And for twice a thousand years,
Floating through the radiant ether,
Lived the happy glendoveers,
Of the other, jealous neither,—
Sapphire naught without the red,
Ruby still by blue bested.
But when weary of their life,
They came down to earth at even—
Purple husband, purple wife—
From the upper deeps of heaven,
And reclined upon the grass,
That their little lives might pass.
Wing to wing and arms enwreathed,
Sank they from their life’s long
dreaming;—
Into earth their souls they breathed;
But when morning’s light was streaming,
All their joys and sweet regrets
Bloomed in banks of violets!
As from its dimpled fountain, at its own
capricious will,
Each step a note of music, and each fall
and flash a thrill,
The rill goes singing to the meadow levels
and is still,
So fell from Nourmahal her song upon the
captive sense;
It dashed in spray against the throne,
it tinkled through the tents,
And died at last among the flowery banks
of recompense;
For when great Selim marked her fire,
and read her riddle well,
And watched her from the flushing to the
fading of the spell,
He sprang forgetful, from his seat, and
caught her as she fell.
He raised her in his tender arms; he bore
her to his throne:
“No more, oh! Nourmahal, my
wife, no more I sit alone;
And the future for the dreary past shall
royally atone!”
He called to him the princes and the nobles
of the land,
Then took the signet-ring from his, and
placed it on her hand,
And bade them honor as his own, fair Nourmahal’s
command.
And on the minted silver that his largess
scattered wide,
And on the gold of commerce, till the
mighty Selim died,
Her name and his in shining boss stood
equal, side by side.
XXII.
The opening of the wondrous tome
Was like the opening of a door
Into a vast and pictured dome,
Crowded, from vaulted roof to floor,
With secrets of her life and home.
To be like Philip was to be
Another Philip—only less!
To win his wit in full degree
Would bear to him but nothingness,
From one no wiser grown than he!
If blue and red in Hindostan
Were blue and red at home, she knew
That she—a woman, he—a
man,
Could never wear the royal hue
Till blue and red together ran
In complement of each to each;
She might not tint his life at all
By learning wisdom he could teach;
So what she gave, though poor and small,
Should be of that beyond his reach.
Where Philip fed, she would not feed;
Where Philip walked, she would not go;
The books he read she would not read,
But live her separate life, and, so,
Have sole supplies to meet his need.