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Classic and Contemporary Poetry


A MEDITATION by AGNES LEE

First Line: ROME HAS BEEN DEAD THESE MANY HUNDRED YEARS
Last Line: ROME STILL RULES.
Subject(s): GOVERNMENT; LANGUAGE; LATIN; LAW & LAWYERS; LEGACIES; ROMAN EMPIRE; ROME, ITALY; WORDS; VOCABULARY; ATTORNEYS;

Rome has been dead these many hundred years --
Of all the might which thrust her bronze-clad men,
Clamoring
And storming to the ends of all the earth,
Not strength enough is left today to lift
A locust's wing.

And yet she lives forever. Would you speak,
She offers you the word. And would you build,
On her pages
Lies beauty deathless. Would you make a law,
Rome whispered in Napoleon's ear a code
For the ages.

In overwhelming chaos everywhere
Slouched the stupendous years, unnamed, unnoted.
Even Greece afar
Gave them but moon-guides, till stern Rome, aware,
Ordered their march and gave the echoing world
The calendar.

There is a curving road from Engadine
Whose Roman stones attest the centuries.
Roman tools
Made safe between its wild and steep escarpments
The traveler of today. Forget the Caesars? --
Rome still rules.



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