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Poems of Adoration

Chapter 19: II
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About This Book

The collection gathers devotional lyrics and dramatic religious scenes that meditate on Christian mysteries - passion, crucifixion, Eucharist, Virgin Mary, saints, death and resurrection - using vivid sacramental imagery, liturgical language, and intimate contemplations. Poems range from processional and eucharistic pieces to meditations on relics, purgatory, and holy places, alternating solemn ceremonial voice and tender lyricism. Recurrent focuses include sacrifice, adoration, maternal grief, spiritual longing, and the interplay of light, blood, and natural symbols. The sequence loosely moves through worship, suffering, sacrament, and consolation, inviting reflective reading rather than a single narrative.

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.

VIRGO POTENS

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

HOLY CROSS

PURGATORY

FORTITUDO EGENIS

PAX VOBISCUM

To Notre Dame de Boulogne

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.
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

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 EvoeAlleluia! He is dumb:
But let us laud Him, Eleutherius come!

ANNUNCIATIONS

STONES OF THE BROOK

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

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”