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Home  »  The World’s Best Poetry  »  Lucius Junius Brutus over the Body of Lucretia

Bliss Carman, et al., eds. The World’s Best Poetry. 1904.

Poems of Tragedy: II. Rome

Lucius Junius Brutus over the Body of Lucretia

John Howard Payne (1791–1852)

From “Brutus”

WOULD you know why I summoned you together?

Ask ye what brings me here? Behold this dagger,

Clotted with gore! Behold that frozen corse!

See where the lost Lucretia sleeps in death!

She was the mark and model of the time,

The mould in which each female face was formed,

The very shrine and sacristy of virtue!

Fairer than ever was a form created

By youthful fancy when the blood strays wild,

And never-resting thought is all on fire!

The worthiest of the worthy! Not the nymph

Who met old Numa in his hallowed walks,

And whispered in his ear her strains divine,

Can I conceive beyond her;—the young choir

Of vestal virgins bent to her. ’T is wonderful

Amid the darnel, hemlock, and base weeds,

Which now spring rife from the luxurious compost

Spread o’er the realm, how this sweet lily rose,—

How from the shade of those ill-neighboring plants

Her father sheltered her, that not a leaf

Was blighted, but, arrayed in purest grace,

She bloomed unsullied beauty. Such perfections

Might have called back the torpid breast of age

To long-forgotten rapture; such a mind

Might have abashed the boldest libertine

And turned desire to reverential love

And holiest affection! O my countrymen!

You all can witness when that she went forth

It was a holiday in Rome; old age

Forgot its crutch, labor its task,—all ran,

And mothers, turning to their daughters, cried,

“There, there ’s Lucretia!” Now look ye where she lies!

That beauteous flower, that innocent sweet rose,

Torn up by ruthless violence,—gone! gone! gone!

Say, would you seek instruction? would ye ask

What ye should do? Ask ye yon conscious walls,

Which saw his poisoned brother,—

Ask yon deserted street, where Tullia drove

O’er her dead father’s corse, ’t will cry, Revenge!

Ask yonder senate-house, whose stones are purple

With human blood, and it will cry, Revenge!

Go to the tomb where lies his murdered wife,

And the poor queen, who loved him as her son,

Their unappeasèd ghosts will shriek, Revenge!

The temples of the gods, the all-viewing heavens,

The gods themselves, shall justify the cry,

And swell the general sound, Revenge! Revenge!

And we will be revenged, my countrymen!

Brutus shall lead you on; Brutus, a name

Which will, when you ’re revenged, be dearer to him

Than all the noblest titles earth can boast.

Brutus your king!—No, fellow-citizens!

If mad ambition in this guilty frame

Had strung one kingly fibre, yea, but one,—

By all the gods, this dagger which I hold

Should rip it out, though it intwined my heart.

Now take the body up. Bear it before us

To Tarquin’s palace; there we ’ll light our torches,

And in the blazing conflagration rear

A pile, for these chaste relics, that shall send

Her soul amongst the stars. On! Brutus leads you!