Poems:
- 1. Ye heavenly spirits, whose ashy cinders lie
- 2. Great Babylon her haughty walls will praise
- 3. Thou stranger, which for Rome in Rome here seekest
- 4. She, whose high top above the stars did soar
- 5. Who lists to see, what ever nature, art
- 6. Such as the Berecynthian Goddess bright
- 7. Ye sacred ruins, and ye tragic sights
- 8. Through arms and vassals Rome the world subdued
- 9. Ye cruel stars, and eke ye Gods unkind
- 10. As that brave son of Aeson, which by charms
- 11. Mars shaming to have given so great head
- 12. Like as whilome the children of the earth
- 13. Nor the swift fury of the flames aspiring
- 14. As men in summer fearless pass the ford
- 15. Ye pallid spirits, and ye ashy ghosts
- 16. Like as ye see the wrathful sea from far
- 17. So long as Jove's great bird did make his flight
- 18. These heaps of stones, these old walls which ye see
- 19. All that is perfect, which th' heaven beautifies
- 20. No otherwise than rainy cloud, first fed
- 21. The same which Pyrrhus, and the puissance
- 22. When that brave honour of the Latin name
- 23. O wary wisdom of the man, that would
- 24. If the blind fury, which wars breedeth oft
- 25. O that I had the Thracian Poet's harp
- 26. Who list the Roman greatness forth to figure
- 27. Thou that at Rome astonish'd dost behold
- 28. He that hath seen a great oak dry and dead
- 29. All that which Egypt whilome did devise
- 30. Like as the seeded field green grass first shows
- 31. That same is now nought but a campion wide
- 32. Hope ye, my verses, that posterity
- L' Envoi
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Ruins of Rome : By Bellay.
translated by Edmund Spenser
1
- YE heavenly spirits, whose ashy cinders lie
- Under deep ruins, with huge walls opprest,
- But not your praise, the which shall never die
- Through your fair verses, ne in ashes rest;
- If so be shrilling voice of wight alive
- May reach from hence to depth of darkest hell,
- Then let those deep Abysses open rive,
- That ye may understand my shreiking yell.
- Thrice having seen under the heavens' vail
- Your tomb's devoted compass over all,
- Thrice unto you with loud voice I appeal,
- And for your antique fury here do call,
- The whiles that I with sacred horror sing,
- Your glory, fairest of all earthly thing.
2
- Great Babylon her haughty walls will praise,
- And sharpèd steeples high shot up in air;
- Greece will the old Ephesian buildings blaze;
- And Nylus' nurslings their Pyramids fair;
- The same yet vaunting Greece will tell the story
- Of Jove's great image in Olympus placed,
- Mausolus' work will be the Carian's glory,
- And Crete will boast the Labybrinth, now 'rased;
- The antique Rhodian will likewise set forth
- The great Colosse, erect to Memory;
- And what else in the world is of like worth,
- Some greater learnèd wit will magnify.
- But I will sing above all monuments
- Seven Roman Hills, the world's seven wonderments.
3
- Thou stranger, which for Rome in Rome here seekest,
- And nought of Rome in Rome perceiv'st at all,
- These same old walls, old arches, which thou seest,
- Old Palaces, is that which Rome men call.
- Behold what wreak, what ruin, and what waste,
- And how that she, which with her mighty power
- Tam'd all the world, hath tam'd herself at last,
- The prey of time, which all things doth devour.
- Rome now of Rome is th' only funeral,
- And only Rome of Rome hath victory;
- Ne ought save Tyber hastening to his fall
- Remains of all: O world's inconstancy.
- That which is firm doth flit and fall away,
- And that is flitting, doth abide and stay.
4
- She, whose high top above the stars did soar,
- One foot on Thetis, th' other on the Morning,
- One hand on Scythia, th' other on the Moor,
- Both heaven and earth in roundness compassing,
- Jove fearing, lest if she should greater grow,
- The old Giants should once again uprise,
- Her whelm'd with hills, these seven hills, which be now
- Tombs of her greatness, which did threat the skies:
- Upon her head he heaped Mount Saturnal,
- Upon her belly th' antique Palatine,
- Upon her stomach laid Mount Quirinal,
- On her left hand the noisome Esquiline,
- And Cælian on the right; but both her feet
- Mount Viminall and Aventine do meet.
5
- Who lists to see, what ever nature, art,
- And heaven could do, O Rome, thee let him see,
- In case thy greatness he can guess in heart,
- By that which but the picture is of thee.
