Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By I. SolomonMoses on Mount Nebo
Above him arched the azure sky,
Beneath the valley was at rest,
A gem in Nature’s pageantry;
Behind him lay the toil of years,
And chains of bondage meekly borne,
And pathways moistened with his tears—
A life of many a pleasure shorn.
Where long had slaved God’s chosen race,
No more the swarth Egyptian’s guile,
The trembling hand, the haggard face;
For he had led his brethren far
Beyond the whip, beyond the chain,
And now beneath the brightest star
Lay Canaan sweet with hill and plain.
Would never open to his tread,
And Jordan old was flowing where
He ne’er would rest his weary head;
And Amram’s son from Nebo’s crest
Gazed long upon the matchless scene;
An untold longing filled his breast
To reach the promised pastures green.
Far from the vale that slept below,
’Neath heaven’s softest canopy
The ceaseless years would o’er him go;
That Israel, anchored safe at last,
Where Jordan singing, sought the sea.
With toil and danger ever past,
Would, thro’ God’s watchful care, be free.
Stood Israel’s leader true and bold;
His grave was not to be the sod
Where Canaan’s rose its petals fold;
He bowed his head and looked no more,
Perchance he for a moment wept;
He knew the pilgrimage was o’er.
God touched him gently and he slept.
Where Moses laid his mantle down.
For high on Nebo’s rugged face,
His service done, he won the crown;
Jehovah made that lonely grave
And left His servant old alone;
Afar from Jordan’s sunlit wave
He sleeps, his sepulchre unknown.