Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
The Rubicon
By John Edmund Reade (18001870)O
Glides gushingly along, whose azure threads
Disparted scarce their emptied channel wet;
Here swelling to a river such as heads
The steed slow wading through its pebbled beds:
Its name hath passed a household word with men,
Moral for him who late or early treads
Life’s fortunate path: who grasps that moment when
The good or ill are offered, ne’er to come again:
But leaves, for aye, in shallows if withstood;
Lo, where yon red banks tell the water’s name,
The Rubicon: and here the arch-rebel stood;
Whose name is ever linked with that wild flood,
Spoiled child of Rome and Fortune, he who chained
Victory to his car: in changeful mood
An ever-varying Proteus, the unreined
Impulse, his law of will, obeyed as fate ordained.
He looked on, but saw not the river’s course;
Earth seemed as if she rose and palpably curbed
His passage on: a wail as of remorse
Rose from that stream, her mandate to enforce;
The Roman mother stood before her son:
Life opening flashed on him from its first source,
All or of good or ill, to seek or shun,
The infinite of thought within its limit won.
Of the stern circumstance that rules us still,
The prescient feeling of the right, the sense
Of conscience stifled but immutable,
Contending impulses of good and ill
Strove here for mastery, the balance hung
By the self-love that doth its fate fulfil:
Strength, faith, hope, confidence behind him clung,
Before, his foe’s cold smile, pride conquered, and he sprung.
Country, or fame, or gods, the undying thirst
Of feverish ambition once awaked?
Thine was of purer essence, to be first
Thy aim: Rome was not by thy tyranny cursed;
She loved, yet marvelled at thee; and the fear
Of thy dread eagles which by victory nursed,
Came, saw, and conquered, vanished when more near,
For thy unbroken faith taught foemen to revere.
The throne upreared by thee a lesser took,
Yet fitter, so thy end of life surpassed:
He, wiser, turned the sword into a crook,
But who on thy bald laurelled brow could look,
Nor fear the heights ambition might attain?
Hate struck, the blow for freedom’s he mistook;
But thou didst leave, on thy own altar slain,
A warning to earth’s tyrants rendered not in vain.
Whose fiery spirits must ascend or die,
Conquering or falling, aught save life’s repose
Thou couldst endure: thine the sublimity
Of an undying nature, and thy sigh
To be the first, the world’s sole oracle,
Its grand but misdirected energy;
For when thy least wish fortune did fulfil,
What respite gave it thee, thou man of restless will?
The immortal rebel on his march, when sprang
Thy citizens from morning slumbers pale,
As the shrill trumpets through thy forum rang!
The wild shouts of the soldiery, the clang
Of arms: and shielded o’er his legion’s tide,
Cæsar, enthroned, forgot remorse’s pang:
His brow inflamed with mingled wrath and pride,
Rising like War let loose with Até by his side.
Wrung from the fierce excitement of the hour:
The cohorts rushing on in their wild path,
Whose rage is reason and whose law is power!
The consciousness of dangers such as lower
O’er him who dares against his country rear
The rebel’s standard, cursed alike his dower,
Failure, or triumph; vengeance, hate, and fear,
Passion’s wild elements met in warring chaos here.