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The Martyrs' Idyl, and Shorter Poems

Chapter 6: ROMANS IN DORSET
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About This Book

The collection opens with a long dramatic idyl that stages the arrest, trial, and martyrdom of a young Christian woman and the spiritual awakening of a soldier, rendered in scene-like poetic dialogue and sacred allusion. The shorter poems that follow range from pastoral and elegiac lyrics to devotional and liturgical pieces, meditating on faith, loss, memory, nature, and ritual with formal diction, musical cadences, and classical and religious imagery.


ROMANS IN DORSET

TO A. B.

STUPOR was on the heath,
And wrath along the sky;
Space everywhere; beneath
A flat and treeless wold for us, and darkest noon on high.
Sullen quiet below,
But storm in upper air!
A wind from long ago,
In mouldy chambers of the cloud, had ripped an arras there,
And singed the triple gloom,
And let through, in a flame,
Crowned faces of old Rome:
Regnant o’er Rome’s abandoned ground, processional they came.
In ovals of wan light
Each warrior eye and mouth:
A pageant brutal bright
As if, once over, loudly passed Jove’s laughter in the south;
And dimmer, these among,
Some cameo’d head aloof,
With ringlets heavy-hung,
Like yellow stonecrop comely grown around a castle roof.
An instant: gusts again,
And heaven’s impacted wall,
The hot insistent rain,
The thunder-shock; and of the Past mirage no more at all.
No more the alien dream
Pursuing, as we went,
With glory’s cursèd gleam:
Nor sins of Cæsar’s ruined line engulfed us, innocent.
The vision great and dread
Corroded; sole in view
Was empty Egdon spread,
Her crimson summer weeds ashake in tempest: but we knew
What Tacitus had borne
In that wrecked world we saw;
And what thine heart uptorn,
My Juvenal! distraught with love of violated Law.