("Zim-Zizimi, Soudan d'Égypte."){Bk. XVI. i.}
Zim Zizimi—(of the Soudan of burnt Egypt,The Commander of Believers, a BashawWhose very robes were from Asia's greatest stript,More powerful than any lion with resistless paw)A master weighed on by his immense splendor—Once had a dream when he was at his evening feast,When the broad table smoked like a perfumed censer,And its grateful odors the appetite increased.The banquet was outspread in a hall, high as vast,With pillars painted, and with ceiling bright with gold,Upreared by Zim's ancestors in the days long past,And added to till now worth a sum untold.Howe'er rich no rarity was absent, it seemed,Fruit blushed upon the side-boards, groaning 'neath rich meats,With all the dainties palate ever dreamedIn lavishness to waste—for dwellers in the streetsOf cities, whether Troy, or Tyre, or Ispahan,Consume, in point of cost, food at a single mealMuch less than what is spread before this crowned man—-Who rules his couchant nation with a rod of steel,And whose servitors' chiefest arts it was to squeezeThe world's full teats into his royal helpless mouth.Each hard-sought dainty that never failed to please,All delicacies, wines, from east, west, north or south,Are plenty here—for Sultan Zizimi drinks wineIn its variety, trying to find what never sates.Laughs at the holy writings and the text divine,O'er which the humble dervish prays and venerates.There is a common saying which holds often good:That cruel is he who is sparing in his cups.That they are such as are most thirsty of man's blood—Yet he will see a slave beheaded whilst he sups.But be this as it all may, glory gilds his reign,He has overrun Africa, the old and black;Asia as well—holding them both beneath a rainOf bloody drops from scaffold, pyre, the stake, or rack,To leave his empire's confines, one must run a raceFar past the river Baxtile southward; in the north,To the rude, rocky, barren land of Thrace,Yet near enough to shudder when great Zim is wroth.Conquering in every field, he finds delightIn battle-storms; his music is the shout of camps.On seeing him the eagle speeds away in fright,Whilst hid 'mong rocks, the grisly wolf its victim champs.Mysore's as well as Agra's rajah is his kin;The great sheiks of the arid sands confess him lord;Omar, who vaunting cried: "Through me doth Allah win!"Was of his blood—a dreaded line of fire and sword.The waters of Nagain, sands of Sahara warm,The Atlas and the Caucasus, snow-capped and lone,Mecca, Marcatta, these were massed in part to formA portion of the giant shadow of Zim's throne.Before his might, to theirs, as hardest rock to dust,There have recoiled a horde of savage, warlike chiefs,Who have been into Afric's fiery furnace thrust—Its scorching heat to his rage greatest of reliefs.There is no being but fears Zim; to him bows downEven the sainted Llama in the holy place;And the wild Kasburder chieftain at his dark powerTurns pale, and seeks a foeman of some lesser race.Cities and states are bought and sold by Soudan Zim,Whose simple word their thousand people hold as law.He ruins them at will, for what are men to him,More than to stabled cattle is the sheaf of straw?The Soudan is not pleased, for he is e'er alone,For who may in his royal sports or joys be leagued.He must never speak to any one in equal tones,But be by his own dazzling weightiness fatigued.He has exhausted all the pastimes of the earth;In vain skilled men have fought with sword, the spear, or lance,The quips and cranks most laughed at have to him no mirth;He gives a regal yawn as fairest women dance;Music has outpoured all its notes, the soft and loud,But dully on his wearied ear its accents roll,As dully as the praises of the servile crowdWho falsely sing the purity of his black soul.He has had before his daïs from the prison broughtTwo thieves, whose terror makes their chains to loudly ring,Then gaping most unkingly, he dismissed his slaves,And tranquilly, half rising, looked around to seekIn the weighty stillness—such as broods round graves—Something within his royal scope to which to speak.The throne, on which at length his eyes came back to rest,Is upheld by rose-crowned Sphinxes, which lyres hold,All cut in whitest marble, with uncovered breast,While their eyes contain that enigma never told.Each figure has its title carved upon its