Page:The Bengali Book of English Verse.djvu/90



The Emperor Aurungzeb, in the height of his power, made an offer of marriage to the Princess of Roopnagore, who haughtily rejected his suit, saying, that she would rather renounce the throne of her ancestors than be allied to an infidel.

Hear how the maid of Roopnagore Disdained the friendship of the Moor, When forth by royal hest there came, With peers and paladins of fame, A gay young lordling of degree, The pride of Moslem chivalry, To win her from her father's side, To be a Kaffir sovereign's bride.

'Go back. Sir Knight,' she sternly said, While maiden shame her cheeks dyed red, 'Go back and say, for gems and gold, For lordly Delhi's guarded hold, For power, for state, for lands in fee, An odalisque I ne'er will be, Nor faith and troth will coldly sell To him who is an infidel.

'The dun-deer on the mountain's side May with the panther be allied; Compelled by bleak December's weather, The owl and lark may house together; Or yet by spring inspired the dove May seek the hawk's protecting love; But Roopnagore in weal and woe Shall ever deem the Moor a foe.