Little Gray Songs From St. Joseph's
IN the winter of 1903, a cold night and a colder dawning sent girls shivering to their work in the mills of an American town; among them Leonie X—, the still girl who never told her name. She, frail and weary as she was, slipped upon the icy pavement and fell. The hurt proving dire, she was carried to a small Franciscan hospital hard by, where she lay for two years — true to herself — saying little with her lips and much with her mournful eyes.
During the illness she wrote many “little letters to herself,” which were hidden beneath her pillow, and which the good Sister Jérôme, who was her sole nurse, lovingly preserved after her death.
“Une odeur d’ether un jour de soleil.”
I
Adventurers of mere and main;
They watch the wave, follow the foam.
There be those that hunt at home,
Adventurers of pain.
And from the hearthstone turn away,
Heart-homeless if their footsteps fail
Some houseless snowy height to scale,
Ere light dies with the day.
And some would plant the desert-place;
Daily their feet are driven forth,
Their hands have measured the round earth —
Adventurers of space.
Unhelped, alas, of near and far?
O gulfs as great gather their cry,
And hosts as fair their victory —
The seekers of the Star.
To scream white-mouth’d upon those heights,
Transported by a truth made plain —
From mad despair to wrest the rein —
To delve in breathless nights
Bravely to launch on each new day
A hope, wave-racked and wrecked again —
To conquer through the fever-fen —
Toward Death to lead the way.
Adventurers of mere and main —
They watch the wave, follow the foam;
There be those that hunt at home,
Adventurers of pain.
II
And straws to show their current’s drift,
And we are riddles they must sift —
Even riddles they must read.
And we are signs of their unthrift
Ay — signs of tasks that they have left.
They shall be shriven with this shrift —
“Go make their need your need.”
III
Where never seed was sown;
There is a wilderness called night,
Wherein I lie alone,
And there my voice goes crying forth.
O were a sound a star!
My cry is all there is of light
In a land where no lamps are.
IV
Or yet my wild grandsir,
Or the lord that lured the maid away That was my sad mother,
Would they have stayed their wild, wild love,
Nor made my years their slave?
O life, O life, how may we learn Thy strangest mystery?
Their souls — O let them rest;
My life is pupil unto pain —
With him I make my quest.
V
I have no songs to sing to thee;
The long, long years for thy grief’s rack;
Mine eyes turn forward and not back.
And griefs of girls and Stranger Sons —
The long, long hope before us runs.
O puzzling strange it is to me;
Slaughter of sons in thy son’s name,
And motherhood turned to maiden’s shame.
Mary, mother of misery,
Here I give thanks, girl that I be,
No son of mine shall drain the cup
That Jesu’s hand hath fillèd up.
O the young torn heart of me!
Branch at the window telleth of Spring;
My body hath no burgeoning.)
(Mary, mother of slavery).
No link I be in the long, long chain
Of human sighs and human pain.
VI
Father Saran goes by;
I think he goes to say a prayer
For one who has to die.
May say a prayer for me;
Myself meanwhile, the Sister tells,
Should pray unceasingly.
Who face to ceiling lie,
Shut out by all that man has made
From God who made the sky?
A humble heart to God;
But O, my heart of clay is proud —
True sister to the sod.
They say bends over me;
I search the dark, dark face of God —
O what is it I see?
Not kneel — who can but seek —
I see mine own face over me,
With tears upon its cheek.
VII
Friend, my page says “Pain.”
But what is the end of our reading?
O it is the same!
Knowledge each will be heeding.
Friend, I go with pain.
What is the end of our going?
O for each the same;
Ourselves we shall be knowing.
Friend, thy food is pleasure;
My bread and meat are pain.
What is the end of our living?
For each, for each the same!
Deep sight it will be giving.
VIII
(O life’s full bitter tide)
Had his Gethsemane last night
On the lone mountain-side.
How great and sure he died.
At the right side of him and left.
Two fears were crucified.
IX
“How bright doth shine the sun!
A little cloud hath flown away,
Its race with darkness done.
That covered up the morn;
See now the earth sky-beauty wears
And starry flowers are born.
In robes that bear the rose;
A little stormy cloud that strayed
Now homeward, homeward goes.”
My flight unto the flowers,
I pray more beauty shall arise,
I pray — more light be yours.