.. -*- encoding: utf-8 -*- .. meta:: :PG.Id: 42051 :PG.Title: Akra the Slave :PG.Released: 2013-02-08 :PG.Rights: Public Domain :PG.Producer: Al Haines :DC.Creator: Wilfrid Wilson Gibson :DC.Title: Akra the Slave :DC.Language: en :DC.Created: 1910 :coverpage: images/img-cover.jpg ============== AKRA THE SLAVE ============== .. clearpage:: .. pgheader:: .. container:: coverpage .. vspace:: 3 .. _`Cover`: .. figure:: images/img-cover.jpg :align: center :alt: Cover Cover .. vspace:: 4 .. container:: titlepage center white-space-pre-line .. class:: x-large AKRA THE SLAVE .. vspace:: 2 .. class:: medium BY WILFRID WILSON GIBSON .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center medium LONDON ELKIN MATHEWS, VIGO STREET MCMX .. vspace:: 4 | *Six years ago, I wrote this story down,* | *While yet the light of Eastern skies* | *Was in my eyes,* | *And still my heart, aglow with memories* | *Of sun-enraptured seas,* | *And that old sea-girt town.* | *Where, down dark alleys of enchanted night,* | *We stole, until we came* | *To where the great dome glimmered white.* | *And every minaret,* | *A shaft of pearly flame,* | *Beneath the cloudy moon...* | | *Six years ago!* | *Ah! soon--too soon,* | *Our tale, too, will be told:* | *And yet, and yet,* | *From this old Eastern tale we know,* | *Love's story never can grow old,* | *Till Love, himself, forget.* .. vspace:: 4 .. class:: center x-large AKRA THE SLAVE .. vspace:: 2 | He thought to see me tremble | And totter as an oar-snapt reed, | When he spake death to me-- | My courage, toppled in the dust, | Even as the head of cactus | The camel-keeper slashes | That his beasts may browse, unscathed, | The succulent, wounded green. | He thought to have me, broken, | And grovelling at his feet; | Mouthing and mumbling to his sandal-ties, | In stammering dread of death-- | Aye! even as a king, | Who, having from death's hand, | Received his crown and kingdom, | For ever treads in terror of the hour | When death shall jog his elbow, | Twitch the purple from his shoulders, | And claim again the borrowed crown. | But, little need have I to fear | The crouching, lean camp-follower, | Unto whose ever-gaping maw, | Day after day, I flung | The spoils of bow and arrow, | Ere I was taken captive-- | I, who have often, at my mother's breast, | Awakened in the night-time, | To see death leering on me from the cave-mouth, | A gaunt and slinking shape | That snuffed the dying embers, | Blotting out the friendly stars-- | I, who, a scarce-weaned boy, | Have toddled, gay and fearless, | Down the narrow jungle-track, | Through bodeful forest-darkness, panther-eyed; | And have felt cold snakes uncoiling | And gliding 'neath my naked sole, | From clammy slumber startled; | While, with sharp snap and crackle, | Beast-trodden branches strained behind me, | My father's hand scarce snatching me | Before the spring of crouching death! | But, naught of this the King could know, | He only knew that, on that far-off morning, | When first I came before him, captive, | Among my captive brothers, | And, as he lightly held, in idle fingers, | Above my unbowed head, | In equal poise | Death's freedom | Or the servitude of life, | I clutched at life: | And cared but little that his lips | Should curl, to see me, broken, | A slave among his slaves. | Yet, never slave of his was I; | Nor did I take my new life from his nod-- | I ... I who could have torn | The proud life out of him, | Before his guards could stay me... | Had she not sat beside him, on her throne. | And he, who knew not then, | Nor ever, till to-day, | Has known me aught but slave, | Remembering that time, | Spake doom of death to me, | Idly, as to a slave: | And I await the end of night, | And dawn of death, | Even as a slave awaits... | Nay! as the unvanquished veteran | Awaits the hour of victory. | In silence, wheels the night, | Star-marshalled, over dreaming Babylon; | And none in all the sleeping city stirs, | Save the cloaked sentries on the outer walls | Who tread out patience 'twixt the gates of brass, | Numb with scarce-baffled slumber, | Or, maybe, some unsleeping priest of Bel, | A lonely warder of eternity, | Who watches on the temple's seventh stage, | With the unslumbering gods. | Yet, may not she, the Queen, | Whose beauty, slaying my body, | Brings my soul to immortal birth, | Although she does not know | Of my last vigil on the peak of life-- | Yet, may not she awaken, troubled | By strange, bewildering dreams, | With heart a little fearful of the dawn | Of day, yet unrevealed? | There is no sound at all, | Save only the cool plashing | Of fountains in the courtyard | Without my lonely cell: | For fate has granted to me | This last, least consolation of sweet sound | Though in the plains I perish, | I shall hear the noise of waters, | The noise of running waters, | As I die. | My earliest lullaby shall sing | My heart again to slumber. | And, even now, I hear | Stream-voices, long-forgotten, calling me | Back to the hills of home; | And, dreaming, I remember | The little yellow brooks | That ever, day and night, | Gush down the mountains singing, | Singing by the caves: | And hearkening unto them, | Once more a tiny baby, | A wee brown fist I dabble | In the foaming