Eastward she looks; against the sky the eternal morning lies; Silent or pleading, veiled or free, she lifts the woman's eyes. O grave girls' faces, listening kind! glad will I sing for ye, While the proud figure of the sphinx is all that I can see. [1] Written for a graduating class at Abbott Academy. VICTURÆ SALUTAMUS.[1] Shall we who are about to live, Cry like a clarion on the battle-field? Or weep before 't is fought, the fight to yield? Thou that hast been and yet that art to be Named by our name, that art the First and Last! Womanhood of the future and the past! Thee we salute, below the breath. Oh, give To us the courage of our mystery. ... Pealing, the clock of Time Has struck the Woman's Hour.... We hear it on our knees. For ah, no power Is ours to trip too lightly to the rhyme Of idle words that fan the summer air, Of bounding words that leap the years to come. Ideal of ourselves! We dream and dare. Victuræ salutamus! Thou art dumb. [1] Written for the first commencement at Smith College. THE ERMINE. I read of the ermine to-day, Of the ermine who will not step By the feint of a step in the mire,— The creature who will not stain Her garment of wild, white fire; Of the dumb, flying, soulless thing (So we with our souls dare to say), The being of sense and of sod, That will not, that will not defile The nature she took from her God. And we, with the souls that we have, Go cheering the hunters on To a prey with that pleading eye. She cannot go into the mud! She can stay like the snow, and die!