ARTHUR POLLEN

TIRPITZ’S LAST HOPE—PIRACY

“Weeping, She hath Wept”

While a world of mourners is plaintively asking, “What has become of our brave dead, where are they? Alas! how dark is the world without them, how silent the home, how sad the heart”; whilst the mourner is groping like the blind woman for her lost treasure, the Belgian mother, and the Belgian widow, and the Belgian orphan are on their knees, praying, “Eternal rest give to them, O Lord; let a perpetual light shine upon them,” the Christian plea that has echoed down the ages from the day of the Maccabees till now, exhorting us to pray for the dead that they may be loosed from their sins.

I would remind the broken-hearted mother beseeching me to tell her where can her brave boy be gone, adding, “His was such a lonely journey; did he find his way to God?” of the words of the poet, who finds his answer to her question in the flight of a sea bird sailing sunward from the winter snows:

There is a Power whose care

Teaches thy way along the pathless coast,

The desert and illimitable air,

Lone, wandering but not lost: