Graham's Magazine Vol XXXIII No. 4 October 1848. Various

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Graham's Magazine Vol XXXIII No. 4  October 1848 - Various

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maid,

      Joined in bestowing on their emperor

      The joyous benedictions of the state.

      Alas! about that day's magnificence

      Was spread a web of shame! The victor's sword

      Was stained with cowardice – his dazzling fame

      Tarnished by insult to a fallen woman.

      Returning from his conquests in the East,

      Aurelian led in his triumphant train

      Palmyra's beauteous queen, Zenobia,

      Whose only crime had been the love she bore

      To her own country and her household gods.

      Long had the Orient owned the sovereign sway

      Of Rome imperial, and in forced submission

      Had bowed the neck to the oppressor's yoke.

      The corn of Syria, her fruits and wares,

      The pearls of India, Araby's perfumes,

      The golden treasures of the mountains, all

      Profusely poured in her luxurious lap,

      Crowned to the full her proud magnificence.

      Rome regal, throned on her eternal hills,

      With power supreme and wide-extended hand,

      Plundered the prostrate nations without stint

      Of all she coveted, and, chiefly thou,

      O Liberty, the birthright boon of Heaven.

      But Rome had passed her noon; her despotism

      Was overgrown; an earthquake was at work

      At her foundations; and new dynasties,

      Striking their roots in ripening revolutions,

      Were soon to sway the destinies of realms.

      The East was in revolt. The myriad seeds

      Of dark rebellion, sown by tyranny,

      And watered by the blood of patriots slain,

      Were springing into life on every hand.

      Success was alternating in this strife

      'Twixt power and right, and anxious Victory,

      With balance poised, the doubtful issue feared.

      Amid the fierce contention, 'mid the din

      Of war's sublime encounter, and the crash

      Of falling systems old, Palmyra's queen

      Followed her valiant lord, Palmyra's king.

      Ever beside him in the hour of peril,

      She warded from his breast the battle's rage;

      And in the councils of the cabinet

      Her prudent wisdom was her husband's guide.

      Domestic treason, with insidious stab,

      Snatched from Zenobia's side her gallant lord,

      And threw into her hand the exigencies

      Of an unstable and capricious throne.

      Yet was her genius not inadequate.

      The precepts of experience, intertwined

      With intellectual power of lofty grade,

      Combined to raise Palmyra's beauteous queen

      High in the golden scale of moral greatness.

      Under the teachings of the good Longinus

      The streams of science flowed into her mind;

      And, like the fountain-fostered mountain lake,

      Her soul was pure as its ethereal food.

      The patronage bestowed on learned men

      Declared her love for letters. The rewards,

      Rich and unnumbered, she conferred on merit

      Her own refined, exalted taste betrayed.

      Her graceful and majestic figure, crowned

      With beauty such as few but angels wear,

      Like the rich casing that surrounds the gem,

      Heightened the splendor of her brilliant genius.

      Equally daring on the battle-field

      And in the chase, her prudence and her courage,

      Displayed in many a hot emergency,

      Had twined victorious laurel round her brow.

      Under her rule Palmyra's fortunes rose

      To an unequalled altitude, and wealth

      Flowed in upon her like a golden sea,

      Her wide dominion, stretching from the Nile

      To the far Euxine and Euphrates' flood —

      Her active commerce, whose expanded range

      Monopolized the trade of all the East —

      Her stately capital, whose towers and domes

      Vied with proud Rome in architectural grace —

      Her own aspiring aims and high renown —

      All breathed around the Asiatic queen

      An atmosphere of greatness, and betrayed

      Her bold ambition, and her rivalry

      With the imperial mistress of the world.

      But 't is the gaudiest flower is soonest plucked;

      The sturdiest oak first feels the builder's axe.

      Palmyra's rising greatness had awaked

      The jealousy of Rome, and Fortune looked

      On her prosperity with envious eye.

      Under the golden eagles of the empire,

      Aurelian's soldiers swept the thirsty sands,

      And poured into Palmyra's palmy plains,

      A mighty host hot for the battle-field.

      Borne on her gallant steed, the warrior queen

      The conflict sought, and led her eager troops

      Into the stern encounter. Like the storm

      Of their own desert plain, innumerable,

      They rushed upon the foe, and courted danger.

      Amid the serried ranks, whose steel array

      Glowed in the noonday sun, and threw a flood

      Of wavy sheen into the fragrant air,

      Zenobia rode; and, like an angry spirit,

      Commissioned from above to chastise men,

      Where'er she moved was death. There was a flash

      Of scorn that lighted up her fiery eye,

      A glance of wrath upon her countenance —

      There was a terror in her frenzied arm

      That struck dismay into the boldest heart.

      Alas for her, Fortune was unpropitious!

      Her fearless valor found an overmatch

      In the experienced prudence of Aurelian;

      And scarcely could the desert's hardy sons

      Cope with the practiced legions of the empire.

      The battle gained, Palmyra taken, sacked —

      Its queen a captive, hurled from off a throne,

      Stripped of her wide possessions, forced to sue

      In humblest attitude for even life —

      The haughty victor led his weary legions

      Back to Italia's shores, and in his train

      His

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