Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/59

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59



THE ZENANA.


The heart’s last string hath snapt in twain,
Oh, earth, receive thine own again:
The weary one at length has rest
Within thy chill but quiet breast.
Long did the young sultana keep
    The memory of that maiden’s lute;
And call to mind her songs, and weep,
    Long after those charmed chords were mute.
A small white tomb was raised, to show
That human sorrow slept below;
And solemn verse and sacred line
Were graved on that funereal shrine.
And by its side the cypress tree
Stood, like unchanging memory.
And even to this hour are thrown
Green wreaths on that remembered stone;
And songs remain, whose tunes are fraught
With music which herself first taught.
And, it is said, one lonely star
Still brings a murmur sweet and far
Upon the silent midnight air,
As if Zilara wandered there.
Oh! if her poet soul be blent
With its aerial element,
May its lone course be where the rill
Goes singing at its own glad will;
Where early flowers unclose and die;
Where shells beside the ocean lie,
Fill’d with strange tones; or where the breeze
Sheds odours o’er the moonlit seas:
There let her gentle spirit rove,
Embalmed by poetry and love.

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