  • But the grace
  • Of God’s own face
  • Is on Peter for annunciation,
  • When he speaks, by flesh and blood unswayed.
  • STONES OF THE BROOK
  • Forth from a cloud,
  • Loosed as a greyhound is loosed,
  • To sweep down the sky,
  • To sweep down the hill,
  • A torrent of water unnoosed--
  • The rain rushes on aloud,
  • And becometh a stream on the earth, and still
  • Groweth and spreadeth as its stream sweeps by.
  • And the stones of its course
  • Are bright with its joy as it leaps
  • Around them in might,
  • Beyond them in joy;
  • For it sings round the rocky heaps,
  • From the brightness of its force;
  • Nor can pebbles nor boulders of granite cloy
  • In their multitude the stream’s delight.
  • With a torrent’s bliss,
  • The Martyr Stephen receives
  • The stones for his head,
  • The stones for his breast,
  • And smiles from his strength that believes:
  • “Sweet stones of the brook!”--for this
  • Is the singing, the song of his heart expressed,
  • As he kneels, looking up, his hands outspread.
  • A river of blood, the tide
  • Of martyrdom, gathers round
  • His soul as a stream;
  • While the stones are drenched
  • With tides of his blood as they bound
  • From temple and mouth and side ...
  • Stones of offence, dark stones from the torrent wrenched,
  • Ye strike the trend of his joy as a dream!
  • RELICS
  • An alabaster box,
  • A tomb of precious stone--
  • White, with white bars, as white
  • As billows on a sea:
  • With spaces where some flush
  • Of sky-like rose is conscious and afraid
  • Of whiteness and white bars.
  • A lovely sepulchre of loveliest stone,
  • This alabaster box--
  • Coy as a maiden’s blood in flush,
  • White as a maiden’s breast in stretch,
  • Alive with fear and grace;
  • Transparent rose,
  • Translucent white;
  • A treasury of precious stone,
  • A strange, long tomb....
  • ’Twas Maximin, who had this casket made,
  • The holy Maximin, who travelled once
  • With Mary Magdalen, and preached with her;
  • Till on a wind as quiet
  • As it had been a cloud,
  • She was removed by Christ to dwell alone.
  • Alone she dwelt, her peace
  • A thought that never fell
  • From its full tide.
  • Ever beside her in her cave,
  • A vase of golden curls,
  • A clod of blooded earth.
  • And when she died at last, and Maximin
  • Must bury her;
  • Being man and holy, in his love
  • He laid her in an alabaster box,
  • As she had laid her soul’s deep penitence,
  • Her soul’s deep passion, a sweet balm, within
  • An alabaster box:
  • So Maximin gave Magdalen to God--
  • Shut as a spice in precious stone,
  • In bland and flushing box
  • Of alabaster stone.
  • And knowing all her secrets, Maximin,
  • Being man and holy, laid within
  • The priceless cave of alabaster two
  • Most precious, cherished things--
  • A vase of curly hair,
  • A vase of golden web;
  • A clod of withered soil,
  • A clod of blooded earth.
  • The curls were crushed together in gold lump,
  • Crushed by the hand that wiped
  • The Holy Feet, kept in a crush of gold,
  • Just as they dabbed the sweetly smelling Feet--
  • The curls enwoven by the balm they dried,
  • Knotted as rose of Sharon, when the winds
  • Sweep it along the desert.... Curls, of power
  • To float the charm of Eve in aureole
  • Round her they covered, till she crushed them tight
  • To dab the Holy Feet, and afterward
  • Be severed from their growth,
  • Stiff in their balm and gold;
  • A piece of honeycomb in rings and web;
  • Sweetness of shorn, gold, unguent-dabbled hair,
  • A handful in a vase.
  • The clod, a bit of hill-turf dry;
  • The turf that sheep might pull up as they graze;
  • Or men might throw upon the fire
  • At sundown when the air is loosed and cold:
  • A clod an eagle might
  • Ascend to build with, or a goat
  • Kick down a valley’s side;
  • A clod dark-red
  • As if it mothered ruby of the mines.
  • The hand that gathered it one hollow night
  • Gathered it up red-wet from Golgotha.
  • Three crosses lay about the grass--
  • Such arms and shafts of crosses on the grass!--
  • When she, who gathered, crept
  • Among the prostrate arms;
  • Roused a great death-bird from the ground,
  • And, in its place,
  • Bent down and pressed her lips where it had couched,
  • And lifted up the ground to press her heart;
  • And went her way, hugging the Sacred Blood
  • As in a sponge of turf,
  • That dried about the treasure, now grown hard,
  • As if it mothered ruby of the mines--
  • A clod of blooded soil.
  • O Relics of the Holy Magdalen!
  • The balmy hair her plea,
  • God’s Blood her grace:
  • Within a vase her gift,
  • Within a turf-clod His--
  • Her relics, by her corpse;
  • All she had cared to keep,
  • Through hermit years of life,
  • To bless her in her tomb
  • Till Judgment-Day.
  • ON CAUCASUS
  • Lo, Crimean marble-quarries tower
  • Colder even than snow-peaks in their power,
  • To the very heart stone-white:
  • And the Christian captives strain
  • On the hillsides in their pain,
  • As they toil for Trajan day and night.
  • Who is this who comes with stirless brow,
  • And sweet eyes that never could allow
  • Rebels save upon their knees?
  • Through the hills a voice is fanned
  • That Pope Clement hath been banned
  • Straightly to the marble Chersonese.
  • Toiling with his people ’mid the rocks,
  • On a streamless slope, the quarried blocks
  • He compels to whiteness clear.
  • There a bitter cry is made
  • Of the thirst that, unallayed,
  • Dreams of well, or freshet, or wide mere.
  • He hath climbed to pray.... A lamb he sees,
  • Pawing gladly in the mountain-breeze,
  • Very golden unto snow:
  • Lamb of God, cross-aureoled,
  • Lovely on His vertex bold,
  • Set above a River’s gush and flow.
  • By the brazen footstroke is expressed
  • Impetus as of God’s River blest.
  • Dew and snow in all their shine
  • Round that heavenly Lamb and Stream
  • Take the lustre of their dream,
  • In a flood and blush of flame combine.
  • On the heavens, from Patmos’ shore,
  • John beheld this crystal sight before--
  • Not to bring a people aid;
  • But, sweet Clement, thou hast seen, on earth
  • God’s own Lamb, His River’s birth;
  • How He shone and how its waters played!
  • IN THE SEA
  • (THE MARTYRDOM OF ST. CLEMENT)
  • “Lord Jesus Christ, have mercy! Save him, save!”--
  • “Father, receive my spirit from the wave.”
  • Rolls the great Sea of the Chersonese
  • Tossed and facing him and these....
  • Cold in waters, high in heap
  • As a quarry should it sweep
  • With a landslip down on men:
  • And it roars as in its den
  • Roars a monster apt for blood.
  • He must journey on this flood
  • To the harbour of his soul;
  • He must seek his furthest goal,
  • With an anchor round his neck,
  • From yon tossing vessel’s deck
  • Cast to drown, when out at sea
  • Full three miles that ship may be.
  • And his fellow-exiles cry,
  • “Let him not, Lord Jesus, die!”
  • On the clouds the vessel is a spot.
  • “Lord Jesus, save him!... Is there not,
  • O brothers, in the sea retreat--
  • Caught back, rolling from our feet,
  • Not in waves, as under tide,
  • But withdrawn on every side?
