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AT Sarra, in the land of Tartary, | |
| There dwelt a king, and with the Russ warred he, | |
| Through which there perished many a doughty man; | |
| And Cambus was he called, the noble Khan. | |
| Nowhere, in all that region, had a crown | 5 |
| Been ever worn with such entire renown. | |
| Hardy he was, and true, and rich, and wise, | |
| Always the same; serene of soul and eyes; | |
| Piteous and just, benign and honorable, | |
| Of his brave heart as any centre stable; | 10 |
| And therewithal he ever kept a state | |
| So fit to uphold a throne so fortunate, | |
| That there was nowhere such another man. | |
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| This noble king, this Tartar, Cambus Khan, | |
| Had by the late Queen Elfeta, his wife, | 15 |
| Two sons, named Cambalu and Algarsife, | |
| And a dear daughter, Canace by name, | |
| Whose perfect beauty puts my pen to shame. | |
| If you could see my heart, it were a glass | |
| To show perhaps how fair a thing she was; | 20 |
| But when I speak of her, my tongue appears | |
| To fail me, looking in that face of hers. | |
| T is well for me that I regard not those, | |
| Who love what I do, as my natural foes; | |
| Or when I think how dear she is to be | 25 |
| To one that will adorn this history, | |
| And how her heart will love him in return, | |
| My paper, sooner than be touched, should burn: | |
| But she knows nothing of all this at present, | |
| She s only young, and innocent, and pleasant; | 30 |
| And sometimes by her father sits and sighs, | |
| On which he stoops to kiss her gentle-lidded eyes. | |
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| And so befell, that when this Khan supreme | |
| Had twenty winters borne his diadem, | |
| He bade the feast of his nativity | 35 |
| Be cried through Sarra, as t was wont to be. | |
| It was in March; and the young lusty year | |
| Came in with such a flood of golden cheer, | |
| That the quick birds, against the sunny sheen, | |
| What for the season and the thickening green, | 40 |
| Sung their affections loudly oer the fields: | |
| They seemed to feel that they had got them shields | |
| Against the sword of winter, keen and cold. | |
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| High is the feast in Sarra, that they hold: | |
| And Cambus, with his royal vestments on, | 45 |
| Sits at a separate table on a throne; | |
| His sons a little lower on the right; | |
| His daughter on the left, a gentle sight; | |
| And then his peers, apart from either wall, | |
| Ranged in majestic drapery down the hall. | 50 |
| The galleries on two sides have crowded slants | |
| Full as flower-shows, of ladies and gallants; | |
| And oer the doorway opposite the king, | |
| The proud musicians blow their shawms and sing. | |
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| But to relate the whole of the array | 55 |
| Would keep me from my tale a summers day; | |
| And so I pass the service and the cost, | |
| The often-silenced noise, the lofty toast, | |
| And the glad-symphonies that leaped to thank | |
| The lustre-giving Lord, wheneer he drank. | 60 |
| Suffice to say, that after the third course | |
| His vassals, while the sprightly wine s in force, | |
| And the proud music mingles over all, | |
| Bring forth their gifts, and set them in the hall; | |
| And so befell, that when the last was set, | 65 |
| And while the king sat thus in his estate, | |
| Hearing his minstrels playing from on high | |
| Before him at his board deliciously, | |
| All on a sudden, ere he was aware, | |
| Through the hall door, and the mute wonder there, | 70 |
| There came a stranger on a steed of brass, | |
| And in his hand he held a looking-glass; | |
| Some sparkling ring he wore; and by his side, | |
| Without a sheath, a cutting sword was tied; | |
| And up he rides unto the royal board: | 75 |
| In all the hall there was not spoke a word; | |
| All wait with busy looks, both young and old, | |
| To hear what wondrous thing they shall be told. | |
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| The stranger, who appeared a noble page, | |
| High-bred, and of some twenty years of age, | 80 |
| Dismounted from his horse; and kneeling down, | |
| Bowed low before the face that wore the crown: | |
| Then rose, and reverenced lady, lords, and all, | |
| In order as they sat within the hall, | |
| With such observance, both in speech and air, | 85 |
| That certainly, had Kublas self been there, | |
| Or sage Confucius, with his courtesy, | |
| Returned to earth to show what men should be, | |
| He could not have improved a single thing; | |
| Then turning lastly to address the king, | 90 |
| Once more, but lightlier than at first, he bowed, | |
| And in a manly voice thus spoke aloud: | |
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| May the great Cambus to his slave be kind! | |
| My lord, the King of Araby and Ind, | |
| In honor of your feast, this solemn day, | 95 |
| Salutes you in the manner he best may, | |
| And sends you, by a page whom he holds dear, | |
| (His happy but his humble messenger) | |
| This steed of brass; which, in a day and night, | |
