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The princes and the merchants come to me;

Merchants of Tyre and Princes of Damascus。

And pass; and disappear; and are no more;

But leave behind their merchandise and jewels;

Their perfumes; and their gold; and their disgust。

I loathe them; and the very memory of them

Is unto me as thought of food to one

Cloyed with the luscious figs of Dalmanutha!

What if hereafter; in the long hereafter

Of endless joy or pain; or joy in pain;

It were my punishment to be with them

Grown hideous and decrepit in their sins;

And hear them say: Thou that hast brought us here;

Be unto us as thou hast been of old!

I look upon this raiment that I wear;

These silks; and these embroideries; and they seem

Only as cerements wrapped about my limbs!

I look upon these rings thick set with pearls;

And emerald and amethyst and jasper;

And they are burning coals upon my flesh!

This serpent on my wrist becomes alive!

Away; thou viper! and away; ye garlands;

Whose odors bring the swift remembrance back

Of the unhallowed revels in these chambers!

But yesterday;and yet it seems to me

Something remote; like a pathetic song

Sung long ago by minstrels in the street;

But yesterday; as from this tower I gazed;

Over the olive and the walnut trees

Upon the lake and the white ships; and wondered

Whither and whence they steered; and who was in them;

A fisher's boat drew near the landing…place

Under the oleanders; and the people

Came up from it; and passed beneath the tower;

Close under me。  In front of them; as leader;

Walked one of royal aspect; clothed in white;

Who lifted up his eyes; and looked at me;

And all at once the air seemed filled and living

With a mysterious power; that streamed from him;

And overflowed me with an atmosphere

Of light and love。  As one entranced I stood;

And when I woke again; lo! he was gone;

So that I said: Perhaps it is a dream。

But from that very hour the seven demons

That had their habitation in this body

Which men call beautiful; departed from me!



This morning; when the first gleam of the dawn

Made Lebanon a glory in the air;

And all below was darkness; I beheld

An angel; or a spirit glorified;

With wind…tossed garments walking on the lake。

The face I could not see; but I distinguished

The attitude and gesture; and I knew

'T was he that healed me。  And the gusty wind

Brought to mine ears a voice; which seemed to say:

Be of good cheer!  'T is I!  Be not afraid!

And from the darkness; scarcely heard; the answer:

If it be thou; bid me come unto thee

Upon the water!  And the voice said: Come!

And then I heard a cry of fear: Lord; save me!

As of a drowning man。  And then the voice:

Why didst thou doubt; O thou of little faith!

At this all vanished; and the wind was hushed;

And the great sun came up above the hills;

And the swift…flying vapors hid themselves

In caverns among the rocks!  Oh; I must find him

And follow him; and be with him forever!



Thou box of alabaster; in whose walls

The souls of flowers lie pent; the precious balm

And spikenard of Arabian farms; the spirits

Of aromatic herbs; ethereal natures

Nursed by the sun and dew; not all unworthy

To bathe his consecrated feet; whose step

Makes every threshold holy that he crosses;

Let us go forth upon our pilgrimage;

Thou and I only!  Let us search for him

Until we find him; and pour out our souls

Before his feet; till all that's left of us

Shall be the broken caskets that once held us!





X



THE HOUSE OF SIMON THE PHARISEE



A GUEST at table。

Are ye deceived?  Have any of the Rulers

Believed on him? or do they know indeed

This man to be the very Christ?  Howbeit

We know whence this man is; but when the Christ

Shall come; none knoweth whence he is。



CHRISTUS。

Whereunto shall I liken; then; the men

Of this generation? and what are they like?

They are like children sitting in the markets;

And calling unto one another; saying:

We have piped unto you; and ye have not danced

We have mourned unto you; and ye have not wept!

This say I unto you; for John the Baptist

Came neither eating bread nor drinking wine

Ye say he hath a devil。  The Son of Man

Eating and drinking cometh; and ye say:

Behold a gluttonous man; and a wine…bibber;

Behold a friend of publicans and sinners!



A GUEST aside to SIMON。

Who is that woman yonder; gliding in

So silently behind him?



