| LARS PORSENA of Clusium, | |
| By the Nine Gods he swore | |
| That the great house of Tarquin | |
| Should suffer wrong no more. | |
| By the Nine Gods he swore it, | 5 | 
| And named a trysting-day, | |
| And bade his messengers ride forth, | |
| East and west and south and north, | |
| To summon his array. | |
| East and west and south and north | 10 | 
| The messengers ride fast, | |
| And tower and town and cottage | |
| Have heard the trumpet’s blast. | |
| Shame on the false Etruscan | |
| Who lingers in his home, | 15 | 
| When Porsena of Clusium | |
| Is on the march for Rome! | |
| The horsemen and the footmen | |
| Are pouring in amain | |
| From many a stately market-place, | 20 | 
| From many a fruitful plain, | |
| From many a lonely hamlet, | |
| Which, hid by beech and pine, | |
| Like an eagle’s nest hangs on the crest | |
| Of purple Apennine: | 25 | 
| From lordly Volaterræ, | |
| Where scowls the far-famed hold | |
| Piled by the hands of giants | |
| For godlike kings of old; | |
| From sea-girt Populonia, | 30 | 
| Whose sentinels descry | |
| Sardinia’s snowy mountain-tops | |
| Fringing the southern sky; | |
| From the proud mart of Pisæ, | |
| Queen of the western waves, | 35 | 
| Where ride Massilia’s triremes, | |
| Heavy with fair-haired slaves; | |
| From where sweet Clanis wanders | |
| Through corn and vines and flowers, | |
| From where Cortona lifts to heaven | 40 | 
| Her diadem of towers. | |
| Tall are the oaks whose acorns | |
| Drop in dark Auser’s rill; | |
| Fat are the stags that champ the boughs | |
| Of the Ciminian hill; | 45 | 
| Beyond all streams, Clitumnus | |
| Is to the herdsman dear; | |
| Best of all pools the fowler loves | |
| The great Volsinian mere. | |
| But now no stroke of woodman | 50 | 
| Is heard by Auser’s rill; | |
| No hunter tracks the stag’s green path | |
| Up the Ciminian hill; | |
| Unwatched along Clitumnus | |
| Grazes the milk-white steer; | 55 | 
| Unharmed the water-fowl may dip | |
| In the Volsinian mere. | |
| The harvests of Arretium, | |
| This year, old men shall reap; | |
| This year, young boys in Umbro | 60 | 
| Shall plunge the struggling sheep; | |
| And in the vats of Luna, | |
| This year, the must shall foam | |
| Round the white feet of laughing girls | |
| Whose sires have marched to Rome. | 65 | 
| There be thirty chosen prophets, | |
| The wisest of the land, | |
| Who always by Lars Porsena | |
| Both morn and evening stand. | |
| Evening and morn the Thirty | 70 | 
| Have turned the verses o’er, | |
| Traced from the right on linen white | |
| By mighty seers of yore; | |
| And with one voice the Thirty | |
| Have their glad answer given: | 75 | 
| “Go forth, go forth, Lars Porsena,— | |
| Go forth, beloved of Heaven! | |
| Go, and return in glory | |
| To Clusium’s royal dome, | |
| And hang round Nurscia’s altars | 80 | 
| The golden shields of Rome!” | |
| And now hath every city | |
| Sent up her tale of men; | |
| The foot are fourscore thousand, | |
| The horse are thousands ten. | 85 | 
| Before the gates of Sutrium | |
| Is met the great array; | |
| A proud man was Lars Porsena | |
| Upon the trysting-day. | |
| For all the Etruscan armies | 90 | 
| Were ranged beneath his eye, | |
| And many a banished Roman, | |
| And many a stout ally; | |
| And with a mighty following, | |
| To join the muster, came | 95 | 
| The Tusculan Mamilius, | |
| Prince of the Latian name. | |
| But by the yellow Tiber | |
| Was tumult and affright; | |
| From all the spacious champaign | 100 | 
| To Rome men took their flight. | |
| A mile around the city | |
| The throng stopped up the ways; | |
