THE CABALISTIC WORDS.
[Since the following poem was written, we have had from the President the pledge that the “cabalistic words” shall be uttered by him on the first of January, 1863, unless the rebellion is abandoned before that time. Thanks and honor to the President for the promise! But we shall not look for the magical operation of the words till they are uttered without reservation or qualification.]
Hear, O Commander of the Faithful, hear
A legend trite to many a childish ear;
But scorn it not, nor let its teaching
fail,
Although familiar as a nursery tale.
Cassim the Covetous, whose god was gold,
Once, by strange chance, found riches
manifold
Hid in a rocky cavern, where a band
Of robbers who were ravaging the land
Kept their bright spoils. Cassim
had learnt the spell
By which the dazzling heaps were guarded
well.
Two cabalistic words he speaks, and, lo!
The door flies open: what a golden
glow!
He enters,—speaks the words
of power once more,
And swift upon him clangs the ponderous
door.
Croesus! what joy to eyes that know their
worth!
Huge bags of gold and diamonds on the
earth!
Here piles of ingots, there a glistening
heap
Of coins that all their minted lustre
keep.
Cassim is ravished at the wondrous sight,
And rubs his hands with ever new delight;
Absorbed in gazing, lets the hours go
by,
Nor can enough indulge his gloating eye.
He chooses what he can to bear away,
And then reluctant seeks the outer day.
The words,—what are
they,—those that ope the door?
He falters,—loses all so plain
before;—
Tries this word,—that,—in
vain!—he cannot speak
The magic sentence;—he grows
faint and weak,—
Spurns the base gold, cause of his wild
despair;—
What if the thieves should come and find
him there?—
Hark! they are coming!—yes,
they come!—they shout
The precious words;—ah, now
they end his doubt!—
Too late he hears; in vain he tries to
fly;
Trembling he sinks upon his knees—to
die!
Commander of the Faithful! dark the strait
Thy people stand in, in this hour of fate;
Thick walls of gloom and doubt have shut
them in;
They grope beneath the ban of one great
sin.
Yet there are two short words whose potent
spell
Shall burst with thunder-crash these gates
of hell,
Open a vista to celestial light,
Lead us to peace through the eternal Right.
Oh, speak those words, those saving words
of power,
In this most pregnant, this supremest
hour,—
Words writ in martyr blood, as all may
see!—
Commander of the Faithful, say, BE FREE!
* * * * *