cool, | Frothing round my wrist, | Spurting up my arm, | Spraying my warm face; | And then again I chuckle, | As I see an empty gourd, | Fallen in the swirling waters, | Bobbing on the tawny eddies, | Swiftly out of sight. | And yet most clearly to remembrance comes | That far-off night, in early Spring, | When, loud with melted snow from Northern peaks, | The torrent roared and fretted; | While, couched within the cavern, | The clamour kept me wakeful; | And, even when I slept, | Tumbled, tumultuous, through my dreams, | And seemed to surge about me, | As the brawl of armèd men. | And once I sprang from slumber, | Hot and startled, | Dreaming that I felt | A warm breath on my cheek, | As if a jackal nuzzled me; | Or some dread, slinking foe | Made certain of my sleeping | Before he plunged the steel. | But nothing stirred within the glimmering cavern, | Where, all around me, lay my sleeping kindred; | And, when I stole without, with noiseless footsteps, | To rouse the smouldering watchfire into flame, | And cast fresh, crackling brushwood on the blaze, | I caught no glint of arms betwixt the branches, | Nor any sound or rumour, save | The choral noise of cold hill-waters, | Cold hill-waters singing, | Singing to the stars. | And so I turned me from the brooding night; | And, couched again upon the leopard-skins, | I slept, till dawn, in dream-untroubled sleep. | I woke to see the cold sky kindling red, | Beyond the mounded ash of the spent fire; | And lay, a moment, watching | The pearly light, caught, trembling, | In dewy-beaded spiders' webs | About the cave-mouth woven. | Then I arose; | And left my kindred, slumbering-- | My mother, by my father, | And, at her breast, her youngest babe, | With dimpled fingers clutching at her bosom; | And, all around them, lying | Their sons and daughters, beautiful in sleep, | With parted lips, | And easy limbs outstretched | Along the tumbled bedskins: | And while they slumbered yet in shades of night, | I sprang out naked | Into eager dawn. | The sun had not yet scaled the eastern ridge: | And still the vales were hidden from my eyes | By snowy wreaths of swathing mist: | But, high upon a scar | That jutted sheer and stark, | In cold grey light, | There stood an antelope, | With lifted muzzle snuffing the fresh day; | When scenting me afar, | He plunged into the mist | With one quick, startled bound: | And, from the smoking vapour, | Arose a gentle pattering, | As, down the rocky trail, | The unseen herd went trotting | Upon their leader's heels. | And from the clear horizon | The exultant sun sprang god-like: | And on a little mound I stood, | With eager arms outstretched, | That, over my cold body, | The first warm golden beams | Of his life-giving light might fall. | And thus, awhile, I stood. | In radiant adoration tranced, | Until I caught the call of waters; | And, running downwards to the stream, | That plunged into a darkling pool, | Where, in the rock was scooped a wide, deep basin; | Upon the glassy brink, | A moment, I hung, shivering, | And gazing down through deeps of lucent shadow; | And then I leapt headlong, | And felt the cloven waters | Closing, icy-cold, above me, | And, again, with sobbing breath, | Battled to the light and air: | And I ran into the sunshine, | Shaking from my tingling limbs | Showers of scintillating drops | Over radiant, dewy beds | Of the snowy cyclamen, | And dark-red anemone, | Till my tawny body glowed | With warm, ruddy, pulsing life. | And then again I sought the stream, | And plunged; and now, more boldly, | I crossed the pool, with easy stroke; | And climbed the further crag; | And, turning, plunged again. | And so, I dived and swam, | Till pangs of hunger pricked | My idle fancy homeward: | And eagerly I climbed the hill; | When, not a sling's throw from the cavern, | Stooping to pluck a red anemone, | To prank the wet, black tangle of my hair, | I heard a shout; | And looking up, | I saw strange men | With lifted spears | Bear down on me: | And as I turned, | A javelin sang | Above my shrinking shoulder, | And bit the ground before me. | But, swift as light I sped, | Until I reached the pool, | And leapt therein: | And he who pressed most hotly on my heels, | Fell stumbling after. | Still I never slackened, | Although I heard a floundering splash, | And then the laughter of his comrades: | And, as I swam for life, | Betwixt my thrusting heels, | Another spear that clove the crystal waters | Glanced underneath my body, | And in the stream-bed quivered bolt upright, | Caught in a cleft of rock. | With frantic arm I struck | Straight as a snake across the pool, | And climbed the further bank; | And plunging through deep brake, | Ran wildly onward, | Startling as I went | A browsing herd of antelope, | That, bounding, fled before me down the valley | And after them I raced, | As though the hunter, | Not the hunted, | Until the chase sang in my blood, | And braced my straining thews. | I knew not if men followed, | Yet, on I sped, impetuously, | As speeds the fleet-foot onaga, | That breasts the windy morning, | With lifted head, and nostrils wide, | Exultant in his youth. | So, on and ever on, | Scarce knowing why I ran-- | Enough for me to feel | Earth beaten back behind