您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam and Salaman and Absal
SALAMAN AND ABSAL
Ralph Waldo Emerson
下载:Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam and Salaman and Absal.txt
本书全文检索:
       _
       

SALAMAN AND ABSAL
       I.
       PROLOGUE.
       Oh Thou whose Memory quickens Lovers' Souls,
       Whose Fount of Joy renews the Lover's Tongue,
       Thy Shadow falls across the World, and They
       Bow down to it; and of the Rich in Beauty
       Thou art the Riches that make Lovers mad.
       Not till thy Secret Beauty through the Cheek
       Of Laila smite does she inflame Majnun,
       And not till Thou have sugar'd Shirin's Lip
       The Hearts of those Two Lovers fill with Blood.
       For Lov'd and Lover are not but by Thee,
       Nor Beauty;--Mortal Beauty but the Veil
       Thy Heavenly hides behind, and from itself
       Feeds, and our Hearts yearn after as a Bride
       That glances past us Veil'd--but ever so
       As none the Beauty from the Veil may know.
       How long wilt thou continue thus the World
       To cozen with the Fantom of a Veil
       From which Thou only peepest?--Time it is
       To unfold thy perfect Beauty. I would be
       Thy Lover, and Thine only--I, mine Eyes
       Seal'd in the Light of Thee to all but Thee,
       Yea, in the Revelation of Thyself
       Self-Lost, and Conscience-quit of Good and Evil.
       Thou movest under all the Forms of Truth,
       Under the Forms of all Created Things;
       Look whence I will, still nothing I discern
       But Thee in all the Universe, in which
       Thyself Thou dost invest, and through the Eyes
       Of Man, the subtle Censor scrutinize.
       To thy Harim Dividuality
       No Entrance finds--no Word of This and That;
       Do Thou my separate and Derived Self
       Make one with Thy Essential! Leave me room
       On that Divan which leaves no Room for Two;
       Lest, like the Simple Kurd of whom they tell,
       I grow perplext, Oh God! 'twixt "I" and "Thou;"
       If I--this Dignity and Wisdom whence?
       If Thou--then what this abject Impotence?
       A Kurd perplext by Fortune's Frolics
       Left his Desert for the City.
       Sees a City full of Noise and
       Clamour, agitated People,
       Hither, Thither, Back and Forward
       Running, some intent on Travel,
       Others home again returning,
       Right to Left, and Left to Right,
       Life-disquiet everywhere!
       Kurd, when he beholds the Turmoil,
       Creeps aside, and, Travel-weary,
       Fain would go to Sleep; "But," saith he,
       "How shall I in all this Hubbub
       Know myself again on waking?"
       So by way of Recognition
       Ties a Pumpkin round his Foot,
       And turns to Sleep. A Knave that heard him
       Crept behind, and slily watching
       Slips the Pumpkin off the Sleeper's
       Ancle, ties it round his own,
       And so down to sleep beside him.
       By and by the Kurd awaking
       Looks directly for his Signal--
       Sees it on another's Ancle--
       Cries aloud, "Oh Good-for-Nothing
       Rascal to perplex me so!
       That by you I am bewilder'd,
       Whether I be I or no!
       If I--the Pumpkin why on You?
       If You--then Where am I, and Who?"
       Oh God! this poor bewilder'd Kurd am I,
       Than any Kurd more helpless!--Oh, do thou
       Strike down a Ray of Light into my Darkness!
       Turn by thy Grace these Dregs into pure Wine,
       To recreate the Spirits of the Good!
       Or if not that, yet, as the little Cup
       Whose Name I go by, not unworthy found
       To pass thy salutary Vintage round!
       II.
       And yet how long, Jami, in this Old House
       Stringing thy Pearls upon a Harp of Song?
       Year after Year striking up some new Song,
       The Breath of some Old Story? Life is gone,
       And yet the Song is not the Last; my Soul
       Is spent--and still a Story to be told!
       And I, whose Back is crooked as the Harp
       I still keep tuning through the Night till Day!
       That Harp untun'd by Time--the Harper's hand
       Shaking with Age--how shall the Harper's hand
       Repair its cunning, and the sweet old Harp
       Be modulated as of old? Methinks
       'Tis time to break and cast it in the Fire;
       Yea, sweet the Harp that can be sweet no more,
       To cast it in the Fire--the vain old Harp
       That can no more sound Sweetness to the Ear,
       But burn'd may breathe sweet Attar to the Soul,
       And comfort so the Faith and Intellect,
       Now that the Body looks to Dissolution.
       My Teeth fall out--my two Eyes see no more
       Till by Feringhi Glasses turn'd to Four;
       Pain sits with me sitting behind my knees,
       From which I hardly rise unhelpt of hand;
       I bow down to my Root, and like a Child
       Yearn, as is likely, to my Mother Earth,
       With whom I soon shall cease to moan and weep,
       And on my Mother's Bosom fall asleep.
       The House in Ruin, and its Music heard
       No more within, nor at the Door of Speech,
       Better in Silence and Oblivion
       To fold me Head and Foot, remembering
       What that Beloved to the Master whisper'd:--
       "No longer think of Rhyme, but think of Me!"--
       Of Whom?--of Him whose Palace The Soul is,
       And Treasure-House--who notices and knows
       Its Incomes and Out-going, and _then_ comes
       To fill it when the Stranger is departed.
       Whose Shadow--being Kings--whose Attributes
       The Type of Theirs--their Wrath and Favour His--
       Lo! in the Celebration of His Glory
       The King Himself come on me unaware,
       And suddenly arrests me for his own.
       Wherefore once more I take--best quitted else--
       The Field of Verse, to chaunt that double Praise,
       And in that Memory refresh my Soul
       Until I grasp the Skirt of Living Presence.
       One who travel'd in the Desert
       Saw Majnun where he was sitting
       All alone like a Magician
       Tracing Letters in the Sand.
       "Oh distracted Lover! writing
       What the Sword-wind of the Desert
       Undecyphers soon as written,
       So that none who travels after
       Shall be able to interpret!"--
       Majnun answer'd, "I am writing
       'Laili'--were it only 'Laili,'
       Yet a Book of Love and Passion;
       And with but her Name to dote on,
       Amorously I caress it
       As it were Herself and sip
       Her presence till I drink her Lip."
       III.
       When Night had thus far brought me with my Book,
       In middle Thought Sleep robb'd me of myself;
       And in a Dream Myself I seemed to see,
       Walking along a straight and even Road,
       And clean as is the Soul of the Sufi;
       A Road whose spotless Surface neither Breeze
       Lifted in Dust, nor mix'd the Rain to Mire.
       There I, methought, was pacing tranquilly,
       When, on a sudden, the tumultuous Shout
       Of Soldiery behind broke on mine Ear,
       And took away my Wit and Strength for Fear.
       I look'd about for Refuge, and Behold!
       A Palace was before me; whither running
       For Refuge from the coming Soldiery,
       Suddenly from the Troop a Shahzeman,
       By Name and Nature Hasan--on the Horse
       Of Honour mounted--robed in Royal Robes,
       And wearing a White Turban on his Head,
       Turn'd his Rein tow'rd me, and with smiling Lips
       Open'd before my Eyes the Door of Peace.