| A fearful sight it was to see | |
| Through two long nights and days. | 105 | 
| For aged folk on crutches, | |
| And women great with child, | |
| And mothers, sobbing over babes | |
| That clung to them and smiled, | |
| And sick men borne in litters | 110 | 
| High on the necks of slaves, | |
| And troops of sunburned husbandmen | |
| With reaping-hooks and staves, | |
| And droves of mules and asses | |
| Laden with skins of wine, | 115 | 
| And endless flocks of goats and sheep, | |
| And endless herds of kine, | |
| And endless trains of wagons, | |
| That creaked beneath the weight | |
| Of corn-sacks and of household goods, | 120 | 
| Choked every roaring gate. | |
| Now, from the rock Tarpeian, | |
| Could the wan burghers spy | |
| The line of blazing villages | |
| Red in the midnight sky. | 125 | 
| The Fathers of the City, | |
| They sat all night and day, | |
| For every hour some horseman came | |
| With tidings of dismay. | |
| To eastward and to westward | 130 | 
| Have spread the Tuscan bands, | |
| Nor house, nor fence, nor dovecote | |
| In Crustumerium stands. | |
| Verbenna down to Ostia | |
| Hath wasted all the plain; | 135 | 
| Astur hath stormed Janiculum, | |
| And the stout guards are slain. | |
| I wis, in all the Senate | |
| There was no heart so bold | |
| But sore it ached, and fast it beat, | 140 | 
| When that ill news was told. | |
| Forthwith up rose the Consul, | |
| Up rose the Fathers all; | |
| In haste they girded up their gowns, | |
| And hied them to the wall. | 145 | 
| They held a council, standing | |
| Before the River-gate; | |
| Short time was there, ye well may guess, | |
| For musing or debate. | |
| Out spake the Consul roundly: | 150 | 
| “The bridge must straight go down; | |
| For, since Janiculum is lost, | |
| Naught else can save the town.” | |
| Just then a scout came flying, | |
| All wild with haste and fear: | 155 | 
| “To arms! to arms! Sir Consul,— | |
| Lars Porsena is here.” | |
| On the low hills to westward | |
| The Consul fixed his eye, | |
| And saw the swarthy storm of dust | 160 | 
| Rise fast along the sky. | |
| And nearer fast and nearer | |
| Doth the red whirlwind come; | |
| And louder still, and still more loud, | |
| From underneath that rolling cloud, | 165 | 
| Is heard the trumpets’ war-note proud, | |
| The trampling and the hum. | |
| And plainly and more plainly | |
| Now through the gloom appears, | |
| Far to left and far to right, | 170 | 
| In broken gleams of dark-blue light, | |
| The long array of helmets bright, | |
| The long array of spears. | |
| And plainly and more plainly, | |
| Above that glimmering line, | 175 | 
| Now might ye see the banners | |
| Of twelve fair cities shine; | |
| But the banner of proud Clusium | |
| Was highest of them all,— | |
| The terror of the Umbrian, | 180 | 
| The terror of the Gaul. | |
| And plainly and more plainly | |
| Now might the burghers know, | |
| By port and vest, by horse and crest, | |
| Each warlike Lucumo: | 185 | 
| There Cilnius of Arretium | |
| On his fleet roan was seen; | |
| And Astur of the fourfold shield, | |
| Girt with the brand none else may wield; | |
| Tolumnius with the belt of gold, | 190 | 
| And dark Verbenna from the hold | |
| By reedy Thrasymene. | |
| Fast by the royal standard, | |
| O’erlooking all the war, | |
| Lars Porsena of Clusium | 195 | 
| Sat in his ivory car. | |
| By the right wheel rode Mamilius, | |
| Prince of the Latian name; | |
| And by the left false Sextus, | |
| That wrought the deed of shame. | 200 | 
| But when the face of Sextus | |
| Was seen among the foes, | |
| A yell that rent the firmament | |