head:Health, andVoluptuousness, Greatness, Joy, andPlay,WithVictory, Beauty, Happiness, may be read,Adorning brands they wear unblushing in the day.The Soudan cried: "O, Sphinxes, with the torch-like eye,I am the Conqueror—my name is high-arrayedIn characters like flame upon the vaulted sky,Far from oblivion's reach or an effacing shade.Upon a sheaf of thunderbolts I rest my arm,And gods might wish my exploits with them were their own.I live—I am not open to the points of harm,And e'en my throne will be with age an altar-stone.When the time comes for me to cast off earthly robe,And enter—being Day—into the realms of light,The gods will say, we call Zizimi from his globeThat we may have our brother nearer to our sight!Glory is but my menial, Pride my own chained slave,Humbly standing when Zizimi is in his seat.I scorn base man, and have sent thousands to the grave.They are but as a rushen carpet to my feet.Instead of human beings, eunuchs, blacks, or mutes,Be yours, oh, Sphinxes, with the glad names on your fronts!The task, with voice attuned to emulate the flute's,To charm the king, whose chase is man, and wars his hunts."Some portion of your splendor back on me reflect,Sing out in praiseful chains of melodious links!Oh, throne, which I with bloody spoils have so bedecked,Speak to your lord! Speak you, the first rose-crested Sphinx!"Soon on the summons, once again was stillness broke,For the ten figures, in a voice which all else drowned,Parting their stony lips, alternatively spoke—Spoke clearly, with a deeply penetrative sound.THE FIRST SPHINX.So lofty as to brush the heavens' dome,Upon the highest terrace of her tombIs Queen Nitrocis, thinking all alone,Upon her line, long tenants of the throne,Terrors, scourges of the Greeks and Hebrews,Harsh and bloodthirsty, narrow in their views.Against the pure scroll of the sky, a blot,Stands out her sepulchre, a fatal spotThat seems a baneful breath around to spread.The birds which chance to near it, drop down dead.The queen is now attended on by shades,Which have replaced, in horrid guise, her maids.No life is here—the law says such as boreA corpse alone may enter through yon door.Before, behind, around the queen, her sightEncounters but the same blank void of night.Above, the pilasters are like to bars,And, through their gaps, the dead look at the stars,While, till the dawn, around Nitrocis' bones,Spectres hold council, crouching on the stones.THE SECOND SPHINX.Howe'er great is pharaoh, the magi, king,Encompassed by an idolizing ring,None is so high as Tiglath Pileser.Who, like the God before whom pales the star,Has temples, with a prophet for a priest,Who serves up daily sacrilegious feast.His anger there are none who dare provoke,His very mildness is looked on as a yoke;And under his, more feared than other rules,He holds his people bound, like tamèd bulls.Asia is banded with his paths of war;He is more of a scourge than Attila.He triumphs glorious—but, day by day,The earth falls at his feet, piecemeal away;And the bricks for his tomb's wall, one by one,Are being shaped—are baking in the sun.THE THIRD SPHINX.Equal to archangel, for one short while,Was Nimroud, builder of tall Babel's pile.His sceptre reached across the space betweenThe sites where Sol to rise and set is seen.Baal made him terrible to all alike,The greatest cow'ring when he rose to strike.Unbelief had shown in ev'ry eye,Had any dared to say: "Nimroud will die!"He lived and ruled, but is—at this time, where?Winds blow free o'er his realm—a desert bare!THE FOURTH SPHINX.There is a statue of King Chrem of old,Of unknown date and maker, but of gold.How many grandest rulers in his dayChrem pluckèd down, there are now none can say.Whether he ruled with gentle hand or rough,None know. He once was—no longer is—enough,Crowned Time, whose seat is on a ruined mass,Holds, and aye turns, a strange sand in his glass,A sand scraped from the mould, brushed from the shroudOf all passed things, mean, great, lowly, or proud.Thus meting with the ashes of the deadHow hours of the living have quickly fled.The sand runs, monarchs! the clepsydra weeps.Wherefore? They see through future's gloomy deeps,Through the church wall, into the catacomb,And mark the change when thrones do graves become.THE FIFTH SPHINX.To swerve the earth seemed from its wonted pathWhen marched the Four