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Katharine Tynan - The Convent GardenKatharine Tynan - The Convent Garden
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The Convent garden lies so near     The road the people go, If it was quiet you might hear     The nuns` talk, merry and low. Black London trees have made their screen     From folk who pry and peer, The sooty sparrows now begin     Their talk of country cheer. And round and round by twos and threes     The nuns walk, praying still For fighting men across the seas     Who die to save them ill. From the dear prison of her choice     The young nun`s thoughts are far; She muses on the golden boys     At all the Fronts of War. Now from her narrow Convent house     She sees where great ships be, And plucks the robe of God, her Spouse,     To give the victory. Under her robe her heart`s a-beat,     Her maiden pulses stir, At sound of marching in the street,     To think they die for her! And now beneath the veil and hood     Her hidden eyes will glow, The battle ardour`s in her blood --     If she might strike one blow! And when she sleeps at last perchance     Her soul hath slipped away To fields of Serbia and of France     Until the dawn of day. She wanders by the still moonbeam     By dying and by dead, And many a broken man will dream     An angel lifts his head. All day and night as a sweet smoke     Her prayer ascends the skies That all her piteous fighting folk     May walk in Paradise. And still her innocent pulses stir,     Her heart is proud and high, To think that men should die for her --     And the marching feet go by.
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