hosen and the be
day, had waited
r his ship that was
e isle of
year, on the sevent
climbed the hill wi
and he beheld his
st
his heart were flu
. And he closed his e
s of hi
the hill, a sadnes
art: How shall I go
hout a wound in the
s c
f pain I have spent
s of aloneness; and
is aloneness w
of the spirit have
ny are the children
hese hills, and I
n and an ache. It is
skin that I tear wit
e behind me, but a
nd with
onger. The sea that
must embark. For to
to freeze and crysta
ld I take with me
voice cannot carr
gs. Alone must it see
t shall the eagle f
the foot of the hi
proaching the harbour, And upon her pro
out to them, and
riders of the tide
w you come in my awakening,
d my eagerness with
athe in this still air, Only another lov
, a seafarer am
sleepless mother,
river and the strea
urmur in this glade, And then I shall com
ea
e saw from afar me
r vineyards and haste
their voices calling
ld telling one anothe
ip
elf: Shall the day
all it be said that
wn
ve unto him who has
m who has stopped th
rt become a tree he
nd give unto them?
that I may fill the
mighty may touch me
y pass th
am I, and what trea
ispense with confiden
fields have I sowed
s? If this indeed b
t is not my flame tha
I raise my lantern,
it with oil and he
id in words. But m
e himself could not
tered into the city
ere crying out to hi
he city stood forth
ntide have you been
us dreams to dream.
st, but our son and
ur eyes to hunge
d the priestesses
e sea separate us n
midst become a mem
nd your shadow has b
ce
you. But speechle
t cries aloud unto you, And would stand
its own depth unti
ame also and entre
d the
ead; and those who
ing upon h
ple proceeded towa
And there came ou
was Almitra. And
her with exceedin
t sought and believe
day in th
saying: Prophet of
you searched the dist
has come, and yo
g for the land of y
ur greater desires;
r our needs
ou leave us, that you
d we will give it un
hildren, and it s
you have watched w
u have listened to
r of ou
se us to ourselves,
f that which is betw
ople of Orphalese,
is even now moving