       Then, riding up to me, dismounted; kiss'd
       My Hand, and did me Courtesy; and I,
       How glad of his Protection, and the Grace
       He gave it with!--Who then of gracious Speech
       Many a Jewel utter'd; but of these
       Not one that in my Ear till Morning hung.
       When, waking on my Bed, my waking Wit
       I question'd what the Vision meant, it answered;
       "This Courtesy and Favour of the Shah
       Foreshadows the fair Acceptance of thy Verse,
       Which lose no moment pushing to Conclusion."
       This hearing, I address'd me like a Pen
       To steady Writing; for perchance, I thought,
       From the same Fountain whence the Vision grew
       The Interpretation also may come True.
       Breathless ran a simple Rustic
       To a Cunning Man of Dreams;
       "Lo, this Morning I was dreaming--
       And methought, in yon deserted
       Village wander'd--all about me
       Shatter'd Houses--and, Behold!
       Into one, methought, I went--and
       Search'd--and found a Hoard of Gold!"
       Quoth the Prophet in Derision,
       "Oh Thou Jewel of Creation
       Go and sole your Feet like Horse's,
       And returning to your Village
       Stamp and scratch with Hoof and Nail,
       And give Earth so sound a Shaking,
       She must hand you something up."
       Went at once the unsuspecting
       Countryman; with hearty Purpose
       Set to work as he was told;
       And, the very first Encounter,
       Struck upon his Hoard of Gold!
       Until Thou hast thy Purpose by the Hilt,
       Catch at it boldly--or Thou never wilt.
       IV.
       THE STORY.
       A Shah there was who ruled the Realm of Yun,
       And wore the Ring of Empire of Sikander;
       And in his Reign A Sage, who had the Tower
       Of Wisdom of so strong Foundation built
       That Wise Men from all Quarters of the World
       To catch the Word of Wisdom from his Lip
       Went in a Girdle round him--Which The Shah
       Observing, took him to his Secresy;
       Stirr'd not a Step nor set Design a-foot
       Without that Sage's sanction; till so counsel'd,
       From Kaf to Kaf reach'd his Dominion:
       No Nation of the World or Nation's Chief
       Who wore the Ring but under span of his
       Bow'd down the Neck; then rising up in Peace
       Under his Justice grew, and knew no Wrong,
       And in their Strength was his Dominion Strong.
       The Shah that has not Wisdom in Himself,
       Nor has a Wise Man for his Counsellor,
       The Wand of his Authority falls short,
       And his Dominion crumbles at the Base.
       For he, discerning not the Characters
       Of Tyranny and Justice, confounds both,
       Making the World a Desert, and the Fount
       Of Justice a Serab. Well was it said,
       "_Better just Kafir than Believing Tyrant_."
       God said to the Prophet David,--
       "David, speak, and to the Challenge
       Answer of the Faith within Thee.
       Even Unbelieving Princes,
       Ill-reported if Unworthy,
       Yet, if They be Just and Righteous,
       Were their Worship of The Fire--
       Even These unto Themselves
       Reap glory and redress the World."
       V.
       One Night The Shah of Yunan, as his wont,
       Consider'd of his Power, and told his State,
       How great it was, and how about him sat
       The Robe of Honour of Prosperity;
       Then found he nothing wanted to his Heart,
       Unless a Son, who his Dominion
       And Glory might inherit after him,
       And then he turn'd him to The Shah and said;
       "Oh Thou, whose Wisdom is the Rule of Kings--
       (Glory to God who gave it!)--answer me;
       Is any Blessing better than a Son?
       Man's prime Desire; by which his Name and He
       Shall live beyond Himself; by whom his Eyes
       Shine living, and his Dust with Roses blows;
       A Foot for Thee to stand on, he shall be
       A Hand to stop thy Falling; in his Youth
       Thou shall be Young, and in his Strength be Strong;
       Sharp shall he be in Battle as a Sword,
       A Cloud of Arrows on the Enemy's Head;
       His Voice shall cheer his Friends to Plight,
       And turn the Foeman's Glory into Flight."
       Thus much of a Good Son, whose wholesome Growth
       Approves the Root he grew from; but for one
       Kneaded of Evil--Well, could one undo
       His Generation, and as early pull
       Him and his Vices from the String of Time.
       Like Noah's, puff'd with Ignorance and Pride,
       Who felt the Stab of "He is none of Thine!"
       And perish'd in the Deluge. And because
       All are not Good, be slow to pray for One
       Whom having you may have to pray to lose.
       Crazy for the Curse of Children,
       Ran before the Sheikh a Fellow
       Crying out, "Oh hear and help me!
       Pray to Allah from my Clay
       To raise me up a fresh young Cypress,
       Who my Childless Eyes may lighten
       With the Beauty of his Presence."
       Said the Sheikh, "Be wise, and leave it
       Wholly in the Hand of Allah,
       Who, whatever we are after,
       Understands our Business best."
       But the Man persisted, saying,
       "Sheikh, I languish in my Longing;
       Help, and set my Prayer a-going!"
       Then the Sheikh held up his Hand--
       Pray'd--his Arrow flew to Heaven--
       From the Hunting-ground of Darkness
       Down a musky Fawn of China
       Brought--a Boy--Who, when the Tender
       Shoot of Passion in him planted
       Found sufficient Soil and Sap,
       Took to Drinking with his Fellows;
       From a Corner of the House-top
       Ill affronts a Neighbour's Wife,
       Draws his Dagger on the Husband,
       Who complains before the Justice,
       And the Father has to pay.
       Day and Night the Youngster's Doings
       Such--the Talk of all the City;
       Nor Entreaty, Threat, or Counsel
       Held him; till the Desperate Father
       Once more to the Sheikh a-running,
       Catches at his Garment, crying--
       "Sheikh, my only Hope and Helper!
       One more Prayer! that God who laid
       Will take that Trouble from my Head!"
       But the Sheikh replied: "Remember
       How that very Day I warn'd you
       Better not importune Allah;
       Unto whom remains no other
       Prayer, unless to pray for Pardon.
       When from this World we are summon'd
       On to bind the pack of Travel
       Son or Daughter ill shall help us;
       Slaves we are and unencumber'd
       Best may do the Master's mind;
       And, whatever he may order,
       Do it with a Will Resign'd."
       VI.
       When the Sharp-witted Sage
       Had heard these sayings of The Shah, he said,
       "Oh Shah, who would not be the Slave of Lust
       Must still endure the Sorrow of no Son.
       --Lust that makes blind the Reason; Lust that makes
       A Devil's self seem Angel to our Eyes;
       A Cataract that, carrying havoc with it,
       Confounds the prosperous House; a Road of Mire
       Where whoso falls he rises not again;
       A Wine of which whoever tastes shall see
       Redemption's face no more--one little Sip
       Of that delicious and unlawful Drink
       Making crave much, and hanging round the Palate
       Till it become a Ring to lead thee by
       (Putting the rope in a Vain Woman's hand),
       Till thou thyself go down the Way of Nothing.
       For what is Woman? A Foolish, Faithless Thing--
       To whom The Wise Self-subjected, himself
       Deep sinks beneath the Folly he sets up.
