How will the form of days grown pale
In golden dreams float softly
by,
Like some old legendary tale,
Before fond memory’s
moistened eye!
The boatman calls—go hence
in peace!
God bless you, wife and child,
and sire!
Bless all your fields with rich increase,
And crown each faithful heart’s
desire!
* * * * *
THE LION’S RIDE [41] (1834)
King of deserts reigns the lion; will
he through his realm go riding,
Down to the lagoon he paces, in the tall
sedge there lies hiding.
Where gazelles and camelopards drink,
he crouches by the shore;
Ominous, above the monster, moans the
quivering sycamore.
When, at dusk, the ruddy hearth-fires
in the Hottentot kraals are
glowing,
And the motley, changeful signals on the
Table Mountain growing
Dim and distant—when the Caffre
sweeps along the lone karroo—
When in the bush the antelope slumbers,
and beside the stream the gnu—
Lo! majestically stalking, yonder comes
the tall giraffe,
Hot with thirst, the gloomy waters of
the dull lagoon to quaff;
O’er the naked waste behold her,
with parched tongue, all panting
hasten—
Now she sucks the cool draught, kneeling,
from the stagnant, slimy basin.
Hark, a rustling in the sedges! with a
roar, the lion springs
On her back now. What a race-horse!
Say, in proudest stalls of kings,
Saw one ever richer housings than the
courser’s motley hide,
On whose back the tawny monarch of the
beasts tonight will ride?
Fixed his teeth are in the muscles of
the nape, with greedy strain;
Round the giant courser’s withers
waves the rider’s yellow mane.
With a hollow cry of anguish, leaps and
flies the tortured steed;
See her, how with skin of leopard she
combines the camel’s speed!
See, with lightly beating footsteps, how
she scours the moonlit plains!
From their sockets start the eyeballs;
from the torn and bleeding veins,
Fast the thick, black drops come trickling,
o’er the brown and dappled
neck,
And the flying beast’s heart-beatings
audible the stillness make.
Like the cloud, that, guiding Israel through
the land of Yemen, shone,
Like a spirit of the desert, like a phantom,
pale and wan,
O’er the desert’s sandy ocean,
like a waterspout at sea,
Whirls a yellow, cloudy column, tracking
them where’er they flee.
On their track the vulture follows, flapping,
croaking, through the air,
And the terrible hyena, plunderer of tombs,
is there;
Follows them the stealthy panther—Cape-town’s
folds have known him well;
Them their monarch’s dreadful pathway,
blood and sweat full plainly tell.
On his living throne, they, quaking, see
their ruler sitting there,
With sharp claw the painted cushion of
his seat they see him tear.
Restless the giraffe must bear him on,
till strength and life-blood fail
her;
Mastered by such daring rider, rearing,
plunging, naught avail her.