Chapter VI.

But Pharaoh was strangely blind, and turning

From his first-born and his dead, with Egypt’s wail

Scarce still upon his ear, he asked which way had

Israel gone? They told him that they journeyed

Towards the mighty sea, and were encamped

Near Baalzephn.

Then Pharaoh said, “the wilderness will hem them in,

The mighty sea will roll its barriers in front,

And with my chariots and my warlike men

I’ll bring them back, or mete them out their graves.”

Then Pharaoh’s officers arose

And gathered up the armies of the king

And made his chariots ready for pursuit.

With proud escutcheons blazoned to the sun,

In his chariot of ivory, pearl and gold,

Pharaoh rolled out of Egypt; and with him

Rode his mighty men, their banners floating

On the breeze, their spears and armor glittering

In the morning light; and Israel saw,

With fainting hearts, their old oppressors on their

Track: then women wept in hopeless terror;

Children hid their faces in their mothers’ robes,

And strong men bowed their heads in agony and dread;

And then a bitter, angry murmur rose,—

“Were there no graves in Egypt, that thou hast

Brought us here to die?”

Then Moses lifted up his face, aglow

With earnest faith in God, and bade their fainting hearts

Be strong and they should his salvation see.

“Stand still,” said Moses to the fearful throng

Whose hearts were fainting in the wild, “Stand still.”

Ah, that was Moses’ word, but higher and greater

Came God’s watchword for the hour, and not for that

Alone, but all the coming hours of time.

“Speak ye unto the people and bid them

Forward go; stretch thy hand across the waters

And smite them with thy rod.” And Moses smote

The restless sea; the waves stood up in heaps,

Then lay as calm and still as lips that just

Had tasted death. The secret-loving sea

Laid bare her coral caves and iris-tinted

Floor; that wall of flood which lined the people’s

Way was God’s own wondrous masonry;

The signal pillar sent to guide them through the wild

Moved its dark shadow till it fronted Egypt’s

Camp, but hung in fiery splendor, a light

To Israel’s path. Madly rushed the hosts

Of Pharaoh upon the people’s track, when

The solemn truth broke on them—that God

For Israel fought. With cheeks in terror

Blenching, and eyes astart with fear, “let

Us flee,” they cried, “from Israel, for their God

Doth fight against us; he is battling on their side.”

They had trusted in their chariots, but now

That hope was vain; God had loosened every

Axle and unfastened every wheel, and each

Face did gather blackness and each heart stood still

With fear, as the livid lightnings glittered

And the thunder roared and muttered on the air,

And they saw the dreadful ruin that shuddered

O’er their heads, for the waves began to tremble

And the wall of flood to bend. Then arose

A cry of terror, baffled hate and hopeless dread,

A gurgling sound of horror, as “the waves

Came madly dashing, wildly crashing, seeking

Out their place again,” and the flower and pride

Of Egypt sank as lead within the sea

Till the waves threw back their corpses cold and stark

Upon the shore, and the song of Israel.

Triumph was the requiem of their foes.

Oh the grandeur of that triumph; up the cliffs

And down the valleys, o’er the dark and restless

Sea, rose the people’s shout of triumph, going

Up in praise to God, and the very air

Seemed joyous for the choral song of millions

Throbbed upon its viewless wings.

Then another song of triumph rose in accents

Soft and clear; “’twas the voice of Moses’ sister

Rising in the tide of song.” The warm blood

Of her childhood seemed dancing in her veins;

The roses of her girlhood were flushing

On her cheek, and her eyes flashed out the splendor

Of long departed days, for time itself seemed

Pausing, and she lived the past again; again

The Nile flowed by her; she was watching by the stream,

A little ark of rushes where her baby brother lay;

The tender tide of rapture swept o’er her soul again

She had felt when Pharaoh’s daughter had claimed

Him as her own, and her mother wept for joy

Above her rescued son. Then again she saw

Him choosing “’twixt Israel’s pain and sorrow

And Egypt’s pomp and pride.” But now he stood

Their leader triumphant on that shore, and loud

She struck the cymbals as she led the Hebrew women

In music, dance and song, as they shouted out

Triumphs in sweet and glad refrains.