POEMS
of
SR. TERESA, Carmelite
of Lisieux,
known as
The "Little Flower of Jesus,"
"Thou, O Lord, hast been the only object of my
songs in the place of my pilgrimage."
Ps. CXVIII, 54.
__________________________________________________________________
Translated by S.L. EMERY,
Author of the "Inner Life of the Soul."
12139
Boston
ANGEL GUARDIAN PRESS CARMELITE CONVENT
RUGGLES STREET MT. PLEASANT AVENUE
Copyright, 1907
by
CARMELITE CONVENT
__________________________________________________________________
DEDICATION
TO
THE LITTLE FLOWER OF JESUS
BLOOMING IN PARADISE, WHOSE HEAVENLY
FRAGRANCE HAS
REFRESHED MY SOUL DURING MANY HOURS OF
EXILE HERE BELOW, THE FOLLOWING
PAGES ARE LOVINGLY DEDICATED
BY
THE TRANSLATOR.
__________________________________________________________________
CONTENTS
FIRST PART
MY SONG OF TO-DAY
TO LIVE OF LOVE
CANTICLE TO THE HOLY FACE
THOU HAST BROKEN MY BONDS, O LORD
REMEMBER THOU!
TO THE SACRED HEART
THE ETERNAL CANTICLE SUNG IN BANISHMENT
"I THIRST FOR LOVE"
MY HEAVEN ON EARTH
MY HOPE
MY WISHES BEFORE THE TABERNACLE.
JESUS ONLY
TO SCATTER FLOWERS
A WORK OF LOVE
MY ARMOR
MY PEACE AND MY JOY
A LILY AMIDST THORNS
A WITHERED ROSE
ABANDONMENT
SECOND PART
THE DEW DIVINE
TO OUR LADY OF VICTORIES
THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN TO HER LITTLE MARY
WHY I LOVE THEE, MARY
THIRD PART
TO MY ANGEL GUARDIAN
TO MY LITTLE BROTHERS IN HEAVEN, THE
HOLY INNOCENTS
MELODY OF SAINT CECILIA
CANTICLE OF SAINT AGNES
TO THE VENERABLE THEOPHANE VENARD,
MARTYRED
FOURTH PART
STORY OF A SHEPHERDESS WHO BECAME A
QUEEN
PRAYER OF THE CHILD OF A SAINT
WHAT I USED TO LOVE
FIFTH PART
JESUS AT BETHANY
THE BIRD CAGE OF THE INFANT JESUS
FLIGHT OF THE HOLY FAMILY INTO EGYPT
THE LITTLE DIVINE BEGGAR OF CHRISTMAS
ANGELS OF THE CRIB
POEMS IN HONOR OF JEANNE D'ARC
SHEPHERDESS OF DOMREMY HEARKENING TO HER
VOICES
HYMN OF JEANNE D'ARC AFTER HER VICTORIES
PRAYER OF JEANNE D'ARC IN PRISON
VOICES OF JEANNE D'ARC DURING HER
MARTYRDOM
THE DIVINE JUDGMENT
CANTICLE OF TRIUMPH
PRAYER OF FRANCE TO THE VENERABLE JEANNE
D'ARC
CANTICLE TO OBTAIN CANONIZATION OF
JEANNE D'ARC
__________________________________________________________________
INDEX ACCORDING TO DATES.
THE DEW DIVINE Feb. 2, 1893
MELODY OF ST. CECILIA April 28, 1893
TO-DAY, MY SONG OF June, 1894
PRAYER OF THE CHILD OF A SAINT Aug. 24,
1894
STORY OF THE SHEPHERDESS WHO BECAME A
QUEEN Nov. 20, 1894
THE SHEPHERDESS OF DOMREMY HEARKENING TO
HER VOICES 1894
HYMN OF JEANNE D'ARC AFTER VICTORY 1894
PRAYER OF JEANNE D'ARC IN PRISON 1894
VOICES OF JEANNE D'ARC DURING MARTYRDOM
1894
THE DIVINE JUDGMENT 1894
CANTICLE OF TRIUMPH 1894
PRAYER OF FRANCE TO THE VENERABLE JEANNE
D'ARC 1894
CANTICLE TO OBTAIN THE CANONIZATION OF
THE VENERABLE JEANNE D'ARC 1894
THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN TO HER LITTLE MARY
Noel, 1894
ANGELS OF THE CRIB Noel, 1894
TO LIVE OF LOVE Feb., 1895
WHAT I USED TO LOVE April 28, 1895
JESUS AT BETHANY JUIV 29, 1895
THOU HAST BROKEN MY BONDS, O LORD Aug.
1895
CANTICLE TO THE HOLY FACE Aug. 1895
REMEMBER THOU Oct. 21, 1895
TO THE SACRED HEART October 1895
CANTICLE OF ST. AGNES Jan. 21, 1896
THE FLIGHT INTO EGYPT January 1896
THE ETERNAL CANTICLE FROM BANISHMENT
Mar.1896
"I THIRST FOR LOVE" April 30,
1896
MY HEAVEN ON EARTH June 7, 1896
MY HOPE June 12, 1896
TO SCATTER FLOWERS June 28, 1896
MY WISHES BEFORE THE TABERNACLE 1896
JESUS ONLY Aug. 15, 1896
A WORK OF LOVE Nov. 1896
THE BIRD-CAGE OF THE INFANT JESUS Dec.
25, 1896
THE LITTLE DIVINE BEGGAR
MY PEACE AND MY JOY Jan. 21, 1897
A LILY AMIDST THORNS
TO THE VENERABLE THEOPHANE VENARD Feb.
2, 1897
TO MY LITTLE BROTHERS, THE INNOCENTS
Feb. 2., 1897
TO MY ANGEL GUARDIAN Feb. 2, 1897
MY ARMOR Mar. 25, 1897
TO OUR LADY OF VICTORIES 1897
A WITHERED ROSE May 1897
ABANDONMENT May 1897
WHY I LOVE THEE, MARY May 1897
__________________________________________________________________
INTRODUCTION.
MARIE FRANCOISE-THERESE MARTIN, daughter
of Louis-Joseph-Stanislaus and
Zelie (Guerin) Martin, was born in
Alencon, France, January 2, 1873.
She was the youngest of nine children,
four of whom died in infancy,
and of the five others, four became
Carmelite nuns. Therese, a
singularly precocious, charming and
beautiful child set her heart upon
entering the convent at the age of
fifteen. Her wish was granted nearly
to the letter, for on April 9, 1888,
when only a little more than three
months past her fifteenth birthday, she
was received into the Carmelite
monastery of the Sacred Heart of Jesus
and of the Immaculate
Conception, at Lisieux, France. There
she lived for nine years a life
of remarkably joyous and childlike -- or
angelic -- holiness; and there
September 30, 1897, she died. Her name
in religion was Sister Teresa of
the Child Jesus and of the Holy Face. In
her character she so
exemplified the loveliness and the
sanctity of the Child Jesus Himself,
and to such a singular degree throughout
her whole short life did she
love and serve her Lord, that the
Mother-Prioress bade her write her
memories, which, with entire openness
and simple obedience, she did.
After her death this exquisite memoir,
at first intended only for the
edification of her sister nuns, was
published in French, together with
a valuable appendix of her letters,
notes of retreat, counsels, and
certain loving remembrances of her life
by those who had watched her
daily. Following upon these, come one
hundred and fifty pages that
contain her poems, which she wrote in
many instances to certain French
airs. It has been said of these simple
verses that: "The rules of
prosody are not always exactly observed
in their construction; and that
on the other hand, they suggest an
extraordinary degree of
inspiration." Lifted up by an
angelic presence, the soul shakes off the
dust of earth, and rises gently towards
the true ideal -- God, the
eternal Love. In reading this charming
history, containing verses that
breathe exquisite purity, we fancy
ourselves before a fresco of Fra
Angelico; or, to use a graceful
expression of Soeur Therese herself, we
imagine that we hear a "melody from
heaven."
It is a curious fact that Sister Teresa
seems never to have written
verses outside the cloister; though
within its walls she succeeded, and
to an extent by no means slight. She
narrates her experience as follows
to the prioress:
"O my Mother! how many reasons I
have for thanking God! I am going to
tell you in all simplicity, that the
Lord showed to me the same mercy
as to King Solomon. All my wishes have
been fulfilled-- not only my
wishes for perfection, but even those,
the vanity of which I understood
without having experienced it. Seeing
one of my sisters paint charming
pictures and compose verses, I thought
how happy I should be if I could
paint also, could express my thoughts in
verse, and could do much good
to others. Yet I would not have liked to
ask for these natural gifts,
and my wishes remained hidden in the
depths of my heart. But Jesus,
hidden likewise in that poor little
heart, deigned to show it once more
the nothingness of what passes away. To
the great surprise of the
community I composed poetry, I painted;
it was permitted me to do good
to some souls. And even as Solomon
(Ecclesiastes 2:11), turning himself
to all the works which his hands had
wrought, and to the labors wherein
he had labored in vain, saw in all
things vanity and vexation of mind,
and that nothing was lasting under the
sun, so I saw by experience,
that the only joy on earth consists in
hiding one's self, in remaining
in complete ignorance of all created
things. I understood that without
love all works are but nothingness, even
the most brilliant. Instead of
doing me harm, and wounding my soul, the
gifts the Lord lavished on me
led me to Him. I perceive that He is the
only thing that cannot change,
the only thing capable of satisfying my
immense desires."
One turns from these simple and holy
songs with a conviction which is
well expressed by P. N., "To the
reader" in the beginning of the French
edition of the Memoirs and which I have
translated thus:
Would you live, one happy moment,
lifted between earth and heaven;
Feel an atmosphere supernal
all about you gently rise;
See the world beneath your feet and
walk mid radiant Pleiads seven;
And believe an angel walks beside you,
from more radiant skies?
Read these songs of love with reverence;
let no idle glance profane
These sublimely simple pages,
seek their mystic sense to know;
But learn humbly that in convents
Love Divine as King doth reign,
And, within their deep seclusion,
hearts with joy are all aglow.
Lovely flower, soul celestial!
fifteen years at home you grew;
Then you gave your heart to Jesus,
fresh with its baptismal dew;
And the Sovereign Pontiff blessed this
lovely lily, that we know
As a nun whose wondrous sweetness,
heavenly, angelic ways,
Lyric songs of rapturous music, --
everything about her -- says
That an angel passed through Carmel,
just a few short years ago.
One remarkable thing about Sister
Teresa's simple and sweet verses is
the mortification she practiced in
regard to them, a severe
self-discipline which those will
appreciate, who have tried to keep in
mind thoughts which they could not at
once write down. To quote her own
words: "The good God never let our
Mother tell me how to write my
verses as fast as I composed them, and I
would not have been willing to
ask this permission for fear of
committing a fault against holy
poverty. So I waited for the hour of
free time, and it was not without
extreme difficulty, that I recalled at
eight o'clock in the evening
what I had composed in the morning.
These little nothings are a
martyrdom, it is true; but we must take
great care not to make our
martyrdom less meritorious, by allowing
ourselves a thousand things
that would make our religious life an
easy one." Her verses have for
their motto: "Vous avez ete seul
l'objet de mes chants dans le lieu de
mon pelerinage," ("You alone
are the object of my song in the place of
my pilgrimage"), and are divided
into five sections. The first consists
of hymns and canticles relating more
exclusively to her Lord, the
Divine Spouse of her soul; the second
part contains hymns in relation
to the Blessed Virgin; and the remaining
sections contain other hymns
and poems and pious recreations, in
honor of St. Mary Magdelen, St.
Agnes, and St. Cecelia.
The religious spirit of the French
people is surely not wholly dead if
we may judge them from the fact, that
twenty-nine thousand copies of
the life of a young Carmelite nun of
Lisieux have been sold in that
land, within a few years. A translation
under the title of The Little
Flower of Jesus, is known in English,
but the entire French life
appears in two forms: one, a large
edition with the poems of the gifted
young soul; the other without the poems
except one under the title --
which also forms the title of that
edition -- Une Rose Effeuillee.
Moreover, the life has been translated
into Polish, German, Dutch,
Italian and Portuguese. The Spanish and
Flemish editions are nearing
completion. The Cardinal Patriarch of
Lisbon has granted an indulgence
to those who read "this admirable
Life," and all the Prelates of
Portugal have followed his example.
Truly the last desires of Sister
Teresa have been realized in a touching
and most wonderful manner: "I
wish to pass my Heaven in doing good on
earth," and again, "After my
death I will let fall a shower of
roses."
The Carmelites of Lisieux receive from
all parts of the world, most
precious testimonies of the truth of these
words. At one time it is the
account of the remarkable cure of some
pitiful malady; more frequently
it is to tell of the relief and
consolation of a soul in distress.
Persons come from long distances and
foreign lands to kneel at the tomb
of this elect of God. Priests and young
missionaries departing for the
Foreign Missions respectfully kiss the
blessed earth and carry away
flowers as veritable relics. The Nuns
are constantly pressed to give
some souvenir of the "little
queen," "the little St. Teresa," the
"little great Saint" or
"the Little Flower", for so are her titles
varied by the devotion of those who love
her, the world over.
The Seminaries have addressed touching
petitions covered with
signatures earnestly pleading for the
introduction of her Cause.
Venerable Priests and eminent Religious
have said: --
"Sister Teresa of the Infant Jesus
is a providential soul. Her divine
mission is evident."
"This dear little saint' is a
remarkable Missionary whose word is
powerful and irresistible."
"The Life of this soul written by
herself has a lasting charm, and
souls who yield to its powerful
influence will be drawn from tepidity
and sin."
"I assure you that the Lord works
beautiful and great things by means
of your little Saint.' In our Seminary
she transforms souls."
"The heart of Sister Teresa is a
pure flame of Paradise which has
enkindled and will enkindle many
hearts."
"Happy Victim, not only consumed by
the flame of Divine Love but who
has received the gift of communicating
it powerfully to others."
"Many lives tell of the fire of
Love. The Life of Sister Teresa makes
it felt. Many give us the desire to love
God; she puts the fire in our
souls." O Thou who hast so loved
Jesus and souls, who didst say when
dying, "I have given my God only
love, and he will return my love." --
thy word was a prophecy. Thousands of
hearts to whom thou wast hitherto
unknown, love and venerate thee now, and
by their prayers and desires
long to hasten the day when the Church
will enshrine thy memory on Her
Altars.
Meanwhile, dear Little Flower, console
the heart of the Sovereign
Pontiff in this moment of supreme trial,
and from the gardens of
Paradise let fall upon Him and each of
His children thy shower of
roses.
__________________________________________________________________
First Part.
__________________________________________________________________
MY SONG OF TO-DAY.
1.
Oh! how I love Thee, Jesus! my soul
aspires to Thee --
And yet for one day only my simple prayer
I pray!
Come reign within my heart, smile
tenderly on me,
To-day, dear Lord, to-day.
2.
But if I dare take thought of what the
morrow brings --
That fills my fickle heart with dreary,
dull dismay;
I crave, indeed, my God, trials and
sufferings,
But only for to-day!
3.
O sweetest Star of heaven! O Virgin,
spotless, blest,
Shining with Jesus' light, guiding to
Him my way!
O Mother! neath thy veil let my tired
spirit rest,
For this brief passing day!
4.
Soon shall I fly afar among the holy
choirs,
Then shall be mine the joy that never
knows decay;
And then my lips shall sing, to heaven's
angelic lyres,
The eternal, glad To-day!
June, 1894.
__________________________________________________________________
TO LIVE OF LOVE
"If any man love Me, he will keep
My word and My Father will love him
and We will come to him and make Our
abode with him. . . My peace I
give unto you . . . Abide in My
love."
(St. John 14:23, 27, -- 15:9)
1.
The eve His life of love drew near its
end,
Thus Jesus spoke: "Whoever loveth
Me,
And keeps My word as Mine own faithful
friend,
My Father, then and I his guests will
be;
Within his heart will make Our dwelling
above.
Our palace home, true type of heaven
above.
There, filled with peace, We will that
he shall rest,
With us, in love.
2.
Incarnate Word! Thou Word of God alone!
To live of love, tis to abide with Thee.
Thou knowest I love Thee, Jesus Christ,
my Own!
Thy Spirit's fire of love enkindleth me.
By loving Thee, I draw the Father here
Down to my heart, to stay with me
always.
Blest Trinity! Thou art my prisoner
dear,
Of love, to-day.
3.
To live of love, 'tis by Thy life to
live,
O glorious King, my chosen, sole
Delight!
Hid in the Host, how often Thou dost
give
Thyself to those who seek Thy radiant
light.
Then hid shall be my life, unmarked,
unknown,
That I may have Thee heart to heart with
me;
For loving souls desire to be alone,
With love, and Thee!
4.
To live of love, 'tis not to fix one's
tent
On Tabor's height and there with Thee
remain.
Tis to climb Calvary with strength nigh
spent,
And count Thy heavy cross our truest
gain.
In heaven, my life a life of joy shall
be,
The heavy cross shall then be gone for
aye.
Here upon earth, in suffering with Thee,
Love! let me stay.
5.
To live of love, 'tis without stint to
give,
An never count the cost, nor ask reward;
So, counting not the cost, I long to
live
And show my dauntless love for Thee,
dear Lord!
O Heart Divine, o'erflowing with
tenderness,
How swift I run, who all to Thee has
given!
Naught but Thy love I need, my life to
bless.
That love is heaven!
6.
To live of love, it is to know no fear;
No memory of past faults can I recall;
No imprint of my sins remaineth here;
The fire of Love divine effaces all.
O sacred flames! O furnace of delight!
I sing my safe sweet happiness to prove.
In these mild fires I dwell by day, by
night.
I live of love!
7.
To live of love, 'tis in my heart to guard
A mighty treasure in a fragile vase.
Weak, weak, am I, O well-beloved Lord!
Nor have I yet an angel's perfect grace.
But, if I fall each hour that hurries
by,
Thou com'st to me from Thy bright home
above,
And, raising me, dost give me strength
to cry:
I live of love!
8.
To live of love it is to sail afar
And bring both peace and joy where'er I
be.
O Pilot blest! love is my guiding star;
In every soul I meet, Thyself I see.
Safe sail I on, through wind or rain or
ice;
Love urges me, love conquers every gale.
High on my mast behold is my device:
"By love I sail!"
9.
To live of love, it is when Jesus sleeps
To sleep near Him, though stormy waves
beat nigh.
Deem not I shall awake Him! On these
deeps
Peace reigns, like that the Blessed know
on high.
To Hope, the voyage seems one little
day;
Faith's hand shall soon the veil between
remove;
Tis Charity that swells my sail alway.
I live of love!
10.
To live of love, O Master dearest, best!
It is to beg Thee light Thy holiest
fires
Within the soul of each anointed priest,
Till he shall feel the Seraphim's
desires;
It is to beg Thee guard Thy Church, O
Christ!
For this I plead with Thee by night, by
day;
And give myself, in sacrifice unpriced,
With love alway!
11.
To live of love, it is to dry Thy tears,
To seek for pardon for each sinful soul,
To strive to save all men from doubts
and fears,
And bring them home to Thy benign
control.
Comes to my ear sin's wild and
blasphemous roar;
So, to efface each day, that burning
shame,
I cry: " O Jesus Christ! I Thee
adore.
I love Thy Name!"
12.
To live of love, 'tis Mary's part to
share,
To bathe with tears and odorous perfume
Thy holy feet, to wipe them with my
hair,
To kiss them; then still loftier lot
assume, --
To rise, and by Thy side to take my
place,
And pour my ointments on Thy holy head.
But with no balsams I embalm Thy Face!
'Tis love, instead!
13.
"To live of love, -- what
foolishness she sings!"
So cries the world. "Renounce such
idle joy!
Waste not thy perfumes on such trivial
things.
In useful arts thy talents now
employ!"
To love Thee, Jesus! Ah, this loss is
gain;
For all my perfumes no reward seek I.
Quitting the world, I sing in death's
sweet pain:
Of love I die!
14.
To die of love, O martyrdom most blest!
For this I long, this is my heart's
desire;
My exile ends; I soon will be at rest.
Ye Cherubim, lend, lend to me your lyre!
O dart of Seraphim, O flame of love,
Consume me wholly; hear my ardent cry!
Jesu, make real my dream! Come Holy
Dove!
Of love I die!
15.
To die of love, behold my life's long
hope!
God is my one exceeding great reward.
He of my wishes forms the end and scope;
Him only do I seek; my dearest Lord.
With passionate love for Him my heart is
riven.
O may He quickly come! He draweth nigh!
Behold my destiny, behold my heaven, --
OF LOVE TO DIE.
February 25, 1895
__________________________________________________________________
Canticle to the Holy Face.
Dear Jesus! tis Thy Holy Face
Is here the start that guides my way;
They countenance, so full of grace,
Is heaven on earth, for me, to-day.
And love finds holy charms for me
In Thy sweet eyes with tear-drops wet;
Through mine own tears I smile at Thee,
And in Thy griefs my pains forget.
How gladly would I live unknown,
Thus to console Thy aching heart.
Thy veiled beauty, it is shown
To those who live from earth apart.
I long to fly to Thee alone!
