III—MOVING EASTWARD

III—MOVING EASTWARD

Grey mists enfolded Europe; and I heardSounds of bewildered warfare in the gloom.Yet, like a misty star, one lampad movedEastward, beyond the mountains where of oldPrometheus, in whose hand the fire first shone,Was chained in agony. His undying ghostBeheld the fire returning on its courseUnquenched, and smiled from his dark crag in peace,Implacable peace, at heaven.Eastward, the fireFollowed the road Pythagoras trod, to meetThe great new morning.The grey mists dissolved.And was it I—or Shadow-of-a-Leaf—that sawAnd heard, and lived through all he showed me then?I saw a desert blazing in the sun,Tufts of tall palm; and then—that City of dreams.As though an age went past me in an hourI saw the silken Khalifs and their courtFlowing like orient clouds along the streetsOf Bagdad. In great Mahmoun’s train I sawNazzam, who from the Stagirite caught his fire.Long had he pondered on the Eternal PowerWho, in the dark palm of His timeless handRolls the whole cosmos like one gleaming pearl.Had he not made, in one pure timeless thought,All things at once, the last things with the first,The first life with the last; so that mankind,Through all its generations, co-existsFor His eternal eyes? Yet, from our ownWho in the time-sphere move, the Maker hidesThe full revolving glory, and unfoldsThe glimmering miracles of its lovelinessEach at its destined moment, one by one,In an æonian pageant that returnsFor ever to the night whence it began.Thus Nazzam bowed before the inscrutable Power,Yet found Him in his own time-conquering soul.I saw the hundred scribes of El MansourMaking their radiant versions from the Greek.I saw Farabi, moving through the throngLike a gaunt chieftain. His world-ranging eyesBeheld the Cause of causes.In his mind,Lucid and deep, the reasoning of the GreeksFlooded the world with new celestial light,Golden interpretations that made clearTo mighty shades the thing they strove to say.He carried on their fire, with five-score booksIn Arabic, where the thoughts of Athens, fledgedWith orient colours, towered to the pure realmOf Plato; but, returning earthward still,Would wheel around his Aristotle’s mindLike doves around the cote where they were born.Then the dark mists that round the vision flowedLike incense-clouds, dividing scene from scene,Rolled back from a wide prospect, and I saw,As one that mounts upon an eagle’s wing,A savage range of mountains, peaked with snow,To northward.They glowed faintly, for the dayWas ending, and the shadows of the rocksWere stretched out to the very feet of night.Yet, far away, to southward, I could seeThe swollen Oxus, like a vanishing snakeThat slid away in slippery streaks and gleamsThrough his grey reed-beds to the setting sun.Earthward we moved; and, in the tawny plain,Before me, like a lanthorn of dark fireBokhara shone, a city of shadowy towersCrimsoned with sunset. In its turreted wallsI saw eleven gates, and all were closedAgainst the onrushing night.Then, at my side,My soul’s companion whispered, “You shall seeThe Gates of Knowledge opening here anew.Here Avicenna dwelt in his first youth.”At once, as on the very wings of night,We entered. In the rustling musky gloomOf those hot streets, thousands of falcon eyesWere round us; but our shadows passed unseenInto the glimmering palace of the PrinceWhom Avicenna, when all others failed,Restored to life, and claimed for all rewardFreedom to use the Sultan’s library,The pride of El Mansour; a wasted joyTo the new Sultan. Radiances were thereImprisoned like the innumerable slavesOf one too wealthy even to know their names;Beautiful Grecian captives, bought with goldFrom tawny traffickers in the Ionian sea.A shadow, with a shadow at my side,I saw him reading there, intent and still,Under a silver lamp; his dusky browWreathed with white silk, a goblet close at handBrimmed with a subtle wine that could uncloudThe closing eyes of Sleep.Along each wallGreat carven chests of fragrant cedar-woodReleased the imprisoned magic,—radiant scrolls,Inscribed with wisdom’s earliest wonder-cry;Dark lore; the secrets of the Asclepiads;History wild as legend; legends trueAs history, all being shadows of one light;Philosophies of earth and heaven; and rhymesThat murmured still of their celestial springs.He thrust his book aside, as in despair.Our shadows followed him through the swarming streetsInto the glimmering mosque. I saw him bowedProstrate in prayer for light, light on a pageOf subtle-minded Greek which many a dayHad baffled him, when he sought therein the mindOf his forerunner.I saw him as he rose;And, as by chance, at the outer gates he metA wandering vendor of old tattered booksWho, for three dirhems, offered him a prize.He bought it, out of gentle heart, and foundA wonder on every page,—Farabi’s work,Flooding his Greek with light.He could not seeWhat intricate law had swept it into his hand;But, having more than knowledge, he returnedThrough the dark gates of prayer; and, pouring outHis alms upon the poor, lifted his heartIn silent thanks to God.

