A Great Day for Israel.
The cornets sounded a final flourish
as the Prince of the Captivity dismounted from his
white mule; his train shouted as if they were once
more a people; and, had it not been for the contemptuous
leer which played upon the countenances of the Moslem
bystanders, it might have been taken for a day of
triumph rather than of tribute.
‘The glory has not departed!’
exclaimed the venerable Bostenay, as he entered the
hall of his mansion. ’It is not as the visit
of Sheba unto Solomon; nevertheless the glory has
not yet departed. You have done well, faithful
Caleb.’ The old man’s courage waxed
more vigorous, as each step within his own walls the
more assured him against the recent causes of his
fear, the audible curses and the threatened missiles
of the unbelieving mob.
‘It shall be a day of rejoicing
and thanksgiving!’ continued the Prince; ’and
look, my faithful Caleb, that the trumpeters be well
served. That last flourish was bravely done.
It was not as the blast before Jericho; nevertheless,
it told that the Lord of Hosts was for us. How
the accursed Ishmaelites started! Did you mark,
Caleb, that tall Turk in green upon my left?
By the sceptre of Jacob, he turned pale! Oh! it
shall be a day of rejoicing and thanksgiving!
And spare not the wine, nor the flesh-pots for the
people. Look you to this, my child, for the people
shouted bravely and with a stout voice. It was
not as the great shout in the camp when the ark returned;
nevertheless, it was boldly done, and showed that
the glory had not yet departed. So spare not the
wine, my son, and drink to the desolation of Ishmael
in the juice which he dare not quaff.’
‘It has indeed been a great
day for Israel!’ exclaimed Caleb, echoing his
master’s exultation.
‘Had the procession been forbidden,’
continued Bostenay, ’had it been reserved for
me of all the princes to have dragged the accursed
tribute upon foot, without trumpets and without guards,
by this sceptre, my good Caleb, I really think that,
sluggishly as this old blood now runs, I would
But it is needless now to talk; the God of our fathers
hath been our refuge.’
’Verily, my lord, we were as
David in the wilderness of Ziph; but now we are as
the Lord’s anointed in the stronghold of Engedi!’
‘The glory truly has not yet
utterly departed,’ resumed the Prince in a more
subdued tone; ’yet if I tell
you what, Caleb; praise the Lord that you are young.’
‘My Prince too may yet live to see the good
day.’
’Nay, my child, you misinterpret
me. Your Prince has lived to see the evil day.
’Twas not of the coming that I thought when I
bid you praise the Lord because you were young, the
more my sin. I was thinking, Caleb, that if your
hair was as mine, if you could recollect, like me,
the days that are gone by, the days when it needed
no bride to prove we were princes,"the glorious days
when we led captivity captive; I was thinking, I say,
my son, what a gainful heritage it is to be born after
the joys that have passed away.’
‘My father lived at Babylon,’
said Caleb. ’Oh! name it not! name it not!’
exclaimed the old chieftain. ’Dark was the
day that we lost that second Zion! We were then
also slaves to the Egyptian; but verily we ruled over
the realm of Pharaoh. Why, Caleb, Caleb, you who
know all, the days of toil, the nights restless as
a love-sick boy’s, which it has cost your Prince
to gain permission to grace our tribute-day with the
paltry presence of half-a-dozen guards; you who know
all my difficulties, who have witnessed all my mortifications,
what would you say to the purse of dirhems, surrounded
by seven thousand scimitars?’
‘Seven thousand scimitars!’
‘Not one less; my father flourished one.’
‘It was indeed a great day for Israel!’
’Nay, that is nothing. When old Alroy was
prince, old David Alroy, for thirty years, good Caleb,
thirty long years we paid no tribute to the
Caliph.’
’No tribute! no tribute for
thirty years! What marvel then, my Prince, that
the Philistines have of late exacted interest?’
‘Nay, that is nothing,’
continued old Bostenay, unmindful of his servant’s
ejaculations. ’When Moctador was Caliph,
he sent to the same Prince David, to know why the
dirhems were not brought up, and David immediately
called to horse, and, attended by all the chief people,
rode to the palace, and told the Caliph that tribute
was an acknowledgment made from the weak to the strong
to insure protection and support; and, inasmuch as
he and his people had garrisoned the city for ten years
against the Seljuks, he held the Caliph in arrear.’
