Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/27

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27



THE ZENANA.


The voice has ceased, the chords are mute,
The singer droops upon her lute;
But, oh, the fulness of each tone
Straight to Nadira’s heart hath gone—
As if that mournful song revealed
Depths in that heart till then concealed,
A world of melancholy thought,
Then only into being brought;
Those tender mysteries of the soul,
Like words on an enchanted scroll,
Whose mystic meaning but appears
When washed and understood by tears.
She gazed upon the singer’s face;
Deeply that young brow wore the trace
Of years that leave their stamp behind:
The wearied hope—the fever'd mind—
The heart which on itself hath turned,
Worn out with feelings—slighted—spurned—
Till scarce one throb remained to show
What warm emotions slept below,
Never to be renewed again,
And known but by remembered pain.

Her cheek was pale—impassioned pale—
    Like ashes white with former fire,
Passion which might no more prevail,
    The rose had been its own sweet pyre.
You gazed upon the large black eyes,
    And felt what unshed tears were there;
Deep, gloomy, wild, like midnight skies,
    When storms are heavy on the air—
And on the small red lip sat scorn,
Writhing from what the past had borne.
But far too proud to sigh—the will,
Though crushed, subdued, was haughty still;
Last refuge of the spirit’s pain,
Which finds endurance in disdain.
    Others wore blossoms in their hair,
And golden bangles round the arm.
    She took no pride in being fair,
The gay delight of youth to charm;

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