Julia Alpinula | ||
141
II.
Yet with her day of majesty, not allIs wrapt in night's annihilating pall;
Memory and song transmit her patriot's name,
Through years of wrong, and centuries of shame;
Our eye once more upon their pages cast,
Forgets the present and renews the past;
Lit by their ray again, a golden shower
Of sunshine hangs on temple and on tower;
The fluted column burns; in bright relief,
Each statue stands of goddess and of chief;
The olive grows more green; a murmuring sound
Steals the rich shrines and holy mountains round.
All things existent, speak of spirit still,—
The rock, the flower, the ocean, and the hill;
On its blue crag the' Acropolis defies
The strength of time, the lightnings of the skies;
Each field, each wave o'er which the mighty flew,
By fancy tinged with inspiration's hue,
Despite the fallen fane, the people's trance,
Still breathe of power, of passion, and romance.
Julia Alpinula | ||