Saturday Mass of the Blessed Virgin Mary.
The Communion Hymn riveted my thoughts, and I re-read the poetry again.
Only at the top, I glanced to the name of the composer.
The life of Francis Thompson comes alight again.
Francis Thompson poem The Passion of Mary
Oh Lady Mary, thy bright crown
Is no mere crown of majesty;
For with the reflex of His own
Resplendent thorns Christ circled thee.
Is no mere crown of majesty;
For with the reflex of His own
Resplendent thorns Christ circled thee.
* * *
The red rose of this Passion-tide
Doth take a deeper hue from thee,
In the five wounds of Jesus dyed,
And in thy bleeding thoughts, Mary!
Doth take a deeper hue from thee,
In the five wounds of Jesus dyed,
And in thy bleeding thoughts, Mary!
* * *
The soldier struck a triple stroke,
That smote thy Jesus on the tree:
He broke the Heart of Hearts, and broke
The Saint's and Mother's hearts in thee.
That smote thy Jesus on the tree:
He broke the Heart of Hearts, and broke
The Saint's and Mother's hearts in thee.
* * *
Thy Son went up the angels' ways,
His passion ended; but, ah me!
Thou found'st the road of further days
A longer way of Calvary:
His passion ended; but, ah me!
Thou found'st the road of further days
A longer way of Calvary:
* * *
On the hard cross of hope deferred
Thou hung'st in loving agony,
Until the mortal-dreaded word
Which chills our mirth, spake mirth to thee.
Thou hung'st in loving agony,
Until the mortal-dreaded word
Which chills our mirth, spake mirth to thee.
* * *
The angel Death from this cold tomb
Of life did roll the stone away;
And He thou barest in thy womb
Caught thee at last into the day,
Before the living throne of Whom
The Lights of Heaven burning pray.
Of life did roll the stone away;
And He thou barest in thy womb
Caught thee at last into the day,
Before the living throne of Whom
The Lights of Heaven burning pray.
* * *
Francis Thompson:
(author of 'The
Hound of Heaven')
In February 1887,
Wilfrid Meynell, the editor of Merry England a Catholic
literary monthly magazine, received some untidy manuscripts, accompanied
by the following covering letter: "In enclosing the accompanying article
for your inspection, I must ask pardon for the soiled state of the manuscript.
It is due, not to slovenliness, but to the strange places and circumstances
under which it has been written".
Meynell must have
wondered what sort of a man wrote the enclosed contents, including the moving
poem, "The Passion of Mary". What were the "strange places and
circumstances" under which these were written? All attempts to trace the
author failed, until Thompson noticed one of his poems had been published in Merry
England. Meynell's hope that the author would, in response to the
publication, reveal himself, proved successful. One day in the spring of 1888,
a man in his early 30s in ragged clothes and broken shoes and looking aged and
ill - largely due to his drug addiction - presented himself at Meynell's office
and introduced himself as Francis Thompson. (ad2000.com)
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