352
மயிலை சீனி. வேங்கடசாமி ஆய்வுக்களஞ்சியம் - 20
Of peace and marriage-rites thus dreamed the king;
Of graves and thrones the traitor; while the fume From altars, loud with prayer
To speed the Scythian envoys, darkened heaven.
156
A hardy prince was young Zariades,
Scorning the luxuries of the loose - robed Mede,
Cast in the antique mould
Of men whose teaching thewed the sould of Cyrus.
160
To ride, to draw the bow, to speak the truth,
Sufficed to Cyrus,' said the prince, when child.
'Astyages knew more'
―
Answered the Magi 'Yes, and lost his kingdoms.'
164
Yet there was in this prince the eager mind
Which needs must think, and therefore needs must learn; Natures, whose roots strike deep,
Clear their own way, and win to light in growing.
168
His that rare beauty which both charms and awes
The popular eye; his the life-gladdening smile;
His the death - dooming frown;
That which he would he could; men loved and feared him. 172
Now of a sudden over this grand brow
There fell the gloom of some unquiet thought,
As when the south wind sweeps
Sunshine from Hadria in a noon of summer:
176
And as a stag, supreme among the herd, With lifted crest inhaling lusty air,
Smit by a shaft from far,
And thro' dim woodlands with drooped antlers creeps To the cool marge of rush-grown watersprings; So from all former sports,
Deserts his lordly range amidst the pasture,
180
Contest, or converse with once-loved companions,
184