Grey mists enfolded Europe; and I heardSounds of bewildered warfare in the gloom.Yet, like a misty star, one lampad movedEastward, beyond the mountains where of oldPrometheus, in whose hand the fire first shone,Was chained in agony. His undying ghostBeheld the fire returning on its courseUnquenched, and smiled from his dark crag in peace,Implacable peace, at heaven.Eastward, the fireFollowed the road Pythagoras trod, to meetThe great new morning.The grey mists dissolved.And was it I—or Shadow-of-a-Leaf—that sawAnd heard, and lived through all he showed me then?I saw a desert blazing in the sun,Tufts of tall palm; and then—that City of dreams.As though an age went past me in an hourI saw the silken Khalifs and their courtFlowing like orient clouds along the streetsOf Bagdad. In great Mahmoun’s train I sawNazzam, who from the Stagirite caught his fire.Long had he pondered on the Eternal PowerWho, in the dark palm of His timeless handRolls the whole cosmos like one gleaming pearl.Had he not made, in one pure timeless thought,All things at once, the last things with the first,The first life with the last; so that mankind,Through all its generations, co-existsFor His eternal eyes? Yet, from our ownWho in the time-sphere move, the Maker hidesThe full revolving glory, and unfoldsThe glimmering miracles of its lovelinessEach at its destined moment, one by one,In an æonian pageant that returnsFor ever to the night whence it began.Thus Nazzam bowed before the inscrutable Power,Yet found Him in his own time-conquering soul.I saw the hundred scribes of El MansourMaking their radiant versions from the Greek.I saw Farabi, moving through the throngLike a gaunt chieftain. His world-ranging eyesBeheld the Cause of causes.In his mind,Lucid and deep, the reasoning of the GreeksFlooded the world with new celestial light,Golden interpretations that made clearTo mighty shades the thing they strove to say.He carried on their fire, with five-score booksIn Arabic, where the thoughts of Athens, fledgedWith orient colours, towered to the pure realmOf Plato; but, returning earthward still,Would wheel around his Aristotle’s mindLike doves around the cote where they were born.Then the dark mists that round the vision flowedLike incense-clouds, dividing scene from scene,Rolled back from a wide prospect, and I saw,As one that mounts upon an eagle’s wing,A savage range of mountains, peaked with snow,To northward.They glowed faintly, for the dayWas ending, and the shadows of the rocksWere stretched out to the very feet of night.Yet, far away, to southward, I could seeThe swollen Oxus, like a vanishing snakeThat slid away in slippery streaks and gleamsThrough his grey reed-beds to the setting sun.Earthward we moved; and, in the tawny plain,Before me, like a lanthorn of dark fireBokhara shone, a city of shadowy towersCrimsoned with sunset. In its turreted wallsI saw eleven gates, and all were closedAgainst the onrushing night.Then, at my side,My soul’s companion whispered, “You shall seeThe Gates of Knowledge opening here anew.Here Avicenna dwelt in his first youth.”At once, as on the very wings of night,We entered. In the rustling musky gloomOf those hot streets, thousands of falcon eyesWere round us; but our shadows passed unseenInto the glimmering palace of the PrinceWhom Avicenna, when all others failed,Restored to life, and claimed for all rewardFreedom to use the Sultan’s library,The pride of El Mansour; a wasted joyTo the new Sultan. Radiances were thereImprisoned like the innumerable slavesOf one too wealthy even to know their names;Beautiful Grecian captives, bought with goldFrom tawny traffickers in the Ionian sea.A shadow, with a shadow at my side,I saw him reading there, intent and still,Under a silver lamp; his dusky browWreathed with white silk, a goblet close at handBrimmed with a subtle wine that could uncloudThe closing eyes of Sleep.Along each wallGreat carven chests of fragrant cedar-woodReleased the imprisoned magic,—radiant scrolls,Inscribed with wisdom’s earliest wonder-cry;Dark lore; the secrets of the Asclepiads;History wild as legend; legends trueAs history, all being shadows of one light;Philosophies of earth and heaven; and rhymesThat murmured still of their celestial springs.He thrust his book aside, as in despair.Our shadows followed him through the swarming streetsInto the glimmering mosque. I saw him bowedProstrate in prayer for light, light on a pageOf subtle-minded Greek which many a dayHad baffled him, when he sought therein the mindOf his forerunner.I saw him as he rose;And, as by chance, at the outer gates he metA wandering vendor of old tattered booksWho, for three dirhems, offered him a prize.He bought it, out of gentle heart, and foundA wonder on every page,—Farabi’s work,Flooding his Greek with light.He could not seeWhat intricate law had swept it into his hand;But, having more than knowledge, he returnedThrough the dark gates of prayer; and, pouring outHis alms upon the poor, lifted his heartIn silent thanks to God.

Grey mists enfolded Europe; and I heardSounds of bewildered warfare in the gloom.

Grey mists enfolded Europe; and I heard

Sounds of bewildered warfare in the gloom.

Yet, like a misty star, one lampad movedEastward, beyond the mountains where of oldPrometheus, in whose hand the fire first shone,Was chained in agony. His undying ghostBeheld the fire returning on its courseUnquenched, and smiled from his dark crag in peace,Implacable peace, at heaven.Eastward, the fireFollowed the road Pythagoras trod, to meetThe great new morning.The grey mists dissolved.And was it I—or Shadow-of-a-Leaf—that sawAnd heard, and lived through all he showed me then?

Yet, like a misty star, one lampad moved

Eastward, beyond the mountains where of old

Prometheus, in whose hand the fire first shone,

Was chained in agony. His undying ghost

Beheld the fire returning on its course

Unquenched, and smiled from his dark crag in peace,

Implacable peace, at heaven.

Eastward, the fire

Followed the road Pythagoras trod, to meet

The great new morning.

The grey mists dissolved.

And was it I—or Shadow-of-a-Leaf—that saw

And heard, and lived through all he showed me then?

I saw a desert blazing in the sun,Tufts of tall palm; and then—that City of dreams.As though an age went past me in an hourI saw the silken Khalifs and their courtFlowing like orient clouds along the streetsOf Bagdad. In great Mahmoun’s train I sawNazzam, who from the Stagirite caught his fire.Long had he pondered on the Eternal PowerWho, in the dark palm of His timeless handRolls the whole cosmos like one gleaming pearl.Had he not made, in one pure timeless thought,All things at once, the last things with the first,The first life with the last; so that mankind,Through all its generations, co-existsFor His eternal eyes? Yet, from our ownWho in the time-sphere move, the Maker hidesThe full revolving glory, and unfoldsThe glimmering miracles of its lovelinessEach at its destined moment, one by one,In an æonian pageant that returnsFor ever to the night whence it began.Thus Nazzam bowed before the inscrutable Power,Yet found Him in his own time-conquering soul.