Thy Face is now my fatherland, --
The radiant sunshine of my days, --
My realm of love, my sunlit land,
Where, all life long, I sing Thy praise;
It is the lily of the vale,
Whose mystic perfume, freely given,
Brings comfort, when I faint and fail,
And makes me taste the peace of heaven.
Thy face, in its unearthly grace,
Is like the divinest myrrh to me,
That on my heart I gladly place;
It is my lyre of melody;
My rest -- my comfort -- is Thy Face.
My only wealth, Lord! is thy Face;
I ask naught else than this from Thee;
Hid in the secret of that Face,
The more I shall resemble Thee!
Oh, leave on me some impress faint
Of Thy sweet, humble, patient Face,
And soon I shall become a saint,
And draw men to Thy saving grace.
So, in the secret of Thy Face,
Oh! hide me, hide me, Jesus blest!
There let me find its hidden grace,
Its holy fires, and, in heaven's rest,
Its rapturous kiss, in Thy embrace!
August 12, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
Thou Hast Broken My Bonds, O Lord'
(Psalm CXV.7.)
For a Postulant, on her entrance-day
into Carmel.
Thou, Jesu! on this day my earthly bonds
hast broken.
In Mary's Order old, my soul true goods
shall find;
And if to-day: "farewell" my quivering
lips have spoken
To those who loved me best, so dear, so
true, so kind,
Thou, Lord, wilt be to them far more
than I could be;
And Thou wilt deign to win some sinful
souls through me.
Jesu! on Carmel I shall dwell --
Thy love has called Thy child to that
oasis fair;
There I desire to serve Thee well,
To love Thee there, and then to die,
There! yes, my Jesu, there!
O Jesu! on this day, Thy love my prayer
has granted;
Before Thy altar throne hereafter tis my
part
Calmly to wait for heaven, -- all pain
to bear undaunted, --
And, lifting to the rays of Thy white
Host my heart,
Within that fire of love all self to
burn away,
And, like a seraph blest, to serve Thee
night and day.
Ah, Jesu! twill be mine -- to dwell,
One day, with Thee on high, in heaven's
bright
mansions fair
There evermore to love Thee well,
To love Thee, and no more to die,
There! yes, my Jesu, there!
August 15, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
JESUS, MY WELL BELOVED, REMEMBER THOU!
"My daughter, seek for those of My
Words, that breathe forth the most
love; write them, and then, guarding
them with great care, as you would
holy relics, be sure that you read them
often. When a friend desires to
re-awaken in the heart of his friend the
first freshness and warmth of
his affection, he says to him : Do you
remember your feelings when you
said such a word to me one day?' or
again: Do you remember what you
felt on such an occasion? in such a
place? at such a time?' In like
manner do you, too, believe that the
most precious relics of Me to be
found on earth to-day are the words of
My love, the words that came
from the depths of My loving
Heart."
Our Divine Lord to St. Gertrude.
Recall, O Christ! the Father's glories
bright,
Recall the splendors of Thy heavenly
home,
Which Thou didst leave, to come to
earth's dark night,
And save poor sinners who in exile roam!
Dear Jesus! bending down at Mary's
humble word,
In her Thou didst conceal Thy majesty
adored.
Now that maternal breast,
Thy second heaven, Thy rest,
Remember Thou!
Remember, now, the day of Thy blest
birth,
How angels, quitting heaven, sang
joyously:
"To God be power, glory, lasting
worth;
And peace to men of good-will ever
be!"
For nineteen hundred years Thy promise
Thou hast kept;
Thy children in that peace have waked,
and worked, and slept.
To taste forever here
Thy peace, divinely dear,
I seek Thee now.
Remember O Thou Babe in swaddling bands!
Beside Thy crib I would forever stay.
There, with Thine angels, Lord of all
the lands!
I would remind thee of that happy day.
O Jesus! call to mind the shepherds and
wise men,
Who offered Thee their hearts, as I mine
own again;
The Babes of Bethlehem see,
Who gave their blood for Thee.
Remember Thou!
Remember Thou that Mary's holy arms
Thou didst prefer to any royal throne.
Dear little One! she shielded Thee from
harm,
She fed Thee with her virginal milk
alone.
Oh, at that feast of love Thy mother
gave to Thee,
My little Brother, grant that I a guest
may be,
Thy little sister I.
Oh, hear my ardent cry:
Remember Thou!
Remember that Thy childish voice, dear
Lord!
Called Joseph father, who, at heaven's
decree,
Prevailed to snatch Thee from the
tyrant's sword,
And sought old Egypt's far-off coast
with Thee.
O Word of God! recall what mysteries
round Thee woke;
Thou didst keep silent, Lord! the while
an angel spoke.
Thy distant, long exile
On banks of ancient Nile,
Remember now.
Remember Thou that on my native shore,
The stars of gold, the moon of silver
bright,
Which I contemplate, wondering more and
more,
Charmed in the East Thine infant eyes at
night.
That tiny hand of Thine, that stroked
Thy Mother's face,
Sustained the world, held all things in
their place;
And Thou didst think of me!
Ah! how I think of Thee,
Remember now.
Remember Thou, in solitude most blest,
Thou laboredst with Thy hands for daily
bread.
To live forgotten, -- this Thy earnest
quest,
All human wisdom trampled neath Thy
tread,
One single word of Thine could charm a
listening world;
Yet Thou Thy wisdom kept in closest
silence furled.
Thou, Who didst all things know,
No sign of power wouldst show.
Remember Thou!
Remember how, -- Stranger and Pilgrim
here, --
Thou hadst no home, O Thou Eternal Word!
Not e'en a pillow for Thy head most
dear;
Not e'en a shelter, like the flitting
bird.
O Jesu, come to me! Rest Thou upon my
breast.
Come, Come! My spirit longs to have Thee
for its Guest.
Thou well-beloved, adored!
Rest in my heart, dear Lord,
Ever as now!
Remember Thou, the loving tenderness
That Thou didst show to children seeking
Thee.
Like them I would receive Thy kind
caress;
Like them, Thy blessings, Lord, be
granted me.
That I in heaven may gain Thy welcome
and Thy rest,
Here will I practise well all
childhood's virtues best.
"The childlike soul wins
heaven."
This promise Thou hast given,
Remember Thou!
Remember Thou that on the fountain's
brink, --
A traveller, weary with the journey's
length, --
Thou of the sinful tenderly didst think,
And for contrition gave her lasting
strength.
I know Thee well Who asked, of her, the
draught, that day.
Thou art "the Gift of God," the
Life, the Truth the Way.
Thou wilt not pass me by.
I hear Thy tender cry:
"Come to Me now!"
"Come unto Me, poor souls with
sorrow tost!
Your heavy load My hands shall take
away;
Your griefs and pains shall be forever
lost,
Within the depths of love I feel for
aye."
I thirst, I thirst, O Christ! Nought
else I seek, save Thee.
Borne down beneath my cross, I cry:
"O comfort me!"
Be Thy dear love my home!
I come! Yes, Lord, I come!
Receive me now!
Remember Thou that, though a child of
light,
Too oft, alas! I have neglected Thee.
Take pity on me in life's dreary night;
Oh, pardon all my sin and misery!
Make my sad heart rejoice Thy holy will
to do;
My soul to those delights, hid in Thy
gospels, woo!
That I that book of gold
Ever most dear did hold,
Remember Thou!
Remember Thou Thy holy Mother's power
That she possesses o'er Thy Heart
divine.
Remember, at her prayer, one joyful
hour,
Thou didst change water to delicious
wine.
Deign also to transform my works, though
poor they be;
Oh, make them glorious works, when Mary
pleads with Thee.
That I am Mary's child,
Dear Jesus, meek and mild,
Remember Thou!
Remember that the summits of the hills
Thou often didst ascend at set of sun.
Ah! how Thy prayer the long, long
night-hours fills,
Thy chants of praise when weary day is
done.
Thy prayer I offer now, with ever new
delight,
Joined to my own poor prayers, my
office, day and night.
That I, too, near Thy heart,
Take in Thy prayer my part,
Remember Thou!
Remember that Thine eyes beheld the
fields
White to the harvest, -- harvest of the
blest!
Thy Heart o'er them Its mystic influence
wields;
Within that Heart is room for all, and
rest.
That soon may come for Thee Thy glorious
harvest day,
I immolate myself, I offer prayers
alway.
I give my joys, my tears,
For thy good harvesters.
Remember Thou!
Recall that feast of angels in delight,
That harmony of heaven's kingly host,
The joy of all those choirs of spirits
bright,
When one is saved, once counted mongst
the lost.
Oh, how I would augment that joy and
glory there!
For sinners I will pray with ceaseless,
ardent prayer.
To win dear souls to heaven,
My life and prayers are given.
Remember Thou!
Remember that most holy flame of love
Thou wouldst enkindle in all hearts
alway.
To me it came from Thy fair heaven
above;
Would I could spread its fires by night
and day!
One feeble spark, dear Lord! -- O
glorious mystery! --
A fire immense can light, if fanned to
flame by Thee.
I long, Divinest Star!
To bear Thy flames afar.
Remember Thou!
Remember how the festal board was
graced,
To feast the penitent returning son!
Remember, too, the innocent soul is
placed
Ever near Thee, O Thou Beloved One!
Unto the prodigal no welcome is denied;
But, ah! the elder son is always at Thy
side.
Father, and Love Divine,
All that Thou hast is mine.
Remember Thou!
Remember how Thou didst disdain earth's
pride,
When working miracles with God's own ease.
"Ye who seek human praise! can ye
decide
To give your faith to mysteries like
these?
The great works that I do, (so Thou hast
said, dear Lord!)
My friends shall yet surpass, according
to My word."
How humble Thou wast then,
Among the sons of men.
Remember Thou!
Remember in what rapture of delight
The loved apostle rested on Thy Heart.
In that deep peace he knew Thy love and
might;
Thy mysteries thence he drew, -- how
strong Thou art!
Of Thy beloved John I feel no jealousy.
I am Thy choice; I, too, behold the
mystery.
I, too, upon Thy breast
May have ecstatic rest.
Remember Thou!
Recall Thine awful hour of agony
When blood and tears bore witness to Thy
woe.
O pearls of love! O rubies fair to see!
Thence virginal blooms of beauty ever
grow.
An angel, showing Thee what harvest Thou
shouldst reap,
Gave gladness to Thee, then, even while
Thou didst weep.
Then truly didst Thou see,
Amongst those lilies, me!
Remember now!
Thy blood, Thy tears, -- a fruitful living
source,
Those mystic flowers, makes virginal
evermore;
And to them grants a wondrous, holy
force,
For winning souls to serve Thee and
adore.
A virginal heart is mine; yet, Christ,
what mystery!
Mother of souls am I, through my chaste
bond with Thee.
These virginal flowers that bloom
To bring poor sinners home,
Remember Thou!
Remember Thou, that, steeped in direst
woe,
Condemned by men, to heaven Thine eyes
were raised;
And Thou didst cry: " Soon ye My
power shall know.
Soon shall ye hear My name by angels
praised! "
Yet who believed Thee, then, the Son of
God to be,-
Thy glory veiled and hid in our
humanity?
Fairest of sons of men!
My God! I knew Thee then!
Remember now!
Remember that Thy dear, divinest Face,
Even among Thy friends, was oft unknown.
But Thou hast drawn me by its matchless
grace;
Thou knowest well I claimed it for mine
own.
I have divined its charms, tho' wet with
human tears.
Face of Eternal God! I love Thee all
these years.
Part of my name Thou art!
Thou dost console my heart.
Remember Thou!
Remember Thou that amorous complaint,
Escaping from Thy lips on Calvary's
tree:
"I thirst!" Oh, how my heart
like Thine doth faint.
Yes, yes! I share Thy burning thirst
with Thee.
The more my heart burns bright with Thy
great Heart's chaste fires,
The more I thirst for souls, to quench
Thy Heart's desires.
That with such love always
I burn, by night, by day,
Remember Thou!
Remember, O my Jesu! Word of life!
That Thou hast loved me, dying e'en for
me.
Oh, let me be with holy folly rife!
So would I, also, live and die for Thee!
Thou knowest, Lord! my wish, my loving
heart's desire, --
To make Thee loved, and then, in
martyrdom expire.
I long of love to die.
O hear my ardent cry.
Remember Thou!
Recall that glorious, that victorious
hour,
When Thou didst say: "Happy indeed
is he,
Who has not seen My triumph and My
power,
But, seeing not, has still believed in
Me."
In faith's dim, shadowy night, I love Thee,
I adore.
Jesu, I wait in peace, till faith's long
night is o'er.
That not one wish had I
To see Thee neath this sky,
Remember Thou!
Remember that ascending unto God,
Thou wouldst not leave us orphans sad
and lone,
But didst, a Prisoner still, where we
abode,
Veil on our altars all Thy pomp, my Own!
The shadow of Thy veil is, oh! how pure
and bright,
Thou Living Bread of faith, heaven's
Food, my heart's Delight.
O mystery of love!
My Bread from heaven above,
Jesus, tis Thou!
Remember Thou, in spite of insults
hurled
Against this sacrament of love divine,
Thou dost remain in this dull, weary
world,
And fix Thy dwelling in a heart like
mine.
O Bread of exiled souls! holy and
heavenly Host!
No more I live -- not I! in Thee my life
is lost.
Thy chosen ciborium
Am I. Come, Jesu, come!
My Love art Thou.
Thy sanctuary here, dear Lord, am I,
That evil men shall never dare molest.
Rest in my, heart! Oh, do not pass me
by!
Thy garden I, each flower an offering blest.
But if from me Thou turn, white Lily of
the vale!
I know too well those flowers would
wither and would fail.
Ever, Thou Lily rare!
Bloom in my garden fair.
My life art Thou!
Remember that I longed upon this earth,
To comfort Thee for sinners' scorn of
Thee.
Give me a thousand hearts to praise Thy
worth.
My Well-Beloved! abide, abide with me!
A thousand hearts too few would be for
my desire;
Give me ThyHeart to set my longing heart
on fire.
My ardent love for Thee,
While swift the moments flee,
Remember Thou!
Remember, Lord! that Thy dear will alone
Is my sole wish, my only happiness.
I give myself to Thee, to rest, mine
Own!
With Thee in peace, and know Thy power
to bless.
And if Thou seems't to sleep while raging
waves beat high,
In peace I still remain, without one
anguished cry.
In peace, on Thee, I wait;
But, for th' Awakening great,
Prepare me Thou!
Remember how I often long and sigh
For that last day when angels shall
proclaim:
"Time is no morel The judgment
draweth nigh.
Rise thou, to face thy judge! He calls
thy name."
Then swiftly shall I fly, past bounds of
earth in space,
To live at last within the Vision of Thy
Face.
That it alone can be
My joy eternally,
Remember Thou!
October 21, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
TO THE SACRED HEART.
Beside the tomb wept Magdalen at dawn,
--
She sought to find the dead and buried
Christ;
Nothing could fill the void now He was
gone,
No one to soothe her burning grief
sufficed.
Not even you, Archangels
heaven-assigned!
To her could bring content that dreary
day.
Your buried King, alone, she longed to
find,
And bear His lifeless body far away.
Beside His tomb she there the last
remained,
And there again was she before the sun;
There, too, to come to her the Saviour
deigned, --
He would not be, by her, in love
outdone.
Gently He showed her then His blessed
Face,
And one word sprang from His deep
Heart's recess:
Mary! His voice she knew, she knew its
grace;
It came with perfect peace her heart to
bless.
One day, my God! I, too, like Magdalen,
Desired to find Thee, to draw near to
Thee;
So, over earth's immense,
wide-stretching plain,
I sought its Master and its King to see.
Then cried I, though I saw the flowers
bloom
In beauty neath green trees and azure
skies:
O brilliant Nature! thou art one vast
tomb,
Unless God's Face shall greet my longing
eyes."
A heart I need, to soothe me and to
bless, --
A strong support that can not pass away,
--
To love me wholly, e'en my feebleness,
And never leave me through the night or
day.
There is not one created thing below,
Can love me truly, and can never die.
God become man -- none else my needs can
know;
He, He alone, can understand my cry.
Thou comprehendest all I need, dear
Lord!
To win my heart, from heaven Thou didst
come;
For me Thy blood didst shed, O King
adored!
And on our altars makest Thy home.
So, if I may not here behold Thy Face,
Or catch the heav'nly music of Thy
Voice,
I still can live, each moment, by Thy
grace,
And in Thy Sacred Heart I can rejoice.
O Heart of Jesus, wealth of tenderness!
My joy Thou art, in Thee I safely hide.
Thou, Who my earliest youth didst charm
and bless,
Till my last evening, oh! with me abide,
All that I had, to Thee I wholly gave,
To Thee each deep desire of mine is
known.
Whoso his life shall lose, that life
shall save; --
Let mine be ever lost in Thine alone!
I know it well, -- no righteousness of
mine
Hath any value in Thy searching eyes;
Its every breath my heart must draw from
Thine,
To make of worth my life's long
sacrifice.
Thou hast not found Thine angels without
taint;
Thy Law amid the thunderbolts was given;
And yet, my Jesus! I nor fear nor faint.
For me, on Calvary, Thy Heart was riven.
To see Thee in Thy glory face to face,
--
I know it well, -- the soul must pass
through fires.
Choose I on earth my purgatorial place,
--
The flaming love of Thy great Heart's
desires!
So shall my exiled soul, to death's
command,
Make answer with one cry of perfect
love;
Then flying straight to heaven its
Fatherland,
Shall reach with no delay that home
above.
October, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
THE ETERNAL CANTICLE.
SUNG IN BANISHMENT.
Exiled afar from heaven, I still, dear
Lord, can sing, --
I, Thy betrothed, can sing the eternal
hymn of love;
For, spite of exile comes to me, on
dove-like wing,
Thy Holy Spirit's fire of rapture from
above.
Beauty supreme! my Love Thou art;
Thyself Thou givest all to me.
Oh, take my heart, my yearning heart, --
Make of my life one act of love to Thee!
Canst Thou my worthlessness efface?
In heart like mine canst make Thy home?
Yes, love wins love, -- O wondrous
grace!
I love Thee, love Thee! Jesu, come I
Love that enkindleth me,
Pierce and inflame me;
Come, for I cry to Thee!
Come and be mine!
Thy love it urgeth me;
Fain would I ever be
Sunken and lost in Thee,
Furnace divine!
All pain borne for Thee
Changes to joy for me,
When my love flies to Thee,
Winged like the dove.
Heavenly Completeness,
Infinite Sweetness,
My soul possesseth Thee
Here, as above.
Heavenly Completeness,
Infinite sweetness,
Naught else art Thou but Love!
Note. -- The swiftly varying metres of
this rapturous "Canticle"
evidently are meant to indicate the ever
increasing ecstasy of the
singer; unless, indeed, Soeur Theresa
had no explicit intention, but
was simply carried on by the force of a
quasi-inspiration.
March 19, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
"I THIRST FOR LOVE."
In wondrous love Thou didst come down
from heaven
To immolate Thyself, O Christ, for me;
So, in my turn, my love to Thee is
given,
I wish to suffer and to die for Thee.
Thou, Lord, hast spoken this truth
benign:
"To die for one loved tenderly
Of greatest love on earth is sign;"
And now, such love is mine, --
Such love for Thee!
Abide, abide with me, O Pilgrim blest!
Behind the hill fast sinks the dying
day.
Helped by Thy cross I mount the rocky
crest;
Oh, come, to guide me on my heavenward
way.
To be like Thee is my desire;
Thy voice finds echo in my soul.
Suffering I crave! Thy words of fire
Lift me above earth's mire,
And sin's control.
Chanting Thy victories, gloriously
sublime,
The Seraphim -- all heaven -- cry to me,
That even Thou, to conquer sin and
crime,
Upon this earth a sufferer needs must
be.
For me, upon life's dreary way,
What scorn, what anguish, Thou didst
bear
Let me grow humble every day,
Be least of all, alway,
Thy lot to share!
Ah, Christ! Thy great example teaches me
Myself to humble, honors to despise.
Little and low like Thee I choose to be,
Forgetting self, so I may charm Thine
eyes.
My peace I find in solitude,
Nor ask I more, dear Lord, than this:
Be Thou my sole beatitude, --
Ever, in Thee, renewed
My joy, my bliss!
Thou, the great God Whom earth and
heaven adore,
Thou dwellest a prisoner for me night
and day;
And every hour I hear Thy voice implore:
" I thirst -- I thirst -- I thirst
-- for love alway!
I, too, Thy prisoner am I;
I, too, cry ever unto Thee
Thine own divine and tender cry:
"I thirst! Oh, let me die
Of love for Thee!"
For love of Thee I thirst! Fulfil my
hope;
Augment in me Thine own celestial flame!
For love of Thee I thirst! Too scant
earth's scope.
The glorious Vision of Thy Face I claim!
My long slow martyrdom of fire
Still more and more consumeth me.
Thou art my joy, my one desire.
Jesu! may I expire
Of love for Thee!
April 30, 1806.
__________________________________________________________________
MY HEAVEN ON EARTH.
To bear my exile now, within this world
of tears,
The holy tender glance of Christ, my
Lord, I need.
