TO OUR LADY IN WINTER
Lady, a transient stranger was the snow
in your far Syrian village,
where vine and olive, in the sun's fierce glow,
scarce asked the rich soil's tillage
But how you would have smiled to see it, Sweet!
here in the city's highway,
hastening at dusk with swift and stainless feet
down the long lanes of skyway.
It would have been so eloquent, I know,
in its untarnished pureness
of what you prized most dear, would not forego
for any honour's sureness.
Its soundless fall - a muting finger laid
on the great city's humming -
would have recalled to you, O Mother-Maid
the Spirit's noiseless coming.
You would have loved - how much! - to see it fling
a swift, a kindly veiling
of pure compassion on each sordid thing,
hiding earth's every failing.
To soon it wears the grime, in lane and street,
of traffic and of toiling;
but you, of all earth's daughters, Lady sweet,
were snow beyond her soiling.
Sister M Angelita
Commonweal. February 1929
From 'A Silence full of bells'
From 'A Silence full of bells'
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