Page:Persian Literature (1900), vol. 1.djvu/175

 No sign of Rustem have thy words conveyed; Thou sayest he leads the Persian host to arms, With him has battle lost its boisterous charms? Of him no trace thy guiding hand has shown; Can power supreme remain unmark'd, unknown?"

"Perhaps returned to Zábul's verdant bowers, He undisturbed enjoys his peaceful hours,  The vernal banquets may constrain his stay,  And rural sports invite prolonged delay."

"Ah! say not thus; the Champion of the world, Shrink from the kindling war with banners furled!  It cannot be! Say where his lightnings dart,  Show me the warrior, all thou know'st impart;  Treasures uncounted shall be thy reward,  Death changed to life, my friendship more than shared.  Dost thou not know what, in the royal ear,  The Múbid said--befitting Kings to hear?  'Untold, a secret is a jewel bright,  Yet profitless whilst hidden from the light;  But when revealed, in words distinctly given,  It shines refulgent as the sun through heaven.'"[35]

To him, Hujír evasive thus replies: "Through all the extended earth his glory flies! Whenever dangers round the nation close,  Rustem approaches, and repels its foes;  And shouldst thou see him mix in mortal strife,  Thou'dst think 'twere easier to escape with life  From tiger fell, or demon--or the fold  Of the chafed dragon, than his dreadful hold--  When fiercest battle clothes the fields with fire,  Before his rage embodied hosts retire!"

"And where didst thou encountering armies see? Why Rustem's praise so proudly urge to me?  Let us but meet and thou shalt trembling know,  How fierce that wrath which bids my bosom glow:  If living flames express his boundless ire,  O'erwhelming waters quench consuming fire!  And deepest darkness, glooms of ten-fold night,  Fly from the piercing beams of radiant light."

Hujír shrunk back with undissembled dread, And thus communing with himself, he said-- "Shall I, regardless of my country, guide To Rustem's tent this furious homicide?