       A very Kafir in Rapacity;
       Clothe her a hundred Years in Gold and Jewel,
       Her Garment with Brocade of Susa braided,
       Her very Night-gear wrought in Cloth of Gold,
       Dangle her Ears with Ruby and with Pearl,
       Her House with Golden Vessels all a-blaze,
       Her Tables loaded with the Fruit of Kings,
       Ispahan Apples, Pomegranates of Yazd;
       And, be she thirsty, from a Jewell'd Cup
       Drinking the Water of the Well of Life--
       One little twist of Temper,--all you've done
       Goes all for Nothing. 'Torment of my Life!'
       She cries, 'What have you ever done for me!'--
       Her Brow's white Tablet--Yes--'tis uninscrib'd
       With any Letter of Fidelity;
       Who ever read it there? Lo, in your Bosom
       She lies for Years--you turn away a moment,
       And she forgets you--worse, if as you turn
       Her Eye should light on any Younger Lover."
       Once upon the Throne of Judgment,
       Telling one another Secrets,
       Sat Sulayman and Balkis;
       The Hearts of Both were turn'd to Truth,
       Unsullied by Deception.
       First the King of Faith Sulayman
       Spoke--"Though mine the Ring of Empire,
       Never any Day that passes
       Darkens any one my Door-way
       But into his Hand I look--
       And He who comes not empty-handed
       Grows to Honour in mine Eyes."
       After this Balkis a Secret
       From her hidden Bosom utter'd,
       Saying--"Never Night or Morning
       Comely Youth before me passes
       Whom I look not longing after;
       Saying to myself, 'Oh were he
       Comforting of my Sick Soul!--'"
       "If this, as wise Ferdusi says, the Curse
       Of Better Women, what should be the Worse?"
       VII.
       The Sage his Satire ended; and The Shah
       With Magic-mighty Wisdom his pure Will
       Leaguing, its Self-fulfilment wrought from Heaven.
       And Lo! from Darkness came to Light A Child
       Of Carnal Composition Unattaint,--
       A Rosebud blowing on the Royal Stem,--
       A Perfume from the Realm of Wisdom wafted;
       The Crowning Jewel of the Crown; a Star
       Under whose Augury triumph'd the Throne.
       For whose Auspicious Name they clove the Words
       "Salamat"--Incolumity from Evil--
       And "Auseman"--the Heav'n from which he came--
       And hail'd him by the title of Salaman.
       And whereas from no Mother Milk he drew,
       They chose for him a Nurse--her Name Absal--
       Her Years not Twenty--from the Silver Line
       Dividing the Musk-Harvest of her Hair
       Down to her Foot that trampled Crowns of Kings,
       A Moon of Beauty Full; who thus elect
       Salaman of Auspicious Augury
       Should carry in the Garment of her Bounty,
       Should feed him with the Flowing of her Breast.
       As soon as she had opened Eyes on him
       She closed those Eyes to all the World beside,
       And her Soul crazed, a-doting on her Jewel,--
       Her Jewel in a Golden Cradle set;
       Opening and shutting which her Day's Delight,
       To gaze upon his Heart-inflaming Cheek,--
       Upon the Darling whom, could she, she would
       Have cradled as the Baby of her Eye.
       In Rose and Musk she wash'd him--to his Lips
       Press'd the pure Sugar from the Honeycomb;
       And when, Day over, she withdrew her Milk,
       She made, and having laid him in, his Bed,
       Burn'd all Night like a Taper o'er his Head.
       Then still as Morning came, and as he grew,
       She dress'd him like a Little Idol up;
       On with his Robe--with fresh Collyrium Dew
       Touch'd his Narcissus Eyes--the Musky Locks
       Divided from his Forehead--and embraced
       With Gold and Ruby Girdle his fine Waist.--
       So rear'd she him till full Fourteen his Years,
       Fourteen-day full the Beauty of his Face,
       That rode high in a Hundred Thousand Hearts;
       Yea, when Salaman was but Half-lance high,
       Lance-like he struck a wound in every One,
       And burn'd and shook down Splendour like a Sun.
       VIII.
       Soon as the Lord of Heav'n had sprung his Horse
       Over the Horizon into the Blue Field,
       Salaman rose drunk with the Wine of Sleep,
       And set himself a-stirrup for the Field;
       He and a Troop of Princes--Kings in Blood,
       Kings too in the Kingdom-troubling Tribe of Beauty,
       All Young in Years and Courage, Bat in hand
       Gallop'd a-field, toss'd down the Golden Ball
       And chased, so many Crescent Moons a Full;
       And, all alike Intent upon the Game,
       Salaman still would carry from them all
       The Prize, and shouting "Hal!" drive Home the Ball.
       This done, Salaman bent him as a Bow
       To Shooting--from the Marksmen of the World
       Call'd for an unstrung Bow--himself the Cord
       Fitted unhelpt, and nimbly with his hand
       Twanging made cry, and drew it to his Ear:
       Then, fixing the Three-feather'd Fowl, discharged.
       No point in Heaven's Azure but his Arrow
       Hit; nay, but Heaven were made of Adamant,
       Would overtake the Horizon as it roll'd;
       And, whether aiming at the Fawn a-foot,
       Or Bird on the wing, his Arrow went away
       Straight--like the Soul that cannot go astray.
       When Night came, that releases man from Toil,
       He play'd the Chess of Social Intercourse;
       Prepared his Banquet Hall like Paradise,
       Summon'd his Houri-faced Musicians,
       And, when his Brain grew warm with Wine, the Veil
       Flung off him of Reserve. Now Lip to Lip
       Concerting with the Singer he would breathe
       Like a Messias Life into the Dead;
       Now made of the Melodious-moving Pipe
       A Sugar-cane between his Lips that ran
       Men's Ears with Sweetness: Taking up a Harp,
       Between its dry String and his Finger fresh
       Struck Fire; or lifting in his arms a Lute
       As if a little Child for Chastisement,
       Pinching its Ear such Cries of Sorrow wrung
       As drew Blood to the Eyes of Older Men.
       Now sang He like the Nightingale alone,
       Now set together Voice and Instrument;
       And thus with his Associates Night he spent.
       His Soul rejoiced in Knowledge of all kinds;
       The fine Edge of his Wit would split a Hair,
       And in the Noose of Apprehension catch
       A Meaning ere articulate in Word;
       His Verse was like the Pleiads; his Discourse
       The Mourners of the Bier; his Penmanship,
       (Tablet and running Reed his Worshippers,)
       Fine on the Lip of Youth as the First Hair,
       Drove Penmen, as that Lovers, to Despair.
       His Bounty was as Ocean's--nay, the Sea's
       Self but the Foam of his Munificence,
       For it threw up the Shell, but he the Pearl;
       He was a Cloud that rain'd upon the World
       Dirhems for Drops; the Banquet of whose Bounty
       Left Hatim's Churlish in Comparison--
       IX.
       Suddenly that Sweet Minister of mine
       Rebuked me angrily: "What Folly, Jami,
       Wearing that indefatigable Pen
       In celebration of an Alien Shah
       Whose Throne, not grounded in the Eternal World,
       Yesterday was, To-day is not!" I answer'd;
       "Oh Fount of Light!--under an Alien Name
       I shadow One upon whose Head the Crown
       Both Was and Is To-day; to whose Firman
       The Seven Kingdoms of the World are subject,
       And the Seas Seven but droppings of his Largess.
