PURITY.

Some souls are white

With perfectness, like stars full-orbed in heaven,

Silently moving through the stainless blue;

Seeming naught of their nature to have drawn

From contact with the earth; and some are white

With innocence, like daisies that too near

The ground their fair leaves fearlessly unfold.

This woman’s soul

Is white with purity; the snowy bloom

Of a camelia, that feels no disdain

In drawing from this common earth of ours

The sources of its beauty and its life;

Yet with a wise and lofty self-control,

Refuses long to blossom to the sun;

Spreading its glossy leaves to light and air;

Winning a deep, sure knowledge of the world;

Rising with quiet dignity and grace

Into a higher air; and when at last

Its stately petals open to the day,

Not with the daisy’s foolish trustfulness,

But with the confidence of slow-won strength,

To the world’s gaze it silently unfolds

The perfect flower of a royal soul,

Not innocent, and yet forever pure.