Sunday, March 14, 2010

Rome

“The triumphal arch through which I march”
In purple robèd splendor
Shades crowds of men who cheer my name
And visions of my empire render
In my mind, the stretching lands
From grey skied British coasts
To Partian deserts, burning sands
And vassal kings who are my hosts.
All this is mine, and mine alone
Countless souls of my domain
We kill men in the name of Rome
So are the glories of my reign.
Columns of tremendous girth
Hold up marble ceilings high
Parading in triumph and mirth
I see them, slowly passing by
And think of those two awful boys
Raised by a wolf, and quarrelsome
Who were the seed of all these joys,
To think of them makes me feel glum.
For, Romulus his brother slew
For leaping ‘cross his sacred wall,
In England Hadrian’s stands anew
And this same fate I fear for all.
Is Rome eternal, as they said
When glorious Augustus reigned?
Methinks she’ll soon be good as dead,
And like that fire-bringer chained.
My name is cheered by scores of throats,
Patriots with Roman pride,
But Saturn’s sacrificial goats
Won’t save the empire, vast and wide.
I fear axe-wielding tribes of north
Will bring the empire’s ruin forth,
This laurel wreath set on my brow
Will die and fade, I do avow.

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