I COULD believe that under such a sky, Thus grave, thus streakt with thunderlight, of yore The small Athenian troop rushed onward, more As Bacchanals than men about to die. How weak that massive, motley enemy Seemed to those hearts, full-fed on that high lore, Which, for their use, in his melodious store, Old Homer had laid up immortally. Thus Marathon was Troy, -- thus here again They were at issue with the barbarous East, And favoring Gods spoke out, and walkt the plain; And every man was an anointed priest Of Nemesis, empowered to chastise The rampant insolence that would not be made wise. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...IN THE NEOLITHIC AGE by RUDYARD KIPLING THE COLD WAVE OF 32 B.C. by FRANKLIN PIERCE ADAMS EPIGRAM by FRANCOIS GUILLAUME JEAN STANISLAS ANDRIEUX TO MARIE by JOHN BENNETT (1865-1956) THE CARPENTER'S STORY by ARCHIE BINNS POETIC STUFF by MORRIS GILBERT BISHOP WRITTEN ON A BLANK LEAF OF HIS POEMS, FOR CHLORIS by ROBERT BURNS |