BLACK Demons hovering o'er his mitred head, To Caesar's Successor the Pontiff spake; "Ere I absolve thee, stoop! that on thy neck "Levelled with earth this foot of mine may tread." Then he, who to the altar had been led, He, whose strong arm the Orient could not check, He, who had held the Soldan at his beck, Stooped, of all glory disinherited, And even the common dignity of man! -- Amazement strikes the crowd: while many turn Their eyes away in sorrow, others burn With scorn, invoking a vindictive ban From outraged Nature; but the sense of most In abject sympathy with power is lost. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...SURFACES AND MASKS; 1 by CLARENCE MAJOR OCTAVES: 21 by EDWIN ARLINGTON ROBINSON BUCOLIC COMEDY: THE FOX; FOR ANN PEARN by EDITH SITWELL EVE SPEAKS by LOUIS UNTERMEYER UNDER THE WATERFALL by THOMAS HARDY THE HERO OF VIMY; AN INCIDENT OF THE GREAT WAR by BRENT DOW ALLINSON |