NRLF POEMS JOHN L. STODDARD +> , POEMS JOHN LSTODDARD AUTHOR p 'THE STODDARD LECTURES," "RED LETTER DAYS ABROAD, "THE STODDARD LIBRARY," ETC., ETC. CHICAGO AND BOSTON GEO. L. SHUMAN & CO. 1910 COPYRIGHT, 1910, BY JOHN L. STODDARD Press of J. J. Little & Ives Co., New York TS 55 P6 ' CONJUGI CARISSIM.E CONTENTS PAGE MY "PROMENADE SOLITAIRE" ..... i REINCARNATION ........4 To THE SPHINX 8 To THE " RING NEBULA" 10 THE WAIP 12 THE SILVER HERONS .......17 YOUTH AND AGE . . . . . . . .21 To THE VENUS OP MELOS ...... 25 SUNSET AT INTERLAKEN . . . . . .28 UNDER THE STARS . . . . . . .31 CORSICA 34 MORS LEONIS ........ 36 A STORY OP THE SEA ....... 39 OLD HYMN-TUNES ....... 44 BEFORE A STATUE OP BUDDHA . . . . .46 THE PILLARS OF HERCULES ...... 50 FRIENDSHIP 53 To MY DEAD DOG .......55 TO-DAY ......... 56 To THE COUNTESS GUICCIOLI . . . . .58 THE BUTTERFLY ........ 60 AFTER THE STORM ....... 64 FALLEN 66 "^QUANIMITAS" ........ 70 THE DEATH OF ANTONINUS Pius . . . . .1 vi CONTENTS PAGE ROME REVISITED ....... 74 ON THE PALATINE ....... 80 THE FAREWELL AT FONTAINEBLEAU . . . .84 JAPAN, OLD AND NEW ...... 88 THE UNFORGOTTEN HEROES ...... 95 A WINTER'S DAY 98 ON THE PROMENADE ....... 100 SOLITUDE ......... 102 OUT OF THE RANKS ....... 104 AUTONOMY ......... 106 ORIENT TO OCCIDENT, 1906 ...... 108 IN A COLUMBARIUM . . . . . . . 117 THE CAPTIVE . . . . . . . .121 WEARINESS ........ 123 A MAY MONODY ........ 125 MY LOST FRIENDS . . . . . . .127 To SLEEP AND TO FORGET . . . . . .129 IN SILENCE ........ 130 AT HOCHFINSTERMUNZ ...... 133 DISCOURAGEMENT ........ 136 MESALLIANCE ........ 143 MY BORES ......... 145 GRATITUDE ........ 148 Two MOTHERS ........ 149 THE GIFT OF JUNO . . . . . . . 152 MYSTERIES ......... 155 TYROLEAN OBERMAIS ......... 159 CONTENTMENT ........ 160 To MERAN'S NORTHERN MOUNTAINS . . . . 162 CONTENTS vii PAGE AT SUNSET ......... 164 POST NUBES Lux ....... 167 THE HOME-COMING FROM ROME ..... 168 MY GARDEN . . . . . . .170 OSWALD, THE MINNESINGER ...... 175 AFTER THE VINTAGE ....... 182 THE PASSING MOON . . . . . . .184 THE MOUNTAINS OF MERAN AT SUNRISE . . . 187 AUTUMN IN MERAN ....... 189 THE STATUE OF THE EMPRESS ELIZABETH ... 191 THE OUTCASTS ........ 194 HEIMWEH ......... 197 MY LIBRARY ........ 199 BESIDE LAKE COMO THE FAUN 205 THE OLD CARRIER ....... 208 EVENING ON LAKE COMO ...... 213 ISOLA COMACINA . . . . . . . . 2l6 ACQUA FREDDA . . . . . . . .221 THE POSTERN GATE . . . . . . .224 JANUARY IN THE TREMEZZINA ..... 229 THE WANDERER . . . . . . . .231 A FRAGMENT ........ 233 "CoNjuci CARISSIMAE" ...... 235 THE CASCADE . . . . . . . . 238 INFLUENCE ........ 241 POINT BALBIANELLO ....... 243 AT LENNO ......... 248 WAKEFULNESS . . .'. . , . .251 viii CONTENTS PERSONALLY ADDRESSED PAGE To HON. JESSE HOLDOM . . . . 255 LINES FOR A GOLDEN WEDDING ..... 258 IN MEMORIAM. G. M. M. . . . . . . 260 To J. C. Y. 262 To C 263 To MR. AND MRS. A. H. S 264 TRANSLATIONS THE Kiss TO THE FLAG (From the French) . . . 269 AUTUMN (From the German) . . . . .275 SERENADE TO NINON (From the French) . . . 277 THE RED TYROLEAN EAGLE (From the German) . ,278 ANDREAS HOFER (From the German) . . . .280 STREAM AND SEA (From the German) .... 282 EMILY'S GRAVE (From the German) . . . - 283 RACHEL RACHEL .....- 287 MY "PROMENADE SOLITAIRE Up and down in my garden fair, Under the trellis where grapes will bloom, With the breath of violets in the air, As pallid Winter for Spring makes room, I walk and ponder, free from care, In my beautiful Promenade Solitaire. Back and forth in the checkered shade Traced by the lattice that holds the vine, With the glory of snow-capped crests displayed On the sapphire sky in a billowy line, I stroll, and ask what can compare With the charm of my Promenade Solitaire. To and fro 'neath the nascent green Which clambers over its slender frame, With white peaks lighting up the scene, As snowfields glow with the sunset flame, I saunter, halting here and there For the view from my Promenade Solitaire. MY "PROMENADE SOLITAIRE" In and out through the silence sweet, While plash of fountain and song of bird Are the only sounds in my lov'd retreat By which the air is ever stirred, I pace, as in long-drawn aisles of prayer, So hushed is my Promenade Solitaire. Onward rushes the world without, But the breeze which over my garden steals Brings from it merely a distant shout Or the echo light of passing wheels ; In its din and drive I have now no share, As I muse in my Promenade Solitaire. Am I dead to the world, that I thus disdain Its moil and toil in the prime of life, When perhaps a score of years remain To win more gold in its selfish strife? Am I foolish to choose the purer air Of my glorious Promenade Solitaire? Ah no! From my mountain-girdled height I watch the game of the world go on, And note the course of the bitter fight, And what is lost and what is won; And I judge of it better here than there, As I gaze from my Promenade Solitaire. MY "PROMENADE SOLITAIRE " It is ever the same old tale of greed, Of robbing and killing the weaker race, Of the world proved false by the cruel deed, Of the slanderous tongue with the friendly face ; 'Tis enough to make one's heart despair Even here in my Promenade Solitaire. They cheer, and struggle, and beat the air With many a stroke and thrust intense, And urge each other to do and dare, To gain some good they deem immense; But they look like ants contending there From the height of my Promenade Solitaire. Backward and forward they run and crawl, Houses and treasures they heap up high, Hither and thither their booty haul, . . . Then suddenly drop in their tracks and die! For few are wise enough to repair In time to a Promenade Solitaire. Meantime the -Earth speeds on through space, As the sun for a million years hath steered, And, an eon hence, the entire race Will have played its part and disappeared; But what will the lifeless planet care, As it follows its Promenade Solitaire? REINCARNATION I know not how, I know not where, But from my own heart's mystic lore I feel that I have breathed this air, And walked this earth before; And that in this its latest form My old-time spirit once more strives, As it has fought through many a storm In past, forgotten lives. Not inexperienced did my soul This incarnation's threshold tread; Not without record was the scroll It brought back from the dead. What thrilled me in a previous state Rekindles here its ancient flame; What I by instinct love and hate I knew before I came; And lands, of which in youth I dreamed And read, heart-moved, and longed to see, REINCARNATION When really visited, have seemed Not strange but known to me. When Mozart, still a child, untaught, Ran joyous to the silent keys, And with inspired fingers wrought Majestic harmonies, There fell upon his psychic ear Faint echoes of a music known In former lives continued here, And one by one outgrown; So to some special lines of thought My mind intuitively tends, And old affinities have brought Not new, but ancient friends. As from the dumb brute's wistful eyes A dawning human