Page:The Poems and Prose remains of Arthur Hugh Clough, volume 2 (1869).djvu/85

 As betwixt you and Paradise of old, So betwixt me, my parents, now, and you, Cherubim I discern, and in their hand A flaming sword that turneth every way, To keep the way of my one tree of life, The way my spirit yearns to, of my love. Yet not, O Adam and O Eve, fear not. For He that asked me, Where is Abel? He Who called me cursed from the earth, and said A fugitive and vagabond thou art, He also said, when fear had slain my soul, There shall not touch thee man nor beast. Fear not. Lo, I have spoke with God, and He hath said. Fear not;—and let me go as He hath said. Cain also said (O Jubal, touch thy string),— Moreover, in the darkness of my mind, When the night's night of misery was most black, A little star came twinkling up within, And in myself I had a guide that led, And in myself had knowledge of a soul Fear not, O Adam and O Eve: I go.

Children of Lamech, listen to my speech.

For when the years were multiplied, and Cain Eastward of Eden, in this land of Nod, Had sons, and sons of sons, and sons of them, Enoch and Irad and Mehujael (My father, and my children's grandsire he), It came to pass, that Cain, who dwelt alone, Met Adam, at the nightfall, in the field: Who fell upon his neck, and wept, and said, My son, has God not spoken to thee, Cain? And Cain replied, when weeping loosed his voice,