| From all the town arose. | |
| On the house-tops was no woman | 205 | 
| But spat towards him and hissed, | |
| No child but screamed out curses, | |
| And shook its little fist. | |
| But the Consul’s brow was sad, | |
| And the Consul’s speech was low, | 210 | 
| And darkly looked he at the wall, | |
| And darkly at the foe; | |
| “Their van will be upon us | |
| Before the bridge goes down; | |
| And if they once may win the bridge, | 215 | 
| What hope to save the town?” | |
| Then out spake brave Horatius, | |
| The Captain of the gate: | |
| “To every man upon this earth | |
| Death cometh soon or late. | 220 | 
| And how can man die better | |
| Than facing fearful odds | |
| For the ashes of his fathers | |
| And the temples of his gods, | |
| “And for the tender mother | 225 | 
| Who dandled him to rest, | |
| And for the wife who nurses | |
| His baby at her breast, | |
| And for the holy maidens | |
| Who feed the eternal flame,— | 230 | 
| To save them from false Sextus | |
| That wrought the deed of shame? | |
| “Hew down the bridge, Sir Consul, | |
| With all the speed ye may; | |
| I, with two more to help me, | 235 | 
| Will hold the foe in play. | |
| In yon strait path a thousand | |
| May well be stopped by three: | |
| Now who will stand on either hand, | |
| And keep the bridge with me?” | 240 | 
| Then out spake Spurius Lartius,— | |
| A Ramnian proud was he: | |
| “Lo, I will stand at thy right hand, | |
| And keep the bridge with thee.” | |
| And out spake strong Herminius,— | 245 | 
| Of Titian blood was he: | |
| “I will abide on thy left side, | |
| And keep the bridge with thee.” | |
| “Horatius,” quoth the Consul, | |
| “As thou sayest so let it be,” | 250 | 
| And straight against that great array | |
| Went forth the dauntless three. | |
| For Romans in Rome’s quarrel | |
| Spared neither land nor gold, | |
| Nor son nor wife, nor limb nor life, | 255 | 
| In the brave days of old. | |
| Then none was for a party— | |
| Then all were for the state; | |
| Then the great man helped the poor, | |
| And the poor man loved the great; | 260 | 
| Then lands were fairly portioned! | |
| Then spoils were fairly sold: | |
| The Romans were like brothers | |
| In the brave days of old. | |
| Now Roman is to Roman | 265 | 
| More hateful than a foe, | |
| And the tribunes beard the high, | |
| And the fathers grind the low. | |
| As we wax hot in faction, | |
| In battle we wax cold; | 270 | 
| Wherefore men fight not as they fought | |
| In the brave days of old. | |
| Now while the three were tightening | |
| Their harness on their backs, | |
| The Consul was the foremost man | 275 | 
| To take in hand an axe; | |
| And fathers, mixed with commons, | |
| Seized hatchet, bar, and crow, | |
| And smote upon the planks above, | |
| And loosed the props below. | 280 | 
| Meanwhile the Tuscan army, | |
| Right glorious to behold, | |
| Came flashing back the noonday light, | |
| Rank behind rank, like surges bright | |
| Of a broad sea of gold. | 285 | 
| Four hundred trumpets sounded | |
| A peal of warlike glee, | |
| As that great host with measured tread, | |
| And spears advanced, and ensigns spread, | |
| Rolled slowly toward the bridge’s head, | 290 | 
| Where stood the dauntless three. | |
| The three stood calm and silent, | |
| And looked upon the foes, | |
| And a great shout of laughter | |
| From all the vanguard rose; | 295 | 
| And forth three chiefs came spurring | |
| Before that deep array; | |
| To earth they sprang, their swords they drew, | |
| And lifted high their shields, and flew | |
| To win the narrow way. | 300 | 
| Aunus, from green Tifernum, | |
