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Idylls of the Bible

Chapter 14: THE FATAL PLEDGE.
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About This Book

A series of lyrical and dramatic reworkings of biblical narratives and devotional poems that recast familiar scriptural episodes as intimate scenes and moral reflections. Scenes dramatize pivotal moments—an infant rescued on a river, exchanges between royal figures and nurturers—while other pieces offer compact moral parables and domestic monologues meditating on suffering, charity, and faith. Language alternates between theatrical dialogue, descriptive lyricism, and moral exhortation, emphasizing themes of compassion, maternal love, liberation, and personal conscience. The collection invites readers to reconsider sacred stories through emotive characterization and accessible moral verse.

THE FATAL PLEDGE.

“Pledge me with wine,” the maiden cried,
Her tones were gay and light;
“From others you have turned aside,
I claim your pledge to-night.”
The blood rushed to the young man’s cheek
Then left it deadly pale;
Beneath the witchery of her smile
He felt his courage fail.
For many years he’d been a slave
To the enchanting bowl,
Until he grasped with eager hands
The reins of self-control;
And struggled with his hated thrall,
Until he rent his chain,
And strove to stand erect and free,
And be a man again.
When others came with tempting words
He coldly turned aside,
But she who held the sparkling cup
Was his affianced bride;
And like a vision of delight,
Bright, beautiful and fair,
With thoughtless words she wove for him
The meshes of despair.
From jeweled hands he took the cup,
Nor heard the serpent’s hiss;
Nor saw beneath its ruby glow
The deadly adder’s hiss.
Like waves that madly, wildly dash,
When dykes are overthrown,
The barriers of his soul gave way,
Each life with wrecks was strewn.
And she who might have reached her hand
To succor and to save,
Soon wept in hopeless agony
Above a drunkard’s grave.
And bore through life with bleeding heart
Remembrance of that night,
When she had urged the tempted man
With wine to make his plight.