       Good luck to him who under other Name
       Taught us to veil the Praises of a Power
       To which the Initiate scarce find open Door."
       Sat a Lover solitary
       Self-discoursing in a Corner,
       Passionate and ever-changing
       Invocation pouring out;
       Sometimes Sun and Moon; and sometimes
       Under Hyacinth half-hidden
       Roses; or the lofty Cypress,
       And the little Weed below.
       Nightingaling thus a Noodle
       Heard him, and, completely puzzled,--
       "What!" quoth he, "And you, a Lover,
       Raving not about your Mistress,
       But about the Moon and Roses!"
       Answer'd he; "Oh thou that aimest
       Wide of Love, and Lover's Language
       Wholly misinterpreting;
       Sun and Moon are but my Lady's
       Self, as any Lover knows;
       Hyacinth I said, and meant her
       Hair--her Cheek was in the Rose--
       And I myself the wretched Weed
       That in her Cypress Shadow grows."
       X.
       Now was Salaman in his Prime of Growth,
       His Cypress Stature risen to high Top,
       And the new-blooming Garden of his Beauty
       Began to bear; and Absal long'd to gather;
       But the Fruit grew upon too high a Bough,
       To which the Noose of her Desire was short.
       She too rejoiced in Beauty of her own
       No whit behind Salaman, whom she now
       Began enticing with her Sorcery.
       Now from her Hair would twine a musky Chain,
       To bind his Heart--now twist it into Curls
       Nestling innumerable Temptations;
       Doubled the Darkness of her Eyes with Surma
       To make him lose his way, and over them
       Adorn'd the Bows that were to shoot him then;
       Now to the Rose-leaf of her Cheek would add
       Fresh Rose, and then a Grain of Musk lay there,
       The Bird of the Beloved Heart to snare.
       Now with a Laugh would break the Ruby Seal
       That lockt up Pearl; or busied in the Room
       Would smite her Hand perhaps--on that pretence
       To lift and show the Silver in her Sleeve;
       Or hastily rising clash her Golden Anclets
       To draw the Crowned Head under her Feet.
       Thus by innumerable Bridal wiles
       She went about soliciting his Eyes,
       Which she would scarce let lose her for a Moment;
       For well she knew that mainly by the Eye
       Love makes his Sign, and by no other Road
       Enters and takes possession of the Heart.
       Burning with desire Zulaikha
       Built a Chamber, Wall and Ceiling
       Blank as an untarnisht Mirror,
       Spotless as the Heart of Yusuf.
       Then she made a cunning Painter
       Multiply her Image round it:
       Not an Inch of Wall but echoed
       With the Reflex of her Beauty.
       Then amid them all in all her
       Glory sat she down, and sent for
       Yusuf--she began a Tale
       Of Love--and Lifted up her Veil.
       From her Look he turn'd, but turning
       Wheresoever, ever saw her
       Looking, looking at him still.
       Then Desire arose within him--
       He was almost yielding--almost
       Laying honey on her Lip--
       When a Signal out of Darkness
       Spoke to him--and he withdrew
       His Hand, and dropt the Skirt of Fortune.
       XI.
       Thus day by day did Absal tempt Salaman,
       And by and bye her Wiles began to work.
       Her Eyes Narcissus stole his sleep--their Lashes
       Pierc'd to his Heart--out from her Locks a Snake
       Bit him--and bitter, bitter on his Tongue
       Became the Memory of her honey Lip.
       He saw the Ringlet restless on her Cheek,
       And he too quiver'd with Desire; his Tears
       Turn'd Crimson from her Cheek, whose musky spot
       Infected all his soul with Melancholy.
       Love drew him from behind the Veil, where yet
       Withheld him better Resolution--
       "Oh, should the Food I long for, tasted, turn
       Unwholesome, and if all my Life to come
       Should sicken from one momentary Sweet!"
       On the Sea-shore sat a Raven,
       Blind, and from the bitter Cistern
       Forc'd his only Drink to draw.
       Suddenly the Pelican
       Flying over Fortune's Shadow
       Cast upon his Head, and calling--
       "Come, poor Son of Salt, and taste of
       Sweet, sweet Water from my Maw."
       Said the Raven, "If I taste it
       Once, the Salt I have to live on
       May for ever turn to Loathing;
       And I sit a Bird accurst
       Upon the Shore to die of Thirst."
       XII.
       Now when Salaman's Heart turn'd to Absal,
       Her Star was happy in the Heavens--Old Love
       Put forth afresh--Desire doubled his Bond:
       And of the running Time she watch'd an Hour
       To creep into the Mansion of her Moon
       And satiate her soul upon his Lips.
       And the Hour came; she stole into his Chamber--
       Ran up to him, Life's offer in her Hand--
       And, falling like a Shadow at his Feet,
       She laid her Face beneath. Salaman then
       With all the Courtesies of Princely Grace
       Put forth his Hand--he rais'd her in his Arms--
       He held her trembling there--and from that Fount
       Drew first Desire; then Deeper from her Lips,
       That, yielding, mutually drew from his
       A Wine that ever drawn from never fail'd--
       So through the Day--so through another still--
       The Day became a Seventh--the Seventh a Moon--
       The Moon a Year--while they rejoiced together,
       Thinking their pleasure never was to end.
       But rolling Heaven whisper'd from his Ambush,
       "So in my License is it not set down.
       Ah for the sweet Societies I make
       At Morning and before the Nightfall break;
       Ah for the Bliss that with the Setting Sun
       I mix, and, with his Rising, all is done!"
       Into Bagdad came a hungry
       Arab--after many days of waiting
       In to the Khalifah's Supper
       Push'd, and got before a Pasty
       Luscious as the Lip of Beauty,
       Or the Tongue of Eloquence.
       Soon as seen, Indecent Hunger
       Seizes up and swallows down;
       Then his mouth undaunted wiping--
       "Oh Khalifah, hear me Swear,
       Not of any other Pasty
       Than of Thine to sup or dine."
       The Khalifah laugh'd and answer'd;
       "Fool; who thinkest to determine
       What is in the Hands of Fate--
       Take and thrust him from the Gate!"
       XIII.
       While a Full Year was counted by the Moon,
       Salaman and Absal rejoiced together,
       And for so long he stood not in the face
       Of Sage or Shah, and their bereaved Hearts
       Were torn in twain with the Desire of Him.
       They question'd those about him, and from them
       Heard something; then Himself in Presence summon'd,
       And, subtly sifting on all sides, so plied
       Interrogation till it hit the Mark,
       And all the Truth was told. Then Sage and Shah
       Struck out with Hand and Foot in his Redress.
       And First with Reason, which is also Best;
       Reason that rights the Retrograde--completes
       The Imperfect--Reason that unties the Knot:
       For Reason is the Fountain from of old
       From which the Prophets drew, and none beside.
       Who boasts of other Inspiration lies--
       There are no other Prophets than The Wise.
       XIV.
       First spoke The Shah;--"Salaman, Oh my Soul,
       Oh Taper of the Banquet of my House,
       Light of the Eyes of my Prosperity,
       And making bloom the Court of Hope with Rose;
       Years Rose-bud-like my own Blood I devour'd
       Till in my hand I carried thee, my Rose;
       Oh do not tear my Garment from my Hand,
       Nor wound thy Father with a Dagger Thorn.
