Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/49

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THE ZENANA.


Days pass, yet still Zilara’s song
    Beguiled the fair Sultana’s hours
As the wind bears some bird along
    Over the haunted orange bowers.
’Twas as till then she had not known
How much her heart had for its own,
And Murad’s image seemed more dear,
    These higher chords of feeling strung;
And love shone brighter for the shade
    That others’ sorrows round it flung.

It was one sultry noon, yet sweet

The air which through the matted grass
Came cool—its breezes had to meet
    A hundred plumes, ere it could pass;
The peacock’s shining feathers wave
From many a young and graceful slave;
Who silent kneel amid the gloom
Of that dim and perfumed room.

Beyond, the radiant sunbeams rest
On many a minaret’s glittering crest,
And white the dazzling tombs below,
Like masses sculptured of pure snow;
While round stands many a giant tree,
Like pillars of a sanctuary,
Whose glossy foliage, dark and bright,
Reflects, and yet excludes the light.
Oh sun, how glad thy rays are shed;
How canst thou glory o’er the dead?
    Ah, folly this of human pride,
What are the dead to one like thee,
    Whose mirror is the mighty tide,
Where time flows to eternity?
A single race, a single age,
What are they in thy pilgrimage?
The tent, the palace, and the tomb
Repeat the universal doom.

Man passes, but upon the plain
Still the sweet seasons hold their reign,
As if earth were their sole domain,

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