Feast of the Sacred Heart By Abram Joseph Ryan

    Two lights on a lowly altar;
     Two snowy cloths for a Feast;
    Two vases of dying roses;
     The morning comes from the east,
    With a gleam for the folds of the vestments
     And a grace for the face of the priest.

    The sound of a low, sweet whisper
     Floats over a little bread,
    And trembles around a chalice,
     And the priest bows down his head!
    O’er a sign of white on the altar —
     In the cup — o’er a sign of red.

    As red as the red of roses,
     As white as the white of snows!
    But the red is a red of a surface
     Beneath which a God’s blood flows;
    And the white is the white of a sunlight
     Within which a God’s flesh glows.

    Ah! words of the olden Thursday!
     Ye come from the far-away!
    Ye bring us the Friday’s victim
     In His own love’s olden way;
    In the hand of the priest at the altar
     His Heart finds a home each day.

    The sight of a Host uplifted!
     The silver-sound of a bell!
    The gleam of a golden chalice.
     Be glad, sad heart! ’tis well;
    He made, and He keeps love’s promise,
     With thee all days to dwell.

    From his hand to his lips that tremble,
     From his lips to his heart a-thrill,
    Goes the little Host on its love-path,
     Still doing the Father’s will;
    And over the rim of the chalice
     The blood flows forth to fill

    The heart of the man anointed
     With the waves of a wondrous grace;
    A silence falls on the altar —
     An awe on each bended face —
    For the Heart that bled on Calvary
     Still beats in the holy place.

    The priest comes down to the railing
     Where brows are bowed in prayer;
    In the tender clasp of his fingers
     A Host lies pure and fair,
    And the hearts of Christ and the Christian
     Meet there — and only there!

    Oh! love that is deep and deathless!
     Oh! faith that is strong and grand!
    Oh! hope that will shine forever,
     O’er the wastes of a weary land!
    Christ’s Heart finds an earthly heaven
     In the palm of the priest’s pure hand.