<h2><SPAN name="chap71"></SPAN>THE PROPHET</h2>
<p class="poem">
All day long he kept the sheep:—<br/>
Far and early, from the crowd,<br/>
On the hills from steep to steep,<br/>
Where the silence cried aloud;<br/>
And the shadow of the cloud<br/>
Wrapt him in a noonday sleep.<br/>
<br/>
Where he dipped the water’s cool,<br/>
Filling boyish hands from thence,<br/>
Something breathed across the pool<br/>
Stir of sweet enlightenments;<br/>
And he drank, with thirsty sense,<br/>
Till his heart was brimmed and full.<br/>
<br/>
Still, the hovering Voice unshed,<br/>
And the Vision unbeheld,<br/>
And the mute sky overhead,<br/>
And his longing, still withheld!<br/>
—Even when the two tears welled,<br/>
Salt, upon that lonely bread.<br/>
<br/>
Vaguely blessed in the leaves,<br/>
Dim-companioned in the sun,<br/>
Eager mornings, wistful eyes,<br/>
Very hunger drew him on;<br/>
And To-morrow ever shone<br/>
With the glow the sunset weaves.<br/>
<br/>
Even so, to that young heart,<br/>
Words and hands and Men were dear;<br/>
And the stir of lane and mart<br/>
After daylong vigil here.<br/>
Sunset called, and he drew near,<br/>
Still to find his path apart.<br/>
<br/>
When the Bell, with gentle tongue,<br/>
Called the herd-bells home again,<br/>
Through the purple shades he swung,<br/>
Down the mountain, through the glen;<br/>
Towards the sound of fellow-men,—<br/>
Even from the light that clung.<br/>
<br/>
Dimly too, as cloud on cloud,<br/>
Came that silent flock of his:<br/>
Thronging whiteness, in a crowd,<br/>
After homing twos and threes;<br/>
With the longing memories<br/>
Of all white things dreamed and vowed.<br/>
<br/>
Through the fragrances, alone,<br/>
By the sudden-silent brook,<br/>
From the open world unknown,<br/>
To the close of speech and book;<br/>
There to find the foreign look<br/>
In the faces of his own.<br/>
<br/>
Sharing was beyond his skill;<br/>
Shyly yet, he made essay:<br/>
Sought to dip, and share, and fill<br/>
Heart’s-desire, from day to day.<br/>
But their eyes, some foreign way,<br/>
Looked at him; and he was still.<br/>
<br/>
Last, he reached his arms to sleep,<br/>
Where the Vision waited, dim,<br/>
Still beyond some deep-on-deep.<br/>
And the darkness folded him,<br/>
Eager heart and weary limb.—<br/>
All day long, he kept the sheep.<br/></p>
<p class="left">
JOSEPHINE PRESTON PEABODY</p>
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