WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Vol. 1 [of 2] cover

The Prose Works of Percy Bysshe Shelley, Vol. 1 [of 2]

Chapter 104: ARCH OF TITUS.[53]
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A collected volume assembles early Gothic romances, political pamphlets, a refutation of deism, travel letters, essays on art and literature, critical notices, and various fragments and minor pieces. The fictional tales deliver dramatic scenes of revenge, abduction, and confinement, while the pamphlets set out radical proposals and a declaration of rights. The essays and letters offer close readings of sculpture and painting, personal reflections, and literary criticism. Alternating narrative, polemic, and aesthetic commentary, the material showcases a range of prose registers from vivid description to philosophical argument and intimate correspondence.

ARCH OF TITUS.[53]

On the inner compartment of the Arch of Titus, is sculptured in deep relief, the desolation of a city. On one side, the walls of the Temple, split by the fury of conflagration, hang tottering in the act of ruin. The accompaniments of a town taken by assault, matrons and virgins and children and old men gathered into groups, and the rapine and licence of a barbarous and enraged soldiery, are imaged in the distance. The foreground is occupied by a procession of the victors, bearing in their profane hands the holy candlesticks and the tables of shewbread, and the sacred instruments of the eternal worship of the Jews. On the opposite side, the reverse of this sad picture, Titus is represented standing in a chariot drawn by four horses, crowned with laurel, and surrounded by the tumultuous numbers of his triumphant army, and the magistrates, and priests, and generals, and philosophers, dragged in chains beside his wheels. Behind him stands a Victory eagle-winged.

The arch is now mouldering into ruins, and the imagery almost erased by the lapse of fifty generations. Beyond this obscure monument of Hebrew desolation, is seen the tomb of the Destroyer’s family, now a mountain of ruins.

The Flavian amphitheatre has become a habitation for owls and dragons. The power, of whose possession it was once the type, and of whose departure it is now the emblem, is become a dream and a memory. Rome is no more than Jerusalem.

[53] From The Shelley Papers, 1833.