Page:Tales and Historic Scenes.pdf/37

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A low, half-stifled moan, that seems to rise From life and death's contending agonies. He turns: Who shares with him that lonely shade? —A youthful warrior on his death-bed laid. All rent and stain'd his broider'd Moorish vest, The corslet shatter'd on his bleeding breast; In his cold hand the broken falchion strain'd, With life's last force convulsively retain'd; His plumage soil'd with dust, with crimson dyed, And the red lance, in fragments, by his side; He lies forsaken—pillow'd on his shield, His helmet raised, his lineaments reveal'd. Pale is that quivering lip, and vanish'd now The light once throned on that commanding brow; And o'er that fading eye, still upward cast, The shades of death are gathering dark and fast. Yet, as yon rising moon her light serene Sheds the pale olive's waving boughs between, Too well can Hamet's conscious heart retrace, Though changed thus fearfully, that pallid face, Whose every feature to his soul conveys Some bitter thought of long-departed days.

"Oh! is it thus," he cries, "we meet at last? Friend of my soul, in years for ever past!