  • Very solemn is this floor!
  • We can see the waves no more.
  • Let us follow them athwart
  • Sea-deeps with no waters fraught;
  • Let us wipe our tears away,
  • Let us take this holy way!
  • Large the floor and larger still:
  • Must the whole horizon fill
  • With a land of weed and shell,
  • Where no billows native dwell
  • Any more--we know not why:
  • Any more, since we made cry?”
  • As the sunset clears the sky,
  • Yet across its wondrous space
  • There is one transcendent place
  • Where the sun is laid to rest:
  • So these mourners, strangely blessed--
  • Over sand and coral clean
  • And unbroken shells, serene,
  • With the peace where sea hath been,
  • Over panting sea-stars bright,
  • Silver-raying fishes, mad
  • For the livesome brine they had--
  • Come upon a Temple-grot,
  • Set before them in a spot
  • Of the naked desert, left
  • By the ocean’s woof and weft
  • Of the tidal streams withdrawn.
  • There upon the sand, forlorn
  • In its beauty, far remote,
  • Stands a Temple-shrine, they note
  • Of the Holy Spirit’s dream....
  • And they cross a little stream,
  • Thrilling with the far-off sea;
  • And they follow what must be,
  • As they tread within the shrine,
  • Builded marble for a sign
  • Angels had been set to build
  • On a ground the ocean filled.
  • In a tabernacle lies,
  • Lone and grand to seeking eyes,
  • Not the sunk sun, but a tomb,
  • Whitest marble, and the room
  • Of the holy Clement dead.
  • There he lies, how comforted!
  • Through the mighty water brought
  • To a peace, a harbour wrought
  • Of the holy Angels’ care.
  • Close his anchor! He so still
  • And sufficed--the waves that kill
  • Driven away by angel-hands;
  • While his people’s exile bands
  • Kneel around him in the sea....
  • Come to port, his anchor by!
  • Thus the sun each day must die:
  • Thus sweet Clement but one day
  • In the sea sank down, and lay
  • As at sunset, full of peace.
  • They bear him to the land: and the flood-tides increase.
  • “COMMUNICANTES ET MEMORIAM VENERANTES ... JOANNIS ET PAULI”
  • Two olive-branches--silver; two candelabra,--gold:
  • Precious as only tried and precious things
  • Are of their essence bold,
  • The Roman John and Paul--young heads together--
  • Pray on, nor is there any question whether
  • The image that the Emperor’s Præfect brings
  • For worship will be worshipped, for already
  • The service of their ritual is so steady
  • It is as day moving to noon, and moving to night’s fold.
  • In one white, empty chamber two brethren, yet as one,
  • And as a sepulchre their home made bare.
  • Ye ask what they have done?
  • And the poor answer, “These would have no treasure
  • Save this, that they can die.” O solemn pleasure
  • To see their home a casket everywhere
  • Wrought for their hour of death! Gone the slow mornings
  • Through which they wearied out the Emperor’s warnings!
  • Now they would hold their jewel safe in their white walls, with prayer.
  • The silence! One can listen how the gold morning sun
  • Sings through the air, the hush is grown so fine.
  • Steps!--Thus intrusive run
  • Rain-storms on solitudes--A white-flashed gleaming!
  • The brow of Jove, the cloud-white hair, the beaming
  • Cloud-swirl of beard! A voice that bids, “Incline,
  • And offer homage!” ... How the silence tingles!
  • The sun with air in call and echo mingles:
  • Those brethren of closed senses--peace! they have made no sign.
  • They had not sought to gather, even for the sick and poor,
  • The lilies of their garden--head by head,
  • The older with the newer--
  • Nor violet-roots from Pæstum, the weaved roses.
  • And now the garden of their home uncloses
  • To cover into secrecy the dead:
  • Deep hidden by the roses they had watered,
  • Lying together sanctified and slaughtered,
  • Their blood upon them underground, above the rose-leaves spread.
  • . . . .
  • Lured, as the demons wander, demons sore afraid,
  • Unclean, tormented, and that do not cease
  • Their rending cries for aid,
  • The son of him who slew the saints, by daytime
  • Wandering, by night, that garden in the Maytime,
  • Is cured of his distraction and at peace:
  • Then glad Terentius, coming to the garden,
  • Of which his well-belovèd is the warden,
  • Plucketh a reed to glorify the martyrs he hath made.
  • IN MONTE FANNO
  • Sylvester by an open tomb
  • Beheld Time’s vanity and doom--
  • A lovely body, as a flower,
  • Left by a ploughman’s foot, wet in a shower.
  • Sylvester meditated, thought
  • His days to solitude were brought.
  • Sight of a corpse within its grave!...
  • To be an eremite alone were brave.
  • Sylvester is a monk: and men
  • Grow frequent round his holy den:
  • Thence to a mount he leads them out,
  • Called _Fannus_ ... through the wood they hear a shout.
  • Sylvester builds his cloister.--Hush!
  • Across the doorstep comes a rush,
  • And all the monks faint with a lure
  • That those in burgeoning woods lost deep endure.
  • Sylvester calls into the dark--
  • There is a breath of those that hark--
  • “Peace, peace! I am Sylvester! Peace!”
  • Trespass and echoes and sweet motions cease.
  • Sylvester in the woods, as still
  • Even as the grave that bowed his will,
  • When he became at first a monk,
  • Rules every power in oak and olive-trunk.
  • Sylvester conquers by his name:
  • King Fannus and all Fauns lie tame
  • Beneath it, and the wild-wood Cross,
  • That he hath planted deep into the moss.
  • Sylvester and his monks are clear
  • From any advent warm and drear
  • Through any door: but sometimes he
  • Looks with slant eyes through piles of leafery.
  • MACRINUS AGAINST TREES
  • “How bare! How all the lion-desert lies
  • Before your cell!
  • Behind, are leaves and boughs on which your eyes
  • Could, as the eyes of shepherd, on his flock,
  • That turn to the soft mass from barren rock,
  • Familiarly dwell.”
  • “O Traveller, for me the empty sands
  • Burning to white!
  • There nothing on the wilderness withstands
  • The soul or prayer. I would not look on trees;
  • My thoughts and will were shaken in their breeze,
  • And buried as by night.
  • “Yea, listen! If you build a cell, at last,
  • Turned to the wood,
  • Your fall is near, your safety over-past;
  • And if you plant a tree beside your door
  • Your fall is there beside it, and no more
  • The solitude is frank and good.
  • “For trees must have soft dampness for their growth,
  • And interfold
  • Their boughs and leaves into a screen, not loath
  • To hide soft, tempting creatures at their play,
  • That, playing timbrels and bright shawms, delay,
  • And wear one’s spirit old.
  • “Smoothly such numberless distractions come--
  • Impertinence
  • Of multiplicity, salute and hum.
  • Away with solitude of leafy shade,
  • Mustering coy birds and beasts, and men waylaid,
  • Tingling each hooded sense!
  • “Did not God call out of a covert-wood
  • Adam and Eve,
  • Where, cowering under earliest sin, they stood,
  • The hugged green-leaves in bunches round their den?
  • Himself God called them out--so lost are men
  • Whom forest-haunts receive!”
  • PASCHAL’S MASS
  • The sheep still in dew, but the sky
  • In sun, the far river in sun;
  • And the incense of flowers steeped bright--
  • Their smell as sweet light;
  • And the shepherd-boy tethered on high
  • To his flock and his day’s work begun.