of Asia in their wrath,And when they were bound slaves to Cyrus' car,The rivers shrank back from their banks afar."Who can this be," was Nineveh's appeal;"Who dares to drag the gods at his car-wheel?"The ground is still there that these wheel-rims tore—The people and the armies are no more.THE SIXTH SPHINX.Never again Cambyses earth will tread.He slept, and rotted, for his ghost had fled.So long as sovereigns live, the subjects kneel,Crouching like spaniels at their royal heel;But when their might flies, they are shunned by all,Save worms, which—human-like—still to them crawlOn Troy or Memphis, on Pyrrhus the Great,Or on Psammeticus, alike falls fate.Those who in rightful purple are arrayed,The prideful vanquisher, like vanquished, fade.Death grins as he the fallen man bestrides—And less of faults than of his glories hides.THE SEVENTH SPHINX.The time is come for Belus' tomb to fall,Long has been ruined its high granite wall;And its cupola, sister of the cloud,Has now to lowest mire its tall head bowed.The herdsman comes to it to choose the stonesTo build a hut, and overturns the bones,From which he has just scared a jackal pack,Waiting to gnaw them when he turns his back.Upon this scene the night is doubly night,And the lone passer vainly strains his sight,Musing: Was Belus not buried near this spot?The royal resting-place is now forgot.THE EIGHTH SPHINX.The inmates of the Pyramids assumeThe hue of Rhamesis, black with the gloom.A Jailer who ne'er needs bolts, bars, or hasps,Is Death. With unawed hand a god he grasps,He thrusts, to stiffen, in a narrow case,Or cell, where struggling air-blasts constant moan;Walling them round with huge, damp, slimy stone;And (leaving mem'ry of bloodshed as drink,And thoughts of crime as food) he stops each chink.THE NINTH SPHINX.Who would see Cleopatra on her bed?Come in. The place is filled with fog like lead,Which clammily has settled on the frameOf her who was a burning, dazzling flameTo all mankind—who durst not lift their gaze,And meet the brightness of her beauty's rays.Her teeth were pearls, her breath a rare perfume.Men died with love on entering her room.Poised 'twixt the world and her—acme of joys!Antony took her of the double choice.The ice-cold heart that passion seldom warms,Would find heat torrid in that queen's soft arms.She won without a single woman's wile,Illumining the earth with peerless smile.Come in!—but muffle closely up your face,No grateful scents have ta'en sweet odors' place.THE TENTH SPHINX.What did the greatest king that e'er earth bore,Sennacherib? No matter—he's no more!What were the words Sardanapalus said?Who cares to hear—that ruler long is dead.The Soudan, turning pale, stared at the TEN aghast."Before to-morrow's night," he said, "in dust to rest,These walls with croaking images shall be downcast;I will not have fiends speak when angels are addressed."But while Zim at the Sphinxes clenched his hand and shook,The cup in which it seems the rich wine sweetly breathes,The cup with jewels sparkling, met his lowered look,Dwelling on the rim which the rippling wine enwreathes."Ha! You!" Zim cried, "have often cleared my heated headOf heavy thoughts which your great lord have come to seekAnd torture with their pain and weight like molten lead.Let us two—power, I—you, wine—together speak."THE CUP."Phur," spoke the Cup, "O king, dwelt as Day's god,Ruled Alexandria with sword and rod.He from his people drew force after force,Leaving in ev'ry clime an army's corse.But what gained he by having, like the sea,Flooded with human waves to enslave the free?Where lies the good in having been the chiefIn conquering, to cause a nation's grief?Darius, Assar-addon, Hamilcar;Who have led men in legions out to war,Or have o'er Time's shade cast rays from their seat,Or throngs in worship made their name repeat,These were, but all the cup of life have drank;Rising 'midst clamor, they in stillness sank.Death's dart beat down the sword—the kings high reared,Were brought full low—judges, like culprits, feared.The body—when the soul had ceased its sway—Was placed where earth upon it heavy lay,While seek the mouldering bones rare oils anointClaw of tree's root and tooth of rocky point.Weeds thrive on them who made the world a martOf human flesh, plants force their joints apart.No deed of eminence the greatest saves,And of