| Through the dark half as safely as the light, | 100 |
| Oer sea and land, and with your perfect ease, | |
| Can bear your body wheresoeer you please. | |
| It matters not if skies be foul or fair; | |
| The thing is like a thought, and cuts the air | |
| So smoothly, and so well observes the track, | 105 |
| The man that will may sleep upon his back. | |
| All that the rider needs, when he would turn, | |
| Or rise, or take him downwards, you may learn, | |
| If it so please you, when we speak within, | |
| And does but take the writhing of a pin. | 110 |
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| This glass too, which I hold, such is its power, | |
| That if, by any chance, an evil hour | |
| Befell your empire or yourself, t would show | |
| What men you ought to know of, friend or foe; | |
| And more than this, if any ladys heart | 115 |
| Be set on one that plays her an ill part, | |
| Or is in aught beneath her love and her, | |
| Here she may see his real character, | |
| All his new loves, and all his old pursuits: | |
| His heart shall all be shown her, to the roots. | 120 |
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| Therefore, my lord, with your good leave, this glass, | |
| And this green ring, the greenest ever was, | |
| My master, with his greeting, hopes may be | |
| Your excellent daughters here, my lady Canace. | |
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| The virtues of the ring, my lord, are these | 125 |
| That if a lady loves the flowers and trees, | |
| And birds, and all fair Natures ministers, | |
| And if she bear this gem within her purse, | |
| Or on her hand, like any other ring, | |
| There s not a fowl that goes upon the wing, | 130 |
| But she shall understand his speech or strain, | |
| And in his own tongue answer him again. | |
| All plants that gardens or that fields produce, | |
| She shall be also skilled in, and their use, | |
| Whether for sweetness or for stanching wounds: | 135 |
| No secret shall she miss, that smiles in balmy grounds. | |
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| Lastly, my lord, this sword has such a might, | |
| That let it meet the veriest fiend in fight, | |
| T will carve throughout his armor the first stroke, | |
| Were it as thick as any branchéd oak; | 140 |
| Nor could the wound be better for the care | |
| Of all the hands and skills that ever were; | |
| And yet, should it so please you, of your grace, | |
| To pass the flat side on the wounded place, | |
| Though it were ready to let out his soul, | 145 |
| The flesh should close again, the man be whole. | |
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| O heart of hearts! that nobody shall break! | |
| Pardon me, sir, that thus my leave I take | |
| Een of a sword, and like a lover grieve, | |
| But its own self, unbidden, will not leave | 150 |
| The hand that wields it, though it smote a block | |
| The dullest in the land, or dashed a rock; | |
| And this my master hopes may also be | |
| Acceptable to Tartarys majesty, | |
| With favor for himself, and pardon, sir, for me. | 155 |
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| The Khan, who listened with a gracious eye, | |
| Smiled as he stopped, and made a due reply, | |
| Thanking the king, his brother, for the great, | |
| Not gifts, but glories, added to his state, | |
| And saying how it pleased him to have known | 160 |
| So young an honor to his neighbors throne. | |
| The youth then gave the proper officers | |
| The gifts; who, midst the musics bursting airs, | |
| Laid them before the king and Canace, | |
| There as they sate, each in their high degree: | 165 |
| But nothing that they did could move the horse; | |
| Boys might as well have tried their little force | |
| Upon a giant with his armor on: | |
| The brazen thing stood still as any stone. | |
| The stranger hastened to relieve their doubt, | 170 |
| And touched his neck, and led him softly out; | |
| And t was a wonder and a joy to see | |
| How well he went, he stepped so tenderly. | |
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| Great was the press that from all quarters came | |
| To gaze upon this horse of sudden fame; | 175 |
| And many were the struggles to get close, | |
| And touch the mane to try if it hung loose, | |
| Or pat it on the shining flanks, or feel | |
| The muscles in the neck that sternly swell; | |
| But the Khans officers forbade, and fear | 180 |
| Een of the horse conspired to keep the circle clear. | |
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| High was the creature built, both broad and long, | |
| And with a true proportion to be strong; | |
| And yet so horsely and so quick of eye, | |
| As if it were a steed of Araby; | 185 |
| So that from tail to ear there was no part | |
| Nature herself could better, much less art; | |
| Only the people dreaded to perceive | |
| How cold it was, although it seemed alive; | |
| And on all sides the constant wonder was | 190 |
| How it could move, and yet was plainly brass. * * * * * | |
| The dinner done, Cambus arose; and all | |
| Stood up, prepared to follow from the hall: | |
| On either side they bend beneath his eye: | |
| Before him goeth the loud minstrelsy; | 195 |
