ANT. 3

By Algernon Charles Swinburne

As the soul on the lips of the dead

Stands poising her wings for flight,

A bird scarce quit of her prison,

But fair without form or flesh,

So stands over each man's head

A splendour of imminent light,

A glory of fame rearisen,

Of day rearisen afresh

From the hells of night.

In the hundred cities of Crete

Such glory was not of old,

Though her name was great upon earth

And her face was fair on the sea.

The words of her lips were sweet,

Her days were woven with gold,

Her fruits came timely to birth;

So fair she was, being free,

Who is bought and sold.

So fair, who is fairer now

With her children dead at her side,

Unsceptred, unconsecrated,

Unapparelled, unhelped, unpitied,

With blood for gold on her brow,

Where the towery tresses divide;

The goodly, the golden-gated,

Many-crowned, many-named, many-citied,

Made like as a bride.

And these are the bridegroom's gifts;

Anguish that straitens the breath,

Shame, and the weeping of mothers,

And the suckling dead at the breast,

White breast that a long sob lifts;

And the dumb dead mouth, which saith,

How long, and how long, my brothers?”

And wrath which endures not rest,

And the pains of death.