Page:Ldpd 14012191 000.pdf/21



, ancient abbeys, you may see them yet, In that high plain above the western sea: A broken arch or two, a few worn stones Piled one upon another, and for paving Uneven fragments with tall grass between: Grass that is always green, winter and summer, The grass that grows on long-forgotten graves.

It was a springtime morning long ago, A morning of blue skies and whitest clouds, And singing birds, and singing streams, and woods That shone like silver, yet untouched with green: The brethren of an abbey of the plain —Whereof what now is ruin yet was whole— Were labouring as holy brethren must, Quietly, and in peace: and elder ones Paced in the cloister, and some, older still, Too old to work or dream, sat in the sunlight, The sunlight which they soon should see no more.

And there came from the wood upon the hill One clothed in the sere habit of a monk, That passed in at the portal of the abbey: Brighter his face than is the face of spring, And joy was in his tread, as in his soul.

And some that paced the cloister paused to glance at him, And one that went upon an errand stayed. And some that laboured left their work, and came Gathering round him, and he spake, and said: