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I. Hail our approach to venerable Rome
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
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I. Hail our approach to venerable Rome

[_]

We arrived at Bolsena, between Florence and Rome, on a cool evening, December 11, 1829; and to help cheer the dismal hours in a huge, comfortless apartment, it was proposed to have a sonnet on our approach to the Eternal City. I called on the company for rhymes, à la mode improvisatrice; and having obtained them, I wrote the following:—

Hail our approach to venerable Rome!
We go to kneel and wonder at her shrine,
To watch where still her parting glories shine,
And bear the memory of her greatness home.
There the late marvel of her sacred Dome
Doth with her hoary monuments combine,
Like ruined elm o'ertop'd by towering vine,
To stir the souls of those that thither roam.
There, 'mid her crumbling relics, we will stray
To tread her Forum in the noonday bright;
Her Colosseum under midnight skies,
And there, in grief, with silent gaze survey,
The world's chief glory fading from its height,
Till in the dust it sinks, and all ignobly dies.