’We shall yet see an ass mount
a ladder,’ exclaimed Caleb, with uplifted
eyes of wonder.
‘It is true, though,’
continued the Prince; ’often have I heard my
father tell the tale. He was then a child, and
his mother held him up to see the procession return,
and all the people shouted “The sceptre has
not gone out of Jacob."’
‘It was indeed a great day for Israel.’
’Nay, that is nothing.
I could tell you such things! But we prattle;
our business is not yet done. You to the people;
the widow and the orphan are waiting. Give freely,
good Caleb, give freely; the spoils of the Canaanite
are no longer ours, nevertheless the Lord is still
our God, and, after all, even this is a great day
for Israel. And, Caleb, Caleb, bid my nephew,
David Alroy, know that I would speak with him.’
’I will do all promptly, good
master! We wondered that our honoured lord, your
nephew, went not up with the donation this day.’
’Who bade you wonder? Begone,
sir! How long are you to idle here? Away!
’They wonder he went not up
with the tribute to-day. Ay! surely, a common
talk. This boy will be our ruin, a prudent hand
to wield our shattered sceptre. I have observed
him from his infancy; he should have lived in Babylon.
The old Alroy blood flows in his veins, a stiff-necked
race. When I was a youth, his grandsire was my
friend; I had some fancies then myself. Dreams,
dreams! we have fallen on evil days, and yet we prosper.
I have lived long enough to feel that a rich caravan,
laden with the shawls of India and the stuffs of Samarcand,
if not exactly like dancing before the ark, is still
a goodly sight. And our hard-hearted rulers,
with all their pride, can they subsist without us?
Still we wax rich. I have lived to see the haughty
Caliph sink into a slave viler far than Israel.
And the victorious and voluptuous Seljuks, even now
they tremble at the dim mention of the distant name
of Arslan. Yet I, Bostenay, and the frail remnant
of our scattered tribes, still we exist, and still,
thanks to our God! we prosper. But the age of
power has passed; it is by prudence now that we must
flourish. The gibe and jest, the curse, perchance
the blow, Israel now must bear, and with a calm or
even smiling visage. What then? For every
gibe and jest, for every curse, I’ll have a
dirhem; and for every blow, let him look to it
who is my debtor, or wills to be so. But see,
he comes, my nephew! His grandsire was my friend.
Methinks I look upon him now: the same Alroy
that was the partner of my boyish hours. And yet
that fragile form and girlish face but ill consort
with the dark passions and the dangerous fancies,
which, I fear, lie hidden in that tender breast.
Well, sir?’
‘You want me, uncle?’
‘What then? Uncles often want what nephews
seldom offer.’
‘I at least can refuse nothing; for I have naught
to give.’
‘You have a jewel which I greatly
covet.’ ’A jewel! See my chaplet!
You gave it me, my uncle; it is yours.’
’I thank you. Many a blazing
ruby, many a soft and shadowy pearl, and many an emerald
glowing like a star in the far desert, I behold, my
child. They are choice stones, and yet I miss
a jewel far more precious, which, when I gave you
this rich chaplet, David, I deemed you did possess.’
‘How do you call it, sir?’ ‘Obedience.’
’A word of doubtful import;
for to obey, when duty is disgrace, is not a virtue.’
’I see you read my thought.
In a word, I sent for you to know, wherefore you joined
me not to-day in offering our our ’
‘Tribute.’
‘Be it so: tribute.
Why were you absent?’ ’Because it was a
tribute; I pay none.’ ’But that the
dreary course of seventy winters has not erased the
memory of my boyish follies, David, I should esteem
you mad. Think you, because I am old, I am enamoured
of disgrace, and love a house of bondage? If
life were a mere question between freedom and slavery,
glory and dishonour, all could decide. Trust
me, there needs but little spirit to be a moody patriot
in a sullen home, and vent your heroic spleen upon
your fellow-sufferers, whose sufferings you cannot
remedy. But of such stuff your race were ever
made. Such deliverers ever abounded in the house
of Alroy. And what has been the result? I
found you and your sister orphan infants, your sceptre
broken, and your tribes dispersed. The tribute,
which now at least we pay like princes, was then exacted
with the scourge and offered in chains. I collected
our scattered people, I re-established our ancient
throne, and this day, which you look upon as a day
of humiliation and of mourning, is rightly considered
by all a day of triumph and of feasting; for, has it
not proved in the very teeth of the Ishmaelites, that
the sceptre has not yet departed from Jacob?’
