Public Domain Poetry And Stories - The Wandering Jew. by James Whitcomb Riley
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The Wandering Jew.

    By James Whitcomb Riley



        The stars are failing, and the sky
            Is like a field of faded flowers;
        The winds on weary wings go by;
            The moon hides, and the temptest lowers;
                And still through every clime and age
                I wander on a pilgrimage
                That all men know an idle quest,
                For that the goal I seek is - REST!

        I hear the voice of summer streams,
            And, following, I find the brink
        Of cooling springs, with childish dreams
            Returning as I bend to drink -
                But suddenly, with startled eyes,
                My face looks on its grim disguise
                Of long gray beard; and so, distressed,
                I hasten on, nor taste of rest.

        I come upon a merry group
            Of children in the dusky wood,
        Who answer back the owlet's whoop,
            That laughs as it had understood;
                And I would pause a little space,
                But that each happy blossom-face
                Is like to one His hands have blessed
                Who sent me forth in search of rest.

        Sometimes I fain would stay my feet
            In shady lanes, where huddled kine
        Couch in the grasses cool and sweet,
            And lift their patient eyes to mine;
                But I, for thoughts that ever then
                Go back to Bethlehem again,
                Must needs fare on my weary quest,
                And weep for very need of rest.

        Is there no end?    I plead in vain:
            Lost worlds nor living answer me.
        Since Pontius Pilate's awful reign
            Have I not passed eternity?
                Have I not drank the fetid breath
                Of every fevered phase of death,
                And come unscathed through every pest
                And scourge and plague that promised rest?

        Have I not seen the stars go out
            That shed their light o'er Galilee,
        And mighty kingdoms tossed about
            And crumbled clod-like in the sea?
                Dead ashes of dead ages blow
                And cover me like drifting snow,
                And time laughs on as 'twere a jest
                That I have any need of rest.



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