       Years for thy sake the Crown has worn my Brow,
       And Years my Foot been growing to the Throne
       Only for Thee--Oh spurn them not with Thine;
       Oh turn thy Face from Dalliance unwise,
       Lay not thy Heart's hand on a Minion!
       For what thy Proper Pastime? Is it not
       To mount and manage Rakhsh along the Field;
       Not, with no stouter weapon than a Love-lock,
       Idly reclining on a Silver Breast.
       Go, fly thine Arrow at the Antelope
       And Lion--let not me my Lion see
       Slain by the Arrow eyes of a Ghazal.
       Go, flash thy Steel among the Ranks of Men,
       And smite the Warriors' Necks; not, flying them,
       Lay down thine own beneath a Woman's Foot,
       Leave off such doing in the Name of God,
       Nor bring thy Father weeping to the Ground;
       Years have I held myself aloft, and all
       For Thee--Oh Shame if thou prepare my Fall!"
       When before Shirueh's Feet
       Drencht in Blood fell Kai Khusrau,
       He declared this Parable--
       "Wretch!--There was a Branch that, waxing
       Wanton o'er the Root he drank from,
       At a Draught the Living Water
       Drain'd wherewith Himself to crown!
       Died the Root--and with it died
       The Branch--and barren was brought down!"
       XV.
       Salaman heard--the Sea of his Soul was mov'd,
       And bubbled up with Jewels, and he said;
       "Oh Shah, I am the Slave of thy Desire,
       Dust of thy Throne ascending Foot am I;
       Whatever thou Desirest I would do,
       But sicken of my own Incompetence;
       Not in the Hand of my infirmer Will
       To carry into Deed mine own Desire.
       Time upon Time I torture mine own Soul,
       Devising liberation from the Snare
       I languish in. But when upon that Moon
       I _think_, my Soul relapses--and when _look_--
       I leave both Worlds behind to follow her!"
       XVI.
       The Shah ceased Counsel, and the Sage began.
       "Oh Thou new Vintage of a Garden old,
       Last Blazon of the Pen of 'Let There Be,'
       Who read'st the Seven and Four; interpretest
       The writing on the Leaves of Night and Day--
       Archetype of the Assembly of the World,
       Who hold'st the Key of Adam's Treasury--
       (Know thine own Dignity and slight it not,
       For Thou art Greater yet than all I tell)--
       The Mighty Hand that mix'd thy Dust inscribed
       The Character of Wisdom on thy Heart;
       O Cleanse Thy Bosom of Material Form,
       And turn the Mirror of the Soul to Spirit,
       Until it be with Spirit all possest,
       Drown'd in the Light of Intellectual Truth.
       Oh veil thine Eyes from Mortal Paramour,
       And follow not her Step!--For what is She?--
       What is She but a Vice and a Reproach,
       Her very Garment-hem Pollution!
       For such Pollution madden not thine Eyes,
       Waste not thy Body's Strength, nor taint thy Soul,
       Nor set the Body and the Soul in Strife!
       Supreme is thine Original Degree,
       Thy Star upon the Top of Heaven; but Lust
       Will fling it down even unto the Dust!"
       Quoth a Muezzin unto Crested
       Chanticleer--"Oh Voice of Morning,
       Not a Sage of all the Sages
       Prophesies of Dawn, or startles
       At the wing of Time, like Thee.
       One so wise methinks were fitter
       Perching on the Beams of Heaven,
       Than with those poor Hens about him,
       Raking in a Heap of Dung."
       "And," replied the Cock, "in Heaven
       Once I was; but by my Evil
       Lust am fallen down to raking
       With my wretched Hens about me
       On the Dunghill. Otherwise
       I were even now in Eden
       With the Bird of Paradise."
       XVII.
       When from The Sage these words Salaman heard,
       The breath of Wisdom round his Palate blew;
       He said--"Oh Darling of the Soul of Plato,
       To whom a hundred Aristotles bow;
       Oh Thou that an Eleventh to the Ten
       Original Intelligences addest,--
       I lay my Face before Thee in the Dust,
       The humblest Scholar of thy Court am I;
       Whose every word I find a Well of Wisdom,
       And hasten to imbibe it in my Soul.
       But clear unto thy clearest Eye it is,
       That Choice is not within Oneself--To Do,
       Not in The Will, but in The Power, to Do.
       From that which I originally am
       How shall I swerve? or how put forth a Sign
       Beyond the Power that is by Nature Mine?"
       XVIII.
       Unto the Soul that is confused by Love
       Comes Sorrow after Sorrow--most of all
       To Love whose only Friendship is Reproof,
       And overmuch of Counsel--whereby Love
       Grows stubborn, and increases the Disease.
       Love unreproved is a delicious food;
       Reproved, is Feeding on one's own Heart's Blood.
       Salaman heard; his Soul came to his Lips;
       Reproaches struck not Absal out of him,
       But drove Confusion in; bitter became
       The Drinking of the sweet Draught of Delight,
       And wan'd the Splendour of his Moon of Beauty.
       His Breath was Indignation, and his Heart
       Bled from the Arrow, and his Anguish grew--
       How bear it?--Able to endure one wound,
       From Wound on Wound no remedy but Flight;
       Day after Day, Design upon Design,
       He turn'd the Matter over in his Heart,
       And, after all, no Remedy but Flight.
       Resolv'd on that, he victuall'd and equipp'd
       A Camel, and one Night he led it forth,
       And mounted--he and Absal at his side,
       The fair Salaman and Absal the Fair,
       Together on one Camel side by side,
       Twin Kernels in a single Almond packt.
       And True Love murmurs not, however small
       His Chamber--nay, the straitest best of all.
       When the Moon of Canaan Yusuf
       Darken'd in the Prison of AEgypt,
       Night by Night Zulaikha went
       To see him--for her Heart was broken.
       Then to her said One who never
       Yet had tasted of Love's Garden:
       "Leavest thou thy Palace-Chamber
       For the Felon's narrow Cell?"
       Answer'd She, "Without my Lover,
       Were my Chamber Heaven's Horizon,
       It were closer than an Ant's eye;
       And the Ant's eye wider were
       Than Heaven, my Lover with me there!"
       XIX.
       Six days Salaman on the Camel rode,
       And then Remembrance of foregone Reproach
       Abode not by him; and upon the Seventh
       He halted on the Seashore, and beheld
       An Ocean boundless as the Heaven above,
       That, reaching its Circumference from Kaf
       To Kaf, down to the Back of Gau and Mahi
       Descended, and its Stars were Creatures' Eyes.
       The Face of it was as it were a Range
       Of moving Mountains; or as endless Hosts
       Of Camels trooping from all Quarters up,
       Furious, with the Foam upon their Lips.
       In it innumerable glittering Fish
       Like Jewels polish-sharp, to the sharp Eye
       But for an Instant visible, glancing through
       As Silver Scissors slice a blue Brocade;
       Though were the Dragon from its Hollow roused,
       The Dragon of the Stars would stare Aghast.
