Stedman and Hutchinson, comps. A Library of American Literature:
An Anthology in Eleven Volumes. 1891.
Vols. IX–XI: Literature of the Republic, Part IV., 1861–1889
Cleopatra
By Ramsay Morris (b. 1858)[In the Metropolitan Museum of Art.]
T
A pulseless queen,
A sculptor’s vain imagining
Of what I’ve been.
He gave to me a form of grace,
A regal air:
He fashioned me with artist’s skill
Beyond compare,
His art is cold;
His chiselled likeness halts at life,
Does not unfold.
I dream in this one attitude
Through all my days,
While countless eyes pause, where I rest,
With lingering gaze.
In Egypt’s land—
My queenly state, my ebon guards,
My armies grand,
The robes which draped my perfect form
With matchless grace,
The gems which flashed on all my limbs—
And, ah, my face!—
With potent wile,
Which made me famed from end to end
The golden Nile,—
The eyes which poets sung were stars
Of glorious light,
Which wielded power greater far
Than warriors’ might!
To reign once more,
To lead my retinue along
Nile’s tawny shore.
To find again my Anthony,
To feel his arms,
To rest secure within their fold
From earth’s alarms.
To living queen!
I long to show to all the world
What I have been.
Breathe soul into this shapely form,
Return my voice:
The multitude will praise your skill,
And loud rejoice.
By beauty’s right,
Should vanquished be by death, and roam
Through Stygian night?
I wander, desolate and lone,
Through midnight lands—
Oh, give me life, and Anthony,
And Egypt’s sands.