LAST SCENE
Helen Raby
Where the grave-deeps rot, where the grave-dews rust,
They dug, crying, 'Earth to earth'—
Crying, 'Ashes to
ashes and dust to dust'—
And
what are my poor prayers worth ?
Upon whom shall I
call, or in whom shall I trust,
Though death were indeed new birth ?
And they bid me be
glad for my baby's sake
That she suffered sinless and young—
Would they have me
be glad when my breasts still ache
Where that small, soft, sweet mouth clung ?
I am glad that the
heart will so surely break
That has been so bitterly wrung.
He was false, they
tell me, and what if he were ?
I
can only shudder and pray,
Pouring out my soul
in a passionate prayer
For
the soul that he cast away ;
Was there nothing
that once was created fair
In
the potter's perishing clay ?
Is it well for the
sinner that souls endure ?
For
the sinless soul is it well ?
Does the pure child
lisp to the angels pure ?
And
where does the strong man dwell,
If the sad assurance
of priests be sure,
Or
the tale that our preachers tell ?
The unclean has
follow'd the undefiled,
And
the ill may regain the good,
And the man may
be even as the little child !
We
are children lost in the wood—
Lord ! lead us out
of this tangled wild,
Where the wise and
the prudent have been beguil'd,
And
only the babes have stood.