- Rome is no more: but if the shade of Rome
- May of the body yield a seeming sight,
- It's like a corse drawn forth out of the tomb
- By Magick skill out of eternal night:
- The corpse of Rome in ashes is entombed,
- And her great sprite rejoinèd to the sprite
- Of this great mass, is in the same enwombed;
- But her brave writings, which her famous merit
- In spite of time, out of the dust doth rear,
- Do make her idol through the world appear.
6
- Such as the Berecynthian Goddess bright
- In her swift chariot with high turrets crowned,
- Proud that so many Gods she brought to light;
- Such was this City in her good days found:
- This city, more than the great Phrygian mother
- Renowned for fruit of famous progeny,
- Whose greatness by the greatness of none other,
- But by herself her equal match could see:
- Rome only might to Rome comparèd be,
- And only Rome could make great Rome to tremble:
- So did the Gods by heavenly doom decree,
- That other deathly power should not resemble
- Her that did match the whole earth's puissaunce,
- And did her courage to the heavens advance.
7
- Ye sacred ruins, and ye tragic sights,
- Which only do the name of Rome retain,
- Old monuments, which of so famous sprites
- The honour yet in ashes do maintain:
- Triumphant arcs, spires neighbors to the sky,
- That you to see doth th' heaven itself appall,
- Alas, by little ye to nothing fly,
- The people's fable, and the spoil of all:
- And though your frames do for a time make war
- 'Gainst time, yet time in time shall ruinate
- Your works and names, and your last relics mar.
- My sad desires, rest therefore moderate:
- For if that time make ends of things so sure,
- It also will end the pain, which I endure.
8
- Through arms and vassals Rome the world subdued,
- That one would ween, that one sole City's strength
- Both land and sea in roundess had surview'd,
- To be the measure of her breadth and length:
- This people's virtue yet so fruitful was
- Of virtuous nephews that posterity
- Striving in power their grandfathers to pass,
- The lowest earth join'd to the heaven high;
- To th' end that having all parts in their power
- Nought from the Roman Empire might be 'quite,
- And that though time doth Commonwealths devour,
- Yet no time should so low embase their height,
- That her head earth'd in her foundations deep,
- Should not her name and endless honour keep.
9
- Ye cruel stars, and eke ye Gods unkind,
- Heaven envious, and bitter stepdame Nature,
- Be it by fortune, or by course of kind
- That ye do weld th' affairs of earthly creature:
- Why have your hands long sithence troubled
- To frame this world, that doth endure so long?
- Or why were not these Roman palaces
- Made of some matter no less firm and strong?
- I say not, as the common voice doth say,
- That all things which beneath the moon have being
- Are temporal, and subject to decay:
- But I say rather, though not all agreeing
- With some, that ween the contrary in thought:
- That all this whole shall one day come to nought.
10
- As that brave son of Aeson, which by charms
- Achieved the golden fleece in Colchid land,
- Out of the earth engendered men of arms
- Of Dragons' teetch, sown in the sacred sand;
- So this brave town, that in her youthly days
- An Hydra was of warriors glorious,
- Did fill with her renownéd nurslings praise
- The firey sun's both one and other house:
- But they at last, there being then not living
- An Hercules, so rank seed to repress,;
- Amongst themselves with cruel fury striving,
- Mow'd down themselves with slaughter merciless;
- Renewing in themselves that rage unkind,
- Which whilom did those searthborn brethren blind.
11
- Mars shaming to have given so great head
- To his off-spring, that mortal puissance
- Puffed up with pride of Roman hardy head,
- Seem'd above heaven's power itself to advance;
- Cooling again his former kindled heat,
- With which he had those Roman spirits filled;
- Did blow new fire, and with enflaméd breath,
- Into the Gothic cold hot rage instill'd:
- Then 'gan that Nation, th' earth's new Giant brood,
- To dart abroad the thunder bolts of war,
- And beating down these walls with furious mood
- Into her mother's bosom, all did mar;
- To th' end that none, all were if Jove his sire
- Should boast himself of the Roman Empire.
12
- Like as whilome the children of the earth
- Heaped hills on hills, to scale the starry sky,
- And fight against the Gods of heavenly birth,
- Whilst Jove at them his thunderbolts let fly;
- All suddenly with lightning overthrown,
- The furious squadrons down the ground did fall,
- That th' earth under her children's weight did groan,
- And th' heavens in glory triumphed over all:
- So did that haughty front which heapéd was
- On these seven Roman hills, itself uprear
- Over the world, and lift her lofty face
- Against the heaven, that 'gan her force to fear.