That glance, surcharged with love,
consoles me through the years;
His loveliness displays foretaste of
heaven indeed.
On me my Jesus smiles, when toward Him I
aspire -- ,
The trial of my faith then weighs no
more on me.
That love-glance of my God, that smile
of holy fire,
Oh, this is heaven for me!
Tis heaven to have the power, great
grace from Christ to win
For Holy Mother Church, for all my
Sisters dear, --
For every soul on earth that He may
enter in,
Enflame our sinful hearts, and grant us
joy and cheer.
All things my love can gain when, heart
to heart, I pray,
Alone with Jesus Christ in speechless
ecstasy.
Beside His altar blest with Him I gladly
stay, --
Oh, this is heaven for me!
My heaven within the Host safe hid and
peaceful, lies,
Where Jesus Christ abides, divinest,
fairest Fair.
From that great fount of love doth
endless life arise;
There, day and night, my Lord doth
hearken to my prayer.
When, in Thy perfect love (O moment
blest and bright!)
Thou comest, Spouse most pure, me to
transform in Thee,
That union of our hearts, that rapture
of delight, --
Oh, this is heaven for me!
My heaven it is to feel in me some
likeness blest
To Him Who made me and my soul hath
reconciled;
My heaven it is always beneath His eye
to rest.
To call Him Father dear, and be His
loving child.
Safe shielded in His arms, no storm my
soul can fear;
Complete abandonment my only law shall
be.
To sleep upon His Heart, with His blest
Face so near, --
Oh, this is heaven for me!
My heaven is God alone, the Trinity
Divine,
Who dwells within my heart, the Prisoner
of my love.
There, contemplating Thee, I tell Thee
Thou art mine;
Thee will I love and serve until we meet
above.
My heaven it is to smile on Thee whom I
adore,
E'en when, to try my faith, from me Thou
hidest Thee;
Calmly on Thee to smile, until Thou
smil'st once more, --
Oh, this is heaven to me!
June 7, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
MY HOPE.
Though in a foreign land I dwell afar,
I taste in dreams the endless joys of
heaven.
Fain would I fly beyond the farthest
star,
And see the wonders to the ransomed
given!
No more the sense of exile weighs on me,
When once I dream of that immortal day.
To my true fatherland, dear God! I see,
For the first time I soon shall fly
away.
Ah! give me, Jesus! wings as white as
snow,
That unto Thee I soon may take my
flight.
I long to be where flowers unfading
blow;
I long to see Thee, O my heart's
Delight!
I long to fly to Mary's mother-arms, --
To rest upon that spotless throne of
bliss;
And, sheltered there from troubles and
alarms,
For the first time to feel her gentle
kiss.
Thy first sweet smile of welcoming
delight
Soon show, O Jesus! to Thy lowly bride;
O'ercome with rapture at that wondrous
sight,
Within Thy Sacred Heart, ah! let me
hide.
O happy moment! and O heavenly grace!
When I shall hear Thee, Jesus, speak to
me;
And the full vision of Thy glorious Face
For the first time my longing eyes shall
see.
Thou knowest well, my only martyrdom
Is love, O Heart of Jesus Christ! for
Thee;
And if my soul craves for its heavenly
home,
Tis but to love Thee more, eternally.
Above, when Thy sweet Face unveiled I
view,
Measure nor bounds shall to my love be
given;
Forever my delight shall seem as new
As the first time my spirit entered
heaven.
June 12, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
MY WISHES BEFORE THE TABERNACLE.
O little key! I envy thee,
For thou canst ope, at any hour,
The Eucharistic prison-house,
Where dwells the God of Love and Power.
And yet -- Oh, tender mystery! --
One effort of my faith alone
Unlocks the tabernacle door,
And hides me there with Christ my Own.
O lamp within the holy place,
Whose mystic lights forever shine!
I fain would burn with fires of love
As bright, before my God and thine.
Yet, miracle of wondrous bliss!
Such flames are mine; and, day by day,
I can win souls to Jesus Christ,
To burn with His pure love for aye.
O consecrated altar-stone!
I envy thee with every morn.
As once in Bethlehem's blessed shed,
The Eternal Word on thee is born.
Yet, gentle Saviour! hear my plea;
Enter my heart, O Lord divine!
Tis no cold stone I offer Thee,
Who dost desire this heart of mine!
O corporal that angels guard!
What envy of thee fills my breast!
On thee, as in His swaddling bands,
I see my only Treasure rest.
Ah Virgin Mother! change my heart
Into a corporal pure and fair,
Whereon the snow-white Host may rest,
And thy meek Lamb find shelter there.
O holy paten! Jesus makes
Of Thee His sacramental throne.
Ah! if He would abase Himself,
To dwell awhile with me alone!
Jesus fulfils my longing hope,
Nor must I wait until I die; --
He comes to me! He lives in me!
His ostensorium am I!
The chalice, too, I fain would be,
Where I adore the Blood divine!
Yet, at the holy sacrifice,
That Precious Blood each day is mine.
More dear to Jesus is my soul,
Than chalices of gold could be;
His altar is a Calvary new,
Whereon His Blood still flows for me.
Only one little bunch of grapes
That gladly disappears for Thee,
O Jesus, holy, heavenly Vine!
Thou knowest I rejoice to be.
Beneath the pressure of the cross,
I prove my love for Thee alway;
And ask no other joy than this, --
To immolate myself each day!
Among the grains of purest wheat,
O happy lot! he chooses me.
We lose our life for Him, the Christ, --
What rapturous height of ecstasy!
Thy spouse am I, Thy chosen one.
My Well-Beloved! come, dwell in me.
Thy beauty wins my heart. Oh, come!
Deign to transform me into Thee!
1896.
__________________________________________________________________
JESUS ONLY.
WRITTEN FOR A NOVICE.
Oh, how my heart would spend itself, to
bless;
It hath such need to prove its
tenderness!
And yet what heart can my heart
comprehend?
What heart shall always love me without
end?
All -- all in vain for such return seek
I;
Jesus alone my soul can satisfy.
Naught else contents or charms me here
below;
Created things no lasting joy bestow.
My peace, my joy, my love, O Christ!
'Tis Thou alone! Thou hast sufficed.
Thou didst know how to make a mother's
heart;
Tenderest of fathers, Lord! to me Thou
art.
My only Love, Jesus, Divinest Word!
More than maternal is Thy heart, dear
Lord!
Each moment Thou my way dost guard and
guide;
I call -- at once I find Thee at my side
--
And if, sometimes Thou hid'st Thy face
from me,
Thou com'st Thyself to help me seek for
Thee.
Thee, Thee, alone I choose: I am Thy
bride.
Unto Thy arms I hasten, there to hide.
Thee would I love, as little children
love;
For Thee, like warrior bold, my love I'd
prove.
Now, like to children, full of joy and
glee,
So come I, Lord! to show my love to
Thee;
Yet, like a warrior bold with high
elation,
Rush I to combats in my blest vocation.
Thy Heart is Guardian of our innocence;
Not once shall it deceive my confidence.
Wholly my hopes are placed in Thee, dear
Lord!
After long exile, I Thy Face adored
In heaven shall see. When clouds the
skies o'erspread.
To Thee, my Jesus! I lift up my head;
For, in Thy tender glance, these words I
see:
"O child! I made My radiant heaven
for thee."
I know it well -- my burning tears and
sighs
Are full of charm for Thy benignant
eyes.
Strong seraphs form in heaven Thy court
divine,
Yet Thou dost seek this poor weak heart
of mine.
Ah! take my heart! Jesus, tis Thine
alone;
All my desires I yield to Thee, my Own!
And all my friends, that are so loved by
me,
No longer will I love them, save in
Thee!
August 15, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
TO SCATTER FLOWERS.
O Jesu! O my Love! Each eve I come to
fling
Before Thy sacred Cross sweet flowers of
all the year.
By these plucked petals bright, my hands
how gladly bring,
I long to dry Thine every tear!
To scatter flowers! -- that means each
sacrifice,
My lightest sighs and pains, my
heaviest, saddest hours,
My hopes, my joys, my prayers, -- I will
not count the price.
Behold my flowers!
With deep, untold delight Thy beauty
fills my soul.
Would I might light this love in hearts
of all who live!
For this, my fairest flowers, all things
in my control,
How fondly, gladly I would give!
To scatter flowers! -- behold my chosen
sword
For saving sinners' souls and filling
heaven's bowers.
The victory is mine: yes, I disarm Thee,
Lord,
With these my flowers!
The petals in their flight caress Thy
Holy Face;
They tell Thee that my heart is Thine,
and Thine alone.
Thou knowest what these leaves are
saying in my place;
On me Thou smilest from Thy throne.
To scatter flowers! -- that means, to
speak of Thee, --
My only pleasure here, where tears fill all the hours;
But soon, with angel hosts, my spirit
shall be free,
To scatter flowers!
June 28, 1896
__________________________________________________________________
A WORK OF LOVE.
A CANTICLE FOR THE SACRISTANS OF CARMEL,
AND FOR THOSE SISTERS WHOSE OFFICE IT IS TO MAKE
THE ALTAR BREADS.
What from our lot could us entice!
'Tis ours the altar-breads to make
For that tremendous sacrifice
Where Christ is offered for our sake.
Heaven will be here, on sinful earth,
When hid beneath these veils of snow:
And God be here, in a new birth,
Come down to dwell with us below!
No queens are reigning anywhere
In joy as great as ours to-day
Our very work is love and prayer,
And binds our Spouse to us alway.
Earth's highest honors seem as naught,
Beside this service of Heaven's King;
Beside this peace, with blessings
fraught
That Jesus sends on dove-like wing.
A holy envy fills our hearts
For this fair work of our delight:
For these small snow-white hosts, whose
arts
Shall hide the Lamb of God from sight.
Yet we His brides, His chosen, are;
Our Friend is He, our Spouse is He!
And hosts are we, that He, our Star,
Transforms to light and ecstasy.
The priest's high lot is like our own,
In this our daily work for God.
Transformed by Him, we tread alone
The very path that He once trod.
By prayers, by acts of love divine,
His brave apostles we must aid;
With them our grace we must combine,
And fight their battles unafraid.
God, hid beneath these snowy veils,
Will hide Him, too, our hearts within.
O miracle! our prayer prevails,
With Him, for mercy upon sin.
Our joy, our glory, our delight,
O Jesus! is this work for Thee.
Thy Heaven is these ciboriums bright
Our prayers shall fill with souls for
Thee.
November, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
MY ARMOR.
TO A NOVICE FOR HER PROFESSION DAY.
"The spouse of the King is terrible
as an army set in array; She is
like to a choir of music on a field of
battle." Canticles vi. 3; vii.
"Put you on the armor of God that
you may be able to stand against the
deceits of the devil." Ephesians
vi. II.
With heavenly armor am I clad to-day;
The hand of God has thus invested me.
What now from Him could tear my heart
away;
What henceforth come between my God and
me?
With Him for Guide, the fight I face
serene;
Nor furious fire, nor foe, nor death, I
fear.
My enemies shall know I am a queen,
The spouse of God, most high, most dear.
This armor I shall keep while life shall
last;
Thou, Thou, hast given it Me, my King,
my Spouse!
My fairest, brightest gems, by naught on
earth surpast,
Shall be my sacred vows.
My first dear sacrifice, O Poverty,
Thou shalt go with me till my dying
hour.
Detached from all things must the
athlete be,
If he the race would run, and prove his
power
Taste, worldly men! regret, remorse and
pain,
The bitter fruits of earthly, vain
desire;
The glorious palms of Poverty I gain,
I who to God alone aspire.
"Who would My heavenly Kingdom have
from Me,
He must use violence," so Jesus
said.
Ah well then! Poverty my mighty lance
shall be,
The helmet for my head.
The pure white Angels' sister now am I;
My vow of Chastity has made me so.
Ah, how I hope one day with them to fly!
Meanwhile to daily combat must I go.
For my great Spouse, of every lord the
Lord,
Struggle must I, with neither truce nor
rest;
And Chastity shall be my heavenly sword.
To win men's souls to Jesus' breast.
O Chastity,my sword invincible!
To overcome my foes thou hast sufficed;
By thee am I -- O joy ineffable! --
The Spouse of Jesus Christ.
The proud, proud angel, in the realms of
light,
Cried out, rebellious: "I will not
obey!"
But I shall cry, throughout earth's
dreary night,
"With all my heart, I will obey
alway!"
With holy boldness all my soul is
steeled,
Against hell's wild attacks I bravely
dart;
Obedience is my firm and mighty shield,
The buckler on my valiant heart.
O conquering God! no other prize I seek,
Than to submit with all my heart to
Thee;
Of victories th' obedient man shall
speak
Through all eternity.
If now a soldier's weapon I can wield,
If valiantly like him the foe I face,
I also long to sing upon the field,
As sang the glorious Virgin of all
grace.
Thou mak'st the chords to vibrate of Thy
lyre.
That lyre, O Jesus! is my loving heart;
To sing Thy mercies is that heart's
desire.
How sweet, how strong, how dear, Thou
art.
With radiant smile, Thou Spouse, my
heart's Delight,
I go to meet all foes from hell's dark
land;
And singing I shall die, upon the field
of fight,
My weapons in my hand.
March 25, 1897.
__________________________________________________________________
MY PEACE AND MY JOY.
How many souls on earth there are,
Who vainly seek for peace and rest!
With me, tis otherwise by far;
Joy dwells forever in my breast.
No fading blossom is this flower,
Of its decay no fear have I;
Like fragrant rose in springtime's bower
So fair it is, yet shall not die.
Well nigh too great my gladness is,
All things I wish are mine to-day.
How can I help but show my bliss,
Who am so light at heart, so gay?
My joy I find in pain and loss,
I love the thorns that guard the rose;
With joy I kiss each heavy cross,
And smile with every tear that flows.
When clouds the sunny skies o'ercast,
And weary grows my heart the while,
My joy it is that joy is past,
And gone my Lord's consoling smile.
My peace is hid in Jesus' breast, --
May His sweet will alone be done!
What fear can mar my perfect rest,
Who love the shadow as the sun?
My peace,'tis like a child to be,
That doth not plan, nor understand;
So, when I fall, Christ raiseth me,
And leads me gently by the hand.
My childish love I manifest,
And for His grace alone implore;
Then, if He hide, my love to test,
I only love Him all the more.
My peace, it is to hide my tears,
Nor ever show my bitter pain.
What joy to suffer through the years;
To veil with flowers each galling chain!
To suffer, yet make no complaint,
Since this, my Jesus, pleases Thee!
Could any trial make me faint?
'Tis Thy sweet cross is laid on me.
My peace,-- it is with God to plead,
In prayers and tears, by day and night;
For many souls to intercede,
And say to Him, my heart's Delight:
"O Little Brother, Heavenly King!
For Thee the cross I gladly bear.
My only joy is suffering,
Since thus Thy earthly lot I
share."
I long would live an exile here,
If that be Thy dear will for me;
Or soon would flee from exile drear,
If thou shouldst call me unto Thee.
Since Love's divine, celestial breath
Is all I need, my heart to bless,
What matters life, what matters death?
Love is my peace, my happiness!
January 21, 1897.
__________________________________________________________________
A LILY AMIDST THORNS.
FOR A NOVICE.
O King majestic, strong! e'en from my
earliest days,
I well may call myself Thy work of grace
alone;
Thy love to pay with love, Thy care to
tell with praise,
I come with joy to-day, before Thy
altar-throne.
Jesu, my Best-Beloved! what privilege is
this?
For nothingness am I. What have I done
for Thee?
Yet, clad in virginal white, it is
to-day my bliss
To follow Thee, the Lamb, in heavenly
ecstasy.
I know, alas, too well, that I am less
than naught,
Weakness itself, and poor; devoid of
virtues great
And yet Thou knowest well that I have
always sought
With longing heart, Thyself; on Thee
alone I wait
When my young heart first felt the fire
of love burn bright,
Thou cam'st, O Christ! that fire to Thee
alone to take;
Naught could content my soul but Thee,
my one Delight; --
The Infinite alone my burning thirst
could slake.
Like some wee lamb afar from its safe
sheltering fold,
Gayly I played, and nothing knew of
dangers drear.
Shepherdess, Queen of Heaven! thy
mother-love untold,
Thy mother-watchfulness, drew me thy
heart anear.
So, playing on the brink of pitfalls
dread and deep,
Afar I saw the hill of Carmel beckon me;
And I divined that they who climb its
summits steep,
Shall learn of love, to fly to heaven's
eternity.
An angel's purity, dear Lord, attracts
Thy heart,
An angel white as snow, in heaven's
celestial mirth.
Dost thou not also love a lily kept
apart
For Thee, from mire and taint; as white
as snow, on earth?
If he, within Thy sight, exults all
dazzling pure,
In brilliant stainless robes, whose
lustre blinds our gaze,
Hast Thou not kept my robe as safe, as
white, as sure?
My virgin heart has been the treasure of
my days.
__________________________________________________________________
A WITHERED ROSE.
Jesus, when Thou didst leave Thy
Mother's fond embrace,
Let go her hand;
And first, on our hard earth, Thy little
foot didst place,
And trembling stand;
Within Thy pathway, then fresh
rose-leaves would I spread, --
Their Maker's dower, --
That so Thy tiny feet might very softly
tread
Upon a flower.
These scattered rose-leaves form true
image of a soul,
O Child most dear!
That longs to immolate itself, complete
and whole,
Each moment here.
On Thy blest altars, Lord, fresh roses
fain would shine,
Radiant, near Thee;
They gladly give themselves. Another
dream is mine, --
To fade for Thee!
How gaily decks Thy feasts, dear Child,
a rose newblown,
Fragrant and fair!
But withered roses are forgot, -- the
wild winds' own, --
Cast anywhere.
Their scattered leaves seek now no
earthly joy or pelf;
For self, no gain.
Ah, little Jesus! so, I give Thee all!
Of self,
Let naught remain.
These roses trampled lie beneath the
passer's tread,
Unmarked, unknown.
I comprehend their lot; -- these leaves,
though pale and dead,
Are still Thine own.
For Thee they die; as I my time, my
life, my all
Have spent for Thee.
Men think a fading rose am I, whose
leaves must fall
At death's decree.
For Thee I die, for Thee, Jesus, Thou
Fairest Fair! --
Joy beyond telling! --
Thus, fading, would I prove my love
beyond compare,
All bliss excelling.
Beneath Thy feet, Thy way to smooth, through
life's long night,
My heart would lie;
And softening Thy hard path up Calvary's
awful height,
I thus would die.
May, 1897-
__________________________________________________________________
ABANDONMENT.
"Abandonment is the delicious fruit
of love."
-- St. Augustine.
I saw upon this earth
A marvelous tree arise;
Its vigorous root had birth,
O wonder! in the skies.
Never, beneath its shade,
Can aught disturb or wound;
There tempests are allayed,
There perfect rest is found
And love men call this tree,
From heaven's high portals sent;
Its fruit, how fair to see!
Is named abandonment.
What banquet here doth greet
Each reverent, hungry guest!
How, by its odors sweet,
The spirit is refreshed!
If we its fruit but touch,
Joy seems on us to pour.
Oh, taste, -- for never such
A feast was yours before.
In this tumultuous world
It brings us perfect peace;
Though storms be round us hurled,
Its quiet shall not cease.
Abandonment gives rest
In Thee, O Jesus Christ!
Here is the food most blest
That has Thy saints sufficed.
Spouse of my soul, draw nigher!
I give my all to Thee.
What more can I desire
Than Thy sweet Face to see?
Naught can I do but smile,
Safe folded to Thy breast.
They who have known no guile
Find there most perfect rest.
As looks the floweret small
Up to the glorious sun,
So I, though least of all,
Seek my Beloved One.
King Whom I love the most!
The star I always see
Is Thy White Sacred Host,
Little and low like me;
And its celestial power,
Down from Thy altar sent,
Wakes in my heart that flower, --
Perfect abandonment.
All creatures here below,
At times, they weary me;
And willingly I go,
With God alone to be.
And if, sometimes, dear Lord,
Of me Thou weariest,
I wait upon Thy word;
Thy holy will is best.
Smiling, I wait in peace,
Till Thou return to me;
And never shall they cease, --
My songs of love for Thee.
All pain I now despise,
Naught can disquiet me;
Swifter than eagle flies,
My spirit flies to Thee.
Beyond the gloomy cloud,
Ever the skies are fair,
And angels sing aloud,
And God is reigning there.
And yet without a tear
I wait that bliss above,
Who in the Host have here
The perfect fruit of love.
May, 1897
__________________________________________________________________
SECOND PART.
__________________________________________________________________
THE DEW DIVINE.
First Poem of Sister Teresa.
My sweetest Jesus! on Thy Mother's
breast
Thy little Face is radiant with love;
Deign to reveal to me the mystery blest
That drew Thee down to exile from above.
Let me hide with Thee neath her veil of
snow,
That now conceals Thee from all human
sight.
Alone with Thee, bright Morning Star,
I'll know
On earth a foretaste of heaven's deep
delight.
When dawn awakens in the far-off cast,
And first the sunbeams strike athwart
the skies,
Looks for a precious balm -- its daily
feast --
The unfolding floweret with expectant eyes.
