BookRags.com Literature Guides Literature Guides Criticism/Essays Criticism/Essays Biographies Biographies My Bibliography Periodic Table U.S. Presidents Shakespeare Sonnet Shake-Up
Research Anything:        
History | Encyclopedias | Films | News | Create a Bibliography | More... Login | Register | Help

Jump to Page: / 156 

Search "Poems"

Navigation

Poems eBook

Print-Friendly  Order the PDF version  Order the RTF version
Victor Hugo

      More and more
        Fades it slow,
      As on shore
        Ripples flow,—­
      As the plaint
      Far and faint
      Of a saint
        Murmured low.

      Hark! hist! 
        Around,
      I list! 
        The bounds
          Of space
          All trace
          Efface
        Of sound.

JOHN L. O’SULLIVAN.

THE OBDURATE BEAUTY.

("A Juana la Grenadine!")

[XXIX., October, 1843.]

To Juana ever gay,
Sultan Achmet spoke one day
  “Lo, the realms that kneel to own
  Homage to my sword and crown
All I’d freely cast away,
  Maiden dear, for thee alone.”

“Be a Christian, noble king! 
For it were a grievous thing: 
  Love to seek and find too well
  In the arms of infidel. 
Spain with cry of shame would ring,
  If from honor faithful fell.”

“By these pearls whose spotless chain,
Oh, my gentle sovereign,
  Clasps thy neck of ivory,
  Aught thou askest I will be,
If that necklace pure of stain
  Thou wilt give for rosary.”

JOHN L. O’SULLIVAN.

DON RODRIGO.

A MOORISH BALLAD.

("Don Roderique est a la chasse.")

[XXX., May, 1828.]

Unto the chase Rodrigo’s gone,
  With neither lance nor buckler;
A baleful light his eyes outshone—­
  To pity he’s no truckler.

He follows not the royal stag,
  But, full of fiery hating,
Beside the way one sees him lag,
  Impatient at the waiting.

He longs his nephew’s blood to spill,
  Who ’scaped (the young Mudarra)
That trap he made and laid to kill
  The seven sons of Lara.

Along the road—­at last, no balk—­
  A youth looms on a jennet;
He rises like a sparrow-hawk
  About to seize a linnet.

“What ho!” “Who calls?” “Art Christian knight,
  Or basely born and boorish,
Or yet that thing I still more slight—­
  The spawn of some dog Moorish?

“I seek the by-born spawn of one
  I e’er renounce as brother—­
Who chose to make his latest son
  Caress a Moor as mother.

“I’ve sought that cub in every hole,
  ’Midland, and coast, and islet,
For he’s the thief who came and stole
  Our sheathless jewelled stilet.”

“If you well know the poniard worn
  Without edge-dulling cover—­
Look on it now—­here, plain, upborne! 
  And further be no rover.

“Tis I—­as sure as you’re abhorred
  Rodrigo—­cruel slayer,
’Tis I am Vengeance, and your lord,
  Who bids you crouch in prayer!

“I shall not grant the least delay—­
  Use what you have, defending,
I’ll send you on that darksome way
  Your victims late were wending.

“And if I wore this, with its crest—­
  Our seal with gems enwreathing—­
In open air—­’twas in your breast
  To seek its fated sheathing!”

Copyrights
Poems from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.

Join BookRagslearn moreJoin BookRags


About BookRags | Customer Service | Report an Error | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy