Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/57

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57



THE ZENANA.


Behind stalk the camels, which, weary and worn,
Seem to stretch their long necks, and repine at the morn:
And wild on the air the fierce war-echoes come,
The voice of the atabal, trumpet, and drum:
Half lost in the shout that ascends from the crowd,
Who delight in the young, and the brave, and the proud.
Tis folly to talk of the right and the wrong,
The triumph will carry the many along.

A dearer welcome far remains,
Than that of Delhi’s crowded plains;* Ruins, S. side of Old Delhi.
Soon Murad seeks the shadowy hall,
Cool with the fountain's languid fall;
His own, his best beloved to meet.
Why kneels Nadira at his feet?
With flushing cheek, and eager air,
One word hath won her easy prayer;
It is such happiness to grant,
The slightest fancy that can haunt
The loved one’s wish, earth hath no gem,
And heaven no hope, too dear for them.

That night beheld a vessel glide,
Over the Jumna's [1] onward tide;
One watched that vessel from the shore,
Too conscious of the freight it bore,
And wretched in her granted vow,
Sees Moohreeb leaning by the prow,
And knows that soon the winding river
Will hide him from her view for ever.

Next morn they found that youthful slave
Still kneeling by the sacred wave;
Her head was leaning on the stone
    Of an old ruined tomb beside,
A fitting pillow cold and lone,
    The dead had to the dead supplied:

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  1. This text has Ganges’, however this was corrected in later editions - Delhi is on the Jumna (or Yamuna) as stated earlier in the poem.