As an almighty night doth pass away From an old ruinous city in a desart, And all its cloudy wrecks sink into day: While every monstrous shape and ghostly wizard, That dwelled within the cavernous old place, Grows pale, and shrinks, and dies in its dismay: And then the light comes in, and flowery grace Covers the sand, and man doth come again And live rejoicing in the new-born plain: So you have seen great, gloomy centuries, (The shadow of Rome's Death,) in which did dwell The men of Europe, shudder and arise: So you have seen break up that smoke of Hell, Like a great superstitious snake, uncurled From the pale temples of the awakening world. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...WHY I LOVE HER by ALEXANDER BROME DANIEL WEBSTER by OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES THE ACHARNIANS: IN PRAISE OF THE POET by ARISTOPHANES BRITANNIA'S PASTORALS: BOOK 1. THE EPISTLE DEDICATORY TO THE READER by WILLIAM BROWNE (1591-1643) NOON; FROM AN UNFINISHED POEM by WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT VERSES FOUND IN A SUMMER HOUSE AT HALES-OWEN by GEORGE GORDON BYRON |