  • The bees in the wind of the dawn;
  • The larks not yet climbing aloft
  • As high as the Aragon Hills ...
  • What bell-ringing thrills
  • Through the bell-wether’s pastoral lorn?
  • From the valley a bell clear and soft.
  • The shepherd-boy kneeling in dew;
  • The bell of his wether rung sharp;
  • Below him the tinkle and sway,
  • From far, far away,
  • Of the sacring-bell, clear as a harp
  • In its chime of God lifted anew.
  • For his God, in the vale, on the height
  • He weeps; while the morning-larks rise.
  • Lo, in chasuble, living and rich
  • Golden rays cross-stitch,
  • Foreshown by magnificent light--
  • Lo, an angel grows firm on his eyes!
  • As an altar of marvellous stone
  • Before him the mountain hath blazed,
  • Round the angel, who lifts in the air
  • A Sun that is there:
  • To the sheep and the shepherd-boy shown,
  • With the ringing of larks, God is raised.
  • O Angel-priest, fragrant with thyme,
  • Girt with sixfold glorious wings!
  • O sky of the mountains above
  • Adventurous Love!
  • How through air and the larks’ watchful chime
  • Earth her incense, as thurifer, flings!
  • O Sacrament, shown to a boy,
  • More blest than the Shepherds of old,
  • He is thine for his lifetime, cast
  • On his mountain vast,
  • In his joy, his great freshness of joy
  • From that high, singing daylight of gold!
  • A SNOW-CAVE
  • Suddenly the snow is falling fast:
  • Slow the lovely speed,
  • All the air being full with fulness cast
  • On the mounded world ...
  • And the firmamental snow will give no heed,
  • Nor the snow terrestrial have a care
  • For anything its heavy deluge hides,
  • For anything upcurled
  • In its mountain-hug, nor what abides
  • Imprisoned deep of the imprisoning air.
  • Peter of Alcantara, how wide
  • And untrodden quite
  • Swells the sudden snow on every side,
  • Speckled with no sign,
  • One in uncontrollable and fearful white!
  • . . . .
  • Swiftly, as it came, its mood is changed ...
  • Now it drifts a white flame of caress,
  • As if it took design,
  • Learnt a new art of its loveliness,
  • And in a cave above the Saint is ranged.
  • Hour on hour the world is flooded bright
  • With fair agency,
  • In continuance a sleep, of might
  • To lay death athwart
  • Any bosom, any limbs that cannot flee:
  • Yet safely housed the holy traveller waits,
  • Though in that white storm caught;
  • For the deep snow of earth its snow abates
  • Before a force of deeper chastity.
  • Little flakes, that touch with feet like birds,
  • Touch him not at all,
  • But lie convex in a wave that curds,
  • Bowed upon its vault,
  • Stooping on him almost won to fall,
  • Yet in strength withheld, whole in its love,
  • As a virgin praying for a priest:
  • So in its lovely halt,
  • So aloof from sense, it rears above
  • The saint its covert, not a flake released.
  • PROPHET
  • Blessed with joy, as daybreak under cloud--
  • Tender light of youth in the old face--
  • Blessed with joy beneath the weight and shroud
  • Of the years before this day of Grace,
  • Simeon blesses God and praises Him,
  • As a little child and mother slim
  • With first girlhood come their way
  • Toward his face, and night becometh day.
  • Prophet, joy for thee and for thy land!
  • Wide the welcome and the peace of joy!
  • But he takes the infant on his hand,
  • Graciously receives the milking boy
  • From the mother’s bosom, from her heart,
  • While she stands in reverence apart.
  • Lo, the old man’s countenance,
  • In a wave of anguish breaks from trance!
  • All the features lift with power, and sink,
  • As if sudden earthquake heaved and rolled
  • Through them, from a sudden thought they think.
  • Can a child of but a few weeks old
  • So confuse with terror an old man?
  • Yea, this child, laid on his fingers’ span,
  • Is for the ruin or the rise
  • Of the generations, Simeon cries.
  • Yea, a child, a tender handful, sleek
  • As a pearl--and the dire earthquake’s power
  • In his little body set, to wreak
  • Dread requital on the souls that cower
  • Mad with desolation, naked, lost,
  • Or uplifted wild from a dead host:
  • For the rise and ruin set
  • Of so many--but not yet, not yet!
  • Shattered by the Child, the Prophet turns
  • To the slender Mother, bright and bowed.
  • Woe again! A flawless lightning burns
  • Through his eyes and his weak voice rings loud,
  • How a sword shall pierce her heart alone
  • That out of many hearts their thoughts be shown.
  • Simeon, terror masks all joy
  • In this Mother and her milking Boy!
  • LOOKING UPON JESUS AS HE WALKED
  • What is it thou hast seen,
  • O desert prophet, hung with camel’s hair, and lean?
  • What makes thine eyes so wide?
  • Not the huge desert where the camel-owners ride;
  • But One, who comes along,
  • So humble in His steps, and yet to Him belong
  • Thy days in their surcease,
  • Because He must increase as thou must now decrease.
  • Behold thy God, whose strength
  • Is as the coiling-in of thy life’s length!
  • Thou of wide eyes, wide soul,
  • Thy heart-blood as He comes to thee heaves on its goal!
  • Saint of the sinner, John,
  • Those whom thy lustral water hath been poured upon,
  • Those who have kept thy fast
  • With locusts and wild honey and long hours have passed
  • In penance, when they see
  • Christ coming toward them, young and fair with what shall be,
  • And giving God delight,
  • They know, by very doom of that remorseless sight,
  • That they, as they have been,
  • Will fade away, diminish and no more be seen:
  • They must, O desert saint,
  • Bow them to certain death and yet they must not faint,
  • And yet they must proclaim
  • The obliterating flourish of their Slayer’s name.
  • A DANCE OF DEATH
  • How lovely is a silver winter-day
  • Of sturdy ice.
  • That clogs the hidden river’s tiniest bay
  • With diamond-stone of price
  • To make an empress cast her dazzling stones
  • Upon its light as hail--
  • So little its effulgency condones
  • Her diamonds’ denser trail
  • Of radiance on the air!
  • How strange this ice, so motionless and still,
  • Yet calling as with music to our feet,
  • So that they chafe and dare
  • Their swiftest motion to repeat
  • These harmonies of challenge, sounds that fill
  • The floor of ice, as the crystalline sphere
  • Around the heavens is filled with such a song
  • That, when they hear,
  • The stars, each in their heaven, are drawn along!
  • Oh, see, a dancer! One whose feet
  • Move on unshod with steel!
  • She is not skating fleet
  • On toe and heel,
  • But only tip-toe dances in a whirl,
  • A lovely dancing-girl,
  • Upon the frozen surface of the stream.
  • Without a wonder, it would seem,
  • She could not keep her sway,
  • The balance of her limbs
  • Sure on the musical, iced river-way
  • That, sparkling, dims
  • Her trinkets as they swing, so high its sparks
  • Tingle the sun and scatter song like larks.
  • She dances mid the sumptuous whiteness set
  • Of winter’s sunniest noon;
  • She dances as the sun-rays that forget
  • In winter sunset falleth soon
  • To sheer sunset:
  • She dances with a languor through the frost
  • As she had never lost,
  • In lands where there is snow,
  • The Orient’s immeasurable glow.
  • Who is this dancer white--
  • A creature slight,
  • Weaving the East upon a stream of ice,
  • That in a trice
  • Might trip the dance and fling the dancer down?