       Salaman eyed the Sea, and cast about
       To cross it--and forthwith upon the Shore
       Devis'd a Shallop like a Crescent Moon,
       Wherein that Sun and Moon in happy Hour,
       Enter'd as into some Celestial Sign;
       That, figured like a Bow, but Arrow-like
       In Flight, was feather'd with a little Sail,
       And, pitcht upon the Water like a Duck,
       So with her Bosom sped to her Desire.
       When they had sail'd their Vessel for a Moon,
       And marr'd their Beauty with the wind o' th' Sea,
       Suddenly in mid Sea reveal'd itself
       An Isle, beyond Description beautiful
       An Isle that all was Garden; not a Bird
       Of Note or Plume in all the World but there;
       There as in Bridal Retinue array'd
       The Pheasant in his Crown, the Dove in her Collar;
       And those who tuned their Bills among the Trees
       That Arm in Arm from Fingers paralyz'd
       With any Breath of Air Fruit moist and dry
       Down scatter'd in Profusion to their Feet,
       Where Fountains of Sweet Water ran, and round
       Sunshine and Shadow chequer-chased the Ground.
       Here Iram Garden seemed in Secresy
       Blowing the Rosebud of its Revelation;
       Or Paradise, forgetful of the Day
       Of Audit, lifted from her Face the Veil.
       Salaman saw the Isle, and thought no more
       Of Further--there with Absal he sat down,
       Absal and he together side by side
       Rejoicing like the Lily and the Rose,
       Together like the Body and the Soul.
       Under its Trees in one another's Arms
       They slept--they drank its Fountains hand in hand--
       Sought Sugar with the Parrot--or in Sport
       Paraded with the Peacock--raced the Partridge--
       Or fell a-talking with the Nightingale.
       There was the Rose without a Thorn, and there
       The Treasure and no Serpent to beware--
       What sweeter than your Mistress at your side
       In such a Solitude, and none to Chide!
       Whisper'd one to Wamik--"Oh Thou
       Victim of the Wound of Azra,
       What is it that like a Shadow
       Movest thou about in Silence
       Meditating Night and Day?"
       Wamik answered, "Even this--
       To fly with Azra to the Desert;
       There by so remote a Fountain
       That, whichever way one travell'd
       League on League, one yet should never,
       Never meet the Face of Man--
       There to pitch my Tent--for ever
       There to gaze on my Beloved;
       Gaze, till Gazing out of Gazing
       Grew to Being Her I gaze on,
       She and I no more, but in One.
       Undivided Being blended,
       All that is not One must ever
       Suffer with the Wound of Absence;
       And whoever in Love's City
       Enters, finds but Room for One,
       And but in Oneness Union."
       XX.
       When by and bye The Shah was made aware
       Of that Soul-wasting absence of his Son,
       He reach'd a Cry to Heav'n--his Eyelashes
       Wept Blood--Search everywhere he set a-foot,
       But none could tell the hidden Mystery.
       Then bade he bring a Mirror that he had,
       A Mirror, like the Bosom of the wise,
       Reflecting all the World, and lifting up
       The Veil from all its Secret, Good and Evil.
       That Mirror bade he bring, and, in its Face
       Looking, beheld the Face of his Desire.
       He saw those Lovers in the Solitude,
       Turn'd from the World, and all its ways, and People,
       And looking only in each other's Eyes,
       And never finding any Sorrow there.
       The Shah beheld them as they were, and Pity
       Fell on his Eyes, and he reproach'd them not;
       And, gathering all their Life into his Hand,
       Not a Thread lost, disposed in Order all.
       Oh for the Noble Nature, and Clear Heart,
       That, seeing Two who draw one Breath together
       Drinking the Cup of Happiness and Tears
       Unshatter'd by the Stone of Separation,
       Is loath their sweet Communion to destroy,
       Or cast a Tangle in the Skein of Joy.
       The Arrows that assail the Lords of Sorrow
       Come from the Hand of Retribution.
       Do Well, that in thy Turn Well may betide Thee;
       And turn from Ill, that Ill may turn beside Thee.
       Firhad, Moulder of the Mountain,
       Love-distracted looked to Shirin,
       And Shirin the Sculptor's Passion
       Saw, and turn'd her Heart to Him.
       Then the Fire of Jealous Frenzy
       Caught and carried up the Harvest
       Of the Might of Kai Khusrau.
       Plotting with that ancient Hag
       Of Fate, the Sculptor's Cup he poison'd
       And remained the Lord of Love.
       So--But Fate that Fate avenges
       Arms Shirueh with the Dagger,
       That at once from Shirin tore him,
       Hurl'd him from the Throne of Glory.
       XXI.
       But as the days went on, and still The Shah
       Beheld Salaman how sunk in Absal,
       And yet no Hand of better Effort lifted;
       But still the Crown that shall adorn his Head,
       And still the Throne that waited for his Foot,
       Trampled from Memory by a Base Desire,
       Of which the Soul was still unsatisfied--
       Then from the Sorrow of The Shah fell Fire;
       To Gracelessness Ungracious he became,
       And, quite to shatter his rebellious Lust,
       Upon Salaman all his Will discharged.
       And Lo! Salaman to his Mistress turn'd,
       But could not reach her--look'd and look'd again,
       And palpitated tow'rd her--but in Vain!
       Oh Misery! what to the Bankrupt worse
       Than Gold he cannot reach! To one Athirst
       Than Fountain to the Eye and Lip forbid!--
       Or than Heaven opened to the Eyes in Hell!--
       Yet, when Salaman's Anguish was extreme,
       The Door of Mercy open'd in his Face;
       He saw and knew his Father's Hand outstretcht
       To lift him from Perdition--timidly,
       Timidly tow'rd his Father's Face his own
       He lifted, Pardon-pleading, Crime-confest,
       As the stray Bird one day will find her Nest.
       A Disciple ask'd a Master,
       "By what Token should a Father
       Vouch for his reputed Son?"
       Said the Master, "By the Stripling,
       Howsoever Late or Early,
       Like to the Reputed Father
       Growing--whether Wise or Foolish.
       "Lo the disregarded Darnel
       With itself adorns the Wheat-field,
       And for all the Early Season
       Satisfies the Farmer's Eye;
       But come once the Hour of Harvest.
       And another Grain shall answer,
       'Darnel and no Wheat, am I.'"
       XXII.
       When The Shah saw Salaman's face again,
       And breath'd the Breath of Reconciliation,
       He laid the Hand of Love upon his Shoulder,
       The Kiss of Welcome on his Cheek, and said,
       "Oh Thou, who lost, Love's Banquet lost its Salt,
       And Mankind's Eye its Pupil!--Thy Return
       Is as another Sun to Heaven; a new
       Rose blooming in the Garden of the Soul.
       Arise, Oh Moon of Majesty unwaned!
       The Court of the Horizon is thy Court,
       Thy Kingdom is the Kingdom of the World!--
       Lo! Throne and Crown await Thee--Throne and Crown
       Without thy Impress but uncurrent Gold,
       Not to be stamp'd by one not worthy Them;
       Behold! The Rebel's Face is at thy Door;
       Let him not triumph--let the Wicked dread
       The Throne under thy Feet, the Crown upon thy Head.
       Oh Spurn them not behind Thee! Oh my Son,
       Wipe Thou the Woman's Henna from thy Hand:
       Withdraw Thee from the Minion who from Thee
       Dominion draws; the Time is come to choose,
       Thy Mistress or the World to hold or lose."