mausoleums make panthers caves."The Cup, Zim, in his fury, dashed upon the floor,Crying aloud for lights. Slaves, at his angry call,In to him hastily, a candelabra bore,And set it, branching o'er the table, in the hall,From whose wide bounds it hunted instantly the gloom."Ah, light!" exclaimed the Soudan, "welcome light, all hail!Dull witnesses were yonder Sphinxes of this room;The Cup was always drunk, in wit did ever fail;But you fling gleams forth brightly, dazzling as a torch;Vainly to quell your power all Night's attempts are spent;The murky, black-eyed clouds you eat away and scorch,Making where'er you spring to life an Orient.To charm your lord give voice, thou spark of paradise!Speak forth against the Sphinxes' enigmatic word,And 'gainst the Wine-Cup, with its sharp and biting spice!"THE LAMP.Oh, Crusher of Countless Cities, such as earth knewScarce once before him, Ninus (who his brother slew),Was borne within the walls which, in Assyrian rite,Were built to hide dead majesty from outer sight.If eye of man the gift uncommon could assume,And pierce the mass, thick, black as hearse's plume,To where lays on a horrifying bedWhat was King Ninus, now hedged round with dread,'Twould see by what is shadow of the light,A line of feath'ry dust, bones marble-white.A shudder overtakes the pois'nous snakesWhen they glide near that powder, laid in flakes.Death comes at times to him—Lifecomes no more!And sets a jug and loaf upon the floor.He then with bony foot the corpse o'erturns,And says: "It is I, Ninus! 'Tis Death who spurns!I bring thee, hungry king, some bread and meat.""I have no hands," Ninus replies. "Yet, eat!"
Zim pierced to the very quick by these repeated stabs,Sprang to his feet, while from him pealed a fearful shout,And, furious, flung down upon the marble slabsThe richly carved and golden Lamp, whose light went out—Then glided in a form strange-shaped,In likeness of a woman, moulded in dense smoke,Veiled in thick, ebon fog, in utter darkness draped,A glimpse of which, in short, one's inmost fears awoke.Zim was alone with her, this Goddess of the Night.The massy walls of stone like vapor part and fade,Zim, shuddering, tried to call guard or satellite,But as the figure grasped him firmly, "Come!" she said.BP. ALEXANDER
A QUEEN FIVE SUMMERS OLD.("Elle est toute petite."){Bk. XXVI.}
She is so little—in her hands a rose:A stern duenna watches where she goes,What sees Old Spain's Infanta—the clear shineOf waters shadowed by the birch and pine.What lies before? A swan with silver wing,The wave that murmurs to the branch's swing,Or the deep garden flowering below?Fair as an angel frozen into snow,The royal child looks on, and hardly seems to know.As in a depth of glory far away,Down in the green park, a lofty palace lay,There, drank the deer from many a crystal pond,And the starred peacock gemmed the shade beyond.Around that child all nature shone more bright;Her innocence was as an added light.Rubies and diamonds strewed the grass she trode,And jets of sapphire from the dolphins flowed.Still at the water's side she holds her place,Her bodice bright is set with Genoa lace;O'er her rich robe, through every satin fold,Wanders an arabesque in threads of gold.From its green urn the rose unfolding grand,Weighs down the exquisite smallness of her hand.And when the child bends to the red leafs tip,Her laughing nostril, and her carmine lip,The royal flower purpureal, kissing there,Hides more than half that young face bright and fair,So that the eye deceived can scarcely speakWhere shows the rose, or where the rose-red cheek.Her eyes look bluer from their dark brown frame:Sweet eyes, sweet form, and Mary's sweeter name.All joy, enchantment, perfume, waits she there,Heaven in her glance, her very name a prayer.Yet 'neath the sky, and before life and fate,Poor child, she feels herself so vaguely great.With stately grace she gives her presence highTo dawn, to spring, to shadows flitting by,To the dark sunset glories of the heaven,And all the wild magnificence of even;On nature waits, eternal and serene,With all the graveness of a little queen.She never sees a man but on his knee,She Duchess of Brabant one day will be,Or rule Sardinia, or the Flemish crowdShe is the Infanta, five years old, and proud.Thus is it with kings' children, for they wearA shadowy circlet on