Fri 4 Mar 2011
A thoroughly modern poem from 1888
Posted by PJ under poetry
[2] Comments
Thanks to Lady Lavona’s Cabinet of Curiosities for sharing it on her blog.
Sisters of the Cross of Shame
by Dana Burnet (1888)
The Sisters of the Cross of Shame,
They smile along the night;
Their houses stand with shuttered souls
And painted eyes of light.
Their houses look with scarlet eyes
Upon a world of sin;
And every man cries, “Woe, alas!â€
And every man goes in.
The sober Senate meets at noon,
To pass the Woman’s Law,
The portly Churchmen vote to stem
The torrent with a straw.
The Sister of the Cross of Shame,
She smiles beneath her cloud—
(She does not laugh till ten o’clock,
And then she laughs too loud.)
And still she hears the throb of feet
Upon the scarlet stair,
And still she dons the cloak of shame
That is not hers to wear.
The sons of saintly women come
To kiss the Cross of Shame;
Before them, in another time,
Their worthy fathers came.…
And no man tells his son the truth,
Lest he should speak of sin;
And every man cries, “Woe, alas!â€
And every man goes in.
Love the poem, especially
And still she hears the throb of feet
Upon the scarlet stair,
And still she dons the cloak of shame
That is not hers to wear. 20
When I write my article about shame, I plan to include it.
Glad you liked it and it was helpful.