- But now these scorned fields bemoan her fall,
- And Gods secure fear not her force at all.
13
- Nor the swift fury of the flames aspiring,
- Nor the deep wounds of victor's raging blade,
- Nor ruthless spoil of soldiers blood-desiring,
- The which so oft thee, Rome, their conquest made;
- Ne stroke on stroke of fortune variable,
- Ne rust of age hating continuance,
- Nor wrath of Gods, nor spite of men unstable,
- Nor thou oppos'd against thine own puissance;
- Nor th' horrible uproar of winds high blowing,
- Nor swelling streams of that God snaky-paced,
- Which hath so often with his overflowing
- Thee drenched, have thy pride so much abased;
- But that this nothing, which they have thee left,
- Makes the world wonder, what they from thee reft.
14
- As men in summer fearless pass the ford,
- Which is in winter lord of all the plain,
- And with his tumbling streams doth bear aboard
- The plowman's hope, and shepherd's labor vain;
- And as the coward beasts use to despise
- The noble lion after his life's end
- Whetting their teeth, and with vain foolhardise
- Daring the foe, that cannot him defend:
- And as at Troy most dastards of the Greeks
- Did brave about the corpse of Hector cold;
- So those which whilome wont with pallid cheeks
- The Roman triumphs glory to behold,
- Now on these ashy tombs show boldness vain,
- And conquer'd dare the Conqueror disdain.
15
- Ye pallid spirits, and ye ashy ghosts,
- Which joying in the brightness of your day,
- Brought forth those signs of your premptuous boasts
- Which now their dusty relics do bewray;
- Tell me ye spirits (sith the darksome river
- Of Styx not passable to souls returning,
- Enclosing you in thrice three wards forever,
- Do not restrain your images still mourning)
- Tell me then (for perhaps some one of you
- Yet here above him secretly doth hide)
- Do ye not feel your torments to accrue,
- When ye sometimes behold the ruin'd pride
- Of these old Roman works built with your hands,
- Now to become nought else, but heaped sands?
16
- Like as ye see the wrathful sea from far,
- In a great mountain heap'd with hideous noise,
- Eftsoons of thousand bilows shouldered narre,
- Against a rock to break with dreadful poise;
- Like as ye see fell Boreas with sharp blast,
- Tossing huge tempests through the troubled sky,
- Eftsoons having his wide wings spent in vast,
- To stop his wearie carrier suddenly;
- And as ye see huge flames spread diversly,
- Gathered in one up to the heavens to spire,
- Eftsoons consum'd to fall down feebily:
- So whilom did this Monarchy aspire
- As waves, as wind, as fire spread over all,
- Till it by fatal doom adown did fall.
17
- So long as Jove's great bird did make his flight,
- Bearing the fire with which heaven doth us fray,
- Heaven had not fear of that presumptuous might,
- With which the Giants did the Gods assay.
- But all so soon, as scorching Sun had brent
- His wings, which wont to the earth to overspread,
- The earth out of her massy womb forth sent
- That antique horror, which made heaven adread.
- Then was the German raven in disguise
- That Roman eagle seen to cleave asunder,
- And towards heaven freshly to arise
- Out of these mountains, not consum'd to powder.
- In which the fowl that serves to bear the lightning,
- Is now no more seen flying, nor alighting.
18
- These heaps of stones, these old walls which ye see,
- Were first enclosures but of savage soil;
- And these brave palaces which mastered be
- Of time, were shepherds cottages somewhile.
- Then took the shepherd kingly ornamnets
- And the stout hynde arm'd his right hand with steel:
- Eftsoones their rule of yearly presidents
- Grew great, and six months greater a great deal;
- Which made perpetual, rose to so great might,
- That thence th' imperial Eagle rooting took,
- Till th' heaven itself opposing 'gainst her might,
- Her power to Peter's successor betook;
- Who shepherdlike, (as fates the same forseeing)
- Doth show, that all things turn to their first being.
19
- All that is perfect, which th' heaven beautifies;
- All that's imperfect, born below the moon;
- All that doth feed our spriits and our eyes;
- And all that doth consume our pleasures soon;
- All the mishap, the which our days outwears,
- All the good hap of th' oldest times afore,
- Rome in the time of her great ancesters,
- Like a Pandora, locked long in store.
