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TO HOPKINS' NUN
I came for the quiet-mindedness
beneath a veil,
And for the silence of the vines
creeping yearly among themselves,
Breeze tapping on the panes of
small high windows.
I came for the hum, sweetly sun
warmed, of the gardens
And the hymns of chanters cooled
by chapel shadows
And for the dusty vines shrouding
the old stones.
The odor of grass and sun air filled
me
And I moved in the contentment
of warm dreams.
Then when the leaves fell and the
sun fell before the bells,
The wind wailed wild and I stared
out
And saw the lightened trees burn
white against the sky.
And on my panes hard clattered
hail.
Good Frere, I see. The calm that
follows wind alone is real.
Quiet springs do fail, and storms
prevail. |