Classic and Contemporary Poetry
HANNIBAL'S OATH, by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON Poet Analysis Poet's Biography First Line: And the night was dark and calm Last Line: How that oath of hate was kept. Alternate Author Name(s): L. E. L.; Maclean, Letitia Subject(s): Hannibal (247-183 B.c.); Hate | ||||||||
AND the night was dark and calm, There was not a breath of air; The leaves of the grove were still, As the presence of death were there; -- Only a moaning sound Came from the distant sea, It was as if, like life, It had no tranquillity. A warrior and a child Pass'd through the sacred wood, Which, like a mystery, Around the temple stood. The warrior's brow was worn With the weight of casque and plume, And sun-burnt was his cheek, And his eye and brow were gloom. The child was young and fair, But the forehead large and high, And the dark eyes' flashing light Seem'd to feel their destiny. They enter'd in the temple, And stood before the shrine; It stream'd with the victim's blood, With incense and with wine. The ground rock'd beneath their feet, The thunder shook the dome; But the boy stood firm, and swore Eternal hate to Rome. There's a page in history O'er which tears of blood were wept, And that page is the record How that oath of hate was kept. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...LOVE THE WILD SWAN by ROBINSON JEFFERS HATRED by GWENDOLYN B. BENNETT TO AN ENEMY by MAXWELL BODENHEIM JACK ROSE by MAXWELL BODENHEIM THE PEOPLE OF THE OTHER VILLAGE by THOMAS LUX IN STRANGE EVENTS by WILLIAM MEREDITH LINES FOR A CHRISTMAS CARD by HILAIRE BELLOC LINES TO A DON by HILAIRE BELLOC CALYPSO WATCHING THE OCEAN by LETITIA ELIZABETH LANDON |
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