Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
A Day in the Pamfili Doria
By Harriet Beecher Stowe (18111896)T
And the wind drives chill to-day,
My heart goes back to a spring-time,
Far, far in the past away.
Weary and worn and brown,
Where the spring and the birds are so early,
And the sun in such light goes down.
Where our afternoons went by,
Where the suns of March flushed warmly,
And spring was in earth and sky.
Mouldering, old, and gray,
We sped, with a lightsome heart-thrill,
For a sunny, gladsome day,—
For a race mid springing flowers,
For a vision of plashing fountains,
Of birds and blossoming bowers.
Violets white and blue;
And a world of bright anemones,
That over the terrace grew,—
Rosy and yellow and white,
Rising in rainbow bubbles,
Streaking the lawns with light.
Those far-off islands of air,
The birds are flinging the tidings
Of a joyful revel up there.
Tossing their silvery spray,
Those fountains so quaint and so many,
That are leaping and singing all day.
With lichens and moss o’ergrown,
Are they marble greening in moss-wreaths?
Or moss-wreaths whitening to stone?
We ramble from morning till noon;
We linger, unheeding the hours,
Till evening comes all too soon.
Where lengthening shadows play,
We look on the dreamy Campagna,
All glowing with setting day,—
In swathings and foldings of gold,
In ribands of azure and lilac,
Like a princely banner unrolled.
And the flash of each villa white,
Shines out with an opal glimmer,
Like gems in a casket of light.
With a strange translucence glows,
Like a mighty bubble of amethyst
Floating in waves of rose.
We, gazing and yearning, behold
That city beheld by the prophet,
Whose walls were transparent gold.
To hallow the softening spell,
There falls on the dying twilight
The Ave Maria bell.
With a weird and weary care,
That strange and ancient city
Seems calling the nations to prayer.
To the mother of Jesus brought,
Rise like a new evangel,
To hallow the trance of our thought.
Our thoughts are ascending then
To Mary, the mother of Jesus,
To Jesus, the Master of men.
O shrines of the sainted dead,
When, when shall the living day-spring
Once more on your towers be spread?
Shall rule in those lordly halls,
And shall stand and feed as a shepherd
The flock which his mercy calls,—
To picture and statue and gem,
To the pageant of solemn worship,
Shall the meaning come back again.
In that reign of His truth and love,
Shall be what it seems in the twilight,
The type of that City above.