Zóphiël ; or, the bride of seven | ||
LXXXIII.
“For morn's light bell, this changeful amethyst;A sapphire for the violet's tender blue;
Large opals for the queen-rose zephyr-kist;
And here are emeralds of every hue,
For folded bud and leaflet, dropped with dew.
It was not unusual among the nations of the East to imitate flowers with precious stones. The Persian kings, about the time of Artaxerxes, sat, when they gave audience, under a vine, the leaves of which were formed of gold, and the grapes of emeralds. Gold is supposed by some of the Asiatics to have grown like a tree in the Garden of Eden, and the veins of ore found in the earth still correspond to the form of branches. Shedad, in the gardens of his wonderful palace, had trees formed of gold and silver, with fruit and blossoms of precious stones. This palace, the Arabs suppose, still exists in the desert, where, though generally invisible, individuals from time to time have been indulged with a sight of it.
Zóphiël ; or, the bride of seven | ||