Selected Poetry and Prose. Percy Bysshe Shelley

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whose walls

      Those mute guests at festivals,

      Son and Mother, Death and Sin,

      Play’d at dice for Ezzelin,

      Till Death cried, ‘I win, I win!’

      And Sin cursed to lose the wager,

      But Death promis’d, to assuage her,

      That he would petition for

      Her to be made Vice-Emperor,

      When the destined years were o’er,

      Over all between the Po

      And the eastern Alpine snow,

      Under the mighty Austrian.

      Sin smiled so as Sin only can,

      And since that time, ay, long before,

      Both have ruled from shore to shore,—

      That incestuous pair, who follow

      Tyrants as the sun the swallow,

      As Repentance follows Crime,

      And as changes follow Time.

      In thine halls the lamp of learning,

      Padua, now no more is burning;

      Like a meteor, whose wild way

      Is lost over the grave of day,

      It gleams betray’d and to betray:

      Once remotest nations came

      To adore that sacred flame,

      When it lit not many a hearth

      On this cold and gloomy earth:

      Now new fires from antique light

      Spring beneath the wide world’s might;

      But their spark lies dead in thee,

      Trampled out by Tyranny.

      As the Norway woodman quells,

      In the depth of piny dells,

      One light flame among the brakes,

      While the boundless forest shakes,

      And its mighty trunks are torn

      By the fire thus lowly born:

      The spark beneath his feet is dead,

      He starts to see the flames it fed

      Howling through the darkened sky

      With myriad tongues victoriously,

      And sinks down in fear: so thou,

      O Tyranny, beholdest now

      Light around thee, and thou hearest

      The loud flames ascend, and fearest:

      Grovel on the earth; ay, hide

      In the dust thy purple pride!

      Noon descends around me now:

      ’Tis the noon of autumn’s glow,

      When a soft and purple mist

      Like a vaporous amethyst,

      Or an air-dissolved star

      Mingling light and fragrance, far

      From the curved horizon’s bound

      To the point of Heaven’s profound,

      Fills the overflowing sky;

      And the plains that silent lie

      Underneath, the leaves unsodden

      Where the infant Frost has trodden

      With his morning-winged feet,

      Whose bright print is gleaming yet;

      And the red and golden vines,

      Piercing with their trellis’d lines

      The rough, dark-skirted wilderness;

      The dun and bladed grass no less,

      Pointing from his hoary tower

      In the windless air; the flower

      Glimmering at my feet; the line

      Of the olive-sandalled Apennine

      In the south dimly islanded;

      And the Alps, whose snows are spread

      High between the clouds and sun;

      And of living things each one;

      And my spirit which so long

      Darkened this swift stream of song,

      Interpenetrated lie

      By the glory of the sky:

      Be it love, light, harmony,

      Odour, or the soul of all

      Which from Heaven like dew doth fall,

      Or the mind which feeds this verse

      Peopling the lone universe.

      Noon descends, and after noon

      Autumn’s evening meets me soon,

      Leading the infantine moon,

      And that one star, which to her

      Almost seems to minister

      Half the crimson light she brings

      From the sunset’s radiant springs:

      And the soft dreams of the morn

      (Which like winged winds had borne

      To that silent isle, which lies

      Mid remembered agonies,

      The frail bark of this lone being)

      Pass, to other sufferers fleeing,

      And

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