Afpice murorum moles, præruptaque faxa, Obrutaque horrenti vafta theatra fitu:
Hæc funt Roma. Viden' velut ipfa cadavera tantæ Urbis adhuc fpirent imperiofa minas?
Janus Vitalis. NOUGH of Grongar, and the fhady dales Of winding Towy, Merlin's fabled haunt,
I fung inglorious. Now the love of arts, And what in metal or in ftone remains Of proud antiquity, thro' various realms And various languages and ages fam'd, Bears me remote, o'er Gallia's woody bounds, O'er the cloud-piercing Alps remote; beyond The vale of Arno purpled with the vine, Beyond the Umbrian and Etrufcan hills, To Latium's wide champain, forlorn and waste,
Where yellow Tiber his neglected wave Mournfully rolls. Yet once again, my Muse, Yet once again, and foar a loftier flight; Lo the refiftless theme, imperial Rome.
Fall'n, fall'n, a filent heap; her heroes all Sunk in their urns; behold the pride of pomp, The throne of nations fall'n; obfcur'd in duft; Ev'n yet majestical; the folemn fcene Elates the foul, while now the rifing fun Flames on the ruins in the purer air Tow'ring aloft, upon the glitt'ring plain, Like broken rocks, a vaft circumference ; Rent palaces, crush'd columns, rifted moles, Fanes roll'd on fanes, and tombs on buried tombs.> Deep lies in duft the Theban obelife, Immenfe along the wafte; minuter art, Gliconian forms, or Phidian, fubtly fair, O'erwhelming; as th' immenfe LEVIATHAN The finny brood, when near Ierne's shore Out-ftretch'd, unwieldly, his ifland length appears Above the foamy flood, Globofe and huge, Grey-mould'ring temples fwell, and wide o'ercaft The folitary landskape, hills and woods,
And boundless wilds; while the vine-mantled brows The pendent goats unveil, regardless they Of hourly peril, though the clefted domes Tremble to every wind. The pilgrim oft At dead of night, 'mid his oraifon hears
Aghaft the voice of time, difparting tow'rs, Tumbling all precipitate down-dafh'd, Rattling around, loud thund'ring to the moon: While murmurs footh each aweful interval Of ever-falling waters; fhrouded Nile', Eridanus, and Tiber with his twins,
And palmy Euphrates; they with dropping locks, Hang o'er their urns, and mournfully among The plaintive-echoing ruins pour their streams. Yet here advent'rous in the facred search Of ancient arts, the delicate of mind, Curious and modeft, from all climes refort, Grateful fociety! with thefe I raise
The toilfome step up the proud Palatin, Through fpiry cypress groves, and tow'ring pine, Waving aloft o'er the big ruins brows, On num'rous arches rear'd: and frequent stopp'd, The funk ground ftartles me with dreadful chafm, Breathing forth darkness from the vast profound Of ifles and halls, within the mountain's womb. Nor thefe the nether works; all these beneath, And all beneath the vales and hills around, Extend the cavern'd fewers, maffy, firm, As the Sibyline grot befide the dead Lake of Avernus; fuch the fewers huge,
Whither the great Tarquinian genius dooms
a Fountains at Rome adorned with the ftatues of thofe rivers.
Each wave impure; and proud with added rains, Hark how the mighty billows lash their vaults, And thunder; how they heave their rocks in vain! Though now inceffant Time has roll'd around A thousand winters o'er the changeful world, And yet a thousand fince, th' indignant floods Roar loud in their firm bounds, and dafh and fwell, In vain; convey'd to Tiber's lowest wave.
Hence over airy plains, by cryftal founts, That wave their glitt'ring waves with tuneful lapse, Among the fleeky pebbles, agate clear, Cerulean ophite, and the flow'ry vein Of orient jafper, pleas'd I move along, And vafes bofs'd, and huge infcriptive ftones," And intermingling vines; and figur'd nymphs, Flora's and Chloe's of delicious mould,
Cheering the darkness; and deep empty tombs, And dells, and mould'ring fhrines, with old decay Ruftick and green and wide-embow'ring fhades, Shot from the crooked clefts of nodding tow'rs; A folemn wilderness! With error sweet,
I wind the ling'ring ftep, where-e'er the path Mazy conducts me, which the vulgar foot O'er fculptures maim'd has made; Anubis, Sphinx, Idols of antique guife, and horned Pan, Terrifick, monftrous fhapes! prepoft'rous gods, Of Fear and Ign'rance, by the fculptor's hand Hewn into form, and worship'd; as ev'n now
Blindly they worship at their breathless mouths b In varied appellations: men to these
(From depth to depth in dark'ning error fall'n) At length afcrib'd th' IN APPLICABLE NAME. How doth it please and fill the memory
With deeds of brave renown, while on each hand Hiftorick urns and breathing statues rise,
And speaking bufts! Sweet Scipio, Marius ftern, Pompey fuperb, the fpirit-ftirring form
Of Cæfar raptur'd with the charm of rule And boundless fame; impatient for exploits, His eager eyes upcast, he foars in thought Above all height: and his own Brutus fee, Defponding Brutus, dubious of the right, In evil days, of faith, of publick weal Solicitous and fad. Thy next regard Be Tully's graceful attitude; uprais'd, His out-ftretch'd arm he waves, in act to speak Before the filent mafters of the world, And eloquence arrays him. There behold Prepar'd for combat in the front of war
The pious brothers; jealous Alba ftands
In fearful expectation of the ftrife,
And youthful Rome intent: the kindred foes
Fall on each other's neck in filent tears;
In forrowful benevolence embrace
Several ftatues of the Pagan gods have been converted into images of faints.
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