Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1832.pdf/28

Rh

Rh

", build it on these banks," the monarch said, "That when the autumn winds have swept the sea, They may come hither with their falling rains, A voice of mighty weeping o'er her grave."

They brought the purest marble that the earth E'er treasured from the sun, and ivory Was never yet more delicately carved: Then cupolas were raised, and minarets, And flights of lofty steps, and one vast dome Rose till it met the clouds: richly inlaid With red and black, this palace of the dead Exhausted wealth and skill. Around its walls The cypresses like funeral columns stood, And lamps perpetual burnt beside the tomb. And yet the emperor felt it was in vain, A desolate magnificence that mocked The lost one, and the loved, which it enshrined.

Muntaza Zemani was the wife of Shah Jehan, emperor of Hindostan. The magnificent mausoleum, which it was some consolation to erect, was one of the many human vanities that mock their founders. Shah Jehan past from a prison to his gorgeous tomb. For the last eight years of his life he was confined in the fort of Agra, by his son, Aurungzebe. An Italian artist, who saw this most exquisite specimen of Mahommedan architecture, regretted there was not a glass-case to cover it. The pure whiteness of the marble is powerfully contrasted to the dark green of its avenue of cypresses.