my heels, | And hear the loud air singing | The blood-song in my ears: | Till, stumbling headlong over | An unseen, fallen branch, | I rolled in a deep bed of withered leaves; | And lay, full-length in shuddering ecstasy | Of hot, tumultuous blood that rioted | Through every throbbing vein. | But when again, I breathed more easily, | And my wild, fluttering heart kept slower beat, | Hot-foot, my thoughts ran, wondering, backward: | And I arose and followed them | With swift and stealthy pace, | Until I reached the stream. | Along the bank I stole with wary step, | Until I came to where the waters | Narrowed, raging through a gorge, | Nigh the threshold of my home: | And across the thunderous flood, | From crag to crag I leapt: | And then I climbed a cedar, | From whose close ambush I could watch | Who came or went about the cavern-mouth. | I lay along a level branch: | And, through the thick, dark screen, | I peered with eager eyes: | But no one crossed my sight. | The whole land lay before me, drowsing | In deepest noonday slumber: | No twig stirred in the breathless blaze; | And underneath the boughs no serpent rustled: | And, in the earth and air, | Naught waked, save one lone eagle, nigh the sun, | With wings, unbaffled, beating | Up the blue, unclouded heavens. | A dreamless, suave security | Seemed brooding o'er the valley's golden slumber, | Whence rang or flashed no hint of lurking peril. | I dropped to earth, | And crouching low, | I stole yet nearer | Through the brake: | Till, drawing nigh the cavern-mouth, | I heard the sound of half-hushed sobbing: | And then I saw, within the gloom, | My mother and my sisters clustering round | My father's body, lying stark and dead, | A spear-wound in his breast. | And as I crept to them, they did not hear me, | Nor ever lift their heads; | But, shuddering, crouched together, | With drooping breasts half-hid in falling hair, | By that familiar form | In such strange slumber bound. | Only the baby, on her shoulder slung, | Saw me, and crowed me greeting, | As I stooped down to touch my weeping mother, | Who, turning suddenly, | With wild tear-fevered eyes; | Arose with whispered warning; | But, even then, too late. | Already, from behind, | Around my throat | An arm was flung; | And heavily I fell: | Yet, with a desperate wrench, | I slipped the clutch of my assailant: | And picking up a slingstone that lay handy, | I crashed it through his helm; | And dead he dropped. | And now upon me all his fellows thronged, | Like hounds about an antelope; | And gripped my naked limbs, | And dragged me down, | A struggling beast, among them: | And desperately I fought, | As fights the boar at bay, | When all the yelling pack, | With lathered lips, and white teeth gnashing, | Is closing in upon him; | And in his quivering flank, and gasping throat, | He feels the fangs of death: | Till, overcome at last, | They bound me hand and foot, | With knotted, leathern thongs; | And dragged me out to where, beneath the trees, | Trussed in like manner, with defiant eyes, | My brothers lay, already, side by side. | They laid me in the shade; | And flicked my wincing spirit | With laughter and light words: | "Now is the roe-buck taken!" | Then another, | On whose dark, sullen face there burned a livid weal | "A buck in flight's a panther brought to bay!" | And then his fellow: | "True enough! and yet, | For such young thews they give good gold-- | They give good gold in Babylon!" | And, laughing thus, they left us, | To lie through hours of aching silence, | Until, at length, the cool of evening fell; | When they returned from slumber; | And loosed the ankle-cords that we might stand; | And bade our mother feed us; | And she, with tender fingers, held | The milk-bowl to our parching lips; | And thrust dried dates betwixt our teeth; | And wept, to see us standing there, | With helpless hands, before her. | Then, bringing out their mules, they saddled them; | And tied us to the girths on either hand. | They drove my weeping sisters from the cavern; | And sought to tear my mother from her home; | But she escaped them; | And they let her bide | Amid the ruins of her life, | Whose light had dropped, so suddenly, | From out the highest heavens: | And, when I turned to look on her, | And win from her a last farewell, | I saw her, sitting desolate betwixt | Her silent husband and her wailing babe, | With still, strange eyes, | That stared upon the dead, unseeing, | While her own children went from her, | Scarce knowing that they left her, nevermore | To look upon her face. | Thus, we set out, as over | The darkening, Southern crags | The new moon's keen, curved blade was thrust: | My sisters trooping on before us, | Like a drove of young gazelles, | Which, in the dead of night, | With pards in leash, and torches flaring, | The hunters have encompassed. | They moved with timid steps, | And little runs; | Stumbling, with stifled cries; | And starting, panic-shot, | From every lurking shadow-- | Behind them, terror's lifted lash: | Before them, ever crouching, | The horror of the unknown night-- | While, as they moved before us, | The moonlight shivered off their shrinking shoulders | And naked, glancing limbs, | In shimmering, strange beauty. | And