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The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 5 cover

The Works of Edgar Allan Poe — Volume 5

Chapter 37: THE COLISEUM.
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About This Book

This collection assembles essays, short stories, and lyric and narrative poems that shift between aesthetic critique, dark satire, and the uncanny. The essays offer arguments about taste and poetic principle, the stories range from macabre and grotesque sketches to psychological portraits of obsession and disguise, and the poems employ varied formal experiments to explore loss, mortality, and yearning. Recurring threads include the tension between beauty and decay, reflections on artistic method, and the emotional force of melancholic imagination across multiple genres.

THE COLISEUM.

     Type of the antique Rome! Rich reliquary
     Of lofty contemplation left to Time
     By buried centuries of pomp and power!
     At length—at length—after so many days
     Of weary pilgrimage and burning thirst,
     (Thirst for the springs of lore that in thee lie,)
     I kneel, an altered and an humble man,
     Amid thy shadows, and so drink within
     My very soul thy grandeur, gloom, and glory!

     Vastness! and Age! and Memories of Eld!
     Silence! and Desolation! and dim Night!
     I feel ye now—I feel ye in your strength—
     O spells more sure than e’er Judæan king
     Taught in the gardens of Gethsemane!
     O charms more potent than the rapt Chaldee
     Ever drew down from out the quiet stars!

     Here, where a hero fell, a column falls!
     Here, where the mimic eagle glared in gold,
     A midnight vigil holds the swarthy bat!
     Here, where the dames of Rome their gilded hair
     Waved to the wind, now wave the reed and thistle!
     Here, where on golden throne the monarch lolled,
     Glides, spectre-like, unto his marble home,
     Lit by the wanlight—wan light of the horned moon,
     The swift and silent lizard of the stones!

     But stay! these walls—these ivy-clad arcades—
     These mouldering plinths—these sad and blackened shafts—
     These vague entablatures—this crumbling frieze—
     These shattered cornices—this wreck—this ruin—
     These stones—alas! these gray stones—are they all—
     All of the famed, and the colossal left
     By the corrosive Hours to Fate and me?

     “Not all”—the Echoes answer me—“not all!
     Prophetic sounds and loud, arise forever
     From us, and from all Ruin, unto the wise,
     As melody from Memnon to the Sun.
     We rule the hearts of mightiest men—we rule
     With a despotic sway all giant minds.
     We are not impotent—we pallid stones.
     Not all our power is gone—not all our fame—
     Not all the magic of our high renown—
     Not all the wonder that encircles us—
     Not all the mysteries that in us lie—
     Not all the memories that hang upon
     And cling around about us as a garment,
     Clothing us in a robe of more than glory.”

1833.