- But destiny this huge Chaos turmoiling,
- In which all good and evil was enclosed,
- Their heavenly virtues from these woes absolving,
- Carried to heaven, from sinful bondage loosed:
- But their great sins, the causers of their pain,
- Under these antique ruins yet remain.
20
- No otherwise than rainy cloud, first fed
- With earthly vapors gathered in the air,
- Eftsoones in compass arch'd, to steep his head,
- Doth plunge himself in Tethys' bosom fair;
- And mounting up again, from whence he came,
- With his great belly spreads the dimmed world,
- Till at last the last dissolving his moist frame,
- In rain, or snow, or hail he forth is hurl'd;
- This City, which was first but shepherds' shade,
- Uprising by degrees, grew to such height,
- That queen of land and sea herself she made.
- At last not able to bear so great weight.
- Her power dispers'd, through all the world did vade;
- To show that all in th' end to nought shall fade.
21
- The same which Pyrrhus, and the puissance
- Of Afric could not tame, that same brave city,
- Which with stout courage arm'd against mischance,
- Sustain'd the shock of common enmity;
- Long as her ship tossed with so many freaks,
- Had all the world in arms against her bent,
- Was never seen, that any fortune's wreaks
- Could break her course begun with brave intent.
- But when the object of her virtue failed,
- Her power itself agains itself did arm;
- As he that having long in tempest sailed,
- Fain would arrive, but cannot for the storm,
- If too great wind against the port him drive,
- Doth in the port itself his vessel rive.
22
- When that brave honour of the Latin name,
- Which bound her rule with Africa, and Byze,
- With Thames' inhabitants of noble fame,
- And they which see the dawning day arise;
- Her nurslings did with mutinous uproar
- Hearten against herself, her conquer'd spoil,
- Which she had won from all the world afore,
- Of all the world was spoil'd within a while.
- So when the compass'd course of the universe
- In six and thirty thousand years is run,
- The bands of th' elements shall back reverse
- To their first discord, and be quite undone:
- The seeds, of which all things at first were bred,
- Shall in great Chaos' womb again be hid.
23
- O wary wisdom of the man, that would
- That Carthage towers from spoil should be forborn,
- To th' end that his victorious people should
- With cankering leisure not be overworn;
- He well foresaw, how that the Roman courage,
- Impatient of pleasure's faint desires,
- Through idleness would turn to civil rage,
- And be herself the matter of her fires.
- For in a people given all to ease,
- Ambition is engend'red easily;
- As in a vicious body, gross disease
- Soon grows through humours' superfluity.
- That came to pass, when swoll'n with plentious pride,
- Nor prince, nor peer, nor kin they would abide.
24
- If the blind fury, which wars breedeth oft,
- Wonts not t' enrage the hearts of equal beasts,
- Whether they fare on foot, or fly aloft,
- Or arméd be with claws, or scaly crests;
- What fell Erynnis with hot burning tongs,
- Did grip your hearts, with noisome rage imbew'd,
- That each to other working cruel wrongs,
- You blades in your own bowels you embrew'd?
- Was this (ye Romans) your hard destiny?
- Or some old sin, whose unappeased guilt
- Power'd vengeance forth on you eternally?
- Or brother's blood, the which at first was spilt
- Upon your walls, that God might not endure,
- Upon the same to set foundation sure?
25
- O that I had the Thracian Poet's harp,
- For to awake out of th' infernal shade
- Those antique Cæsars, sleeping long in dark,
- The which this ancient City whilome made:
- Or that I had Amphion's instrument,
- To quicken with his vital note's accord,
- The stony joints of these old walls now rent,
- By which th' Ausonian light might be restor'd:
- Or that at least I could with pencil fine,
- Fashion the portraits of these palaces,
- By pattern of great Virgil's spirit divine;
- I would assay with that which in me is,
- To build with level of my lofty style,
- That which no hands can evermore compile.
26
- Who list the Roman greatness forth to figure,
- Him needeth not to seek for usage right
- Of line, or lead, or rule, or square, to measure
- Her length, her breadth, her deepness, or her height:
- But him behooves to view in compass round
- All that the ocean grasps in his long arms;
- Be it where the yearly star doth scorch the ground,
- Or where cold Boreas blows his bitter storms.
- Rome was th' whole world, and all the world was Rome,
- And if things nam'd their names do equalize,
- When land and sea ye name, then name ye Rome;
- And naming Rome ye land and sea comprise:
- For th' ancient plot of Rome displayéd plain,
- The map of all the wide world doth contain.
