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Home  »  The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse  »  Richard Le Gallienne (1866–1947)

Arthur Quiller-Couch, comp. The Oxford Book of Victorian Verse. 1922.

The Second Crucifixion

Richard Le Gallienne (1866–1947)

LOUD mockers in the roaring street

Say Christ is crucified again:

Twice pierced His gospel-bearing feet,

Twice broken His great heart in vain.

I hear, and to myself I smile,

For Christ talks with me all the while.

No angel now to roll the stone

From off His unawaking sleep,

In vain shall Mary watch alone,

In vain the soldiers vigil keep.

Yet while they deem my Lord is dead

My eyes are on His shining head.

Ah! never more shall Mary hear

That voice exceeding sweet and low

Within the garden calling clear:

Her Lord is gone, and she must go.

Yet all the while my Lord I meet

In every London lane and street.

Poor Lazarus shall wait in vain,

And Bartimæus still go blind;

The healing hem shall ne’er again

Be touch’d by suffering humankind.

Yet all the while I see them rest,

The poor and outcast, on His breast.

No more unto the stubborn heart

With gentle knocking shall He plead,

No more the mystic pity start,

For Christ twice dead is dead indeed.

So in the street I hear men say:

Yet Christ is with me all the day.