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GAMALIEL THE SCRIBE.

Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

When Rabban Simeon--upon whom be peace!--

Taught in these Schools, he boasted that his pen

Had written no word that he could call his own,

But wholly and always had been consecrated

To the transcribing of the Law and Prophets.

He used to say, and never tired of saying,

The world itself was built upon the Law.

And ancient Hillel said, that whosoever

Gains a good name gains something for himself,

But he who gains a knowledge of the Law

Gains everlasting life. And they spake truly.

Great is the Written Law; but greater still

The Unwritten, the Traditions of the Elders,

The lovely words of Levites, spoken first

To Moses on the Mount, and handed down

From mouth to mouth, in one unbroken sound

And sequence of divine authority,

The voice of God resounding through the ages.

 

The Written Law is water; the Unwritten

Is precious wine; the Written Law is salt,

The Unwritten costly spice; the Written Law

Is but the body; the Unwritten, the soul

That quickens it and makes it breathe and live.

I can remember, many years ago,

A little bright-eyed school-boy, a mere stripling,

Son of a Galilean carpenter,

From Nazareth, I think, who came one day

And sat here in the Temple with the Scribes,

Hearing us speak, and asking many questions,

And we were all astonished at his quickness.

And when his mother came, and said: Behold

Thy father and I have sought thee, sorrowing;

He looked as one astonished, and made answer,

How is it that ye sought me? Wist ye not

That I must be about my Father's business?

Often since then I see him here among us,

Or dream I see him, with his upraised face

Intent and eager, and I often wonder

Unto what manner of manhood he hath grown!

Perhaps a poor mechanic like his father,

Lost in his little Galilean village

And toiling at his craft, to die unknown

And he no more remembered among men.

 

CHRISTUS, in the outer court.

The Scribes and Pharisees sit in Moses' seat;

All, therefore, whatsoever they command you,

Observe and do; but follow not their works

They say and do not. They bind heavy burdens

And very grievous to be borne, and lay them

Upon men's shoulders, but they move them not

With so much as a finger!

 

GAMALIEL, looking forth.

Who is this

Exhorting in the outer courts so loudly?