LA SALETTE

It is a hundred years since your shy feet

Ventured to stand upon the pasture grass of the high Alps,

Coming no deeper in our smoky atmosphere

Than these blue skies, the mountain eyes

Of the two shepherd children, young as flowers,

Born to be dazzled by no mortal snow.

Lady, it is a hundred years

Since those fair, terrible tears

Reproved, with their amazing grief

All the proud candor of those altitudes:

Crowning the flowers at your feet

With diamonds, that seized upon, transfigured into nails of light

The rays of the mountain sun!—

And by their news,

(Which came with cowbells to the evening village

And to the world with church-bells

After not too many days,)

And by their news

We thought the walls of all hard hearts

Had broken down, and given in,

Poured out their dirty garrisons of sin,

And washed the streets with our own blood, if need be—

—Only to have them clean!

And though we did not understand

The weight and import of so great a sorrow,

We never thought so soon to have seen

The loss of its undying memory,

Passing from the black world without a word,

Without a funeral!

For while our teeth were battling in the meat of miracles and favors,

Your words, your prophecies, were all forgotten!

Now, one by one,

The things you said

Have come to be fulfilled.

John, in the might of his Apocalypse, could not foretell

Half of the story of our monstrous century,

In which the arm of your inexorable Son,

Bound, by His Truth, to disavow your intercession

For this wolf-world, this craven zoo,

Has bombed the doors of hell clean off their hinges,

And burst the cage of antichrist,

And roused, with His first two great thunderbolts,

The chariots of Armageddon.