Poems (Linn)/On the Acropolis

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
4649448Poems — On the AcropolisEdith Willis Linn
ON THE ACROPOLIS.
I STOOD 'mid Athens' ruined pride
Upon her mighty templed hill,
And saw the beauties far and wide
Of purple mount and harbor still,
Of grazing sheep and flowery sod
And winding roads the great have trod

The sunlight bathed Hymettus' crest,
Fair smiling valleys stretched below;
The very breezes from the west
Brought me some tale of long ago,
From Salamis across the bay
Along the cactus-bordered way.

Grand arches! through which used to come
The virgin train with downcast eyes
Leading from some fair hill-side home
The flower-decked bull of sacrifice;
With flowing robes and tramp of feet,
And sound of music low and sweet.

Where once the blood flowed red and free
Upon the altar of the god,
I picked a flower dear to me,
A flower of New England sod
A dandelion bright as gold,
Grown from those ruins fair and old.

Bright as the fillets were that bound
The midnight hair of Athens' maids;
Strong as the love of gods that found
Worship in arch and colonnades,
And like the ones that blossom gay
Beside my door-sill far away.

The old and new you seemed to bind,
Gay flower, with the yellow hair.
We often travel far to find
The home-like beauties grow more fair:
To learn that nature is the same
Whatever land we choose to name

That human hearts and lives and ends
Own the same purpose year by year;
Dreams, hopes, the good that still contends
With evil, prayer and doubt and fear,
Still thrill the heart and fire the brain,
Through lives of kindred joy and pain.

My soul bowed low to heed the sign
Upon that templed hill of old;
That ancient altar was the shrine;
The priestess was that flower of gold;
Praying to God of earth and skies:—
A living heart was sacrifice.