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				Title:     Gehazi 
			    
Author: Rudyard Kipling [
More Titles by Kipling]		                
			    
'Whence comest thou, Gehazi,
 So reverend to behold,
 In scarlet and in ermines
 And chain of England's gold?'
 'From following after Naaman
 To tell him all is well,
 Whereby my zeal hath made me
 A Judge in Israel.'
 Well done, well done, Gehazi,
 Stretch forth thy ready hand,
 Thou barely 'scaped from judgment,
 Take oath to judge the land,
 Unswayed by gift of money
 Or privy bribe, more base,
 Of knowledge which is profit
 In any market-place.
 Search out and probe, Gehazi,
 As thou of all canst try,
 The truthful, well-weighed answer
 That tells the blacker lie--
 The loud, uneasy virtue,
 The anger feigned at will,
 To overbear a witness
 And make the Court keep still.
 Take order now, Gehazi,
 That no man talk aside
 In secret with his judges
 The while his case is tried.
 Lest he should show them--reason
 To keep a matter hid,
 And subtly lead the questions
 Away from what he did.
 Thou mirror of uprightness,
 What ails thee at thy vows?
 What means the risen whiteness
 Of the skin between thy brows?
 The boils that shine and burrow,
 The sores that slough and bleed--
 The leprosy of Naaman
 On thee and all thy seed?
 Stand up, stand up, Gehazi,
 Draw close thy robe and go,
 Gehazi, Judge in Israel,
 A leper white as snow!
[The end]
Rudyard Kipling's poem: Gehazi
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