their forehead fair;Their tottering steps are towards a kingly chair.Calmly she waits, and breathes her gathered flowerTill one shall cull for her imperial power.Already her eye saith, "It is my right;"Even love flows from her, mingled with affright.If some one seeing her so fragile stand,Were it to save her, should put forth his hand,Ere he had made a step, or breathed a vow,The scaffold's shadow were upon his brow.While the child laughs, beyond the bastion thickOf that vast palace, Roman Catholic,Whose every turret like a mitre shows,Behind the lattice something dreadful goes.Men shake to see a shadow from beneathPassing from pane to pane, like vapory wreath,Pale, black, and still it glides from room to room;In the same spot, like ghost upon a tomb;Or glues its dark brown to the casement wan,Dim shade that lengthens as the night draws on.Its step funereal lingers like the swingOf passing bell—'tis death, or else the king.'Tis he, the man by whom men live and die;But could one look beyond that phantom eye,As by the wall he leans a little space,And see what shadows fill his soul's dark place,Not the fair child, the waters clear, the flowersGolden with sunset—not the birds, the bowers—No; 'neath that eye, those fatal brows that keepThe fathomless brain, like ocean, dark and deep,There, as in moving mirage, should one findA fleet of ships that go before the wind:On the foamed wave, and 'neath the starlight pale,The strain and rattle of a fleet in sail,And through the fog an isle on her white rockHearkening from far the thunder's coming shock.Still by the water's edge doth silent standThe Infanta with the rose-flower in her hand,Caresses it with eyes as blue as heaven;Sudden a breeze, such breeze as panting evenFrom her full heart flings out to field and brake,Ruffles the waters, bids the rushes shake,And makes through all their green recesses swellThe massive myrtle and the asphodel.To the fair child it comes, and tears awayOn its strong wing the rose-flower from the spray.On the wild waters casts it bruised and torn,And the Infanta only holds a thorn.Frightened, perplexed, she follows with her eyesInto the basin where her ruin lies,Looks up to heaven, and questions of the breezeThat had not feared her highness to displease;But all the pond is changed; anon so clear,Now back it swells, as though with rage and fear;A mimic sea its small waves rise and fall,And the poor rose is broken by them all.Its hundred leaves tossed wildly round and roundBeneath a thousand waves are whelmed and drowned;It was a foundering fleet you might have said;And the duenna with her face of shade,—"Madam," for she had marked her ruffled mind,"All things belong to princes—but God's wind."BP. ALEXANDER
("En partant du Golfe d'Otrante."){Bk. XXVIII.}
We told thirty when we startedFrom port so taut and fine,But soon our crew were parted,Till now we number nine.Tom Robbins, English, tall and straight,Left us at Aetna light;He left us to investigateWhat made the mountain bright;"I mean to ask Old Nick himself,(And here his eye he rolls)If I can't bring Newcastle pelfBy selling him some coals!"In Calabree, a lass and cupDrove scowling Spada wild:She only held her finger up,And there he drank and smiled;And over in Gaëta Bay,Ascanio—ashoreA fool!—must wed a widow gayWho'd buried three or four.At Naples, woe! poor Ned they hanged—Hemp neckcloth he disdained—And prettily we all were banged—And two more blades remainedTo serve the Duke, and row in chains—Thank saints! 'twas not my cast!We drank deliverance from pains—We who'd the ducats fast.At Malta Dick became a monk—(What vineyards have those priests!)And Gobbo to quack-salver sunk,To leech vile murrained beasts;And lazy André, blown off shore,Was picked up by the Turk,And in some harem, you be sure,Is forced at last to work.Next, three of us whom nothing daunts,Marched off with Prince Eugene,To take Genoa! oh, it vauntsGirls fit—each one—for queen!Had they but promised us the pick,Perchance we had joined, all;But battering bastions built of brick—Bah, give me wooden wall!By Leghorn, twenty caravelsCame 'cross our lonely sail—Spinoza's Sea-Invincibles!But, whew! our shots like hailMade shortish work of galley longAnd chubby sailing craft—Our making ready first to closeSent them a-spinning aft.Off Marseilles, ne'er by sun forsookWe friends fell-to