’I pray you, uncle, speak not
of these things. I would not willingly forget
you are my kinsman, and a kind one. Let there
not be strife between us. What my feelings are
is nothing. They are my own: I cannot change
them. And for my ancestors, if they pondered much,
and achieved little, why then ’twould seem our
pedigree is pure, and I am their true son. At
least one was a hero.’
‘Ah! the great Alroy; you may
well be proud of such an ancestor.’
‘I am ashamed, uncle, ashamed, ashamed.’
’His sceptre still exists.
At least, I have not betrayed him. And this brings
me to the real purport of our interview. That
sceptre I would return.’
‘To whom?’
‘To its right owner, to yourself.’
’Oh! no, no, no; I pray you,
I pray you not. I do entreat you, sir, forget
that I have a right as utterly as I disclaim it.
That sceptre you have wielded it wisely and well;
I beseech you keep it. Indeed, good uncle, I
have no sort of talent for all the busy duties of this
post.’
‘You sigh for glory, yet you fly from toil.’
‘Toil without glory is a menial’s lot.’
’You are a boy; you may yet
live to learn that the sweetest lot of life consists
in tranquil duties and well-earned repose.’
‘If my lot be repose, I’ll find it in
a lair.’
’Ah! David, David, there
is a wildness in your temper, boy, that makes me often
tremble. You are already too much alone, child.
And for this, as well as weightier reasons, I am desirous
that you should at length assume the office you inherit.
What my poor experience can afford to aid you, as
your counsellor, I shall ever proffer; and, for the
rest, our God will not desert you, an orphan child,
and born of royal blood.’
’Pr’ythee, no more, kind
uncle. I have but little heart to mount a throne,
which only ranks me as the first of slaves.’
’Pooh, pooh, you are young.
Live we like slaves? Is this hall a servile chamber?
These costly carpets, and these rich divans, in what
proud harem shall we find their match? I feel
not like a slave. My coffers are full of dirhems.
Is that slavish? The wealthiest company of the
caravan is ever Bostenay’s. Is that to
be a slave? Walk the bazaar of Bagdad, and you
will find my name more potent than the Caliph’s.
Is that a badge of slavery?’
‘Uncle, you toil for others.’
‘So do we all, so does the bee, yet he is free
and happy.’
‘At least he has a sting.’
‘Which he can use but once, and when he stings ’
‘He dies, and like a hero. Such a death
is sweeter than his honey.’
’Well, well, you are young,
you are young. I once, too, had fancies.
Dreams all, dreams all. I willingly would see
you happy, child. Come, let that face brighten;
after all, to-day is a great day. If you had
seen what I have seen, David, you too would feel grateful.
Come, let us feast. The Ishmaelite, the accursed
child of Hagar, he does confess to-day that you are
a prince; this day also you complete your eighteenth
year. The custom of our people now requires that
you should assume the attributes of manhood.
To-day, then, your reign commences; and at our festival
I will present the elders to their prince. For
a while, farewell, my child. Array that face
in smiles. I shall most anxiously await your
presence.’
‘Farewell, sir.’
He turned his head and watched his
uncle as he departed: the bitter expression of
his countenance gradually melted away as Bostenay
disappeared: dejection succeeded to sarcasm; he
sighed, he threw himself upon a couch and buried his
face in his hands.
Suddenly he arose and paced the chamber
with an irregular and moody step. He stopped,
and leant against a column. He spoke in a tremulous
and smothered voice:
’Oh! my heart is full of care,
and my soul is dark with sorrow! What am I?
What is all this? A cloud hangs heavy o’er
my life. God of my fathers, let it burst!
’I know not what I feel, yet
what I feel is madness. Thus to be is not to
live, if life be what I sometimes dream, and dare to
think it might be. To breathe, to feed, to sleep,
to wake and breathe again, again to feel existence
without hope; if this be life, why then these brooding
thoughts that whisper death were better?
