Page:The Lusiad (Camões, tr. Mickle, 1791), Volume 2.djvu/138

 While proudly mingling with the tempest's sound, Their shouts of joy from every cliff rebound.


 * The howling blast, ye slumbering storms prepare,

A youthful lover and his beauteous fair, Triumphant sail from India's ravaged land; His evil angel leads him to my strand. Through the torn hulk the dashing waves shall roar, The shatter'd wrecks shall blacken all my shore. Themselves escaped, despoil'd by savage hands, Shall naked wander o'er the burning sands, Spared by the waves far deeper woes to bear, Woes even by me acknowledged with a tear. Their infant race, the promised heirs of joy, Shall now no more a hundred hands employ; By cruel want, beneath the parents' eye, In these wide wastes their infant race shall die. Through dreary wilds where never pilgrim trod, Where caverns yawn and rocky fragments nod, The hapless lover and his bride shall stray, By night unshelter'd, and forlorn by day. In vain the lover o'er the trackless plain Shall dart his eyes, and cheer his spouse in vain. Her tender limbs, and breast of mountain snow, Where ne'er before intruding blast might blow, Parch'd by the sun, and shrivell'd by the cold Of dewy night, shall he, fond man, behold. Thus wandering wide, a thousand ills o'erpast, In fond embraces they shall sink at last; While