| Lord of the Hill of Vines; | |
| And Seius, whose eight hundred slaves | |
| Sicken in Ilva’s mines; | |
| And Picus, long to Clusium | 305 | 
| Vassal in peace and war, | |
| Who led to fight his Umbrian powers | |
| From that gray crag where, girt with towers, | |
| The fortress of Nequinum lowers | |
| O’er the pale waves of Nar. | 310 | 
| Stout Lartius hurled down Aunus | |
| Into the stream beneath; | |
| Herminius struck at Seius, | |
| And clove him to the teeth; | |
| At Picus brave Horatius | 315 | 
| Darted one fiery thrust, | |
| And the proud Umbrian’s gilded arms | |
| Clashed in the bloody dust. | |
| Then Ocnus of Falerii | |
| Rushed on the Roman three; | 320 | 
| And Lausulus of Urgo, | |
| The rover of the sea; | |
| And Aruns of Volsinium, | |
| Who slew the great wild boar,— | |
| The great wild boar that had his den | 325 | 
| Amidst the reeds of Cosa’s fen, | |
| And wasted fields, and slaughtered men, | |
| Along Albinia’s shore. | |
| Herminius smote down Aruns; | |
| Lartius laid Ocnus low; | 330 | 
| Right to the heart of Lausulus | |
| Horatius sent a blow: | |
| “Lie there,” he cried, “fell pirate! | |
| No more, aghast and pale, | |
| From Ostia’s walls the crowd shall mark | 335 | 
| The track of thy destroying bark; | |
| No more Campania’s hinds shall fly | |
| To woods and caverns, when they spy | |
| Thy thrice-accursèd sail!” | |
| But now no sound of laughter | 340 | 
| Was heard among the foes; | |
| A wild and wrathful clamor | |
| From all the vanguard rose. | |
| Six spears’ length from the entrance, | |
| Halted that mighty mass, | 345 | 
| And for a space no man came forth | |
| To win the narrow pass. | |
| But, hark! the cry is Astur: | |
| And lo! the ranks divide; | |
| And the great lord of Luna | 350 | 
| Comes with his stately stride. | |
| Upon his ample shoulders | |
| Clangs loud the fourfold shield, | |
| And in his hand he shakes the brand | |
| Which none but he can wield. | 355 | 
| He smiled on those bold Romans, | |
| A smile serene and high; | |
| He eyed the flinching Tuscans, | |
| And scorn was in his eye. | |
| Quoth he, “The she-wolf’s litter | 360 | 
| Stand savagely at bay; | |
| But will ye dare to follow, | |
| If Astur clears the way?” | |
| Then, whirling up his broadsword | |
| With both hands to the height, | 365 | 
| He rushed against Horatius, | |
| And smote with all his might. | |
| With shield and blade Horatius | |
| Right deftly turned the blow. | |
| The blow, though turned, came yet too nigh; | 370 | 
| It missed his helm, but gashed his thigh. | |
| The Tuscans raised a joyful cry | |
| To see the red blood flow. | |
| He reeled, and on Herminius | |
| He leaned one breathing-space, | 375 | 
| Then, like a wild-cat mad with wounds, | |
| Sprang right at Astur’s face. | |
| Through teeth and skull and helmet | |
| So fierce a thrust he sped, | |
| The good sword stood a handbreadth out | 380 | 
| Behind the Tuscan’s head. | |
| And the great lord of Luna | |
| Fell at that deadly stroke, | |
| As falls on Mount Avernus | |
| A thunder-smitten oak. | 385 | 
| Far o’er the crashing forest | |
| The giant arms lie spread; | |
| And the pale augurs, muttering low | |
| Gaze on the blasted head. | |
| On Astur’s throat Horatius | 390 | 
| Right firmly pressed his heel, | |
| And thrice and four times tugged amain, | |
| Ere he wrenched out the steel. | |
| And “See,” he cried, “the welcome, | |
| Fair guests, that waits you here! | 395 | 
| What noble Lucumo comes next | |
| To taste our Roman cheer?” | |
| But at his haughty challenge | |
| A sullen murmur ran, | |
| Mingled with wrath and shame and dread, | 400 | 