closely on their heels, | I, with my brothers, foremost in the file, | Marched, tethered 'twixt the plodding beasts, | Whose stolid riders sat, | Each with his javelin on the pummel couched, | In watchful silence, with dark eyes alert. | And once, nigh driven crazy | By the tugging of the thongs, | I sprang into the air, | As down a rocky steep we scrambled; | And strove to burst the galling bonds, | Or hurl my guards on one another; | But, all too sure of foot, the beasts, | And too securely girths and cords | Held me, and I stumbled. | Instantly a thong | Struck my wincing shoulders, | Blow on thudding blow. | I bit my lips; and strode on silently; | Nor fought again for freedom. | So on we journeyed through the night, | And down familiar mountain-tracks, | Through deep, dark forest, | Ever down and down; | Fording the streams, whose moon-bright waters flowed, | In eddies of delicious, aching cool, | About our weary thighs. | And, once, when in mid-torrent, | That swirled, girth-high about the plunging beasts, | A startled otter, glancing | Before their very hoofs, | Affrighted them; and, rearing, | With blind and desperate floundering, | They nearly dragged us down to death: | And, ere we righted, | With a fearful cry, | My eldest sister from the bevy broke; | And struck down-stream | With wild arm lashing desperately, | Until the current caught her; | And she sank, to rise no more. | And on again we travelled, | Down through the darkling woodlands: | And once I saw green, burning eyes, | Where, on a low-hung bough, | A night-black panther crouched, | As though to pounce upon my sisters; | But, the sudden crack of whips, | Startling him, he snarled; | And turned with lashing tail, | Crashing through dense brushwood. | When, once, again we came unto a clearing, | The night was near its noon: | And all the vales that lay before us | Were filled with moving, moonlit mists, | That seemed phantasmal waters | Of that enchanted world, | Where we, in dreams, sail over still lagoons, | Throughout eternal night, | And under unknown stars. | Still, on we fared, unresting, | Until the low moon paled; | When, halting on a mountain-spur, | We first looked down on Babylon, | Far in the dreaming West, | A cluster of dim towers, | Scarce visible to wearied eyes. | We camped within a sheltering cedar-grove; | And all the day, beneath the level boughs, | Upon the agelong-bedded needles lay, | Half-slumbering, with fleeting, fretful dreams | That could not quite forget the chafing cords, | That held our arms in aching numbness: | But, ere the noon, in sounder sleep I sank, | Dreaming I floated on a still, deep pool, | Beneath dark, overhanging branches; | And seemed to feel upon my cheek | The cool caress of waters; | While, far above me, through the night of trees, | Noon glimmered faintly as the glint of stars. | As thus I lay, in indolent ecstasy, | O'er me, suddenly, the waters | Curved, and I was dragged, | Down and down, | Through gurgling deeps | Of swirling, drowning darkness... | When I awoke in terror; | And strove to sit upright; | But, tautly, with a jerk, | The thongs that held me to my brothers, | Dragged me back to earth. | Awhile I lay, with staring eyes, awake, | Watching a big, grey spider, crouched overhead, | In ambush 'neath a twig, beside her web, | Oft sallying out, to bind yet more securely, | The half-entangled flies. | And then, once more, I slumbered; | And dreamed a face leant over me, | More fair than any face | My waking eyes had ever looked upon. | Its beauty burned above me, | Not dusky like my sisters' faces, | But pale as the wan moon, | Reflected in a flood | Of darkly flowing waters, | Or as the creaming froth, | That, born amid the thunder of the fall, | Floats on the river's bosom in the sunshine, | Bubble after bubble, | Perishing in air. | So, a moment, over me, | With frail and fleeting glimmer | Of strange elusive, evanescent light, | The holy vision hovered. | And yet, whenever, with a fervent longing, | I sought to look into the darkling eyes, | The face would fade from me, | As foam caught in an eddy: | Until, at last, I wakened, | And, wondering, saw a pale star gleaming | Betwixt the cedar-branches. | And soon our captors stirred: | And we arose, to see | The walls and towers of Babylon, dark | Against the clear rose of the afterglow, | Already in the surge of shadows caught, | As night, beneath us, slowly Westward swept, | Flooding the dreaming plain that lay before us, | Vast, limitless, bewildering, | And strange to mountain-eyes. | As down the slope we went, | And when, at last, we left behind | The hills and singing waters, | A vague, oppressive fear | Of those dim, silent leagues of level land, | Fell on me; and I almost seemed | To bear upon my shoulders | The vaster dome of overwhelming night; | And, trembling like a child, | I looked askance at my two captors, | As they rode on in heedless silence, | Their swarthy faces sharp | Against the lucent sky. | And then, once more, | The old, familiar watchfires of the stars | Brought courage to my bosom; | And the young moon's brilliant horn | Was exalted in the sky: | And soon, the glooming wilderness | Awoke with glittering waters, | As a friendly wind sang unto me | Among