’Away! The demon tempts
me. But to what? What nameless deed shall
desecrate this hand? It must not be: the
royal blood of twice two thousand years, it must not
die, die like a dream. Oh! my heart is full of
care, and my soul is dark with sorrow!
’Hark! the trumpets that sound
our dishonour. Oh, that they but sounded to battle!
Lord of Hosts, let me conquer or die! Let me conquer
like David; or die, Lord, like Saul!
’Why do I live? Ah! could
the thought that lurks within my secret heart but
answer, not that trumpet’s blast could speak
as loud or clear. The votary of a false idea,
I linger in this shadowy life, and feed on silent
images which no eye but mine can gaze upon, till at
length they are invested with all the terrible circumstance
of life, and breathe, and act, and form a stirring
world of fate and beauty, time, and death, and glory.
And then, from out this dazzling wilderness of deeds,
I wander forth and wake, and find myself in this dull
house of bondage, even as I do now. Horrible!
horrible!
’God, of my fathers! for indeed
I dare not style thee God of their wretched sons;
yet, by the memory of Sinai, let me tell thee that
some of the antique blood yet beats within these pulses,
and there yet is one who fain would commune with thee
face to face, commune and conquer.
’And if the promise unto which
we cling be not a cheat, why, let him come, come,
and come quickly, for thy servant Israel, Lord, is
now a slave so infamous, so woe-begone, and so contemned,
that even when our fathers hung their harps by the
sad waters of the Babylonian stream, why, it was paradise
compared with what we suffer.
’Alas! they do not suffer; they
endure and do not feel. Or by this time our shadowy
cherubim would guard again the ark. It is the
will that is the father to the deed, and he who broods
over some long idea, however wild, will find his dream
was but the prophecy of coming fate.
’And even now a vivid flash
darts through the darkness of my mind. Methinks,
methinks ah! worst of woes to dream of glory
in despair. No, no; I live and die a most ignoble
thing; beauty and love, and fame and mighty deeds,
the smile of women and the gaze of men, and the ennobling
consciousness of worth, and all the fiery course of
the creative passions, these are not for me, and I,
Alroy, the descendant of sacred kings, and with a
soul that pants for empire, I stand here extending
my vain arm for my lost sceptre, a most dishonoured
slave! And do I still exist? Exist! ay,
merrily. Hark! Festivity holds her fair revel
in these light-hearted walls. We are gay to-day;
and yet, ere yon proud sun, whose mighty course was
stayed before our swords that now he even does not
deign to shine upon; ere yon proud sun shall, like
a hero from a glorious field, enter the bright pavilion
of his rest, there shall a deed be done.
’My fathers, my heroic fathers,
if this feeble arm cannot redeem your heritage; if
the foul boar must still wallow in thy sweet vineyard,
Israel, at least I will not disgrace you. No!
let me perish. The house of David is no more;
no more our sacred seed shall lurk and linger, like
a blighted thing, in this degenerate earth. If
we cannot flourish, ’why, then, we will die!’
‘Oh! say not so, my brother!’
He turns, he gazes on a face beauteous
as a starry night; his heart is full, his voice is
low.
’Ah, Miriam! thou queller of
dark spirits! is it thou? Why art thou here?’
’Why am I here? Are you
not here? and need I urge a stronger plea? Oh!
brother dear, I pray you come, and mingle in our festival.
Our walls are hung with flowers you love; I culled
them by the fountain’s side; the holy lamps
are trimmed and set, and you must raise their earliest
flame. Without the gate, my maidens wait, to
offer you a robe of state. Then, brother dear,
I pray you come and mingle in our festival.’
‘Why should we feast?’
’Ah! is it not in thy dear name
these lamps are lit, these garlands hung? To-day
to us a prince is given, to-day ’
‘A prince without a kingdom.’
’But not without that which
makes kingdoms precious, and which full many a royal
heart has sighed for, willing subjects, David.’
‘Slaves, Miriam, fellow-slaves.’
’What we are, my brother, our
God has willed; and let us bow and tremble.’
‘I will not bow, I cannot tremble.’