Those spotless pearls of clear
translucent dew
Are full of some mysterious vital power;
They form the sap that ever doth renew
And ope the petals of the half-blown
flower.
Thou art the Flower with petals still
unclosed;
I gaze upon Thy beauty undefiled.
Thou art the Rose of Sharon long
foretold,
Still in Thy glorious bud, Thou heavenly
Child!
Thy dearest Mother's arms, so pure and
white,
Form for Thee now a royal cradle-throne;
Thy morning sun is Mary's bosom bright,
Thy sunlit dew her virginal milk, my
Own!
Ah, little Brother, shielded safe from
harms,
In Thy deep eyes Thy future clear I see,
--
Soon Thou wilt leave for us Thy Mother's
arms;
E'en now to suffer, Love is urging Thee.
And round Thy very Cross, Thou fading
Flower,
Still clings the fragrance of Thy
cradle-throne;
I recognize the pearls of Thy first
hour:
This Blood drew life from Mary's milk,
my Own.
Those pearly dews on all our altars
rest;
The angels fain would slake their thirst
thereby,
Offering to God these words, forever
blest:
"Behold the Lamb " -- St.
John's adoring cry.
Yes, see the Word, made Bread for
famished men,
The Eternal Priest, the Lamb on
altar-throne!
Since God's own Son is Mary's Son, all,
then,
This Bread drew life from Mary's milk,
my Own!
On love divine, on joy, on glory's
light,
The seraphs feast with rapture ever new;
I, a frail child, in the ciborium bright
See but a milk-white Host, like pearly
dew.
And since tis milk that suits with
childhood most,
And Thou art Love Itself upon Thy
throne,
So, tender Love, in my white daily Host
I see Thy Mother's virginal milk, my
Own!
February 2, 1893
__________________________________________________________________
TO OUR LADY OF VICTORIES.
QUEEN OF VIRGINS, OF APOSTLE'S, AND OF MARTYRS.
O Mother! thou my heart's desire
Hast granted now; so hear my cry
Of gratitude and love like fire
Thy child uplifts to thee on high.
By love for God and all mankind,
By bonds of prayer and earnest will,
Thou deignest now my soul to bind
To those who Christ's last wish fulfil.
Tis theirs through pagan lands to go,
And raise the cross of Christ on high;
Tis mine, within the cloister low,
His slightest will to satisfy.
I long for suffering; and the cross
With strong desire my heart doth crave.
A thousand deaths were gain, not loss,
If but one soul I help to save!
For this to Carmel's hill I've come, --
Myself to immolate for men.
Christ brought a fire from Heaven's high
dome
I fain would light in hearts again.
Where Afric suns the desert bake,
Where Asian Su-tchen [1] fronts the
east,
My Mother, I can help to make
Thy virginal name revered and blest.
My prayers shall travel every day,
As fast as mighty river rolls;
My brothers, missioned far away,
Helped here by me, shall conquer souls;
And so the pure baptismal stream
Shall make of many a Pagan child
A temple, where God's grace shall beam,
And God with man be reconciled.
Ah! might I see dear children fill
The heavenly courts where seraphs sing!
Them, by my prayers and God's sweet
will,
My brothers shall to Jesus bring.
The palm my spirit longs to gain,
My brother's hand in mine shall place.
A martyr's sister! Any pain
Would seem delight to win that grace.
The fruit of our apostolate
Our longing eyes at last shall see,
When, pressing on through heaven's gate,
Our souls shall meet the saved and Thee.
Be theirs the honor of the fight,
My priestly brothers far away!
Be mine, reflection of their light,
At last, in heaven's eternal day!
1897.
__________________________________________________________________
[1] Countries evangelized by her
"brothers," the missionaries.
__________________________________________________________________
THE QUEEN OF HEAVEN TO HER LITTLE
MARY.
TO A POSTULANT NAMED MARY.
Could I some childlike spirit see,
Resembling Christ, my little Child,
Then she with Him should cradled be
Upon my bosom undefiled.
Angelic spirits, hovering near,
Would envy such celestial bliss;
Yet Thee I chose, so come then, dear!
My Child awaits thy timid kiss.
Oh, Jesus' sister thou shalt be, --
I choose thee for "this better
part."
Wilt gladly bear Him company?
Then shalt thou rest upon my heart.
And I will shield thee neath my veil,
Near Bethlehem's Babe so fair and
bright.
Oh, thou shalt think the stars are pale,
Compared with this divine delight.
But would'st forever stay with me,
And with this Christ-Child, in my care?
Then thou all fitly dressed must be
In childhood's graces heavenly fair.
Upon thy brow mine eyes must trace
Thy light of purity divine;
Simplicity's most tender grace
Through all things in thy life must
shine.
God, Three in One, and One in Three,
By angels tremblingly adored,
Asks gently to be called by thee
"Flower of the Fields," that
simple word.
As fair white daisies lift their face
With steadfast meekness to the skies,
So thou must look with kindred grace
Within the Christ-Child's holy eyes.
To worldly men no charm appears
In this meek King Who wears no crown.
Thou oft shalt see the burning tears
From Jesus' eyes fail swiftly down.
Then thine own pains thou must forget,
To calm and soothe our Blessed One;
Then thou must prize the vows that set
Thy place so close to Him alone.
Our God, Whose mighty power controls
Fury of flood and force of flame,
Now lieth low, to save men's souls,
A Child enclothed in our shame.
The Word, the Father's Word on high,
My little Lamb, thy Brother dear,
Now speaks no word, He breathes no sigh;
Silent and dumb He lieth here.
That silence forms the mystic sign
Of love beyond all utterance deep;
Its meaning thou must well divine
And day by day like silence keep.
And if, at times, His eyelids close,
Rest then near Him in perfect peace;
His Sacred Heart no slumber knows,
His love for thee shall never cease.
Nor think, dear Mary, anxiously,
About the task of every day;
To love thy blessed work shall be,
Its holy crown be thine for aye.
Lo! if some voice reproaches thee
Because no great things thou hast done,
Oh, make this answer steadfastly:
"But I Ioved much!" So heaven
is won.
Our Lord Himself thy crown shall weave;
And if thou seek His love alone,
If all for Him thou gladly leave,
Near His for aye shall be thy throne.
When life's long vigil is all past,
Heav'n's dawn shall break in joy for
thee;
And face to face, at last, at last,
The Vision of God shall welcome thee!
CHRISTMAS, 1894
__________________________________________________________________
WHY I LOVE THEE MARY.
LAST POEM OF SISTER TERESA.
Fain would I sing, O Mother blest! the
reasons why I love thee;
Why e'en to name thy name, with joy, O
Mary! fills my heart;
And why the glorious thoughts of thee,
in greatness far above me,
Inspire no fear within my soul, so dear
and sweet thou art.
Yet, if I were to see thee now, in
majesty stupendous,
Surpassing all the crowned saints in
highest heaven above,
Scarce could I dream I am thy child, (O
truth sublime, tremendous!),
For I should think myself to be unworthy
of thy love.
The mother, who desires to be her
child's best earthly treasure,
Must ever share its grief with it, must
understand its pain.
Queen of my heart! how many years, thy
sorrows had no measure;
What bitter tears thine eyes have shed,
my worthless heart to gain!
So, musing on thy earthly life, in
Scripture's sacred story,
I dare to look upon thy face, and unto
thee draw nigh;
For when I see thee suffering, --
concealed thy marvelous glory --
It is not hard, then, to believe thy
little child am 1.
When Gabriel came from heaven's courts,
to ask thee to be mother
Of God Who reigns omnipotent to all
eternity,
I see thee, Mary! then prefer to that
great grace, another, --
Through all thy consecrated life a
virgin pure to be.
And so I now can comprehend, immaculate
white maiden!
Why thou wast dearer unto God than
heaven itself could be;
And how thy humble, human frame, with
mortal weakness laden,
Could yet contain the Eternal Word,
Love's vast unbounded Sea.
I love thee when I hear thee call
thyself the handmaid only
Of God, Whom thou didst win to earth by
thy humility;
All-powerful it made thee then, above
all women, lonely,
And drew, into thy bosom chaste, the
Blessed Trinity,
The Holy Spirit, Love Divine,
o'ershadowed thee, O Mother!
And God the Father's only Son incarnate
was in thee.
How many sinful, sorrowing souls shall
dare to call Him -- Brother!
For He shall be called: Jesus, thy
first-born, eternally.
And oh! despite my frailties, dear Mary!
well thou knowest
That I at times, like thee, possess the
Almighty in my breast.
Shall I not tremble at the gift, O God!
that Thou bestowest ?
A mother's treasure is her child's: -- I
still my fears to rest.
For I, O Mary, am thy child! O Mother
dear and tender.
Shall not thy virtues and thy love plead
now with God for me?
Then, when the pure white sacred Host,
in all its veiled splendor,
Visits my heart, thy spotless Lamb will
think He comes to thee.
Oh, thou dost help me to believe that
e'en for us, frail mortals,
Tis not impossible to walk where we thy
footsteps see;
The narrow road before us now, thou
lightest to heaven's portals.
Who lowliest virtues here below didst
practise perfectly.
Near thee, O Mother! I would stay,
little, unknown and lowly;
Of earthly glory, oh! how plain I see
the vanity!
In the house of St. Elizabeth, thy
cousin dear and holy,
I learn of thee to practise well most
ardent charity.
There, too, I listen on my knees, great
Queen of all the Angels!
To that sweet canticle that flows in
rapture from thy soul;
So dost thou teach me how to sing like
heavenly, glad evangels
And glorify my Jesus, Who alone can make
me whole.
Thy burning words of love divine are
mystic flowers victorious,
Whose fragrance shall embalm the long,
long, ages yet to be.
In thee, indeed, the Almighty King hath
done great things and glorious!
I meditate upon them now, and bless my
God in thee.
When good St. Joseph did not know the
great archangel's story,
Which thou wouldst fain conceal from men
in thy humility,
O tabernacle of the Lord! thou didst not
tell thy glory,
But veiled the Saviour's presence in
profoundest secrecy,
Thy silence, how I love it now, so
eloquent, so moving!
For me it is a concert sweet, of melody
sublime;
I learn thereby the grandeur of a soul
that God is proving,
That only looks for help from Him and in
His chosen time.
Then later still, O Joseph! and O Mary!
I behold you
Repulsed in little Bethlehem by all the
dwellers there;
From door to door you vainly went, for
all the people told you
They had no place to shelter you, no
time to give you care.
Their rooms were for the great alone;
and in a stable dreary
The Queen of Heaven gave birth to Him
Who made both heaven and earth.
O Mother of my Saviour! then, thou wast
not sad nor weary;
In that poor shed how grand thou wert!
how painless was that Birth!
And there when, wrapped in swaddling
bands, I see the King Eternal, --
When of the Word divine, supreme, the
feeble cry I hear --
O Mary, can I envy e'en the angels' joy
supernal?
The Master Whom they worship is My
little Brother dear.
What praises must I give to thee, who,
in earth's gloomy prison,
Brought forth this lovely heaven-sent
Flower, before our eyes to bloom!
Though unto shepherds and wise men a
star had grandly risen,
These things were kept within thy heart
as in some secret room.
I love thee when I see thee next, like
other Hebrew women,
To Israel's temple turn thy steps when
dawned the fortieth day;
I love thee yielding humbly up, to aged,
favored Simeon,
The Lord Who should redeem us all when
years had fled away.
And first my happy smiles awake, to hear
his glorious singing, --
That "Nunc Dimittis" that
shall ring till Time itself shall die;
But soon those joyous notes are changed,
and my hot tears are
springing; --
"A sword of grief must be thy
lot," thus runs his prophecy.
O Queen of all the martyr-host! till thy
life here is ended,
That sharp, sharp sword shall pierce thy
heart! At once, it pierces
sore.
That thy dear Child from Herod's wrath
may surely be defended,
I see thee as an exile fled to Egypt's
pagan shore.
Beneath thy veil thy Jesus slept, thy
peace no fears were daunting,
When Joseph came to bid thee wake, and
straightway flee from home;
And then at once I see thee rise, as
called by angels chanting,
Content, without a questioning word, in
foreign lands to roam.
In Egypt and in poverty, I think I see
thee, Mary,
All glad at heart, all radiant, with joy
beyond compare.
What matters exile unto thee? Thy true
home cannot vary.
Hast thou not Jesus, with thee still?
and with Him Heaven is there.
But, oh! in fair Jerusalem, a sorrow,
vast, unbounded,
Indeed o'erwhelmed thy mother-heart with
grief beyond compare; --
For three days Jesus hid Himself; no
word to thee was spoken.
Thou truly wast an exile then, and knew
what exiles bear.
And when, at last, thine eyes again were
thy Son's face beholding,
And love entranced thee, watching Him
among the doctors wise,
"My Child!" thou saidst,
"now tell me why didst leave my arms
enfolding?
Didst Thou not know we sought for Thee
with tear-endimmed eyes?
The Child-God answered to thee then, to
thy sweet, patient wooing,
O Mother whom He loved so well, whose
heart was well-nigh broken!
"How is it that you sought for Me?
Wist not I must be doing
My Father's work?" Oh, who shall
sound the depths those words betoken?
But next the Gospel tells me that, in
His hidden mission,
Subject to Joseph and to thee was
Christ, the Holy Boy;
And then my heart reveals to me how true
was His submission,
And how beyond all words to tell, thy
daily, perfect joy.
And now the temple's mystery I
understand, dear Mother!
The answer, and the tone of voice, of
Christ, my King adored.
Twas meant the pattern thou shouldst be,
thereafter to all other
Tried souls who seek, in Faith's dark
night the coming of the Lord.
Since Heaven's high King has willed it
so His Mother and His dearest
Should know the anguish of that night
the torn heart's deepest woe,
Then are notthose, who suffer thus, to
Mary's heart the nearest?
And is not love in suffering God's
highest gift below?
All, all that He has granted me, oh!
tell Him He may take it!
Tell Him, dear Mother! He may do
whate'er He please with me;
That He may bruise my heart to-day, and
make it sore, and break it,
So only through Eternity my eyes His
Face may see!
I know, indeed, at Nazareth, O Virgin
rich in graces!
As the lowly live, so thou didst live,
and sought no better things;
Of ecstasies and wonders there, our eyes
can find no traces,
O thou who daily dwelt beside the
incarnate King of Kings!
On earth, we know, is very great the
number of the lowly;
With neither fear nor trembling now we
dare to look on thee.
By common lot and humble path, our
Mother dear and holy,
Thou wast content to walk to heaven, and
thus our guide to be.
Through all my weary exile here, I fain
would walk beside thee.
O my pure and precious Mother! be near
to me each day!
Thy beauty thrills my heart with joy.
Deign now to guard and guide me!
What depths of love are in thy heart for
me thy child, alway!
Before thy kind maternal glance, my many
fears are banished;
Thou teachest me to gently weep, and
then to sing for joy;
Thou dost not scorn our happy days, nor
hast thou wholly vanished;
Thou smilest on us tenderly, as once
upon thy Boy!
When bride and groom at Cana's feast
knew well the wine was failing,
And knew not whence to bring supply,
their need thine eyes perceived,
To Christ, the Master, thou didst speak,
who knew His power availing,
--
The Maker of created things, in Whom thy
soul believed.
But first He seemed thy mother-heart's
kind prayer to be denying.
"What matters this, O woman! unto
Me and thee?" said He.
But "Mother," in His soul's
deep depths, His filial heart was crying;
And that first miracle He wrought,
Mother, lie wrought for thee.
One day, while sinners crowded round to
hear what He was saying,
In His desire to save their souls and
them to heaven beguile,
Lo! thou wast there amid the throng, and
thou wast meekly praying
That they would let thee nearer come,
and speak with Him awhile.
And then thy Son spoke out this word
mysterious like that other.
To show us thus His marvelous love for
all the souls of men; --
He said: "Who is My brother, and My
sister, and My Mother?
Tis he who does My Father's will!"
The Father's will, again!
O Virgin, pure, immaculate! O Mother,
tenderest, dearest!
Hearing these words that Jesus spake,
this time thou wast not grieved.
No! thy great heart it leaped for joy, O
thou His friend the nearest!
Because our longing souls likewise to
kinship He received.
Oh, how thy heart is glad to know His
love to us is given, --
The treasure, that cannot be weighed, of
His Divinity!
Who shall not love thee well to-day, and
bless thee in high heaven,
Seeing thy tender care for us, thy
generosity!
For truly thou dost love us all as thy
Child Jesus loves us;
And for our sake thou didst consent to
stay when He had risen.
Since, if we love, then all to give,
e'en self, both tries and proves
us,
So thou, to prove thy love, didst stay
in earth's dark, dreary prison.
Thy love for souls our Saviour knew,
that love His heart had sounded;
He left thee to us when He went to God's
right hand on high.
Refuge of sinners! on thy prayers how
many hopes are grounded!
Christ gave thee to us from His cross;
for us He hears thy cry.
For thou -- His Mother -- there didst
stand, that awful day, on
Calvary;
As a priest before God's altar, at the
cross so thou didst stand.
And to appease the Father's wrath, didst
offer up, O Mary!
Thy Jesus, our Emmanuel, at God's
supreme command.
A prophet had foretold this thing, O
Mother brokenhearted!
"Is any sorrow like to thine?"
Thy grief no words can say!
Blest Queen of martyrs! left on earth
when Jesus had departed!
Twas thy heart's blood for us was given
on that unequalled day.
Henceforth thy shelter in thy woe was
St. John's humble dwelling;
The son of Zebedee replaced the Son Whom
heaven adored.
Naught else the Gospels tell us of thy
life, in grace excelling;
It is the last they say of thee, sweet
Mother of my Lord!
But that deep silence, oh! I think it
means that, up in glory,
When time is past, and into heaven thy
children safe are come,
The Eternal Word, my Mother dear, Himself
will tell thy story,
To charm our souls, thy children's
souls, in our eternal home.
Soon I shall hear that harmony, that
blissful, wondrous singing;
Soon, soon, to heaven that waits for us,
my soul shall swiftly fly.
O Thou who cam'st to smile on me at dawn
of life's beginning!
Come once again to smile on me. . . .
Mother! the night is nigh.
I fear no more thy majesty, so far, so
far above me,
For, I have suffered sore with thee; now
hear my heart's deep cry!
Oh! let me tell thee face to face, dear
Virgin! how I love thee;
And say to thee forevermore: thy little
child am I.
May,1897.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
THIRD PART.
__________________________________________________________________
TO MY ANGEL GUARDIAN.
O glorious guardian of my frame!
In heaven's high courts thou shinest
bright,
As some most pure and holy flame,
Before the Lord of endless light.
Yet for my sake thou com'st to earth,
To be my brother, Angel dear:
My friend and keeper from my birth,
By day and night to me most near.
Knowing how weak a child am I,
By thy strong hand thou guidest me;
The stones that in my pathway lie,
I see thee move them carefully.
Ever thy heavenly tones invite
My soul to look to God alone;
And ever grows thy face more bright,
When I more meek and kind have grown.
O thou who speedest through all space
More swiftly than the lightnings fly!
Go very often, in my place,
To those I love most tenderly.
With thy soft touch, oh! dry their
tears;
Tell them the cross is sweet to bear;
Speak my name softly in their ears,
And Jesu's name, supremely fair.
Through all my life, though brief it be,
I fain would succor souls from sin.
Dear Angel, sent from heaven to me,
Kindle thy zeal my heart within!
Naught but my holy poverty,
And daily cross to give have I;
O join them to thine ecstasy,
And offer them to God on high.
Thine are heaven's glory and delight,
The riches of the King of kings;
The Host in our ciboriums bright
Is mine, and all the wealth pain brings.
So with the Cross, and with the Host,
And with thine aid, dear Angel Friend,
I wait in peace, on time's dark coast,
Heaven's happiness that knows no end.
February, 1897.
__________________________________________________________________
TO MY LITTLE BROTHERS IN HEAVEN,
THE HOLY INNOCENTS.
"The Lord shall gather together the
lambs with His arm, and shall take
them up in His bosom." Is. 40:11.
Happy those whom God regards as
justified without works! for to him
that worketh, the reward is not reckoned
according to grace, but
according to debt." It is, then,
gratuitously that those who do no
works are justified by grace, in virtue
of the Redemption of which
Jesus Christ is the Author. Romans 4: 4,
5, 6.
O happy little ones! with what sweet
tenderness
The King of Heaven
Blessed you, when here below! How often
His caress
To you was given!
You were the type of all the Innocents
to come.
In dreams I know
The boundless joy the King gives you in
heaven's high home,
He loves you so!
Before earth's bitter griefs, dear
lilies of the Lord,
Had dimmed your eyes,
You had beheld the gifts, -- how very
beauteous! -- stored
In Paradise.
O fragrant buds, soon plucked at day's
sweet dawning bright,
By God's own hand;
His Sacred Heart is now the Sun by Whose
soft light
Those buds expand!
What perfect care and oh! what ceaseless
watchfulness,
What love alway,
Lavishes on you here our Mother Church,
to bless
Souls of a day!
In her maternal arms, you were in holy
rite
To Jesus given;
And through eternity, you will be the
delight
Of His fair Heaven.