  • Does she not know deeps under ice can drown?
  • This is Salome, in a western land,
  • An exile with Herodias, her mother,
  • With Herod and Herodias:
  • And she has sought the river’s icy mass,
  • Companioned by no other,
  • To dance upon the ice--each hand
  • Held, as a snow-bird’s wings,
  • In heavy poise.
  • Ecstatic, with no noise,
  • Athwart the ice her dream, her spell she flings;
  • And Winter in a rapture of delight
  • Flings up and down the spangles of her light.
  • Oh, hearken, hearken!... Ice and frost,
  • From these cajoling motions freed,
  • Have straight given heed
  • To Will more firm. In their obedience
  • Their masses dense
  • Are riven as by a sword....
  • Where is the Vision by the snow adored?
  • The Vision is no more
  • Seen from the noontide shore.
  • Oh, fearful crash of thunder from the stream,
  • As there were thunder-clouds upon its wave!
  • Could nothing save
  • The dancer in the noontide beam?
  • She is engulphed and all the dance is done.
  • Bright leaps the noontide sun--
  • But stay, what leaps beneath it? A gold head,
  • That twinkles with its jewels bright
  • As water-drops....
  • O murdered Baptist of the severed head,
  • Her head was caught and girded tight,
  • And severed by the ice-brook sword, and sped
  • In dance that never stops.
  • It skims and hops
  • Across the ice that rasped it. Smooth and gay,
  • And void of care,
  • It takes its sunny way:
  • But underneath the golden hair,
  • And underneath those jewel-sparks,
  • Keen noontide marks
  • A little face as grey as evening ice;
  • Lips, open in a scream no soul may hear
  • Eyes fixed as they beheld the silver plate
  • That they at Macherontis once beheld;
  • While the hair trails, although so fleet and nice
  • The motion of the head as subjugate
  • To its own law: yet in the face what fear,
  • To what excess compelled!
  • Salome’s head is dancing on the bright
  • And silver ice. O holy John, how still
  • Was laid thy head upon the salver white,
  • When thou hadst done God’s Will!
  • OBEDIENCE
  • O instrument of God, baptizing men
  • In vehement, lone Jordan of the wilds,
  • Amid the rushes, when
  • Thou wert startled by the sight
  • Of One coming, simply bright
  • As a Lamb, across the sand,
  • Thou didst tremble to abide
  • In the shallows and to dash the tide
  • Of the current on a Head
  • That must bow beneath the sin of men!
  • Thou wouldst only, at command,
  • Keep thy awful station, grown more awful then.
  • But thou wert obedient to His word,
  • Who was greater beyond words than thou,
  • As thy lips averred:
  • And, obedient, thou wert blest
  • With the presence manifest
  • Of the Holy Trinity--
  • Thou the Body of the Son
  • Didst behold on which thy rite was done;
  • Thou didst hear the Father’s Voice,
  • As the firmament soft thunder heard;
  • And thy senses, blest to hear and see,
  • Might behold the Spirit poised, a sunlit Bird.
  • GARDENS ENCLOSED
  • Garden by the brook,
  • The brook Kedron--
  • Olive-silvered nook,
  • Red flowers to kneel on:
  • There in blood and strife divine,
  • There a Eucharist outspread,
  • Christ gave the Father in a chalice Wine,
  • And in His yielded Will He offered Bread.
  • Garden on the hill,
  • Mount Golgotha,
  • Have you a running rill
  • From your rocky spur?
  • “Yea, a water from His side,
  • Who was hanging on a Tree:
  • Son of Man, they called Him, and He died,
  • And is hidden in my rock with me.”
  • GARDEN-SEED
  • What art Thou sowing in the garden-ground,
  • Sowing, sowing with such pain?
  • Clouds are overhead, and all around
  • Spring hath fallen spring-rain
  • Of seed-growing power.
  • Lo, where Thou bowest down, it seems a shower
  • Hath laid the grass, as rain ran through,
  • Engendering rain, stronger than early dew.
  • It is Thy Agony that pierces deep
  • Through the sod of that still place;
  • For Thou bowest down where Thou dost weep,
  • Bowest down Thy face;
  • And Thou sowest seed,
  • Drops of Thy most Holy Blood, that bleed
  • Through brow and limbs in sweat, and stay
  • Red on the Earth, while the tears sink away.
  • Sower, what herb shall spring, what flower be born?
  • Will pomegranate-apples hang,
  • When we pass this way, some morn?
  • Struck with spring’s own pang,
  • _This_ our eyes will see--
  • Faith that shoulders great buds lustily;
  • Hope that shoots up a hundredfold;
  • And Love in roses wondrous to behold.
  • UNIVERSA COHORS
  • They call the cohort from all sides together....
  • There is a king, a king of mockery,
  • His kingdom a pretence,
  • An actor to be dressed for all to see,
  • Whose body oozes from the cords or leather
  • That struck with lashes dense--
  • There is a king to mock, a make-believe
  • To be derided, a poor form to grieve
  • With haughty purple of the robe of state,
  • And acclamations powerless to elate;
  • A victim to be tortured and made grand
  • With clothes whose pomp He cannot understand,
  • Claiming with slavish brow their heritage:
  • There is the mocking of a solemn dupe,
  • With laughter and a jollity of rage.
  • They call together, like the vultures called
  • To feast on what is yet a feast forestalled,
  • The cohort in a troop.
  • O Martyrs, press together from all regions,
  • You have a King, a King for whom you died--
  • His kingdom built on gems--
  • And ye are dressed in purple from His side;
  • The stoles of glory, clothing all your legion,
  • His purple to their hems!
  • Press round Him whom the Romans mocked that day,
  • Press round Him, Martyrs; keep His foes at bay!
  • And let me, though far off from your bright red
  • Of vestures triumphing in Blood He shed,
  • Yet wrap my heart in His deep sanguine robe,
  • Ensanguined from the scourge, and nails that probe,
  • And spear that cleaves! Wrapt in His Blood, O heart,
  • We must bear witness that His purple dress
  • Is not the dressing of an actor’s part,
  • But of a Royalty no woof of man
  • Might clothe that Day of Woe, nor ever can--
  • That is the Martyr’s dress.
  • IN EXTREMIS
  • What is the desert? Thirst,
  • And very immolation’s loneliness!
  • Upon that land of death dry ridges press,
  • Like to sand-drifts on the tongue--
  • And the sequestered heart through fear will burst.
  • Armies have gone along,
  • Defeated, to oblivion among
  • The naught of those bare sands--
  • Banners and horses and bright-harnessed bands.
  • None hath beheld the banners wave and slip
  • Abyssward, and the horses, under whip
  • Of crazy dust, plunge down
  • With manes sand-tossed,
  • Beneath the plain they crossed,
  • Making athwart the breadth a little frown,
  • Gone in its very moment, like the smile
  • That followed, as the horsemen flashed awhile
  • Above the grave, and sank bright, and were gone.
  • O desert, full of plots,
  • On lapping water, of sleek palm-tree knots,
  • And isles in haunted channels; cruel earth,
  • Mirage of desolation, grace of dearth,
  • Many have died in anguish at the pain
  • Never to drink those lakes that gibe and wane!
  • “I thirst”--“My God, Thou hast forsaken Me!”
  • Parched, sinking in abysses mortally,
  • O Christ, and there is none to succour Thee,
  • Water of Life, perpetual Deity!