’Hush, David, hush! It
was this haughty spirit that called the vengeance
of the Lord upon us.’
‘It was this haughty spirit that conquered Canaan.’
’Oh, my brother, my dear brother!
they told me the dark spirit had fallen on thee, and
I came, and hoped that Miriam might have charmed it.
What we may have been, Alroy, is a bright dream; and
what we may be, at least as bright a hope; and for
what we are, thou art my brother. In thy love
I find present felicity, and value more thy chance
embraces and thy scanty smiles than all the vanished
splendour of our race, our gorgeous gardens, and our
glittering halls.’
‘Who waits without there?’
‘Caleb.’
‘Caleb!’
‘My lord.’
’Go tell my uncle that I will
presently join the banquet. Leave me a moment,
Miriam. Nay, dry those tears.’
‘Oh, Alroy! they are not tears of sorrow.’
’God be with thee! Thou
art the charm and consolation of my life. Farewell!
farewell!
’I do observe the influence
of women very potent over me. ’Tis not
of such stuff that they make heroes. I know not
love, save that pure affection which doth subsist
between me and this girl, an orphan and my sister.
We are so alike, that when, last Passover, in mimicry
she twined my turban round her head, our uncle called
her David.
’The daughters of my tribe,
they please me not, though they are passing fair.
Were our sons as brave as they are beautiful, we still
might dance on Sion. Yet have I often thought
that, could I pillow this moody brow upon some snowy
bosom that were my own, and dwell in the wilderness,
far from the sight and ken of man, and all the care
and toil and wretchedness that groan and sweat and
sigh about me, I might haply lose this deep sensation
of overwhelming woe that broods upon by being.
No matter! Life is but a dream, and mine must
be a dull one.’
Without the gates of Hamadan, a short
distance from the city, was an enclosed piece of elevated
ground, in the centre of which rose an ancient sepulchre,
the traditionary tomb of Esther and Mordecai. This
solemn and solitary spot was an accustomed haunt of
Alroy, and thither, escaping from the banquet, about
an hour before sunset, he this day repaired.
As he unlocked the massy gate of the
burial-place, he heard behind him the trampling of
a horse; and before he had again secured the entrance,
some one shouted to him.
He looked up, and recognised the youthful
and voluptuous Alschiroch, the governor of the city,
and brother of the sultan of the Seljuks. He
was attended only by a single running footman, an Arab,
a detested favourite, and notorious minister of his
pleasures.
‘Dog!’ exclaimed the irritated
Alschiroch, ’art thou deaf, or obstinate, or
both? Are we to call twice to our slaves?
Unlock that gate!’ ‘Wherefore?’
inquired Alroy.
’Wherefore! By the holy
Prophet, he bandies questions with us! Unlock
that gate, or thy head shall answer for it!’
‘Who art thou,’ inquired
Alroy, ’whose voice is so loud? Art thou
some holiday Turk, who hath transgressed the orders
of thy Prophet, and drunken aught but water?
Go to, or I will summon thee before thy Cadi;’
and, so saying, he turned towards the tomb.
’By the eyes of my mother, the
dog jeers us! But that we are already late, and
this horse is like an untamed tiger, I would impale
him on the spot. Speak to the dog, Mustapha!
manage him!’
‘Worthy Hebrew,’ said
the silky Mustapha, advancing, ’apparently you
are not aware that this is our Lord Alschiroch.
His highness would fain walk his horse through the
burial-ground of thy excellent people, as he is obliged
to repair, on urgent matters, to a holy Santon,
who sojourns on the other side of the hill, and time
presses.’
’If this be our Lord Alschiroch,
thou doubtless art his faithful slave, Mustapha.’
‘I am, indeed, his poor slave. What then,
young master?’
’Deem thyself lucky that the
gate is closed. It was but yesterday thou didst
insult the sister of a servant of my house. I
would not willingly sully my hands with such miserable
blood as thine, out away, wretch, away!’
‘Holy Prophet! who is this dog?’
exclaimed the astonished governor.
‘’Tis the young Alroy,’
whispered Mustapha, who had not at first recognised
him; ’he they call their Prince; a most headstrong
youth. My lord, we had better proceed.’
