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ows, With dismal note the cock unusual crows, A shrill-voic'd howling trembles thro' the air, As passing ghosts were weeping in despair; In dismal yells the dogs confess their fear, And shiv'ring, own some dreadful presence near. So, lower'd the night, the sullen howl the same, And, 'mid the black-wing'd gloom, stern Bacchus came; The form, and garb of Hagar's son he took, The ghost-like aspect, and the threat'ning look.[535] Then, o'er the pillow of a furious priest, Whose burning zeal the Koran's lore profess'd, Reveal'd he stood, conspicuous in a dream, His semblance shining, as the moon's pale gleam: "And guard," he cries, "my son, O timely guard, Timely defeat the dreadful snare prepar'd: And canst thou, careless, unaffected, sleep, While these stern, lawless rovers of the deep Fix on thy native shore a foreign throne, Before whose steps thy latest race shall groan!" He spoke; cold horror shook the Moorish priest; He wakes, but soon reclines in wonted rest: An airy phantom of the slumb'ring brain He deem'd the vision; when the fiend again, With sterner mien, and fiercer accent spoke: "Oh faithless! worthy of the foreign yoke! And know'st thou not thy prophet sent by Heav'n, By whom the Koran's sacred lore was giv'n, God's chiefest gift to men: and must I leave The bowers of Paradise, for you to grieve, For you to watch, while, thoughtless of your woe, Ye sleep, the careless victims of the foe; The foe, whose rage will soon with cruel joy, If unoppos'd, my sacred shrines destroy? Then, while kind Heav'n th'auspicious hour bestows, Let ev'ry nerve their infant strength oppose. When, softly usher'd by the milky dawn, The sun first rises[536] o'er the daisied lawn, His silver lustre, as the shining dew Of radiance mild, unhurt the eye may view: But, when on high the noon-tide flaming rays Give all the force of living fire to blaze, A giddy darkness strikes the conquer'd sight, That dares, in all his glow, the lord of light. Such, if on India's soil the tender shoot Of these proud cedars fix the stubborn root, Such, shall your power before them sink decay'd. And India's strength shall wither in their shade." He spoke; and, instant from his vot'ry's bed Together with repose, the demon fled; Again cold horror
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