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Classic and Contemporary Poetry
ODE TO THE GLORY OF GREECE (A FRAGMENT), by JAMES ELROY FLECKER Poet's Biography First Line: Hellas victorious Subject(s): Greece; Greeks | |||
Hellas victorious! Two came to me at night Glorious With that Elysian light Which round the phantoms of great Poets dead Hovers, as once in their blue earthly eyes Played Thoughts with wings outspread, -- The splendour of their souls. Cried one to me, "O mortal brother, since thou lovest too With all thy burning breath The stony hills and salt Corinthian blue From whose divine dear shore Apollo led me to the caves of death --" But charmed, he forbore. His voice had sung to measure grave and low When suddenly his young friend-phantom spoke, And Shelley's voice rang like a wave of aether Blazing and breaking on rosy cliffs of air, And his face was flaming snow, overlushed By a river of the sun -- his long bright hair. "Inheritor," he sang, "speed thou away Rushing with AEolus and Boreas, rushing on the ancient paths Scattering the rosy plumage of the new arisen day. "Go thou to Athens, go to Salonica, Go thou to Yannina beside the lake, And cry, 'The vision of the Prophet dead!' Cry, 'The Olympians wake!' And cry, 'O Towers of Hellas built anew by rhyme, Star-woven to my Amphionic lyre, Stand you in steel for ever, And from your lofty lanterns sweeping the dim hills and the nocturnal sea Pour out the fire of Hellas, the everlasting fire!'" And then to me once more the Elder Shadow: "Still, brother, Shelley's fancy brims desire: His soul is so acquainted with great dreams That even the immane Elysian meadow Whose flowers are stars and every star a world that glides and gleams, Confines him not -- but still he longs to roam Beyond the quiet spiritual home. -- His soul is so acquainted with great dreams That man's endeavour He seeth not near -- that broken river Struggling -- to what salt sea? "Since man's endeavour flows as a river, how shall it turn to the hills again? -- Burst again all rosy with morning from snow-starred mountains of first renown; Who to-day shall hear the Achaeans shout from the trench of the Troyans slain, Who rebuild in music or memory Sparta's tower or Athena's town? "Since the Roman intercepted and Rome's dimidiate, stoled Byzance, Shall they hear above their cannon grave, the Periclean tune? Christ oversang it, chivalry dimmed it, winding on Parnes the horns of France, Islam drowned the echo of echo deep in the night of her languid moon." * * * * * Passionate thus he spake, the wise ghost unforgetful Of stone and tree, river and shore and plain, And the good coloured things of Earth the dead see not again, And how man's hope grows weak and his force fretful With such great hills to gain. I for an answer pondered deep, And then I seemed to fall from sleep to sleep, Watching as through a veil I could not tear The threads of rose and gold of Shelley's hair. The gold glowed deeper and the rose burnt red, And I saw running and rustling at my feet The rivers of a golden sun that bled Scarlet, scarlet, scarlet as though wounded By some celestial archer of the Stars In the last fight when God's last trump was sounded; Then the great lake of commingling blood and fire Burst in a fountain to my window streaming, To my Cephisian window high and cool, Over far Salamis and Athens gleaming, Drowning the sea and city in one deep pool. And only now old Parnes of the West And grey Hymettus of the dawn Rose above the phantom seas Like Islands of the Blest. Then a wind came and swept and whirled away, And the mist left Hymettus broken small Like a swarm of golden bees. Gone is the Poet of the magic locks, And Byron gone; master of war's [. . . .] Outflashes white the holy Parthenon And broad calm streets of Athens of to-day, And in the barracks the far bugles play, O listen what they say! * * * * * Hark, hark the shepherd piping far and near, The hills are dancing to the Dorian mood. To-day Arcady is and the white Fear Naked in sunshine glory still haunts here; The old dark wood Invites to prayer -- or fountain in the vale. If not the Cytherean, one more dear Daphnis shall worship -- one more pale, She too a heroine of a Grecian tale. * * * * * But if no Pheidias with marble towers Grace our new Athens, simple, calm and wide, Carving a group of men to look like flowers For our new glory's pride. If songs of gentle Solomos be less Than that Aeschylean trump of bronze And if beside Eurotas the lone swans About the desolation press. Yet still victorious Hellas, thou hast heard Those ancient voices thundering to arms, Thou nation of an older younger day Thou hast gone forth as with the poet's song. Surely the spirit of the old oak grove Rejoiced to hear the cannon round Yannina, Apollo launched his shaft of terror down On Salonica. . . . . . . . . . . 1913 | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...A FLOWER NO MORE THAN ITSELF by LINDA GREGG ALMA IN ALL SEASONS by LINDA GREGG ALMA IN THE DARK by LINDA GREGG ALMA TO HER SISTER by LINDA GREGG ALONE WITH THE GODDESS by LINDA GREGG APHRODITE AND THE NATURE OF ART by LINDA GREGG AS BEING IS ETERNAL by LINDA GREGG SANTORIN (A LEGEND OF THE AEGEAN) by JAMES ELROY FLECKER |
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