Page:The Works of Lord Byron (ed. Coleridge, Prothero) - Volume 4.djvu/299

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CANTO III.]
THE PROPHECY OF DANTE.
261

CANTO THE THIRD.

From out the mass of never-dying ill,[1]
The Plague, the Prince, the Stranger, and the Sword,
Vials of wrath but emptied to refill
And flow again, I cannot all record
That crowds on my prophetic eye: the Earth
And Ocean written o'er would not afford
Space for the annal, yet it shall go forth;
Yes, all, though not by human pen, is graven,
There where the farthest suns and stars have birth,
Spread like a banner at the gate of Heaven,10
The bloody scroll of our millennial wrongs
Waves, and the echo of our groans is driven
Athwart the sound of archangelic songs,
And Italy, the martyred nation's gore,
Will not in vain arise to where belongs[2]
Omnipotence and Mercy evermore:
Like to a harpstring stricken by the wind,
The sound of her lament shall, rising o'er
The Seraph voices, touch the Almighty Mind.
Meantime I, humblest of thy sons, and of20
Earth's dust by immortality refined
To Sense and Suffering, though the vain may scoff,
And tyrants threat, and meeker victims bow
Before the storm because its breath is rough,
To thee, my Country! whom before, as now,

I loved and love, devote the mournful lyre
  1. —— of long-enduring ill.—[MS. erased.]
  2. —— the martyred country's gore
    Will not in vain arise to whom belongs.—[MS. erased.]