I saw a desert blazing in the sun,

Tufts of tall palm; and then—that City of dreams.

As though an age went past me in an hour

I saw the silken Khalifs and their court

Flowing like orient clouds along the streets

Of Bagdad. In great Mahmoun’s train I saw

Nazzam, who from the Stagirite caught his fire.

Long had he pondered on the Eternal Power

Who, in the dark palm of His timeless hand

Rolls the whole cosmos like one gleaming pearl.

Had he not made, in one pure timeless thought,

All things at once, the last things with the first,

The first life with the last; so that mankind,

Through all its generations, co-exists

For His eternal eyes? Yet, from our own

Who in the time-sphere move, the Maker hides

The full revolving glory, and unfolds

The glimmering miracles of its loveliness

Each at its destined moment, one by one,

In an æonian pageant that returns

For ever to the night whence it began.

Thus Nazzam bowed before the inscrutable Power,

Yet found Him in his own time-conquering soul.

I saw the hundred scribes of El MansourMaking their radiant versions from the Greek.I saw Farabi, moving through the throngLike a gaunt chieftain. His world-ranging eyesBeheld the Cause of causes.In his mind,Lucid and deep, the reasoning of the GreeksFlooded the world with new celestial light,Golden interpretations that made clearTo mighty shades the thing they strove to say.

I saw the hundred scribes of El Mansour

Making their radiant versions from the Greek.

I saw Farabi, moving through the throng

Like a gaunt chieftain. His world-ranging eyes

Beheld the Cause of causes.

In his mind,

Lucid and deep, the reasoning of the Greeks

Flooded the world with new celestial light,

Golden interpretations that made clear

To mighty shades the thing they strove to say.

He carried on their fire, with five-score booksIn Arabic, where the thoughts of Athens, fledgedWith orient colours, towered to the pure realmOf Plato; but, returning earthward still,Would wheel around his Aristotle’s mindLike doves around the cote where they were born.Then the dark mists that round the vision flowedLike incense-clouds, dividing scene from scene,Rolled back from a wide prospect, and I saw,As one that mounts upon an eagle’s wing,A savage range of mountains, peaked with snow,To northward.They glowed faintly, for the dayWas ending, and the shadows of the rocksWere stretched out to the very feet of night.Yet, far away, to southward, I could seeThe swollen Oxus, like a vanishing snakeThat slid away in slippery streaks and gleamsThrough his grey reed-beds to the setting sun.Earthward we moved; and, in the tawny plain,Before me, like a lanthorn of dark fireBokhara shone, a city of shadowy towersCrimsoned with sunset. In its turreted wallsI saw eleven gates, and all were closedAgainst the onrushing night.Then, at my side,My soul’s companion whispered, “You shall seeThe Gates of Knowledge opening here anew.Here Avicenna dwelt in his first youth.”

He carried on their fire, with five-score books

In Arabic, where the thoughts of Athens, fledged

With orient colours, towered to the pure realm

Of Plato; but, returning earthward still,

Would wheel around his Aristotle’s mind

Like doves around the cote where they were born.

Then the dark mists that round the vision flowed

Like incense-clouds, dividing scene from scene,

Rolled back from a wide prospect, and I saw,

As one that mounts upon an eagle’s wing,

A savage range of mountains, peaked with snow,

To northward.

They glowed faintly, for the day

Was ending, and the shadows of the rocks

Were stretched out to the very feet of night.

Yet, far away, to southward, I could see

The swollen Oxus, like a vanishing snake

That slid away in slippery streaks and gleams

Through his grey reed-beds to the setting sun.

Earthward we moved; and, in the tawny plain,

Before me, like a lanthorn of dark fire

Bokhara shone, a city of shadowy towers

Crimsoned with sunset. In its turreted walls

I saw eleven gates, and all were closed

Against the onrushing night.

Then, at my side,

My soul’s companion whispered, “You shall see

The Gates of Knowledge opening here anew.

Here Avicenna dwelt in his first youth.”

At once, as on the very wings of night,We entered. In the rustling musky gloomOf those hot streets, thousands of falcon eyesWere round us; but our shadows passed unseenInto the glimmering palace of the PrinceWhom Avicenna, when all others failed,Restored to life, and claimed for all rewardFreedom to use the Sultan’s library,The pride of El Mansour; a wasted joyTo the new Sultan. Radiances were thereImprisoned like the innumerable slavesOf one too wealthy even to know their names;Beautiful Grecian captives, bought with goldFrom tawny traffickers in the Ionian sea.A shadow, with a shadow at my side,I saw him reading there, intent and still,Under a silver lamp; his dusky browWreathed with white silk, a goblet close at handBrimmed with a subtle wine that could uncloudThe closing eyes of Sleep.Along each wallGreat carven chests of fragrant cedar-woodReleased the imprisoned magic,—radiant scrolls,Inscribed with wisdom’s earliest wonder-cry;Dark lore; the secrets of the Asclepiads;History wild as legend; legends trueAs history, all being shadows of one light;Philosophies of earth and heaven; and rhymesThat murmured still of their celestial springs.He thrust his book aside, as in despair.Our shadows followed him through the swarming streetsInto the glimmering mosque. I saw him bowedProstrate in prayer for light, light on a pageOf subtle-minded Greek which many a dayHad baffled him, when he sought therein the mindOf his forerunner.I saw him as he rose;And, as by chance, at the outer gates he metA wandering vendor of old tattered booksWho, for three dirhems, offered him a prize.He bought it, out of gentle heart, and foundA wonder on every page,—Farabi’s work,Flooding his Greek with light.He could not seeWhat intricate law had swept it into his hand;But, having more than knowledge, he returnedThrough the dark gates of prayer; and, pouring outHis alms upon the poor, lifted his heartIn silent thanks to God.