Dear little ones! you join the virginal
court, in state
Following the Lamb;
And you the sweet new song shall sing (O
privilege great!)
Unto His Name.
You to the conqueror's palm, without the
deadly fight,
Have safely come.
O charming victors: Christ from you has
taken all blight,
And brought you home.
It needs no precious stones, all
luminous and gay,
To deck your hair;
The lustre of your curls, sweet
Innocents, to-day,
Makes Heaven more fair.
To you grand martyrs lend their palms;
they give their crowns,
Your brows to grace;
Upon their knees you find, dear
children, now your thrones,
In their embrace.
In splendid courts on high, with tiny
cherub-throngs
Gayly you play:
Beloved baby-band! your childish sports
and songs
Charm heaven alway.
God tells you how He makes the birds,
the flowers, the snow,
The sunlight clear;
No genius here below knows half the
things you know,
O children, dear!
From Heaven's azure vault you tear the
veils that make
Such mystery:
The glowing myriad stars in your wee
hands you take,
Your toys to be.
Running Heaven's highways, there, your
tiny footsteps leave
A silvery trace;
In the bright Milky Way, I think I see,
at eve,
Each shining face.
To Mary's welcoming arms, when your gay
games are done,
How swift you hie!
Hiding beneath her veil your heads like
Christ Her Son
In sleep you lie.
Heaven's darling little pets! audacity
like this
Delights our Lord;
And you can even dare caress and gently
kiss
His Face adored.
That Blessed Lord has deigned you for my
pattern here
To give to me;
O Holy Innocents, like you so pure and
dear
I strive to be.
Pray, pray, that I may gain all
childhood's graces best, --
Your candor true,
Your sweet abandonment, your innocence
so blest,
That charm my view!
Thou, of my exiled soul, O Lord! full
well dost know
The ardent prayer.
Fair Lily of the Vale, on Thee I would
bestow Earth's lilies fair;
These buds of spring I love, and long to
find for Thee,
Thou King adored!
Grant the baptismal grace to each one
tenderly;
Then cull them, Lord!
My pains and my joys I offer with
delight, --
For children's souls:
Thus to augment Thy ranks of Innocents
most white,
The while time rolls;
And, mongst these Innocents, I ask Thee
that it place
To me be given.
Grant to me, as to them, Thy kiss, O
wondrous grace
Jesus! in Heaven.
February, 1897.
__________________________________________________________________
THE MELODY OF ST. CECILIA.
"During the sound of the
instruments,
Cecilia was singing in her heart."
--
Office of the Church.
Thou glorious Saint of God! in ecstasy I
see
The path of shining light thy footsteps
left below;
And still I think I hear thy heavenly
melody;
Of thy celestial chant e'en here the
sounds we know.
Now, of my exiled soul, accept the
fervent prayer;
Upon thy virginal heart let my young
heart find rest!
Almost unequalled here wast thou, O lily
fair,
Immaculately pure, and how divinely
blest!
Most chaste white dove of Rome! through
all thy life on earth
No other spouse than Christ thy heart
desired to find.
He chose thy favored soul, e'en from thy
hour of birth,
And made it rich in grace and virtues
all combined.
And yet a mortal came, on fire with
youth and pride;
He saw how sweet thou wert, thou white
celestial flower!
And then, to gain thy love -- to win
thee for his bride --
He strove with all his strength, from
that momentous hour.
Soon bridal feasts he spread, his palace
decked with glory,
Bade minstrels play their best, and
songs ring loudly there,
While still thy virginal heart sang soft
thy Saviour's story,
Whose echo rose to heaven like incense
sweet and rare.
How couldst thou sing, so far from
Heaven, thy fatherland,
When seeing near thy side, that mortal
bold and frail?
Did not thy heart crave, then, in
heaven's high courts to stand,
And dwell, forever safe, with Christ
beyond the veil?
But no! thy harp I hear vibrate like
seraph's singing,
Harp of thy love, whose sound so softly
smote the ear;
These words, to Christ thy Lord, in thy
sweet chant were ringing:
"Now keep my young heart pure, O
Jesus, Spouse most dear."
Abandonment how true! O wondrous melody!
By that celestial chant thy love now
stands revealed --
The love that knows no fear, but sleeps
in ecstasy
Upon the Saviour's Heart, from every ill
concealed.
In wide blue skies appeared the radiant
white star
That came, to lighten up, with meek and
timid glow,
The luminous night that shows, unveiled
to us afar,
That virginal love, in heaven, which
virgin spouses know.
........
But here, Valerian dreamed of earthly
joy and bliss.
Cecilia! thou alone wast his young
heart's desire.
Ah, when thy hand he gained, he gained
far more than this!
That hand showed him a path to better
things, and higher.
"O friend! " to him thou
saidst "near me doth watch alway
An angel of the Lord, who keeps me pure
as snow,
Who leaves me not alone, neither by
night nor day;
E'en in my sleep, his wings protect from
harm and woe.
At night, his holy face, with clear and
silvery light --
A glory lovelier far than morning sun,
-- doth shine.
That face to me appears like some blest
image bright,
Transparent, marvelous, of God's own
face divine."
Then cried Valerian: "Show me this
angel blest,
That I may give my faith to thy firm
word, fair maid;
Or else believe that hate for thee will
fill my breast,
And thou, before my wrath, shalt shudder
sore afraid."
O dove, within the rock of God's strong
heart concealed,
No fear hadst thou, that night, of
subtlest fowler's snare:
The Face of Jesus, then, Its light to
thee revealed;
His sacred gospels lay upon thy bosom
fair.
"Valerian!" that word was said
with gentlest smile,
"My heavenly guide, who hears, will
answer thy request.
Soon thou his face shalt see; his voice
shall thee beguile,
For martyrdom to seek, and thus to find
thy rest.
But, ere his face thou see, baptismal
grace must make
Thy soul as white as snow, that God
therein may dwell.
The one true God Himself thy heart His
home shall make,
The Spirit give thee life, that thou
mayst serve Him well;
The Word, the Father's Son, and Son of
Mary chaste,
Must immolate Himself, in His vast love
for thee,
Upon His altar throne; and there thou
must be placed,
Beside that throne, to feed on Him Who
died for thee.
Then shall the seraph bright, thee for
his brother, claim,
And, seeing in thy heart the home of God
his King,
Thee shall he lift from earth's dark
dens of sin and shame;
Thee, to his own abode, that angel then
shall bring."
"Ah! in my heart I feel a new fire
burn to-night!"
Transformed by God's own grace, the
young patrician cried.
Oh! come, within my soul to dwell, Thou
Lord of light!
Worthy my love shall be of thee, Cecile,
my bride!"
In his baptismal robe, the type of
innocence,
Valerian, at last, the angel's face
beheld;
In awe he gazed upon that grave
magnificence;
That radiant, crown-decked brow his old
ambitions quelled.
Fresh roses in his hands did that grand
spirit bear,
Pure lilies, dazzling white, to his
strong heart he pressed.
In gardens of high heaven had bloomed
those blossoms rare,
Beneath the rays of love from their
Creator blest.
"O Spouses dear to Heaven! the
martyrs' royal rose
Shall crown your brows," exclaimed
that angel from on high
"No voice on earth can sing, no
mortal tongue disclose,
Its value beyond price, that lasts
eternally.
I lose myself in God, His attributes
proclaim;
But I cannot, for Him, bear pain, though
fain would I!
I cannot shed or tears or blood for His
dear name;
To prove my love for Him, I cannot
gladly die.
Oh! purity is ours, the angels' special
grace, --
Our vast, unbounded joy, that ne'er
shall fade away;
But o'er our lofty lot yours hath a loftier
place,
For you -- you can be pure, and you can
die, to-day'
"Of chaste virginity, you see the
emblem here,
In these white lilies sweet, -- fair
gift from Christ the Lamb;
The pure white crown He gives, in glory
you shall wear;
And you for aye shall chant the new song
to His name.
Your union, spotless, chaste, shall win
great souls to God --
Souls that no other spouse, than Christ,
shall seek on earth;
And near His heavenly throne, when
life's hard path is trod,
There you shall see them shine, in
saintly joy and mirth."
Cecilia, lend to me thy melody most
sweet:
How many souls would I convert to Jesus
now.
I fain would die, like thee, to win them
to His feet;
For him give all my tears, my blood. Oh,
help me thou!
Pray for me that I gain, on this our
pilgrim way
Perfect abandonment -- that sweetest
fruit of love.
Saint of my heart! oh, soon, bring me to
endless day;
Obtain that I may fly, with thee, to
heaven above!
April28, 1893.
__________________________________________________________________
CANTICLE OF ST. AGNES.
"My only Love is Christ."
From the Acts of her Martyrdom
Christ is my Love alone, all life is He
for me;
He is my one Betrothed, Who charms my
dazzled eyes;
E'en now I hear vibrate the solemn
harmony
Of His melodious sighs.
With precious stones and gold He decks
my flowing hair,
Already on my hand shines bright His
nuptial ring;
And many lustrous stars, magnificently
fair,
Are love-gifts from my King.
With pearls, all price beyond, has He
adorned my hands;
About my neck He placed a necklace
wondrous bright;
Celestial rubies red, from far-off
unknown lands,
Bedeck my ears to-night.
Betrothed am I to Him on Whom the angels
wait,
Trembling before His throne throughout
eternity;
The sun and moon His praise with rapture
will relate,
Till time shall cease to be.
Divine His Person is; heaven is His
realm of bliss;
He for His Mother chose a Virgin here on
earth;
Who no beginning hath, nor end, His
Father is, --
Eternal is that birth.
Ah! when this Jesus Christ at times to
touch I dare,
More pure becomes my heart; more chaste,
dear Lord, am I!
The kisses of His mouth give me the
treasure fair
Of blest virginity.
His signet He hath set already on my
face,
That so no earthly love may dare draw
nigh to me;
Kept thus for Christ alone, by His
abiding grace,
His perfect purity.
Cleansed by the precious Blood He shed
on Calvary's cross,
Already here I taste of heaven's
matchless bliss;
The honey and the milk -- with joys that
know not loss --
Come to me with His kiss.
No thought of fear have I, of either
flame or sword:
For naught can now disturb this perfect
heavenly peace
A fire of love divine pervades my soul,
O Lord:
And never shall it cease.
January21, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
TO THE VENERABLE THEOPHANE VENARD,
MARTYRED.
O Theophane, [2] angelic martyr blest!
All the elect to sing thy praise aspire;
And thee to hail, behold! there stand
confest
The Seraphim, with love divine on fire.
I, a poor exile still on this dull
earth,
Can not with them my joyful song
combine;
Yet will I take my harp, and sing thy
worth,
And claim thee as a kindred soul to
mine.
Thy brief bright sojourn here was like a
psalm
Of heavenly melody, all hearts
upraising;
Thy poet nature sang sweet songs like
balm,
Through all thy life thy dearest Saviour
praising.
Writing thy farewell thy last earthly
night,
That farewell was a song of Spring and
love,
"I, little butterfly, the first
take flight,
Of all our loved ones, to our home
above."
Thou, happy martyr! in the hour of death
Didst taste the deep delight of
suffering:
Thou didst declare, e'en with thy dying
breath,
That it is sweet to suffer for the King.
When the stern headsman made thee offer
fair
Thy torture to abridge, how swift thy
word:
"Oh, blest am I my Master's cup to
share!
Long let my suffering last with Christ
my Lord!"
O virginal lily! life had but begun,
When Jesus heard thy loving heart's
desire.
I see in thee a flower whose race is
run,
Yet his hand plucked it but to lift it
higher.
And now, no longer, exile dost thou
know;
Thy ecstasy the Blest exult to see.
Thou Rose of love! the Virgin white as
snow
Rejoices in thy heavenly purity.
Soldier of Christ, thy armor lend to me!
For sinners' souls I long to give my
life;
For them to give my tears, my blood,
like thee:
Protect me then, and arm me for the
strife!
For them I fain would fight, till life
is done; --
God's kingdom take by force, their souls
to save.
"Not peace to earth I bring,"
(so spake God's Son),
"But fire and sword I bring."
Oh, saving glaive!
How dear is now to me that pagan horde,
The object of thy burning love below;
If Jesus would to me such grace accord,
Ah, thither with what ardor would I go.
Before Him space and distance fade away.
This earth is but a plaything on the
breeze;
My actions, my small sufferings to-day,
Can make my Jesus loved beyond the seas.
Oh, were I but a fading springtime
flower,
That soon the Lord would gather to His
breast!
Come down, O Theophane, at my last hour;
Come down for me, thou youthful martyr
blest!
Come, with the virginal flames of purest
love,
Come, burn from out my soul all earthly
clay,
That I may fly to heaven's courts above,
And join thy cohort in unending day.
February 2, 1897.
__________________________________________________________________
[2] Sister Teresa died in 1897, since
then the Life of Theophane,
beheaded for the faith at Tonquin in
1861, has become almost as well
known as her own. These kindred souls in
Heaven, have been inciting
thousands of souls upon earth to
spiritual heroism. He crying out for
the Foreign Missions, she opening the
road for Christ's little ones to
run in the hidden ways of prayer and
penance.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
FOURTH PART.
__________________________________________________________________
THE STORY OF A SHEPHERDESS WHO
BECAME A QUEEN.
(To a young Sister named Mary Magdalen,
for her Profession day.)
On this glad day, dear Magdalene,
We come to sing with praises due
The wonderful, strong, gentle chain
That binds your heavenly Spouse and you.
Oh, hear us tell the charming story
Of how a shepherdess once heard
A Monarch bid her share His glory,
And how she answered to his word.
The shepherdess sing,
Whom the Heavenly King
With glory-crowned head
Doth here, this day, at Carmel, wed!
This shepherdess, so small, so poor,
While spinning, kept her flocks with
care.
She loved the flowers beside her door,
The birds that fluttered here and there;
She knew what tongue the river spake,
The verdant woods, the skies above;
She loved them for her Master's sake,
As tokens of His boundless love.
But oh! she loved most tenderly
Jesus and Mary. All her heart
She gave, and they loved Melanie,
And came to speak with her apart.
"Will you," to her the sweet
Queen said,
"Near me, on Carmel, come to dwell?
Will you be Magdalene, instead
Of Melanie, and serve God well?
"Child, quit your flock, seek God
alone,
Nor mourn the lambs you ne'er shall see!
Upon this mountain all my own,
Jesus your only Lamb shall be."
"Oh, come! thy soul has charmed My
sight,"
Spake Jesus, "Come, be thou My
bride!
Who gave to God all earth's delight!
Come, reign forever at My side!"
Gladly the humble shepherdess
Responded to that gentle call;
And following Mary, swift to bless,
She came to Carmel's lofty wall.
*********** ****
Tis you, O little Magdalene!
We feast with, on this joyous day!
The shepherdess is now a Queen,
Near Christ, her Spouse and King alway.
O! cherished Sister, you know well
To serve our God, it is to reign!
Our Jesus did not cease to tell
This lesson through His life of pain;
"Among the great, on heaven's
height,
Who would stand first eternally
Must choose on earth the lowest place,
To hide from sight -- the least to
be."
Happy are you, O Magdalene!
In your fixed lot in Carmel's home,
Can there, for you, be any pain
Who here so close to heaven come?
Both Martha's, Mary's is your part --
To pray, to wait upon the Lord --
To love Him here with all your heart,
And have Him for your great reward.
Yet if, sometimes, sharp suffering
Shall come to flood your soul with
night,
From out your pain will gladness spring
For God you suffer. What delight!
His tenderness, divine and sweet,
Shall make you very soon forget
The thorns that lie beneath your feet,
The tears with which your eyes were wet.
The angels envy you to-day!
They fain would taste your joy, Marie!
Your ecstasy, divinely gay --
The spouse of Jesus Christ to be.
Soon, soon among the angel bands,
Among the Virtues, Thrones and Powers,
Your Spouse and King in heaven's bright
lands
You, too, shall praise through endless
hours.
This shepherdess soon,
So poor neath the moon,
In heaven a queen,
Beside her King shall yet be seen.
November20,1894.
__________________________________________________________________
PRAYER OF THE CHILD OF A SAINT [3]
TO HER GOOD FATHER, CALLED HOME TO GOD,
July 29, 1894.
Remember thou how once upon this earth
Thy joy was found in caring for us all!
Hear now the prayer of those who owe
their birth
To thee, dear father; bless us when we
call!
A little while ago, in Heaven, our home
above,
Thou to our mother's side hast come with
saintly love.
Together now ye reign,
in Heaven made one again.
O'er us keep guard!
Remember thy first-born, thy bright
Marie,
She who was dearest ever in thy sight;
Remember how her charm, her gaiety,
Her love, her goodness, filled thee with
delight,
That daily source of joy thou didst
renounce -- for God;
And thou didst bless the band, that made
thee feel His rod.
Thy "diamond" bright and fair,
Thy rarest of the rare,
Remember thou!
Remember thou thy beautiful "pure
pearl,"
The timid lamb once to thy tendence
given!
Trusting in God, behold thy lovely girl
Guide Carmel's flock along the road to
Heaven.
Of thy beloved ones, "Mother"
is she to-day:
Then come to guide even now thy darling
on her way!
This Carmel of Thine own
Remember at Heaven's throne,-
Remember thou!
Remember now thy strong and ardent
prayer
Made here for thy third child, thy
Leonie!
God heard thee; for to her this earth so
fair
But banishment and exile seems to be.
She, too, from this gay world, to God
would turn aside;
She loves Him only, and becomes His
bride.
Her ardent, burning sighs,
Her Heaven-sent ecstasies,
Remember thou!
Remember thou thy faithful child,
Celine,
Who was to thee like angel from the
skies,
When close to thine the Face of Christ
was seen,
Testing thy virtue by great sacrifice!
In Heaven thou reignest now; her task is
past and gone;
Now unto Jesus Christ she gives her life
alone.
Protect her future days,
Who very often says:
Remember thou!
And, oh! remember thou thy "little
queen," --
The tender love with which her heart
o'erflowed;
Remember where at first her steps have
been,
And whose hand guided her along her
road.
Papa, remember now, that in her infancy
Her innocence was given into God's care
by thee.
Even her curling hair
To thee was dear and fair!
Remember thou!
Remember thou that on the terrace green
Her place was often on thy saintly
knees;
And murmuring a prayer for her,
"thy queen,"
Thou didst sing softly on the Sunday
breeze,
And she, upon thy heart, saw in thy holy
face
A shining of Heaven's light, a strange
unearthly grace.
The beauty, sung by thee,
Was of eternity!
Remember thou!
Remember now that Sunday ever blest,
When thou a pure white flower to her
didst give,
And to thy child, dose to thy bosom
pressed,
Didst grant the grace on Carmel's hill
to live.
Oh, father dear, recall that in her
trial-hour
Sincerest proofs were given of all thy
loving power,
At Bayeux and at Rome
Showing her Heaven as home!
Remember thou!
Remember that the Holy Father's hand
Within the Vatican was laid on thee.
The mystery, then, thou couldst not
understand,
The mystic sign of suffering to be.
But now thy children here to thee uplift
their prayer;
They bless thy bitter cross, that won
thy coronet rare.
Upon thy brow, -- fair sight! --
There shine, in Heaven's own light,
Nine lilies bright!
August, 1894.
__________________________________________________________________
[3] SISTER TERESA was the youngest of
nine children, four of whom died
in infancy, four became Carmelite nuns,
and one a Visitation nun. These
are the "nine lilies bright,"
referred to in the poem here as forming
their saintly father's coronet in
Heaven. He used to call Teresa his
"little queen," Marie his
"diamond," Pauline his "pearl." He died of
paralysis, after months of helplessness,
tended by Celine. These
remarks serve to explain the poem. . . .
__________________________________________________________________
WHAT I USED TO LOVE.
COMPOSED AT THE REQUEST OF HER SISTER
CELINE, SOME MONTHS AFTER THE LATTER'S
ENTRANCE INTO CARMEL.
"I have in my Beloved the
mountains, the solitary and wooded valleys,
the foreign islands, the resounding
rivers, the murmur of the amorus
zephyrs, * * * the peaceful night, so
like the dawn of day, the
harmonious solitude, -- all that charms
and that augments love." -- St.
John of the Cross.
Oh, how I love your memory,
My childhood days, so glad and free!
To keep my innocence, dear Lord, for
Thee,
Thy love came to me night and day,
Alway.
So, when a little child was I,
To Thee I gave me utterly
Making with joy to Thee my promise high,
To wed a King beyond my view, --
Jesu!
I loved the Mother loved by Thee;
Saint Joseph, too, was friend to me.
How near Thy promised heaven seemed to
be,
When shone, reflected in mine eyes,
The skies!
I loved the fields of wheat, the plain
Of emerald grass, the gentle rain.
Joy grew so great in me, twas almost
pain!
How dear my sisters' presence there;
How fair!
I loved to cull the grass, the flowers,
Forget-me-nots in leafy bowers;
I found the violets' perfume, all the
hours, --
With crocus growing neath my feet,-
Most sweet.
I loved the daisies fair and white;
Our Sunday walks, -- oh, what delight!
The azure skies so gloriously bright;
The birds that sang upon the tree
For me!
