Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Festival of St. Agnes, at Her Church without the Walls
By Nathaniel Langdon Frothingham (17931870)O
Whose simple beauty rears
The memory of a pure life slain,
Through thrice five hundred years!
Beneath the hollow ground;
For what I deemed the dusky shrine
Of holy Agnes bound.
With many a candle’s ray,
And windows high pour on the sight
The purer blaze of day.
Nothing is worn or old;
Lo! colors rich and marbles rare,
And virgin white and gold.
No blackened paintings grim;
’T was glittering as a festival,
And warming as a hymn.
Her typic lamb caressed;
While music, with its living charm,
The silent pageant blest.
Not for a victim’s fate,
But to express a gentle thought,
And to be consecrate.
With garlands, light, and song,
The memory of one pure life slain,
So tenderly and long.
To all the world it saith:
“Behold what shining honors fall
Bound Innocence and Faith!”