soul aspires, So from each lower form we rise, Ourselves our spirits' sires. Full many a thought that thrills my breast Is the late harvest from a seed Sown elsewhere, on my soul impressed By many an arduous deed; REINCARNATION Full many a fetter which hath lamed My struggling spirit's upward flight Was by that self-same spirit framed, When further from the Light; Not without justice, then, the pain That o'er the tortured world extends; Not without hope the lessening stain, As each life-cycle ends. No changeless, endless states await The good and evil souls set free; Each grave is a successive gate In immortality. Clear is at last the truth that slept Among the darkened souls of men, " Ye cannot see God's face, except Ye shall be born again/' The God-like Christs and Buddhas yearn, However high their spirits' stage, For man's salvation to return As Saviour or as Sage. On our benighted, groping minds Their noble precepts, star-like, shine; REINCARNATION Each soul, that wisely seeks them, finds The truths that are divine. Misunderstood and vilified, Their aims and motives scarcely known, How many of these Saints have died, Rejected by their own! Yet, though their followers miss the way, In spite of precept and of prayer, And lead unnumbered souls astray, Committed to their care, Still, on the lofty spirit-plane, Where all lies open to their sight, The Masters know that not in vain They left the Hills of Light TO THE SPHINX O sleepless Sphinx! Thy sadly patient eyes, Forever gazing o'er the shifting sands, Have watched Earth's countless dynasties arise, Stalk forth like spectres waving gory hands, Then fade away with scarce a lasting trace To mark the secret of their dwelling place : O sleepless Sphinx! O changeless Sphinx! In the fair dawn of Time So grandly sculptured from the living rock! Still wears thy face its primal look sublime, Surviving all the hoary ages' shock : Still art thou royal in thy proud repose, As when the sun on tuneful Memnon rose, O changeless Sphinx! O voiceless Sphinx! Thy solemn lips are dumb; Time's awful secrets lie within thy breast; Age follows age ; revering pilgrims come TO THE SPHINX c From every clime to urge the same request, That thou wilt speak! Poor creatures of a day, In calm disdain thou seest them die away : O voiceless Sphinx! Majestic Sphinx! Thou crouchest by a sea Whose fawn-hued wavelets clasp thy buried feet: Whose desert-surface, petrified like thee, Gleams white with sails of many an Arab fleet: Whose tawny billows, surging with the storm, Break on thy flanks, and overleap thy form; Majestic Sphinx! Eternal Sphinx! The Pyramids are thine; Their giant summits guard thee night and day, On thee they look when stars in splendor shine, Or while around their crests the sunbeams play: Thine own coevals, who with thee remain Colossal Genii of the boundless plain! Eternal Sphinx! TO THE "RING NEBULA" O pallid spectre of the midnight skies, Whose phantom features in the dome of Night Elude the keenest gaze of wistful eyes, Till amplest lenses aid the failing sight; On heaven's blue sea the farthest isle of fire, From thee, whose glories it would fain admire, Must vision, baffled, in despair retire ! What are thou, ghostly visitant of flame? Wouldst thou 'neath closer scrutiny resolve In myriad suns that constellations frame, Round which life-freighted satellites revolve, Like those unnumbered orbs which nightly creep In dim procession o'er the azure steep, As white-winged caravans the desert sweep? Or art thou still an incandescent mass, Acquiring form as hostile forces urge, Through whose vast length a million lightnings pass, As to and fro its fiery billows surge, TO THE "RING NEBULA' 3 n Whose glowing atoms, whirled in ceaseless strife, Where now chaotic anarchy is rife, Shall yet become the fair abodes of life ? We know not; for the faint, exhausted rays Which hither on Light's winged coursers come, From fires which ages since first lit their blaze, One instant gleam, then perish, spent and dumb; How strange the thought that, whatsoe'er we learn, Our tiny globe no answer can return, Since with but dull, reflected beams we burn! Yet this we know; yon ring of spectral light, Whose distance thrills the soul with solemn awe, Can ne'er escape in its majestic might The firm control of omnipresent law; This mote descending to its bounden place, Those suns whose radiance we can scarcely trace, Alike obey the Power pervading space. THE WAIF I sit in my luxurious chair; Soft rugs caress my slippered feet; Within, a balmy, summer air; Without, a wintry storm of sleet. A favorite book is in my hands, A thousand others line the walls; Some souvenir of distant lands In every nook the Past recalls. Upon a Turkish tabouret In Dresden cups of peerless blue Gleams on a pretty Cashmere tray The fragrant Mocha's ebon hue. Two dainty hands prepare the draught, While loving glances meet my own; Two lips repeat (the coffee quaffed), " To-night 'tis sweet to be alone." Hark! in the court my faithful hound Breaks rudely on our tete-a-tete; THE WAIF 13 Too well I understand that sound! A mendicant is at my gate. Admit him? Yes; for none shall say That he who seeks in want my door Is ever harshly turned away; His plea is heard, if nothing more. I leave my comforts with a sigh, And, passing to the outer hall, Behold a man doomed soon to die, So ill, I look to see him fall. I know his story ere he speaks; And from his cough and labored breath I trace, with tears upon my cheeks, His long and hopeless fight with death. A poor, storm-beaten, lonely waif, Lured southward from a colder clime By hope and that unfailing faith That health will come again in time! Alas! too late; the dread disease Hath fixed its roots too firmly there; And now sick, friendless, at my knees, He pours forth his heart-breaking prayer. I 4 THE WAIF What are his needs ? Before all, food ! Hot soup, bread, wine, until at last A sense of human brotherhood Obliterates his cruel past; Yet not for long; for though well-fed, With warmer garments than before, He hath no place to lay his head, On turning from my friendly door. I slip some silver in his hand ('Twill purchase shelter for the night), Then for a time, remorseful, stand And watch his bent form out of sight; Out through the snow and chilling sleet, Out from my home of warmth and cheer, Forth from my comforts to the street! Ah ! should I not have kept him here ? My room is no less bright and warm, But all its charm and joy have fled ; That lonely figure in the storm Leaves both our hearts uncomforted. For this is but one tiny wave In life's vast, shoreless sea of woe, fHE WAIF 15 One note in man's hoarse cry to save, Resounding o'er its ebb and flow; To-day the cry is from a boy, Whose wistful eyes look out through pain Upon a world of blithesome joy That he can never know again; To-morrow come yet sadder scenes, A woman crowned with snow-white hair, Who helpless lies, with slender means, And none to comfort or to care. I ask myself in blank dismay, Ought I my little wealth to own? Yet, should I give it all away, 'Twere but a drop to ocean thrown! Great God! if what I dimly see, In this small section of mankind, Of pain and want and misery, Can thus bring anguish to my mind, How canst Thou view the awful whole, As our ensanguined planet rolls From unknown source to unknown goal Its freight of suffering human souls? 16 THE WAIF Problem of Pain! the first and last Of riddles that we strive to solve, Ever more poignant and more vast, As man's mentalities evolve, I hear thy victims' ceaseless wails, I view the path my race hath trod, And at the sight my spirit quails, And cries in agony to God ! THE SILVER HERONS Within a home for captive beasts Whose world had dwindled to a cage, I noted in their mournful eyes Such resignation, fear, and rage, I longed at once to set them free, And send them over land and sea Back to a life of liberty. For them no more the mountain range, The desert vast, the jungle's lair ! Their meaner fate through grated bars To feel the public's hateful stare ; Poor prisoners! doomed henceforth to pace With stinted strides a narrow space, And, daily, gaping crowds to face. At length I stood before a cage, Where, guarded by a loftier screen, Were artificial rocks, and pools, And strips of vegetation green; There, perched upon some rocky mound, Or crouching on the miry ground, A flock of waterfowl I found. i8 THE SILVER HERONS Storks, poised upon a single leg, Stood dreaming of the eternal Nile, iThe Mecca of their winter flight, [When lured by Egypt's sunny smile; While ducks and geese, in gabbling mood, Explored the muddy pond for food, Attended by their noisy brood. Their keeper brought their evening meal ; And instantly on broad-webbed feet, And stilt-like legs, and flapping wings, The feathered bipeds rushed to greet, With snaps and duckings of delight, The joyful, ever-welcome sight Of supper at the approach of night. Yet all came not ! Two stood apart, With plumage like fresh-fallen snow, Two " Silver Herons," of a race As pure and fine as earth can show ; These, 'mid the tumult that was rife, Despised the others' greedy strife, And looked disgusted with their life. With closed eyes, shrinking from the mass, They seemed, in thought, removed as far From all their coarse environment As sun is separate from star ! THE SILVER HERONS 19 The very picture of disdain, From all such gorging, it was plain, They had determined to refrain. The keeper murmured with reproach, " Those Silver Herons are too proud ! Why should they not devour their food Together with the common crowd ? They eat a little from my hand, But would prefer to starve, than stand Besmeared by that uncleanly band. " A month hence, neither will be here ; For both will grieve themselves to death; And when one falls, its mate expires With scarcely an additional breath; And, should there come another pair, They in their turn the fate will share Of the two herons standing there." Poor hapless birds! I see them yet, Alone and starving in their pride, Their glittering plumage still intact, While standing bravely side by side ; And, although put to hunger's test, Continuing mutely to protest Against defilement with the rest. 20 THE SILVER HERONS O Silver Herons, teach mankind To cherish thus a stainless name ! To shun the vile, ignoble crowd, Preferring death to smirch and shame! A foul, unfriendly mob to brave, And go, unspotted, to the grave, Is not to lose one's life, but save. YOUTH AND AGE " I will gain a fortune," the young man cried; " For Gold by the world is deified ; Hence, whether the means be foul or fair, I will make myself a millionaire, My single talent shall grow to ten ! " But an old man smiled, and asked " And then? " A peerless beauty," the young man said, " Shall be the woman I choose to wed. And men shall envy me my prize, And women scan her with jealous eyes ; " And he looked annoyed, when once again The old man smiled, and asked " And then ? " " I will build," he answered, " a home so fine, That kings in their castles shall covet mine; The rarest pictures shall clothe its walls, And statues stand in its stately halls ; It shall lack no luxury known to men ; " But still the old man asked " And then? " " I will play a role in Church or State That all mankind shall acknowledge great; 22 YOUTH AND AGE I will win at last such brilliant fame, That distant lands shall know my name, For I can wield both sword and pen ; " But again the old man asked " And then? " " Is your heart a stone," the young man cried, " Hath all ambition within you died, That nothing seems to you worth while, And you answer me with that sphinx-like smile? Of what are you secretly thinking, when You utter those mournful words, ' And then ? ' Gently the old man said " O youth, The words I have spoken veil a truth That is only learned through the lapse of years, And is first discerned through a mist of tears ; For youth is full of illusions fair ,Which manhood sees dissolve in air. " Your millions will not make you blest, They will rob you, instead, of peace and rest : Your beautiful wife may be the prey Of a treacherous friend or a skilled roue ; And the splendid palace that you crave Will make you Society's gilded slave. " 'Tis a weary road to political fame ; Its price you must often pay in shame ; YOUTH AND AGE 23 And the world-known name for which you yearn On a bulletin board or a funeral urn, Is scarcely worth the toil and strife Which poison the peaceful joys of life. " For be you ever so wise and good, By some you will be misunderstood, And fame will bring you envious foes To spoil for you many a night's repose ; And alas ! as your pathway upward tends, You will find self-interest in your friends ! " The loudest shout of the mob's applause Will die out after a moment's pause; And what is the greatest public praise To one whose form in the earth decays ? For the cruel world will always laugh At the fulsome lie of an epitaph. " But Spring recks not of Winter's snow, And you will not believe, I know, That all those boons that tempt your powers, If gained, will be like fragile flowers, Whose freshness wilts in the fevered hand, Like a wild rose dropped on the desert sand. " And much of the work you deem sublime Is like the grain of pink-hued lime 24 YOUTH AND AGE Which once was a coral insect's shell, But now is a microscopic, cell, Entombed with countless billions more In a lonely reef on an unknown shore ! " " Alas ! " said the youth, and his eyes were wet,- " Is old age merely a vain regret, The retrospect of wasted years, Of false ideals and lost careers? Advise me! What must I reject, And what for my permanent good select? " " Beloved youth," the old man said, " All is not vain, be comforted ! Seek not thine own, but others' joy; Ring true, like gold without alloy; Waste not thy time in asking Why, Or Whence, or Whither when we die; " The actual world, the present hours Will give enough to tax thy powers; At no clear duty hesitate ; Serve well thy neighbor and the State; So shalt thou add thy tiny form To bind the reef that breasts