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creature strong. At eve she bent above her sleeping treasure, With eyes that wept for pity and for love, Filling its cup of life in richer measure, With the blest care that watches us above; And in the morn they bound the babe again, And so drew on the mother in their train. Her tender feet soon wounded were, and sore With the rough travel, and the weary way, And her slight limbs, o'ertask'd and loaded, bore Less lightly up their burden day by day; But, nature failing, Love imparted power To bear her steps up to the resting hour. Alas! the mother gazed with aching eyes Upon the life-spring in her little child, As one laid by a fountain while it dries; Daily she watch'd it ebb, till she grew wild With anguish at the Angel drawing near, And bared her own breast for his fatal spear. She lost all sense of weariness and pain, And with hot tearless eyes still hurried on, Bearing the child girt by its cruel chain, All thought save of her cherish'd burden gone, Fearful alone lest other eyes should guess The feeble thing her longing arms did press. At last they saw the babe was weaker growing, That soon the little spark of life must fade, So, spite of all her prayers, and wild tears flowing, Beside a spring the sleeping child they laid, And bid her onward, heedless of her woe But on the earth she fell, and would not go. They raised her up, and bound her on a steed, And so march'd onward on their weary way-- For there was none to help her in her need, And thus they travell'd eastward all the day, But when they rested, and on each bow'd head Sleep heavy lay, the mother rose and fled. And speeding swiftly with a lapwing's flight, Backward she hurried to the little spring, Led by a power that knoweth not the night, But flies through darkness with unerring wing; And so e'er morning shimmer'd in the East, She clasp'd her dead babe to her panting breast. At morn they miss'd her, and the women said, "She seeks her babe beside the distant well, There wilt thou find her, if she be not dead, For O! the love of mother who can tell." And so the steward gallop'd back in haste, To seek the lost one in the desert waste. At last the spring rose in the distant sand, With its close verdure pleasant to the eye, And there, as, nearing it, the place he scann'd, He saw the mother with her infant lie, Quiet and stilly on each other's breast, Folded together in unbroken rest;
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