’The young Alroy! I mark
him. They must have a prince too! The young
Alroy! Well, let us away, and, dog!’ shouted
Alschiroch, rising in his stirrups, and shaking his
hand with a threatening air, ’dog! remember
thy tribute!’
Alroy rushed to the gate, but the
massy lock was slow to open; and ere he could succeed,
the fiery steed had borne Alschiroch beyond pursuit.
An expression of baffled rage remained
for a moment on his countenance; for a moment he remained
with his eager eye fixed on the route of his vanished
enemy, and then he walked slowly towards the tomb;
but his excited temper was now little in unison with
the still reverie in which he had repaired to the
sepulchre to indulge. He was restless and disquieted,
and at length he wandered into the woods, which rose
on the summit of the burial-place.
He found himself upon a brow crested
with young pine-trees, in the midst of which rose
a mighty cedar. He threw himself beneath its thick
and shadowy branches, and looked upon a valley small
and green; in the midst of which was a marble fountain,
the richly-carved cupola, supported by twisted
columns, and banded by a broad inscription in Hebrew
characters. The bases of the white pillars were
covered with wild flowers, or hidden by beds of variegated
gourds. The transparent sunset flung over the
whole scene a soft but brilliant light.
The tranquil hour, the beauteous scene,
the sweetness and the stillness blending their odour
and serenity, the gentle breeze that softly rose,
and summoned forth the languid birds to cool their
plumage in the twilight air, and wave their radiant
wings in skies as bright Ah! what
stern spirit will not yield to the soft genius of subduing
eve?
And Alroy gazed upon the silent loneliness
of earth, and a tear stole down his haughty cheek.
’’Tis singular! but when
I am thus alone at this still hour, I ever fancy I
gaze upon the Land of Promise. And often, in my
dreams, some sunny spot, the bright memorial of a
roving hour, will rise upon my sight, and, when I
wake, I feel as if I had been in Canaan. Why am
I not? The caravan that bears my uncle’s
goods across the Desert would bear me too. But
I rest here, my miserable life running to seed in
the dull misery of this wretched city, and do nothing.
Why, the old captivity was empire to our inglorious
bondage. We have no Esther now to share their
thrones, no politic Mordecai, no purple-vested Daniel.
O Jerusalem, Jerusalem! I do believe one sight
of thee would nerve me to the sticking-point.
And yet to gaze upon thy fallen state, my uncle tells
me that of the Temple not a stone remains. ’Tis
horrible. Is there no hope?’
’The bricks are fallen, but
we will rebuild with marble; the sycamores are cut
down, but we will replace them with cedars.’
’The chorus of our maidens,
as they pay their evening visit to the fountain’s
side. The burden is prophetic.
’Hark again! How beautifully,
upon the soft and flowing air, their sweet and mingled
voices blend and float!’
’YET AGAIN I WILL BUILD THEE,
AND THOU SHALT BE BUILT, O VIRGIN OF ISRAEL!
YET AGAIN SHALT THOU DECK THYSELF WITH THY TABRETS,
AND GO FORTH IN THE DANCE OF THOSE THAT MAKE MERRY.
YET AGAIN SHALT THOU PLANT VINEYARDS ON THE MOUNTAINS
OF SAMARIA.’
’See! their white forms break
through the sparkling foliage of the sunny shrubs
as they descend, with measured step, that mild declivity.
A fair society in bright procession: each one
clothed in solemn drapery, veiling her shadowy face
with modest hand, and bearing on her graceful head
a graceful vase. Their leader is my sister.
’And now they reach the fountain’s
side, and dip their vases in the water, pure and beauteous
as themselves. Some repose beneath the marble
pillars; some, seated ’mid the flowers, gather
sweets, and twine them into garlands; and that wild
girl, now that the order is broken, touches with light
fingers her moist vase, and showers startling drops
of glittering light on her serener sisters. Hark!
again they sing.’
’O VINE OF SIBMAH! UPON
THY SUMMER FRUITS, AND UPON THY VINTAGE, A SPOILER
HATH FALLEN!’
A scream, a shriek, a long wild shriek,
confusion, flight, despair! Behold! from out
the woods a tur-baned man rushes, and seizes the leader
of the chorus. Her companions fly on all sides,
Miriam alone is left in the arms of Alschiroch.
