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I grasped this ponderous and gnarled spear,
Which now I scarcely sway, I ill conceived
The possibility of self-mistrust,

But I have now not only lost my youth, -
Ah! were the invincible right-hand of God
E'en yet with me! or were with me at least
David, my champion!

*

*

And what?

*

Wouldst thou

Conceal from me the horror of my state?
Ah! were I not a father, as I am,

Alas! too certainly, of much-loved children,
Would I have now life, victory, or the throne?
I should already, and a long time since,
Headlong have cast myself mid hostile swords:
I should already, thus at least, at once
Have closed the horrible life that I drag on.
How many years have now past, since a smile
Was seen to play upon my lips? My children,
Whom still I love so much, if they caress me,
For the most part inflame my heart to rage.
Impatient, fierce, incensed, and turbulent,
I am a burthen to myself and others;
In peace I wish for war, in war for peace;
Poison concealed I drink in every cup,
In every friend I see an enemy;
The softest carpets of Assyria seem
Planted with thorns to my unsolaced limbs ;
My transient sleep is agonized with fear;
Each dream with imaged terrors that distract me.
Why should I add to this dark catalogue?

Who would believe it? The sonorous trumpet
Speaks to my ears in an appalling voice;
And fills the heart of Saul with deep dismay.
Thou seest clearly that Saul's tottering house
Is desolate, bereft of all its splendor;

Thou seest that God hath cast me off forever.

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Imperative and visionary voice,

Which as a youth my nightly slumbers broke,
When I in privacy securely lived

Far from the throne, and all aspiring thoughts
For sundry nights hath that same voice been heard
In menacing, denunciatory tones;

Like the deep murmur of the stormy waves,
Thundering repulsively, to me it cried, -
"Depart, depart, O Saul." The sacred aspect,
The venerable aspect of the prophet,

Which I had seen in dreams before he had
Made manifest that God had chosen me
For Israel's king, that Samuel, in a dream,
Now with far different aspect I behold,
I, from a hollow, deep, and horrible vale,
Behold him sitting on a radiant mount:
David is humbly prostrate at his feet:
The Joly prophet on his forehead pours
The consecrated oil: with the other hand
Stretched to my head, a hundred cubits length,
He snatches from my brow the royal crown,
And would replace it on the brow of David:
But wouldst thou think it? David prostrate falls,

With piteous gesture, at the prophet's feet,
Refusing to receive it; and he weeps,
And cries, and intercedes so fervently,
That he refits it on my head at last.

Vittorio Alfieri. Tr. C. Lloyd.

Gilead, the Mount.

MOUNT GILEAD.

N Gilead's hills a voice of wail is heard,

ON

'Tis not the sighing wind or plaining bird; Where yon cool fountain flows, beneath the shade Of arching willows sits the Hebrew maid:

Young girls around her raise those cries of woe,
But from sweet Miriam's lips no murmurs flow:
Calm on that breast, which soon beneath the knife
Must yield to heaven its gentle springs of life,
Droops her fair head, her rich locks, once her pride,
In unbound masses floating by her side.

Like soft dark clouds which screen too brilliant skies
The silken fringe half veils those large black eyes,
And as in that deep hush scarce comes her breath,
She seems absorbed in thought, and dreams of death.

Although weak shrinkings shake not Miriam's soul, Regret's sad pangs she may not all control; She feels how lovely Nature smiles around,

Joy in each beam, and music in each sound;
But soon for her the sun will quench its ray,
And all that's bright and glorious fade away;
No more for her will gush the bird's glad song,
The lithe gazelle in beauty bound along!
No more, O, nevermore, the much-loved voice
Of sire or friend will bid her soul rejoice:
That young warm heart, now fond Affection's seat,
In soft response to love must cease to beat;
In Gilead's vales no bride shall Miriam smile,
No mother's joys shall e'er her heart beguile,
Her nuptial wreath must be Death's plant of gloom,
Hymen's sweet bower the cold undreaming tomb.
Did fiends or angels prompt that fatal vow?
O, Heaven, look down!' support and pity now!
Were ever woes so dark and crushing piled
On one fair head?-alas for Jephthah's child!

And there that maiden sat, but made no moan; Still drooped her beauteous brow, as turned to stone; The willow branches o'er her sighing spread, Its crystal tears the bubbling fountain shed: The fair attendants mourned to hill and dale, And pitying Echo caught the plaintive wail, Ages have passed, poor ill-starred Hebrew maid! Thy heart is hushed, in long, long quiet laid, Yet pilgrims drawing near this lonely spot, Will ever think of thee, and mourn thy lot.

Nicholas Michell.

Hebron.

HEBRON.

HERE stands a tree at Hebron, huge its form,

THERE

Oft seared by lightning, worn by many a storm:
Ages that level thrones beneath their stroke,
And sweep off races, spare that spreading oak.
Pilgrims, when Rome was Pagan, came to see,
And muse beneath this famed and hallowed tree.
Here oft did Abraham sit, when évening still
Cooled the green vale, and crimsoned Hebron's hill;
The musky breezes round his forehead played,

He blessed bright Nature's God, and blessed that shade.
Here stood those guests sent earthward from the skies,
Mortal their forms, but heaven within their eyes;
And yonder glooms Machpelah's ancient cave,
The bartering sons of Heth to Abraham gave.
Now giant stones protect that spot so blest,
Where the great sire and Hebrew mother rest;
Nor yet perchance the rock betrays its trust,
Though forty ages brood above their dust.
But sealed to Christians is that cell of gloom,
The Turk's proud crescent glittering o'er the tomb;
For Moslems guard the spot with jealous care,
And burn their lamps, and read their Koran there,
And pray to Allah in that worshipped place,
E'en while they scorn and hate the Patriarch's race.
Nicholas Michell.

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