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Victor Hugo

I am no Tartar maiden
  That a blackamoor of price
Should tune my lute and hold to me
  My glass of sherbet-ice. 
Far from these haunts of vices,
  In my dear countree, we
With sweethearts in the even
  May chat and wander free.

But still I love this climate,
  Where never wintry breeze
Invades, with chilly murmur,
  These open lattices;
Where rain is warm in summer,
  And the insect glossy green,
Most like a living emerald,
  Shines ’mid the leafy screen.

With her chapelles fair Smyrna—­
  A gay princess is she! 
Still, at her summons, round her
  Unfading spring ye see. 
And, as in beauteous vases,
  Bright groups of flowers repose,
So, in her gulfs are lying
  Her archipelagoes.

I love these tall red turrets;
  These standards brave unrolled;
And, like an infant’s playthings,
  These houses decked with gold. 
I love forsooth these reveries,
  Though sandstorms make me pant,
Voluptuously swaying
  Upon an elephant.

Here in this fairy palace,
  Full of such melodies,
Methinks I hear deep murmurs
  That in the deserts rise;
Soft mingling with the music
  The Genii’s voices pour,
Amid the air, unceasing,
  Around us evermore.

I love the burning odors
  This glowing region gives;
And, round each gilded lattice,
  The trembling, wreathing leaves;
And, ’neath the bending palm-tree,
  The gayly gushing spring;
And on the snow-white minaret,
  The stork with snowier wing.

I love on mossy couch to sing
  A Spanish roundelay,
And see my sweet companions
  Around commingling gay,—­
A roving band, light-hearted,
  In frolicsome array,—­
Who ’neath the screening parasols
  Dance down the merry day. 
But more than all enchanting
  At night, it is to me,
To sit, where winds are sighing,
  Lone, musing by the sea;
And, on its surface gazing,
  To mark the moon so fair,
Her silver fan outspreading,
  In trembling radiance there.

W.D., Tait’s Edin.  Magazine

MOONLIGHT ON THE BOSPHORUS.

("La lune etait sereine.")

[X., September, 1828.]

Bright shone the merry moonbeams dancing o’er the wave;
  At the cool casement, to the evening breeze flung wide,
  Leans the Sultana, and delights to watch the tide,
With surge of silvery sheen, yon sleeping islets lave.

From her hand, as it falls, vibrates the light guitar. 
  She listens—­hark! that sound that echoes dull and low. 
  Is it the beat upon the Archipelago
Of some long galley’s oar, from Scio bound afar?

Is it the cormorants, whose black wings, one by one,
  Cut the blue wave that o’er them breaks in liquid pearls? 
  Is it some hovering sprite with whistling scream that hurls
Down to the deep from yon old tower a loosened stone?

Copyrights
Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

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