       Four are the Signs of Kingly Aptitude;
       Wise Head--clean Heart--strong Arm--and open Hand.
       Wise is He not--Continent cannot be--
       Who binds himself to an unworthy Lust;
       Nor Valiant, who submits to a weak Woman;
       Nor Liberal, who cannot draw his Hand
       From that in which so basely he is busied.
       And of these Four who misses All or One
       Is not the Bridegroom of Dominion.
       XXIII.
       Ah the poor Lover!--In the changing Hands
       Of Day and Night no wretcheder than He!
       No Arrow from the Bow of Evil Fate
       But reaches him--one Dagger at his Throat,
       Another comes to wound him from behind.
       Wounded by Love--then wounded by Reproof
       Of Loving--and, scarce stauncht the Blood of Shame
       By flying from his Love--then, worst of all,
       Love's back-blow of Revenge for having fled!
       Salaman heard--he rent the Robe of Peace--
       He came to loathe his Life, and long for Death,
       (For better Death itself than Life in Death)--
       He turn'd his face with Absal to the Desert--
       Enter'd the deadly Plain; Branch upon Branch
       Cut down, and gather'd in a lofty Pile,
       And fired. They look'd upon the Flames, those Two--
       They look'd, and they rejoiced; and hand in hand
       They sprang into the Fire. The Shah who saw
       In secret all had order'd; and the Flame,
       Directed by his Self-fulfilling Will,
       Devouring utterly Absal, pass'd by
       Salaman harmless--the pure Gold return'd
       Entire, but all the baser Metal burn'd.
       XXIV.
       Heaven's Dome is but a wondrous House of Sorrow,
       And Happiness therein a lying Fable.
       When first they mix'd the Clay of Man, and cloth'd
       His Spirit in the Robe of Perfect Beauty,
       For Forty Mornings did an Evil Cloud
       Rain Sorrows over him from Head to Foot;
       And when the Forty Mornings pass'd to Night,
       Then came one Morning-Shower--one Morning-Shower
       Of Joy--to Forty of the Rain of Sorrow!--
       And though the better Fortune came at last
       To seal the Work, yet every Wise Man knows
       Such Consummation never can be here!
       Salaman fired the Pile; and in the Flame
       That, passing him, consumed Absal like Straw,
       Died his Divided Self, and there survived
       His Individual; and, like a Body
       From which the Soul is parted, all alone.
       Then rose his Cry to Heaven--his Eyelashes
       Dropt Blood--his Sighs stood like a Smoke in Heaven,
       And Morning rent her Garment at his Anguish.
       He tore his Bosom with his Nails--he smote
       Stone on his Bosom--looking then on hands
       No longer lockt in hers, and lost their Jewel,
       He tore them with his Teeth. And when came Night,
       He hid him in some Corner of the House,
       And communed with the Fantom of his Love.
       "Oh Thou whose Presence so long sooth'd my Soul,
       Now burnt with thy Remembrance! Oh so long
       The Light that fed these Eyes now dark with Tears!
       Oh Long, Long Home of Love now lost for Ever!
       We were Together--that was all Enough--
       We two rejoicing in each other's Eyes,
       Infinitely rejoicing--all the World
       Nothing to Us, nor We to all the World--
       No Road to reach us, nor an Eye to watch--
       All Day we whisper'd in each other's Ears,
       All Night we slept in one another's Arms--
       All seem'd to our Desire, as if the Hand
       Of unjust Fortune were for once too short.
       Oh would to God that when I lit the Pyre
       The Flame had left Thee Living and me Dead,
       Not Living worse than Dead, depriv'd of Thee!
       Oh were I but with Thee!--at any Cost
       Stript of this terrible Self-solitude!
       Oh but with Thee Annihilation--lost,
       Or in Eternal Intercourse renew'd!"
       Slumber-drunk an Arab in the
       Desert off his Camel tumbled,
       Who the lighter of her Burden
       Ran upon her road rejoicing.
       When the Arab woke at morning,
       Rubb'd his Eyes and look'd about him--
       "Oh my Camel! Oh my Camel!"
       Quoth he, "Camel of my Soul!--
       That Lost with Her I lost might be,
       Or found, She might be found with Me!"
       XXV.
       When in this Plight The Shah Salaman saw,
       His Soul was struck with Anguish, and the Vein
       Of Life within was strangled--what to do
       He knew not. Then he turn'd him to The Sage--
       "On Altar of the World, to whom Mankind
       Directs the Face of Prayer in Weal or Woe,
       Nothing but Wisdom can untie the Knot;
       And art not Thou the Wisdom of the World,
       The Master-Key of all its Difficulties?
       Absal is perisht; and, because of Her,
       Salaman dedicates his Life to Sorrow;
       I cannot bring back Her, nor comfort Him.
       Lo, I have said! My Sorrow is before Thee;
       From thy far-reaching Wisdom help Thou Me
       Fast in the Hand of Sorrow! Help Thou Me,
       For I am very wretched!" Then The Sage--
       "Oh Thou that err'st not from the Road of Right,
       If but Salaman have not broke my Bond,
       Nor lies beyond the Noose of my Firman,
       He quickly shall unload his Heart to me,
       And I will find a Remedy for all."
       XXVI.
       Then The Sage counsell'd, and Salaman heard,
       And drew the Wisdom down into his Heart;
       And, sitting in the Shadow of the Perfect,
       His Soul found Quiet under; sweet it seem'd,
       Sweeping the Chaff and Litter from his own,
       To be the very Dust of Wisdom's Door,
       Slave of the Firman of the Lord of Life,
       Then The Sage marvell'd at his Towardness,
       And wrought in Miracle in his behalf.
       He pour'd the Wine of Wisdom in his Cup,
       He laid the Dew of Peace upon his lips;
       And when Old Love return'd to Memory,
       And broke in Passion from his Lips, The Sage
       Under whose waxing Will Existence rose
       Responsive, and, relaxing, waned again,
       Raising a Fantom Image of Absal
       Set it awhile before Salaman's Eyes,
       Till, having sow'd the Seed of Quiet there,
       It went again down to Annihilation.
       But ever, for the Sum of his Discourse,
       The Sage would tell of a Celestial Love;
       "Zuhrah," he said, "the Lustre of the Stars--
       'Fore whom the Beauty of the Brightest wanes;
       Who were she to reveal her perfect Beauty,
       The Sun and Moon would craze; Zuhrah," he said,
       "The Sweetness of the Banquet--none in Song
       Like Her--her Harp filling the Ear of Heaven,
       That Dervish-dances at her Harmony."
       Salaman listen'd, and inclin'd--again
       Repeated, Inclination ever grew;
       Until The Sage beholding in his Soul
       The Spirit quicken, so effectually
       With Zuhrah wrought, that she reveal'd herself
       In her pure Beauty to Salaman's Soul,
       And washing Absal's Image from his Breast,
       There reign'd instead. Celestial Beauty seen,
       He left the Earthly; and, once come to know
       Eternal Love, he let the Mortal go.
       XXVII.
       The Crown of Empire how supreme a Lot!
