Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
France: Vols. IX–X. 1876–79.
On the Church of the Madeleine
By Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton (18091885)Contained the presence of Olympian Jove,
With smooth Hymettus round it and above,
Softening the splendor by a sober bloom,
Is yielding fast to Time’s irreverent doom;
While on the then barbarian banks of Seine
That nobler type is realized again
In perfect form, and dedicate—to whom?
To a poor Syrian girl, of lowliest name,
A hapless creature, pitiful and frail
As ever wore her life in sin and shame,
Of whom all history has this single tale,—
“She loved the Christ, she wept beside his grave,
And He, for that Love’s sake, all else forgave.”
The working of this world beyond the day
Of his small life, had taken by the hand
That wanton daughter of old Magdala;
And told her that the time was ripe to come
When she, thus base among the base, should be
More served than all the gods of Greece and Rome,
More honored in her holy memory,
How would not men have mocked and she have scorned
The fond diviner? Plausible excuse
Had been for them, all moulded to one use
Of feeling and of thought, but we are warned
By such ensamples to distrust the sense
Of Custom proud and bold Experience.
That did come down to earth, and there confound
Most sacred thoughts with names of usual sound,
And homeliest life with all a poet sings,
The proud Ideas that had ruled and bound
Our moral nature were no longer kings,
Old Power grew faint and shed his eagle-wings,
And gray Philosophy was half uncrowned.
Love, Pleasure’s child, betrothed himself to Pain;
Weakness, and poverty, and self-disdain,
And tranquil sufferance of repeated wrongs,
Became adorable; Fame gave her tongues,
And Faith her hearts to objects all as low
As this lorn child of infamy and woe.