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Oriental Scenes, Dramatic Sketches and Tales/A Scene in the Doaab

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4471110Oriental Scenes, Dramatic Sketches and TalesA Scene in the Doaab1830Emma Roberts


ORIENTAL SCENES.




A SCENE IN THE DOAAB.

In tangled depths the jungles spread
    Around the solitary scene,
The lurking panther's sullen tread
    Marks the wild paths of the ravine;

Here too the fierce hyena prowls,
    Haunting the dark Jheel's broad lagoon,
And here, at eve, the wolf-cub howls,
    And famished jackalls bay the moon.

Its scorching breath the hot wind pours
    Along the arid waste; and loud,
The storm-fiend of the desert roars,
    When bursts the sable thunder-cloud,


A crumbling mosque—a ruined fort—
    Hastening alike to swift decay,
Where owls and vampire bats resort,
    And vultures hide them from the day,

Alone remain to tell the tale
    Of Moslem power, and Moslem pride,
When shouts of conquest filled the gale
    And swords in native blood were dyed.

They sleep—the slayer and the slain—
    A lowly grave the victor shares
With the weak slave who wore the chain
    None save a craven spirit wears.

Yet had the deeds which they have done
    Lived in the poet's deathless song,
These nameless spahis would have won
    All that to valour's hopes belong.


They brought their faith from distant lands,
    They reared the Moslem badge on high,
And swept away with reeking brands
    The reliques of idolatry.

Where'er they spread their prophet's creed
    The guilty rites of Brama fled;
No longer shrinking victims bleed,
    Nor sleeps the living with the dead.

The frantic shrieks of widowed brides
    From burning piles resound no more,
Nor Ganges' desecrated tides
    Bear human offerings from its shore.

Their wreaths have faded—lizards bask
    Upon the marble pavement, where,
'Twas erst the dark-eyed beauty's task
    To crown with flowers her raven hair.


Unheeded now the scorpion crawls,
    And snakes unscathed in silence glide,
Where once the bright Zenana's halls
    To woman's feet were sanctified.

No trace remains of those gay hours
    When lamps, in golden radiance bright,
Streamed o'er these now deserted towers
    The sunshine of their perfumed light.

The maiden's song, the anklet's bells
    So sweetly ringing o'er the floor,
And eyes as soft as the gazelle's
    Are heard, and seen, and felt no more.

Now all is silent; the wild cry
    Of savage beasts alone is heard,
Or wrathful tempest hurrying by,
    Or moanings of some desert bird.