the storm ! " TO THE VENUS OF MELOS O goddess of that Grecian isle Whose shores the blue ^Egean laves, Whose cliffs repeat with answering smile Their features in its sun-kissed waves! An exile from thy native place, We view thee in a northern clime; Yet mark on thy majestic face A glory still undimmed by Time. Through those calm lips, proud goddess, speak! Portray to us thy gorgeous fane, Where Melian lovers thronged to seek Thine aid, Love's paradise to gain; And where, as in the saffron east, Day's jewelled gates were open flung, With stately pomp the attendant priest Drew back the veil before thee hung; And when the daring kiss of morn, Empurpling, made thy charms more fair, 26 TO THE VENUS OF MELOS Sweet strains from unseen minstrels borne Awoke from dreams the perfumed air. Vouchsafe at last our minds to free From doubts pertaining to thy charms,- The meaning of thy bended knee, The secret of thy vanished arms. Wast thou in truth conjoined with Mars? Did thy fair hands his shield embrace, The surface of whose golden bars Grew lovely from thy mirrored face? Or was it some bright scroll of fame Thus poised on thine extended knee, Upon which thou didst trace the name Of that fierce god so dear to thee? Whatever thou hadst, no mere delight Was thine the glittering prize to hold; Not thine the form that met thy sight, Replying from the burnished gold; Unmindful what thy hands retained, Thy gaze is fixed beyond, above ; Some dearer object held enchained The goddess of immortal love. TO THE VENUS OF MELOS 27 We mark the motion of thine eyes, And smile ; for, heldst thou shield or scroll, A tender love-glance we surprise, That tells the secret of thy soul. SUNSET AT INTERLAKEN The sun is low ; Yon peak of snow Is reddening 'neath the sunset glow; The rosy light Makes richly bright The Jungfrau's veil of snowy white. From vales that sleep Night's shadows creep To take possession of the steep ; While, as they rise, The western skies Seem loath to leave so fair a prize. The light of day Still loves to stay And round that pearly summit play; How fair a sight That realm of light, Contended for by Day and Night! SUNSET AT INTERLAKEN 29 Now fainter shines, As Day declines, The lustrous height which he resigns; The shadows gain Th' illumined plane; The Jungfrau pales, as if in pain. When daylight dies, The azure skies Seem sparkling with a thousand eyes, Which watch with grace From depths of space The sleeping Jungfrau's lovely face. And when the Light Hath put to flight Night's shadows from each Alpine height, Along the skies It quickly flies, To kiss the Maiden's opening eyes. The timid flush And rosy blush Which then from brow to bosom rush, Are pure and fair Beyond compare, Resplendent in the crystal air. 30 SUNSET AT INTERLAKEN And thus alway By night and day Her varying suitors homage pay; And tinged with rose, Or white with snows, The same fair, radiant form she shows. UNDER THE STARS The breath of summer stirs the trees, A thousand roses round me bloom, Whose saffron petals give the breeze A wealth of exquisite perfume, As, climbing high, with tendrils bold, They clothe the walls with cups of gold. No sound disturbs the silence sweet, The weary birds have sunk to rest; For where the snow and sunset meet The light is fading in the west, And with the dusk the cares of day Slip from my burdened heart away. The emptiness of social strife, The pettiness of human souls, The cheap frivolities of life, The keen pursuit of common goals, How small they seem beneath the dome That shelters my Tyrolean home! 32 UNDER THE STARS A shining mote, our tiny earth No furrow leaves in shoreless space! What is one brief existence worth In the long annals of the race? That silent, star-strewn vault survives The dawns and dusks of countless lives. Why grieve, dear heart? Oblivion deep Will soon enshroud both friend and foe, And those who laugh and those who weep Must join the hosts of long ago, Whose transient hours of smiles and tears Make up earth's wilderness of years. The sunset's glowing embers die, The snow-peaks lose their crimson hue, Through deepening shades the ruddy sky Burns slowly down to darkest blue, Wherein a million worlds of light Announce the coming of the night. I gaze, and slowly my despair At human wretchedness and crime Gives place to hopes and visions fair, So much may be evolved by time ! So much may yet men's souls surprise Beneath the splendor of God's skies! UNDER THE STARS 33 Some day, somewhere, in realms afar His light may make all problems plain, And justice on some happier star May recompense this planet's pain, And earth's bleak Golgothas of woe Grow lovely in life's afterglow. CORSICA In Bordighera's groves of palm I linger at the close of day, And watch, beyond the ocean's calm, A range of mountains far away. Their snowy summits, white and cold, Flush crimson like a tinted shell, As sinks the sun in clouds of gold Behind the peaks of Esterel. No unsubstantial shapes are they, The offspring of the mist and sea; No splendid vision of Cathay, Recalled in dreamful revery ; Their solid bastions, towering high Though rooted in earth's primal plan, Proclaim to every passer by The cradle of the Corsican. What martial soul there found rebirth, When on those cliffs then scarcely known CORSICA 35 There once more visited the earth The spirit called Napoleon? Three islands, like the sister Fates, His life-thread wove upon their loom From fair Ajaccio's silvered gates To Saint Helena's mournful tomb; The first, his birthplace ; whence appeared His baleful star with lurid glow; Next, Elba, where the world still feared The fugitive from Fontainebleau ; Last, England's lonely prison-block, Grim fragment 'neath a tropic sky, Where, like Prometheus on his rock, The captive Caesar came to die. O Corsica, sublimely wild And riven by the winds and waves, Thy fame is deathless from thy child, Whose glory filled a million graves. MORS LEONIS When o'er the aged lion steals The instinct of approaching death, Whose numbing grasp he vaguely feels In trembling limbs and labored breath, He shuns the garish light of day, Leaves his lov'd mate and whelps at play, And sorrowfully creeps away. From bush to bush, by devious trails, He drags himself from hill to hill, And, as his old strength slowly fails, Drinks long at many a mountain rill, Until he gains, with stifled moan, A height, to hated man unknown, Where he may die, at least alone. Relaxing now his mighty claws, He lies, half shrouded by his mane, His grand head resting on his paws, And heeding little save his pain, As o'er his eyes, so sad and deep, The film of death begins to creep, The prelude to eternal sleep. MORS LEONIS 37 As Caesar, reeling 'neath the stroke And dagger-thrust of many a friend, Drew o'er his face his Roman cloak, To meet, unseen, his tragic end, So hath this desert-monarch tried With noble dignity to hide From others how and where he died. And now his spirit is serene ; For here no stranger can intrude To view this last, pathetic scene, Or mar its sombre solitude ; Prone on the lonely mountain crest, Confronting the resplendent west, The dying lion sinks to rest. Proud king of beasts ! thy death should teach Mankind the cheapness of display; More eloquent than human speech, Thy grand example shows the way To pass from life, unheard, unseen, And with composed, majestic mien Death's awful sacredness to screen. Nay, more! thou didst select a place Where, unobserved, thy form can rest, Till Mother Earth with fond embrace Shall hide it in her ample breast ; 38 MORS LEONIS Like Moses in lone Nebo's land, Thou shalt be sepulchred in sand, Unseen by eye, untouched by hand. No pompous tomb shall ever rise Above thy lonely, sun-bleached frame; No epitaph of well-turned lies Shall be inscribed beneath thy name ; No bells for thee a dirge shall ring, No choir beside thy grave shall sing, Yet hast thou perished like a king ! A STORY OF THE SEA Were you ever told the legend old Of the birth of storms at sea? You should hear the tale in a Channel gale, As happened once to me, On a fearful night off Fastnet Light, With Ireland on our lee. In the good old days, which poets praise As the best that man hath seen, The storm-king's hand might smite the land, But the sea remained serene ; Blow east, blow west, its sun-kissed breast Kept ever its tranquil sheen. Not a single trace came o'er its face Of the storms that raged elsewhere ; No misty screen e'er crept between The sun and its image there ; And its depths at night were gemmed with light By stars in the crystal air. 40 A STORY OF THE SEA The fisherman laughed in his little craft, If a landsman felt alarm, For never did gale a ship assail, Or a sailor suffer harm ; There was nothing to fear, for the skies were clear, And the ocean always calm. But on the shore, where more and more The human race increased, There were cold and heat, and snow and sleet, And troubles never ceased ; For wind and rain beat down the grain, And the plague slew man and beast. And even worse was the moral curse, That came like a deadly blight Through men who seized whate'er they pleased, On the ground that might makes right, Till the fatal seed of selfish greed Made life a bitter fight. Hence many sighed, as they watched the tide Glide out to the sunset sea, And longed to go with its gentle flow To where they hoped might be A realm of peace, where sorrows cease, And souls from pain are free. A STORY OF THE SEA 41 At last they said, " We were better dead, Than endure this anguish more ; Let us seek relief from care and grief Far out from the storm-swept shore; The sea can bring no sadder thing Than the life we lived before." So a ship was framed, which they fondly named " The Peace of the Human Mind," And the weary band soon left the land And its ceaseless strife behind; But unattained the goal remained They had so longed to find. For the souls that came were quite the same As they were before they sailed; And, as pride and hate did not abate, The hope of the voyagers failed ; And, facing alone the great Unknown, The bravest spirits quailed. Meanwhile the ship began to dip, And labored to and fro, For the sea, though fair, could no more bear This load of human woe ; And at last the boat, with all afloat, Sank helplessly below. 42 A STORY OF THE SEA Down, down it swirled to the nether world; While up from the riven main Came the gurgling sound of those who drowned, As the vortex closed again; The sea surged back to its wonted track; Once more 'twas a sun-lit plain ! But soon men saw, with deepening awe, That sea grow white with spray; Its brilliant hue was changed from blue To a deathlike, leaden gray; And a sullen roar approached the shore Whence the ship had sailed away. Huge waves rolled in with frightful din, And spat out hissing foam, And smote the sand along the strand, And swept off many a home ; And lightnings flashed and thunder crashed From heaven's ink-black dome. " Alas ! " they cried, " that our brothers died In the depths of the sea of peace ; They have brought unrest to its quiet breast, Which nevermore shall cease ; For the peace it lost we must pay the cost; And behold ! our woes increase ! " A STORY OF THE SEA 43 In truth, since then how many men Have learned that the mighty deep Can heave and swell to a seething hell, When storms its surface sweep ! For its calm hath fled, and countless dead Are the spoils it loves to heap. But at its best, when it lies at rest On a cloudless summer day, And, tiger-like, forbears to strike, But, sated, basks at play, One seems to hear, with the psychic ear, Its murmuring wavelets say, " No real relief from care and grief Is found o'er distant waves; The men who sail to find it, fail, And sink to lonely graves; In the firm control of man's own soul Is alone the peace he craves." OLD HYMN-TUNES Dear, old-time tunes of prayer and praise, Heard first beside my mother's knee, Your music on my spirit lays A spell from which I should be free, If lapse of time gave liberty. I listen, and the crowded years Fade, dream-like, from my life, and lo! I find my eyelids wet with tears, So much I loved, so well I know Those plaintive airs of long ago! They tell me of my vanished youth, Of faith in what so flawless seemed, Before the painful quest of truth Had proved how much I then esteemed Was other than I fondly dreamed ! They make my childhood live again; And life's fair dawn grows once more bright, While listening to the sweet refrain, Sung in the Sabbath's waning light, " Glory to Thee, my God, this night ! " OLD HYMN-TUNES 45 My mother's voice, so pure and strong, My father's flute of silvery tone, The little household's strength of song, The childish treble of my own, I hear them once more, but . . . alone! Sweet obligato to some hymn Whose words those vanished tones recall, Float o'er me, when earth's scenes grow dim, And life's last, lingering echoes fall, Till silence settles over all ! BEFORE A STATUE OF BUDDHA O Buddha, of the mystic smile And downcast, dreamful eyes, To whom unnumbered sacred shrines And gilded statues rise, Whose fanes are filled with worshippers, Whose hallowed name is sung By myriads of the human race In every Eastern tongue, What means thy sweet serenity? Our planet, as it rolls, Sweeps through the starry universe A mass of burdened souls, Still agonized and pitiful, Despite the countless years That man has spent in wandering Through paths of blood and tears ! O Lord of love and sympathy For all created life, BEFORE A STATUE OF BUDDHA 47 How canst thou view thus placidly The world's incessant strife, The misery and massacre Of war's destructive train, The martyrdom of animals, The tragedy of pain, The infamous brutalities To helpless children shown, The pathos of whose joyless lives Might melt a heart of stone ? Preeminently merciful, Does not thy spirit long To guard from inhumanity The weak against the strong? Thou bad'st mankind deal tenderly With every breathing thing, The horse that drags the heavy load, The bird upon the wing, The flocks along the riverside, The cattle on the lea, And every