| Along that glittering van. | |
| There lacked not men of prowess, | |
| Nor men of lordly race, | |
| For all Etruria’s noblest | |
| Were round the fatal place. | 405 | 
| But all Etruria’s noblest | |
| Felt their hearts sink to see | |
| On the earth the bloody corpses, | |
| In the path the dauntless three; | |
| And from the ghastly entrance, | 410 | 
| Where those bold Romans stood, | |
| All shrank,—like boys who, unaware, | |
| Ranging the woods to start a hare, | |
| Come to the mouth of the dark lair | |
| Where, growling low, a fierce old bear | 415 | 
| Lies amidst bones and blood. | |
| Was none who would be foremost | |
| To lead such dire attack; | |
| But those behind cried “Forward!” | |
| And those before cried “Back!” | 420 | 
| And backward now and forward | |
| Wavers the deep array; | |
| And on the tossing sea of steel | |
| To and fro the standards reel, | |
| And the victorious trumpet-peal | 425 | 
| Dies fitfully away. | |
| Yet one man for one moment | |
| Strode out before the crowd; | |
| Well known was he to all the three, | |
| And they gave him greeting loud: | 430 | 
| “Now welcome, welcome, Sextus! | |
| Now welcome to thy home! | |
| Why dost thou stay, and turn away? | |
| Here lies the road to Rome.” | |
| Thrice looked he at the city; | 435 | 
| Thrice looked he at the dead: | |
| And thrice came on in fury, | |
| And thrice turned back in dread; | |
| And, white with fear and hatred, | |
| Scowled at the narrow way | 440 | 
| Where, wallowing in a pool of blood, | |
| The bravest Tuscans lay. | |
| But meanwhile axe and lever | |
| Have manfully been plied: | |
| And now the bridge hangs tottering | 445 | 
| Above the boiling tide. | |
| “Come back, come back, Horatius!” | |
| Loud cried the Fathers all,— | |
| “Back, Lartius! back, Herminius! | |
| Back, ere the ruin fall!” | 450 | 
| Back darted Spurius Lartius,— | |
| Herminius darted back; | |
| And, as they passed, beneath their feet | |
| They felt the timbers crack. | |
| But when they turned their faces, | 455 | 
| And on the farther shore | |
| Saw brave Horatius stand alone, | |
| They would have crossed once more; | |
| But with a crash like thunder | |
| Fell every loosened beam, | 460 | 
| And, like a dam, the mighty wreck | |
| Lay right athwart the stream; | |
| And a long shout of triumph | |
| Rose from the walls of Rome, | |
| As to the highest turret-tops | 465 | 
| Was splashed the yellow foam. | |
| And like a horse unbroken, | |
| When first he feels the rein, | |
| The furious river struggled hard, | |
| And tossed his tawny mane, | 470 | 
| And burst the curb, and bounded, | |
| Rejoicing to be free; | |
| And whirling down, in fierce career, | |
| Battlement and plank and pier, | |
| Rushed headlong to the sea. | 475 | 
| Alone stood brave Horatius, | |
| But constant still in mind,— | |
| Thrice thirty thousand foes before, | |
| And the broad flood behind. | |
| “Down with him!” cried false Sextus, | 480 | 
| With a smile on his pale face; | |
| “Now yield thee,” cried Lars Porsena, | |
| “Now yield thee to our grace!” | |
| Round turned he, as not deigning | |
| Those craven ranks to see; | 485 | 
| Naught spake he to Lars Porsena, | |
| To Sextus naught spake he; | |
| But he saw on Palatinus | |
| The white porch of his home; | |
| And he spake to the noble river | 490 | 
| That rolls by the towers of Rome: | |
| “O Tiber! Father Tiber! | |
| To whom the Romans pray, | |
| A Roman’s life, a Roman’s arms, | |
| Take thou in charge this day!” | 495 | 
| So he spake, and, speaking, sheathed | |
| The good sword by his side, | |
| And, with his harness on his back, | |
