The Church-Porches

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I
(To M.F.R.)
  SISTER, first shake we off the dust we have
 Upon our feet, lest it defile the stones
 Inscriptured, covering their sacred bones
  Who lie i' the aisles which keep the names they gave,
  Their trust abiding round them in the grave;
 Whom painters paint for visible orisons,
 And to whom sculptors pray in stone and bronze;
  Their voices echo still like a spent wave.
  Without here, the church-bells are but a tune,
  And on the carven church-door this hot noon
 Lays all its heavy sunshine here without:
  But having entered in, we shall find there
  Silence, and sudden dimness, and deep prayer,
 And faces of crowned angels all about.
II
(To C.G.R.)

  SISTER, arise: We have no more to sing
 Or say. The priest abideth as is meet
 To minister. Rise up out of thy seat,
  Though peradventure 'tis an irksome thing
  To cross again the threshold of our King
 Where His doors stand against the evil street,
 And let each step increase upon our feet
  The dust we shook from them at entering.
  Must we of very sooth go home? The air,
 Whose heat outside makes mist that can be seen,
 Is very clear and cool where we have been.
 The priest abideth ministering. Lo!
  As he for service, why not we for prayer?
 It is so bidden, sister, let us go.

© Dante Gabriel Rossetti