Page images
PDF
EPUB

Besculptured, as becomes the brave,
With nodding casque, and crest,

And shield, on which we trace the line,
The key-note of his song divine,

66

Pro Fide!" Tasso lies.

So may we find our legend writ,
What time the Crucified shall sit
For judgment, in the skies!

Thomas D'Arcy McGee.

Rome, Palaces and Villas of.

A

THE VATICAN.

MID the hoary ruins, sculpture first,

Deep digging, from the cavern dark and damp, Their grave for ages, bid her marble race

Spring to new light.

Joy sparkled in her eyes,
And old remembrance thrilled in every thought,
As she the pleasing resurrection saw,

In leaning site, respiring from his toils,
The well-known Hero, who delivered Greece,
His ample chest, all tempested with force,
Unconquerable reared. She saw the head,
Breathing the hero, small, of Grecian size,
Scarce more extensive than the sinewy neck:
The spreading shoulders, muscular and broad;
The whole a mass of swelling sinews, touched

Into harmonious shape; she saw, and joyed.
The yellow hunter, Meleager, raised

His beauteous front, and through the finished whole
Shows what ideas smiled of old in Greece.

Of raging aspect, rushed impetuous forth
The Gladiator: pitiless his look,

And each keen sinew braced, the storm of war,
Ruffling, o'er all his nervous body frowns.

The dying other from the gloom she drew:
Supported on his shortened arm he leans,
Prone, agonizing; with incumbent fate,
Heavy declines his head; yet dark beneath
The suffering feature sullen vengeance lowers,
Shame, indignation, unaccomplished rage,
And still the cheated eye expects his fall.
All conquest-flushed, from prostrate Python, came
The quivered god. In graceful act he stands,
His arm extended with the slackened bow:
Light flows his easy robe, and fair displays
A manly, softened form. The bloom of gods
Seems youthful o'er the beardless cheek to wave:
His features yet heroic ardor warms;
And sweet subsiding to a native smile,
Mixed with the joy elating conquest gives,
A scattered frown exalts his matchless air.
On Flora moved; her full proportioned limbs
Rise through the mantle fluttering in the breeze.
The Queen of Love arose, as from the deep
She sprung in all the melting pomp of charms.
Bashful she bends, her well-taught look aside
Turns in enchanting guise, where dubious mix

Vain conscious beauty, a dissembled sense
Of modest shame, and slippery looks of love.
The gazer grows enamored, and the stone,
As if exulting in its conquest, smiles.

So turned each limb, so swelled with softening art,
That the deluded eye the marble doubts.

At last her utmost masterpiece she found,
That Maro fired; the miserable sire,

Wrapt with his sons in fate's severest grasp:
The serpents, twisting round, their stringent folds
Inextricable tie. Such passion here,

Such agonies, such bitterness of pain,

Seem so to tremble through the tortured stone,
That the touched heart engrosses all the view.
Almost unmarked the best proportions pass,
That ever Greece beheld; and, seen alone,
On the rapt eye the imperious passions seize :
The father's double pangs, both for himself
And sons convulsed; to Heaven his rueful look,
Imploring aid, and half accusing, cast;
His fell despair with indignation mixed,
As the strong curling monsters from his side
His full extended fury cannot tear.
More tender touched, with varied art, his sons
All the soft rage of younger passions show.
In a boy's helpless fate one sinks oppressed;
While, yet unpierced, the frighted other tries
His foot to steal out of the horrid twine.

James Thomson.

THE VATICAN.

R, turning to the Vatican, go see

A father's love and mortal's agony

With an immortal's patience blending: vain The struggle; vain, against the coiling strain And gripe, and deepening of the dragon's grasp, The old man's clench; the long envenomed chain Rivets the living links, — the enormous asp Enforces pang on pang, and stifles gasp on gasp.

Or view the lord of the unerring bow,
The god of life and poesy and light,

The sun in human limbs arrayed, and brow
All radiant from his triumph in the fight;

The shaft hath just been shot, the arrow bright With an immortal's vengeance; in his eye And nostril beautiful disdain and might And majesty flash their full lightnings by, Developing in that one glance the deity.

But in his delicate form a dream of love,
Shaped by some solitary nymph, whose breast
Longed for a deathless lover from above,
And maddened in that vision are exprest
All that ideal beauty ever blessed

The mind within its most unearthly mood,
When each conception was a heavenly guest,

A ray of immortality, — and stood,
Starlike, around, until they gathered to a god!

And if it be Prometheus stole from Heaven
The fire which we endure, it was repaid
By him to whom the energy was given
Which this poetic marble hath arrayed
With an eternal glory, — which, if made

By human hands, is not of human thought;
And Time himself hath hallowed it, nor laid
One ringlet in the dust, nor hath it caught

A tinge of years, but breathes the flame with which

't was wrought.

Lord Byron.

THE BELVEDERE APOLLO.

[EARD ye the arrow hurtle in the sky?

HEARD

Heard ye the dragon monster's deathful cry?

In settled majesty of calm disdain,

Proud of his might, yet scornful of the slain,

The heavenly archer stands,

No perishable denizen of earth;

no human birth,

Youth blooms immortal in his beardless face,

A god in strength, with more than godlike grace; All, all divine,no struggling muscle glows, Through heaving vein no mantling life-blood flows, But animate with deity alone,

In deathless glory lives the breathing stone.

Bright kindling with a conqueror's stern delight, His keen eye tracks the arrow's fateful flight;

« EelmineJätka »