Give to the wind thy locks; all glittering Thy sea-blue eyes, and thy white bosom bared, Mount to thy chariot, while in speechless roaring Terror and Force before thee clear the way! The shadow of thy helmet, like the flashing Of brazen star, strikes through the trembling air. The dust of broken empires, cloud-like rising, Follows the awful rumbling of thy wheels. So once, O Rome, beheld the conquered nations Thy image, object of their ancient dread. To-day a mitre they would place upon Thy head, and fold a rosary between Thy hands. O name! again to terrors old Awake the tired ages and the world! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SPOON RIVER ANTHOLOGY: JUDGE SELAH LIVELY by EDGAR LEE MASTERS DOWN THE MISSISSIPPI: 5. THE STEVEDORES by JOHN GOULD FLETCHER MODERN LOVE: 17 by GEORGE MEREDITH THE LADY POVERTY by ALICE MEYNELL DAFFY-DOWN-DILLY [OR, DAFFYDOWNDILLY] by MOTHER GOOSE THE BATTLE OF BLENHEIM by ROBERT SOUTHEY AS THE GREEK'S SIGNAL FLAME by WALT WHITMAN THE LAMENTATION OF THE OLD PENSIONER (1) by WILLIAM BUTLER YEATS |