The Desert of the World
AN ALLEGORY.
Deep in the deserts wild of burning sand,
Far from my mountain home,
Far from the vales and streams of Fatherland,
Alone I roam.
I see, at distance o'er the barren brown,
A placid lake at rest;
Shadowy hills and moving clouds float down
Its glancing breast.
Alas! the waters vanish, thin as light,
When thirsty feet draw near;
Like Error, they at distance cheat the sight,
Then disappear.
Over the hot and heavy soil I tread,
How wearily and slow!
The pitiless sun beats down upon my head,
Yet on I go.
I see the unburied bones of mighty hosts,
In drifted sand-hills near;
I hear the mutterings of their thirsty ghosts,
" No water here! "
But now far off I see, cheered on once more,
A half-hid palm-tree stand;
Branch after branch, aloft it rises o'er
The sea of sand.
So to the shipwrecked mariner, at last,
Sinking in long death-strife,
Over the main comes on, with growing mast,
The ship of life.
The low acacia lifts its fragrant head,
Planted beside the well;
Its yellow flowers o'er sultry breezes spread
A pleasant smell.
See the green bending boughs, how beautiful,
Down o'er the fountain slanting;
And birds among the leaves shady and cool,
Are loudly chanting.
Hope nerves afresh each slowly-lagging limb,
Onward I run, I fly;
Down on my knees I fall beside its brim —
The well is dry!
" O G OD ! a death of thirst! and life all spent —
Ended ere yet begun!
Father , it is Thy Hand, I am content:
T HY will be done! "
I lay me down beneath the palm; the cup
My hands still vainly keep;
And deadly faintness wraps my senses up,
Like sudden sleep.
The desert was not in my dreams, nor heat,
Nor weariness, nor thirst;
But sparkling from the rocks before my feet,
The fountain burst!
I laughed to see the joyous streams all round
Run purling through the plain;
And rustled in my ears the plashy sound
Of falling rain.
I woke. The cup was brimming in my hand,
The drops of Heaven still fell;
And by my side, ran over in the sand
The bubbling well.
Deep in the deserts wild of burning sand,
Far from my mountain home,
Far from the vales and streams of Fatherland,
Alone I roam.
I see, at distance o'er the barren brown,
A placid lake at rest;
Shadowy hills and moving clouds float down
Its glancing breast.
Alas! the waters vanish, thin as light,
When thirsty feet draw near;
Like Error, they at distance cheat the sight,
Then disappear.
Over the hot and heavy soil I tread,
How wearily and slow!
The pitiless sun beats down upon my head,
Yet on I go.
I see the unburied bones of mighty hosts,
In drifted sand-hills near;
I hear the mutterings of their thirsty ghosts,
" No water here! "
But now far off I see, cheered on once more,
A half-hid palm-tree stand;
Branch after branch, aloft it rises o'er
The sea of sand.
So to the shipwrecked mariner, at last,
Sinking in long death-strife,
Over the main comes on, with growing mast,
The ship of life.
The low acacia lifts its fragrant head,
Planted beside the well;
Its yellow flowers o'er sultry breezes spread
A pleasant smell.
See the green bending boughs, how beautiful,
Down o'er the fountain slanting;
And birds among the leaves shady and cool,
Are loudly chanting.
Hope nerves afresh each slowly-lagging limb,
Onward I run, I fly;
Down on my knees I fall beside its brim —
The well is dry!
" O G OD ! a death of thirst! and life all spent —
Ended ere yet begun!
Father , it is Thy Hand, I am content:
T HY will be done! "
I lay me down beneath the palm; the cup
My hands still vainly keep;
And deadly faintness wraps my senses up,
Like sudden sleep.
The desert was not in my dreams, nor heat,
Nor weariness, nor thirst;
But sparkling from the rocks before my feet,
The fountain burst!
I laughed to see the joyous streams all round
Run purling through the plain;
And rustled in my ears the plashy sound
Of falling rain.
I woke. The cup was brimming in my hand,
The drops of Heaven still fell;
And by my side, ran over in the sand
The bubbling well.
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