SIMON。

                       It is Mary;

Who dwelleth in the Tower of Magdala。



THE GUEST。

See; how she kneels there weeping; and her tears

Fall on his feet; and her long; golden hair

Waves to and fro and wipes them dry again。

And now she kisses them; and from a box

Of alabaster is anointing them

With precious ointment; filling all the house

With its sweet odor!



SIMON; aside;

                 Oh; this man; forsooth;

Were he indeed a Prophet; would have known

Who and what manner of woman this may be

That toucheth him! would know she is a sinner!



CHRISTUS。

Simon; somewhat have I to say to thee。



SIMON。

Master; say on。



CHRISTUS。

               A certain creditor

Had once two debtors; and the one of them

Owed him five hundred pence; the other; fifty。

They having naught to pay withal; he frankly

Forgave them both。  Now tell me which of them

Will love him most?



SIMON。 

               He; I suppose to whom

He most forgave。



CHRISTUS。

        Yea; thou hast rightly judged。

Seest thou this woman?  When thine house I entered;

Thou gavest me no water for my feet;

But she hath washed them with her tears; and wiped them

With her own hair。  Thou gavest me no kiss;

This woman hath not ceased; since I came in;

To kiss my feet。  My head with oil didst thou

Anoint not; but this woman hath anointed

My feet with ointment。  Hence I say to thee;

Her sins; which have been many; are forgiven;

For she loved much。



THE GUESTS。

             Oh; who; then; is this man

That pardoneth also sins without atonement?



CHRISTUS。

Woman; thy faith hath saved thee!  Go in peace!







THE SECOND PASSOVER。



I



BEFORE THE GATES OF MACHAERUS



MANAHEM。

Welcome; O wilderness; and welcome; night

And solitude; and ye swift…flying stars

That drift with golden sands the barren heavens;

Welcome once more!  The Angels of the Wind

Hasten across the desert to receive me;

And sweeter than men's voices are to me

The voices of these solitudes; the sound

Of unseen rivulets; and the far…off cry

Of bitterns in the reeds of water…pools。

And lo! above me; like the Prophet's arrow

Shot from the eastern window; high in air

The clamorous cranes go singing through the night。

O ye mysterious pilgrims of the air;

Would I had wings that I might follow you!



I look forth from these mountains; and behold

The omnipotent and omnipresent night;

Mysterious as the future and the fate

That hangs o'er all men's lives!  I see beneath me

The desert stretching to the Dead Sea shore;

And westward; faint and far away; the glimmer

Of torches on Mount Olivet; announcing

The rising of the Moon of Passover。

Like a great cross it seems; on which suspended;

With head bowed down in agony; I see

A human figure!  Hide; O merciful heaven;

The awful apparition from my sight!



And thou; Machaerus; lifting high and black

Thy dreadful walls against the rising moon;

Haunted by demons and by apparitions;

Lilith; and Jezerhara; and Bedargon;

How grim thou showest in the uncertain light;

A palace and a prison; where King Herod

Feasts with Herodias; while the Baptist John

Fasts; and consumes his unavailing life!

And in thy court…yard grows the untithed rue;

Huge as the olives of Gethsemane;

And ancient as the terebinth of Hebron;

Coeval with the world。  Would that its leaves

Medicinal could purge thee of the demons

That now possess thee; and the cunning fox

That burrows in thy walls; contriving mischief!



Music is heard from within。



Angels of God!  Sandalphon; thou that weavest

The prayers of men into immortal garlands;

And thou; Metatron; who dost gather up

Their songs; and bear them to the gates of heaven;

Now gather up together in your hands

The prayers that fill this prison; and the songs

That echo from the ceiling of this palace;

And lay them side by side before God's feet!



He enters the castle。





II



HEROD'S BANQUET…HALL



MANAHEM。

Thou hast sent for me; O King; and I am here。



HEROD。

Who art thou?



MANAHEM。

             Manahem; the Essenian。



HEROD。

I recognize thy features; but what mean

These torn and faded garments?  On thy road

Have demons crowded thee; and rubbed against thee;

And given thee weary knees?  A cup of wine!



MANAHEM。

The Essenians drink no wine。



HEROD。

                What wilt thou; then?



MANAHEM。

Nothing。



HEROD。

       Not even a cup of

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