AMID the dungeon's stifling gloom he lay, -- A white-haired prisoner; his beard unkempt, His tattered garments, and his wasted frame, Told of long years of solitude. Above, A narrow loop-hole pierced the massive wall, And through it fell a sunbeam, pallid, thin, Across whose path, marked by the dancing motes, Wavered a single fly in aimless flight, Buzzing a dreary monotone. Faint gusts Of far-off shouting and the echoing call Of bugles drifted through the narrow cleft, Breaking the wonted silence of the cell. Yet still the prisoner unheeding lay, Watching the sunlight, as it slowly crept Along the dungeon wall to where were cut Rude characters, half legible and dim, Deep carven in the blackened stone, -- crude shift To tell the passing of the leaden hours. Hard by the mark which told the hour of noon Three words were graven, -- and the sunbeam stole Yet nearer, nearer, till at last it reached The first and flooded it with golden light: -- "@3Fraternite@1": the old man's dying gaze Grew more intent, -- faint came the whispered words: "Ah, brother, -- brother, -- Jacques, my brother, -- you Had sworn --" Breath failed. The shouting from without Grew louder, fiercer, mingled with the boom Of cannon, and the rumbling crash and roar Of battered, falling masonry. The sun Touched now the second word: "@3Egalite@1"; And straight the weary eyes were lit with joy, And then grew dark with pain. "Marie, -- Marie, -- Are all your smiles for him, -- and this for me? We loved together, Jacques and I, we fought And toiled as one, Marie, -- are all, -- are all Your smiles -- for him -- and this --" The whisper died. No longer through the narrow loop-hole came The shouting, but with ever fiercer din, And clash of steel on steel, through the thick door Of massive oak, cross bound with iron straps. And now the letters of the last-carved word Are touched with gleams of gold, -- 'tis "@3Liberte.@1" The tired eyes grow brighter as they gaze, Then fade in death. A rush of heavy feet Down the long corridor. Shrill screams the door Upon its rusty hinge. The cell is filled With men in arms, all wet with sweat and blood, Their eyes aflame with light and victory. And through the vaulted passage rings the cry: "@3Liberte! Egalite! Fraternite!@1" | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE ARAB by CHARLES STUART CALVERLEY EMERSON by MARY ELIZABETH MAPES DODGE LOVE AND A QUESTION by ROBERT FROST LAMENT OF THE FRONTIER GUARD by LI PO PATTY MORGAN THE MILKMAID'S STORY: 'LOOK AT THE CLOCK!' by RICHARD HARRIS BARHAM TWELVE SONNETS: 12. AFTER BATTLE by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |