A Legend of Old Persia and Other Poems Part 6

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A voice cried over the Hills "Follow the strange desire.

Oh! follow, follow, follow, The world is on fire.

Day burns on funeral bed In flame of sky and sea, And, black against that red, Is the tower where dwelleth she And gazeth, white foot pressed On bruised heaps of bloom, O'er the sea which cannot rest And sounds thro' her room.

Murmurs in her room Thro' a cas.e.m.e.nt open wide The sea which is a tomb For mariners of pride.

Oh! follow, follow, follow, Come quickly unto her, Her body is more sweet Than ca.s.sia or myrrh, She is whiter than the moon, She is stranger than death, Stronger than the new moon Which the waters draweth.

More lovely are her words More lovely is she Than the flight of white birds O'er a halcyon sea.

She took the stars for toys-- Her magic was so strong-- Murmurs of earth and the noise Of green seas for a song.

She leant down on the sill And called across the sea.

... Oh! follow, follow, follow, Come quickly unto me...."

A voice cried over the Hills "Oh! come, I fail, I swoon, Pale with my love's excess, Paler than our pale moon.

Oh! come, Oh! come, Oh! come, Before the days eclipse We'll meet with br.i.m.m.i.n.g eyes And kiss with quivering lips.

Love-drunken, breast to breast, With half-closed eyes we'll kiss, And reel from bliss to pain From pain again to bliss.

The sea which cannot rest From its undernote of doom (We swooning breast on breast) Shall murmur thro' my room.

Shall murmur all night long Thro' a cas.e.m.e.nt open wide.

The sea, which is a tomb For mariners of pride, With an undernote of doom Shall murmur evermore That love is in the room And Death is at the door, That Death will bruise to dust Our flower-drenched pa.s.sion soon Darker than darkest night Colder than our cold moon.

So shall it ebb and flow Our love like those sea-tides For a s.p.a.ce ... a little s.p.a.ce-- What matter? ... nought abides."

A voice cried over the Hills, "What matter? ... all things die, Our quivering love's excess, Our rose-drenched ecstasy As glimmering waters drawn By the magic of the moon, As the moon itself at dawn Our love shall vanish soon.

So swift (my love-pale groom) A white bird wings its flight.

Then find you Death's cold room, Darker than darkest night; Then find you that dark door (And find it all men must) And love there nevermore But crumble back to dust, And kiss there nevermore In flower-drenched ecstasy; Too late then to implore, Too cold to hear a cry."

And then towards the shelving beach A cedar shallop drew, With silver prow shaped like a swan And sails of rainbow hue.

Swiftly it came with a wake of foam And lying on its side Like an arrow's flight towards the Knight, Tho' none sat there to guide.

And in the shallows by the sh.o.r.e It came to rest at last, The cordage slacked and the rainbow sail Flapped idly on the mast.

And the Swan-prow with the ruby eyes Opened his silver beak, And with a musical, magic voice He thus began to speak.

"Step in, step in, my gallant lad, Your youth shall be my fare.

For you my mistress opes her door And combs her wine-dark hair.

She swelled my sail with an eager wind And drove me to this beach, She gave strange sight to my ruby eyes And filled my beak with speech.

"She saw you in the magic gla.s.s The hour that she has might, As you rode across the purple heath, Honour and armour bright.

Step in, step in, my lover bold And come to the West with me Where the young nymphs play in the wave and lift Their white arms from the sea; And the Tritons chase the laughing rout And swim by the vessel's side, Blowing on horns confusedly, Or shouting words of pride.

You hear it now, but the time will come When you shall hear no more The ceaseless wash of a dreaming sea, Its ripples on the sh.o.r.e.

Oh! follow, follow the sinking sun And the great white Evening Star, A magic wind shall breathe behind Our sail, and bear us far."

He doffed his red-plumed casque of steel, All flaxen was his hair, And he was clad from throat to heel In the armour princes wear, From throat to heel in silver mail Like a s.h.i.+ning prince in a fairy-tale.

The witch Hegertha o'er him bent, (Ah! G.o.d, her face was fair) Her breath blew on him like a scent, She touched him with her hair.

There was no stronger witch than this, And she gave the Knight her first kiss.

And he was bound to her sword and hand, To do whatever she might command.

