Jump to content

Page:Quatrains of Omar Khayyam (tr. Whinfield, 1883).djvu/258

From Wikisource
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
202
THE QUATRAINS OF

300.

My love shone forth, and I was overcome,
My heart was speaking, but my tongue was dumb;
    Beside the water-brooks I died of thirst.
Was ever known so strange a martyrdom?


301.

Give me my cup in hand, and sing a glee
In concert with the bulbuls' symphony;
    Wine would not gurgle as it leaves the flask,
If drinking mute were right for thee and me!


302.

The "Truth" will not be shown to lofty thought,
Nor yet with lavished gold may it be bought;
    But, if you yield your life for fifty years,
From words to "states" you may perchance be brought.


300.   N.   Dil rubáye, 'that well-known charmer.'   Lumsden, ii. 142.   Pur sukhan.   See note on No. 227.

301.   C. L. N. A. I. J.