  • A LIGNO
  • There were trees that spring--
  • One on a little hill,
  • One in a small, green field.
  • One stood a leaf-stripped thing;
  • One had begun to fill
  • With leaves from shoots unsealed,
  • With purple flowers along the wood--
  • So those trees stood.
  • One bore up a Form
  • On the clean branches nailed,
  • Ineffable in peace:
  • One bent as if a storm
  • In its descent had trailed
  • Down the red blossom-fleece;
  • And where the boughs most sullen hung
  • A crisped form swung.
  • One the Tree of Life--
  • Both near Jerusalem--
  • And one of Death the Tree!
  • One bore a bitter strife;
  • A cry came from its stem:
  • “Thou hast forsaken Me!”
  • The other heard no sound at all,
  • Save a dumb fall.
  • Both were gibbet-trees--
  • From one was said, “Forgive!
  • They know not what they do.”
  • One rocked in purple breeze
  • Despair, that would not live,
  • Nor trust forgiveness:--no!
  • And from the wreathèd branches fell
  • A soul to Hell.
  • ONE REED
  • Shaken by winds to sigh, to song,
  • One reed amid the misty throng
  • That to a reed-bed, Christ, belong--
  • One reed among
  • Those who are reeds to every wind,
  • Now in Thy Presence, now declined:
  • Cut me away from dim caprice,
  • And sheer me from the reedy fleece!
  • Let my poor, shivering motion cease,
  • Dead of Thy peace:
  • A reed and no more shaken--yea,
  • No more a slant sedge-reed I pray!
  • No more! But, Mercy infinite,
  • Let me not be a reed to smite
  • The thorns within Thy forehead tight,
  • And urge to sight
  • Thy sacred Blood and urge Thy pain!
  • Better the devious winds again!
  • Upon Thy lips let me but lay
  • Such sour, dun vintage as I may;
  • Push not the sponge-tipped spear away,
  • But let it stay!
  • Oh, let the bitter draught through me
  • Bring to Thy Cross some lenity!
  • CRYING OUT
  • In the Orient heat He stands--
  • Heat that makes the palm-trees dim,
  • Palms that do not shelter Him,
  • As under the fierce blue He stands with outstretched hands.
  • As a lizard of the rocks,
  • Under furnace-sun He stays;
  • Earth beneath Him in a daze
  • Is faint and trembling, spite of rocks, in shadeless blocks.
  • He among them mid the blue,
  • With a mouth wide open held,
  • As a lion-fountain welled
  • Under the spaciousness of blue, the heat throbs through.
  • Wide His mouth as lion’s, set
  • Wide for waters of a fount!
  • Through them words of challenge mount,
  • Great words that cry through them, wide-set, where men have met.
  • “Ye the thirsty come to Me!”
  • So He cries with lion-roar:
  • “Ye will thirst not any more.
  • Come!” and He stands for all to see, and offers free.
  • Jesus, in the Eastern sun,
  • A strange prophet with His cry!
  • While the folk are passing by,
  • And clack their tongues, nor will they run where thirst is done.
  • AD MORTEM
  • This sin is unto death. Whose death? Fair tomb
  • Of virgin rock, not for my corse such room!
  • Where never man hath lain
  • Shall I by sin attain--
  • Among the unpolluted crystals lie
  • In my malignity?
  • For I have killed my God, and I behold
  • His burial, behold His Body rolled
  • In a new sheet with nard,
  • And in the grotto hard
  • Lying as hard--O tenderest Love!--as block
  • Of that new-cloven rock.
  • As a vile, wandering spectre I must stray,
  • Now I have quenched the Light, that was my Day,
  • By wickedness, almost
  • Against the Holy Ghost,
  • Laying within His tomb God, laying Him
  • Wound tight in face and limb.
  • I cannot see! My eyes are wells that beat
  • Fountains of tears forth on my hands and feet:
  • With fire of pain I cry,
  • That angels of the sky
  • Come forth.... “My God, arise and live once more!
  • My sin I will abhor!
  • “Divine One, be not dead and put away!
  • O Holy Ghost, blow down the stone, I pray,
  • Though it should crush me there
  • Outspread, the worst I dare.
  • Divine One, mid the tombs, with pardoning grace
  • Unwrap Thy limbs, Thy face!
  • “Austere come forth upon me as grey dawn!
  • Well it had been that I had not been born,
  • Who could Thy burial see!....
  • What will become of me,
  • Unless Thou wilt arise and bid me live,
  • Unless Thou wilt forgive?”
  • But there is Easter every day and hour
  • When by the crevice of Thy tomb we cower,
  • Ghosts from dank night, and call,
  • And wait for one footfall
  • Of the arising, awful Love we doomed
  • Ourselves to lie entombed.
  • THE FLOWER FADETH
  • The Lord died yesterday:--
  • Lowly and single, lost,
  • His worn disciples, tossed
  • With pain of tears, have wandered wide
  • In the country-fields, as sheep might stray.
  • No need to hide,
  • For harvesters that shout and sing have heard
  • Of the far city’s rumour scarce a word,
  • And only stare to see a stranger lost.
  • Tears fight with Peter’s breath--
  • He roves a field of grass,
  • At eventide ... a mass
  • Of faded flower of grass, grown grey,
  • Cut from sap and clinging into death,
  • And bowed one way.
  • Alone amid the darkness soon to be
  • Deep midnight, Peter mourneth bitterly
  • Christ buried, the sunk day, the flower of grass.
  • Yet he had hailed Him Christ....
  • The straw and clover feel
  • Sudden a lifted heel,
  • And, rudely whirled aside, are left
  • By the stranger’s feet, they had enticed
  • Beneath their weft.
  • But he is on the rock, the narrow way,
  • As if he talked with something he would say,
  • As if he would conceive as he could feel.
  • He stands thus in sweet dark,
  • The hay upon the air,
  • His feet on bare rock bare,
  • Set as a statue’s, waiting on....
  • Is it a trumpet raised and sounded? Hark,
  • Hath a torch shone?
  • The cock crows and the sun appears! Yet dry
  • Is Peter’s face, although the dawn-bird cry,
  • As the first Easter Day assumes the air.
  • FEAR NOT
  • A little chamber, shadowed, still
  • As cave within a marble hill--
  • O Virgin Mother, thou dost fill
  • The little space, bent down in prayer!
  • Sudden, through tears, thou art aware
  • How One is standing at thy door,
  • As stood, some thirty years before,
  • The Angel when thy fear was sore.
  • O Virgin--Virgin-Mother now,
  • No creature half so still as thou,
  • With the black wimple round thy brow,
  • For He hath entered: very white
  • His body, lovely as first light.
  • Thou tremblest ... Mother, thou dost hear
  • An _Ave_ stealing through thy fear,
  • As He who entered draweth near!
  • “Jesus?”--She quickly hid in dread
  • The name that through her being spread
  • Its lustre, for her Son was dead....
  • And yet her arms rise up, her eyes
  • Raised as at morning sacrifice:
  • For blessèd is she in this dower
  • Beyond the Holy Ghost’s, that hour
  • When He encompassed her in power.
  • RECOGNITION
  • Breath from the water, breath down from the moon,
  • A trembling influence between, so mild,
  • The water-hen makes tempest if she croon,
  • And fishers from the ship look forth beguiled:
  • They look on, careless of the reeds aswim,
  • And know not why they watch the shoreway dim;
  • Why watch the single form that moves along,
  • So dark in nobleness of solitude,
  • By the lake-side, and gathers from among
  • The rushes fallen rush as fuel rude.
