The Winged Victory

By Bliss Carman

Thou dear and most high Victory,

Whose home is the unvanquished sea,

Whose fluttering wind-blown garments keep

The very freshness, fold, and sweep

They wore upon the galley's prow,

By what unwonted favor now

Hast thou alighted in this place,

Thou Victory of Samothrace?

O thou to whom in countless lands

With eager hearts and striving hands

Strong men in their last need have prayed,

Greatly desiring, undismayed,

And thou hast been across the fight

Their consolation and their might,

Withhold not now one dearer grace,

Thou Victory of Samothrace!

Behold, we, too, must cry to thee,

Who wage our strife with Destiny,

And give for Beauty and for Truth

Our love, our valor and our youth.

Are there no honors for these things

To match the pageantries of kings?

Are we more laggard in the race

Than those who fell at Samothrace?

Not only for the bow and sword,

O Victory, be thy reward!

The hands that work with paint and clay

In Beauty's service, shall not they

Also with mighty faith prevail?

Let hope not die, nor courage fail,

But joy come with thee pace for pace,

As once long since in Samothrace.

Grant us the skill to shape the form

And spread the color living-warm,

( As they who wrought aforetime did ),

Where love and wisdom shall lie hid,

In fair impassioned types, to sway

The cohorts of the world to-day,

In Truth's eternal cause, and trace

Thy glory down from Samothrace.

With all the ease and splendid poise

Of one who triumphs without noise,

Wilt thou not teach us to attain

Thy sense of power without strain,

That we a little may possess

Our souls with thy sure loveliness,—

That calm the years cannot deface,

Thou Victory of Samothrace?

Then in the ancient, ceaseless war

With infamy, go thou before!

Amid the shoutings and the drums

Let it be learned that Beauty comes,

Man's matchless Paladin to be,

Whose rule shall make his spirit free

As thine from all things mean or base,

Thou Victory of Samothrace.