I loved my little shoe to grace,
Each Christmas in the chimney-place;
To find it there at morn, how swift I'd
race!
The feast of heaven, I hailed it well;
Noel!
I loved my mother's gentle smile,
Her thoughtful glance that said, the
while:
"Eternity doth me from you beguile.
I go to heaven, my God, to be
With Thee!
"I go to find, in realms above,
My angel-band in Mary's love, ah, prove,
The children whom I leave below, ah,
prove,
Jesu! to them their guide and stay,
Alway!
Oh, how I loved my heavenly Lord,
In His blest Sacrament adored!
He bound me to Him by His given word
That He my Spouse from infancy
Would be!
I loved, upon the terrace fair,
My father's reveries to share;
To feel his gentle kisses on my hair.
I loved that father -- who shall tell
How well!
Teresa, seated on his knee,
Listened with me there, tenderly,
To those melodious songs he sang for me.
Those accents sweet I can not yet
Forget.
O Memory, what joys you bring!
You wake the thought of many a thing
That flew from me, long since, like
birds awing.
Faces I see, voices I hear
How dear!
At sunset's hour I loved to be,
Teresa, heart to heart with thee;
Thy soul was as my very own to me.
My sister-friend, my love, wert thou
As now.
Hand clasped in hand our hymns we sang.
Above earth's noisy clash and clang,
Our voices through the holy twilight
rang.
Our dreams were then to Carmel given,
And heaven.
In Switzerland and Italy
Thefairest scenes were shown to me;
But fairer yet I deemed the sight to be
Of him, -- Father of Christendom, --
At Rome!
The Coliseum's hallowed ground,
With rapturous joy, my footsteps found;
The Catacombs re-echoed to the sound
Of hymns I sang to Thee, th' Adored,
My Lord !
What sorrows followed then, amain;
What fears have filled my heart with
pain!
But Jesus came to help me, and sustain,
And His dear cross has been my stay
Alway.
I fled the world, I turned my face,
And. in a quiet resting-place,
I sought in silent prayer for constant
grace
My load to bear, and for my grief
Relief.
I loved to hear, from distant towers,
The sweet church-bells ring out the
hours;
I loved to cull, through burning tears,
the flowers
And hear, at eve, among the trees,
The breeze.
I loved the swallows' graceful flight,
The turtledoves' low chant at night,
The pleasant sound of insects gay and
bright,
The grassy vale where doth belong
Their song.
I loved the delicate morning-dew,
On Bengal rose of charming hue;
I loved to see the virginal bee accrue
Its store of honey from the flower, --
Its dower.
I loved to gather autumn leaves;
And, where the moss a carpet weaves,
How oft, from mongst the vines, my hand
receives
A butterfly, so light of wing, --
Fair thing!
I loved the glow-worm on the sod;
The countless stars, so near to God!
But most I loved the beauteous moon,
endowed
With shining disk of silver bright,
At night.
To my dear father, worn and old,
I gave myself with love untold.
He was all to me. Joy, and home, and
gold,
Were mine in him; for him my kiss,
My bliss.
We loved the sweet sound of the sea,
The storm, the calm, all things that be,
At eve, the nightingale sang from the
tree.
Oh, seemed to us like seraphim
Its hymn!
But came one day when his sweet eyes
Sought Jesus' cross with glad surprise .
. .
And then -- my precious, loving father
dies!
His last dear glance to me was given;
Then -- heaven!
Jesus, with hand benign and blest,
Took Celine's treasure to his rest,
Where endless joys are evermore
possessed;
Placing him near his throne of love,
Above!
*********** ****
Now, Lord, I am Thy prisoner here;
Gone are the joys once held so dear.
I have found out, -- none last, all seek
their bier.
I have seen all my joys pass by,
And die.
The grass is withered in its bed;
The flowers within my hands are dead.
Would that my weary feet, Jesu! might
tread
Thy heavenly fields, and I might be
With Thee!
E'en as the thirsting hart doth crave
Its lips in some cool stream to lave,
I seek from Thee, Jesu! the healing
wave.
I need, to calm my ardors and my fears,
Thy tears.
Thy love, naught else, attracts my soul;
Heaven is my only aim, my goal;
Love, Love divine, has me in Its
control.
I seek the Lamb upon His throne,
Alone.
Jesu! Thou art that Lamb divine;
Naught else I crave, if I am Thine.
In Thee all things in heaven and earth
are mine!
Thou art the lovely Flower of spring,
My King!
Thou art the Lily, pure and fair;
Thy perfume sweet embalms the air.
O Bunch of sacred Myrrh, divinely rare,
Upon my heart, I beg Thee, stay
Alway!
Thy love goes with me where I go!
In Thee have I the sparkling snow,
The rains, the lofty hills, the valleys
low,
The babbling brooks, the leafy trees,
The breeze!
All these I have in Thee, dear Lord:
The yellow wheat, the harvest horde,
The Rose of Sharon, -- type of Thee,
Adored!
Round me what flowers of charming dyes
Arise!
I have the dear melodious lyre,
The solitude of my desire,
My waves, and mighty rocks, and
brilliant fire,
My birds that sing, my murmuring stream,
-- Fair dream!
My rainbow in my rain-washed skies,
Horizon where my suns arise,
Island in far-off seas, pearl I most
prize,
Springtime and butterflies, I see
In Thee!
Thy love is like the flowers of May,
The palm-trees where the breezes play,
The nights almost as bright and light as
day.
In Thee I find what shall not cease, --
Sweet peace!
Delicious grapes in Thee are mine,-
The purple burden of the vine;
The virgin forest and the stately pine,
The fair haired children, Lord, I see
With Thee!
In Thee I have the springs, the rills,
The mignonette, the daffodils,
The eglantine, the harebell on the
hills,
The trembling poplar, sighing low
And slow.
In Thee I have the waving wheat,
The winds that murmur low and sweet.
All Mary's flowers, once blooming at my
feet,
The glowing plain, the tender grass, I
see
In Thee.
Beneath my habit's plain, coarse fold
Thou givest me rare gems and gold.
Within my clasp what brilliant rings I
hold, --
Pearls, sapphires, rubies, diamonds
bright, --
To-night.
The lovely lake, the valley fair
And lonely, in the lambent air,
The ocean touched with silver
everywhere,
In Thee their treasures, all combined,
I find.
I have the barque on mighty seas,
Its shining track, the shore, the
breeze,
The sun that sinks behind the leafy
trees,
Lighting the clouds, ere it expire,
With fire.
In Thee, the glorious stars are mine;
And often at the day's decline
I see, as through some veil silken and
fine,
Beckoning from heaven, our fatherland,
Thy hand!
O Thou Who governest all the earth,
Who giv'st the mighty forests birth,
And at one glance mak'st all their life
of worth!
On me Thou gazest, from above,
With love.
I have Thy Face, I have Thy Heart!
Lo! I am wounded with thy dart;
Thou dost Thy sacred kiss to me impart.
I love Thee! Thee alone I view,
Jesu!
I go, to chant, with angel-throngs,
The homage that to Thee belongs.
Soon let me fly away, to join their
songs!
Oh, let me die of love, I pray,
One day!
Drawn by the light, the insect flies
To meet the flame wherein it dies.
So, to Thy light, my longing soul would
rise;
So would I gladly in that tire,
Expire!
I hear, e'en I, Thy last and least,
The music from Thy heavenly feast;
There, there, receive me as Thy loving
guest!
There, to my harp, oh, bid me sing,
My King!
Mary I go to see, and there
The saints, and those once treasured
here.
Life is all past, and dried at last each
tear.
To me my home again is given, --
In heaven!
April 28, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
__________________________________________________________________
FIFTH PART.
SPIRITUAL RECREATIONS
__________________________________________________________________
JESUS AT BETHANY.
MARY MAGDALENE.
My God, Thy work complete!
At last I seek Thy grace.
Here at Thy holy feet,
To-day I choose my place.
From earth I sought in vain
For ease, or joy, or rest;
Sorrow and weary pain
Alone have filled my breast.
OUR LORD.
Yes, Magdalene, rest here,
With contrite, humble heart.
Men's scorn no longer fear!
Choose thou the better part.
Hereafter live in peace,
Holy and pure, for Me;
And I shall never cease
To suffer, child, for thee.
MARY MAGDALENE.
It is too much! My sore
And burdened heart will break.
Could I be born once more,
Or die, for Thy sweet sake!
But I have caused Thy grief,
For me Thou art to die.
How shall I find relief
For all this misery?
OUR LORD.
Yes, many, many tears
Mine eyes have shed for thee
Yet speedily thy fears
Shall change to love for Me.
Thy soul, made pure again,
By one calm word of Mine,
In heaven, free from pain
Shall live a life divine.
MARY MAGDALENE.
Holy and stainless One!
How dare I seek Thy face?
What have I ever done
To win from Thee such grace?
I spurned in other years
Thy patient love for me;
Now, naught have I but tears
To offer Lord, to Thee.
OUR LORD.
Those pure, repentant tears
Shine brighter in My sight
Than any star appears
In radiant glow at night.
Than precious pearls more dear
Thy contrite heart to-day.
O sorrowing soul, draw near!
Thy guilt is washed away.
MARY MAGDALENE
Thou Lord of heaven and earth,
What marvelous mystery!
Hath nothing, then, the worth
To win Thy heart from me?
Behold, how full of charms
The hill, and sea, and sky,
The lambs that seek Thine arms
The rivers flowing by!
OUR LORD.
I see the lilies bloom,
Unsullied, fair, and white;
Yet My large heart hath room
For thy heart's rose to-night.
That rose at last has won
My choice mid flowerets rare
From all beneath the sun
I choose its blossoms fair.
MARY MAGDALENE.
The bird's pure, warbling voice
Chants sweetest song to Thee;
The rippling brooks rejoice,
And praise Thee merrily;
The lily of the vale
Its perfumes hastes to bring
And petals, starlike, pale,
Before Thy feet to fling.
OUR LORD.
On ivoried, regal throne,
In glorious array,
The great King Solomon
Is less than these to-day;
The daisies in the field
Surpass his princely state;
And yet to thee they yield,
On thee they gladly wait!
MARY MAGDALENE.
A virginal train above,
With robes more white than snow,
Give thee their constant love,
And go where Thou dost go.
I, of a blighted life,
Offer the end to Thee,
From its frail morning rife
With bitter misery.
OUR LORD.
I love the fires of dawn,
So bright, so pure, so fair;
But ah! I also love
The radiant evening air.
The soul, if it repent,
Shall find at last its home,
There where the sinless tent,
'Neath heaven's o'erspreading dome.
MARY MAGDALENE.
The angels there delight
To show their love for Thee.
Upon their phalanx white
Thy blessing ever be!
A sinful soul am I,
Who naught have merited.
Must Thou not pass me by?
Is mine the children's bread?
OUR LORD.
Higher than angels mount,
Shalt thou ascend one day!
Close, close to Love's own fount,
Shalt thou abide alway!
But first, on earth a while
In prayer live silently,
And thus gain souls from guile
To give their hearts to Me.
MARY MAGDALENE.
Oh! with what ardent zeal
My heart at last doth burn!
What deep desire I feel
To give Thy love return!
Yet souls to win for Thee,
Too weak, too blind, am I.
Lend Thou Thy heart to me; --
None then shall pass me by.
MARTHA.
Lord, one word I ask! Behold my sister
there!
Now bid her, dearest Lord, to help me
serve Thy meal.
She thinks not of my tasks; for me she
hath no care;
She ought to wait on Thee; for me some
pity feel!
OUR LORD.
Dear Martha, hostess kind and good!
Why should you thus your sister blame?
True, naught she thinks about My food,
Yet waits she on Me all the same.
MARTHA.
Ah, Lord divine and dear! tis this
surprises me.
Ought she not, then, awhile, to cease to
dream and pray ?
Should she not choose what gift shall be
her gift to Thee,
Who lavishly dost give to her and me
each day?
OUR LORD.
Nay, Martha! listen to My Word!
Your faithful, generous love I know;
Yet doth your sister to her Lord
As faithful love and homage show,
MARTHA.
Deep myst'ries are these words that
greet mine ears to-day.
I can not help but think, -- oh! let me
tell my thought!
Better to work good works than many
prayers to say; --
The love I feel for Thee must into deeds
be wrought.
OUR LORD.
True, Martha! works are needful here;
I came, Myself, to work with care;
Yet I would have this truth stand clear;
One must transfigure work with prayer.
MARTHA.
I knew that I was right; for, did I idly
rest,
No charm should I possess in Thy
benignant eyes;
So I made haste, to serve for Thee, my
holy Guest,
Some pleasant food, to win Thy praise;
-- tis all I prize.
OUR LORD.
Generous your ardent soul, and good!
Martha, your works show forth your
worth;
Yet would you know the only food
That I desire to have on earth?
One single work is needful here!
Your sister, biding near My heart,
In love's own prayer, divinely dear,
Hath chosen thus the better part.
Yes, this the part that is the best!
So I declare, and Truth am I.
Now, Martha, come and share her rest,
Her blessed rest, for Love am I!
MARTHA.
At last I understand! O Jesus, Love
supreme,
Thy glance hath pierced my soul, Thy
meaning now I see.
My gifts are all too small, my services
a dream;
My heart the priceless gift that Thou wouldst
have from me.
OUR LORD.
Yes, tis thy loving heart I crave;
For this I came from heaven above.
The glories tis My right to have,
I left, to seek your love, your love!
MARTHA.
Why, then, O Saviour-dear, if I may ask
Thee this,
Why, within Simon's house, didst greatly
praise Marie?
For surely in her life she gave Thee
pain, I wis;
And stormy days, in her, Thy sorrowing
eyes must see
OUR LORD.
Martha! I understand her heart,
By pain and sin and sorrow rent;
For souls love much if pardoned much,
And sorely, sorely they repent.
MARTHA.
Amazed am I the more by Thy great love
and power,
For naught know I, dear Lord, of sin's
wild strength and shame.
What do I owe Thee, then Who, from my
earliest hour,
Hast shielded me in peace, and kept me
free from blame?
OUR LORD.
A soul kept pure through all its days,
--
Chief masterpiece of Love Divine, --
Should give Me rapturous, endless
praise,
And wholly and alone be Mine.
Yes, Martha, you have charmed My sight,
By lifelong, stainless purity;
Yet, while your soul is spotless white,
Your sister hath humility!
MARTHA.
To win Thy love, dear Lord! through all
my life to be,
Earth's honors I will scorn, and all its
pomps despise,
And Mary's part will choose, while
working still for Thee;
Thy love alone shall be of value in mine
eyes.
OUR LORD.
Many the souls you thus shall claim
From sin's dark haunts to seek My Face;
And you shall bear afar the flame
Of faith, and love's immortal grace.
MARTHA AND MARY.
Thy voice, O Jesus Christ! is sweetest
melody,
That wins our love to Thee, and sets our
hearts on fire.
Abide Thou here alway, our Life on earth
to be:
Abide Thou here alway, our hearts'
supreme Desire!
OUR LORD.
True joy have I at Bethany,
Where find I oft a welcome true;
And in my Father's home shall be
A wondrous blessing granted you.
Yes, you the mystery comprehend
That makes drear earth My precious
prize;
For souls of prayer are dear to Me,
A vast reward for sacrifice.
Beyond heaven's joys I prize such souls!
Heaven's glories, one day, yours shall
be;
My goods your loving prayer controls,
Your Spouse am I eternally.
Here, faithful friends, ye gave Me meat;
But, in the feast at heaven's board,
Ye shall sit down to food more sweet,
While on you waits your God and Lord.
July 29, 1895.
__________________________________________________________________
BIRD CAGE OF THE INFANT JESUS.
For us, poor exiles from our birth,
God made the pretty little birds;
Among the hills and dales of earth
They sing His praises without words;
But sometimes playful childish hands,
Choosing the ones they like the best,
Keep them in cages, where the bands
Are gilded bars for these oppressed.
*********** ****
O Jesus, little Brother dear!
For us from Heaven didst Thou flee;
Thou knowest well Thy bird-cage here
Is Carmel, and Thy birds are we.
Our cage is gilded not at all,
Yet oh! how precious tis to me!
To hill or plain from its high wail
Not one of us would wish to flee.
Let not the outer world intrude!
No joy to us it now could bring.
Child Jesus! in our solitude
For Thee, for Thee alone, we sing.
Thy tiny hand has us beguiled;
Thy infant-charms no words can tell;
Thy smile, most sweet and Holy Child!
Has won Thy birds to love Thee well.
Here finds the simple, candid soul
The only object of its love;
Here is the vulture's fierce control
No longer dreaded by the dove.
Upon the wings of burning prayer
Theardent heart ascends on high,
As swift the lark doth cleave the air,
With sweet, enraptured, joyful cry.
Here, in Thy praises to engage,
The nightingale and veery came.
O Little Jesus! in Thy cage
Thy birds are carolling Thy Name.
The little bird it always sings,
Nor fear for its small meal doth know;
A grain of wheat contentment brings;
It sows not, spins not, here below.
Within this cage where we have fled,
Is all provided through Thy care;
The one thing needful, Thou hast said,
Is just to love Thee, Child most fair!
So, through the hours, we sing Thy
praise,
With glad, pure spirits ever blest.
We know the angels, all the days,
Love Carmel's birds within their nest.
Jesu! Thy bitter tears to dry,
That sinful men have wrung from Thee,
Thy birds to win back souls will try,
By their sweet songs of ecstasy.
One day, when earth and time are o'er,
And Thy clear call to us is given,
Then angel-hands shall ope the door;
Thy birds shall take their flight to
Heaven;
And there, with charming, songful hosts
Of little cherubs glad and gay,
Thy happy birds from Carmel's coasts
Shall praise Thy Holy Name alway.
December 25, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
THE FLIGHT OF THE HOLY FAMILY INTO
EGYPT.
A Fragment.
THE ANGEL WARNS ST. JOSEPH.
Rise, Joseph! heed my cry!
All swiftly, silently,
To Egypt take your flight!
Depart, this very night!
Herod his fury now,
Is even to madness heaping;
He longs to slay the Lamb
In Mary's tendance sleeping,
Take Mother and Child, and go
From an impending woe.
SONG OF THE ANGELS ACCOMPANYING
THE HOLY FAMILY.
Wonders on wonders piled!
Jesus, of Heaven the Lord,
Now upon earth exiled,
Flee, from a mortal's sword.
So, unto God in flight,
Oh, let us give our love;
Let our white wings to-night
Protect Him from above!
Now bring the flowers most fair
To strew before His way!
A lullaby prepare,
Of songs most sweet and gay!
Console His Mother's heart
By singing of His charms.
How fair, how sweet, Thou art,
Reposing in her arms!
Oh, let us speed afar,
For here dire perils are!
Fly, on this very night,
From dangers and from fright!
The Virgin bears our Star,
Beneath her veil afar,
The Star of the elect,
Whom longing hearts expect.
Behold! Heaven's Lord
Flees from a mortal's sword!
THE ANGEL OF THE DESERT.
I come, I come, to sing your charms
divine,
Blest Family who lure me to this place.
In this drear desert, lo! to-night doth shine
A Star more fair than heaven in all its
grace.
But who shall comprehend this mystery:
--
He came unto His own -- they bade Him
go!
A wanderer on the earth He made is He,
And none discern His beauty here below.
But if the great Thine empire now
despise,
Thou King of Heaven, Thou mystic
promised Star!
Long for Thy reign have looked. the
tear-dimmed eyes,
And long the unhappy sought Thee from
afar.
O Word Eternal! Wisdom true and deep!
Thy gifts are here, but they are for the
meek:
The childlike soul, the tried, and them
who weep,
It is to them, one day, Thy voice shall
speak.
For Thou Thy wisdom often dost impart
To ignorant men, if they but humble be;
And Thou dost call the sinful to Thy
Heart,
Because in them Thine image Thou dost
see.
A day shall come, when, in the selfsame
fold,
The lamb beside the lion safe shall
feed;
And in Thy refuge here, this desert old,
Thy Name shall call forth many a holy
deed.
O hidden God! what virginal souls, one
day,
Catching from Thy vast fire of love the
flame,
Shall hither haste, where Thou hast led
the way;
And all these wastes for their
possession claim.
Their ardent souls, their love like
seraphs blest,
Shall fill the angels with supreme
delight;
And hell shall tremble at their hymns,
addrest
Unto God's greater glory, day and night
Then Satan shall, in frantic jealousy,
Seek to deplete these houses of our
Lord;
But knows he not the power and majesty
Of this frail Child, humble, unknown,
ignored.
He dreams not that a lowly virgin-heart
Forever dwells in safety and in peace;
He dreams not of the strength, beyond
his art,
She has from God, whose wonders never
cease.
It may be that, one day, Thy spouses
dear
Must share Thy exile, O Thou Holy Child!
But none shall quench their love, that
burns most clear
Despite their exile and men's fury wild.
Nor shall the vile world's sacrilegious
spite
Turn from their goal the virgins of the
Lord;
Nor ever soil their robes of spotless
white,
Nor mar their likeness to their King
adored.
Ungrateful world! thy reign is well nigh
done
Dost thou not see how this most holy
Child
Culls joyously these roses like the sun,
These martyrs' palms, these lilies
undefiled?