The water column wildly rising from
the breast of summer ocean, in some warm tropic clime,
when the sudden clouds too well discover that the
holiday of heaven is over, and the shrieking sea-birds
tell a time of fierce commotion, the column rising
from the sea, it was not so wild as he, the young
Alroy.
Pallid and mad, he swift upsprang,
and he tore up a tree by its lusty roots, and down
the declivity, dashing with rapid leaps, panting and
wild, he struck the ravisher on the temple with the
mighty pine. Alschiroch fell lifeless on the
sod, and Miriam fainting into her brother’s
arms.
And there he stood, fixed and immovable,
gazing upon his sister’s deathly face, and himself
exhausted by passion and his exploit, supporting her
cherished but senseless body.
One of the fugitive maidens appeared
reconnoitring in the distance. When she observed
her mistress in the arms of one of her own people,
her courage revived, and, desirous of rallying her
scattered companions, she raised her voice, and sang:
’HASTE, DAUGHTERS OF JERUSALEM;
O! HASTE, FOR THE LORD HAS AVENGED US, AND THE
SPOILER IS SPOILED.’
And soon the verse was responded to
from various quarters of the woods, and soon the virgins
reassembled, singing,
’WE COME, O DAUGHTER OF JERUSALEM!
WE COME; FOR THE LORD HAS AVENGED US, AND THE SPOILER
IS SPOILED.’
They gathered round their mistress,
and one loosened her veil, and another brought water
from the fountain, and sprinkled her reviving countenance.
And Miriam opened her eyes, and said, ‘My brother!’
And he answered, ‘I am here.’ And
she replied in a low voice, ’Fly, David, fly;
for the man you have stricken is a prince among the
people.’
’He will be merciful, my sister;
and, doubtless, since he first erred, by this time
he has forgotten my offence.’
’Justice and mercy! Oh,
my brother, what can these foul tyrants know of either!
Already he has perhaps doomed you to some refined and
procrastinated torture, already
Ah! what unutterable woe is mine! fly, my brother,
fly!’
‘Fly, fly, fly!’
’There is no fear, my Miriam;
would all his accursed race could trouble us as little
as their sometime ruler. See, he sleeps soundly.
But his carcass shall not defile our fresh fountain
and our fragrant flowers. I’ll stow it
in the woods, and stroll here at night to listen to
the jackals at their banquet.’
’You speak wildly, David.
What! No! It is impossible! He is not
dead! You have not slain him!
He sleeps, he is afraid. He mimics
death that we may leave his side, and he may rise
again in safety. Girls, look to him. David,
you do not answer. Brother, dear brother, surely
he has swooned! I thought he had fled. Bear
water, maidens, to that terrible man. I dare not
look upon him.’
’Away! I’ll look
on him, and I’ll triumph. Dead! Alschiroch
dead! Why, but a moment since, this clotted carcass
was a prince, my tyrant! So we can rid ourselves
of them, eh? If the prince fall, why not the people?
Dead, absolutely dead, and I his slayer! Hah!
at length I am a man. This, this indeed is life.
Let me live slaying!’
’Woe! woe, our house is fallen!
The wildness of his gestures frightens me. David,
David, I pray thee cease. He hears me not; my
voice, perchance, is thin. I am very faint.
Maidens, kneel to your Prince, and soothe the madness
of his passion.’
’SWEET IS THE VOICE OF A
SISTER IN THE SEASON OF SORROW, AND WISE IS THE COUNSEL
OF THOSE WHO LOVE US.’
’Why, this is my Goliath! a
pebble or a stick, it is the same. The Lord of
Hosts is with us. Rightly am I called David.’
’DELIVER US FROM OUR ENEMIES,
O LORD! FROM THOSE WHO RISE UP AGAINST US, AND
THOSE WHO LIE IN WAIT FOR US.’
’Were but this blow multiplied,
were but the servants of my uncle’s house to
do the same, why, we should see again the days of Elah!
The Philistine, the foul, lascivious, damnable Philistine!
and he must touch my sister! Oh! that all his
tribe were here, all, all! I’d tie such
firebrands to their foxes’ tails, the blaze should
light to freedom!’
