Poetry John Keats (best thriller novels of all time txt) đ
- Author: John Keats
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Comes from a plaything of the Emperorâs choice,
From a Man-Tiger-Organ, prettiest of his toys.â XXXVIII
Eban then usherâd in the learned Seer:
Elfinanâs back was turnâd, but, neâertheless,
Both, prostrate on the carpet, ear by ear,
Crept silently, and waited in distress,
Knowing the Emperorâs moody bitterness;
Eban especially, who on the floor âgan
Tremble and quake to death,â âhe feared less
A dose of senna-tea, or nightmare Gorgon,
Than the Emperor when he playâd on his Man-Tiger-Organ.
They kissâd nine times the carpetâs velvet face
Of glossy silk, soft, smooth, and meadow-green,
Where the close eye in deep rich fur might trace
A silver tissue, scantly to be seen,
As daisies lurkâd in June-grass, buds in green;
Sudden the music ceased, sudden the hand
Of majesty, by dint of passion keen,
Doubled into a common fist, went grand,
And knockâd down three cut glasses, and his best ink-stand.
Then turning round, he saw those trembling two:
âEban,â said he, âas slaves should taste the fruits
Of diligence, I shall remember you
To-morrow, or next day, as time suits,
In a finger conversation with my mutes,â â
Begone!â âfor you, Chaldean! here remain!
Fear not, quake not, and as good wine recruits
A conjurerâs spirits, what cup will you drain?
Sherry in silver, hock in gold, or glassâd champagne?â
âCommander of the Faithful!â answerâd Hum,
âIn preference to these, Iâll merely taste
A thimble-full of old Jamaica rum.â
âA simple boon!â said Elfinan, âthou mayâst
Have Nantz, with which my morning-coffeeâs laced.â1
âIâll have a glass of Nantz, then,ââ âsaid the Seer,â â
âMade racyâ â(sure my boldness is misplaced!)â â
With the third partâ â(yet that is drinking dear!)â â
Of the least drop of crĂšme de citron crystal clear.â
âI pledge you. Hum! and pledge my dearest love,
My Bertha!â âBertha! Bertha!â cried the sage,
âI know a many Berthas!â âMineâs above
All Berthas!â sighed the Emperor. âI engage,â
Said Hum, âin duty, and in vassalage,
To mention all the Berthas in the earth;â â
Thereâs Bertha Watson,â âand Miss Bertha Page,â â
This famed for languid eyes, and that for mirth,â â
Thereâs Bertha Blount of York,â âand Bertha Knox of Perth.â
âYou seem to knowââ ââI do know,â answerâd Hum,
âYour Majestyâs in love with some fine girl
Named Bertha; but her surname will not come,
Without a little conjuring.â âââTis Pearl,
âTis Bertha Pearl! What makes my brain so whirl?
And she is softer, fairer than her name!â
âWhere does she live?â askâd Hum. âHer fair locks curl
So brightly, they put all our fays to shame!â â
Live?â âO! at Canterbury, with her old grand dame.â
âGood! good!â cried Hum, âIâve known her from a child!
She is a changeling of my management;
She was born at midnight in an Indian wild;
Her motherâs screams with the striped tigerâs blent,
While the torch-bearing slaves a halloo sent
Into the jungles; and her palanquin,
Rested amid the desertâs dreariment,
Shook with her agony, till fair were seen
The little Berthaâs eyes ope on the stars serene.â
âI canât say,â said the monarch, âthat may be
Just as it happenâd, true or else a bam!
Drink up your brandy, and sit down by me,
Feel, feel my pulse, how much in love I am;
And if your science is not all a sham,
Tell me some means to get the lady here.â
âUpon my honour!â said the son of Cham,2
âShe is my dainty changeling, near and dear,
Although her story sounds at first a little queer.â
âConvey her to me, Hum, or by my crown,
My sceptre, and my cross-surmounted globe,
Iâll knock youâ ââ âDoes your majesty meanâ âdown?
No, no, you never could my feelings probe
To such a depth!â The Emperor took his robe,
And wept upon its purple palatine,
While Hum continued, shamming half a sob,â â
âIn Canterbury doth your lady shine?
But let me cool your brandy with a little wine.â
Whereat a narrow Flemish glass he took,
That since belongâd to Admiral De Witt,
Admired it with a connoisseuring look,
And with the ripest claret crowned it,
And, ere the lively head could burst and flit,
He turnâd it quickly, nimbly upside down,
His mouth being held conveniently fit
To catch the treasure: âBest in all the town!â
He said, smackâd his moist lips, and gave a pleasant frown.
âAh! good my Prince, weep not!â And then again
He fillâd a bumper. âGreat Sire, do not weep!
Your pulse is shocking, but Iâll ease your pain.â
âFetch me that Ottoman, and prithee keep
Your voice low,â said the Emperor, âand steep
Some ladyâs-fingers nice in Candy wine;
And prithee, Hum, behind the screen do peep
For the rose-water vase, magician mine!
And sponge my foreheadâ âso my love doth make me pine.â
âAh, cursed Bellanaine!â âDonât think of her,â
Rejoinâd the Mago, âbut on Bertha muse;
For, by my choicest best barometer,
You shall not throttled be in marriage noose;
Iâve said it, Sire; you only have to choose
Bertha or Bellanaine.â So saying, he drew
From the left pocket of his threadbare hose,
A sampler hoarded slyly, good as new;
Holding it by his thumb and finger full in view.
âSire, this is Bertha Pearlâs neat handywork,
Her name, see here, Midsummer, ninety-oneââ â
Elfinan snatchâd it with a sudden jerk,
And wept as if he never would have done,
Honouring with royal tears the poor homespun;
Whereon were broiderâd tigers with black eyes,
And long-tailed pheasants, and a rising sun,
Plenty of posies, great stags, butterflies
Bigger than stagsâ âa moonâ âwith other mysteries.
The monarch handled oâer and oâer again
These day-school hieroglyphics with a sigh;
Somewhat in sadness, but pleased in the main,
Till this oracular couplet met his eye
Astoundedâ âCupid, I do thee defy!
It was too much. He shrunk back in his chair,
Grew pale as death and
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