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The Judgement of the Flood

by John A. Heraud. A New Edition. Revised and Re-Arranged

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Meantime as one new-risen from the dead,
Unlike his former self, by friend and foe
Unrecognized, came Samiasa nigh
The City of his name—but from the wild
Not free'd, nor from his doom. Nor would he pass
Into the public ways, though sternly urged
By Palal, who there left him for awhile,
Alone within the Desert. There he lay
Three days, a passive brute; but on the fourth
He was a-hungered, and fierce appetite
With bestial rage stirred in him, and he scoured
The Wilderness for food. In fury thus,
A Lion crossed his path—on it he seized,
With more than giant might. Long time they strove
In mutual war, but the ferocious man
Was braver than the merely animal,
And him before the inferior creature quailed—
Even by the teeth asunder rent the jaws,
The noble Lion slain lay by his side;
Anon, stript of its skin, a royal robe
For him who slew it; and of flesh deprived,
Its victor's royal meal.
Now, Sabbath brake,
And Samiasa saw what desperate feat
He had performed, but not with triumph felt;
And earnestly resolved within his breast,
How to regain communion with his kind.
Not that he had not been beheld by man,

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But whoso saw him shrank from him in dread,
And he from them in shame, but proudly shewn.