Page:Poems Jackson.djvu/308

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220
POEMS.
Comes out to meet and honor me;
The glittering ranks spread royally
Far as I walk. When hasty greed
Tramples it down for food and seed,
I, with a certain veiled delight,
Hear half the crop is lost by blight.
Letter of law these may fulfil,
Plant where they like, slay what they will,
Count up their gains and make them great;
Nevertheless, the whole estate
Always belongs to me and mine.
We are the only royal line.
And though I have no title-deed
My tenants pay me loyal heed
When our sweet fields I wander by
To see what strangers occupy.


THE STORY OF BOON.[1]
IT haunts my thoughts morn, night, and noon,
The story of the woman, Boon,—
Haunts me like restless ghost, until
I give myself to do its will;
Cries voiceless, yet as voices cry,—
"O singer, can this tale pass by
Untold by thee? Thy heart is wrung
In vain, if dies the song unsung."

  1. This story of Boon is strictly true. It is told by Mrs. Leonowens, the English Governess at the Siamese court. She took it down from Choy's own lips.