A PURPOSE OF AMENDMENT

By Helen Parry Eden

He who mangold-patch doth hoe,

Sweating beneath a sturdy sun,

Clearing each weed-disguised row

Till day-light and the task be done,

Standeth to view his labour’s scene—

Where now, within the hedge-row’s girth,

The little plants untrammeled green

Stripes the brown fabric of the earth.

So when the absolution’s said

Behind the grille, and I may go,

And all the flowers of sin are dead,

And all the stems of sin laid low,

And I am come to Mary’s shrine

To lay my hopes within her hand—

Ah, in how fair and green a line

The seedling resolutions stand.