Belisarius by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow



Belisarius by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow

I am poor and old and blind;

    The sun burns me, and the wind

        Blows through the city gate

    And covers me with dust

    From the wheels of the august

        Justinian the Great.

    It was for him I chased

    The Persians o’er wild and waste,

        As General of the East;

    Night after night I lay

    In their camps of yesterday;

        Their forage was my feast.

    For him, with sails of red,

    And torches at mast-head,

        Piloting the great fleet,

    I swept the Afric coasts

    And scattered the Vandal hosts,

        Like dust in a windy street.

    For him I won again

    The Ausonian realm and reign,

        Rome and Parthenope;

    And all the land was mine

    From the summits of Apennine

        To the shores of either sea.

    For him, in my feeble age,

    I dared the battle’s rage,

        To save Byzantium’s state,

    When the tents of Zabergan,

    Like snow-drifts overran

        The road to the Golden Gate.

    And for this, for this, behold!

    Infirm and blind and old,

        With gray, uncovered head,

    Beneath the very arch

    Of my triumphal march,

        I stand and beg my bread!

    Methinks I still can hear,

    Sounding distinct and near,

        The Vandal monarch’s cry,

    As, captive and disgraced,

    With majestic step he paced,–

        “All, all is Vanity!”

    Ah! vainest of all things

    Is the gratitude of kings;

        The plaudits of the crowd

    Are but the clatter of feet

    At midnight in the street,

        Hollow and restless and loud.

    But the bitterest disgrace

    Is to see forever the face

        Of the Monk of Ephesus!

    The unconquerable will

    This, too, can bear;–I still

        Am Belisarius!

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