as foes!For Lucca Diavolo mistookAngelo's wife for Rose,And hang me! soon the angel slidThe devil in the sea,And would of lass likewise be rid—And so we fought it free!At Palmas eight or so gave slip,Pescara to pursue,And more, perchance, had left the ship,But Algiers loomed in view;And here we cruised to interceptSome lucky-laden rogues,Whose gold-galleons but slowly crept,So that we trounced the dogs!And after making war out there,We made love at "the Gib."We ten—no more! we took it fair,And kissed the gov'nor's "rib,"And made the King of Spain our take,Believe or not, who cares?I tell ye that he begged till blackI' the face to have his shares.We're rovers of the restless main,But we've some conscience, mark!And we know what it is to reign,And finally did heark—Aye, masters of the narrow Neck,We hearkened to our heart,And gave him freedom on our deck,His town, and gold—in part.My lucky mates for that were madeGrandees of Old Castile,And maids of honor went to wed,Somewhere in sweet Seville;Not they for me were fair enough,And so his MajestyDeclared his daughter—'tis no scoff!My beauteous bride should be."A royal daughter!" think of that!But I would never one.I have a lass (I said it pat)Who's not been bred like nun—But, merry maid with eagle eye,It's proud she smiles and bright,And sings upon the cliff, to spyMy ship a-heave in sight!My Faenzetta has my heart!In Fiesoné sheThe fairest! Nothing shall us part,Saving, in sooth, the Sea!And that not long! its rolling waveAnd such breeze holding nowWill send me along to her I love—And so I made my bow.We told thirty when we startedFrom port so taut and fine,But thus our crew were parted,And now we number nine.
("Lorsque le regiment des hallebardiers."){Bk. XXXI.}
When the regiment of HalberdiersIs proudly marching by,The eagle of the mountain screamsFrom out his stormy sky;Who speaketh to the precipice,And to the chasm sheer;Who hovers o'er the thrones of kings,And bids the caitiffs fear.King of the peak and glacier,King of the cold, white scalps—He lifts his head, at that close tread,The eagle of the Alps.O shame! those men that march below—O ignominy dire!Are the sons of my free mountainsSold for imperial hire.Ah! the vilest in the dungeon!Ah! the slave upon the seas—Is great, is pure, is glorious,Is grand compared with these,Who, born amid my holy rocks,In solemn places high,Where the tall pines bend like rushesWhen the storm goes sweeping by;Yet give the strength of foot they learnedBy perilous path and flood,And from their blue-eyed mothers won,The old, mysterious blood;The daring that the good south windInto their nostrils blew,And the proud swelling of the heartWith each pure breath they drew;The graces of the mountain glens,With flowers in summer gay;And all the glories of the hillsTo earn a lackey's pay.Their country free and joyous—She of the rugged sides—She of the rough peaks arrogantWhereon the tempest rides:Mother of the unconquered thoughtAnd of the savage form,Who brings out of her sturdy heartThe hero and the storm:Who giveth freedom unto man,And life unto the beast;Who hears her silver torrents ringLike joy-bells at a feast;Who hath her caves for palaces,And where her châlets stand—The proud, old archer of Altorf,With his good bow in his hand.Is she to suckle jailers?Shall shame and glory rest,Amid her lakes and glaciers,Like twins upon her breast?Shall the two-headed eagle,Marked with her double blow,Drink of her milk through all those heartsWhose blood he bids to flow?Say, was it pomp ye needed,And all the proud arrayOf courtly joust and high paradeUpon a gala day?Look up; have not my valleysTheir torrents white with foam—Their lines of silver bullionOn the blue hillocks of home?Doth not sweet May embroiderMy rocks with pearls and flowers?Her fingers trace a richer laceThan yours in all my bowers.Are not my old peaks gildedWhen the sun arises proud,And each one shakes a white mist plumeOut of the thunder-cloud?O, neighbor of the golden sky—Sons of the mountain sod—Why wear a base king's colorsFor the livery of God?O shame! despair! to see my AlpsTheir giant shadows flingInto the very waiting-roomOf tyrant and of king!O thou deep heaven, unsullied yet,Into thy gulfs sublime—Up azure tracts of flaming light—Let my free pinion climb;Till from my sight, in that clear light,Earth and her crimes be gone—The men who act the evil deeds—The caitiffs who look on.Far, far into that space immense,Beyond the vast white veil,Where distant stars come out and shine,And the great sun grows pale.BP. ALEXANDER
