Page:Dreams and Images.djvu/95

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OUR LADY'S DEATH

By Father Edmund, C.P.


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

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

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



VIGIL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION

By Maurice Francis Egan


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