Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
The Campo Santo at Pisa
By Aubrey Thomas de Vere (18141902)This mighty cloister of itself inspires
Thoughts breathed like hymns from spiritual choirs;
While shades and lights, in soft succession stealing,
Along it creep, now veiling, now revealing
Strange forms, here traced by painting’s earliest sires,—
Angels with palms; and purgatorial fires;
And saints caught up, and demons round them reeling.
Love, long remembering those she could not save,
Here hung the cradle of Italian Art:
Faith rocked it: like a hermit child went forth
From hence that power which beautified the earth.
She perished when the world had lured her heart
From her true friends, Religion and the Grave.
Through the ribbed fretwork with low sigh or moan,
Lament enough: let them lament alone,
Counting the sear leaves of the innumerous grass
With thin, soft sound like one prolonged,—alas!
Spread thou thy hands on sun-touched vase, or stone
That yet retains the warmth of sunshine gone,
And drink warm solace from the ponderous mass.
Gaze not around thee. Monumental marbles,
Time-clouded frescos, mouldering year by year,
Dim cells in which all day the night-bird warbles,—
These things are sorrowful elsewhere, not here:
A mightier Power than Art’s hath here her shrine:
Stranger! thou tread’st the soil of Palestine!