A Legend of Old Persia and Other Poems | Page 3

Alfred Lord Tennyson
young lord, murmured,?As he feasted in the taverns,?"It is time to take my Father,?I must bear him to the Caverns."
So he took his long-maned pony,?Her who wore the silver shoes,?Galloped thro' the crowded highways?Like one with no time to lose.?Purpose in his warning outcry?(Was he not the next of kin?)?Till he reached his palace gateway,?Flung the rein and fled within,?Chose with care a wicker basket?Very strong and deep and wide,?Laying shawls of costliest texture?And an eider quilt inside.
Underneath the spreading cedar,?In an arbour newly built,?Found Hasan his ancient person,?Put him underneath the quilt,?Mounted then his long-maned pony?With the basket on his arm,?Carrying it very firmly?Lest his father might take harm.?Galloped thro' the crowded highway,?Passing by the Street of Taverns,?Fourteen leagues across the desert?Till he came unto the Caverns.
Fastened then his long-maned pony?To a ring-post at the mouth?(Scores and scores of ring-posts were there?Where the Caverns faced the South)?Plunged within the long wide gallery?Tunnelled 'neath the rocky roof,?With a lantern light exploring?All the dark which lay aloof,?Treading swiftly, treading surely,?With the basket on his arm,?Carrying it very firmly?Lest his father might take harm.
Till he came a byway unto?Fashioned from another way,?And a niche seen at the summit?Of a guiding lantern ray.?Lifted then the basket gently,?Poised, and placed it in the niche,?Saying "Farewell, ancient father,?'Tis the custom" ... after which?Bowed his head before his father?Thrice, and swiftly turned to go,?Knowing that it was the custom,?Thinking it was better so.
Suddenly he heard a droning,?Like a gnat's small plaintive lay,?Somewhere in the dark behind him?Where the "Ancient Persons" lay,?Heard a little ghostly twitter?Like a voice addressing him,?Turned and saw his father staring?Just above the basket rim,?Staring at Hasan, his strong son,?With his filmy red-rimmed eyes,?"What's ado, Oh! ancient father?"?Cried Hasan in great surprise.
"Son," replied the ancient person,?"Tho' a miser is disgraced,?Even in a wealthy household?Monstrous is the crime of waste,?Strong and shapely is the basket?Much hath held and more will take;?If you leave it in the Caverns?Won't it be a great mistake??So, for once, let custom perish....?Son, 'tis I, your father, ask it,?Lift me out and lay me gently?On the rock and ... take our basket."
Oh! the young lord's wild amazement?As he heard that tiny hum;?Turned the lantern light behind him?Stricken with amazement dumb.?Oh! the young lord's vast confusion?As its meaning gave a flicker--?Oh! the mild iconoclastic?Staring o'er the edge of wicker.?Staring--staring--simply staring?With his filmy red-rimmed eyes--?Down Hasan his father lifted?Silent still in strange surmise.
Never faster had prince ridden?From the place of Persian devils,?Where its huge and inky bastions?Frowned across the golden levels;?Nor before had faster travelled?Scion of the equine brood?Than that day, that day of portent,?Galloped she the silver-shoed.?Saw Hasan the meaning clearly?And a prophet (so they said)?After sunset thro' the taverns?Loud proclaimed the custom dead.
This a legend of old Persia?Of an earlier happier day?Of a happy happy people--?How they ended none can say.
The Enchanted Gipsy.
"Gilda, Gilda, my ragged child,?Where have you been,?In the lane, the green lane, or the heather,?My little queen?"
"Honey mother, sweet little mother,?Oh! my old grey mummy,?It's the blood of berries on my skirt?Makes me look rummy."
"There is no juice on your coral lips,?Your amber eyes are wild,?And why do you dance like an angry jay,?My fairy child?"
"I can tell, I can tell,?Oh! my delicate mam,?I dance to the tune of a blue-bell,?Which told me what I am."
"Gilda, Gilda, my lovely child,?Say how it spoke,?There is nothing well in a flower's spell?On one of our folk."
"Oh! my pet, my beautiful heart,?Oh! my cunning mummy,?My cousin the sun and the wind have begun,?That's why I look rummy."
"I have known one since I have begun,?I have known a dozen,?But never I knew a girl was true?Who called _them_ cousin."
"Oh! my mam, my delicate mam,?Do not scold your daughter,?I only went to the Witch's pool?And looked in the water."
"Oh! my dove, my beautiful elf,?Was the water clear as heaven,?Did you weave a crown of flowers for yourself,?In the magic of even?"
"Oh! my mother, my honey mother,?The water was heaven-clear,?I wove a crown of marigolds....?But why do you look so queer?"
"Oh! my girl, my pitiful girl,?Good-bye to your happy hours,?The Curse of the Pool is on you....?Your ways are not ours."
The Roof of the World.
"Ere the first blush of morning's rose?Had reddened the eternal snows,?I plunged the pines among,?And came down thro' the forest sons?In their deep-ranked battalions?With practised steps and strong.
"Then heard I from the plateau rock?A lowing cow and a crowing cock--?Thin sounds in upper air.?And far below at the valley's end?I saw the morning smoke ascend?That showed me men were there.
"Ho! you lads, arouse, arouse!?He is descended to your house?Of whom wild legend ran.?On the roof of the world I dwelt five year,?Go, tell your master I am here?To be his serving-man.
"Ho! all you folk, I climbed above?The boundaries of hate and love.?Ho! such an one was I--?The wind it
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