("Mon pére, ce héros au sourire."){Bk. XLIX. iv.}
My sire, the hero with the smile so soft,And a tall trooper, his companion oft,Whom he loved greatly for his courage highAnd strength and stature, as the night drew nighRode out together. The battle was done;The dead strewed the field; long sunk was the sun.It seemed in the darkness a sound they heard,—Was it feeble moaning or uttered word?'Twas a Spaniard left from the force in flight,Who had crawled to the roadside after fight;Shattered and livid, less live than dead,Rattled his throat as hoarsely he said:"Water, water to drink, for pity's sake!Oh, a drop of water this thirst to slake!"My father, moved at his speech heart-wrung,Handed the orderly, downward leapt,The flask of rum at the holster kept."Let him have some!" cried my father, as ranThe trooper o'er to the wounded man,—A sort of Moor, swart, bloody and grim;But just as the trooper was nearing him,He lifted a pistol, with eye of flame,And covered my father with murd'rous aim.The hurtling slug grazed the very head,And the helmet fell, pierced, streaked with red,And the steed reared up; but in steady tone:"Give him the whole!" said my father, "and on!"TORU DUTT
("Il est nuit. La cabane est pauvre."){Bk. LII. iii.}'Tis night—within the close stout cabin door,The room is wrapped in shade save where there fallSome twilight rays that creep along the floor,And show the fisher's nets upon the wall.In the dim corner, from the oaken chest,A few white dishes glimmer; through the shadeStands a tall bed with dusky curtains dressed,And a rough mattress at its side is laid.Five children on the long low mattress lie—A nest of little souls, it heaves with dreams;In the high chimney the last embers die,And redden the dark room with crimson gleams.The mother kneels and thinks, and pale with fear,She prays alone, hearing the billows shout:While to wild winds, to rocks, to midnight drear,The ominous old ocean sobs without.Poor wives of fishers! Ah! 'tis sad to say,Our sons, our husbands, all that we love best,Our hearts, our souls, are on those waves away,Those ravening wolves that know not ruth, nor rest.Think how they sport with these beloved forms;And how the clarion-blowing wind untiesAbove their heads the tresses of the storms:Perchance even now the child, the husband, dies.For we can never tell where they may beWho, to make head against the tide and gale,Between them and the starless, soulless seaHave but one bit of plank, with one poor sail.Terrible fear! We seek the pebbly shore,Cry to the rising billows, "Bring them home."Alas! what answer gives their troubled roar,To the dark thought that haunts us as we roam.Janet is sad: her husband is alone,Wrapped in the black shroud of this bitter night:His children are so little, there is noneTo give him aid. "Were they but old, they might."Ah, mother! when they too are on the main,How wilt thou weep: "Would they were young again!"She takes his lantern—'tis his hour at lastShe will go forth, and see if the day breaks,And if his signal-fire be at the mast;Ah, no—not yet—no breath of morning wakes.No line of light o'er the dark water lies;It rains, it rains, how black is rain at morn:The day comes trembling, and the young dawn cries—Cries like a baby fearing to be born.Sudden her humane eyes that peer and watchThrough the deep shade, a mouldering dwelling find,No light within—the thin door shakes—the thatchO'er the green walls is twisted of the wind,Yellow, and dirty, as a swollen rill,"Ah, me," she saith, "here does that widow dwell;Few days ago my good man left her ill:I will go in and see if all be well."She strikes the door, she listens, none replies,And Janet shudders. "Husbandless, alone,And with two children—they have scant supplies.Good neighbor! She sleeps heavy as a stone."She calls again, she knocks, 'tis silence still;No sound—no answer—suddenly the door,As if the senseless creature felt some thrillOf pity, turned—and open lay before.She entered, and her lantern lighted allThe house so still, but for the rude waves' din.Through the thin roof the plashing rain-drops fall,But something terrible is couched within.
