You are currently viewing King Porus by Michael Madhusudan Dutt | King Porus – Legend of Old | Explanation | Summary | Key Points | Michael Madhusudan Dutt | Word Meaning | Questions Answers | Critical Appreciation | Themes | Free PDF Download – Easy Literary Lessons

King Porus by Michael Madhusudan Dutt | King Porus – Legend of Old | Explanation | Summary | Key Points | Michael Madhusudan Dutt | Word Meaning | Questions Answers | Critical Appreciation | Themes | Free PDF Download – Easy Literary Lessons


King Porus | King Porus by Michael Madhusudan Dutt | King Porus – Legend of Old | Explanation | Summary | Historical Context | Key Points | Michael Madhusudan Dutt | Word Meaning | Questions Answers | Critical Appreciation | Themes | Free PDF Download – Easy Literary Lessons


King Porus Legend of Old

(Michael Madhusudan Dutt)

I

Loudly the midnight tempest sang,

Ah! it was thy dirge, fair Liberty!

And clouds in thundering accents roar’d

Unheeded warning from on high;

The rain in darksome torrents fell,

Hydaspes’ waves did onward sweep,

Like fiery Passion’s headlong flow,

To meet th’ awaken’d calling deep;

The lighting flashed bright— dazzling,like

Fair women’s glance from ‘neath her veil;’

And on the heaving, troubled air,

There was a moaning sound of wail

But, Ind! thy unsuspecting sons

Did heedless slumber,— while the foe

Came in stealthy step of death,—

Came as the tiger, noiseless, slow,

To close at once its victim’s breath!

Alas! they knew not ‘midst this gloom’

This war of elements was burst,—

Like to an earthquake in the womb

Of a volcano,— deep and low—

A deadlier storm—on them to burst!

II

‘Twas morn; the Lord of Day

From gold Sumero’s palace bright,

Look’d his own sweet dime,

But lo! the glorious flag,

To which the world in awe once bow’d,

There in defiance waved

On India’s gales— triumphant—proud!—

Then, rose the dreadful yell,—

Then lion-like, each warrior brave

Rushed on the coming foe,

To strike for freedom—or the grave!

Oh Death! upon thy gory altar

What blood-libations freely flow’d!

Oh Earth! on that bright morn, what thousands

Rendered to thee the dust they ow’d!

But ‘fore the Macedonians driven’

Fell India’s hardy sons,—

Proud mountain oaks by thunders riven,—

That for their country’s freedom bled—

And made on gore their glorious bed!

III

But dauntlessly there stood

King Porus, towering ‘midst the foe’

Like a Himala-peak

With its eternal crown of snow:

And on his brow did shine

The jewell’d regal diadem.

His milk-white elephant

Was deck’d with many a brilliant gem.

He reck’d not of the phalanx

That ‘round him closed—but nobly fought’

And like the angry winds that blow

And lofty mountain pines lay low,

Amidst them dreadful havoc wrought,

And thinn’d his crown and country’s foe!

The hardiest warriors, at his deeds,

Awe—struck quail’d like wind-shaken reeds:

They dared not look upon his face,

They shrank before his burning gaze,

For in his eye the hero shone

That feared not death;—but high—alone

A being as if of lightning made,

That scorch’d all that is gazed upon—

Trampling the living with the dead.

IV

Th’ immortal Thund’rer’s son,

Astonish’d eyed the heroic king;

He saw him bravely charge

Like his dread father,— fulmining:—

Tho’ thousands’ round him closed,

He stood—as stand the ocean rock

Amdist the lashing billows

Unmoved at their fierce thoundering shock.

But when th’ Emathian conqueror

Saw that with gaping wounds he bled,

‘Desist—desist!’—he cried—

‘Such noble blood should not be shed!’

Then a herald was sent

Where bleeding and faint,

Stood, ‘midst the dying’ and the dead,

King Porus,— boldly, undismayed:

‘Hail, brave and warlike prince!’

Thy generous rival bids thee cease—

Behold! there flies the flag,

That lulls dread war, and wakens peace!’

V

Like to a lion chain’d,

That tho’ faint—bleeding—stands in pride—

With eyes, where unsubdued

Yet flash’d the fire—looks that defied;

King Porus boldly went

Where ‘midst the gay and flittering crowd’

Sat god-like Alexander;

While ‘round’ Earth’s mightiest monarchs bow’d.

King Porus was no slave;

he stooped not—bent not there his knee,—

But stood, as stands an oak,

In Himalayan majesty.

‘The mighty king of Macedon:’

‘Ev’n as a King,’ replied

In royal pride, Ind’s haughty son.

The conqu’ror pleas’d,

Him forth releas’d:

Thus India’s crown was lost and won.

VI

But where, Oh! where is Porus now?

And where the noble hearts that bled

For freedom—with the herioc glow

In patriot bosoms nourished—

—Hearts, eagle-like that recked not death,

But shrank before foul Thraldom’s breath?

And where art thou—fair Freedom!—thou

Once goodness of Ind’s sunny clime

When glory’s halo round her brow

Shone radiant, and she rose sublime,

Like her own towering Himalye

To kiss blue clouds thron’d on high!

Clime of the sun!—How like a Dream—

How like bright sun-beams on a stream

That melt beneath gray twilight’s eye—

That glory hath now flitted by!

The crown that once did deck thy brow

Is tramped down—and thou sunk low;

Thy pearl, thy diamond and thy mine

Of glistening gold no more is thine.

Alas!—each conquering tyrant’s lust

Has robb’d thee of thy very dust!

Thou standest like a lofty tree

Shorn of fruits — blossoms — leaves and all—

Of every gale the sport to be.

Despised and scorned e’en in thy fall?



Leave a Reply