Dost thou not see His faithful virgin
band,
Holding their burning lamps with love
alight
Dost thou not see heaven's portals
openstand
The saints to welcome in, to glory
bright?
O happy moment! joy that knows no shade!
When the elect in gladness enter there;
And for their love, the great reward is
paid, --
To see God's face, that promised Vision
fair!
Life's exile o'er, gone are all pain and
woe;
E'en faith itself, and hope itself,
shall cease;
But everlasting rest those souls shall
know.
The ecstasy of love and endless peace.
January 21, 1896.
__________________________________________________________________
THE LITTLE DIVINE BEGGAR OF
CHRISTMAS.
An angel appears, bearing the Child
Jesus in
his arms; and he sings as follows:
Sisters! I bring to you the Adored,
The Eternal God, so small, so weak;
I plead for the Incarnate Word,
Because as yet He cannot speak.
To Jesus, exiled from His home,
The cruel world no shelter grants;
And so to Carmel's shade I come,
To find the shelter that He wants.
Ever your praise, your tenderness,
Your welcome sweet, your warm caress,
Be for this Child!
Oh, burn with love, for He loves you,
This Child, who is your God and Lord.
Pathetic mystery! He who begs, to-night,
of you,
Is the Eternal Word!
Come then, my Sisters! without fear,
Each in her turn, to Jesus' feet,
Offering your love to Him most dear,
And you shall know His will so sweet,
Yes, I will tell you the desires
Of Jesus born amid the snow;
For you are pure as angels are,
And you can suffer too, you know!
Ever your cares, your suffering,
Andall your joys so light of wing,
Be for this Child!
Oh, burn with love, for He loves you,
This Babe, who is your God and Lord!
Pathetic mystery! He who begs, to-night,
of you,
Is the Eternal Word!
The angel, having placed the Child Jesus
in the crib, offers to the
Mother-prioress, and then to all the
Carmelites, a basket of little
notes or envelopes. Each takes one,
haphazard, and without opening it
gives it to the angel, who then sings
the petition therein contained,
-- the gift which the Divine Child asks
from each in turn.
I. -- 1 A GOLD THRONE
Jesus, Christ, your only treasure,
Asks one special gift of you.
No gold throne was in the stable,
Yet such treasure is His due.
Sinners' souls are like the stable,
Bare and cold in winter's snow,
Off'ring to Him no soft shelter,
No bright fire's cheerful glow.
Souls of sinners, save them, Sister!
That the throne our Lord desires;
Seeks He, too, the royal welcome
Of your pure heart's holy fires.
I. -- 2 SOME MILK.
He Who feeds the souls predestined
With His Essence all Divine,
Makes Himself the Infant Jesus
To be your delight, and mine.
Up in heaven His joy is perfect;
Here below, a beggar He
Quickly fetch some milk, dear Sister;
Baby Jesus thirsts, you see.
Ah! our little Brother Jesus
Smiles on you. Noel! Noel!
Down from heaven to earth He cometh
In your childlike heart to dwell.
I. -- 3 SOME LITTLE BIRDS
You, dearest Sister! long to know
What you can do for Jesus' sake,
So joyfully I haste to tell
How you His glorious smiles can wake.
Go, catch for Him some charming birds,
And in the stable let them sing,
For they are types of children's souls,
So dear to this Child Christ their King.
Their pretty hymns, their baby prayers,
His sleep like joy-bells gently break.
Pray for them then; in heaven one day
Those children's souls your crown will
make.
I. -- 4 A STAR.
Sometimes, when all the skies are black
With gloomy clouds, and no stars shine,
Our little Jesus grieves alone, --
He craves your love, yes, yours and
mine.
Then give to Him the light He wants,
Be like a bright and shining star;
And let your virtues, like a lamp,
Shed welcoming radiance near and far.
So may your rays lead souls to heaven,
The sinful souls for whom He died.
This Child Divine, our Morning Star,
Asks you to be His star, His bride.
I. -- 5 A LYRE
MY little Sister, 'waiting there,
Your gift for Bethlehem's Babe to hear,
Your heart for His melodious lyre
Is what He asks in accents clear.
In heaven's high court swells up alway
The angels' song with incense sweet;
And yet He loves, in Carmel's shade,
To hear your praises at His feet.
So, dearest Sister! 'tis your heart,
Whose melodies our Lord desires.
By night, by day, consume away,
With songs of love, in love's sweet
fires.
I. -- 6 SOME ROSES.
Your soul, dear, is a lily sweet, --
Jesus and Mary love it well.
Hear what the heavenly Bridegroom speaks
Softly, yet clear as altar-bell; --
Ah! if I love the lily white,
Symbol of innocence like snow,
Yet for the rose of penitence
I also feel My heart aglow.
Let your warm tears for sinners fall, --
What joy your love will give Me then!
So can I gather at My Will
Those roses dear, the hearts of men.
I. -- 7 A VALLEY.
As by the shining of the sun
Nature is glorified and gay;
As by its radiance field and vale
Grow fair and strong and green alway;
So doth our Jesus, Son divine,
Approach you with His sweet caress,
Shining at His own matin hour,
Your loving heart to heal and bless.
Lo! He is born on Christmas morn,
Your exiled soul to find and cheer,
To fill your days with His warm rays:
So be His smiling valley, dear!
I. -- 8 SOME REAPERS.
Lo! here on earth, 'neath other skies,
In spite of storm and winter's snow
Already our dear Little One
Hath found some harvests here below.
But, ah! to gather them He needs
Reapers on fire with quenchless love,
And glad to suffer or to die
For Him who reigns in Heaven above
Noel Noel to Carmel's shade
I come, because His will is thine.
Sister! form apostolic souls,
To reap the harvest fields divine.
The following was the stanza that was drawn
by Sister Teresa of the
Infant Jesus herself. Only three months
later she heard the first call
of the Divine Master invite her to leave
earth for heaven.
I. -- 9 A BUNCH OF GRAPES
I want some sweet and cooling fruit,
A bunch of grapes so smooth and fair,
To moisten the small, thirsting lips
Of this dear Babe within my care.
Your lot, my Sister! oh, how blest,
For those choice grapes He asks of you,
Within His vineyard to be prest!
The hearts of all men are His due.
His tiny hand like snow-flake white
Upon your throbbing heart shall lie,
And from all touch of earth's delight
Absorb it into His on high.
I. -- 10 A LITTLE WHITE HOST.
Oh! we how with each morning's light
Jesus, the Child divinely fair,
Into a little snow-white host
Transforms Himself, that you may share
His life; and yet with greater love,
He longs to change you into Him.
Your heart His precious treasure is,
His happiness, His joy supreme.
Noel! Noel! from heaven He comes,
To fill your soul with glorious light;
The Lamb of God to you descends,
Now be His pure white host to-night!
II. -- 1 A SMILE.
Ah! the wicked world despises
Love that Jesus feels for men;
And His heavenly eyes are moistened
With hot bitter tears for them;
And His little arms He stretches,
Dearest Sister, unto you.
Shall I tell you what the comfort
That I think He seems to sue?
See! His look is asking of you,
And His sweet eyes seem to say:
Smile on all! That smile suffices
To wipe all My tears away.
II. -- 2 SOME PLAYTHINGS.
Would you like to be the plaything
Of this Child so fair and sweet?
Would you, dear one! like to please Him?
Then lie humbly at His feet.
If He chooses to caress you,
If He lifts you to His breast,
Yes, if He seems tired of you,
Count yourself among the blest.
Be His happy Christmas plaything,
Seeking just to do His will;
And in heaven with countless blessings
He, your happy heart, will fill.
II. -- 3 A PILLOW.
Oft I see the Baby Jesus
Wakeful in His manger bed.
Would you know the reason? Dear ones,
There's no pillow for His head.
Ah! I know your ardent longing
To console Him night and day.
Give your heart to be His pillow,
That is what He wants alway;
And be ever meek and humble,
Then you will be greatly blest.
You will hear Him softly saying:
In your heart how sweet My rest!
II. -- 4 A FLOWER.
All the earth with snow is covered,
Everywhere the white frosts reign;
Winter and his gloomy courtiers
Hold their court on earth again.
But for you has bloomed the Flower
Of the fields, Who comes to earth
From the fatherland of heaven,
Where eternal spring has birth.
Near the Rose of Christmas, Sister!
In the lowly grasses hide,
And be like the humble flowerets, --
Of heaven's King the lowly bride!
II. -- 5 SOME BREAD.
Day by day, at morn and even,
Still the holy words are said:
O our Father up in Heaven!
Give to us our daily bread,
Yet your God, become your Brother,
Suffers hunger as you do;
And His childish voice is asking
For a little bread from you.
Ah! my Sister! Jesus wishes
Just your love, -- how great your bliss!
Let your soul be pure and spotless,
For His daily bread is this.
II. -- 6 A MIRROR.
Children like to have you place them,
Near a mirror clear and fair;
Then they greet with childish rapture
The bright face that they see there.
Come, then, to the favored stable,
Let your soul like crystal glow.
Let the Word, become an Infant,
In your heart His likeness know!
Sister, be the living image,
Of your Spouse, -- His mirror clear;
All the beauty of your Jesus
He would have in you appear.
II. -- 7 A PALACE.
The great and noble of the earth,
In palaces they proudly dwell;
The poor and lonely find their home
In hut, in cabin, and in cell.
So in a humble cattle-shed
The Christ-Child lies, this Christmas
night;
Leaving His palace in the skies,
He veils His glory's dazzling light.
Your heart loves poverty, I know;
You count yourself divinely blest;
So Jesus finds a palace-home
Within your humble, happy breast.
II. -- 8 A CROWN OF LILIES.
Sinners will crown with thorns, one day
The holy, heavenly head of Christ.
What pains and sorrows will be His,
To gain us graces all unpriced.
Now may your virginal sweet soul
Make Him to-night His woes forget;
And for His royal lily-crown
Your Sisters' souls before Him set!
Draw very near to Jesus' throne,
To charm His lovely tear-dimmed eyes;
Make of these virgin souls His crown
Of snow-white lilies beyond price!
III. -- 1 SOME BONBONS.
Sister dear, the little ones
Like so much the sweet bonbons!
Bring some then, and quickly fill
Jesus' small white hand to-night!
By His smile He doth invite
You to do His childish will.
This wee King, so frail, so weak,
Carmel's candies He doth seek; --
What they are, you surely guess!
Give Him your austerity
And your holy poverty, --
He your gift will quickly bless.
III. -- 2 A CARESS.
Little Jesus, dear, from you
Nothing more doth softly sue
Than a very sweet caress.
Give Him all your love to-day,
And your gift He will repay;
With His love your soul will bless.
If a Sister weep to-night,
Sore at heart where all are bright,
Ah! at once, with tenderness,
Beg the little Holy Child
That His small hand undefiled
Dry her tears with its caress.
III. -- 3 A CRADLE.
Many hearts God's favors want,
Would have Jesus always grant
Gifts and presents without end.
If He seem awhile to sleep,
Few their watch beside Him keep;
Few remain His faithful friend.
Get Him sleep that none may break;
Though we know His Heart doth wake;
Even in dreams our Jesus weeps.
So His cradle, Sister, be!
Guard the sweet Lamb tenderly,
Smiling on Him while He sleeps.
III. -- 4 SOME LINENS.
See the dear Child's tiny hand
Point -- to make you understand --
At the rough and rasping straw.
Won't you grant His wish to-night,
And bring linens pure and white,
O'er His manger-bed to draw?
Make excuses kind and true,
Whatsoe'er your Sisters do,
Loving all for Christ their King.
Thus your ardent charity,
And your true simplicity,
Are the linens you can bring.
III. -- 5 SOME FIRE.
Our sweet Jesus, Fire of love,
Light and Warmth of heaven above,
In the stable, cold is He!
Yet, in the far, shining sky,
Angels, living flames on high,
Wait on Him in ecstasy.
Here on earth tis you must light
Blazing fires of love to-night,
In your heart, all free from sin;
Little shivering Jesus warm
In the shelter of your arm,
By the souls your prayers shall win!
III. -- 6 A CAKE.
Well we know that children small
Eagerly for cakes will call!
This dear Child will not disdain
Even such a gift to-night!
Offer it with great delight;
You His happy smile will gain.
Know you what to this Child-King
Real content will surely bring?
'Tis obedience prompt and true.
As He bowed to Mary's will,
So do you the rule fulfil, --
Such the cake He asks of you.
III. -- 7 SOME HONEY.
In the pretty floweret's cup,
When the morning sun comes up,
You can see the tiny bee,
Flitting fast through summer hours,
Visiting the woodland bowers,
Gathering honey steadily.
Ah! of love your treasure make;
And, each day, for Christ's dear sake,
To His holy cradle come.
All the honey of your love
Give, sweet bee! to this meek Dove;
Make His Heart your hive and home!
III. -- 8. A LAMB.
Would you charm the Lamb of God?
In the path that He hath trod
Tread to-day with willing feet!
Leaving all things here below,
Seek alone His will to know;
Do His will surpassing sweet!
O my Sister! be His own;
Seek for naught but God alone!
He will give you perfect rest.
Mary, leaning o'er His bed,
Will see another childish head,
Close to His, and oh! how blest.
The Angel, taking again the Child Jesus
in his arms, sings what
follows:
The dear Child Jesus thanks you all,
For all your gifts, this Christmas
night;
And all your names His tiny hand
Within His book of life will write.
Since in this Carmel He hath found
Such joy and peace,
Rewards in heaven He'll store for you,
That shall not cease.
And if you ever faithful are
To all the vows you make to-night,
Then love will give you wings to fly
Unto a far sublimer height.
One day, in heaven's dear fatherland,
Your exile o'er,
Jesus and Mary you shall see
Forevermore!
__________________________________________________________________
THE ANGELS OF THE CRIB.
FRAGMENT.
THE ANGEL OF THE CHILD JESUS.
Thou Word of God, Thou Glory of God!
In awe I gazed on Thee above;
And now I see that Glory of God,
That Word of God, made Man through love.
O Child, whose light doth blind the
sight
Of angels in high heaven divine!
Thou'rt come to save the world to-night,
And who can fathom that love of Thine?
In swaddling bands
The Child-God fies.
Lord of all lands!
Trembling before Thy face I veil mine
eyes.
Yes, who can fathom this marvellous
thing?
God makes Himself a little Child,
He, the eternal, almighty King,
Afar from His own heaven exiled!
Fain would I give Thee love for love!
Thee will I guard by day and night,
My utter fealty to prove,
Thou tiny Jesu, Light of Light!
Thy cradle so dear
Draws angels anear.
O Child-God! now
Trembling before that humble crib I bow.
While earth has power from heaven to
bring
My King to want and cold and woe,
Heaven holds no longer anything
To keep me from that world below.
My wings shall shield Thy Baby-head;
Thee will I follow everywhere;
Beneath Thy tiny feet I'll fling
The sweetest flowers and most fair.
Oh, would some radiant star might fall,
To form Thy cradle, Baby bright!
Would I the dazzling snow could call,
To be Thy curtains pure and white!
Would all the lofty hills might bow
In lowly homage at Thy feet!
Oh, would the fields might bloom for
Thee,
Celestial blossoms heavenly sweet!
For all the flowers are smiles of God,
Are distant echoes from His throne,
Are notes that wander far abroad
From that great harp He holds alone.
Those notes of harmony divine
Relate His goodness unto men,
And in their melody combine
To tell His saving love again.
O that sweet melody,
Exquisite harmony,
Silence of flowers!
Ye tell His greatness, His wonders, His
powers!
Well know I, Jesu! that Thy friends,
Thy dearest friends, are living flowers.
Thou travellest to earth's farthest
ends,
To cull them for heaven's fadeless
bowers.
Souls are the flowers with beauty rife
That draw Thee from the heavens high;
Thy tiny hand first gave them life,
And Thou for them wilt gladly die.
Mystery ineffable!
Thou, Word adorable,
Surely shalt one day weep
When Thou the harvest of those flowers
shalt reap.
THE ANGEL OF THE HOLY FACE.
Yes, from the morning of Thy days, dear
Child!
Thy blessed Face is bathed in burning
tears.
Those tears upon that Face all undefiled
Still shall flow on throughout Thy
earthly years.
O Face divine!
So fair Thou art
From angel eyes
The glories of the skies depart.
Under its veil of anguish sore and
dread,
I see Thy loveliness all charms above;
In Thy worn, pallid Face, O Jesu dead!
I see Thy Child-face in its perfect
love.
For pain to Thee, my Jesus! was so dear
That even Thy Baby-eyes the future saw,
And Thou didst long to drink the chalice
drear,
Thy very dreams could Thee to Calvary
draw.
O wonderful dream!
Thou Child of a day,
From Thy face but one beam
Thrills my heart with its ray.
THE ANGEL OF THE RESURRECTION.
Angel of man's Redeemer! weep no more.
I come with comfort for sad hearts and
sore.
This Child shall yet gain
All men's hearts as their King;
He shall arise and reign
Almighty, triumphing.
O God! concealed in childish guise before
us,
I see Thee glorious,
O'er all things victorious.
I shall roll back the great tomb's rocky
door,
I shall behold Thy lovely Face once
more,
And I shall sing,
And I shall then rejoice,
When I shall see my King,
And hear again His voice.
Thy childish eyes, though dim to-night
with tears,
Shall shine with heavenly light
throughout the eternal years.
O Word of God!
Thy speech, like burning flame,
Shall sound one day abroad,
And all Thy love proclaim.
THE ANGEL OF THE EUCHARIST.
Gaze on, dear Angel, heavenward-flown,
Gaze, while our King ascends on high;
But I, to seek His altar-throne,
Down to the distant earth will fly.
Veiled in His Eucharist I see
The Almighty Lord, the Undefiled,
The Master of all things that be,
More tiny than the humblest child.
Here will I dwell in this biest piace,
The sanctuary of my King;
And here, before His veiled Face,
My hymns of ardent love will sing.
Here, to my heaven-strung angel-lyre,
My praise I'll chant, by night, by day,
To Him, the Feast for saint's desire,
To Him, the sinner's Hope and Stay.
Would that by miracle, I too
Could feed upon this heavenly Bread;
Could taste that Blood forever new,
That Blood which was for all men shed!
At least, with some pure longing soul,
I'll share my fires of love divine,
That so, all fearless, glad and whole,
It may approach its Lord and mine.
THE ANGEL OF THE LAST JUDGMENT.
Soon shall the awful day of judgment
come,
This wicked world shall feel the avenging
flame;
All men shall hear pronounced their
endless doom,
And these to bliss shall pass, and those
to shame.
Then shall we see our God in glory
bright,
No longer hidden in this cradle small;
Then shall we sing His triumph after
fight,
And then proclaim Him Lord and King of
all.
As stars shine out when furious storms
are passed,
His eyes shall shine, now veiled in
blood and tears;
And His eternal splendor shall at last
Appear again, after these anguished
years.
Upon the clouds our Jesus shall be
borne,
Beneath the standard of the cross on
high;
And evil men who hailed Him once in
scorn
Shall know their awful judge is drawing
nigh.
Ah, ye shall tremble, habitants of
earth!
Ah, ye shall tremble on that final day,
No longer able to withstand the wroth
Of this dear Child, the God of love
to-day.
For you He chose to tread the path of
pain,
Seeking your hearts alone, to Him so
dear:
But when at last He comes to earth
again,
How shall ye quail before His Face in fear!
ALL THE ANGELS, with the exception of THE ANGEL
OF THE LAST JUDGMENT.
O Jesu, deign to hear the prayer,
That we, Thy Angels offer Thee!
Thy people save, Thy people spare,
Thou who didst come the world to free!
With Thy small hand avert this dart,
Appease this Angel with the sword;
Save every meek and contrite heart
That seeks Thy mercy, dearest Lord!
THE CHILD JESUS.
My faithful Angels, tried and true!
Far from the heavenland of your birth,
Hear, for the first time, speak to you
The Eternal Word made Man on earth!
I love you well, O spirits pure!
Angels from heaven's high courts above!
Yet men I love with love as sure,
Yea, with an everlasting love.
I made their infinite desires,
Their souls were made at My decree;
A heart that kindles with My fires
Becomes a heaven on earth for Me.
The Angel of the Infant Jesus asks Him
to gather upon earth an abundant
harvest of innocent souls, before they
have been tainted by the impure
breath of sin.
ANSWER OF THE CHILD JESUS.
Dear Angel of My childhood's hours!
I grant the answer to thy prayer.
Many shall be the innocent flowers
I will preserve all lily-fair.
Yes, I will cull those blossoms gay,
Fresh with their pure baptismal dew;
And they shall bloom in endless day,
In ecstasy forever new.
Their fair corollas, silvery bright,
More brilliant than a thousand fires,
Shall be the Milky Way of light
'Mid all the starry heavenly choirs.
I must have lilies for My crown, --
The Lily of the Field am I!
And I must have to grace my throne,
A sheaf of lilies in the sky.
The Angel of the Holy Face asks pardon
for sinners.
ANSWER OF THE CHILD JESUS
Thou who dost gaze upon My Face
In ecstasy of seraph love,
Leaving for love of it thy place
Of glory in My heaven above!
