AT THE
SHRINE
At the place where the clipped grass meets the wild
veronica and yellow cone flowers
in a cleared space under old oaks and elms
At the place where the clipped grass meets the wild
veronica and yellow cone flowers
in a cleared space under old oaks and elms
they put an image
of Our Lady of Peace
and planted arborvitae[1]
in a ring around her.
Within this ring,
nut-hatch and oriole and wood pewee in season call
or the leaves fall
or a twig cracks
underfoot
or the snow
gathers, whispering around the white image
with its praying
hands and inscrutable stone eyes
that turn toward
and beyond the sky
where a plane hums
over and the clouds run.
They have worn a
path here
having so many
dear
brothers, fathers,
friends and lovers to pray for
and the war is
over now,
the peaceful Lady
having heard how,
coming in bright
processions to this ring of quiet,
following the hill
above the pond,
they prayed the
rosary, or with fond
hearts and voices
sang the old hymns
they have
forgotten when they learned
but turned, all of
them turned
finally towards
the white lady in her ring of peace
under the drifting
clouds and the old trees,
toward the lady
who is not an image on a hillside
but a listening
heart near by in accessible heaven.
Sister Maris Stella CSJ
Frost
for Saint Brigid and other poems. New York: Sheed & Ward. 1949.
Used
with permission
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