“Yes,” said the young Philistine harper; “if the Greek should sing one of the Hebrew’s songs, you would know he had borrowed it, in a moment.”
“And so, if it were the other way.”
“Of course,” said their old captain, joining in this conversation. “Homer, if you call him so, sings the thing made: David sings the maker. Or, rather, Homer thinks of the thing made: David thinks of the maker, whatever they sing.”
“I was going to say that Homer would sing of cities; and David, of the life in them.”
“It is not what they say so much, as the way they look at it. The Greek sees the outside,—the beauty of the thing; the Hebrew—”
“Hush!”
For David and his new friend had been talking too. Homer had told him of the storm at sea they met a few days before; and David, I think, had spoken of a mountain-tornado, as he met it years before. In the excitement of his narrative he struck the harp, which was still in his hand, and sung:—
“Then the earth shook
and trembled,
The foundations of the hills
moved and were shaken,
Because
He was wroth;
There went up a smoke out
of his nostrils,
And fire out of his mouth
devoured;
It
burned with living coal.
He bowed the heavens
also, and came down,
And darkness was under his
feet;
He rode upon a cherub and
did fly,
Yea, he did fly upon the wings
of the wind.
He made darkness his resting-place,
His pavilion were dark waters
and clouds of the skies;
At the brightness before him
his clouds passed by,
Hail-stones and
coals of fire.
The Lord also thundered in
the heavens,
And the highest gave his voice;
Hail-stones and
coals of fire.
Yea, he sent out his arrows,
and scattered them,
And he shot out his lightnings,
and discomfited them.
Then the channels
of waters were seen,
And the foundations
of the world were made known,
At
thy rebuke, O Lord!
At the blast of
the breath of thy nostrils.
He
sent from above, he took me,
He
drew me out of many waters.”
“Mine were but a few verses,” said Homer. “I am more than repaid by yours. Imagine Neptune, our sea-god, looking on a battle:—
“There he sat high, retired
from the seas;
There looked with pity on his Grecians beaten;
There burned with rage at the god-king who slew
them.
Then he rushed forward from the rugged mountains,
Quickly descending;
He bent the forests also as he came down,
And the high cliffs shook under his feet.
Three times he trod upon them,
And with his fourth step reached the home he sought
for.