While he spoke, a maiden, who had
not yet rejoined the company, came running towards
them swiftly with an agitated countenance.
‘Fly,’ she exclaimed, ‘they come,
they come!’
Miriam was reclining in an attendant’s
arms, feeble and faint, but the moment her quick ear
caught these words she sprang up, and seized her brother’s
arm.
’Alroy! David! brother,
dear brother! I beseech thee, listen, I am thy
sister, thy Miriam; they come, they come, the hard-hearted,
wicked men, they come, to kill, perhaps to torture
thee, my tender brother. Rouse thyself, David;
rouse thyself from this wild, fierce dream: save
thyself, fly!’
’Ah! is it thou, Miriam?
Thou seest he sleepeth soundly. I was dreaming
of noble purposes and mighty hopes. Tis over now.
I am myself again. What wouldst thou?’
’They come, the fierce retainers
of this fallen man; they come to seize thee.
Fly, David!’
‘And leave thee?’
’I and my maidens, we have yet
time to escape by the private way we entered, our
uncle’s garden. When in his house, we are
for a moment safe, as safe as our poor race can ever
be. Bostenay is so rich, so wise, so prudent,
so learned in man’s ways, and knows so well the
character and spirit of these men, all will go right;
I fear nothing. But thou, if thou art here, or
to be found, thy blood alone will satiate them.
If they be persuaded that thou hast escaped, as I yet
pray thou mayest, their late master here, whom they
could scarcely love, why, give me thy arm an instant,
sweet Beruna. So, that’s well. I was
saying, if well bribed, and they may have
all my jewels, why, very soon, he will
be as little in their memories as he is now in life.
I can scarcely speak; I feel my words wander, or seem
to wander; I could swoon, but will not; nay! do not
fear. I will reach home. These maidens are
my charge. ’Tis in these crises we should
show the worth of royal blood. I’ll see
them safe, or die with them.’
’O! my sister, methinks I never
knew I was a brother until this hour. My precious
Miriam, what is life? what is revenge, or even fame
and freedom without thee? I’ll stay.’
’SWEET IS THE VOICE OF A
SISTER IN THE SEASON OF SORROW, AND WISE IS THE COUNSEL
OF THOSE WHO LOVE US.’
‘Fly, David, fly!’
‘Fly! whither and how?’
The neigh of a horse sounded from the thicket.
‘Ah! they come!’ exclaimed the distracted
Miriam.
’ALL THIS HAS COME UPON US,
O LORD! YET HAVE WE NOT FORGOTTEN THEE, NEITHER
HAVE WE DEALT FALSELY IN THY COVENANT.’
’Hark! again it neighs!
It is a horse that calleth to its rider. I see
it. Courage, Miriam! it is no enemy, but a very
present friend in time of trouble. It is Alschiroch’s
courser. He passed me on it by the tomb ere sunset.
I marked it well, a very princely steed.’
’BEHOLD, BEHOLD, A RAM IS
CAUGHT IN THE THICKET BY HIS HORNS.’
’Our God hath not forgotten
us! Quick, maidens, bring forth the goodly steed.
What! do you tremble? I’ll be his groom.’
’Nay! Miriam, beware, beware.
It is an untamed beast, wild as the whirlwind.
Let me deal with him.’
He ran after her, dashed into the
thicket, and brought forth the horse.
Short time I ween that stately steed
had parted from his desert home; his haughty crest,
his eye of fire, the glory of his snorting nostril,
betoken well his conscious pride, and pure nobility
of race. His colour was like the sable night
shining with a thousand stars, and he pawed the ground
with his delicate hoof, like an eagle flapping its
wing.
Alroy vaulted on his back, and reined
him with a master’s hand.
‘Hah!’ he exclaimed, ’I
feel more like a hero than a fugitive. Farewell,
my sister; farewell, ye gentle maidens; fare ye well,
and cherish my precious Miriam. One embrace,
sweet sister,’ and he bent down and whispered,
’Tell the good Bostenay not to spare his gold,
for I have a deep persuasion that, ere a year shall
roll its heavy course, I shall return and make our
masters here pay for this hurried ride and bitter
parting. Now for the desert!’