Selected
Poems
by
Frederick George Scott
ROME
|
|
Imperial
city, slumbering on thy throne
Of vanished empires, once
thy voice and hands
Rocked the wide world; thy
fingers wove the lands
Into thy girdle; who for crown alone
Didst wear the stars. Yet still in undertone
|
5 |
Man
hears thy deathless utterance, though Time’s
sands
Roll centuries; thou clasp’st
the earth with bands
Of speech, art, law, and subtle powers unknown.
Thou wast not meant to die; thy mighty heart
Pulsed with the universe.
Thy deeds of old
|
10 |
Flame
like the sunset skies through clouds which throng;
They blazon on thy throne a name apart
In red of mighty victories,
in gold
Of
all things valorous and great and strong. [Page
67]
|
|
|
|