



 


|
My
Lattice and Other Poems
by
Frederick George Scott
|
ON
AN OLD VENETIAN PORTRAIT
|
|
THE
features loom out of the darkness
As brown as an ancient scroll,
But the eyes gleam on with the fire that shone
In the dead man’s
living soul.
He is clad in a cardinal’s mantle,
|
5 |
And
he wears the cap of state,
But his lip is curled in a sneer at the world,
And his glance is full of
hate.
Old age has just touched with its winter
The hair on his lip and
chin,
|
10 |
He stooped,
no doubt, as he walked about,
And the blood in his veins
was thin.
His date and his title I know not,
But I know that the man
is there,
As cruel and cold as in days of old,
|
15 |
| When
he schemed for the Pontiff’s chair.
He never could get into Heaven,
Though his lands were
all given to pay
For prayers to be said on behalf of the dead
From now till the judgement
day.
|
20 |
His palace, his statues, and pictures
Were Heaven, at least for
a time,
And now he is “Where?”—why an
ornament there
On my wall, and I think
him sublime.
For the gold of another sunset
|
25 |
Falls
over him even now,
And it deepens the red of the cap on his head,
And it brings out the lines
on his brow.
The ages have died into silence,
And men have forgotten
his tomb,
|
30 |
But
he still sits there in his cardinal’s chair,
And he watches me now in
the gloom.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|