Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Mausoleum of Augustus
By William Whitehead (17151785)A
Where slept the heroes of the Julian name,
Say, shall we linger still in thought profound,
And meditate the mournful paths to fame?
No sculptured urns, the last records of fate,
O’er the shrunk terrace wave their baleful boughs,
Or breathe in storied emblems of the great;
The scene though changed, nor negligently tread;
These variegated walks, however gay,
Were once the silent mansions of the dead.
That paints with different hues yon smiling plain,
Some hero’s ashes issue from the tomb,
And live a vegetative life again.
But shifts to other forms the pliant mass,
When the free spirit quits its cumberous clay,
And sees, beneath, the rolling planets pass.
Perhaps, unknowing of the bloom it gives,
In yon fair scion of Apollo’s tree
The sacred dust of young Marcellus lives.
The ideal memory of so sweet a shade;
In these sad seats an early grave he found,
And the first rites to gloomy Dis conveyed.
His youthful triumphs in the mimic war,
Thou heardst the heartfelt, universal groan
When o’er thy bosom rolled the funeral car.
In sportive stragglings with the opposing wave,
Fast by the recent tomb thy waters flowed,
While wept the wife, the virtuous, and the brave.
By thousands envied and by Heaven approved?
Rare is the boon to those of longer date
To live, to die, admired, esteemed, beloved.
And slowly dawns the radiant morn of truth,
Our expectations hastily we form,
And much we pardon to ingenuous youth.
To rising merit, and resume the crown;
Full many a blooming genius, snatched away,
Has fallen lamented who had lived unknown.