Page:Songs from the Southern Seas and Other Poems (1873).djvu/38

34 Some occult words, and from the carven case Would take the Pearl and touch the young man's face, And hold it o'er him blessing; while the crowd, As on the shore, in dumb abasement bowed. And when the King had closed the formal rite, The rest held savage revelry by night, Round blazing fires, with dance and orgies base, That roused the sleeping echoes of the place. Which down the forest vistas moaned the din, Like spirits pure beholding impious sin.

Nine times they gathered thus; but on the last The old king's waning life seemed well-nigh past. His feeble strength had failed: he walked no more. But on a woven spear-wood couch they bore With careful tread the form that barely gasped, As if the door of death now hung unhasped. Awaiting but a breath to swing, and show The dim eternal plain that stretched below.