Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/514

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476
ALARIC AT ROME.

XIX.

Soon was that stillness broken: like the cry
Of the hoarse onset of the surging wave,
Or louder rush of whirlwinds sweeping by
Was the wild shout those Gothic myriads gave,
As towered on high, above their moonlit road,
Scenes where a Cæsar triumpht, or a Scipio trod.


XX.

Think ye it strikes too slow, the sword of fate,
Think ye the avenger loiters on his way,
That your own hands must open wide the gate,
And your own voice must guide him to his prey;
Alas, it needs not; is it hard to know
Fate's threat'nings are not vain, the spoiler comes not slow.


XXI.

And were there none, to stand and weep alone,
And as the pageant swept before their eyes
To hear a dim and long-forgotten tone
Tell of old times, and holiest memories,
Till fanciful regret and dreamy woe
Peopled night's voiceless shades with forms of long Ago.


XXII.

Oh yes! if fancy feels, beyond to-day,
Thoughts of the past and of the future time,
How should that mightiest city pass away
And not bethink her of her glorious prime,
Whilst every chord that thrills at thoughts of home
Jarr'd with the bursting shout, "they come, the Goth, they come!"