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Home  »  The Poetical Works In Four Volumes  »  Judith at the Tent of Holofernes

John Greenleaf Whittier (1807–1892). The Poetical Works in Four Volumes. 1892.

Appendix I. Early and Uncollected Verses

Judith at the Tent of Holofernes

NIGHT was down among the mountains,

In her dim and quiet manner,

Where Bethulia’s silver fountains

Gushed beneath the Assyrian banner.

Moonlight, o’er her meek dominion,

As a mighty flag unfurled,

Like an angel’s snowy pinion

Resting on a darkened world!

Faintly rose the city’s murmur,

But the crowded camp was calm;

Girded in their battle armor,

Each a falchion at his arm,

Lordly chief and weary vassal

In the arms of slumber fell;

It had been a day of wassail,

And the wine had circled well.

Underneath his proud pavilion

Lay Assyria’s champion,

Where the ruby’s rich vermilion

Shone beside the beryl-stone.

With imperial purple laden,

Breathing in the perfumed air,

Dreams he of the Jewish maiden,

With her dark and jewelled hair.

Who is she, the pale-browed stranger,

Bending o’er that son of slaughter?

God be with thee in thy danger,

Israel’s lone and peerless daughter!

She hath bared her queenly beauty

To the dark Assyrian’s glance;

Now, a high and sterner duty

Bids her to his couch advance.

Beautiful and pale she bendeth

In her earnest prayer to Heaven;

Look again, that maiden standeth

In the strength her God has given!

Strangely is her dark eye kindled,

Hot blood through her cheek is poured;

Lo, her every fear hath dwindled,

And her hand is on the sword!

Upward to the flashing curtain,

See, that mighty blade is driven,

And its fall!—’t is swift and certain

As the cloud-fire’s track in heaven!

Down, as with a power supernal,

Twice the lifted weapon fell;

Twice, his slumber is eternal—

Who shall wake the infidel?

Sunlight on the mountains streameth

Like an air-borne wave of gold;

And Bethulia’s armor gleameth

Round Judea’s banner-fold.

Down they go, the mailëd warriors,

As the upper torrents sally

Headlong from their mountain-barriers

Down upon the sleeping valley.

Rouse thee from thy couch, Assyrian!

Dream no more of woman’s smile;

Fiercer than the leaguered Tyrian,

Or the dark-browed sons of Nile,

Foes are on thy slumber breaking,

Chieftain to thy battle rise!

Vain the call—he will not waken—

Headless on his couch he lies.

Who hath dimmed your boasted glory?

What hath woman’s weakness done?

Whose dark brow is up before ye,

Blackening in the fierce-haired sun?

Lo! an eye that never slumbers

Looketh in its vengeance down;

And the thronged and mailëd numbers

Wither at Jehovah’s frown!

1829.