At once, as on the very wings of night,

We entered. In the rustling musky gloom

Of those hot streets, thousands of falcon eyes

Were round us; but our shadows passed unseen

Into the glimmering palace of the Prince

Whom Avicenna, when all others failed,

Restored to life, and claimed for all reward

Freedom to use the Sultan’s library,

The pride of El Mansour; a wasted joy

To the new Sultan. Radiances were there

Imprisoned like the innumerable slaves

Of one too wealthy even to know their names;

Beautiful Grecian captives, bought with gold

From tawny traffickers in the Ionian sea.

A shadow, with a shadow at my side,

I saw him reading there, intent and still,

Under a silver lamp; his dusky brow

Wreathed with white silk, a goblet close at hand

Brimmed with a subtle wine that could uncloud

The closing eyes of Sleep.

Along each wall

Great carven chests of fragrant cedar-wood

Released the imprisoned magic,—radiant scrolls,

Inscribed with wisdom’s earliest wonder-cry;

Dark lore; the secrets of the Asclepiads;

History wild as legend; legends true

As history, all being shadows of one light;

Philosophies of earth and heaven; and rhymes

That murmured still of their celestial springs.

He thrust his book aside, as in despair.

Our shadows followed him through the swarming streets

Into the glimmering mosque. I saw him bowed

Prostrate in prayer for light, light on a page

Of subtle-minded Greek which many a day

Had baffled him, when he sought therein the mind

Of his forerunner.

I saw him as he rose;

And, as by chance, at the outer gates he met

A wandering vendor of old tattered books

Who, for three dirhems, offered him a prize.

He bought it, out of gentle heart, and found

A wonder on every page,—Farabi’s work,

Flooding his Greek with light.

He could not see

What intricate law had swept it into his hand;

But, having more than knowledge, he returned

Through the dark gates of prayer; and, pouring out

His alms upon the poor, lifted his heart

In silent thanks to God.