  • One from the ship bows forwards in the night....
  • What makes that fisher’s face so gaily white?
  • A voice comes to them: “Children, have ye caught
  • All the night nothing?” And the voice entreats:
  • “Stretch forth your nets!”--Behold, the nets are fraught,
  • Once dipped, with fish, a silver dance, that beats
  • Against the trellis.... And John’s face shines now
  • As Lucifer, the Dawn-star, from the prow.
  • In Peter’s ear “It is the Lord” he saith--
  • Virgin, he knows the Virgin Deity:
  • Then on the secret holding back his breath,
  • While Peter girds his clothes on boisterously
  • To spring out overboard, John doth abide
  • With his own smile, and steers to the Loved Side.
  • VENIT JESUS
  • (IN THE CONFESSIONAL)
  • “Peace be to you!”--The door is closed.
  • “Peace be to you!”--Only His Wounds lie wide,
  • His Wounds in hands, and side.
  • And feet, His Wounds exposed.
  • And I rejoice
  • At His still hands and at the voice
  • Of the Wounds calling through twilight;
  • For here the day is almost night,
  • In its severe and curtained dark....
  • But I rejoice to hark
  • What on His priest He whispers low,
  • Breathing the breath of power through day’s eclipse,
  • A sigh on all the place
  • As of creation on the waters’ face:
  • “Receive the Holy Spirit! All the sins
  • You shall remit, remitted are,
  • And those you shall retain, they are retained.”
  • Listen! The empery this chamber wins!
  • A Law moves here as peaceful as a star
  • Moves on the circle of its sway ordained.
  • Here let me kneel, and every struggle cease!
  • Here the dark Wounds bleed over me in peace:
  • Here God hath come to bless me at nightfall,
  • With words of consolation that appal,
  • For I had left Him, as the gathered few
  • Of His disciples He passed, darkling, through:
  • And yet He came to them as comes a dew....
  • O bounty of such stillness!--“Peace to you!”
  • ASCENSION
  • Fine, jealous, in suspicion as a child,
  • In jealousy more infinitely wild,
  • Forth to us from Thy Father Thou didst come:
  • Now to Thy Father in His home
  • Ascend--to the Beginning and the Dawn!
  • Pass to the East,
  • New-born our priest--
  • The East,
  • And where the rose is born!
  • O Heaven of Heavens, as no sea is clear,
  • O Eastern Gate of Waters, with a spear
  • Day rings you wide for Christ to be released!
  • He passes free from Earth, our priest
  • Forth to His Shrine: our love, grown tense,
  • Would follow Him,
  • Through Seraphim
  • Lost dim,
  • His servers who incense.
  • CONFLUENCE
  • _Genitori genitoque
  • Laus et jubilatio._
  • One--from the limits of the sky, whence rain
  • And sun and dew come down,
  • Moveth, a sheet of fire, and in His train,
  • Where the flames ripple brown,
  • Are spirits to be born
  • Into the Earth, dim creatures slender,
  • Girt in the train of Him whose brows are tender,
  • Compulsive, sweet as in the strength of morn.
  • One--from the deepness of the Earth, where graves
  • Have fallen on gems in rock,
  • Moveth, a sheet of fire, whose ruddy waves
  • Have gathered up a flock
  • Of people on all sides,
  • Redeemed from Earth by that red flowing
  • Behind a Form, as if from sunset glowing
  • Above the wheat, when harvest-home betides.
  • IMPLE SUPERNA GRATIA
  • We may enter far into a rose,
  • Parting it, hut the bee deeper still:
  • With our eyes we may even penetrate
  • To a ruby and our vision fill;
  • Though a beam of sunlight deeper knows
  • How the ruby’s heart-rays congregate.
  • Give me finer potency of gift!
  • For Thy Holy Wounds I would attain,
  • As a bee the feeding loveliness
  • Of the sanguine roses. I would lift
  • Flashes of such faith that I may drain
  • From each Gem the wells of Blood that press!
  • WORDS OF THE BRIDEGROOM
  • Ye who would follow Me with song,
  • My heavenly bodyguard, My throng
  • Of happy throats, with voices free
  • As birds in deep-wood secrecy;
  • Ye who would be the core of Heaven round Me,
  • And therefore songsters of felicity
  • Beyond all ranges of the singing
  • That myriad voices of the Blessed are flinging
  • In skylark madness to Me distantly;
  • My Virgins, My delight and neighbourhood,
  • The white flowers of My Precious Blood,
  • Through whom it rises up and yields
  • Fragrance to Me of lily-fields;
  • How shall ye keep the whiteness of your vow?
  • My Virgins, My white Brides, I whisper how:
  • Of Virgin flesh, a Virgin God,
  • Incarnate among men I trod;
  • And when as Bread they feed on Me
  • Needs must that Bread be of Virginity.
  • Feed at My altar, My white Doves,
  • Feed on the Bread My Mother loves!
  • A MAGIC MIRROR
  • Thou art in the early youth
  • Of Thy mission, Thou the Truth:
  • Thy young eyes behold the glory
  • Of the lilies’ burnished story
  • That the lovely dress they don
  • Vaunts it over Solomon.
  • Fields of lilies and of corn
  • Thou dost tarry through at dawn,
  • Seeing in their life a spell,
  • Drawing it as grace to dwell
  • In Thy first disciples’ eyes.
  • We of far-off centuries
  • See Thee on the cornfields’ sod,
  • Mid the lily-heads, a God
  • Young and dumb as yet of grief.
  • Lo, although the time is brief,
  • All the heavenly things, Thou must
  • Suffer, because Love is just
  • To a perfect building’s measure,
  • Thou hast buried under pleasure
  • Of Thy heart incarnate mid
  • Youths Thou call’st and forces hid
  • With fresh flowers and stems of gold.
  • Yet Thy vision, waxing bold
  • Through the Truth, amid the light
  • Of this world’s green, gold and white,
  • Sees a desert stretch away,
  • Stretched on its upheavals gray,
  • Round a serpent lifted high
  • In untarnishable sky.
  • Thou dost see that serpent high
  • In untarnishable sky:
  • And with ruddy lips dost say
  • How the Son of Man one day
  • Must be lifted for Love’s sake.
  • Thy bright eyes, so clear awake,
  • See Thy Body lifted high
  • As a serpent’s in the sky.
  • Day by day Thou see’st Thy Cross--
  • Yet the cornfields are not dross;
  • Nor the lilies, kinglike clad,
  • Grave-clothes of a weaving sad.
  • Life for lily-flowers too fair--
  • No sustaining corn may share--
  • Thou dost hail for those who gaze
  • On the serpent’s lifted maze.
  • Feeder among Lilies, Bread
  • To Thy multitudes outspread,
  • Let me love Thy pasture, all
  • Bliss that round my life may fall,
  • Though my eyes and voice, as Thine,
  • Witness the raised serpent’s twine.
  • DESCENT FROM THE CROSS
  • Come down from the Cross, my soul, and save thyself--come down!
  • Thou wilt be free as wind. None meeting thee will know
  • How thou wert hanging stark, my soul, outside the town.
  • Thou wilt fare to and fro;
  • Thy feet in grass will smell of faithful thyme; thy head ...
  • Think of the thorns, my soul--how thou wilt cast them off,
  • With shudder at the bleeding clench they hold!