living denizen Of earth and air and sea; 48 BEFORE A STATUE OF BUDDHA Yet daily in the shambles A sea of blood is spilled, And man is nourished chiefly From beasts that he has killed ! And hunters still find happiness In seeing, red with wounds, A sobbing deer, with liquid eyes, Dragged down by yelping hounds! What is the real significance Of thine unchanging smile? Is it the secret consciousness That grief is not worth while, That sorrow is the consequence Of former lives of sin, The spur that goads us on and up A nobler life to win ? That pain is as impermanent As shadows on the hills, And that Nirvana's blessedness Will cure all mortal ills? But agony is agony, And small is the relief If, measured with eternity, Life's anguish be but brief. BEFORE A STATUE OF BUDDHA 49 This world at least is sorrowful, And to a tortured frame The present pang is actual, Nirvana but a name ; Moreover, why should former lives Bequeath their weight of woe, If with it comes no memory To guide us, as we go? If o'er the dark, prenatal void No mental bridge be cast, No thread, however frail, to link The present to the past? Still silent and dispassionate ! Ah, would that I might find The key to the serenity That fills thy lofty mind ! Thou hast a joy we do not feel, A light we cannot see ; Injustice, sin, and wretchedness No longer harass thee ; No doubt to thy sublimer gaze Life's mystery grows plain, As finally full recompense Atones for earthly pain. THE PILLARS OF HERCULES Here ends at last the Inland Sea ! Still seems its outlet, as of yore, The anteroom of Mystery, As, through its westward-facing door, I see the vast Atlantic lie In splendor 'neath a sunset sky. Up from its distant, glittering rim Streams o'er the waves a flood of gold, To gild the mountains, bare and grim, Which guard this exit, as of old, The sombre sentries of two seas, The Pillars reared by Hercules; Gibraltar, on the northern shore, By conquering Moors once proudly trod, And, to the south a league or more, Huge Abyla, the " Mount of God ", Whence burdened Atlas watched with ease The Gardens of Hesperides. THE PILLARS OF HERCULES 51 How many slow-paced centuries passed, Ere the first sailors dared to creep Beyond the gloom these monsters cast, And venture on the unknown deep, At last resolving to defy The " God-established " termini ! Yet no fierce gods opposed their path ; No lurid bolt or arrow sped To crush them with celestial wrath, And number them among the dead; The dreadful Pillars proved as tame As other rocks of lesser fame. Hence, when before them stretched the sea, Majestic, limitless and clear, A rapturous sense of being free Dispelled all vestiges of fear The longed-for ocean to explore From pole to pole, from shore to shore. Thus all men learn the God they dread Is kinder than they had supposed, And that, not God, but Man hath said, " The door to freedom must be closed! " Once past that door, with broadened view, They find Him better than they knew. 52 THE PILLARS OF HERCULES Meanwhile, along the sunlit strait My ship glides toward the saffron west, Out through the old Phenician gate To ocean's gently heaving breast, Whence, on the ever-freshening breeze, Come to my spirit words like these ; Sail bravely on! the morning light Shall find thee far beyond the land ; Gibraltar's battlemented height And Afric's tawny hills of sand Shall soon completely sink from view Beneath the ocean's belt of blue. Sail on ! nor heed the shadows vast Of fabled Powers, whose fear enslaves! Their spectral shapes shall sink at last Below the night's abandoned waves; Rest not confined by shoals and bars ; Steer oceanward by God's fixed stars! FRIENDSHIP 'Tis not in the bitterest woes of life That the love of friends, as a rule, grows cold; Still less does it melt in the heat of strife, Or die from the canker of borrowed gold; For pity comes when they see us grieved, Or forced to lie on a couch of pain, And a hasty word is soon retrieved, And the loan of money may leave no stain. 'Tis oftenest lost through the deadly blight Of Society's pestilential air, Which blackens the robe of purest white, And fouls what once was sweet and fair. An envious woman's whispered word, A slander born of a cruel smile, The repetition of something heard, The imputation of something vile, Or possibly even a fancied slight For a feast declined, or a call delayed, 54 FRIENDSHIP Or jealousy caused by petty spite, Or the wish for a higher social grade, 'Tis one, or all of these combined, That saps the love of our dearest friends, And slowly poisons heart and mind, Till the joy of generous friendship ends. Last night they were in a cordial mood, But to-day they suddenly seem estranged, And for hours we suffer, and sadly brood O'er the unknown cause that has made them changed. Ask once, that they make the matter clear, But ask no more, if the lesson fail ; Let the changeling go, however dear, And shed no tears for a love so frail. Be not the slave of a friend's migraine, Nor let him play, now hot, now cold; The master of thyself remain, And the key of thine inmost heart withhold! For they who weep and sue and plead, Are used and dropped, like a worn-out glove, And the friends with " moods " are the friends who need To learn that they are not worth our love. TO MY DEAD DOG All is noiseless; Cold and voiceless Lies the form I've oft caressed; Heedless now of blame or praises, 'Neath the sunshine and the daisies Little Nina lies at rest. Eager greeting, Joy at meeting, Watching for my step to come, Grief at briefest separation, Sorrow without affectation, These are over, she is dumb! Loyal ever, Treacherous never, Lifelong love she well expressed; Ah! may we deserve like praises When beneath the sun-kissed daisies We, like Nina, lie at rest! TO-DAY " The sun will set at day's decline " ; Qu'importe ? Quaff off meanwhile life's sparkling wine! Of what avail are mournful fears, Foreboding sighs and idle tears, They hinder not the hurrying years; Buvons ! " This fleeting hour will soon be past " ; Qu'importe ? Enrich its moments while they last ! To-day is ours ; be ours its joy ! Let not to-morrow's cares annoy! Enough the present to employ; Vivons ! " These pleasures will not come again " ; Qu'importe ? Enjoy their keenest transport then! If but of these we are secure, Be of their sweetness doubly sure, That long their memory may endure ! Rions ! TO-DAY 57 " With time love's ardor always cools " ; Qu'importe ? Leave that lugubrious chant to fools ! Must doubt destroy our present bliss? Shall we through fear love's rapture miss, Or lose the honey of its kiss? Aimons ! " The sun will set at day's decline " ; Qu'importe ? Will not the eternal stars still shine? So even in life's most dreary night A thousand quenchless suns are bright, Blest souvenirs of past delight; Allons! TO THE COUNTESS GUICCIOLI, AFTER READING HER "RECOLLECTIONS OF LORD BYRON" Like one who, homeward bound from distant lands, Tells of strange climes and visions passing fair, Yet deftly hides from others' eyes and hands A private casket