Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Greece and Turkey in Europe: Vol. XIX. 1876–79.
Delphi
By Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton (18091885)B
And some faint stars that pierced the film of cloud,
Stood those Parnassian peaks before my sight,
Whose fame throughout the ancient world was loud.
Diverging from the cliffs on either side;
A theatre whose steps were filled with shrines
And rich devices of Hellenic pride;
The place whence gods and worshippers had fled;
Only, and they too tenantless, remain
The hallowed chambers of the pious dead.
To Nature gave in their religious shows,
And thus, amid the sepultures of art,
Still rise the Rocks and still the Fountain flows.
Hear me avow that I am not as they,
Who deem that all about you ministering
Were base impostors, and mankind their prey:
Were but the tools their paltry trade to ply;
This pomp of Faith a mere gigantic fraud,
The apparatus of a mighty lie!
Cannot thus read the history of my kind;
Remembering all this little Greece has done
To raise the universal human mind:
By their own faith alone, could keep alive
Mysterious rites and sanctity of place,—
Believing in whate’er they might contrive.
With such rare nature as the priestess bore,
Brought to the surface of her stormy mind
Distracted fragments of prophetic lore;
Creation is revealed, yet must we pause,
Weak to dissect the futile from the true,
Where’er imagination spreads her laws.
And things each moment more fantastic seem,
I fain would seek if still the gods have might
Over the undissembling world of dream:
The solemn veil that hides what is decreed;
I crave the resurrection of the past,
That I may know what Delphi was indeed!