But all these books—for him—were living thoughts,Clues to the darker Book of Nature’s law;For, when he climbed, a goat-foot boy, in SpringUp through the savage Hissar range, he sawA hundred gorges thundering at his feetWith snow-fed cataracts; torrents whose fierce flightUprooted forests, tore great boulders down,Ground the huge rocks together; and every yearChannelled raw gullies and swept old scars away;So that the wildered eagle beating upTo seek his last year’s eyry, found that allWas new and strange; and even the tuft of pinesThat used to guide him to his last year’s nestHad vanished from the crags he knew no more.There, pondering on the changes of the world,Young Avicenna, with a kinglier eye,Saw in the lapse of ages the great hillsMelting away like waves; and, from the sea,New lands arising; and the whole dark earthDissolving, and reshaping all its realmsAround him, like a dream.Thus of his hillsAnd of their high snows flowing through his thoughtsWas born the tale that afterwards was toldBy golden-tongued Kazwini, and wafted thenceThrough many lands, from Tartary to Pameer.For, cross-legged, in the shadow of a palm,The hawk-eyed teller of tales, in years unbornHolding his wild clan spell-bound, would intoneThe deep melodious legend, flowing thus,As all the world flows, through the eternal mind.I came one day upon an ancient City.I saw the long white crescent of its wallStained with thin peach-blood, blistered by the sun.I saw beyond it, clustering in the sky,Ethereal throngs of ivory minarets,Tall slender towers, each crowned with one bright pearl.It was no desert phantom; for it grewAnd sharpened as I neared it, till I saw,Under the slim carved windows in the towers,The clean-cut shadows, forked and black and smallLike clinging swallows.In the midst up-swamThe Sultan’s palace with its faint blue domes,The moons of morning.Wreaths of frankincenseFloated around me as I entered in.A thousand thousand warrior faces throngedThe glimmering streets. Blood-rubies burned like starsIn shadowy silks and turbans of all hues.The markets glowed with costly merchandise.I saw proud stallions, pacing to and froBefore the rulers of a hundred kings.I saw, unrolled beneath the slender feetOf slave-girls, white as April’s breathing snow,Soft prayer-rugs of a subtler drift of bloomThan flows with sunset over the blue and greyAnd opal of the drifting desert sand.Princes and thieves, philosophers and foolsJostled together, among hot scents of musk.Dark eyes were flashing. Blood throbbed darker yet.Lean dusky fingers groped for hilts of jade.Then, with a roll of drums, through Eastern gates,Out of the dawn, and softer than its clouds,Tall camels, long tumultuous caravans,Like stately ships came slowly stepping in,Loaded with shining plunder from Cathay.I turned and asked my neighbour in the throngWho built that city, and how long ago.He stared at me in wonder. “It is old,Older than any memory,” he replied.“Nor can our fathers’ oldest legend tellWho built so great a city.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned,And found not even a stone of that great City,Not even a shadow of all that lust and pride.But only an old peasant gathering herbsWhere once it stood, upon the naked plain.“What wars destroyed it, and how long ago?”I asked him. Slowly lifting his grey head,He stared at me in wonder.“This bleak landWas always thus. Our bread was always blackAnd our wine harsh. It is a bitter windThat scourges us. But where these nettles grewNettles have always grown. Nothing has changedIn mortal memory here.”“Was there not, once,A mighty City?” I said, “with shining streets,Here, on this ground?” I spoke with bated breath.He shook his head and smiled, the pitying smileThat wise men use to poets and to fools.—“Our fathers never told us of that City.Doubtless it was a dream.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned;And, where the plain was, I beheld the sea.The sea-gulls mewed and pounced upon their prey.The brown-legged fishermen crouched upon the shore,Mending their tarry nets.I asked how longThat country had been drowned beneath the waves.They mocked at me. “His wits are drowned in wine.Tides ebb and flow, and fishes leap ashore;But all our harvest, since the first wind blew,Swam in deep waters. Are not wrecks washed upWith coins that none can use, because they bearThe blind old images of forgotten kings?The waves have shaped these cliffs, dug out these caves,Rounded each agate on this battered beach.How long? Ask earth, ask heaven. Nothing has changed.The sea was always here.”—I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned.The sea had vanished. Where the ships had sailedWarm vineyards basked, among the enfolding hills.I saw, below me, on the winding road,Two milk-white oxen, under a wooden yoke,Drawing a waggon, loaded black with grapes.Beside them walked a slim brown-ankled girl.I stood beneath a shadowy wayside oakTo watch them. They drew near.It was no dream.Blood of the grape upon the wrinkled throatsAnd smoking flanks of the oxen told me this.I saw the branching veins and satin skinTwitch at the flickering touch of a fly. I sawThe knobs of brass that sheathed their curling horns,The moist black muzzles.Like many whose coats are white,Their big dark eyes had mists of blue.Their breathWas meadows newly mown.By all the godsThat ever wrung man’s heart out in the graveI did not dream this life into the world.—Blood of the grape upon the girl’s brown armsAnd lean, young, bird-like fingers told me this.Her smooth feet powdered by the warm grey dust;The grape-stalk that she held in her white teeth;Her mouth a redder rose than Omar knew;Her eyes, dark pools where stars could shine by day;These were no dream. And yet,—“How long ago,”I asked her, “did the bitter sea withdrawIts foam from all your happy sun-burnt hills?”She looked at me in fear. Then, with a smile,She answered, “Nothing here has ever changed.My father’s father, in his childhood, playedAmong these vines. That oak-tree where you standHad lived a century, then. The parent oakFrom which its acorn dropped had long been dead.But hills are hills. I never saw the sea.Nothing has ever changed.”I went my way.Last, in a thousand ages I returned,And found, once more, a City, thronged and tall,More rich, more marvellous even than the first;A City of pride and lust and gold and grime,A City of clustering domes and stately towers,And temples where the great new gods might dwell.But, turning to a citizen in the gates,I asked who built it and how long ago.He stared at me as wise men stare at fools;Then, pitying the afflicted, he repliedGently, as to a child:“The City is old,Older than all our histories. Its birthIs lost among the impenetrable mistsThat shroud the most remote antiquity.None knows, nor can our oldest legends tellWho built so great a City.”I went my way.