Then up to her full height she drew, Down poured her hair like wine, Her pale, proud face looked sadly through --A moon in a wood of pine-- She breathed a spell in a low, sweet tone Which none of woman born could disown.

And he was bound to her side till death By the spell just uttered above her breath.

She drew his soul forth with her eyes, As a drinker slakes his drouth, A little smile played sorrowful, wise, About her rose-red mouth.

She stooped down and called his soul forth, And left him naught but his body's earth.

And he was bound to her evermore By the soul he lost and the word he swore.

For evermore and evermore In the chamber by the sea, Till death should break the spell-bound door And end his slavery; In the chamber strewn with flowers in bloom With a heavy scent like death, Echoing ever the song of doom Which the sad sea moaned beneath.

For evermore and evermore Till life ceased in his side, Bound to the room and the rose-strewn floor And the strange, unholy bride.

And naught could save him now, when once the spell Had fallen on him, binding limbs and will, Where he sat listening to the sad sea swell, Amid the roses which no time could kill.

Naught could restore lost courage to his eyes, The Knightly ardour that he used to feel, Or make his heart the seat of high emprise, Or nerve his hand to grasp the s.h.i.+ning steel.

Whether she kept him fast by her enchantment, Or drove him forth to roam death-pale and weeping, Naught could remind him what his life's fair grant meant, Now that his soul was in Hegertha's keeping.

The Dreamer.

This is the dream of the Dreamer With the grave thought-sunken eyes, Which he dreamed between sleeping and waking, Between the night and the making Of dawn ... and he dreamed in this wise:

To the gate of the dawn came a chariot Which four black stallions were drawing, And a spirit charioteer, With the burning eyes of a seer, Held them impatiently pawing.

He mounted the floor of the chariot, And the Spirit drew together His reins, his strong grip tight'ning, And his thong flashed out like a lightning, And the horses rushed up to aether.

The Dreamer was caught into s.p.a.ce With a pang as of ending or birth, And lo! clouds builded above him, And beneath him soundless and moving The sea of his own little earth.

They clove the walls of the clouds, And snorted each coal black stallion Nursed by the Spirit, whose hair Streamed out like a banner, and bare In the night was the moon--a medallion

And then an ice-sheathed corpse With ancient glaciers and snouted Craters of fires extinct, Chain on chain of them linked.

And the Lord of the Chariot shouted

And shook out his hissing lash Over the backs of the four Till they whirled up faster and faster, Till the sun became vaster and vaster, And its flames leapt out with a roar

Of mountains, subsident, resurging, Innumerable, ceaseless of action, Years and years into s.p.a.ce....

And the Dreamer covered his face, As he rode, in his stupefaction.

They pa.s.sed with a dip and a swerve, As a swallow skims the downs, Far up into the height, And the stars looked down from the night Like the lights of distant towns.

Swift is the lonely thought Of a sage, a mountain-dweller, But swifter far was their rush Thro' the awful cold and the hush Of the s.p.a.ces interstellar.

They heard the approaching thunder, And saw the glare of a comet Holding its destined way To an undiscovered day, And its tresses streamed out from it.

They broke thro' other systems, By huger alien spheres, Each in its...o...b..t travelling, The timeless skeins unravelling Of a law with no count of years

And came at last to a planet, Girt in a gleaming ring Of cloud and vapour and mist, Which the light of four moons kissed To a wonderful milk-white thing.

Then the Spirit reined in his stallions, And pointed in exultation And turned his...o...b..d eyes, Which burned with a wild surmise And a dreadful penetration,

On the Dreamer, who followed, and lo!

The Heavens had changed their stations, And their voids were with unknown And greater galaxies sown And altered constellations.

And, beyond, a scatter of crystals, And, beyond, bright motes in a beam, And, beyond, while the Spirit probed him To the soul in the flesh that robed him, An uncountable s.h.i.+mmering stream.

He saw these worlds all marshalled, And their ways all governed for ever; And he felt the sight of his soul Shrivel up like a fire-licked scroll In his insupportable terror.

Then the Spirit pointed again, And wheeled the might of his horses And shouted ... and down they fell, As a pebble drops in a well, Thro' the worlds and the roar of their courses.

A Legend of Old Persia and Other Poems Part 6

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A Legend of Old Persia and Other Poems Part 6 summary

You're reading A Legend of Old Persia and Other Poems Part 6. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: A. B. S. Tennyson already has 672 views.

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