the swaying reeds: | While, cloud on cloud, | The snowy flocks of pelican | Before our coming rose; | And, as they swerved to Southward, | The moonlight shivered off their flashing pinions. | So, on we marched, till dawn, across the plain; | And, on and on, | Beneath the waxing moon, | Each night we travelled Westward; | Until, at last, we halted | By the broad dull-gleaming flood | Of mighty, roaring Tigris; | And aroused from midnight slumber | The surly, grumbling ferrymen, | And crossed the swollen waters | Upon the great, skin rafts: | Then on again we fared, | Until the far, dim towers soared in the dawnlight | And we encamped beside a stream, | Beneath dry, rustling palms. | And heavily I slumbered: | And only wakened once, at noon, | When, lifting up my head, | I saw the towers of Babylon, burning blue, | Far off, in the blind heat: | And slept again, till sunset, | When we took our Westward course | Along the low bank of a broad canal, | That glimmered wanly 'neath a moonless sky. | Higher, and higher still, | As we drew slowly nearer, | Arose the vasty walls and serried towers, | That seemed to thrust among the stars, | And on embattled summits bear the night, | Unbowed beneath their burden, | As easily as, with unruffled brows, | And limber, upright bodies, | The village-daughters carry | At eve the brimming pitchers, | Poised upon their heads. | And when, above us, the wide-looming walls | Shut out the Western stars; | Beneath their shade, at midnight, we encamped, | To await till dawn should open | The city gates for us. | That night we did not sleep, | But, crouched upon the ground, | We watched the moon rise over Babylon, | Till, far behind us, o'er the glittering waste, | Was flung the wall's huge shadow, | And the moving shades of sentries, | Who, unseen above our heads, | Paced through the night incessantly. | Thus long we sat, hushed with awed expectation, | And gazing o'er the plain that we had travelled, | As, gradually, the climbing moon, | Escaping from the clustering towers, | Revealed far-gleaming waters, | And the sharp, shrill cry of owls, | Sweeping by on noiseless plumes, | Assailed the vasty silence, | Shivering off like darts | From some impenetrable shield. | And, as we waited, | Sometimes, fearfully, | I gazed up those stupendous, soaring walls | Of that great, slumbering city, wondering | What doom behind the bastioned ramparts slept, | What destiny, beneath the brooding night, | Awaited me beyond the brazen gates. | But, naught the blind, indifferent stars revealed, | Though towards the long night's ending, | Half-dazed with gazing up that aching height, | A drowsiness fell over me, | And in a restless waking-trance I lay, | Dreaming that Life and Death before me stood. | And, as each thrust towards me a shrouded cup, | Implacable silence bade me choose and drink. | But, as I stretched a blind, uncertain hand | To take the cup of death, | I wakened, and dawn trembled, | At last, beyond the Eastern hills, | And, star by star, night failed; | And eagerly the sun leapt up the sky, | And, as his flashing rays | Smote kindling towers and flaming gates of brass, | Across the reedy moat | A clattering drawbridge fell, | And wide the glittering portals slowly swung: | And there came streaming out in slow procession | A sleepy caravan of slouching camels, | Groaning and grumbling as they strode along | Beneath their mountainous burdens, | Upon whose swaying summits, | Impassively, the blue-robed merchants sat. | They passed us slowly by, | And then we took the bridge, | And, while our captors parleyed with the guards, | Who stood, on either hand, | With naked swords, | I turned my head, | And saw for the last time, far Eastward, | The cold, snow-brilliant peaks, | Beyond my dim, blue, native hills. | And, as I looked, my thoughts flew homeward, | And I, one dreaming moment, | Stood by my mourning mother in the cavern | Of desolation, looking on the dead. | And then, between the brazen gate-posts, | And underneath the brazen lintel, | At last we entered Babylon. | Before us, yet another wall arose, | And, turning sharply | Down a narrow way, | The living breath of heaven seemed shut from us | As though beneath the beetling crags | Of some deep mountain-gorge-- | By cliffs of wall, on either hand, | That soared up to the narrow sky, | Which with dim lustre lit | The shimmering surface of enamelled brick, | Whereon, through giant groves, | Blue-coated hunters chased the boar, | Or 'loosed red-tasselled falcon | After flying crane. | But soon we reached another gate, | Sword-guarded, and we entered, | And plunged into the traffic | Of clamorous merchantmen, | Speeding their business ere the heat of day. | And as we jostled, slowly, | Through bewildering bazaars, | The porters and the idler wayfarers | All turned to look upon our shame, | With cold, unpitying eyes, | And indolent, gaping mouths, | Or jested with our captors, | Until we left the busier thoroughfares, | And walked through groves of cypress and of ilex, | Where not a sound or rumour troubled | The silence of the dark-plumed boughs | And glimmering deeps of peace, | Save only the cool spurt of waters | That, from a myriad unseen jets, | Fretted the crystal airs of morning, | And