The Poetry Corner

Little Florence Gray

By Nathaniel Parker Willis

I was in Greece. It was the hour of noon, And the gean wind had dropped asleep Upon Hymettus, and the thymy isles Of Salamis and gina lay hung Like clouds upon the bright and breathless sea. I had climbed up th Acropolis at morn, And hours had fled as time will in a dream Amid its deathless ruins, for the air Is full of spirits in these mighty fanes, And they walk with you! As it sultrier grew, I laid me down within a shadow deep Of a tall column of the Parthenon, And in an absent idleness of thought I scrawled upon the smooth and marble base. Tell me, O memory, what wrote I there? The name of a sweet child I knew at Rome! I was in Asia. Twas a peerless night Upon the plains of Sardis, and the moon, Touching my eyelids through the wind-stirred tent, Had witched me from my slumber. I arose, And silently stole forth, and by the brink Of golden Pactolus, where bathe his waters The bases of Cybeles columns fair, I paced away the hours. In wakeful mood I mused upon the storied past awhile, Watching the moon, that with the same mild eye Had looked upon the mighty Lybian kings Sleeping around me, Crsus, who had heaped Within the mouldering portico his gold, And Gyges, buried with his viewless ring Beneath you swelling tumulus, and then I loitered up the valley to a small And humbler ruin, where the undefiled Of the Apocalypse their garments kept Spotless; and crossing with a conscious awe The broken threshold, to my spirits eye It seemed as if, amid the moonlight, stood The angel of the church of Sardis still! And I again passed onward, and as dawn Paled the bright morning star, I lay me down Weary and sad beside the rivers brink, And twixt the moonlight and the rosy morn, Wrote with my fingers in the golden sands. Tell me, O memory! what wrote I there? The name of the sweet child I knew at Rome! The dust is old upon my sandal-shoon And still I am a pilgrim; I have roved From wild America to spicy Ind, And worshipped at innumerable shrines Of beauty; and the painters art, to me, And sculpture, speak as with a living tongue, And of dead kingdoms, I recall the soul, Sitting amid their ruins. I have stored My memory with thoughts that can allay Fever and sadness; and when life gets dim, And I am overladen in my years, Minister to me. But when wearily The mind gives over toiling, and, with eyes Open but seeing not, and senses all Lying awake within their chambers fine, Thought settles like a fountain, clear and calm, Far in its sleeping depths, as twere a gem, Tell me, O memory what shines so fair? The face of the sweet child I knew at Rome!