Does that lamp still burn in my father’s house,
Which he kindled the night I went away?
I turned once beneath the cedar boughs,
And
marked it gleam with a golden ray;
Did he
think to light me home some day?
Hungry here with the crunching swine,
Hungry
harvest have I to reap;
In a dream I count my Father’s kine,*
I hear
the tinkling bells of his sheep,
I
watch his lambs that browse and leap.
There is plenty of bread at home,
His
servant have bread enough and to spare;
The purple wine-fat froths with foam,
Oil
and spices make sweet the air,
While
I perish hungry and bare.
Rich
and blessed those servants, rather
Than
I who see not my Father’s face!
I
will arise and go to my Father –
“Fallen from sonship, beggared of grace,
Grant me, Father, a servant’s place.”
*Kine: archaic plural for “cow”
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