Wednesday, September 27, 2023
Still the Old Gods Reign
Excerpt from John Addington Symonds (1840-1893), "Southward Bound," Many Moods: A Volume of Verse (London: Smith, Elder, & Co., 1878), pp. 3-7 (at 3-4):
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Great cities, greater in decay and death,Related posts:
Dream-like with immemorial repose,
Whose ruins like a shrine for ever sheathe
The mighty names and memories of those
Who lived and died to die no more, shall close
Your happy pilgrimage; and you shall learn,
Breathing their ancient air, the thoughts that burn
For ever in the hearts of after men:—
Yea, from the very soil of silent Rome
You shall grow wise; and, walking, live again
The lives of buried peoples, and become
A child by right of that eternal home,
Cradle and grave of empires, on whose walls
The sun himself subdued to reverence falls.
O solemn aisles! O vast and sacred shade!
Ruins on ruins heaped! Imperial state
With rubbish of wrecked centuries o'erlaid!
There Christ in Phoebus' shrine is consecrate;
Titles of pope and priest surmount the gate
Where Cæsar's legions trampled: yet in vain
Age strives with age; for still the old gods reign:
Pale gods in cere-cloths, ghosts of bye-gone Greece,
Rule in their marble sepulchres: the halls,
Through which we pass, with dead divinities
Are gleaming; and the voice of Hellas calls
Clear from her grave: nought but the pedestals
Belong to Christ: the carven shapes above
Still breathe and smile with life of ancient Love.
- The Old Goat-Legged Gentleman from Greece
- They Told Me Pan Was Dead
- You Shall Hear the Note of His Pipe
- Pan Is Not Yet Dead
- A Worshipper at Pan's Shrine
- This Modern World Is Grey and Old
- Poems of a Stockbroker
- The Survival of Pan