Rouen, Place de la Pucelle by Maria White Lowell

Rouen, Place de la Pucelle
by Maria White Lowell
 
 
Here blooms the legend, fed by Time and Chance,     
    Fresh as the morning, though with centuries old, 
The whitest lily on the shield of France,        
    With heart of virgin gold. 


Along the square she moved, sweet Joan of Arc,     
    With face more pallid than a daylit star, 
Half-seen, half-doubted, while before her dark        
    Stretched the array of war. 


Swift passed the battle-smoke of lying breath     
    From off her path, as if a wind had blown, 
Showing no faithless King, but righteous Death        
    On the low wooden throne. 


He would reward her: she who meekly wore     
    Alike the gilded mail and peasant gown, 
As meekly now received one honor more,        
    The formless, fiery crown. 

 
A white dove trembled up the heated air,     
    And in the opening zenith found its goal; 
Soft as a downward feather, dropped a prayer        
    For each repentant soul.

 
Maria White was born on July 8, 1821, in Watertown, Massachusetts. Her husband, fellow poet James Russell Lowell, had her poems collected and published after her death in 1853. This poem is in public domain.

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