  • But on their wounds thou wilt a balsam spread,
  • And over that a verdurous circle rolled
  • With gathered violets, sweet bright violets, sweet
  • As incense of the thyme on thy free feet;
  • A wreath thou wilt not give away, nor wilt thou doff.
  • Come down from the Cross, my soul, and save thyself; yea, move
  • As scudding swans pass lithely on a seaward stream!
  • Thou wilt have everything thou wert made great to love;
  • Thou wilt have ease for every dream;
  • No nails with fang will hold thy purpose to one aim;
  • There will be arbours round about thee, not one trunk
  • Against thy shoulders pressed and burning them with hate,
  • Yea, burning with intolerable flame.
  • O lips, such noxious vinegar have drunk,
  • There are through valley-woods and mountain-glades
  • Rivers where thirst in naked prowess wades;
  • And there are wells in solitude whose chill no hour abates!
  • Come down from the Cross, my soul, and save thyself! A sign
  • Thou wilt become to many, as a shooting star.
  • They will believe thou art æthereal, divine,
  • When thou art where they are;
  • They will believe in thee and give thee feasts and praise.
  • They will believe thy power when thou hast loosed thy nails;
  • For power to them is fetterless and grand:
  • For destiny to them, along their ways,
  • Is one whose Earthly Kingdom never fails.
  • Thou wilt be as a prophet or a king
  • In thy tremendous term of flourishing--
  • And thy hot royalty with acclamations fanned.
  • Come down from the Cross, my soul, and save thyself!... Beware!
  • Art thou not crucified with God, who is thy breath?
  • Wilt thou not hang as He while mockers laugh and stare?
  • Wilt thou not die His death?
  • Wilt thou not stay as He with nails and thorns and thirst?
  • Wilt thou not choose to conquer faith in His lone style?
  • Wilt thou not be with Him and hold thee still?
  • Voices have cried to Him, _Come down!_ Accursed
  • And vain those voices, striving to beguile!
  • How heedless, solemn-gray in powerful mass,
  • Christ droops among the echoes as they pass!
  • O soul, remain with Him, with Him thy doom fulfil!
  • UNSURPASSED
  • Lord Jesus, Thou didst come to us, to man,
  • From Godhead’s open golden Halls,
  • From Godhead’s hidden Throne
  • Of glory, no imagination can
  • Achieve, and it must glow alone,
  • Behind a cloud that falls
  • Over the Triune Perfectness its voice
  • Of thunder, making Cherubim rejoice,
  • And Seraphim as doves in rapture moan.
  • Yet Thou didst come to us a wailing child,
  • Homeless, tied up in swaddling-clothes,
  • To live in poverty
  • And by the road: then, with detractions piled,
  • And infamies of misery
  • From scourge and thorns and blows,
  • To die a felon fastened into wood
  • By nails that in their jeering harshness could
  • Clamp vermin of the forests to a tree.
  • And Thou dost come to us from Heaven each day,
  • Obeying words that call Thee down
  • On mortal lips; and Thou,
  • Jesus, dost suffer mortal power to slay
  • Its God in sacrifice: dost bow
  • Thy bright Supremacy to lose its Crown,
  • Closed in a prison, yet through Godhead free
  • To every insult, gibe and contumely--
  • Come from Forever to be with us Now.
  • So Thou dost come to us. But when at last
  • Thou callest us to come to Thee,
  • We only have to die,
  • Only from weary bones our flesh to cast,
  • Only to give a bitter cry;
  • Yea, but a little while to see
  • Our beauty falling from us, in its fall
  • Destined to lose its suasions that enthral,
  • Destined to be as any gem put by.
  • We but fulfil our stricken Nature’s law
  • To fail and to consume and end;
  • While Thou dost come and break,
  • Coming to us, Thy Nature with a flaw
  • Of death and for our mortal sake
  • Thou dost Thy awful wholeness rend.
  • Oh, let me run to Thee, as runs a wind,
  • That leaves the withered trees, it moved, behind,
  • And triumphs forward, careless of its wake!
  • WASTING
  • I need Thee, O my Food,
  • O Christ, for whom I pine fourteen long days--
  • And, as the time delays,
  • More sad my mood,
  • More faint my powers;
  • Like that poor Beast of fairy-tale,
  • Who by the fountain cowers,
  • Reft of his Beauty, his poor love’s avail,
  • By whom he lives, and, missing, dies
  • By inches, at the fountain, with wan eyes!
  • O come, my Beauty, come,
  • My Lord, by whom I flourish and am strong;
  • If I must wait so long,
  • And mourn so dumb,
  • Reach me in time,
  • Before I shudder into death and die!
  • Bow down sublime,
  • O Beautiful in pity, where I lie,
  • And rouse me, sovereign, from my woe,
  • Empowering me with Thy celestial glow!
  • THE HOUR OF NEED
  • O mother of my Lord,
  • Beautiful Mary, aid!
  • He, whom thy will adored,
  • When thy body was afraid,
  • Is coming in my flesh to dwell--
  • Pray for me, Mary ... and white Gabriel!
  • To thee He came a child,
  • To me He comes as wheat:
  • And He descended mild
  • To His Mother, as was meet.
  • To me He comes where sin hath been ...
  • Gabriel, sweep thy lily-stem between!
  • He came, O Mary, down
  • To bless thy virgin womb:
  • From me He sweeps God’s frown,
  • And He lifts me from a tomb.
  • Thou wert afraid.... Have grace toward me!
  • Help me, O Mary! Gabriel, hearten me!
  • Great love it was to give
  • His Body to thy care,
  • In thine awhile to live:
  • For me this love He will dare....
  • Pray, Mary, pray! My soul is shent!
  • Thy wings, thy wings, O Gabriel, for my tent!
  • EXTREME UNCTION
  • Soft fall the Holy Oils, their drip
  • Peaceful as Jesus sleeping on the ship.
  • Our eyes, so restless and so full of grip,
  • Reflecting as the sea,
  • Give up their range and their possession, free
  • As if to sleep--the sleep of Deity.
  • Upon the ears a lull that dowers
  • With gentleness of bees in laurel-flowers;
  • So that it gives to Quiet breeding powers,
  • A future wrought of gold,
  • When we shall hear what never hath been told,
  • And fathom sound it takes all heaven to hold.
  • Oh, softness on the nostrils, where they strained
  • After their airy lusts till they attained;
  • Now, by the Cross of balm so softly reined,
  • They wait to breathe for breath
  • The vigour of their God, as a shell saith,
  • Left on the beach, “The brine will wake my death.”
  • The lips receive no coal of fire
  • To urge their fervent crying should not tire;
  • A tender Cross gives check to such desire,
  • And bids them wait their song,
  • Till they are far from peril and among
  • The consonant and ever-praising throng.
  • The hands, the feet ... O Jesus, all
  • Marked with Thy Cross, but as a dream may fall
  • In mercy on a mind great woes appal--
  • A healing shade,
  • A priestly grace, so soft the Cross is made,
  • Embracing, by the nails we are not frayed.
  • Crosses as flowers on every sense
  • Fall, rest on them in heavenly suspense;
  • And then we know the holy, the immense
  • Delight of what shall be.
  • When, sanctified and calm for joyance, we
  • Shall have of God our bodies deathlessly.
