Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/29

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THE ZENANA.


And near the watermelon stands,
Fresh from the Jumna’s shining sands;Ruins on the Jumna
And golden grapes, whose bloom and hue
Wear morning light and morning dew,
Or purple with the deepest dye
That flushes evening’s farewell sky.
And in the slender vases glow—
Vases that seem like sculptur'd snow—
The rich sherbets are sparkling bright
With ruby and with amber light.
A fragrant mat the ground o’erspread,
With an old tamarind overhead,
With drooping bough of darkest green,
Forms for their feast a pleasant screen.

’Tis night, but such delicious time
Would seem like day in northern clime.
A pure and holy element,
Where light and shade, together blent,
Are like the mind’s high atmosphere,
When hope is calm, and heaven is near.
The moon is young—her crescent brow
Wears its ethereal beauty now,
    Unconscious of the crime and care,
Which even her brief reign must know,
    Till she will pine to be so fair,
With such a weary world below.
A tremulous and silvery beam
Melts over palace, garden, stream;
Each flower beneath that tranquil ray,
Wears other beauty than by day,
All pale as if with love, and lose
Their rich variety of hues—
    But ah, that languid loveliness
Hath magic, to the noon unknown,
    A deep and pensive tenderness,
The heart at once feels is its own—
How fragrant to these dewy hours,
    The white magnolia lifts its urn
The very Araby of flowers,
    Wherein all precious odours burn.


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