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The Hymn of the Robe of Glory This hymn was published in G.R.S. Meads booklet of the same name in 1908, in a series called "Echoes from the Gnosis". Its general theme may be compared to that of the Prodigal Son. The many modern translations as an attachment to the Apocryphal Acts of Thomas seem to lack the musicality G.R.S. Mead managed to capture.When, a quite little child, I was dwelling And in the wealth and the glories From the East, our Home, my Parents Indeed from the wealth of our Treasure, Large was it, yet was it so light Gold from the Land of Gilan, Chalcedonies of India, They girt me with Adamant [also] My Glorious Robe they took off me And my Purple Mantle [also] And with me They [then] made a compact; "If thou goest down into Egypt, "[The Pearl] that lies in the Sea, "[Then] shalt Thou put on thy Robe "And with thy Brother, Our Second, I left the East and went down For the way was hard and dangerous, I traversed the borders of Maishan, And I reached the Land of Babel, Down further I went into Egypt; Straightway I went to the Serpent; To take away my Pearl Lone was I there, yea, all lonely; However I saw there a noble, A young man fair and well favoured, I made him my chosen companion, He warned me against the Egyptians, For I had clothed me as they were, From afar to take off the Pearl, But from some occasion or other With their wiles they made my acquaintance; I forgot that I was a King's son, I forgot all concerning the Pearl And from the weight of their victuals All this that now was befalling, It was then proclaimed in our Kingdom, Kings and Chieftains of Parthia, And this is the counsel they came to: And for me they wrote out a Letter; "From Us - King of Kings, thy Father, "And from Our Second, thy Brother - "Up and arise from thy sleep, "Remember that thou art a King's son; "Bethink thyself of the Pearl "Remember thy Glorious Robe, "To put on and wear as adornment, "And with Our Successor, thy Brother, My Letter was [surely] a Letter 'Gainst the Children of Babel, the wicked, It flew in the form of the Eagle, It flew and alighted beside me, At its voice and the sound of its winging, Unto me I took it and kissed it; E'en as it stood in my heart writ, I remembered that I was a King's son, I bethought me again of the Pearl, And I began [then] to charm him, I lulled him to sleep and to slumber, The Name of our Second, [my Brother], And [thereon] I snatched up the Pearl, Their filthy and unclean garments To the way that I came I betook me, On the road I found [there] before me As with its voice it had roused me, On fabric of silk, in letters of red [?], Encouraging me with its guidance, I went forth; through Sarbug I passed; And I reached unto Maishan the Great, That lieth hard by the Sea-shore. My Glorious Robe that I'd stripped off, Down from the Heights of Hyrcania, By the hands of their Treasure-dispensers Without my recalling its fashion, - At once, as soon as I saw it, I saw it all in all of me, That we were twain in distinction, I saw, too, the Treasurers also, Were twain [and yet] of one likeness; Who through them restored me the Glory, The Glorious Robe all-bespangled With Gold and also with Beryls, With Sards of varying colours. With adamantine jewels [Moreover] the King of Kings' Image And as with Sapphires above I saw that moreover all o'er it I saw it further was making I heard the sound of its Music "Behold him the active in deeds! "I too have felt in myself And [now] with its Kingly motions And made haste in the hands of its Givers, And me, too, my love urged forward And I stretched myself forth to receive it; And my Mantle of sparkling colours I clothed me therewith, and ascended I bowed my head and did homage Whose commands I [now] had accomplished, [And there] at the Gate of His House-sons For He had received me with gladness, To whom the whole of His Servants He had promised that with him to the Court And taking with me my Pearl
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