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A DAY IN THE PAMFILI DORIA.
THOUGH the hills are cold and snowy, And the wind drives chill to-day, My heart goes back to a spring-time, Far, far in the past away. |
And I see a quaint old city, Weary and worn and brown, Where the spring and the birds are so early, And the sun in such light goes down. |
I remember that old-times villa, Where our afternoons went by, Where the suns of March flushed warmly, And spring was in earth and sky. |
Out of the mouldering city, Mouldering, old, and gray, We sped, with a lightsome heart-thrill, For a sunny, gladsome day,-- |
For a revel of fresh spring verdure, For a race 'mid springing flowers, For a vision of plashing fountains, Of birds and blossoming bowers. |
There were violet banks in the shadows, Violets white and blue; And a world of bright anemones, That over the terrace grew,-- |
Blue and orange and purple, Rosy and yellow and white, Rising in rainbow bubbles, Streaking the lawns with light. |
And down from the old stone pine-trees, Those far off islands of air, The birds are flinging the tidings Of a joyful revel up there. |
And now for the grand old fountains, Tossing their silvery spray, Those fountains so quaint and so many, That are leaping and singing all day. |
Those fountains of strange weird sculpture, With lichens and moss o'ergrown. Are they marble greening in moss-wreaths? Or moss-wreaths whitening to stone? |
Down many a wild, dim pathway We ramble from morning till noon; We linger, unheeding the hours, Till evening comes all too soon. |
And from out the ilex alleys, Where lengthening shadows play, We look on the dreamy Campagna, All glowing with setting day,-- |
All melting in bands of purple, In swathings and foldings of gold, In ribands of azure and lilac, Like a princely banner unrolled, |
And the smoke of each distant cottage, And the flash of each villa white, Shines out with an opal glimmer, Like gems in a casket of light. |
And the dome of old St. Peter's With a strange translucence glows, Like a mighty bubble of amethyst Floating in waves of rose. |
In a trance of dreamy vagueness We, gazing and yearning, behold That city beheld by the prophet, Whose walls were transparent gold. |
And, dropping all solemn and slowly, To hallow the softening spell, There falls on the dying twilight The Ave Maria bell. |
With a mournful motherly softness, With a weird and weary care, That strange and ancient city Seems calling the nations to prayer. |
And the words that of old the angel To the mother of Jesus brought, Rise like a new evangel, To hallow the trance of our thought. |
With the smoke of the evening incense, Our thoughts are ascending then To Mary, the mother of Jesus, To Jesus, the Master of men. |
O city of prophets and martyrs, O shrines of the sainted dead, When, when shall the living day-spring Once more on your towers be spread? |
When He who is meek and lowly Shall rule in those lordly halls, And shall stand and feed as a shepherd The flock which his mercy calls,-- |
O, then to those noble churches, To picture and statue and gem, To the pageant of solemn worship, Shall the meaning come back again. |
And this strange and ancient city, In that reign of His truth and love, Shall be what it seems in the twilight, The type of that City above. |
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