dots-menu
×

Home  »  The Standard Book of Jewish Verse  »  Happy He Who Saw of Old

Joseph Friedlander, comp. The Standard Book of Jewish Verse. 1917.

By Solomon Ibn Gabirol (Trans. Alice Lucas)

Happy He Who Saw of Old

HAPPY he who saw of old

The high priest, with gems and gold

All adorned from crown to hem,

Tread thy courts, Jerusalem,

Till he reached the sacred place

Where the Lord’s especial grace

Ever dwelt, the centre of the whole.

Happy he whose eyes

Saw at last the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.

Happy he that day who saw

How, with reverence and awe

And with sanctity of mien,

Spoke the priest: “Ye shall be clean

From your sins before the Lord.”

Echoed long the holy word,

While around the fragrant incense stole.

Happy he whose eyes

Saw at last the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.

Happy he who saw the crowd,

That in adoration bowed,

As they heard the priest proclaim:

“One, Ineffable, the Name,”

And they answered, “Blessed be

God the Lord eternally,

He whom all created worlds extol.”

Happy he whose eyes

Saw at last the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.

Happy he who saw the priest

Turning toward the shining East,

And, with solemn gladness thrilled,

Read the doctrine that distilled

As the dew upon the plain,

As the showers of gentle rain,

While he raised on high the sacred scroll.

Happy he whose eyes

Saw at last the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.

Happy he who saw the walls

Of the temple’s radiant halls,

Where the golden cherubim

Hide the ark’s recesses dim,

Heard the singer’s choral song,

Saw the Levites’ moving throng,

Saw the golden censer and the bowl.

Happy he whose eyes

Saw at last the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.

Ever thus the burden rang

Of the pious songs they sang.

All the glories past and gone

Israel once did gaze upon,

Glories of the sacred fane,

Which they mourned and mourned again,

With a bitterness beyond control.

Happy he whose eyes

Saw (they said) the cloud of glory rise,

But to hear of it afflicts our soul.