       The Throne of the Sultan how high!--But not
       For All--None but the Heaven-ward Foot may dare
       To mount--The Head that touches Heaven to wear!--
       When the Belov'd of Royal Augury
       Was rescued from the Bondage of Absal,
       Then he arose, and shaking off the Dust
       Of that lost Travel, girded up his Heart,
       And look'd with undefiled Robe to Heaven.
       Then was His Head worthy to wear the Crown,
       His Foot to mount the Throne. And then The Shah
       Summon'd the Chiefs of Cities and of States,
       Summon'd the Absolute Ones who wore the Ring,
       And such a Banquet order'd as is not
       For Sovereign Assemblement the like
       In the Folding of the Records of the World.
       No armed Host, nor Captain of a Host,
       From all the Quarters of the World, but there;
       Of whom not one but to Salaman did
       Obeisance, and lifted up his Neck
       To yoke it under his Supremacy.
       Then The Shah crown'd him with the Golden Crown,
       And set the Golden Throne beneath his Feet.
       And over all the Heads of the Assembly,
       And in the Ears of all of them, his Jewels
       With the Diamond of Wisdom cut and said:--
       XXVIII.
       "My Son, the Kingdom of The World is not
       Eternal, nor the Sum of right Desire;
       Make thou the Faith-preserving Intellect
       Thy Counsellor; and considering To-day
       To-morrow's Seed-field, ere That come to bear,
       Sow with the Harvest of Eternity.
       All Work with Wisdom hath to do--by that
       Stampt current only; what Thyself to do
       Art wise, that _Do_; what not, consult the Wise,
       Turn not thy Face away from the old Ways,
       That were the Canon of the Kings of Old;
       Nor cloud with Tyranny the Glass of Justice;
       But rather strive that all Confusion
       Change by thy Justice to its opposite.
       In whatsoever Thou shalt Take or Give
       Look to the _How_; Giving and Taking still,
       Not by the backward Counsel of the Godless,
       But by the Law of Faith increase and Give.
       Drain not thy People's purse--the Tyranny
       Which Thee enriches at thy Subjects' cost,
       Awhile shall make Thee strong; but in the End
       Shall bow thy Neck beneath a Double Burden.
       The Tyrant goes to Hell--follow not Him--
       "Become not Thou the Fuel of its Fires.
       Thou art a Shepherd, and thy Flock the People,
       To save and not destroy; nor at their Loss
       To lift Thyself above the Shepherd's calling.
       For which is for the other, Flock or Shepherd?
       And join with Thee true Men to keep the Flock.
       Dogs, if you will--but Trusty--head in leash,
       Whose Teeth are for the Wolf, not for the Lamb,
       And least of all the Wolf's Accomplices,
       Their Jaws blood-dripping from the Tyrant's Shambles.
       For Shahs must have Vizirs--but be they Wise
       And Trusty--knowing well the Realm's Estate--
       (For who eats Profit of a Fool? and least
       A wise King girdled by a Foolish Council)--
       Knowing how far to Shah and Subject bound
       On either Hand--not by Extortion,
       Nor Usury wrung from the People's purse,
       Their Master's and their own Estates (to whom
       Enough is apt enough to make them Rebel)
       Feeding to such a Surplus as feeds Hell.
       Proper in Soul and Body be They--pitiful
       To Poverty--hospitable to the Saint--
       Their sweet Access a Salve to wounded Hearts,
       Their Vengeance terrible to the Evil Doer,
       Thy Heralds through the Country bringing Thee
       Report of Good or Ill--which to confirm
       By thy peculiar Eye--and least of all
       Suffering Accuser also to be Judge--
       By surest Steps builds up Prosperity."
       XXIX.
       EPILOGUE.
       Under the Outward Form of any Story
       An Inner Meaning lies--This Story now
       Completed, do Thou of its Mystery
       (Whereto the Wise hath found himself a way)
       Have thy Desire--No Tale of _I_ and Thou,
       Though _I_ and Thou be its Interpreters.
       What signifies The Shah? and what the Sage?
       And what Salaman not of Woman born?
       And what Absal who drew him to Desire?
       And what the Kingdom that awaited him
       When he had drawn his Garment from her Hand?
       What means that Fiery Pile? and what The Sea?
       And what that Heavenly Zuhrah who at last
       Clear'd Absal from the Mirror of his Soul?
       Learn part by part the Mystery from me;
       All Ear from Head to Foot and Understanding be.
       XXX.
       The Incomparable Creator, when this World
       He did create, created First of All
       The First Intelligence--First of a Chain
       Of Ten Intelligences, of which the Last
       Sole Agent is in this our Universe,
       Active Intelligence so call'd; The One
       Distributor of Evil and of Good,
       Of Joy and Sorrow, Himself apart from Matter,
       In Essence and in Energy--his Treasure
       Subject to no such Talisman--He yet
       Hath fashion'd all that is--Material Form,
       And Spiritual, sprung from Him--by Him
       Directed all, and in his Bounty drown'd.
       Therefore is He that Firman-issuing Shah
       To whom the World was subject. But because
       What He distributes to the Universe
       Himself from still a Higher Power receives,
       The Wise, and all who comprehend aright,
       Will recognise that Higher in The Sage.
       His the Prime Spirit that, spontaneously
       Projected by the Tenth Intelligence,
       Was from no Womb of Matter reproduced
       A Special Essence called The Soul--a Child
       Fresh sprung from Heaven in Raiment undefiled
       Of Sensual Taint, and therefore call'd Salaman.
       And who Absal?--The Lust-adoring Body,
       Slave to the Blood and Sense--through whom The Soul,
       Although the Body's very Life it be,
       Does yet imbibe the Knowledge and Desire
       Of Things of Sense; and these united thus
       By such a Tie God only can unloose,
       Body and Soul are Lovers Each of other.
       What is The Sea on which they sail'd?--The Sea
       Of Animal Desire--the Sensual Abyss,
       Under whose Waters lie a World of Being
       Swept far from God in that Submersion.
       And wherefore was it Absal in that Isle
       Deceived in her Delight, and that Salaman
       Fell short of his Desire?--That was to show
       How Passion tires, and how with Time begins
       The Folding of the Carpet of Desire.
       And what the turning of Salaman's Heart
       Back to the Shah, and looking to the Throne
       Of Pomp and Glory? What but the Return
       Of the Lost Soul to its true Parentage,
       And back from Carnal Error looking up
       Repentant to its Intellectual Throne.
       What is The Fire?--Ascetic Discipline,
       That burns away the Animal Alloy,
       Till all the Dross of Matter be consumed,
       And the Essential Soul, its Raiment clean
       Of Mortal Taint, be left. But forasmuch
       As any Life-long Habit so consumed,
       May well recur a Pang for what is lost,
       Therefore The Sage set in Salaman's Eyes
       A Soothing Fantom of the Past, but still
       Told of a Better Venus, till his Soul
       She fill'd, and blotted out his Mortal Love.
       For what is Zuhrah?--That Divine Perfection,
       Wherewith the Soul inspir'd and all array'd
       In Intellectual Light is Royal blest,
       And mounts The Throne and wears The Crown, and Reigns
       Lord of the Empire of Humanity.
       This is the Meaning of This Mystery
       Which to know wholly ponder in thy Heart,
       Till all its ancient Secret be enlarged.
       Enough--The written Summary I close,
       And set my Seal:
       THE TRUTH GOD ONLY KNOWS. _