Where, girt with orchard and with oliveyard, The white hill-fortress glimmers on the hill,
Day after day an ancient goldsmith's skill Guided the copper graver, tempered hard
By some lost secret, while he shaped the sard Slowly to beauty, and his tiny drill,
Edged with corundum, ground its way until The gem lay perfect for the ring to guard. Then seeing the stone complete to his desire,
With mystic imagery carven thus,
And dark Egyptian symbols fabulous,
He drew through it the delicate golden wire,
And bent the fastening; and the Etrurian sun
Sank behind Ilva, and the work was done. What dark-haired daughter of a Lucumo Bore on her slim white finger to the grave
This the first gift her Tyrrhene lover gave, Those five-and-twenty centuries ago?
What shadowy dreams might haunt it, lying low So long, while kings and armies, wave on wave,
Above the rock-tomb's buried architrave Went trampling million-footed to and fro? Who knows? but well it is so frail a thing,
Unharmed by conquering Time's supremacy,
Still should be fair, though scarce less old than Rome.
Now once again at rest from wandering
Across the high Alps and the dreadful sea,
In utmost England let it find a home. —J. W. Mackail

ORPHEUS WITH HIS LUTE

Orpheus with his lute made trees,
And the mountain tops that freeze, Bow themselves when he did sing: To his music, plants and flowers
Ever sprung: as sun and showers There had made a lasting spring. Everything that heard him play,
Even the billows of the sea, Hung their heads, and then lay by. In sweet music is such art,
Killing care and grief of heart Fall asleep or hearing, die. —William Shakespeare

[A HYMN IN PRAISE OF NEPTUNE]

Of Neptune's empire let us sing
At whose command the waves obey;
To whom the rivers tribute pay, Down the high mountains sliding:
To whom the scaly nation yields
Homage for the crystal fields
Wherein they dwell: And every sea-god pays a gem
Yearly out of his wat'ry cell To deck great Neptune's diadem. The Tritons dancing in a ring
Before his palace gates do make
The waters with their echoes quake, Like the great thunder sounding:
The sea-nymphs chant their accents shrill,
And the sirens, taught to kill
With their sweet voice, Make every echoing rock reply
Unto their gentle murmuring noise The praise of Neptune's empery. —Thomas Campion

[HORACE'S PHILOSOPHY OF LIFE]

Book II, Ode 16
(In part, only) He lives on little, and is blest,
On whose plain board the bright
Salt-cellar shines, which was his sire's delight, Nor terrors, nor cupidity's unrest,
Disturb his slumbers light. Why should we still project and plan,
We creatures of an hour?
Why fly from clime to clime, new regions scour? Where is the exile, who, since time began,
To fly from self had power? Fell care climbs brazen galley's sides;
Nor troops of horse can fly
Her foot, which than the stag's is swifter, ay, Swifter than Eurus when he madly rides
The clouds along the sky. Careless what lies beyond to know,
And turning to the best,
The present, meet life's bitters with a jest, And smile them down; since nothing here below
Is altogether blest. In manhood's prime Achilles died,
Tithonus by the slow
Decay of age was wasted to a show, And Time may what it hath to thee denied
On me perchance bestow. To me a farm of modest size,
And slender vein of song,
Such as in Greece flowed vigorous and strong, Kind fate hath given, and spirit to despise
The base, malignant throng. —Sir Theodore Martin

[AN INVITATION TO DINE WRITTEN BY HORACE TO VIRGIL]