Alexander Restores to Athens the Spoils Carried off by Xerxes.
                        A Poem which obtained the Vice-Chancellor’s premium in Trinity College,
 Dublin, in February 1819.
                        
                     
                     
                     
Raise, Athens, raise
                              thy loftiest tone !1
                        
                        Eastward the tempest cloud hath blown,2
                        
                        Vengeance hung darkly on its wing,3
                        
                        It burst in ruin—Athens ring4
                        
                        Thy loudest peal of triumphing ;5
                        
                        Persia is fallen ;  in mouldering heaps6
                        
                        Her grand, her stately city sleeps,7
                        
                        Above her towers exulting high,8
                        
                        Susa has heard the victors’ cry,9
                        
                        And Ecbatana, nurse of pride,10
                        
                        Weeps where her best, her bravest died.11
                        
                        Persia is sad, her virgins’ sighs12
                        
                        Through all her thousand states arise ;13
                        
                        Along Arbela’s purpled plain14
                        
                        Shrieks the wild wail above the slain :15
                        
                        Long shall her widows curse the day,16
                        
                        When, at the voice of despot sway,17
                        
                        Her millions passed o’er Helle’s wave,18
                        
                        To chain, vain boast, the free, the brave.19
                        
                        Raise, Athens, raise the triumph-song,20
                        
                        Yet, louder yet, the peal prolong ;21
                        
                        “ Avenged at length our slaughtered sires,22
                        
                        Avenged the waste of Persian fires !23
                        
                        And these dear relics of the brave24
                        
                        Torn from their shrines by Satrap slave,25
                        
                        The spoils of Persia’s haughty king26
                        
                        Again are thine—ring, Athens, ring !”27
                        O Liberty! delightful name,28
                        
                        The land that once has felt thy flame,29
                        
                        That loved thy light, but wept its clouding,30
                        
                        Oh !  who can tell her joys’ dark shrouding ;31
                        
                        But if, to cheer the night of sorrow,32
                        
                        Memory a ray of thine should borrow,33
                        
                        That on her tears and on her woes34
                        
                        Sheds one soft beam of sweet repose,35
                        
                        O, who can tell her bright revealing,36
                        
                        Her deep, her holy thrills of feeling ?37
                        
                        So Athens felt, as fixed her gaze38
                        
                        On her proud wealth of better days.39
                        
                        ’Twas not the tripod’s costly frame,40
                        
                        Nor vase that told it’s artist’s fame,41
                        
                        Nor veils high-wrought with skill divine42
                        
                        That graced of old Minerva’s shrine,43
                        
                        Nor marble bust; where vigour breathed,44
                        
                        And beauty’s living ringlets wreathed ;45
                        
                        Not these could wake that joyous tone,46
                        
                        Those transports long unfelt, unknown ;47
                        
                        ’Twas memory’s vision, robed in light,48
                        
                        That rushed upon her raptured sight,49
                        
                        Warm from the fields where freedom strove—50
                        
                        Fresh from the wreaths that freedom wove—51
                        
                        This blessed her then, if that could be,52
                        
                        If aught is blest that is not free.53
                        But did no voice exulting raise,54
                        
                        To that high chief, the song of praise ?55
                        
                        And did no strain exulting ring56
                        
                        For Macedonia’s conquering King ?57
                        
                        Who wide o’er Persia’s prostrate might,58
                        
                        On victory’s pinion winged his flight—59
                        
                        Who from the foe those spoils had won,60
                        
                        Was there no shout for Philip’s son ?61
                        
                        No warrior !  what’s thy vaunted name ?62
                        
                        What is thine high career of fame,63
                        
                        From its first field of boyhood pride,64
                        
                        Where valour failed and freedom died,65
                        
                        Onward by wild ambition fired,66
                        
                        Till Greece beneath its march expired ?67
                        
                        Let the vile herd, to whom thy gold68
                        
                        Is dearer than the rights they sold,69
                        
                        In secret to their lord and king70
                        
                        That foul unholy incense fling ;71
                        
                        But let no slave exalt his voice72
                        
                        Where hearts in, glory’s trance rejoice ;73
                        
                        O breathe not now her tyrant’s name—74
                        
                        O wake not yet Athenæ’s shame !75
                        
                        Would that the hour when Xerxes’ ire76
                        
                        Had wrapt her ancient walls in fire,77
                        
                        All, all had perished in the blaze,78
                        
                        And that had been her last of days,79
                        
                        Gone down in that bright shroud of glory,80
                        
                        The loveliest wreck in after story.81
                        
                        Or when in exile forced to roam,82
                        
                        Freedom their star, the waves their home,83
                        
                        Near Salamis’ immortal isle,84
                        
                        Her sons had slept in victory’s smile ;85
                        
                        Or Cheronæa’s fatal day,86
                        
                        While fronting slavery’s dark array,87
                        
                        Had seen them bravely, nobly, die,88
                        
                        Bosom on weltering bosom lie,89
                        
                        Piling fair freedom’s breast-work high,90
                        
                        Ere one Athenian should remain91
                        
                        To languish life in captive chain,92
                        
                        Or vassals wield a freeman’s sword93
                        
                        Beneath a Macedonian lord.94
                        Such then was Greece; though
                              conquered, 
chained,95
                        
                        chained,95
Some pride, some virtue yet remained ;96
                        
                        And as the sun, when down he glides97
                        
                        Behind the western mountains’ sides,98
                        
                        Leaves in the cloud that robes the hill99
                        
                        His own bright image burning still,100
                        
                        Thus freedom’s lingering flushes shone101
                        
                        O’er Greece, tho’ freedom’s self was gone.102
                        Such then was Greece, so fallen, so low, 103
                        
                        Yet great even then—what is she now ?104
                        
                        
Who can her many woes deplore ?105
                        
                        Who shall her freedom spoiled restore ?106
                        
                        Darkly above her slavery’s night107
                        
                        The crescent sheds her lurid light ;108
                        
                        Upon her breaks no cheering ray,109
                        
                        No beam of freedom’s lovely day ;110
                        
                        But there—deep shrouded in her gloom,111
                        
                        Their urn is Greece—a living tomb :112
                        
                        Look at her sons and seek in vain113
                        
                        The haughty brow, the high disdain,114
                        
                        With which the proud soul drags her chain.115
                        
                        The living spark of latent fire,116
                        
                        That smoulders on but can’t expire,117
                        
                        That, bright beneath the lowering lashes,118
                        
                        Will burst at times in angry flashes.119
                        
                        Like Ætna, fitful slumbers taking,120
                        
                        To be but mightier in its waking.121
                        Spirits of those, whose ashes sleep122
                        
                        For freedom’s cause in glory’s bed,123
                        
                        O !  do ye sometimes come and weep,124
                        
                        That that is lost for which ye bled !125
                        
                        That e’er Barbarian flag should float126
                        
                        O’er your own land in victory’s pride !127
                        
                        That e’er should ring Barbarian shout,128
                        
                        Where wisdom taught, and valour died.129
                        
                        O, for that Minstrel’s soul of fire130
                        
                        That breathed, and Sparta’s arm was strong ;131
                        
                        O, for some master of the lyre132
                        
                        To wake again that kindling song.133
                        
                        And if, sweet land, aught lives of thee,134
                        
                        What Helles was, what Greece could be,135
                        
                        Freedom—like her to Orpheus given,136
                        
                        Might visit yet her home—her heaven.137