Maiden Ecstasy | ||
95
THE SHEPHERDESS.
I
By one whose heart kept watch was heard the fameOf a bright world that, like a ship of war,
Was launched in heaven beside the last that came
O'er the sky's outer bar:
Her land Chaldea, she that blessed name
Gave to the coming star.
II
Child of a lord, they called on her to reignO'er that old story-land whose shepherds deem
The stars a flock that studs a holy plain;
And she had learned in dream
That her loved land, through her, that star should gain
And with its blessings teem.
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III
But heartless deeds were of her father toldWho the fair daughters, in the mountains born,
Had captured and to days of slavery sold
Where bends the Golden Horn:
A shepherd chief, who robbed his neighbour's fold,
And took the lamb unshorn.
IV
She bears her crook o'er living plains, her wayThrough tents in which the thoughtful shepherds dwell
Who watch the heavens where the bright grazers stray
And think they hear the bell
Whose holy tinklings, as they softly play,
The fates of men foretell.
V
So doth she haste to meet her shepherd-seersAnd see the promised star that shall eclipse
The one which filled her father's land with tears;
And learn from their own lips
The happy portents that to man it bears
From the new heaven it skips.
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VI
While Tigris and Euphrates still o'erleapTheir shallow bounds her camel slowly goes,
When nigh her tent, on vengeful errand, creep
Her father's olden foes,
And seize her, helpless, in her noon-day sleep
While all her tribes repose.
VII
In a barred chamber, and in chains, a slave,She weeps with eyes upon the Golden Horn,
And thinks of far-off waters as they lave
Blessed homes in Capricorn,
Where happy beings find the Heaven that gave
To her the star new-born.
VIII
Strangers have come and through her prison-grateThey count her price and would her love allure;
But her eyes restless watch and wide dilate;
Their look can none endure,
So wild in sorrow and so mild in hate;
In majesty so pure.
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IX
One comes towards whom the look of prayer she bendsThat seems to utter ‘Thou, my star, arise!’
And while that Heaven-adoring thought ascends
New sorrow fills her eyes,
That tells how Love is dead and beauty ends
When human pity dies!
X
All that he has, the mystic life he bears,What is their worth, her soul in slavery?
He pays the ransom, breaks the chain she wears,
As though some god were he:
Voiceless, she offers up to him the tears
Her anguish has set free.
XI
Hand-maids and armed protectors are at hand,All that to queenly power and pomp pertains,
And, passing waters from the stranger-land,
Her star-roofed home she gains,
Where her sleek camels, crimson-girded, stand
To bear her o'er the plains.
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XII
In her slow path the faithful seers arriveAnd with prophetic tidings bid her cheer:
That night, they tell, the older worlds shall strive,
As the new star comes near,
And into depths of unknown darkness dive
And find no other sphere.
XIII
But little heed gives she to their appeals:The coming star, alas! not yet is found;
Deep-sighing in her silence, she reveals
A heart in slavery bound:
Her bonds are there, and there it is she feels
The chain about her wound.
XIV
'Mid joyous shouts she sees her open gates,But enters not, up-gazing in the thought
That never sleeps or in her breast abates,
Where is the star she sought!
But now a greater seer her advent waits;
He hath the tidings brought.
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XV
‘The hour is come, the star is now in sight;Portents of blessed change the heavens bestrew:
The shepherds upward gaze, the air is bright,
The sky is gold and blue,
The ancient stars are on their downward flight
And others come anew.
XVI
‘And in the shower of burning worlds, self-hurledFrom heaven to heaven, a lord is on his way
Around whose hosts the golden dust is whirled,
While, in divine array,
Green floats his shepherd-banner, wide-unfurled,
With flocks thereon at play.’
XVII
The hour has come in clouds that hurry o'erHer palace towers, and scatter while the rays
Of new-made light upon the valleys pour;
While flocks awake and graze,
And shepherds sing and the new star adore:
But she, beholding, prays.
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XVIII
The seer of seers stands forth, he takes her hands;He cries, ‘Thy star is come! Be it to thee
A rich reward and to these teeming lands;
The lord, who made thee free,
Now in his earthly place before thee stands,
Thy guiding-star to be.’
XIX
She looks at heaven; afar the cloud-vane drifts;Her face is pale, he comes, the lord is found:
She kneels, once more his slave; the stranger lifts
The virgin from the ground,
And offers up for sacred wedding gifts
The chains her heart had bound.
Maiden Ecstasy | ||