Lew Wallace

COMMODUS & THE WOOING OF MALKATOON (Illustrated)


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And horses beautiful enough for kings,

       And by their owmers far more loved than were

       Their youthless wives, mere handmaids of the brutes—

       In the noon, lo! the Tribe.

       "'Came these with thee ?'

       The Dervish asked.

       "And Othman, pleased to mark

       His wonder, smiled, and said, 'I am their Sheik.

       The Wilderness hath rendered them to me,

       And they are Prophets now.'

       "Then, half in quest

       And half in scorn, the elder's brow and hand

       Impulsive rose. But Othman meekly bowed,

       And answered, patient still, 'Ah me! They were

       So true thy words the day I boldly asked

       The hand of Malkatoon: "For men will laugh,

       And with their laughter kill." In other phrase,

       The jesting critics in my father's halls

       Would make a plaything of her simple soul,

       And drive it weeping back to Paradise,

       With none to know how lavishly of charms

       And all perfections it was clothed on,

       Save thou, and I, and Allah. And the thought

       Went with me down into the No Man's Land,

       Whither I betook myself companionless,

       A question ever present, How to keep

       My love the child she is, and harmless save

       Her from the courtly brood? At last I had

       An answer. You must know the land was wild,

       Uncastled, townless, and the people dwelt

       Apart as enemies, and ruthless preyed

       Upon each other, making mock of love

       And Allah; and when I shewed them trust

       They laughed at me, and let me go in peace,

       A dreaming madman. But in time there came

       A hopeful change. By what 'twas wrought I leave

       The necklace and yon bale of robes to tell.

       Out of the farther South there one day rose

       A cloud of war with grim necessities

       They knew not of before; and it blew fire

       Upon them, and calamities so fierce

       They came to me, and in large charity

       I yielded to their prayer, and ordered them,

       And with them took the field. And as we charged

       I shouted Allah! Allah! And they caught

       The holy name, and with it swung their swords,

       And aimed their lances, all so joyously.

       It seemed the blood they shed had turned to wine,

       And made them sudden drunk. We won the fight,

       And they are Moslem now. Then as I sat

       My horse the children and the women came

       And kissed his bloody front, and caught my hand

       And stirrups, painted with the same red drip,

       Proclaiming, Live Sheik Othman ! And the men

       Made answer, Live Sheik Othman ! Then a new,

       Exquisite pleasure wrapt me in a glow

       Of strange delight, and, looking up, I saw

       The moon a crescent in the day-sky's depth,

       And by it, lustrous clear, the star assigned

       To wait on it, as page upon a queen.

       Some childish thought—a wonder if the sun

       Were not enough to show the havoc strewn

       Along the field—was passing through my mind,

       When suddenly the face of Malkatoon

       Appeared to me, a fleck of brighter light,

       Resilvering the silver of the moon.

       I raised my hands as worshippers are wont;

       I could not speak, for all my senses swam

       In dim confusion; and before I woke

       The apparition drew the coarser rays

       Of star and planet round it, and was veiled

       From sight. And when 'twas gone, I knew myself,

       By certain intuition of the soul,

       In Allah's care. I knew that Malkatoon

       Would be my wife. I knew the warrior-cries

       For me as Sheik was Allah making known

       What He would have. Wherefore, behold my Tribe—

       The Tribe of Othman ! Prophets of the State

       Which I will build with them! And as thou lovest

       His officers, the little and the great,

       Look kindly on them, father, for they know

       Right well to follow where I dare to lead.

       And think'st thou they will laugh at Malkatoon?

       Or wound her gentle soul with glance or speech

       Unseemly? Nay, good Dervish, say the word,

       And here before thy door the Tribe shall pitch

       My great black tent and set the wedding - feast,

       And hold it on with story, meat, and drink,

       And merry joust, until the new year come,

       Unless thou sooner say that never bride

       Had truer welcome to a truer home.

       I ask it—I, Othman—who never prayed

       To other man.'

       "And then the Dervish said,

       Slow speaking, 'To my cave there often come

       Ambassadors of kings, and yesterday

       The high Sultan of ancient Samarkand

       Saluted me in person royally,

       And in his shower of gifts my feet were hid,

       Or had I stept, it would have been on pearls

       And precious stones; and yet more welcome thou,

       O son of Ertoghrul, than all of them—

       A messenger from Allah with the key

       He keeps upon the door above the vault

       Where things to come lie hidden' gainst their day—

       Take thou salute, and hear, then go thy way.

       The wise man reads the name of Allah writ

       On everything in Nature—on the stone,

       The wasting leaf, the glittering water-drop—

       And comes at last to look for prophecy

       In all the unaccounted trifles strewn

       By chance along the blind-worn paths of life.

       These trophies are not voiceless as they seem.

       I listen, and they tell me of the East

       By thee again restored and masterful;

       I listen, and they tell how turbaned hosts

       Devout shall come from every land to light

       The ready torches of their faith