e work of their hands--all
save their hope and desire have perished.
Only the flowers of the heart have endured--
only they in the waste of the ages,
Ay--they have grown, but the hewn rock has
crumbled away and the temples have fallen.
Bow, haughty people; ye live in the day of
fulfilment--the day everlasting.
Soon the plough of oppression shall cease and
the ox shall abandon the furrow.
Ready the field, and I sing of the sower whose
grain has been gathered in heaven.
"Now is he come, with my voice and my soul I declare him.
Wonderful Counsellor, Mighty God, the Everlasting
Father, the Prince of Peace."
The flood of inspiration had passed. The singer turned away. "It is
Simeon," said a voice in the crowd. "He shall not die until his eyes
have beheld the king of promise."
Those departing from the games of Herod resumed their march. At the
gate of the castle of Antonia, Vergilius, with David and two armed
equites, one bearing colors, left the squadron. They rode slowly
towards the setting sun. Now there was not in all the world a city so
wonderful as Jerusalem. Golden dome and tower were gleaming above
white walls on the turquoise blue of the heavens.
"Good friend, I grieve for her who is dead," said Vergilius to David.
"She died for love," the other answered as one who would have done the
same.
Vergilius looked not to right nor left. His dark, quivering plume was
an apt symbol of thought and passion beneath it. His blood was hot
from the rush and wrath of battle, from hatred of them who had sought
his life. He could hear the cry of Cyran; "Rise, rise, my beloved!"
Again, he was like as he had been there on the field of battle. He
could not rise above his longing for revenge. He hated the emperor
whose cruel message had wrung his heart; he hated Manius, who had
sought to destroy him; he despised the vile and stealthy son of Herod,
who had plotted to rob him of love and life; he had begun to doubt the
goodness of the great Lawgiver.
No sooner had he found an enemy than his God was become a god of
vengeance. The council, the continued failure of his prayers, the
cruelty of impending misfortune, the death of Cyran had weakened the
faith of Vergilius. He had begun to founder in the deep mystery of the
world. The voice of the old singer had not broken the spell of bitter
passion. Vergilius trembled with haste to kill. He feared even t
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