27
- Thou that at Rome astonish'd dost behold
- The antique pride, which menaced the sky,
- These haughty heaps, these palaces of old,
- These walls, these arcs, these baths, these temples hie;
- Judge by these ample ruins' view, the rest
- The which injurious time hath quite outworne,
- Since of all workmen held in reck'ning best,
- Yet these old fragments are for patterns born:
- Then also mark, how Rome from day to day,
- Repairing her decayéd fashion,
- Renews herself with buildings rich and gay;
- That one would judge, that the Roman dæmon
- Doth yet himself with fatal hand enforce,
- Again on foot to rear her pouldred corse.
28
- He that hath seen a great oak dry and dead,
- Yet clad with relics of some trophies old,
- Lifting to heaven her agéd hoary head,
- Whose foot in ground hath left but feeble hold;
- But half disbowel'd lies above the ground,
- Showing her wreathéd roots, and naked arms,
- And on her trunk all rotten and unsound
- Only supports herself for meat of worms;
- And though she owe her fall to the first wind,
- Yet of the devout people is ador'd,
- And many young plants spring out of her rind;
- Who such an oak hath seen let him record
- That such this city's honor was of yore,
- And 'mongst all cities flourishéd much more.
29
- All that which Egypt whilome did devise,
- All that which Greece their temples to embrave,
- After th' Ionic, Attic, Doric guise,
- Or Corinth skill'd in curious works to 'grave;
- All that Lysippus' practick art could form,
- Appeles' wit, or Phidias his skill,
- Was wont this ancient city to adorn,
- And the heaven itself with her wide wonders fill;
- All that which Athens ever brought forth wise,
- All that which Africa ever brought forth strange,
- All that which Asia ever had of prize,
- Was here to see. O marvelous great change:
- Rome living, was the world's sole ornament,
- And dead, is now the world's sole monument.
30
- Like as the seeded field green grass first shows,
- Then from green grass into a stalk doth spring,
- And from a stalk into an ear forth grows,
- Which ear the fruitfull grain doth shortly bring;
- And as in season due the husband mows
- The waving locks of those fair yellow hairs,
- Which bound in sheaves, and laid in comely rows,
- Upon the naked fields in stacks he rears:
- So grew the Roman Empire by degree,
- Till that barbarian hands it quite did spill,
- And left of it but these old marks to see,
- Of which all passersby do somewhat pill:
- As they which glean, the relics use to gather,
- Which th' husbandman behind him chanced to scatter.
31
- That same is now nought but a campion wide,
- Where all this world's pride once was situate.
- No blame to thee, whosoever dost abide
- By Nile, or Ganges, or Tigris, or Euphrate,
- Ne Africa thereof guilty is, nor Spain,
- Nor the bold people by the Thame's brinks,
- Nor the brave, warlike brood of Alemagne,
- Nor the born soldier which Rhine running drinks;
- Thou only cause, O civil fury, art
- Which sowing in the Aemathian fields thy spite,
- Didst arm thy hand against thy proper heart;
- To th' end that when thou wast in greatest height
- To greatness grown, through long prosperity,
- Thou then adown might'st fall more horribly.
32
- Hope ye, my verses, that posterity
- Of age ensuing shall you ever read?
- Hope ye that ever immortality
- So mean harp's work may challenge for her mead?
- If under heaven any endurance were,
- These monuments, which not in paper writ,
- Put in porphyry and marble do appear,
- Might well have hop'd to have obtained it.
- Na th' less my lute, whom Phoebus deigned to give,
- Cease not to sound these old antiquities:
- For if that time do let thy glory live,
- Well mayst thou boast, how ever base thou be,
- That thou art first, which of thy Nation sung
- Th' old nonor of the people gowné long.
L' Envoi
- Bellay, first garland of free Poesy
- That France brought forth, though fruitful of brave wits,
- Well worthy thou of immorality,
- That long hast travail'd by thy learned writs,
- Old Rome out of her ashes to revive,
- And give a second life to dead decays:
- Needs must he all eternity survive,
- That can to other give eternal days.
- Thy days therefore are endless, and thy praise
- Excelling all, that ever went before;
- And after thee, 'gins Bartas high to raise
- His heavenly Muse, th' Almighty to adore.
- Live, happy spirits, th' honour of your name,
- And fill the world with never dying fame.
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