FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   >>  
With our sadness in a star, Or our sadness in a child. But two words, and this sweet air. Soeur Monique, Had he more, who set you there? Was his music-dream of you Of some perfect nun he knew, Or of some ideal, as true? And I see you where you stand With your life held in your hand As a rosary of days. And your thoughts in calm arrays, And your innocent prayers are told On your rosary of days. And the young days and the old With their quiet prayers did meet When the chaplet was complete. Did it vex you, the surmise Of this wind of words, this storm of cries, Though you kept the silence so In the storms of long ago, And you keep it, like a star? --Of the evils triumphing, Strong, for all your perfect conquering, Silenced conqueror that you are? And I wonder at your peace, I wonder. Would it trouble you to know, Tender soul, the world and sin By your calm feet trodden under Long ago, Living now, mighty to win? And your feet are vanished like the snow. Vanished; but the poet, he In whose dream your face appears, He who ranges unknown years With your music in his heart, Speaks to you familiarly Where you keep apart, And invents you as you were. And your picture, O my nun! Is a strangely easy one, For the holy weed you wear, For your hidden eyes and hidden hair, And in picturing you I may Scarcely go astray. O the vague reality! The mysterious certainty! O strange truth of these my guesses In the wide thought-wildernesses! --Truth of one divined of many flowers; Of one raindrop in the showers Of the long-ago swift rain; Of one tear of many tears In some world-renowned pain; Of one daisy 'mid the centuries of sun; Of a little living nun In the garden of the years. Yes, I am not far astray; But I guess you as might one Pausing when young March is grey, In a violet-peopled day; All his thoughts go out to places that he knew, To his child-home in the sun, To the fields of his regret, To one place i' the innocent March air, By one olive, and invent The familiar form and scent Safely; a white violet Certainly is there. Soeur Monique, remember me. 'Tis not in the past alone I am picturing you to be; But my little friend, my own, In my moment, pray for me. For another dream is mine, And another dream is true, Sweeter even, Of the little ones that shine Lost within the light divine,-- Of some meekest flower, or you, In the fields of Heave
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18   19   20   21   22   23   24   25   26   >>  



Top keywords:

prayers

 
innocent
 

fields

 
violet
 

Monique

 

hidden

 
perfect
 

picturing

 

sadness

 

astray


rosary

 
thoughts
 

wildernesses

 

divined

 

garden

 

living

 

guesses

 
thought
 

centuries

 

renowned


mysterious

 

showers

 

strange

 

flowers

 

raindrop

 
certainty
 
reality
 

invent

 
moment
 

Sweeter


friend
 

meekest

 

flower

 

divine

 
remember
 

Certainly

 

peopled

 

Pausing

 
places
 

Safely


familiar

 
regret
 

surmise

 

chaplet

 

complete

 
Though
 

Strong

 
conquering
 

Silenced

 

triumphing