| And thus they pace into a noble room, | |
| Where dance and song were waiting till they come | |
| With throng of waxen lights that shed a thin perfume. | |
| But first the king and his young visitor | |
| Go where the horse was put, and close the door; | 200 |
| And there the Khan learns all about the pin, | |
| And how the horse is hastened or held in, | |
| And turned, and made to rise or to descend, | |
| And all by a mere thumb and fingers end. | |
| The stranger further tells him of a word, | 205 |
| By which the horse, the instant it is heard, | |
| Vanishes with his sparkling shape, like light, | |
| And comes again, whether it be day or night. | |
| And, sir, said he, my master bade me say | |
| The first time I was honored in this way, | 210 |
| (For on the throne you might prefer, he said, | |
| To wave such plain confessions from crowned head) | |
| That one like you were fitter far than he | |
| To ride the elements like a deity, | |
| And with a speed proportioned to your will | 215 |
| Shine on the good and fall upon the ill; | |
| For he, too sensual and too satisfied | |
| With what small good lay near him, like a bride, | |
| Was ever but a common king; but you | |
| A king, and a reforming conqueror, too. | 220 |
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| Glad is great Cambus, both at this discourse, | |
| And to be master of so strange a horse, | |
| And longs to mount at once, and go and see | |
| His highest mountain-tops in Tartary, | |
| Or look upon the Caspian, or appear | 225 |
| Suddenly in Cathay, a starry fear. * * * * * | |
| So issuing forth, he led into the air, | |
| Saluting the sweet moon which met him there, | |
| And forth the steed was brought; you would have said, | |
| It knew for what, so easily t was led, | 230 |
| And leant with such an air its lively head. | |
| But when at rest, still as before it stood, | |
| As though its legs had to the ground been glued. | |
| Some urged it on, some dragged, and some would fain | |
| Have made it lift a foot, but all in vain. | 235 |
| And yet when Cambus whispered it, a thrill | |
| Flashed through its limbs, nor could its feet be still, | |
| But rocked the body with a sprightly grace, | |
| As though it yearned aloft, and weighed it for the race. | |
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| The youth had talked of armor like an oak, | 240 |
| And how the sword would joint it with a stroke. | |
| The Khan had no convenient foe at hand, | |
| To see what sort of carving he could stand, | |
| But in the moon there stood some oaken trees, | |
| And suddenly he struck at one of these: | 245 |
| Back, like a giant, fell its towering size, | |
| And let the light on his victorious eyes. | |
| The blow was clearly the swords own, and yet | |
| The Khan, as if inspired, felt proud of it, | |
| And leaping on the horse as suddenly, | 250 |
| He touched the pin, and bade the fair good by, | |
| And midst their pretty shrieks, went mounting to the sky. | |
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| Cambus ascended such a height so soon, | |
| It seemed as if he meant to reach the moon; | |
| And you might know by a tremendous shout, | 255 |
| That not a soul in Sarra but looked out; | |
| But the fierce noise made some of them afraid, | |
| That it might startle een a brazen head, | |
| And threatening looks were turned upon the youth, | |
| Who glowed and said, By all the faith and truth | 260 |
| That is, or can be, in the heart of man, | |
| Nothing can happen to the noble Khan: | |
| See, he returns! And at the word, indeed, | |
| They saw returning the descending steed; | |
| Not round and round, careering; but at once; | 265 |
| Oblique and to the point, a fervid pounce. | |
| For to say truth, the noble Khan himself, | |
| Though he had fought on many a mountain shelf, | |
| And drooped through deserts, and been drenched in seas, | |
| Felt somewhat strange in that great emptiness, | 270 |
| And was not sorry to relieve his court | |
| By cutting his return some fathom short: | |
| Such awful looks has utter novelty | |
| To dash, and to confuse the boldest eye. | |
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| The Khan returned, they hasten all again | 275 |
| To their warm room, but do not long remain: | |
| For late and long and highly wrought delight | |
| Cannot, at will, resume its giddy height; | |
| And so, his story told, and praises spread | |
| From mouth to mouth, he waved his court to bed; | 280 |
| Yet still in bed, and dozing oft between, | |
| Their fading words recalled what they had seen: | |
| Still of the ring they mumbled, and the glass, | |
| And what amazing things might come to pass: | |
| And when they slept (for suppers produce dreams, | 285 |
| And joined with dinners, mount them to extremes) | |
| A hundred vapor-headed souls that night | |
| Went riding their own brass with all their might: | |
| They skim, they dive, they shoot about, they soar, | |
| They say, Why rode I not this way before? | 290 |
| Strange! not to think of such a perfect goer! | |
| What leg that crosses brass would stoop to horse-flesh more? | |
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