Still downward into lurid gloom
The saint and angel took their
way,
Moving within a clear cool room,
The light benign of heavenly
day.
The wretched thronged on every side.
“Have mercy on us, radiant
twain!
O Paul! beloved of God!” they cried,
“Pray Heaven for surcease
of our pain.”
“Weep, weep, unhappy ones, bewail!
We too our prayers and tears
will lend:
Our supplication may prevail,
And haply God some respite
send.”
Then upward from the lost there swept
Entreaty multitudinous,
As every wave of ocean wept:
“O Christ! have mercy
upon us!”
And as their clamor rose on high
Beyond the pathway of the
sun,
Heav’n’s happy legions joined
the cry,
Their voices melting into
one.
The saint, up-gazing through the dew
Of pity brimming o’er
his eyes,
Discerned in Heav’n’s remotest
blue
The Son of God lean from the
skies.
Then through their agonies were heard
The tones which still’d
the angry sea,
The voice of the Eternal Word:
“And do ye ask repose
of me?
“Me whom ye pierced with curse and
jeer,
Whose mortal thirst ye quenched
with gall?
I died for your immortal cheer:
What profit have I of you
all?
“Liars, traducers, proud in thought,
Misers! no offering of psalms
Or prayer or thanks ye ever brought—
No deed of penitence or alms.”
Michael and Paul at that dread speech,
With all the myriads of Heaven,
Fell on their faces to beseech
Peace for the lost one day
in seven.
The Son of God, who hearkens prayer,
In mercy to those souls forlorn
Bade that their torments should forbear
From Sabbath eve to Monday
morn.
The torments swarmed forth at the gate—
Hell’s solemn guardians
let them pass:
Those awful cherubim who wait
All sorrowful surveyed the
mass.
But from the lost a single cry,
Which rang rejoicing through
the spheres:
“O blessed Son of God most high!
Two nights, a day, no pain
or tears?”
“O Son of God, for ever blessed!
Praise and give thanks, all
spirits sad:
A day, two nights of perfect rest?
So much on earth we never
had!”
[Footnote 1: See Fauriel, Hist. de la Poesie provencale, tom. i. ch. 8.]
THE ATONEMENT OF LEAM DUNDAS.
BY MRS. E. LYNN LINTON, AUTHOR OF “PATRICIA KEMBALL.”
CHAPTER XXIX.
THE FRIEND OF THE FUTURE.