Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
The Circus
By William Wetmore Story (18191895)H
In its vast circus, all alive with heads
And quivering arms and floating robes,—the air
Thrilled by the roaring fremitus of men,—
The sunlit awning heaving overhead,
Swollen and strained against its corded veins,
And flapping out its hem with loud report,—
The wild beasts roaring from the pit below,
The wilder crowd responding from above
With one long yell that sends the startled blood
With thrill and sudden flush into the cheeks,—
A hundred trumpets screaming,—the dull thump
Of horses galloping across the sand,—
The clang of scabbards, the sharp clash of steel,—
Live swords, that whirl a circle of gray fire,—
Brass helmets flashing ’neath their streaming hair,—
A universal tumult,—then a hush
Worse than the tumult,—all eyes straining down
To the arena’s pit, all lips set close,
All muscles strained,—and then that sudden yell,
Habet!—“That ’s Rome,” says Lucius: so it is!
That is, ’t is his Rome, ’t is not yours and mine.