But all these books—for him—were living thoughts,Clues to the darker Book of Nature’s law;For, when he climbed, a goat-foot boy, in SpringUp through the savage Hissar range, he sawA hundred gorges thundering at his feetWith snow-fed cataracts; torrents whose fierce flightUprooted forests, tore great boulders down,Ground the huge rocks together; and every yearChannelled raw gullies and swept old scars away;So that the wildered eagle beating upTo seek his last year’s eyry, found that allWas new and strange; and even the tuft of pinesThat used to guide him to his last year’s nestHad vanished from the crags he knew no more.There, pondering on the changes of the world,Young Avicenna, with a kinglier eye,Saw in the lapse of ages the great hillsMelting away like waves; and, from the sea,New lands arising; and the whole dark earthDissolving, and reshaping all its realmsAround him, like a dream.Thus of his hillsAnd of their high snows flowing through his thoughtsWas born the tale that afterwards was toldBy golden-tongued Kazwini, and wafted thenceThrough many lands, from Tartary to Pameer.For, cross-legged, in the shadow of a palm,The hawk-eyed teller of tales, in years unbornHolding his wild clan spell-bound, would intoneThe deep melodious legend, flowing thus,As all the world flows, through the eternal mind.I came one day upon an ancient City.I saw the long white crescent of its wallStained with thin peach-blood, blistered by the sun.I saw beyond it, clustering in the sky,Ethereal throngs of ivory minarets,Tall slender towers, each crowned with one bright pearl.It was no desert phantom; for it grewAnd sharpened as I neared it, till I saw,Under the slim carved windows in the towers,The clean-cut shadows, forked and black and smallLike clinging swallows.In the midst up-swamThe Sultan’s palace with its faint blue domes,The moons of morning.Wreaths of frankincenseFloated around me as I entered in.A thousand thousand warrior faces throngedThe glimmering streets. Blood-rubies burned like starsIn shadowy silks and turbans of all hues.The markets glowed with costly merchandise.I saw proud stallions, pacing to and froBefore the rulers of a hundred kings.I saw, unrolled beneath the slender feetOf slave-girls, white as April’s breathing snow,Soft prayer-rugs of a subtler drift of bloomThan flows with sunset over the blue and greyAnd opal of the drifting desert sand.Princes and thieves, philosophers and foolsJostled together, among hot scents of musk.Dark eyes were flashing. Blood throbbed darker yet.Lean dusky fingers groped for hilts of jade.Then, with a roll of drums, through Eastern gates,Out of the dawn, and softer than its clouds,Tall camels, long tumultuous caravans,Like stately ships came slowly stepping in,Loaded with shining plunder from Cathay.I turned and asked my neighbour in the throngWho built that city, and how long ago.He stared at me in wonder. “It is old,Older than any memory,” he replied.“Nor can our fathers’ oldest legend tellWho built so great a city.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned,And found not even a stone of that great City,Not even a shadow of all that lust and pride.But only an old peasant gathering herbsWhere once it stood, upon the naked plain.“What wars destroyed it, and how long ago?”I asked him. Slowly lifting his grey head,He stared at me in wonder.“This bleak landWas always thus. Our bread was always blackAnd our wine harsh. It is a bitter windThat scourges us. But where these nettles grewNettles have always grown. Nothing has changedIn mortal memory here.”“Was there not, once,A mighty City?” I said, “with shining streets,Here, on this ground?” I spoke with bated breath.He shook his head and smiled, the pitying smileThat wise men use to poets and to fools.—“Our fathers never told us of that City.Doubtless it was a dream.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned;And, where the plain was, I beheld the sea.The sea-gulls mewed and pounced upon their prey.The brown-legged fishermen crouched upon the shore,Mending their tarry nets.I asked how longThat country had been drowned beneath the waves.They mocked at me. “His wits are drowned in wine.Tides ebb and flow, and fishes leap ashore;But all our harvest, since the first wind blew,Swam in deep waters. Are not wrecks washed upWith coins that none can use, because they bearThe blind old images of forgotten kings?The waves have shaped these cliffs, dug out these caves,Rounded each agate on this battered beach.How long? Ask earth, ask heaven. Nothing has changed.The sea was always here.”—I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned.The sea had vanished. Where the ships had sailedWarm vineyards basked, among the enfolding hills.I saw, below me, on the winding road,Two milk-white oxen, under a wooden yoke,Drawing a waggon, loaded black with grapes.Beside them walked a slim brown-ankled girl.I stood beneath a shadowy wayside oakTo watch them. They drew near.It was no dream.Blood of the grape upon the wrinkled throatsAnd smoking flanks of the oxen told me this.I saw the branching veins and satin skinTwitch at the flickering touch of a fly. I sawThe knobs of brass that sheathed their curling horns,The moist black muzzles.Like many whose coats are white,Their big dark eyes had mists of blue.Their breathWas meadows newly mown.By all the godsThat ever wrung man’s heart out in the graveI did not dream this life into the world.—Blood of the grape upon the girl’s brown armsAnd lean, young, bird-like fingers told me this.Her smooth feet powdered by the warm grey dust;The grape-stalk that she held in her white teeth;Her mouth a redder rose than Omar knew;Her eyes, dark pools where stars could shine by day;These were no dream. And yet,—“How long ago,”I asked her, “did the bitter sea withdrawIts foam from all your happy sun-burnt hills?”She looked at me in fear. Then, with a smile,She answered, “Nothing here has ever changed.My father’s father, in his childhood, playedAmong these vines. That oak-tree where you standHad lived a century, then. The parent oakFrom which its acorn dropped had long been dead.But hills are hills. I never saw the sea.Nothing has ever changed.”I went my way.Last, in a thousand ages I returned,And found, once more, a City, thronged and tall,More rich, more marvellous even than the first;A City of pride and lust and gold and grime,A City of clustering domes and stately towers,And temples where the great new gods might dwell.But, turning to a citizen in the gates,I asked who built it and how long ago.He stared at me as wise men stare at fools;Then, pitying the afflicted, he repliedGently, as to a child:“The City is old,Older than all our histories. Its birthIs lost among the impenetrable mistsThat shroud the most remote antiquity.None knows, nor can our oldest legends tellWho built so great a City.”I went my way.

But all these books—for him—were living thoughts,Clues to the darker Book of Nature’s law;For, when he climbed, a goat-foot boy, in SpringUp through the savage Hissar range, he sawA hundred gorges thundering at his feetWith snow-fed cataracts; torrents whose fierce flightUprooted forests, tore great boulders down,Ground the huge rocks together; and every yearChannelled raw gullies and swept old scars away;So that the wildered eagle beating upTo seek his last year’s eyry, found that allWas new and strange; and even the tuft of pinesThat used to guide him to his last year’s nestHad vanished from the crags he knew no more.

But all these books—for him—were living thoughts,

Clues to the darker Book of Nature’s law;

For, when he climbed, a goat-foot boy, in Spring

Up through the savage Hissar range, he saw

A hundred gorges thundering at his feet

With snow-fed cataracts; torrents whose fierce flight

Uprooted forests, tore great boulders down,

Ground the huge rocks together; and every year

Channelled raw gullies and swept old scars away;

So that the wildered eagle beating up

To seek his last year’s eyry, found that all

Was new and strange; and even the tuft of pines

That used to guide him to his last year’s nest

Had vanished from the crags he knew no more.

There, pondering on the changes of the world,Young Avicenna, with a kinglier eye,Saw in the lapse of ages the great hillsMelting away like waves; and, from the sea,New lands arising; and the whole dark earthDissolving, and reshaping all its realmsAround him, like a dream.Thus of his hillsAnd of their high snows flowing through his thoughtsWas born the tale that afterwards was toldBy golden-tongued Kazwini, and wafted thenceThrough many lands, from Tartary to Pameer.For, cross-legged, in the shadow of a palm,The hawk-eyed teller of tales, in years unbornHolding his wild clan spell-bound, would intoneThe deep melodious legend, flowing thus,As all the world flows, through the eternal mind.

