KHALED OF THE SEA
An Arabic Romance
An early work, conceived in twelve cantos with a
Prologue and Epilogue, found unrevised and incomplete.
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Prologue
Alnuman and the Peri
The
Story of Alnuman and the Emir
The
Companions of Alnuman 1
The
Companions of Alnuman 2
The
Companions of Alnuman 3
The
First Quest of the Sapphire Crown The Quest of the- Golden Snake Canto 7
The
Quest of the Marble Queen
The
Quest of the Snowbird
The
Second Quest of the Sapphire Crown The Journey of the Green Oasis Canto 11
The
Journey of the Irremeable Ocean
The
Journey of the Land without Pity The Arabian and the Caliph. Page-261 Prologue
Euphrates that through deserts must deliver The voices which of human daybreaks are
Into
the dim mysterious surge afar,
And
swum through giant waters and had heard Calling to God for prey, marked the vast wheel Of monstrous birds shadowing whole countries; he
From
singhal through the long infinity Where unknown winds their lonely tumult keep And he had lived with strong and pitiless men,
Nations
unhumanised by joy and pain, Silent he was, as one whom thoughts attend,
Distant
whom stiller hearts than ours befriend
Made
the mute echoes of his life rejoice;
Released
from trammelling affinities,1
Vainly
to win his marble mind to love. And the strong earth was blind with summer, forth The Arabian rode from great Bagdad and turned Into the desert. All around him burned -
1 Large as from commerce with infinities, Page-263 The imprisoned spirit of fire; above his head
The
sky was like a tyranny outspread,
The
Arabian unfeeling like a god. Pricked up his slender ears, swerved from the course And pawing stood the unwilling air, nor heard The guiding voice nor the familiar word. Whinnying with wrath he smote the desert sand And mocked the rein and raged at the command.
Then
raised the man his face and saw above Therefore I will not stay your gathering wings
Who
watch me from the air, you living things,
And
set swift footing on that fiery plain. His angry tremor ceased and bounding wrath Following
unbidden in the Arabian's path. Vanquishing through that luminous world and wide Page-264 Went a slow shadow, till his feet untired The fruit of all his labour long acquired.
Before
a mile complete he was aware
And
all her limbs were like a luminous dream,
A
tigress at her lovely feet reclined.
And
often with that splendour miscreated
Binding
the brilliant death or would increase Waking
the desert from its sleep with sound
Amazed
nor could the steely light attend Page-265
By
any smaller thing than death; and he
Blest
beyond expectation, scarce believes
"Thou
then art mine, after long labour mine,
Fairer
shall be thy feet on greensward than
Much
have I laboured; the resplendent face
1 royal Page-266 Sprinkling with earth's cool love the ruthless ground,
And
in my throat there was a desert's thirst Through the mad tempest for some human shore And fought with winds and seen vast Hell aflame
Down
in the nether flood till I became
Or
weakening tears making my heart a stone.
With
after-joys that spring from these; the face
And
hearts grown iron their soft masteries
Listened
with downcast lids arid a soft flush Page-267
She
laughed with happy lips most like a flute
Its
jewelled hood for spotted radiance praised, Experienced; but before the serpent sprang, Wrathful,
the Arabian seized the glittering neck
Grew
woman with a soft and rosy light
"Bright
fugitive, lovely wanderer with the tide, Thy dreadful guardians who have fenced thee round Are equalled, and thyself, sweet, though thou shame The winds with swiftness or like mounting flame Page-268 Strive all thy days in my imprisoning arms Couldst bum thyself no exit. With alarms Menace and shapes of death; call on the flood For thy deliverance on these sands to intrude
And
lead thee to its jealous waters rude;
Shall
stay and chastise and habituate thee Bought with hard pains from the reluctant wave, With pain ineffable bought and deep despair
And
passion of impracticable care." Her fair soft arm in one hand, the other clasping, Her smooth desired thighs, from that rude seat,
The
grey sun-blistered boulder most unmeet Arching its neck with joy and proud content. Great were the Arabian's labours; many seas He had passed and borne impossible miseries
And
battled with impracticable ills Till nature fainted. Yet too little was this
To
merit all the heaven now made his.
