Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Sorrento
By Bayard Taylor (18251878)T
The storms of time the very rocks have shaken:
The Past is mute, save where some mouldy stone
Speaks to confuse, like speech by age o’ertaken.
The pomp that crowned the winding shore
Has fled forevermore:
Its old magnificence shall never reawaken.
The Oscan warriors saw their javelins hurtle,
The farmer prunes his olives, and the maid
Trips down the lanes in flashing vest and kirtle:
The everlasting laurel now
Forgets Apollo’s brow,
And, dedicate no more to Venus, blooms the myrtle.
Phœnician strangers saw, and flying Dardans,
The bounteous earth fulfils her ancient boast
In mellow fields which winter never hardens;
And daisy, lavender, and rose
Perpetual buds unclose,
To flood with blended balm the tiers of hanging gardens.
Beckons with scented stars, an unreached wonder:
On sunny banks their wine the hyacinths spill,
And self-betraying violets bloom thereunder;
While near and threatening, dim and deep,
The wave assaults the steep,
Or booms in hollow caves with sound of smothered thunder.
Fashioned all lovely things that most might please her,
Hiding her playground where the greed of man
Must half withhold the toiling hands that tease her:
Her sweetest air, her softest wave,
Reluctantly she gave
To grace the wealth of Rome, to heal the languid Cæsar!
Contrasted horror to her idyl tender:
Across the azure pavement of the sea
She raised a cape for Baïæ’s marble splendor;
And westward, on the circling zone,
To front the seas unknown,
She planted Capri’s couchant lion to defend her.
Not from her secret gardens will she spurn us.
The Roman, casting hitherward his eyes,
Forgot his Sybaris beside Volturnus,—
Forgot the streams and sylvan charms
That decked his Sabine farms,
And orchards on the slopes that sink to still Avernus.
The marrow that subdued the world, in leisure;
Counting no days that were not feasts, no cost
Too dear to purchase other forms of pleasure;
Yet, while for him stood still the sun,
The restless world rolled on,
And shook from off its skirts Cæsar and Cæsar’s treasure.
To feed the mind on Fancy’s airy diet;
Soft airs that come like memories of Greece,
Nights that renew the old Egyptian quiet:
Escape from yonder burning crest
That stirs with new unrest,
And in its lava-streams keeps hot the endless riot.
May we, meek citizens, a summer screen us:
Here find with milder Earth a perfect home,
Once, ere she puts profounder rest between us:
Here break the sacred laurel bough
Still for Apollo’s brow,
And bind the myrtle buds to crown a purer Venus.