Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
Vicolo della Fontana
By John Edmund Reade (18001870)W
Who proved, ere meteor-like his spirit fled,
Through Rome’s live heart the blood of freedom ran;
That, with the dust of ages o’er her spread,
Prostrate and chained, the Helot was not dead;
A resurrection of futurity
Awaiting yet: to raise her buried head,
Cola Rienzi! was reserved for thee:
To breathe into her veins the life of liberty.
Of a crushed world thou stood’st, evoking forth
Passionate words that waited at thy beck
To raise the fiends hate, vengeance, into birth,
And the old memories of heroic worth:
The skeleton fragments of Rome’s giant power
Recalled the minds that once o’erruled the earth;
The freemen heard, the spirit that made cower
Tyrants, awoke again the Nemesis of the hour.
Was subtly played, all save the unattained,
The greatest, the unfelt, the hero heart:
Dazzled wert thou thy giddy eminence gained,
While flattery whispered that the Tribune reigned.
Foes mocked thee: patriots saw their liberty
By crime and vanity and folly stained;
Failure, flight, cowardice, apostasy,
Proved what thou wert too late, vain martyr of the free!