There, pondering on the changes of the world,

Young Avicenna, with a kinglier eye,

Saw in the lapse of ages the great hills

Melting away like waves; and, from the sea,

New lands arising; and the whole dark earth

Dissolving, and reshaping all its realms

Around him, like a dream.

Thus of his hills

And of their high snows flowing through his thoughts

Was born the tale that afterwards was told

By golden-tongued Kazwini, and wafted thence

Through many lands, from Tartary to Pameer.

For, cross-legged, in the shadow of a palm,

The hawk-eyed teller of tales, in years unborn

Holding his wild clan spell-bound, would intone

The deep melodious legend, flowing thus,

As all the world flows, through the eternal mind.

I came one day upon an ancient City.I saw the long white crescent of its wallStained with thin peach-blood, blistered by the sun.

I came one day upon an ancient City.

I saw the long white crescent of its wall

Stained with thin peach-blood, blistered by the sun.

I saw beyond it, clustering in the sky,Ethereal throngs of ivory minarets,Tall slender towers, each crowned with one bright pearl.

I saw beyond it, clustering in the sky,

Ethereal throngs of ivory minarets,

Tall slender towers, each crowned with one bright pearl.

It was no desert phantom; for it grewAnd sharpened as I neared it, till I saw,Under the slim carved windows in the towers,The clean-cut shadows, forked and black and smallLike clinging swallows.In the midst up-swamThe Sultan’s palace with its faint blue domes,The moons of morning.Wreaths of frankincenseFloated around me as I entered in.A thousand thousand warrior faces throngedThe glimmering streets. Blood-rubies burned like starsIn shadowy silks and turbans of all hues.

It was no desert phantom; for it grew

And sharpened as I neared it, till I saw,

Under the slim carved windows in the towers,

The clean-cut shadows, forked and black and small

Like clinging swallows.

In the midst up-swam

The Sultan’s palace with its faint blue domes,

The moons of morning.

Wreaths of frankincense

Floated around me as I entered in.

A thousand thousand warrior faces thronged

The glimmering streets. Blood-rubies burned like stars

In shadowy silks and turbans of all hues.

The markets glowed with costly merchandise.I saw proud stallions, pacing to and froBefore the rulers of a hundred kings.I saw, unrolled beneath the slender feetOf slave-girls, white as April’s breathing snow,Soft prayer-rugs of a subtler drift of bloomThan flows with sunset over the blue and greyAnd opal of the drifting desert sand.

The markets glowed with costly merchandise.

I saw proud stallions, pacing to and fro

Before the rulers of a hundred kings.

I saw, unrolled beneath the slender feet

Of slave-girls, white as April’s breathing snow,

Soft prayer-rugs of a subtler drift of bloom

Than flows with sunset over the blue and grey

And opal of the drifting desert sand.

Princes and thieves, philosophers and foolsJostled together, among hot scents of musk.Dark eyes were flashing. Blood throbbed darker yet.Lean dusky fingers groped for hilts of jade.Then, with a roll of drums, through Eastern gates,Out of the dawn, and softer than its clouds,Tall camels, long tumultuous caravans,Like stately ships came slowly stepping in,Loaded with shining plunder from Cathay.I turned and asked my neighbour in the throngWho built that city, and how long ago.He stared at me in wonder. “It is old,Older than any memory,” he replied.“Nor can our fathers’ oldest legend tellWho built so great a city.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned,And found not even a stone of that great City,Not even a shadow of all that lust and pride.But only an old peasant gathering herbsWhere once it stood, upon the naked plain.

Princes and thieves, philosophers and fools

Jostled together, among hot scents of musk.

Dark eyes were flashing. Blood throbbed darker yet.

Lean dusky fingers groped for hilts of jade.

Then, with a roll of drums, through Eastern gates,

Out of the dawn, and softer than its clouds,

Tall camels, long tumultuous caravans,

Like stately ships came slowly stepping in,

Loaded with shining plunder from Cathay.

I turned and asked my neighbour in the throng

Who built that city, and how long ago.

He stared at me in wonder. “It is old,

Older than any memory,” he replied.

“Nor can our fathers’ oldest legend tell

Who built so great a city.”

I went my way.

And in a thousand ages I returned,

And found not even a stone of that great City,

Not even a shadow of all that lust and pride.

But only an old peasant gathering herbs

Where once it stood, upon the naked plain.

“What wars destroyed it, and how long ago?”I asked him. Slowly lifting his grey head,He stared at me in wonder.“This bleak landWas always thus. Our bread was always blackAnd our wine harsh. It is a bitter windThat scourges us. But where these nettles grewNettles have always grown. Nothing has changedIn mortal memory here.”“Was there not, once,A mighty City?” I said, “with shining streets,Here, on this ground?” I spoke with bated breath.He shook his head and smiled, the pitying smileThat wise men use to poets and to fools.—“Our fathers never told us of that City.Doubtless it was a dream.”I went my way.And in a thousand ages I returned;And, where the plain was, I beheld the sea.The sea-gulls mewed and pounced upon their prey.The brown-legged fishermen crouched upon the shore,Mending their tarry nets.I asked how longThat country had been drowned beneath the waves.They mocked at me. “His wits are drowned in wine.Tides ebb and flow, and fishes leap ashore;But all our harvest, since the first wind blew,Swam in deep waters. Are not wrecks washed upWith coins that none can use, because they bearThe blind old images of forgotten kings?The waves have shaped these cliffs, dug out these caves,Rounded each agate on this battered beach.How long? Ask earth, ask heaven. Nothing has changed.The sea was always here.”—I went my way.

