[Suggested by the death of a young girl.]

The white, soft robes that cling
About her tender form and young
Have caught earth's last faint breeze
And flutter in the earliest breath
Of God's new-dawning day,
Revealing on the topmost step
The slender foot that rests
Upon the threshold she shall cross,
And baring the young arm
That mothered infant Hope.
And in her dreaming eyes so mild,
That glance a moment down
To where her loved ones longing dwell,
There lives no hungering regret;
For on the doorway latch there rests
The fragile hand so pale;
It moves, the door swings softly now,
The sweet soul enters in,
While one long ray of light falls through
And filters down to earth.

SONNET TO NEMESIS, GODDESS OF REMORSE

O Nemesis, thou goddess born of Night,
Thou younger sister of stern Death and Sleep,
Close-couched art thou with those grim Three who keep
The spun and measured threads of life aright;
O Nemesis, that shuns each form of light,
By night o'er all the world thy glance doth sweep
To seek out crime, its penalty to reap
When rosy dawn has put the stars to flight.
Thy fateful voice rings dread from age to age,
Oft times as baying dog or hooting owl;
And clear upon thy all-recording page
Is writ each deed e'er done with purpose foul.
Not even can thy brother Death assuage
Thy pangs, Remorse, more dread than Cerberus' growl.

THOUGHTS OF GOD

Whoever the God that has called me to light,
Has willed that my soul should have faith in His might:
God is our fountain-head, God is our source,
From Him and to Him we follow our course;
Wavering, some of us, some ever bold,
All of us coming at last to His fold.

TWO MONOLOGUES