spread before us,?All the miracles shed o'er us,?Echoes of the voice above,?Tokens of a Father's love."
XX
While of heaven his heart indited,?And his dark eyes swept the crowd,?Sudden on the maid they lighted,?Mild and haughty, meek and proud.
Rapid as the flash of sabre,?Strong as giant's toss of caber,?Sure as victor's grasp of goal,?Came the love-stroke through his soul
Gently she, her eyes recalling,?Felt that Heaven had touched their flight,?Peeped again, through lashes falling,?Blushed, and shrank, and shunned the light
XXI
Ah, what booteth sweet illusion,?Fluttering glance, and soft suffusion,?Bliss unknown, but felt in sighs,?Breast, that shrinks at its own rise?
She, who is the Nile's devoted,?Courted with a watery smile;?Her betrothal duly noted?By the bridesmaid Crocodile!
So she bowed her forehead lowly,?Tightened her tiara holy;?And, with every sigh suppressed,?Clasped her hands on passion's breast.
PART II
I
Twice the moon hath waxed and wasted,?Lavish of her dew-bright horn;?And the wheeling sun hath hasted?Fifty days, towards Capricorn.
Thebes, and all the Misric nation,?Float upon the inundation;?Each man shouts and laughs, before?Landing at his own house door.
There the good wife doth return it,?Grumbling, as she shows the dish,?Chervil, basil, chives, and burnet?Feed, instead of seasoning, fish.
II
Palm trees, grouped upon the highland,?Here and there make pleasant island;?On the bark some wag hath wrote--?"Who would fly, when he can float?"
Udder'd cows are standing--pensive,?Not belonging to that ilk;?How shall horn, or tail defensive,?Keep the water from their milk?
Lo, the black swan, paddling slowly,?Pintail ducks, and sheldrakes holy,?Nile-goose flaked, and herons gray,?Silver-voiced at fall of day!
III
Flood hath swallowed dikes and hedges,?Lately by Sesostris planned;?Till, like ropes, its matted edges?Quiver on the desert sand.
Then each farmer, brisk and mellow,?Graspeth by the hand his fellow;?And, as one gone labour-proof,?Shakes his head at the drowned shadoof
Soon the Nuphar comes, beguiling?Sedgy spears, and swords around,?Like that cradled infant smiling,?Whom, the royal maiden found.
IV
But the time of times foe wonder,?Is when ruddy sun goes under;?And the dusk throws, half afraid,?Silver shuttles of long shade.
Opens then a scene, the fairest?Ever burst on human view;?Once behold, and thou comparest?Nothing in the world thereto.
While the broad flood murmurs glistening?To the moon that hangeth listening--?Moon that looketh down the sky,?Like an aloe-bloom on high--
V
Sudden conch o'er the wave ringeth!?Ere the date-leaves cease to snake,?All, that hath existence, springeth?Into broad light, wide-awake.
As at a window of heaven thrown up,?All in a dazzling blaze are shown up,?Mellowing, ere our eyes avail,?To some soft enchanter's tale.
Every skiff a big ship seemeth,?Every bush with tall wings clad;?Every man his good brain deemeth?The only brain that is not mad.
VI
Hark! The pulse of measured rowing,?And the silver clarions blowing,?From the distant darkness, break?Into this illumined lake.
Tis Sesostris, lord of nations,?Victor of three continents,?Visiting the celebrations,?Priests, and pomps, and regiments.
Kings, from Indus, and Araxes,?Ister, and the Boreal axes,?Horsed his chariot to the waves,?Then embarked, his galley-slaves.
VII
Glittering stands the giant royal,?Four tall sons are at his back;?Twain, with their own corpses loyal,?Bridged the flames Pelusiac.
As he passeth, myriads bless him,?Glorious Monarch all confess him,?Sternly upright, to condone?No injustice, save his own.
He, well-pleased, his sceptre swingeth,?While his four sons strike the gong;?Till the sparkling water ringeth?Joy and laughter, joke and song.
VIII
Ah, but while loud merry-making?Sets the lights and shadows shaking,?While the mad world casts away?Every thought that is not gay,
Hath not earth, our sweet step-mother,?Very different scene hard by,?Tossing one, and trampling other,?Some to laugh, and some to sigh?
Where the fane of Hathor Iowereth,?And the black Myrike embowereth,?Weepeth one her life gone by;?Over young, oh death, to die!
IX
Nay, but lately she was yearning?To be quit of life's turmoil,?In the land of no returning,?Where all travel ends, and toil.
What temptations now entice her??What hath made the world seem nicer??Whence the charm, that strives anew?To prolong this last adieu?
Ah, her heart can understand it,?Though her tongue can ne'er explain:?Let yon granite Sphinx demand it--?Riddle, ever solved in vain.
X
No constraint of hands hath bound her,?Not a chain hath e'er been round her;?Silver star hath sealed her brow,?Holy as an Isis cow.
Free to wander where she listeth;?No immurement must defile?(So the ancient law insisteth)?This, the hallowed bride of Nile.
What recks Abraham's descendant?Idols, priests, and pomps attendant??And how long shall nature heed?What the stocks and stones decreed?
XI
"Fiendish superstitions hold thee?To a vile and hideous death.?Break their bonds; let love enfold thee;?Off, and fly with me;"--he saith.
"Off! while priests are cutting capers--?Priests of beetles, cats, and tapirs,?Brutes, who would thy beauty truck,?For an inch of yellow muck.
"Lo, my horse, _Pyropus_, yearneth?For the touch of thy light form;?Like the lightning, his eye burneth;?And his nostril, like the storm.
XII
"What are those unholy pagans??Can they ride? No more than Dagons.?Fishtails ne'er could sit a steed;?That belongs to Esau's seed.
"I will make thee Queen of far lands,?Flocks, and herds, and camel-trains,?Milk and honey, fruit and garlands,?Vines and venison, woods and wains.
"God is with us; He shall speed us;?Or (if this vile crew impede us)?Let some light into their brain,?By the sword of Tubal Cain."
XIII
"Nay,"
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