Her
snowy side was of his being a part; And all her hair streamed over him and the whiteness Of her was in his eyes and her soft brightness Page-269
A joy beneath his hands to his embrace Compelled their limbs together, and by their side
Pacing
the tigress checked her dangerous stride. Of
calm, a silence heard, or rich by noise
In
the mysterious moonlight; how they come
Resistless
arms beyond the long sea-beaches Page-270
Pearls unattainable a human brow
Been
mated with the sisters of the sea.
Making
the
weary
sands a rapture; long The sun toiled through the endless afternoon: But they paced always like a marvellous dream, And dreamlike in the eyes of man might seem Such magic vision (had human eyes been found In the sole desert void of sign or bound), - The horse that feared its dread companion not, The kingly man with brow of reaching thought And danger-hardened strength; fair as the morn,
The
radiant girl upon his saddle borne, Following with noiseless step the godlike pair. Nor when to Bagdad and its street they came,
Did
any eye behold. Only a name They rose, the mighty bolts they drew; loud jarred.
The
doors unhearing with deaf iron barred Whirling and kissed again with clamorous tongue;
Nor
in the streets was any step of man,
Setting
the night on fire; bright and rare
So
is the beautiful sea-stranger gone
Upon
the bounding waves, nor feel the sun. Page-271 When with those small beloved feet grew bright His lonely house, wealth like a sea swept through
Its
doors and as a dwelling of gods it grew
Costly
or fragrant upon earth or lives By
Indian or by Syrian art refined Regal
Bokhara weaves or Samarcand, And passionate Arab girls and strong-limbed youth
Of
Tartar maidens for his harem doors.
At
last has brought into the marble pride Other his life than theirs who never dreamed Beyond earth's ken, nor made in sun and breeze Their spirits great with shock of the strong seas, Nor fortified their hearts with pains sublime Nor wrestled with the bounds of space and time. Like common men he lived to whom the ray Of a new sun but brings another day Unmeaning, who in their own selves confined Know not the grandeur which the mightier mind
Inherits
when it makes the destinies rude
With
God's or hero's likeness is indued. An edge of flaming rapture was, that things
Beyond
all transitory imaginings Page-272 Than frail humanity had dared to feel before. Since too much joy man's heart can hardly bear And all too weak man's narrow senses were
For
raptures that eternal spirits attain Wed with the child of the unbounded sea. Page-273
CANTO
I
THE STORY OF ALMAlMUN1 AND THE
EMIR'S DAUGHTER
Now
in great Bagdad of the Abbasside
Whom
storm so long had tossed to storm, and grace These strengthen, these the mind as marble hard
Make
and as marble pure, which has not feared
And
each as
to
her
orb the sunflower burns
Brightened
but to illumine, kindled each
Of
the unseen? Must only she make moan?
That
to no alien house at the end has come
1 Name changed in MS. on this page Page-274
Reaches
its one unfailing nest at night. With the one possible home out of an universe, Makes simply happy there secure shall dwell, Feeling
that to be there is only well From
Koraish and the Abbasside he drew
About
his formidable name accursed Of midnight are more luminous there than birth
Of
day upon the ordinary earth. From Bagdad to the sea, were he not loth; The
leavbngs of his menials far exceed And since by thee this fair display was planned, O God, yet from the beggar's outstretched hand He guards his boundless trust ignobly well, Page-275 Just Lord, display to him the fires of Hell."
And
here another pressing from his eye "Richer his wealth than widest chambers hold, Not in the weary heaps of ingots told Entirely, nor the cloths Damascus yields, Nor what the seas give up, nor what the fields.
He
gathers ever with exhaustless hands: Through Balkh when to Caboul or Candahar The wains go groaning or the evening star Watches the pomp of the wide caravan
Intend
to provinces Arabian From
Balsora the ships that o’er the bar
Yemen's
far ports are with his ventures full; With joy the Malayan sea-robber hails His argosy and for his western sails The
Moorish pirates all the horizon scan
His
riches by that vast expenditure. When
Azrael shall smite his limbs to dust Which, lord and peasant, all must one day tread,
The
bitter sword that spans the nether hell, Page-276 Who quiet was from constancy to pain: "Curse him not either lest the Kazi find And God loose not the chains that he shall bind."
For
he indeed was mighty in the town,
Glanced
on the rash accuser; for his word
Well
did the sad
and
toiling peasant know.
Each
day a pomp, each night with music loud, Proscribed,
a heretic and Persian Between his golden house and Allah’s wall. (Incomplete) Page-277 |
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