| Plunged headlong in the tide. | |
| No sound of joy or sorrow | 500 | 
| Was heard from either bank, | |
| But friends and foes in dumb surprise, | |
| With parted lips and straining eyes, | |
| Stood gazing where he sank; | |
| And when above the surges | 505 | 
| They saw his crest appear, | |
| All Rome sent forth a rapturous cry, | |
| And even the ranks of Tuscany | |
| Could scarce forbear to cheer. | |
| But fiercely ran the current, | 510 | 
| Swollen high by months of rain; | |
| And fast his blood was flowing, | |
| And he was sore in pain, | |
| And heavy with his armor, | |
| And spent with changing blows; | 515 | 
| And oft they thought him sinking, | |
| But still again he rose. | |
| Never, I ween, did swimmer. | |
| In such an evil case, | |
| Struggle through such a raging flood | 520 | 
| Safe to the landing-place; | |
| But his limbs were borne up bravely | |
| By the brave heart within, | |
| And our good Father Tiber | |
| Bare bravely up his chin. | 525 | 
| “Curse on him!” quoth false Sextus,— | |
| “Will not the villain drown? | |
| But for this stay, ere close of day | |
| We should have sacked the town!” | |
| “Heaven help him!” quoth Lars Porsena, | 530 | 
| “And bring him safe to shore; | |
| For such a gallant feat of arms | |
| Was never seen before.” | |
| And now he feels the bottom; | |
| Now on dry earth he stands; | 535 | 
| Now round him throng the Fathers | |
| To press his gory hands; | |
| And now, with shouts and clapping, | |
| And noise of weeping loud, | |
| He enters through the River-gate, | 540 | 
| Borne by the joyous crowd. | |
| They gave him of the corn-land, | |
| That was of public right, | |
| As much as two strong oxen | |
| Could plough from morn till night; | 545 | 
| And they made a molten image, | |
| And set it up on high,— | |
| And there it stands unto this day | |
| To witness if I lie. | |
| It stands in the Comitium, | 550 | 
| Plain for all folk to see,— | |
| Horatius in his harness, | |
| Halting upon one knee; | |
| And underneath is written, | |
| In letters all of gold, | 555 | 
| How valiantly he kept the bridge | |
| In the brave days of old. | |
| And still his name sounds stirring | |
| Unto the men of Rome, | |
| As the trumpet-blast that cries to them | 560 | 
| To charge the Volscian home; | |
| And wives still pray to Juno | |
| For boys with hearts as bold | |
| As his who kept the bridge so well | |
| In the brave days of old. | 565 | 
| And in the nights of winter, | |
| When the cold north-winds blow, | |
| And the long howling of the wolves | |
| Is heard amidst the snow; | |
| When round the lonely cottage | 570 | 
| Roars loud the tempest’s din, | |
| And the good logs of Algidus | |
| Roar louder yet within; | |
| When the oldest cask is opened, | |
| And the largest lamp is lit; | 575 | 
| When the chestnuts glow in the embers, | |
| And the kid turns on the spit; | |
| When young and old in circle | |
| Around the firebrands close; | |
| When the girls are weaving baskets, | 580 | 
| And the lads are shaping bows; | |
| When the goodman mends his armor, | |
| And trims his helmet’s plume; | |
| When the goodwife’s shuttle merrily | |
| Goes flashing through the loom; | 585 | 
| With weeping and with laughter | |
| Still is the story told, | |
| How well Horatius kept the bridge | |
| In the brave days of old. | |
| Thmas Babington, Lord Macauley | 
A selection of writings, speeches, photographs and events as well as some of my favourite literary passages.
Monday, 29 October 2018
Favourite Poems - Horatius at the Bridge - Macauley
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