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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
THE PALACE OF OMARTES, by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON Poet's Biography First Line: Omartes, king of the wide plains Last Line: Shivered, and, parting, round him wrapt his mantle. Alternate Author Name(s): Bulwer, Edward; Lytton Of Knebworth, 1st Baron; Lytton, Edward George Earle Bulwer, Lord Subject(s): Russia; Soviet Union; Russians | |||
OMARTES, king of the wide plains which, north Of Tanais, pasture steeds for Scythian Mars, Forsook the simple ways And nomad tents of his unconquered fathers; And in the fashion of the neighboring Medes, Built a great city girt with moat and wall, And in the midst thereof A regal palace dwarfing piles in Susa, With vast foundations rooted into earth, And crested summits soaring into heaven, And gates of triple brass, Siege-proof as portals wielded by the Cyclops. One day Omartes, in his pride of heart, Led his high priest, Telentias, through his halls, And chilled by frigid looks, When counting on warm praise, asked, "What is wanting? "Where is beheld the palace of a king, So stored with all that doth a king beseem; The woofs of Phrygian looms, The gold of Colchis, and the pearls of Ormus, "Couches of ivory sent from farthest Ind, Sidonian crystal, and Corinthian bronze, Egypt's vast symbol gods, And those imagined unto men by Hellas; "Stored not in tents that tremble to a gale, But chambers firm-based as the Pyramids, And breaking into spray The surge of Time as Gades breaks the ocean?" "Nor thou nor I the worth of these things now Can judge; we stand too near them," said the sage. "None till they reach the tomb Scan with just eye the treasures of the palace. "But for thy building, -- as we speak, I feel Through all the crannies pierce an icy wind More bitter than the blasts Which howled without the tents of thy rude fathers. "Thou hast forgot to bid thy masons close The chinks of stone against Calamity." The sage inclined his brow, Shivered, and, parting, round him wrapt his mantle. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...OXOTA: A SHORT RUSSIAN NOVEL: CHAPTER 259 by LYN HEJINIAN A FOREIGN COUNTRY by JOSEPHINE MILES THE DIAMOND PERSONA by NORMAN DUBIE IN MEMORIAM: 1933 (7. RUSSIA: ANNO 1905) by CHARLES REZNIKOFF TAKE A LETTER TO DMITRI SHOSTAKOVITCH by CARL SANDBURG READING THE RUSSIANS by RUTH STONE THE SOVIET CIRCUS VISITS HAVANA, 1969 by VIRGIL SUAREZ A PROBLEM IN AESTHETICS by KAREN SWENSON SONG, FR. ERNEST MALTRAVERS by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON A SPENDTHRIFT by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON ABSENT YET PRESENT by EDWARD GEORGE EARLE LYTTON BULWER-LYTTON |
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