Out of the sedge by the creek a flight
of clamorous killdees
Rose from their timorous sleep with piercing
and iterant challenge,
Wheeled in the starlight and fled away
into distance and silence.
White on the other hand lay the tents,
and beyond them glided the river,
Where the broadhorn[A] drifted slow at
the will of the current,
And where the boatman listened, and knew
not how, as he listened,
Something touched through the years the
old lost hopes of his
childhood,—
Only his sense was filled with low monotonous
murmurs,
As of a faint-heard prayer, that was chorused
with deeper responses.
[Footnote A: The old-fashioned flat-boats were so called.]
Not with the rest was lifted her voice
in the fervent responses,
But in her soul she prayed to Him that
heareth in secret,
Asking for light and for strength to learn
His will and to do it:
“Oh, make me clear to know, if the
hope that rises within me
Be not part of a love unmeet for me here,
and forbidden!
So, if it be not that, make me strong
for the evil entreaty
Of the days that shall bring me question
of self and reproaches,
When the unrighteous shall mock, and my
brethren and sisters shall
doubt me!
Make me worthy to know Thy will, my Saviour,
and do it!”
In her pain she prayed, and at last, through
her mute adoration,
Rapt from all mortal presence, and in
her rapture uplifted,
Glorified she rose, and stood in the midst
of the people,
Looking on all with the still, unseeing
eyes of devotion,
Vague, and tender, and sweet, as the eyes
of the dead, when we dream
them
Living and looking on us, but they cannot
speak, and we cannot:
Knowing only the peril that threatened
his soul’s unrepentance,
Knowing only the fear and error and wrong
that withheld him,
Thinking, “In doubt of me, his soul
had perished forever!”
Touched with no feeble shame, but trusting
her power to save him,
Through the circle she passed, and straight
to the side of her lover,—
Took his hand in her own, and mutely implored
him an instant,
Answering, giving, forgiving, confessing,
beseeching him all things,—
Drew him then with her, and passed once
more through the circle
Unto her place, and knelt with him there
by the side of her father,
Trembling as women tremble who greatly
venture and triumph,—
But in her innocent breast was the saint’s
sublime exultation.
So was Louis converted; and though the
lips of the scorner
Spared not in after-years the subtle taunt
and derision,
(What time, meeker grown, his heart held
his hand from its answer,)
Not the less lofty and pure her love and
her faith that had saved him,
Not the less now discerned was her inspiration
from heaven
By the people, that rose, and embracing,
and weeping together,
Poured forth their jubilant songs of victory