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PAGE 4

The Triumph Of Woman
by [?]

Gay o’er the embattled plain
Moves yonder warrior train,
Their banners wanton on the morning gale!
Full on their bucklers beams the rising ray,
Their glittering helmets flash a brighter day,
The shout of war rings echoing o’er the vale:
Far reaches as the aching eye can strain
The splendid horror of their wide array.
Ah! not in vain expectant, o’er
Their glorious pomp the Vultures soar!
Amid the Conqueror’s palace high
Shall sound the song of victory:
Long after journeying o’er the plain
The Traveller shall with startled eye
See their white bones then blanched by many a winter sky.

Lord of the Earth! we will not raise
The Temple to thy bounded praise.
For thee no victim need expire,
For thee no altar blaze with hallowed fire!
The burning city flames for thee–
Thine altar is the field of victory!
Thy sacred Majesty to bless
Man a self-offer’d victim freely flies;
To thee he sacrifices Happiness,
And Peace, and Love’s endearing ties,
To thee a Slave he lives, to thee a Slave he dies.

Husht was the lute, the Hebrew ceas’d to sing;
The shout rush’d forth–for ever live the King!
Loud was the uproar, as when Rome’s decree
Pronounc’d Achaia once again was free;
Assembled Greece enrapt with fond belief
Heard the false boon, and bless’d the villain Chief;
Each breast with Freedom’s holy ardor glows,
From every voice the cry of rapture rose;
Their thundering clamors burst the astonish’d sky,
And birds o’erpassing hear, and drop, and die.
Thus o’er the Persian dome their plaudits ring,
And the high hall re-echoed–live the King!
The Mutes bow’d reverent down before their Lord,
The assembled Satraps envied and ador’d,
Joy sparkled in the Monarch’s conscious eyes,
And his pleas’d pride already doom’d the prize.

Silent they saw Zorobabel advance:
Quick on Apame shot his timid glance,
With downward eye he paus’d a moment mute,
And with light finger touch’d the softer lute.
Apame knew the Hebrew’s grateful cause,
And bent her head and sweetly smil’d applause.

Why is the Warrior’s cheek so red?
Why downward droops his musing head?
Why that slow step, that faint advance,
That keen yet quick-retreating glance?
That crested head in war tower’d high,
No backward glance disgrac’d that eye,
No flushing fear that cheek o’erspread
When stern he strode o’er heaps of dead;
Strange tumult now his bosom moves–
The Warrior fears because he loves.

Why does the Youth delight to rove
Amid the dark and lonely grove?
Why in the throng where all are gay,
His wandering eye with meaning fraught,
Sits he alone in silent thought?
Silent he sits; for far away
His passion’d soul delights to stray;
Recluse he roves and strives to shun
All human-kind because he loves but One!

Yes, King of Persia, thou art blest;
But not because the sparkling bowl
To rapture lifts thy waken’d soul [1]
But not because of Power possest,
Not that the Nations dread thy nod,
And Princes reverence thee their earthly God,
Even on a Monarch’s solitude
Care the black Spectre will intrude,
The bowl brief pleasure can bestow,
The Purple cannot shield from Woe.
But King of Persia thou art blest,
For Heaven who rais’d thee thus the world above
Has made thee happy in Apame’s love!

Oh! I have seen his fond looks trace
Each angel feature of her face,
Rove o’er her form with eager eye,
And sigh and gaze, and gaze and sigh.
Lo! from his brow with mimic frown,
Apame takes the sacred crown;
Her faultless form, her lovely face
Add to the diadem new grace
And subject to a Woman’s laws
Darius sees and smiles applause!