filled with treasures rare, So, favored Countess, all that thou dost say Is nothing to thy secrets left unsaid ; Thy printed souvenirs are but the spray Tossed from the depths of ocean's briny bed. For, oh ! how often must thy mind retrace Soft phrases whispered in the Tuscan tongue, Love's changes sweeping o'er his mobile face, And kisses sweeter far than he had sung; The gleam of passion in his glorious eyes, The hours of inspiration when he wrote, To be recalled to Earth in sweet surprise At feeling thy white arms about his throat; To have been loved by Byron ! Not in youth When the hot senses tempt to reckless choice, But in maturer years, when keen-eyed Truth Reveals the folly of the siren's voice. Last love is best, and this thou didst enjoy; TO THE COUNTESS GUICCIOLI 59 Thy happy fate to see no rival claim A share in what was thine without alloy ; How must the remnant of thy life seem tame ! Yet this thy recompense, that thou dost keep Thy friend and lover safe from every change ; For, loyal to thy love, he fell asleep, And it is life, not death, that can estrange. THE BUTTERFLY: I watched to-day a butterfly, With gorgeous wings of golden sheen, Flit lightly 'neath a sapphire sky Amid the springtime's tender green; A creature so divinely fair, So frail, so wraithlike to the sight, I feared to see it melt in air, As clouds dissolve in morning light. With sudden swoop, a brutal boy Caught in his cap its fans of gold, And forced them down with savage joy Into the path's defiling mould ; Then cautiously, the ground well scanned, He clutched his darkened, helpless prey, And, pinched within his grimy hand, Withdrew it to the light of day. Alas ! its fragile bloom was gone, Its gracile frame was sorely hurt, THE BUTTERFLY 61 Its silken pinions drooped forlorn, Disfigured by the dust and dirt ; Its life, a moment since so gay, So joyous in its dainty flight, Was slowly ebbing now away, Its too-brief day eclipsed by night. Meantime, the vandal, face aflame, Surveyed it dying in his grasp, Yet knew no grief nor sense of shame In watching for its final gasp. At last its sails of gold and brown, Of texture fine and colors rare, Came, death-struck, slowly fluttering down, No more to cleave the sunlit air; One happy, harmless being less, To bid us dream the world is sweet ! Gone like a gleam of happiness, A glimpse of rapture . . . incomplete! Yet who shall say that creature fair In God's sight had a smaller worth Than the dull lout who watched it there, And in its death found cause for mirth ? 62 THE BUTTERFLY For what, in truth, are we who claim An endless life beyond the grave, But insects of a larger frame, Whose souls may be too small to save? Since the dim age when Cave Men fought Like famished brutes for bloody food, And through unnumbered centuries sought To rear their naked, whelp-like brood, What of the billions who have died, From pole to pole through every clime? An awful, never-ending tide Swept deathward on the shores of Time ! Like insects swarming in the sun, They flutter, struggle, mate, and die, And, with their life-work scarce begun, Are struck down like the butterfly; A million more, a million less, What matters it? The Earth rolls on, Unmindful of mankind's distress, Or if the race be here, or gone. Thus rolled our globe ere man appeared, And thus will roll, with wrinkled crust, THE BUTTERFLY 63 Deserted, lifeless, old, and seared, When man shall have returned to dust. And IT at last shall also die ! Hence, measured by the eternal scale, It ranks but as the butterfly, A world, ephemeral, fair and frail. Man, insect, earth, or distant star, They differ only in degree; Their transient lives, or near or far, Are moments in eternity! Yet somehow to my spirit clings The faith that man survives the sod, As the poor insect's broken wings Have raised my thoughts from earth to God. AFTER THE STORM The duel of the warring clouds Hath ended with the day; Their scintillant, electric blades Have ceased their fearful play; The pent up fury of their hate Hath found at last release, And o'er the tempest-stricken earth Broods now the hush of peace. The passing of the hurricane Hath swept the sultry skies ; The clearness of the atmosphere Brings jubilant surprise; The mountain peaks are glorified With freshly-fallen snow, And, stealing o'er their coronets, Appears the sunset glow. An hour since, a torrid heat Oppressed the languid frame; The wind was as the khamseen's breath, The solar touch seemed flame ; AFTER THE STORM 65 But now the air rejuvenates, The breeze refreshment brings, The lustrous leaves drop diamonds, The lark with rapture sings. Fear not, dear heart ! life's darkest storms Shall likewise end in light ; Behind the blackest thundercloud The sun shines clear and bright; Once more celestial height shall wear Their sheen of spotless snow, And on the bravely steadfast soul The smile of God shall glow. FALLEN My country! by our fathers reared As champion of the world's opprest; Whose moral force the tyrant feared; Whose flag all struggling freemen cheered; In clutching at an empire's crest Thou art now fallen like the rest. Not in thy numbers, wealth or might, Proud mistress of a continent! For rival nations, at the sight Of thy resources, view with fright Thy progress without precedent; Not there is seen thy swift descent. Reread the story of thy birth! Recall the years in conflict spent To prove to a despairing earth That every Government of worth Rests on the govern'd's free consent; Then view with shame thy present bent ! FALLEN 67 Thou hadst a place unique, sublime; In many a land beyond the sea The victims of despotic crime In thee, the latest born of Time, Beheld a land from tyrants free, The sacred Ark of Liberty. But now the Old World's lust for lands Infects thee too; the dread disease Hath left its plague-spots on thy hands; Thy monster area still expands; For, blind to history's Nemesis, Thou too wouldst alien races seize. Condemning with profound disdain All other nations' heartless greed, How couldst thou buy from humbled Spain A people struggling to attain A freedom suited to their need? Why stultify thy boasted creed? Thine aid to them thou mightst have given, As France her aid once gave to thee ; With them thy sons might well have striven, And their blood-rusted fetters riven; But why, in Heaven's name, should we Shoot men aspiring to be free? 68 FALLEN I tread the fields where thousands sleep, The blood-soaked fields that freed the slave; What precious memories still they keep For hearts that mourn and eyes that weep! Yet for the lives those heroes gave What have we that they died to save? A Union? Yes; outstretched in might From snow to palm, from sea to sea; But pledged to use its strength aright, And evermore to keep alight The torch of human liberty : Is this the Union that we see? Where history's Martyr dared to break The power that held a race in chains, I see the ghastly lynching-stake, Where brutal mobs their vengeance take, And, since no law their course restrains, Gloat o'er their