Mathilde Blind

Here you will find the Long Poem The Tombs of the Kings of poet Mathilde Blind

The Tombs of the Kings

Where the mummied Kings of Egypt, wrapped in linen fold on fold, 
Couched for ages in their coffins, crowned with crowns of dusky gold, 

Lie in subterranean chambers, biding to the day of doom, 
Counterfeit life's hollow semblance in each mazy mountain tomb, 

Grisly in their gilded coffins, mocking masks of skin and bone, 
Yet remain in change unchanging, balking Nature of her own; 

Mured in mighty Mausoleums, walled in from the night and day, 
Lo, the mortal Kings of Egypt hold immortal Death at bay. 

For--so spake the Kings of Egypt--those colossal ones whose hand 
Held the peoples from Pitasa to the Kheta's conquered land; 

Who, with flash and clash of lances and war-chariots, stormed and won 
Many a town of stiff-necked Syria to high-towering Askalon: 

"We have been the faithful stewards of the deathless gods on high; 
We have built them starry temples underneath the starry sky. 

"We have smitten rebel nations, as a child is whipped with rods: 
We the living incarnation of imperishable gods. 

"Shall we suffer Death to trample us to nothingness? and must 
We be scattered, as the whirlwind blows about the desert dust? 

"No! Death shall not dare come near us, nor Corruption shall not lay 
Hands upon our sacred bodies, incorruptible as day. 

"Let us put a bit and bridle, and rein in Time's headlong course; 
Let us ride him through the ages as a master rides his horse. 

"On the changing earth unchanging let us bide till Time shall end, 
Till, reborn in blest Osiris, mortal with Immortal blend." 

Yea, so spake the Kings of Egypt, they whose lightest word was law, 
At whose nod the far-off nations cowered, stricken dumb with awe. 

And Fate left the haughty rulers to work out their monstrous doom; 
And, embalmed with myrrh and ointments, they were carried to the tomb; 

Through the gate of Bab-el-Molouk, where the sulphur hills lie bare, 
Where no green thing casts a shadow in the noon's tremendous glare; 

Where the unveiled Blue of heaven in its bare intensity 
Weighs upon the awe-struck spirit with the world's immensity; 

Through the Vale of Desolation, where no beast or bird draws breath, 
To the Coffin-Hills of Tuat--the Metropolis of Death. 

Down--down--down into the darkness, where, on either hand, dread Fate, 
In the semblance of a serpent, watches by the dolorous gate; 

Down--down--down into the darkness, where no gleam of sun or star 
Sheds its purifying radiance from the living world afar; 

Where in labyrinthine windings, darkly hidden, down and down,-- 
Proudly on his marble pillow, with old Egypt's double crown, 

And his mien of cold commandment, grasping still his staff of state, 
Rests the mightiest of the Pharaohs, whom the world surnamed the Great. 

Swathed in fine Sidonian linen, crossed hands folded on the breast, 
There the mummied Kings of Egypt lie within each painted chest. 

And upon their dusky foreheads Pleiades of flaming gems, 
Glowing through the nether darkness, flash from luminous diadems. 

Where is Memphis? Like a Mirage, melted into empty air: 
But these royal gems yet sparkle richly on their raven hair. 

Where is Thebes in all her glory, with her gates of beaten gold? 
Where Syenê, or that marvel, Heliopolis of old? 

Where is Edfu? Where Abydos? Where those pillared towns of yore 
Whose auroral temples glittered by the Nile's thick-peopled shore? 

Gone as evanescent cloudlands, Alplike in the afterglow; 
But these Kings hold fast their bodies of four thousand years ago. 

Sealed up in their Mausoleums, in the bowels of the hills, 
There they hide from dissolution and Death's swiftly grinding mills. 

Scattering fire, Uræus serpents guard the Tombs' tremendous gate; 
While Troth holds the trembling balance, weighs the heart and seals its fate. 

And a multitude of mummies in the swaddling clothes of death, 
Ferried o'er the sullen river, on and on still hasteneth. 

And around them and above them, blazoned on the rocky walls, 
Crowned with stars, enlaced by serpents, in divine processionals, 

Ibis-headed, jackal-featured, vulture-hooded, pass on high, 
Gods on gods through Time's perspectives--pilgrims of Eternity. 

There, revealed by fitful flashes, in a gloom that may be felt, 
Wild Chimæras flash from darkness, glittering like Orion's belt. 

And on high, o'er shining waters, in their barks the gods sail by, 
In the Sunboat and the Moonboat, rowed across the rose-hued sky. 

Night, that was before Creation, watches sphinx-like, starred with eyes, 
And the hours and days are passing, and the years and centuries. 

But these mummied Kings of Egypt, pictures of a perished race, 
Lie, of Death forgotten, face by immemorial face. 

Thoug