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wer came And took them softly by the hand. I wonder if they ever heard The silver scream, in some grey morn, High in a lit and listening tower, Because a man-child then was born. I wonder if they ever saw A woman's hair, or in her eye Read the eternal mystery-- Or ever saw a woman die. I wonder, when all friends had gone,-- The gay companions, the brave men-- If in some fragile girl they found Their only stay and comrade then. She who thus went through flaming hell To make us, put into our clay All that there is of heaven, shall she-- Mother and sister, wife and fay,-- Have no part in the world she made-- Serf of the rainbow, vassal flower-- Save knitting in the afternoon, And rocking cradles, hour by hour! AN EASTER HYMN Spake the Lord Christ--"I will arise." It seemed a saying void and vain-- How shall a dead man rise again!-- Vain as our tears, vain as our cries. Not one of all the little band That loved Him this might understand. "I will arise"--Lord Jesus said. Hearken, amid the morning dew, Mary, a voice that calleth you,-- Then Mary turned her golden head, And lo! all shining at her side Her Master they had crucified. At dawn to his dim sepulchre, Mary, remembering that far day, When at his feet the spikenard lay, Came, bringing balm and spice and myrrh; To her the grave had made reply: "He is not here--He cannot die." Praetor and priest in vain conspire, Jerusalem and Rome in vain Torture the god with mortal pain, To quench that seed of living fire; But light that had in heaven its birth Can never be put out oh earth. "I will arise"--across the years, Even as to Mary that grey morn, To us that gentle voice is borne-- "I will arise." He that hath ears O hearken well this mystic word, Let not the Master speak unheard. No soul descended deep in hell, The child of sorrow, sin and death, The immortal spirit suffereth To see corruption; though it fell From loftiest station in the skies, It still to heaven again must rise. No dream of faith, no seed of love, No lonely action nobly done, But is as stable as the sun, And fed and watered from above; From nether base to starry cope Nature's two laws are Faith and Hope. Safe in the care of heavenly powers, The good we dreamed but might not do, Lost beauty magically new, Shall spring as surely as the flowers, When, 'mid the sobbing
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