  • AFTER ANOINTING
  • Joy of the senses, joy of all
  • And each of them, as fall
  • The Holy Oils!... O senses, ye would dance,
  • Would circle what ye cannot see,
  • Nor hear, nor smell, nor taste, nor touch,
  • Yet ye receive of your felicity,
  • Till ye would reel and dance;
  • The joy apparent from your bliss being such
  • That, in a fivefold garland knit,
  • Softly ye would circle it.
  • Joy ripples through each covered lid;
  • Nor are the ears forbid
  • Sounds as of honeycomb, so sweet is Heaven
  • Afar, such sweet, such haunting sound!
  • O nostrils, myrtle ye shall love!
  • The lips taste fully, as if God were found.
  • Swift, under peace, toward Heaven
  • The hands, the feet, so still, like still lakes move,
  • Delighted Powers of Sense, ye dance,
  • Woven in such a lovely chance!
  • VIATICUM
  • O heart, that burns within,
  • Illuminated, hot!
  • O feet, that tread the road
  • As if they trod it not--
  • So lifted and so winged
  • By rare companionship!
  • No matter tho’ the road
  • Doth unto shadow dip;
  • The meaning of the night
  • My ears, attentive, hail.
  • The mighty silence brings
  • Music no nightingale
  • Hath warbled from its fount;
  • Music of holy things
  • Made clear as song can make,
  • With marvellous utterings:
  • The Past become a joy
  • Of instant clarity,
  • As the deep evening fills
  • With converse brimmingly.
  • O nightingale, hold back
  • Your wildest song’s discant;
  • You cannot make my heart
  • With such devotion pant
  • As He who steps along
  • Beside me in the shade,
  • Down the steep valley-road,
  • The enveloping, dark glade!
  • Hush, O dim nightingale!...
  • Is it my God whose Feet
  • Wing mine to travel on;
  • Whose voice in current sweet
  • Shows how divine the thought
  • And purpose is of all
  • That hath been and shall be,
  • And shall to me befall?
  • Stay, nightingale! Behold!
  • This Wayfarer, with strange,
  • Wild Voice that rouses gloom
  • Thy voice could never range,
  • Hath broken Bread with me!
  • No resinous, balmed shrine
  • Glows from its core as I,
  • When I behold His sign,
  • And touch His offering Hand.
  • O holiest journey, sped
  • With Him who died for me,
  • Who breaking with me Bread,
  • Is known to me as Life,
  • Is felt by me as Fire;
  • Who is my Way and all
  • My wayfaring’s Desire!
  • A GIFT OF SWEETNESS
  • I thought to lay my hands about Thy Crown,
  • And gather, bleeding, its sharp spines:
  • But as I knelt and bowed my forehead down,
  • Worshipping thy cruel desert-Crown,
  • Worshipping its thicket of sharp spines--
  • Through them blew a little wind,
  • Clearer than the dew in breath
  • Round Thy Mother’s feet at Nazareth;
  • In a cloud it left behind
  • Scent of violets, of such birth
  • They had never broken earth,
  • But through meshes of the Crown of Thorn,
  • In a fertilising cloud, were born;
  • And, fresh with piety of grace,
  • Were thrown--oh sweet!--unseen across my face.
  • That never will a mould-born violet-bed
  • Smell like the violets from the Sacred Head.
  • IN CHRISTO
  • As shade doth on a dial slide,
  • Those dark and parting eyes abide
  • Toward me from the tall vessel’s side:
  • Eyes lovelier than the stones of grace
  • That build for God His dwelling-place;
  • Beyond all jewels in device,
  • Yea, beyond amethyst in price,
  • The hyacinth-stone in loveliness.
  • Delectable, dear eyes that bless;
  • A saviour’s eyes, bent down on me,
  • As New Jerusalem might be
  • Come down, adorned with Charity....
  • Let the tall vessel sweep to sea!
  • SIGHTS FOR GOD
  • A woman, heavenly as dew
  • Of the fresh morning, in a little room
  • Is kneeling down, and through
  • The door of it an Angel’s bloom
  • Of light, how lonely, hath advanced,
  • And on the walls his lovely light hath danced,
  • As he hath told God’s utter Will
  • Unto that creature heavenly and still--
  • God the Father’s terrible, high Will.
  • Motions of fear and wonder
  • The girl sways under;
  • Her eyes distraught, as wings
  • A hawk’s suspension brings
  • To panic, when two doves
  • Tremble mid their sweet loves.
  • She sees beyond sight’s rim
  • God and the Power of Him;
  • His Promise fallen on her
  • As grace He would confer--
  • Men and the fear their speech
  • Must startle should it reach
  • A virgin’s secrecy....
  • How can such terrors be?
  • Then over her, distraught,
  • Falls a contentment wrought
  • To courage of a word
  • By the Archangel heard
  • With heart’s felicity--
  • “Be it done unto me
  • According to His Will.”
  • The little room thereafter grew more still,
  • And Mary knelt and shone
  • With grace, although the Angel’s beam was gone.
  • This was the fairest sight God yet had looked upon--
  • Mary, the chosen Mother of His Son,
  • Obedient to Him
  • As glowing Seraphim.
  • A lonely Man, beneath the trees,
  • That stoop above a sward of garden-ground,
  • Kneels in the evening breeze,
  • Felt as flow without a sound.
  • While He kneels in that cool place,
  • With the moonlight settled on His face,
  • He is praying that He may not drink
  • Of a Cup filled bitter to the brink,
  • Praying in His anguish not to drink.
  • And, in strife tremendous
  • Of woe stupendous,
  • He strains with power so great--
  • As a red pomegranate
  • That splits and bleeds His head
  • With blood is scarlet-red.
  • He struggles with the might
  • Of the world’s sin in sight,
  • That He must bear if now
  • He bends ensanguined brow,
  • And drinks that awful Cup
  • Before his eyes raised up.
  • Sin!--us He meets the shock,
  • Earth reddens to its rock
  • With blood.... Then peace from storm
  • Comes to that ruddy Form,
  • And a brave word of God
  • Blows over the wet sod--
  • “If I must drink, not mine,
  • My will, O Father, thine
  • Be done! Not mine, Thy Will!”
  • The garden-shades thereafter grew more still,
  • Because an angel came,
  • And the red forehead whitened in his flame.
  • This was the fairest sight God ever looked upon--
  • Jesus, His loved, only-begotten Son,
  • Obedient to Him
  • As sworded Cherubim.
  • TRANSIT
  • _Cloud that streams its breath of unseen flowers,
  • Cloud with spice of bay,
  • Of roses, lily-breathings, and the powers
  • Of small violets, or, aloft, black poplars as they quiver!_
  • _Cloud that streams its song of birds--no bird
  • Seen to chant the song:
  • Yet wide and keen as sun-breath it is heard,
  • All the air itself a voice of voices chiming golden!_
  • _Mary hath passed by. All plants sweet-leaved,
  • Sweet-flowered; birds, sweet-voiced,
  • Round her passing have their sweetness weaved.
  • Let us yield our incense up, our anthems and our homage!_
  • SOME OF THESE POEMS HAVE BEEN PUBLISHED
  • IN “THE IRISH MONTHLY” AND
  • IN “THE ROSARY.” ONE WAS PUBLISHED
  • IN “THE UNIVERSE.”
  • PRINTED BY
  • BALLANTYNE & COMPANY LTD
  • AT THE BALLANTYNE PRESS
  • TAVISTOCK STREET COVENT GARDEN
  • LONDON
  • End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Poems of Adoration, by
  • Michael Field and Katherine Bradley and Emma Cooper
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