Page:Landon in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book 1834.pdf/13

Rh

Rh

A finer eye, a gentler hand, Than in their native Hindoo land.

’Twas thence Nadira came, and still Her memory kept that lofty hill; The vale below, her place of birth, That one charmed spot, her native earth. Still haunted by that early love, Which youth can feel, and youth alone; An eager, ready, tenderness, To all its after-life unknown. When the full heart its magic flings, Alike o’er rare and common things, The dew of morning's earliest hour, Which swells but once from leaf and flower, From the pure life within supplied, A sweet but soon exhausted tide.

There falls a shadow on the gloom, There steals a light step through the room, Gentle as love, that, though so near, No sound hath caught the list’ning ear. A moment’s fond watch o’er her keeping, Murad beholds Nadira weeping; He who to win her lightest smile, Had given his heart’s best blood the while. She turned—a beautiful delight Has flushed the pale one into rose, Murad, her love, returned to-night, Her tears, what recks she now of those? Dried in the full heart's crimson ray, Ere he can kiss those tears away— And she is seated at his feet, Too timid his dear eyes to meet; But happy; for she knows whose brow Is bending fondly o’er her now. And eager for his sake to hear The records red of sword and spear, For his sake feels the colour rise, His spirit kindle in her eyes,