Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Italy: Vols. XI–XIII. 1876–79.
The City of My Love
By Julia Ward Howe (18191910)S
Their crown, thrice glorious and dear,
Her voice is as a thousand tongues
Of silver fountains, gurgling clear;
And worship of all lovely things;
Her children have a gracious port,
Her beggars show the blood of kings.
None doubt the grandeur she has seen;
Upon her venerable front
Is written: “I was born a queen!”
As once she ruled by arméd might;
The Southern sun doth treasure her
Deep in his golden heart of light.
The vision of her distant dome,
And a strange spasm wrings his heart
As the guide whispers, “There is Rome!”
Of Greek Olympus long held sway;
Rome of the Christians, Peter’s tomb,
The Zion of our later day.
Defiance on her brows and breast;
Rome, to voluptuous pleasure won,
Debauched, and locked in drunken rest.
Europe’s intriguing step-dame grown;
Rome, bowed to weakness and decay,
A canting, mass-frequenting crone.
Half chiding at the spell he feels,
The artist pauses at the gate,
And on the wondrous threshold kneels.
For those soft skies and balmy airs;
The pilgrim tries a quicker pace,
And hugs remorse, and patters prayers.
Methinks some unknown virtue yields;
The very hinds in reverence tread
The precincts of the ancient fields.
I crept to thee, dear mother Rome;
And in thy hospitable heart
Found rest and comfort, health and home,
Although their dearest joys are fled;
True sympathies that bring to life
That better self, so often dead.
For all the dear delight thou art,
Accept a homage from my lips,
That warms again a wasted heart.
I ’ve breathed it oft, that when I die,
As thy remembrance dear in it,
That heart in thee might buried lie.