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The Khalif And The Arab.

Topics: classic

A Transcript.     Among the tales, wherein it hath been told,     In golden letters in a book of gold,     Of Hatim Ta's hospitality,     Who, substanceless in death and shadowy,     Made men his guests upon that mountain top     Whereon his tomb grayed from a thistle crop; -     A tomb of rock where women hewn of stone,     Rude figures, spread dishevelled hair; whose moan     From dark to daybreak made the silence cry;     The camel drivers, being tented nigh,     "Ghouls or hyenas," shuddering would say     But only girls of granite find at day: -     And of that city, Sheddad son of Aad     Built mid the Sebaa sands. - A king who had     Dominion of the world and many kings. -     Builded in pride and power out of things     Unstable of the earth. For he had read     Of Paradise, and to his soul had said,     "Now in this life the like of Paradise     I 'll build me and the Prophet's may despise,     Knowing no need of that he promises."     So for this city taxed the lands and seas,     And Columned Irem, on a blinding height,     Blazed in the desert like a chrysolite;     The manner of its building, it is told,     Alternate bricks of silver and of gold:     How Sheddad with his women and his slaves,     His thousand viziers, armored troops as waves     Of ocean countless, God with awful flame -     Shot sheer in thunder on him - God, his shame     Confounded and abolished, ere his eyes     Had glimpsed bright follies of that Paradise;     Lay blotted to a wilderness the land     Accursd, and the city lost in sand:     Among such tales - who questions of their sooth? -     One is recorded of an Arab youth:     The Khalif Hisham ben Abdulmelik     Hunting one day, by some unwonted freak     Rode parted from his retinue and gave     Chase to an antelope. Without or slave,     Amir or vizier to a pasture place     Of sheep he came, where dark, in tattered grace,     Watched one, an Arab youth. And as it came     The antelope drew off, with mouth of flame     And tongue of fire to the youth he turned     Shouting, "Ho! fellow! in what school hast learned!     Seest not the buck escapes me? worthless one!     O desert dullard!"                      Rising in the sun,     "O ignorant," he said, "of that just worth     Of those the worthy of our Muslim earth!     In that thou look'st upon me - what thou art! -     As one fit for contempt, thou lack'st no part     Of my disdain? - Allah! I would not own     A dog of thine for friend no other known -     Of speech a tyrant, manners of an ass!"     And flung him, rags and rage, into the grass.     Provoked, astonished, wrinkled angrily,     Hissed Hisham, "Slave! thou know'st me not I see!"     Calmly the youth, "Aye, verily I know,     O mannerless! thy tongue hath told me so,     Thy tongue commanding ere it spake me peace -     Soon art thou known, nor late may knowledge cease."     "O dog! I am thy Khalif! by a hair     Thy life hangs rav'ling."                              "May it dangle there     Till thou art rotted! - Whiles, upon thy head     Misfortunes shower! - Of his dwelling place,     Allah, be thou forgetful! - What! his grace     Hisham ben Merwan, king of many words -     Few generosities!"...                      A flash of swords     In drifts of dust and lo! the Khalif's troops     Surrounding ride. As when a merlin stoops     Some stranger quarry, prey that swims the wind,     Heron or eagle; kenning not its kind     There whence 'tis cast until it, towering, feels     An eagle's tearing talons, falling reels     In broken circles downward - so the youth,     An Arab fearless as the face of Truth     Of all that made him instant of his death,     Waited with eyes indifferent, equal breath.     The palace reached, "Bring in the prisoner     Before the Khalif," and he came as were     He in no wise concerned: unquestioning went     Chin bowed on breast, and on his feet a bent     Dark gaze of scornful freedom unafraid,     Till at the Khalif's throne his steps were staid;     And unsaluting, standing head held down,     An armed attendant blazed him with a frown,     "Dog of the Bedouins! thy eyes rot out!     Insulter! must the whole big world needs shout     'Commander of the Faithful,' so thou see?"     To him the Arab sneering, "Verily,     Packsaddle of an ass."                          The Khalif's rage     Exceeded now, and, "By my realm and rage!     Arab, thy hour is come, thy very last;     Thy hope is vanished and thy life is past."     The shepherd answered, "Aye? - by Allah, then,     O Hisham, if my time be stretched again,     Unscissored of what Destiny ordain,     Little or great, thy words give little pain."     Then the chief Chamberlain, "O vilest one     Of all the Arabs! wilt thou not be done     Bandying thy baseness with the Ruler of     The Faithful?" spat upon his face. A scoff     Fiery made answer:                     "There be some have heard     The nonsense of our God, the text absurd,     'One day each soul whatever shall be prompt     To bow before me and to give accompt.'"     Then wroth indeed was Hisham; hotly said,     "He braves us! - headsman, ho! his peevish head!     See; canst thou medicine its speech anew,     Doctor its multiplying words to few;     Divorce them well." So, where the Arab stood,     Bound him; made kneel upon the cloth of blood:     With curving sword the headsman leaned at pause,     And, even as 'tis custom made of laws,     To the descendant of the Prophet quoth,     "O Khalif, shall I strike?"                                 "By Iblis' oath!     Strike!" answered Hisham; but again the slave     Questioned; and yet again the Khalif gave     His nodded "yea"; and for the third time then     He asked - and knowing neither men nor Jinn     Might save him if the Khalif spake assent,     Signalled the sword, the youth with body bent     Laughed - till the wang-teeth of each jaw appeared,     Laughed - as with scorn the King of kings he 'd beard,     Insulting death. So, with redoubled spleen     Roared Hisham rising, "It is truly seen     That thou art mad who mockest Azrael!"     The Arab answered: "Listen! - Once befell,     Commander of the Faithful, that a hawk,     A hungry hawk, pounced on a sparrow-cock;     And winging nestward with his meal in claw,     To him the sparrow, for the creature saw     The hawk's conceit, addressed this slyly, 'Oh,     Most great, most royal, there is not, I know,     That in me which will stay thy stomach's stress,     I am too paltry for thy mightiness';     With which the hawk was pleased, and flattered so     In his self-praise, he let the sparrow go."     Then smiled the Khalif Hisham; and a sign     Staying the scimitar, that hung malign     A threatening crescent, said, "God bless, preserve     The Prophet whom all true believers serve! -     Now by my kinship to the Prophet, and     Had he at first but spake us thus this hand     Had ne'er been reckless, and instead of hate     He had had all - except the Khalifate."     Bade stuff his mouth with jewels and entreat     Him courteously, then from the palace beat.

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Exploring the themes of classic, Madison Julius Cawein delivers a powerful performance in "The Khalif And The Arab."... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

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