Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Sir Walter Scott at the Tomb of the Stuarts in St. Peters
By Richard Monckton Milnes, Lord Houghton (18091885)E
Where Art has taken almost Nature’s room,
While still two objects clear in light remain,
An alien pilgrim at an alien tomb,—
Of one heart-worshipped, fancy-haunted, name,
Once loud on earth, but now scarce else renowned
Than as the offspring of that stranger’s fame.
Strange congress of illustrious thoughts and things!
A plain old moral, still too oft forgot,—
The power of genius and the fall of kings.
A beacon to the world, shines not for him;
He is with those who felt their life was sere,
When the full light of loyalty grew dim.
Historic as that sceptre, theirs no more;
His gaze is fixed; his thirsty heart can quaff,
For a short hour, the spirit-draughts of yore.
Each fancied shape his actual vision fills,
From the long-pining, death-delivered, queen,
To the worn outlaw of the heathery hills.
O dignity, that circumstance defied!
Pure is the neck that wears the deathly scar,
And sorrow has baptized the front of pride.
Exiles to suffer and returns to woo,
Are gone, like dreams by daylight disallowed;
And their historian,—he is sinking too!
Cold as those royal busts and calm will lie;
And, as on them his thoughts are resting now,
His marbled form will meet the attentive eye.
Bound in one solemn ever-living bond,
Communed; and I was sad that ancient head
Ever should pass those holy walls beyond.