Page:The Poems and Prose remains of Arthur Hugh Clough, volume 2 (1869).djvu/95

 Leah asked then, And shall these things compare (Fond wishes, and the pastime, and the play) With serious aims and forward-working hopes Aims as far-reaching as to earth's last age, And hopes far-travelling as from east to west?

Rachel replied, That love which in his youth, Through trial proved, consoles his perfect age; Shall this with project and with plan compare? Is not for-ever shorter than all time, And love more straitened than from east to west?

Leah spake further, Hath my lord not told How, in the visions of the night, his God, The God of Abraham and of Isaac, spake And said, Increase, and multiply, and fill With sons to serve Me this thy land and mine; And I will surely do thee good, and make Thy seed as is the sand beside the sea, Which is not numbered for its multitude? Shall Rachel bear this progeny to God?

But Rachel wept and answered, And if God Hath closed the womb of Rachel until now, Shall He not at His pleasure open it? Hath Leah read the counsels of the Lord? Was it not told her, in the ancient days, How Sarah, mother of great Israel's sire, Lived to long years, insulted of her slave, Or e'er to light the Child of Promise came, Whom Rachel too to Jacob yet may bear?

Moreover, Rachel said, Shall Leah mock, Who stole the prime embraces of my love, My first long-destined, long-withheld caress?