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Caesar's Wife

NAY! swear no more, thou woman whom I called

Star, Empress, Wife! Were Dian's self to lean

From her white altar and with goddess lip

Swear thee as pure as her pale breast divine,

I could not deem thee purer than I know

Thou art indeed.

 

Once, when my triumphs rolled

Along old Rome and blood of roses washed

The battle-stains from off my chariot-wheels,

And triumph's thunders round my legions roared,

And kings in kingly ******* golden bound

Shook at my charger's foot, past the hot din

Of Victory-whose heart of golden pride in wound

Most subtly through with fire of subtlest pain-

My soul on prouder pinion rose above

The Roman shouting, to an air more clear

Than that Jove darks with hurtling thunderbolts,

Or stains with Jovian revels-that separate sphere,

Unshared of gods or man, where thy white feet

Caught their sole staining from my ruddy heart,

Blazing beneath them; where, when Rome looked up,

'Twas with the eyes close shaded with the hand,

As at some glory terrible and pure,-

For no man being pure, a terror dwells

Holy and awful in a sinless thing-

And Caesar's wife, the Empress-Matron, sat

Above a doubt-as high above a stain.

 

Nay! how know I what hell first belched abroad

Tall flames and slanderous vomitings of smoke,

Blown by infernal breathings, till they scaled

Thy throne of whiteness, and the very slaves

Who crouched in Roman kennels wagged the tongue

Against the wife of Caesar: 'Ha! we need not now

And opal-shaded stone wherewith to view

A stainless glory.' In that day my neck

Was bound and yoked with my twin-Caesar's yoke-

Man's master, Sorrow.

 

I know thee pure-

But Caesar's wife must throne herself so high

Upon the hills that touch their snowy crests

So close on Heaven that no slanderous Hell

Can dash its lava up their swelling sides.

I love thee, woman, know thee pure, but thou

No more art wife of Caesar. Get thee hence!

My heart is hardened as a lonely crag,

Grey granite lifted to a greyer sky,

And where against its solitary crown

Eternal thunders bellow.

i
Written by
Isabella Valancy Crawford
1850-1887 / Canadian
Lines·Words
48·354
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