The Poetry Corner

The Dream Of Roderick

By Madison Julius Cawein

Below, the tawny Tagus swept Past royal gardens, breathing balm; Upon his couch the monarch slept; The world was still; the night was calm. Gray, Gothic-gated, in the ray Of moonrise, tower-and castle-crowned, The city of Toledo lay Beneath the terraced palace-ground. Again, he dreamed, in kingly sport He sought the tree-sequestered path, And watched the ladies of his Court Within the marble-basined bath. Its porphyry stairs and fountained base Shone, houried with voluptuous forms, Where Andalusia vied in grace With old Castile, in female charms. And laughter, song, and water-splash Rang round the place, with stone arcaded, As here a breast or limb would flash Where beauty swam or beauty waded. And then, like Venus, from the wave A maiden came, and stood below; And by her side a woman slave Bent down to dry her limbs of snow. Then on the tesselated bank, Robed on with fragrance and with fire,-- Like some exotic flower--she sank, The type of all divine desire. Then her dark curls, that sparkled wet, She parted from her perfect brows, And, lo, her eyes, like lamps of jet Within an alabaster house. And in his sleep the monarch sighed, "Florinda!"--Dreaming still he moaned, "Ah, would that I had died, had died! I have atoned! I have atoned!" ... And then the vision changed: O'erhead Tempest and darkness were unrolled, Full of wild voices of the dead, And lamentations manifold. And wandering shapes of gaunt despair Swept by, with faces pale as pain, Whose eyes wept blood and seemed to glare Fierce curses on him through the rain. And then, it seemed, 'gainst blazing skies A necromantic tower sate, Crag-like on crags, of giant size; Of adamant its walls and gate. And from the storm a hand of might Red-rolled in thunder, reached among The gate's huge bolts--that burst; and night Clanged ruin as its hinges swung. Then far away a murmur trailed,-- As of sad seas on cavern'd shores,-- That grew into a voice that wailed, "They come! they come! the Moors! the Moors!" And with deep boom of atabals And crash of cymbals and wild peal Of battle-bugles, from its walls An army rushed in glimmering steel. And where it trod he saw the torch Of conflagration stalk the skies, And in the vanward of its march The monster form of Havoc rise. And Paynim war-cries rent the storm, Athwart whose firmament of flame, Destruction reared an earthquake form On wreck and death without a name ... And then again the vision changed: Where flows the Guadalete, see, The warriors of the Cross are ranged Against the Crescent's chivalry. With roar of trumpets and of drums They meet; and in the battle's van He fights; and, towering towards him, comes Florinda's father, Julian; And one-eyed Taric, great in war: And where these couch their burning spears, The Christian phalanx, near and far, Goes down like corn before the shears. The Moslem wins: the Christian flies: "Allah il Allah," hill and plain Reverberate: the rocking skies, "Allah il Allah," shout again. And then he dreamed the swing of swords And hurl of arrows were no more; But, louder than the howling hordes, Strange silence fell on field and shore. And through the night, it seemed, he fled, Upon a white steed like a star, Across a field of endless dead, Beneath a blood-red scimitar. Of sunset: And he heard a moan, Beneath, around, on every hand-- "Accursd! Yea, what hast thou done To bring this curse upon thy land?" And then an awful sense of wings: And, lo! the answer--"'Twas his lust That was his crime. Behold! E'en kings Must reckon with Me. All are dust."