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[XXXV. I twine to-day a victor's crown]
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77

[XXXV. I twine to-day a victor's crown]

I twine to-day a victor's crown,
To deck your champion's manly head,
And shade the terrors of his frown,
O doughty foemen of the dead!
And since his deeds are new and strange,
No common chaplet shall he wear;
Some fresh device I would arrange,
That gest and guerdon may compare.
The curséd cross some leaves shall yield,
And some the bough that Judas bent,
And some I'll gather from the field
Where Joseph's brothers pitched their tent.
The viper of the proverb old,
That stung the warming breast, shall clasp
The wreath together, fold in fold
With him that bit against the rasp.

78

And strangling both, the wily snake,
By which our common mother fell,
Upon his lifted crest shall shake
Just Aristides' pearly shell.
The tears that banished Marius shed
O'er ruined Carthage, shall be seen,
Like dew-drops, over all dispread,
To keep the garland bright and green.
Wherever truth has been abused,
Or man's ingratitude has lent
Its stain to aught, it shall be used,
To add another ornament.
And when the work is wholly done,
I'll plume the chaplet with this pen;
And having crowned your champion,
I'll set him in the sight of men.