Page:Mistral - Mirèio. A Provençal poem.djvu/233

] "So must we say farewell, O sacred shore! O doomed Judæa, farewell evermore! Thy just are banished, thy God crucified! Henceforth let serpents in thy halls abide; And wandering lions, tawny, terrible, Feed on thy vines and dates. Farewell! farewell!

"The gale had grown into a tempest now: The vessel fled before it. On the prow Martial was kneeling, and Saturnius: While, in his mantle folded, Tropbimus The aged saint silently meditated; And Maximin the bishop near him waited.

"High on the main-deck Lazarus held his place. There was an awful pallor on his face,— Hues of the winding-sheet and of the grave. He seemed to face the anger of the wave. Martha his sister to his side had crept, And Magdalene behind them cowered and wept.

"The slender bark, pursued of demons thus, Contained, beside, Cléon, Eutropius, Marcellus, Joseph of Arimathea, Sidonius. And sweet it was to hear The psalms they sang on the blue waste of sea, Leaned o'er the tholes. Te Deum, too, said we.