Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Rizpah by Henry Kendall
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Rizpah

    By Henry Kendall



    Said one who led the spears of swarthy Gad,
    To Jesse’s mighty son: “My Lord, O King,
    I, halting hard by Gibeon’s bleak-blown hill
    Three nightfalls past, saw dark-eyed Rizpah, clad
    In dripping sackcloth, pace with naked feet
    The flinty rock where lie unburied yet
    The sons of her and Saul; and he whose post
    Of watch is in those places desolate,
    Got up, and spake unto thy servant here
    Concerning her yea, even unto me:
    ‘Behold,’ he said, ‘the woman seeks not rest,
    Nor fire, nor food, nor roof, nor any haunt
    Where sojourns man; but rather on yon rock
    Abideth, like a wild thing, with the slain,
    And watcheth them, lest evil wing or paw
    Should light upon the comely faces dead,
    To spoil them of their beauty. Three long moons
    Hath Rizpah, daughter of Aiah, dwelt
    With drouth and cold and rain and wind by turns,
    And many birds there are that know her face,
    And many beasts that flee not at her step,
    And many cunning eyes do look at her
    From serpent-holes and burrows of the rat.
    Moreover,’ spake the scout, ‘her skin is brown
    And sere by reason of exceeding heat;
    And all her darkness of abundant hair
    Is shot with gray, because of many nights
    When grief hath crouched in fellowship with frost
    Upon that desert rock. Yea, thus and thus
    Fares Rizpah,’ said the spy, O King, to me.”

    But David, son of Jesse, spake no word,
    But turned himself, and wept against the wall.

    We have our Rizpahs in these modern days
    Who’ve lost their households through no sin of theirs,
    On bloody fields and in the pits of war;
    And though their dead were sheltered in the sod
    By friendly hands, these have not suffered less
    Than she of Judah did, nor is their love
    Surpassed by hers. The Bard who, in great days
    Afar off yet, shall set to epic song
    The grand pathetic story of the strife
    That shook America for five long years,
    And struck its homes with desolation he
    Shall in his lofty verse relate to men
    How, through the heat and havoc of that time,
    Columbia’s Rachael in her Rama wept
    Her children, and would not be comforted;
    And sing of Woman waiting day by day
    With that high patience that no man attains,
    For tidings, from the bitter field, of spouse,
    Or son, or brother, or some other love
    Set face to face with Death. Moreover, he
    Shall say how, through her sleepless hours at night,
    When rain or leaves were dropping, every noise
    Seemed like an omen; every coming step
    Fell on her ears like a presentiment
    And every hand that rested on the door
    She fancied was a herald bearing grief;
    While every letter brought a faintness on
    That made her gasp before she opened it,
    To read the story written for her eyes,
    And cry, or brighten, over its contents.



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