VIII.‘ SING US ONE OF THE SONGS OF SION.’

By Coventry Kersey Dighton Patmore

How sing the Lord's Song in so strange a Land?

A torrid waste of water-mocking sand;

Oases of wild grapes;

A dull, malodorous fog

O'er a once Sacred River's wandering strand,

Its ancient tillage all gone back to bog;

A busy synod of blest cats and apes

Exposing the poor trick of earth and star

With worshipp'd snouts oracular;

Prophets to whose blind stare

The heavens the glory of God do not declare,

Skill'd in such question nice

As why one conjures toads who fails with lice,

And hatching snakes from sticks in such a swarm

As quite to surfeit Aaron's bigger worm;

A nation which has got

A lie in her right hand,

And knows it not;

With Pharaohs to her mind, each drifting as a log

Which way the foul stream flows,

More harden'd the more plagued with fly and frog!

How should sad Exile sing in such a Land?

How should ye understand?

What could he win but jeers,

Or howls, such as sweet music draws from dog,

Who told of marriage-feasting to the man

That nothing knows of food but bread of bran?

Besides, if aught such ears

Might e'er unclog,

There lives but one, with tones for Sion meet.

Behoveful, zealous, beautiful, elect,

Mild, firm, judicious, loving, bold, discreet,

Without superfluousness, without defect,

Few are his words, and find but scant respect,

Nay, scorn from some, for God's good cause agog.

Silence in such a Land is oftenest such men's speech.

O, that I might his holy secret reach;

O, might I catch his mantle when he goes;

O, that I were so gentle and so sweet,

So I might deal fair Sion's foolish foes

Such blows!