LXXI.
Bright Ramaöur followed on, in order meet;
Then Nahalcoul and Zotzaraven, best
Beloved, save Rouämasak of perfume sweet;
Then Talhazak and Marmorak:
These names are formed from Hebraic words, expressive of the
various qualities and employments of the beings who bear them.
Aishalat signifies fire-control; Psaämayim, black-water; Ramaöur,
light-direct; Nahalcoul, guide-sound; Zotzaraven, shape-spar;
Rouämasak, mingle-air; Talhazak, dew-congeal; Marmorak
(partly Greek), marble-stain.
Nothing can be more barbarous than Hebrew words as they are
pronounced in English. They are, however, much softer on the
lips of Oriental speakers, or even those of the south of Europe.
Some of the dialects of the aborigines of America, though they
look so repulsively as we get them on paper, are soft as the murmur
of the forest when spoken by forest orators.
the rest,
A crowd of various use and properties,
Arranged to meet their monarch's wishes, vie
In seemly show to please the strangers' eyes,
And show what could be wrought without or soil or sky.