The Mistress of the Manse by J. G. (Josiah Gilbert) Holland
page 38 of 119 (31%)
page 38 of 119 (31%)
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Kept revel high in honor of that day of all the days.
The earth was spread, the walls were hung, with silken fabrics fine, And arabesque and lotus-flower bore each the broidered sign Of jewels plucked from land and sea, and red gold from the mine. Upon his throne he sat alone, half buried in the gems That strewed his tapestries like stars, and tipped their tawny hems, And glittered with the glory of a hundred diadems. He saw from his pavilion door the nodding heron plumes His nobles wore upon their brows, while, from the rosy glooms Which hid his harem, came low songs, on wings of rare perfumes! The elephants, a thousand strong, had passed his dreaming eye, Caparisoned with golden plates on head and breast and thigh, And a hundred flashing troops of horse unmarked had thundered by. He sat upon old Akbar's throne, the heir of power and fame, But all his glory was as dust, and dust his wondrous name-- Swept into air, and scattered far, by one consuming flame! For on that day of all the days, and in that festal hour, He sickened with his glory and grew weary of his power, And pined to bind upon his breast his harem's choicest flower, "Oh Nourmahal! oh Nourmahal! why sit I here," he cried,-- "The victim of these gaudy shows, and of my haughty pride, When thou art dearer to my soul than all the world beside! |
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