writhing victim's pains. Race hatred, born of groundless fears And narrow prejudice of caste , Now greets the cultured black with sneers And, barring him from high careers, Breaks, like a mad iconoclast, The nation's idols of the past. FALLEN 69 No more can we with steadfast eyes Protest, when tortured races moan With hands uplifted toward the skies; Their tyrants answer with surprise And new-born insolence of tone, " These are our lynchings ; cure your own ! " Yet hope remains! A path retraced Is nobler than persistent wrong; A fault confessed is half effaced; That land alone can be disgraced Which is not just, however strong, Toward those to whom its " spoils " belong. My country! Would to God that praise Might leave my lips, instead of blame! So near the parting of the ways, Subjected to the eager gaze Of millions, jealous of thy fame, Retrace the path that ends in shame! " AEQUANIMITAS " Watchword sublime of Rome's imperial sage, Tersest of synonyms for self-control, Paramount precept of the Stoic's age, Noblest of mottoes for the lofty soul, Would thou wert writ in characters of light, At every turn to greet my reverent gaze, And bid me face life's evils, calm, upright, Unspoiled alike by calumny or praise ! With all our science we are slaves of Fate ; What is to come we know not, cannot know ; Grief, suffering, death, all touch us soon or late, The master question, how to meet the blow. Grant me, ye Gods, through life a steadfast eye, And then, with equanimity, to die! THE DEATH OF ANTONINUS PIUS Through the marble gates of Ostia, Where the Tiber meets the sea, And a hundred Roman galleys Strain their leashes to be free, Streams a flood of sunset glory From the classic sea of old, Till Rome's seven hills stand gleaming, And the Tiber turns to gold. Why, indifferent to this splendor, Do the people throng the streets? What is everyone demanding Of the stranger whom he meets? They have heard alas! the rumor That, ere dawn regilds the sky, All the world may be in mourning, For the Emperor must die. Search, O Romans, through the annals Of the rulers of your race, From the zenith of their glory To their ultimate disgrace, 72 THE DEATH OF ANTONINUS PIUS And as earth's most perfect master, And the noblest of your line, You will yield your greatest homage To this dying Antonine. For he holds a Caesar's sceptre In a loving father's hand, And his heart and soul are given To the welfare of his land; Through his justice every nation Hath beheld its warfare cease, And he leaves to his successor Rome's gigantic world at peace. Hence these nations now are waiting In an anguish of suspense; For their future is as doubtful, As their love for him intense ; By the Nile and on the Danube, From the Tagus to the Rhine, There is mourning among millions For the man they deem divine. Now the sunset glow is fading, And the evening shadows creep O'er the ashen face of Caesar, As he lies in seeming sleep; THE DEATH OF ANTONINUS PIUS 73 But he slumbers not; for, faithful To his duties, small and great, He is not alone the sovereign, But the servant of the State. Unrebuked, then, his Centurion, As the sun-god sinks from sight, Makes his wonted way to Caesar For the password of the night; And great Antonine, though conscious That ere dawn his soul must pass, As his last, imperial watchword, Utters " ^Equanimitas ! " O thou noblest of the Caesars, Whose transcendent virtues shine, Like a glorious constellation, O'er the blood-stained Palatine, When the latest sands are running From my life's exhausted glass, May I have thy calm and courage, And thine ^quanimitas! ROME REVISITED sovereign Rome, still mistress of the heart, As of the world in thy majestic prime, Grand in thy ruins, peerless in thine art, Rich in the memories of a past sublime, Is thine the fault or mine that thou art changed, And that I tread the new Tiberian shore Convinced, alas! that we are now estranged, And that for me thy charm exists no more? 1 have grown older, but am not blase, My hair has whitened, but my heart is young, Still thrills my pulse the tomb-girt Appian Way, Still stirs my soul the ancient Latin tongue. Whence then this transformation, that pervades Rome's very air, and leaves its blighting trace Alike upon the Pincio's colonnades And on the Mausoleum's rugged face? The fault, dear Rome, is neither thine nor mine, But that of vandals nurtured on thy breast, ROME REVISITED 75 Who, mad as " modern citizens " to shine, Have fashioned thee like cities of the west. Thy time-worn face, and figure deeply bowed By countless sufferings for two thousand years, Whose proper garment seemed to be a shroud, Commanding reverence, sympathy and tears, Are now bedecked with tawdry gems of paste; Parisian robes thy withered limbs conceal; Thy wrinkled cheeks are rouged ; in vulgar taste A modern watch-fob holds the Caesar's seal ! Where once the splendors of the Triumph passed, Electric cars roll thundering through thy streets; In Raphael's groves the automobile's blast Expels the Muses from their calm retreats. Through sinuous miles of shops with worldly wares Bewildered pilgrims reach St. Peter's shrine; Some modern stamp each old piazza bears; And freed from weeds, thy burnished ruins shine ! Near Hadrian's massive bridge of sculptured stone, The Tiber surges 'neath an iron frame, Across whose ugly beams the tramcars groan, And brand the river with a bar of shame. 76 ROME REVISITED Gods of Olympus, can ye not restore To outraged Rome her dignity of old? 'Twere better Jove and Juno to adore Than in their stead to worship only Gold ! Thy glorious statues, cruelly defaced, Thy crumbling shrines, thy marbles burnt to lime, The lone Campagna's fever-stricken waste, Where lizards bask on columns once sublime, The Flavian Amphitheatre's gaping wounds, The Baths of Caracalla's roofless walls, The Forum's multitude of ruined mounds, The royal Palatine's abandoned halls, All these indeed create a hopeless pain, When from their parts we reconstruct the whole, Yet from the pathos of a wreck-strewn plain We gain at least nobility of soul ; But where a Syndic's greed hath left its trail The picturesque and beautiful take flight; The Past's inspiring influences fail, As stars are hidden by electric light. Yet protests meet derision and disdain; The fatal madness spreads from land to land; ROME REVISITED 77 Peace, Art, and Beauty everywhere are slain By greedy Traffic's hard, rapacious hand. We laugh at lessons taught by others' fate, We see no ending to our prosperous day ; Forgetting that, in turn, each ancient State Hath passed through bud and flower to decay. Behold the retrogression of those lands Whence painting, sculpture and the drama sprung; See starved Trinacria's outstretched, empty hands, And all the classic shores by Homer sung! In what have we surpassed them? We are taught Their art, their ethics, and their rythmic speech; Both Greece aid Asia still control our thought, Their grandes: works are still beyond our reach. The breathless transfer of men, thoughts, and things, Improved d