"So, for the kisses that delight the flesh,For mother's worship, and for children's bloom,For song, for smile, for love so fair and fresh,For laugh, for dance, there is one goal—the tomb."And why does Janet pass so fast away?What hath she done within that house of dread?What foldeth she beneath her mantle gray?And hurries home, and hides it in her bed:With half-averted face, and nervous tread,What hath she stolen from the awful dead?The dawn was whitening over the sea's vergeAs she sat pensive, touching broken chordsOf half-remorseful thought, while the hoarse surgeHowled a sad concert to her broken words."Ah, my poor husband! we had five before,Already so much care, so much to find,For he must work for all. I give him more.What was that noise? His step! Ah, no! the wind."That I should be afraid of him I love!I have done ill. If he should beat me now,I would not blame him. Did not the door move?Not yet, poor man." She sits with careful browWrapped in her inward grief; nor hears the roarOf winds and waves that dash against his prow,Nor the black cormorant shrieking on the shore.Sudden the door flies open wide, and letsNoisily in the dawn-light scarcely clear,And the good fisher, dragging his damp nets,Stands on the threshold, with a joyous cheer."'Tis thou!" she cries, and, eager as a lover,Leaps up and holds her husband to her breast;Her greeting kisses all his vesture cover;"'Tis I, good wife!" and his broad face expressedHow gay his heart that Janet's love made light."What weather was it?" "Hard." "Your fishing?" "Bad.The sea was like a nest of thieves to-night;But I embrace thee, and my heart is glad."There was a devil in the wind that blew;I tore my net, caught nothing, broke my line,And once I thought the bark was broken too;What did you all the night long, Janet mine?"She, trembling in the darkness, answered, "I!Oh, naught—I sew'd, I watch'd, I was afraid,The waves were loud as thunders from the sky;But it is over." Shyly then she said—"Our neighbor died last night; it must have beenWhen you were gone. She left two little ones,So small, so frail—William and Madeline;The one just lisps, the other scarcely runs."The man looked grave, and in the corner castHis old fur bonnet, wet with rain and sea,Muttered awhile, and scratched his head,—at last"We have five children, this makes seven," said he."Already in bad weather we must sleepSometimes without our supper. Now! Ah, well—'Tis not my fault. These accidents are deep;It was the good God's will. I cannot tell."Why did He take the mother from those scraps,No bigger than my fist. 'Tis hard to read;A learned man might understand, perhaps—So little, they can neither work nor need."Go fetch them, wife; they will be frightened sore,If with the dead alone they waken thus.That was the mother knocking at our door,And we must take the children home to us."Brother and sister shall they be to ours,And they will learn to climb my knee at even;When He shall see these strangers in our bowers,More fish, more food, will give the God of Heaven."I will work harder; I will drink no wine—Go fetch them. Wherefore dost thou linger, dear?Not thus were wont to move those feet of thine."She drew the curtain, saying, "They are here!"BP. ALEXANDER