The Indian Of San Salvador Poem by John Bannister Tabb

The Indian Of San Salvador



What time the countless arrow-heads of light
Keen twinkled on the bended heavens, back-drawn
With deadly aim, at signal of the Dawn,
To slay the slumbering, dusky warrior, Night;
I dreamed a dream: And, lo! three spirits, white
As mist that gathers when the rain is gone,
Came walking o'er the waters, whereupon
The very waves seemed quivering with affright
I woke and heard, while yet the vision stayed,
A prophecy: 'Behold the coming race
Before whose feet the forest kings shall fall
Prostrate; and ye, like twilight shadows tall
That wither at the sun's uplifted face,
Shall pass in silence to a deeper shade.'

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