fell in frolic showers | Of twinkling, rainbow drops, | That plashed in unseen basins; | And through the blaze of almond-orchards, | Tremulous with blossom | That flickered in a rosy, silken snow | Of falling petals over us, | And wreathed about our feet | In soft and scented drifts; | Beneath pomegranate trees in young, green leaf, | And through vast gardens, glowing with strange flowers, | Such as no April kindled into bloom | Among the valleys of my native hills. | We came unto a court of many fountains, | Where, leaping off their jaded mules, | Our captors loosed the thongs that held us, | But left our wrists still bound. | And one with great clay pitchers came, | And over our hot bodies, travel-stained, | Poured out cool, cleansing waters | In a gurgling, crystal stream, | And flung coarse robes of indigo | About our naked shoulders. | And here we left behind us | The maidens and the younger boys, | And passing through a gateway, | Came out upon a busy wharf, | Where, southward, midway through the city, | The broad Euphrates flows, | His dark flood thronged with merchant-dhows, | And fishing-boats of reed and bitumen, | Piled high with glistering barbel, freshly-caught; | And foreign craft, with many-coloured sails, | And laden deep with precious merchandise, | That, over wide, bewildering waters, | Across the perilous world, | The adventurous, dark-bearded mariners, | Who swear by unknown gods in alien tongues, | Bring ever to the gates of Babylon. | We crossed the drawbridge, round whose granite piers | Swirled strong, Spring-swollen waters, | Loud and tawny, | And, through great brazen portals, | Passed within the palace gates, | When first I saw afar the hanging-gardens, | Arch on arch, | And tier on tier, | Against a glowing sky. | Two strapping Nubians, like young giants | Hewn from blue-black marble | By some immortal hand in immemorial ages, | Led us slowly onward. | The dappled pard-skins, slung across their shoulders, | Scarcely hid the ox-like thews, | Beneath the dark skin rippling, | As they strode along before us. | Through courts of alabaster, | And painted corridors, | And chambers fair with flowery tapestries | They led us, wondering, till at last we came | Into a vast, dim hall of glimmering gold, | The end of all our journeying. | And, as we halted on the threshold, | My eyes could see but little for a moment, | In the dusky, heavy air, | Through the ceaseless cloud of incense, | Rising from the smouldering braziers | To the gold, grey-clouded dome, | Tingling strangely in my nostrils, | As I came from morning airs; | Then slowly filling them with drowsy fume, | When, looking up with half-dazed eyes, | I saw the King upon his golden throne: | And through my body | Raged rebellious blood, | In baffled riot beating | At my corded wrists, | As if to burst the galling bonds, | That I might hurl that lean, swart face, | So idly turning towards us, | With thin curled lips, | And cold, incurious eyes, | To headlong death-- | Yea! even though I tumbled | The towers of Babylon round about my head. | And, when our captors bowed their foreheads low, | Obsequious to the throne, | I stood upright, | And gazed my loathing on that listless form-- | The gay, embroidered robe, | The golden cap, that prankt the crispèd locks, | The short, square beard, new-oiled and barbered-- | But, in a flash, | A heavy blow | Fell on my head, | And struck me to my knees | Before the sleek, indifferent king. | And then, on either hand, | With gripping palms upon my shoulders set, | The Nubians towered above me | Like mighty men of stone. | And savagely I struggled, | Half-stunned, to rise again; | When, as I vainly battled | In their unrelenting clutch, | My eyes lit for the first time on the Queen, | Who sat upon the daïs, by her lord | Half-shadowed, on a throne of ivory, | And all the hate died in me, as I saw | The face that hovered over me in dream, | When I had slept beneath the low-boughed cedar: | The moon-pale brows, o'er which the clustered hair | Hung like the smoke of torches, ruddy-gold, | Against a canopy of peacock plumes: | The deep brown, burning eyes, | From which the soul looked on me in fierce pity. | And, as I gazed on that exultant beauty, | The hunter and the slayer of men | Was slain within me instantly, | And I forgot the mountains and my home; | My desolate mother, and my father's death; | My captive sisters ... and the thronèd King! | I was as one, that moment, | New-born into the world | Full-limbed and thewed, | Yet, with the wondering heart | Of earth-bewildered childhood. | And, unto me, it seemed | That, as the Queen looked down on me, | There stole into her eyes | Some dim remembrance of old dreams, | That in their brown depths flickered | With strange, elusive light, | Like stars that tremble in still forest-pools. | One spake-- | I scarce knew whom, nor cared-- | And bade me choose, | Before the throne, | Between a life of slavery, | Or merciful, swift death-- | Death, that but a moment since, | I would have dragged, exulting, on me-- | And with my eyes still set on the Queen's face, | I answered: | "I will serve": | And scarcely heeded that my wrists were loosed. | And, huddled in a stifling hut, | That night, among my