Poems

The Babylonian Captivity

(Pslam CXXVII.)

Charles Harpur


BY FAR Euphrates’ stream we sate,
    A weary band of herded slaves,
And over Judah’s fallen estate
    We wept into the passing waves.

On willow-boughs that o’er us bent
    Our once glad-sounding harps were hung,
That but the wild wind, as it went,
    Might grieve their wailful chords among.

But they who spoiled us—even they
    Who wasted us with daily wrongs,
To make them mirth did asking say:
    “Come sing us one of Zion’s songs!”

How can with us the will remain
    To strike the harp with fettered hand?
How can we sing a joyful strain
    As captives in a foreign land?

And when, Jerussalem! We let
    Thy memory pass on Time’s grey wing,
May our right hands at once forget
    Their mastery o’er the sounding string!

Yea, let our tongues to song be dumb,
    As in a dull and voiceless dream,
Till to thy courts again we come
    And thy redemption be the theme!

Then, Edom, thou shalt get thy wound!
    For thou, on Zion’s evil day,
Saidst—“Raze her beauty to the ground,
    And captive drive her sons away!”

And lo! Yet fiercer visions rise,
    The day is fixed, the hour is known,
When, Babylon! Thy fateful skies
    Shall raid red wrath and ruin down!

Till by thy towers all overthrown,
    Thy daughters, desolate as we,
Each with her shame shall sit alone,
    With shame and wild-faced misery!

And then may the avenger dash
    Thy children’s heads against stones;
For so, ’mid Zion’s falling crash,
    Didst thou with all our little ones.


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