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Chronicles and Characters

By Robert Lytton (Owen Meredith): In Two Volumes
  

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 I. 
I.MOSES AND THE DERVISH.
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I.MOSES AND THE DERVISH.

God, that heaven's seven climates hath spread forth,
To every creature, even as is the worth,
The lot apportions, and the use of things.
If to the creeping cat were given wings,
No sparrow's egg would ever be a bird.
Moses the Prophet, who with God conferr'd,
Beheld a Dervish, that, for dire distress
And lack of clothes to hide his nakedness,
Buried his body in the desert sand.
This Dervish cried
“O Moses, whom the Hand
Of the Most High God favours! make thy prayer
That He may grant me food and clothes to wear
Who knows the misery of me, and the need.”
Then Moses pray'd to God, that He would feed
And clothe that Dervish.

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Nine days after this,
Returning from Mount Sinai in bliss,
Having beheld God's face, the Prophet met
The Dervish in the hands of Justice, set
Between two officers; and, all about,
The rabble follow'd him with hoot, and shout,
And jeer.
The Prophet ask'd of those that cried
“What hath befallen this man?”
And they replied
“He hath drunk wine, and, having slain a man,
Is going to the death.”
Moses began
To praise the Maker of the Universe,
Seeing that his prayer, tho' granted, proved perverse,
Since God to every living soul sets forth
The circumstance according to the worth.