“Oh, brightly bloom’d the
orange flow’r,
And fair the roses round;
And the fountain, in its marble bed,
Leapt up with a happy sound;
And stately, stately was the hall,
And rich the feast outspread;
But the Soldan of Bagdad sigh’d
full sore,
And never a word he said.
Never a word the Soldan said,
But many a tear let fall;
He had tried all the joys that life could
give,
And was weary of them all.
The Soldan lift up his heavy eye—
And to that garden fair,
A stranger enter’d with harp in
hand,
And with a winsome air;
Long locks of yellow molten gold
Hung over his cheek so brown,
And a red mantle of Venice silk
Fell from his shoulders down.
A weary wanderer he did seem,
Come from a distant land;
And over the harpstrings thoughtfully,
He moveth his cunning hand.
He opes his lips, and he poureth forth
Such a sweet stream of sound,
That the Soldan’s heart leaps up
in his breast,
And his eye he casts around.
‘Was never a voice,’ the Soldan
said,
’So sweet—nor
so blest a song;—
Sing on, kind minstrel,’ the Soldan
said,
‘I have been sad too
long.’
The minstrel sang, and soft and sweet
The Soldan’s tears fell
free;
‘Oh, tell me, thou minstrel dear,’
he said,
’What boon shall I give
to thee?
Oh, stay with me but a year and a day,
And sing sweet songs to me;
And whatever the boon, by Allah, I swear,
I will freely give it to thee.’
The minstrel stay’d a year and a
day,
And the Soldan loved him well;
’Now what is the boon thou askest
of me—
I prithee, dear minstrel,
tell.’
’A Christian knight in thy dungeon
pines,
And his hope is nearly o’er;
His freedom is the boon I ask—
Oh, open his prison door!’
The minstrel went—and no more
was seen;
And the Christian knight,
set free,
Found a stately ship, that bore him safe
Home to his own countrie.
And his lady met him at the gate,
His lady fair and young;
And with a scream of pride and joy,
She in his bosom hung.
Oh, glad, glad was the Christian knight,
And glad was his lady fair,
And her pale cheek flush’d as he
cast aside
The locks of her raven hair,
And kiss’d her brow, and told the
tale
Of his dungeon, deep and strong;
And of the minstrel, too, he told
And of the power of song.
And they blest the minstrel, and blest
his song,
And soon the feast was dight;
And prince and noble crowded in,
To welcome home the knight.
And when the brimming cup went round,
Spoke out an evil tongue,
And blamed that lady to her lord,
That lady fair and young;
And told, with many a bitter sneer,
How that, for many a day,