Page:Dreams and Images.djvu/62

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

        And feel thy presence near;
And yet when he, regardful of her ease,
  Had led her back by brightening hall and stair
To her own chamber's quietude and peace,
  One maple-bowered window shook with rare,
  Sweet song—and thou wert there!

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

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

Makes God one soul a lure for snaring three?
  Ah! surely; so this nursling of the nest,