“What wars destroyed it, and how long ago?”

I asked him. Slowly lifting his grey head,

He stared at me in wonder.

“This bleak land

Was always thus. Our bread was always black

And our wine harsh. It is a bitter wind

That scourges us. But where these nettles grew

Nettles have always grown. Nothing has changed

In mortal memory here.”

“Was there not, once,

A mighty City?” I said, “with shining streets,

Here, on this ground?” I spoke with bated breath.

He shook his head and smiled, the pitying smile

That wise men use to poets and to fools.—

“Our fathers never told us of that City.

Doubtless it was a dream.”

I went my way.

And in a thousand ages I returned;

And, where the plain was, I beheld the sea.

The sea-gulls mewed and pounced upon their prey.

The brown-legged fishermen crouched upon the shore,

Mending their tarry nets.

I asked how long

That country had been drowned beneath the waves.

They mocked at me. “His wits are drowned in wine.

Tides ebb and flow, and fishes leap ashore;

But all our harvest, since the first wind blew,

Swam in deep waters. Are not wrecks washed up

With coins that none can use, because they bear

The blind old images of forgotten kings?

The waves have shaped these cliffs, dug out these caves,

Rounded each agate on this battered beach.

How long? Ask earth, ask heaven. Nothing has changed.

The sea was always here.”—

I went my way.

And in a thousand ages I returned.The sea had vanished. Where the ships had sailedWarm vineyards basked, among the enfolding hills.I saw, below me, on the winding road,Two milk-white oxen, under a wooden yoke,Drawing a waggon, loaded black with grapes.Beside them walked a slim brown-ankled girl.I stood beneath a shadowy wayside oakTo watch them. They drew near.It was no dream.Blood of the grape upon the wrinkled throatsAnd smoking flanks of the oxen told me this.I saw the branching veins and satin skinTwitch at the flickering touch of a fly. I sawThe knobs of brass that sheathed their curling horns,The moist black muzzles.Like many whose coats are white,Their big dark eyes had mists of blue.Their breathWas meadows newly mown.By all the godsThat ever wrung man’s heart out in the graveI did not dream this life into the world.—Blood of the grape upon the girl’s brown armsAnd lean, young, bird-like fingers told me this.Her smooth feet powdered by the warm grey dust;The grape-stalk that she held in her white teeth;Her mouth a redder rose than Omar knew;Her eyes, dark pools where stars could shine by day;These were no dream. And yet,—“How long ago,”I asked her, “did the bitter sea withdrawIts foam from all your happy sun-burnt hills?”She looked at me in fear. Then, with a smile,She answered, “Nothing here has ever changed.My father’s father, in his childhood, playedAmong these vines. That oak-tree where you standHad lived a century, then. The parent oakFrom which its acorn dropped had long been dead.But hills are hills. I never saw the sea.Nothing has ever changed.”I went my way.Last, in a thousand ages I returned,And found, once more, a City, thronged and tall,More rich, more marvellous even than the first;A City of pride and lust and gold and grime,A City of clustering domes and stately towers,And temples where the great new gods might dwell.But, turning to a citizen in the gates,I asked who built it and how long ago.He stared at me as wise men stare at fools;Then, pitying the afflicted, he repliedGently, as to a child:“The City is old,Older than all our histories. Its birthIs lost among the impenetrable mistsThat shroud the most remote antiquity.None knows, nor can our oldest legends tellWho built so great a City.”I went my way.

And in a thousand ages I returned.

The sea had vanished. Where the ships had sailed

Warm vineyards basked, among the enfolding hills.

I saw, below me, on the winding road,

Two milk-white oxen, under a wooden yoke,

Drawing a waggon, loaded black with grapes.

Beside them walked a slim brown-ankled girl.

I stood beneath a shadowy wayside oak

To watch them. They drew near.

It was no dream.

Blood of the grape upon the wrinkled throats

And smoking flanks of the oxen told me this.

I saw the branching veins and satin skin

Twitch at the flickering touch of a fly. I saw

The knobs of brass that sheathed their curling horns,

The moist black muzzles.

Like many whose coats are white,

Their big dark eyes had mists of blue.

Their breath

Was meadows newly mown.

By all the gods

That ever wrung man’s heart out in the grave

I did not dream this life into the world.—

Blood of the grape upon the girl’s brown arms

And lean, young, bird-like fingers told me this.

Her smooth feet powdered by the warm grey dust;

The grape-stalk that she held in her white teeth;

Her mouth a redder rose than Omar knew;

Her eyes, dark pools where stars could shine by day;

These were no dream. And yet,—

“How long ago,”

I asked her, “did the bitter sea withdraw

Its foam from all your happy sun-burnt hills?”

She looked at me in fear. Then, with a smile,

She answered, “Nothing here has ever changed.

My father’s father, in his childhood, played

Among these vines. That oak-tree where you stand

Had lived a century, then. The parent oak

From which its acorn dropped had long been dead.

But hills are hills. I never saw the sea.

Nothing has ever changed.”

I went my way.

Last, in a thousand ages I returned,

And found, once more, a City, thronged and tall,

More rich, more marvellous even than the first;

A City of pride and lust and gold and grime,

A City of clustering domes and stately towers,

And temples where the great new gods might dwell.

But, turning to a citizen in the gates,

I asked who built it and how long ago.

He stared at me as wise men stare at fools;

Then, pitying the afflicted, he replied

Gently, as to a child:

“The City is old,

Older than all our histories. Its birth

Is lost among the impenetrable mists

That shroud the most remote antiquity.

None knows, nor can our oldest legends tell

Who built so great a City.”

I went my way.


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