fellows, | I could not sleep at all: | But gazed, wild-eyed, till dawn upon that face, | Which hovered o'er me, like the moon of dreams; | And seemed to draw the wandering tides of life | In one vast wave, which ever strove | To climb the heavens wherein she moved, | That it might break in triumphing foam about her. | Not then, nor ever afterwards, | Was I a slave, among my fellow-slaves, | But one, who, with mean drudgery, | And daily penance serves | Before a holy altar, | That, sometimes, as he labours, his glad eyes | May catch a gleam of the immortal light | Within the secret shrine; | Yea! and, maybe, shall look, one day, with trembling, | On the bright-haired, imperishable god. | And, even when, day after day, | I bore the big reed-baskets, laden | With wet clay, digged beyond the Western moat, | Although I seemed to tread, | As treads the ox that turns the water-wheel, | A blindfold round of servitude, | My quenchless vision ever burned before me: | And when, in after days, I fed | The roaring oven-furnaces; | And toiled by them through sweltering days, | Though over me, at times, would come | Great longing for the hill-tops, | And the noise of torrent-waters: | Or when, more skilled, I moulded | The damp clay into bricks; | And spread the colour and the glaze; | And in strength-giving heat of glowing kilns, | I baked them durable, | Clean-shaped, and meet for service: | My vision flamed yet brighter; | And unto me it seemed | As if my gross and useless clay were burned | In a white ecstasy of lustral fire, | That, in the fashioning of the house of love, | I might serve perfectly the builder's need. | Thus, many months, I laboured; | Till, one day, at the noontide hour of rest, | I lay; and with a sharpened reed-- | As temple-scribes write down the holy lore | On tablets of wet clay-- | On the moist earth beside me, | I limned a young fawn, cropping | A bunch of tender, overhanging leaves. | And, as I slowly drew, | I dreamt a little sadly of the days, | When I, too, roamed, untethered, | And drinking in, unquestioning, | The sunshine and the air, | And all the rapture of the earth that turns, | New every morning to the wondering sun, | Refashioned in still nights of starry dews: | But one, the while, unseen of me, | Watched my unconscious hand, approving: | And I was set, next morning, | Among the craftsmen, who so deftly limned | The hunts and battles for the palace walls. | And, happily, with them I lived | A life of loving labour, for each line | Flowed from the knowledge of my heart: | I drew the startled ostrich | Fleeing from the far-flung noose: | The brindled lynx; the onaga | In dewy-plashing flight; | The bristling boar, at bay, | Crouched in a deadly ring of threatening spears, | With streaming nostrils, and red eyes ablaze; | The striped hyæna; the gaunt, green-eyed wolf; | The skulking jackal; the grey, brush-tailed fox; | The hunting leopard and the antelope, | In mid-chase tense, | With every thew astrain; | The dappled panther; the brown-eyed gazelle, | Butting with black horns through the tangled brake | The nimble hare, alert, with pricked-up ears; | The tiger, crouched, with yellow eyes afire; | The shaggy mountain-goat, | Perched on the utmost crag, | Against the afterglow of lucent ruby, | Or, poised with bunching hoofs | In mid-spring over a dark, yawning chasm; | Or the black stallion, with his tameless troop, | Fording a mountain-river in the dawn. | And, sometimes, as we toiled, | A terrible fleeting rapture | Would come upon me, when the Queen | Passed by us with her maidens; | Or paused, a moment, gazing, | With tranced and kindling eyes upon our labours: | But never did I dare, at any time, | To lift my eyes to hers, | And look, as soul on soul, | As on the day her beauty brought to birth | The strange new life within me. | In silence she would ever leave us; | And ever with her passing perished | The light and colour of my work; | So that my heart failed, daunted by that glimpse | Of the ever-living beauty. | And, sometimes, I would carve in ruddy teak, | Or ivory, from the Indian merchants bought, | Or in the rare, black basalt, little beasts | To please the idle fancies of the King; | Or model in wet clay, and cast in bronze, | Great bulls and lions for the palace-courts; | Or carve him seals of lapis-lazuli, | Of jasper, amethyst and serpentine, | Chalcedony--carnelian, chrysoprase, | Agate, sardonyx, and chalcedonyx-- | Green jade, and alabaster; | Or cut in stones that flashed and flickered | Like a glancing kingfisher, | Or, in the sun-filled amber, | The kite with broad wings spread, | Or little fluttering doves that pecked | A golden bunch of dates: | And then of these in settings of fine gold | Made fillets, rings and ear-rings. | Thus, one day, | Dreaming, as ever, of the Queen, | I wrought a golden serpent for her hair: | And when I brought it to the King, next morn, | Where he sat brooding over chess, | He bade me bear it to the Queen, myself, | And so, I went unto her, where she sat, | Among her singing maidens, at the loom, | Weaving a silken web of Tyrian dye. | I laid the trinket at her feet, in silence: | And she arose, and set it in her hair, | Whose living lustre far outshone | The cold, dead metal I had