Thy prayer I hear, I grant thy plea.
Each soul that on My name shall call
Shall find relief, shall be set free
From Sin's dark curse, from Satan's
thrall.
Thou who dost seek to honor here
My Cross, My Passion, My bruised Face:
Learn now this mystery, angel dear!
Each soul that suffers shares thy grace.
The radiance of its pain borne now,
In heaven upon thy face shall shine;
The martyr's halo decks thy brow,
His glory shall be drawn from thine.
The Angel of the Eucharist asks what he
can do to console our Lord for
the ingratitude of men.
ANSWER OF THE CHILD JESUS.
Dear Angel of the Eucharist!
Thou, thou dost charm Me every hour;
Thy song, by heaven's own breezes
kissed,
Over My suffering soul hath power.
Ah, the great thirst of My desires!
I crave, I crave, the hearts of men.
Dear Angel, melt them with thy fires,
And win them to My Heart again!
Would each anointed priest might be
Like Seraphim beyond the skies,
What time he comes to offer Me
My pure and holy Sacrifice!
To work such miracle of grace,
It needs must be that night and day,
Souls near the attar seek a place
To watch and suffer, weep and pray.
The Angel of the Resurrection asks what
will become of the poor exiled
ones left on earth when the Saviour
shall have ascended into heaven.
ANSWER OF THE CHILD JESUS.
Back to My Father I shall go,
Thither to draw the men I love;
And heaven's long bliss they then shall
know,
When I shall welcome them above.
When the last hour of time appears,
My flock shall come again to Me;
And I shall be, for endless years,
Their Light, their Life, their Ecstasy
THE ANGEL OF THE LAST JUDGMENT.
Goodness supreme! and dost Thou then
forget
Sinners must meet at last, the doom
decreed ?
Dost Thou forget, in Thy great love,
that yet,
Their number is nigh infinite indeed ?
At the last judgment I shall punish
crime,
Evil before My wrath shall shrink and
bow;
My sword is ready . . . Jesu! tis the
time.
My sword is ready to avenge Thee now.
THE CHILD JESUS
Great Angel, turn aside thy sword
I am the Messenger of Peace.
The nature taken by thy Lord
'Tis not thy work to judge. O cease!
Tis I shall judge the human race,
Jesus My name, all names above.
I grant My elect ones boundless grace.
For men I died, and I am Love!
Dost thou not know that, every day,
The blasphemies of faithless lips
Before one love-glance pass away,
And find therein assured eclipse?
The souls I choose, the souls I spare,
Shall reign in glory like the sun.
Tis Mine own life I give them there,
And they and I shall there be one.
THE ANGEL OF THE LAST JUDGMENT.
Before Thee, Child divine, the Cherubim
bow lowly,
Lost in amaze as they Thy love all
boundless see.
Fain would we die like Thee, on
Calvary's summit holy,
Fain would we die like Thee!
REFRAIN.
Sung by all the Angels.
How great the bliss of man, Thy low and
humble creature.
In ecstasy would fain each seraph
undefiled
Put off, O Jesus sweet, his grand
angelic nature,
Would fain become a child!
Noel, 1894 --
__________________________________________________________________
POEMS IN HONOR OF JEANNE D'ARC
__________________________________________________________________
I.
THE SHEPHERDESS OF DOMREMY
HEARKENING TO HER VOICES.
Happy, happy am I,
Jeanne the shepherdess!
How swift my lambkins fly
To meet my kind caress.
How light my little crook;
How cool this verdant grove,
Beside whose babbling brook
In solitude I rove.
A lovely crown I weave
Of field-flowers, fair and sweet;
What joy is mine to leave
That crown at Mary's feet!
Oh, how I love the flowers,
The birds, the rippling stream
The skies above these bowers
As fair as angel's dream.
The valleys and the rills
Rejoice my longing eyes;
The summits of the hills,
They seem to touch the skies!
But hark! What voices come
Upon the evening breeze?
Do angels seek my home
With melodies like these?
I question air and space,
I gaze into the skies;
And yet no slightest trace
Of angels greets my eyes.
Ah, past those clouds that bar
And veil them from my sight,
Would I might fly afar
To realms of radiant light!
ST. CATHERINE AND ST. MARGARET:
Thy pure sweet voice to heaven has
pierced, dear child,
From this time forth committed to our
care!
Thine angel guardian, ever undefiled,
Has borne to God on high thy earnest
prayer.
Down from His heavenly palace we have
flown,
From His high court on His eternal hill;
For by our voices He to thee makes known
His holy will.
Thou must go forth to save thy
fatherland,
To guard the faith, uphold God's honor
here.
Thou as a conqueror in His sight shall
stand,
Preserved by Him and His own Mother
dear.
(TO JEANNE, WHO WEEPS.)
Oh, dry thy tears, take comfort, tender
heart!
Beyond these clouds gaze into heaven's
delight;
In our ecstatic chants thou shalt have
part,
Who by God's grace shalt conquer in the
fight.
These sweet refrains thy soul shall
fortify
Against approaching combat fierce and
dire.
Jeanne! thou must suffer. Seek, then,
from on high
A love like fire!
For the pure soul, in time's long dreary
night,
Its only glory is, Christ's cross to
bear;
And, in heaven's endless day, with
splendor bright
That cross shall shine all radiant and
fair.
ST. MICHAEL:
Michael am I, the guardian of France,
Great Captain of the armies of the
skies;
Against hell's troops I march with sword
and lance,
And the old serpent glares with curious
eyes.
Once Satan far above the starry world
Desired to reign, higher than seraphs
trod;
But, like a thunderbolt, at him I hurled
These words: " Oh, who is like to
God!
At that same moment vengeance, dread,
divine,
Oped hell's abyss and thither thrust him
deep.
For that proud fallen angel, ah! no
mercies shine;
For him, what eyes shall weep?
Pride tore down Satan from his lofty
place,
And of that morning-star an outcast
made;
But when man, too, had trifled with
God's grace,
Pity and comfort were to him displayed.
The Eternal Word, the Father's Equal
Son,
Clothing Himself with poor humanity,
Back to His Father's heart the exiles
won
By His profound humility.
Now that same Saviour deigns to succor
France
But not by any mighty soldier's hand.
He hath cast down the proud; He gives
the conquering lance
Unto a child's frail hand.
Jeanne! God has chosen thee His work to
do.
Thou must depart, obedient to His call;
Unto thy fields, thy flocks, must bid
adieu,
To this dear vale, these woods, thy
home, thy all.
Be strong, go forth and save thy
fatherland!
Go forth -- fear naught; all danger now
despise!
Go! in my might beside thee I shall
stand.
See how the foe before thee flies!
Take thou this sword and bear it to the
fray; --
Long hath God kept it for thy hand to
bring.
Take for thy standard, child! this pure
white flag to-day;
Then go, -- and find the king!
JEANNE ALONE:
For Thee alone, O God, I quit my
father's side,
I leave my cherished friends, my
parish-church so dear,
For Thee I leave my flocks, my valleys
green and wide,
My peaceful home, -- to fight. Forgive
me, if I fear!
Instead of my white lambs, I must lead
armed men;
To Thee I sacrifice my joy, my eighteen
years.
I shall not see, alas! these flowery
fields again;
To serve Thee, Lord, I go, mid shields
and swords and spears.
My voice, that mingles now with the soft
breezes' breath,
Shall soon resound amid war's clamors
wild and drear;
The piercing, frightful cries of battle
and of death,
Instead of sweet church-bells, shall
reach my straining car.
Yet, I desire the cross; the sacrifice
is light;
To suffer for Thee, Lord, ready and glad
am I.
Now deign to call Thy child to this
sublime delight!
Jesus, my Love, my All, for Thee I long
to die.
ST. MICHAEL:
Thou must depart, O Jeanne! the time has
come.
It is the Lord Who arms thee for the
fray.
Soon shalt thou see our blest, eternal
home!
Daughter of God! fear not to die to-day.
ST. MARGARET:
Thou, child, with Him shalt reign above.
ST. CATHERINE:
Wherever goes the Lamb, thy virgin soul
shall go.
THE TWO SAINTS TOGETHER:
Like us, thou, too, shalt sing the love
And power of God most high, where
crystal streamlets flow.
ST. MICHAEL:
Thy name, O Jeanne! on heaven's scroll
is placed,
With all who died that France might live
for aye;
There shall thy brow with glory's crown
be graced,
Like royal queen upon her nuptial day.
THE SAINTS, offering to Jeanne the palm
and crown:
With joy our loving eyes can see
The radiance that even now upon thy head
streams down;
And from high heaven we bring to thee
ST. CATHERINE:
The martyr's glorious palm,
ST. MARGARET:
The martyr's crown.
ST MICHAEL, presenting the sword:
Before the victory must come the fight,
Not yet the crown, not yet the palm can
be.
Win them where honor doth defend the
right.
Jeanne! dost thou hear the bugle call to
thee?
THE SAINTS TOGETHER:
Thee will we guard throughout the fray;
And splendid victories shall thy banner
grace.
On thy pure brow, one happy day,
Our hand the glorious aureole shall
place.
JEANNE, ALONE:
With you, dear saints, no foe I fear;
Upon the Lord of hosts I wait.
What time the battle draweth near,
His arm shall send deliverance great.
Oh, how I love my fatherland,
France, oldest daughter of the cross;
That love to sacrifice is fanned;
For her I count as gain all loss.
Ah, no! I fear not now to die,
Who long, dear God, Thy Face to see;
Yet, as I go, oh ! hear my cry:
Comfort my mother tenderly!
And thou, St. Michael, strengthen me.
ST. MICHAEL:
Hark! for already all the elect in
heaven
Raise high their joyous chant, because
they hear
The illustrious name of Martyr gladly
given,
By Rome's great Pontiff, to this maiden
dear.
I hear the universe declare
The virtues of this maid in warlike
armor drest;
I hear God grant to her the rare
And grand and glorious title, Jeanne the
Blest.
In those great days sore suff'ring
France shall know,
And impious deeds shall make her fail
and faint.
Then shall thy glory, Jeanne, more
splendid grow,
And all pure souls shall then invoke the
Saint.
__________________________________________________________________
The voices mount towards the skies,
Mingling with angel-choirs, whose songs
our hopes enhance.
O Jeanne of Arc, now hear our cries!
A second time, a second time, save
France!
1894.
__________________________________________________________________
HYMN OF JEANNE D'ARC AFTER HER
VICTORIES:
All honor and all glory be
To Thee, the Eternal King of kings!
For Thou hast given the victory
To me, a frail and feeble thing.
And thou, dear Mother, pure as snow,
Most lovely star, sublimely bright!
Oh, thou hast been my light below,
Protecting me in danger's night.
Thou, Queen, whose glories ne'er shall
fail,
When shall mine eyes thy splendors see?
When shall I rest beneath thy veil,
Never again to part from thee?
Hail, Mary! Holy Mother, hail!
My exiled spirit fain would fly
To heavenly joys that have no end;
Naught here its needs can satisfy, --
It craves for God, its perfect Friend.
But, ere that sweet reward begin,
I long to combat for Him here,
For Him unnumbered souls to win,
And find Him dearer and more dear.
My exile here will pass away,
As the day passes and is gone;
Then, up the radiant, sunlit way,
My happy soul shall hasten on,
To see my God in endless day.
__________________________________________________________________
PRAYER OF JEANNE D'ARC IN PRISON.
My voices this foretold: I am a prisoner
here,
No aid can I expect, except, my God,
from Thee;
For love of Thee alone, I left my father
dear;
My flower-decked fields, blue skies, my
flocks, no more I see.
For Thee I left my home and her who gave
me birth;
Then, lifting in my hand the standard of
Thy choice,
Lord, in Thy holy Name, I led an army
forth,
And far-famed generals then gave
credence to my voice.
Behold my recompense -- this gloomy
prison-place,
The price of all my toils, my prayers,
my blood, my tears!
No more my flowery fields my longing
eyes shall face,
Nor shall I see the home of all my
childhood years.
No more shall I behold the mountains far
away,
Whose distant summits seemed to pierce
the azure sky;
And I shall hear no more the
church-bells sweetly play.
How soft upon the air those holy notes
swept by!
Here, in this gloomy cell, the star I
seek in vain,
That used, at vesper hour, to shine so
clear and fair;
In vain I seek the leaves, that when
upon the plain
Beside my flock I slept, gave cooling
shelter there.
Here, when at last I sleep after long
bitter weeping,
Of morning's flowers I dream, and
perfumes of the dawn;
But then my clanking chains disturb that
happy sleeping, --
I wake -- my dream is past -- the
verdant fields are gone.
Lord, for Thy love I go, martyrdom to
embrace;
For Thee I dare to meet the lingering
death of fire.
Now but one wish is mine, -- to see Thee
face to face,
No more to part from Thee: -- behold my
heart's desire!
To die for love of Thee, -- what happier
lot than this?
I will take up my cross, and walk where
Thou hast trod.
Ah! how I long to die, and enter into
bliss!
Ah! how I long to die, and thus to see
my God!
__________________________________________________________________
IV. THE VOICES OF JEANNE D'ARC DURING HER MARTYRDOM:
We have come down from heaven's eternal
height,
To smile on thee and bear thee to thy
rest.
See in our hands the immortal crown of
light,
Designed to grace thy brow, O maiden
blest!
Come with us, virgin pure and fair!
Oh! come where saints and martyrs trod;
Come unto joys beyond compare,
Come unto life most fair,
Daughter of God!
Hot burns the fire about thy tender frame,
But far more hotly burns thy holy love;
Soon Christ will call thee to Him by thy
name,
And heavenly dews shall soothe thee from
above.
An angel comes to set thee free
From every pain; from torture wild.
Behold, the palm descends to thee!
Look up! thy Saviour see,
Great-hearted child!
O virgin-martyr! one brief moment's pain
Thee shall conduct to heaven beside thy
Lord.
Thy death saves France. See! heaven opes
again
To her lost children ransomed by thy
sword.
JEANE, DYING:
To my eternal home I fly;
Angelic faces meet my view
In God's great Name for France I die!
O Mary, now be nigh!
"Jesu! Jesu!"
__________________________________________________________________
V. THE DIVINE JUDGMENT:
I answer from My throne thy voice that
calls My name.
I break thy iron bands, thy bitter foes
I shame.
Fly, fly thou pure white dove, to Me,
thy Spouse, thy King!
Come, reign with Me in heaven, where
Saints thy praise shall sing.
O Jeanne, thy angel brings thee grace;
And I, the Judge of all thy race,
Beside My own throne give thee place,
And this proclaim:
Even in thee I saw love's holy flame.
Thou shalt be crowned. Oh, come to Me!
Thy tears My hand shall wipe away;
My kiss divine I give to thee;
I crown with joy thy griefs to-day.
With thy companions come
To My eternal home;
In heavenly valleys roam,
Following the Lamb.
Soul, well-beloved by Me,
Lo! I have ransomed thee!
Sing the new song, and be
Where'er I am.
Past is thy fleeting shame!
Angels exalt thy name,
Singing thy saintly fame,
Close to My throne.
Ah, timid shepherdess!
Virgin in warrior's dress!
Thy name the world shall bless,
Heavenward blown.
Ah, timid shepherdess!
Virgin in warrior's dress!
All heaven is now thine own.
__________________________________________________________________
VI. THE CANTICLE OF TRIUMPH.
THE SAINTS TO JEANNE D'ARC:
The immortal crown to thee, O Jeanne! we
bear;
Thou martyr of high God! to thee the
palm we bring;
A glorious throne for thee our loving
hands prepare,
Beside the King.
Rest now in heaven at last, rest now in
heaven, pure bride,
Escaped forevermore from every net and
snare!
In endless peace behold! the living
waters glide
'Mid fields bestrewn with flowers most
fair!
Take thou thy flight; expand thy wings
of snow;
For swiftly shalt thou speed from star
to golden star.
Through heaven's eternal space, all
joyous shalt thou go.
Fly now afar!
No cruel foes are here, no gloomy prison
walls;
The shining seraph hosts hail thee their
sister blest;
For thee, O spouse of Christ: thy
Well-Beloved calls.
Find now with Him eternal rest!
JEANNE:
He is my Own . . . . what ecstacy
divine!
All heaven is mine own!
THE SAINTS:
All heaven is thine own!
JEANNE:
The angels and the saints, Mary and God,
are mine.
They are mine own!
THE SAINTS:
Upon the far-off earth ages have passed
away,
Since thou didst pass from thence to
heaven's eternal joy,
A thousand years in heaven seem but one
little day.
O endless day, without alloy!
JEANNE:
O endless day, without or cloud or
shade,
No power can snatch from me thy glory
all divine!
The passing show of earth from off my
sight doth fade,
And heaven is mine!
THE SAINTS:
And heaven is thine!
__________________________________________________________________
VII. PRAYER OF FRANCE TO THE VENERABLE JEANNE D'ARC:
In heaven remember, Jeanne, your
fatherland,
Remember all her valleys decked with
flowers;
Recall the smiling plains, the mountains
grand,
You left, to dry her tears, in other
hours.
Remember how your arm saved France from
deadly foes;
How, like an angel sent from heaven, you
cured her woes!
Hear, in her night of pain,
France call on you again:
Remember now!
Remember those great victories you won,
Rheims, Orleans; those memorable days,
When, in God's name, grand deeds by you
were done,
Crowning your land with laurels and with
bays.
Now, far away from you, I suffer and I
sigh.
Come once again to save, who once for me
didst die!
Deign now to break my chains,
And all my present pains
Remember now!
My arms with fetters bound, to you I
cry,
Dim are my eyes with tears, oh, bring
relief!
No longer great among earth's queens am
I,
And mine own children pierce my heart
with grief.
No more for God they care; their Mother
they despise.
O Jeanne, compassionate my myriad
miseries!
Daughter of noble heart,
Oh, come, and take my part.
I hope in thee.
__________________________________________________________________
VIII CANTICLE TO OBTAIN THE CANONIZATION OF THE VENERABLE JEANNE D'ARC.
Thy Church, O conquering God! through
all the earth,
Begs Thee to crown with the saint's
royal crown,
A virgin, martyr, warrior, whose true
worth
In heaven's high courts e'en now hath
won renown.
Our tumults calm;
Her cause advance!
The halo and the palm
Give unto Jeanne of France!
For guilty France we do not ask from
Thee
A mighty conquerer with mail-clad horde.
Far better help Jeanne's prayer can gain
than he!
One martyr doth outshine all heroes,
Lord!
Jeanne is Thy glorious handiwork alone;
A heart of fire, a soldier's soul of
steel,
Thou gavest to Thine handmaid, all Thine
own,
With lily and laurel crowned, for woe or
weal.
Beside her flock she heard the high
command, --
Voices from heaven called her to the
fray;
So she left all, to save her fatherland;
Conquered by her, the foe fled far away.
To martial hosts she brought God's
saving grace;
Her eyes like heaven, her words like
burning flame,
Her holiness like theirs who see God's
Face.
Bowed sinful souls in penitence and
shame.
(O marvel ne'er before in history told!)
A kingdom's crown and glory all undone,
From the strong grasp of the invaders
bold,
By a young maiden's feeble arm are won.
Not thy great victories, O Jeanne so
blest!
Thy countrymen to celebrate are come;
But thy true glories here they would
attest,
Thy purity, thy love, thy martyrdom.
Though she saved France, hers was yet
loftier grace,
The gift Christ gave to those who loved
Him best,
Beside His cross to have the nearest
place,
He gave to Jeanne, before He gave her
rest.
In that last torture of consuming fire
She heard her "voices" speak
once more her name,
And left earth's exile for her heart's
desire,
Angel of France! up that steep path of
flame.
Daughter of God! deign now our voice to
hear!
Descend to us with thy sweet heavenly
glance!
Come, and convert the land to thee so
dear!
A second time, a second time, save
France!
By God's great power
In thee displayed,
Save France! O come, save France,
Thou saintly warrior-maid!
Glorious' O thou strong child of God!
wast thou,
When English hosts to meet thee did not
dare;
Yet, in thy father's fields, -- remember
now, --
Once weak and tender lambs were in thy
care.
Of all the weak
Be the defence!
In hearts of children meek,
Preserve their innocence!
Sweet martyr! keep our convents in thy
care!
Our virgins are thy sisters, each thine
own,
And like to thine the object of their
prayer, --
To see God reign in every heart alone.
This their desire,-
All souls to save.
Now let them share thy fire,
Apostle, martyr brave!
When holy Church shall give thee crown
and palm,
How swiftly every fear in us will faint!
Then can we sing in loud afid rapturous
psalm,
To Jeanne, our virgin, martyr,
warrior-saint: --
God grants us hope
Through thee today!
Saint Jeanne, Saint Jeanne of France,
Pray for thy country, pray!
1894.
__________________________________________________________________
Indexes
__________________________________________________________________
Index of Scripture References
Psalms
[1]115:7 [2]118:54
Ecclesiastes
[3]2:11
Song of Solomon
[4]6:3 [5]7:1
Isaiah
[6]40:11
John
[7]14:23 [8]14:27 [9]15:9
Romans
[10]4:4-6
Ephesians
[11]6:2