The Complete Poetical Works of George MacDonald. George MacDonald

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Complete Poetical Works of George MacDonald - George MacDonald страница 74

Автор:
Серия:
Издательство:
The Complete Poetical Works of George MacDonald - George MacDonald

Скачать книгу

in thy dreams.

      Well mightst thou suffer things not few

       For his sake all the night!

       In pale eclipse he suffers, who

       Is of the world the light.

      Precious it were to know thy dream

       Of such a one as he!

       Perhaps of him we, waking, deem

       As poor a verity.

      XI.

       THE WOMAN OF SAMARIA.

       Table of Contents

      In the hot sun, for water cool

       She walked in listless mood:

       When back she ran, her pitcher full

       Forgot behind her stood.

      Like one who followed straying sheep,

       A weary man she saw,

       Who sat upon the well so deep,

       And nothing had to draw.

      "Give me to drink," he said. Her hand

       Was ready with reply;

       From out the old well of the land

       She drew him plenteously.

      He spake as never man before;

       She stands with open ears;

       He spake of holy days in store,

       Laid bare the vanished years.

      She cannot still her throbbing heart,

       She hurries to the town,

       And cries aloud in street and mart,

       "The Lord is here: come down."

      Her life before was strange and sad,

       A very dreary sound:

       Ah, let it go—or good or bad:

       She has the Master found!

      XII.

       MARY MAGDALENE.

       Table of Contents

      With wandering eyes and aimless zeal,

       She hither, thither, goes;

       Her speech, her motions, all reveal

       A mind without repose.

      She climbs the hills, she haunts the sea,

       By madness tortured, driven;

       One hour's forgetfulness would be

       A gift from very heaven!

      She slumbers into new distress;

       The night is worse than day:

       Exulting in her helplessness,

       Hell's dogs yet louder bay.

      The demons blast her to and fro;

       She has no quiet place,

       Enough a woman still, to know

       A haunting dim disgrace.

      A human touch! a pang of death!

       And in a low delight

       Thou liest, waiting for new breath.

       For morning out of night.

      Thou risest up: the earth is fair,

       The wind is cool; thou art free!

       Is it a dream of hell's despair

       Dissolves in ecstasy?

      That man did touch thee! Eyes divine

       Make sunrise in thy soul;

       Thou seëst love in order shine:—

       His health hath made thee whole!

      Thou, sharing in the awful doom,

       Didst help thy Lord to die;

       Then, weeping o'er his empty tomb,

       Didst hear him Mary cry.

      He stands in haste; he cannot stop;

       Home to his God he fares:

       "Go tell my brothers I go up

       To my Father, mine and theirs."

      Run, Mary! lift thy heavenly voice;

       Cry, cry, and heed not how;

       Make all the new-risen world rejoice—

       Its first apostle thou!

      What if old tales of thee have lied,

       Or truth have told, thou art

       All-safe with him, whate'er betide—

       Dwell'st with him in God's heart!

      XIII.

       THE WOMAN IN THE TEMPLE.

       Table of Contents

      A still dark joy! A sudden face!

       Cold daylight, footsteps, cries!

       The temple's naked, shining space,

       Aglare with judging eyes!

      All in abandoned guilty hair,

       With terror-pallid lips,

       To vulgar scorn her honour bare,

       To lewd remarks and quips,

      Her eyes she fixes on the ground

       Her shrinking soul to hide,

       Lest, at uncurtained windows

Скачать книгу