Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.
By Arthur Hugh CloughThe Meeting of Isaac and Rebecca
W
O Eleazer, steward to my lord?
And Eleazer answered her and said,
Daughter of Bethuel, it is other none
But my lord Isaac, son unto my lord,
Who as his wont is, walketh in the field,
In the hour of evening meditating there.
And from her camel ’lighting to the earth,
Sought for a veil and put it on her face.
Saw from afar a company that came,
Camels, and a seat as where a woman sat;
Wherefore he came and met them on the way.
Whom, when Rebekah saw, she came before
Saying, Behold the handmaiden of my lord,
Who, for my lord’s sake travel from my land.
Come, for the tent is eager for thy face.
Shall not thy husband be unto thee more than
Hundreds of kinsmen living in thy land?
Even according as thy father bade,
Did we; and thus and thus it came to pass:
Lo! is not this Rebekah, Bethuel’s child?
And as he ended, Isaac spoke and said,
Surely my heart went with you on the way
When with the beasts ye came unto the place.
When to my mother and my mother’s son
Thou madest answer, saying, I will go.
And Isaac brought her to her mother’s tent.