fashioned, | As she stood before me, dreaming, | In her robe of flowing blue; | Then looked a moment on me with kind eyes. | And though she spoke no word, | I turned, and fled, in trembling, | Before the light that shivered through me, | And struck my soul with shuddering ecstasy: | And, still, through many days, | Although I did not look again | Upon those dreaming eyes, | Their visionary light | Within my soul, revealed eternity. | Thus, have the mortal years | Flowed onward to the perfect end-- | This day of days, | That never night shall quench, | Nor darkness vanquish: | And, at dawn, | I die. | And yet, this morning, as I slowly climbed | The steep, ascending stages | That lead up to the hanging-gardens-- | Where, tier on tier, | The great brick arches bore | Their April wealth of blossoms, | Plumed with palm and dusky cypress-- | I little knew that I | Who came to carve a garland | Round a fountain's porphry basin, | Should scale so soon the utmost peak of life. | Throughout the morn I toiled, | Until an hour ere noon-- | For no one, save the King and Queen, | May walk in those high gardens, after midday-- | When, underneath a cypress shade, | I paused, a moment, resting; | And looking down upon the basking city, | Beneath me slumbering deeply-- | Garden on garden glowing, grove on grove, | Like some green fabric, shot with myriad hues, | And chequered with white clusters of flat roofs, | Aquiver in clear heat: | And then I gazed up through the aching azure, | At the restless kites that hover | Ever over Babylon: | And, as I watched one broad-winged bird that hung | Above the seven-coloured pyramid | Of Bel's great temple, | With wide pinions spread, | As though it kept eternal vigil over | The golden image in the golden shrine, | I thought of eagles poised | Above the peaks of glittering snows, | Beyond the Eastern plains. | Half-dreaming, thus, I lay, | Lulled by the tinkling waters, | Till, unawares, sleep slowly overcame me; | And noonday drifted by: | And still, I slept, unheeding: | And, in my sleep, | I looked on Beauty in a quiet place | Of forest gloom and immemorial dream: | When, something rousing me from slumber, | With waking eyes that yet seemed dream-enchanted, | I looked upon the Queen, | Where, in a secret close, | Set thickly round with screens of yew and ilex, | She stood upon the dark, broad brim | Of a wide granite basin, gazing down, | With dreaming eyes, into the glooming cool, | Unraimented, save of the flickering gleam, | Reflected from the lucent waters, | That flowed before her silently: | And slowly, from her feet, | The cold light rippled up her body, till, | Entangled in the meshes of her hair, | It flooded the calm rapture of her face: | When, dreaming still, she lifted up her eyes, | Unseeing; and I looked upon her soul, | Unveiled, in naked immortality, | Untrammelled by the trappings of brief time, | And cloaks of circumstance. | How long I looked upon the perfect beauty, | I cannot tell-- | Each moment, flowing to eternity, | Bearing me further from time's narrow shores; | Though, yet, a little while, | From those unshadowed deeps time sought to hold me. | Suddenly, I felt | A ghostly arrow pierce my life; | And I leapt up, and turning, | I saw the King beside me, | With steely, glittering eyes | Shooting barbed anger, | Though he coldly spake, | With evil, curling lips: | "Slave, thou art dead!" | And yet I did not quail: | But, looking 'twixt his brows, | I answered: and he blenched before my words: | "Nay! I have seen: | "And am newborn, a King!" | And then his craven fingers | Went quaking to his wagging beard, | As if he felt my clutch upon his throat: | Yet, though, with one quick blow, | I might have hurled him down to death, | I never stirred: | And, eyeing me, he summoned | The negro-eunuchs, who kept watch below: | But I, ere they could spring up the first stage, | Went forth to meet them; | And they bound my wrists. | And so, down from the hills, my life has flowed, | Until, at fullest flood, it meets the sea. | With calm and unregretful heart, I wait | Till dawn shall loose the arrow from the bow. | I, who, with eager, faltering hand have sought | To fashion a little beauty, in the end, | Have looked on the perfect beauty, and I die-- | Even as the priest, who, in the heart of night, | Trembling before the thunder-riven shrine, | Looks on the face of God, and perishes. | I die... | And yet, maybe, when earth lies heavily | Upon the time-o'ertoppled towers, | And tumbled walls, and broken gates of brass; | And the winds whisper one another: | "Where, Oh! where is Babylon?" | In the dim underworld of dreaming shades, | My soul shall seek out beauty | And look, once more, | Upon the unveiled vision... | And not die. | Night passes: and already in the court, | Amid the plash of fountains, | There sounds the pad of naked feet approaching. | With slow, deliberate pace, | As though they trod out all my perished years, | The Nubians come, to lead me out to death. | Slowly the great door opens; | And clearer comes the call of waters; | Cool airs are on my brow ... | Lo! ... in the East, the dawn. .. vspace:: 3 .. class:: center small LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED. .. vspace:: 6 .. pgfooter::