Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By William KnoxThe Field of Gilboa
T
And beamed on the face of the dead and the dying,
For the yell and the strife, like the thunder, had flown,
And red on Gilboa the carnage was lying.
To the beautiful cheek that was tearless and ruddy,
But the claws of the eagle were fixed in his breast
And the beak of the vulture was busy and bloody.
Who yesterday went from her dwelling forever,
Now the wolf of the hills a sweet carnival had
On the delicate limbs that had ceased not to quiver.
To hold up the head that was breathless and hoary,
And there came the maiden, all frantic and wild
To kiss the loved lips that were gasping and gory.
To stem the red tide of a spouse that bereft her,
And there came a mother that sunk ’mid the slain
To weep o’er the last human stay that was left her.
Where the king and his people were slaughtered together,
May the dew and the rain leave thy herbage to die,
Thy flocks to decay and thy forests to wither.