C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
The Immortality of Genius
By Propertius (c. 50c. 16 B.C.)
O
Stayed the swift stream and soothed the savage brute;
Cithæron’s rocks, to Thebes spontaneous leaping,
Rose into walls before Amphion’s lute.
’Neath Ætna’s crags, lone Polyphemus’s song:
Is’t strange the loved of Bacchus and Apollo
Leads captive with his lay the maiden throng?
Nor ivory panels shine ’tween gilded beams;
No orchards mine Phæacia’s woods excelling,
No chiseled grots where Marcian water streams,—
Faint from the dance sinks the lithe Muse with me:
O happy maid whose name adorns my pages!
Each lay a lasting monument to thee!
Eléan Jove’s star-spangled dome; the tomb
Where rich Mausolus sleeps,—are not immortal,
Nor shall escape inevitable doom.
The weight of years will drag the marble down:
Genius alone a name can deathless render,
And round the forehead wreathe the unfading crown.