With such a horrid clang
As on Mount Sinai rang,
While the red fire and smould’ring
clouds out-brake;
The aged earth, aghast
With terror of that blast,
Shall from the surface to the centre shake—
When, at the world’s last session,
The dreadful judge in middle air shall
spread his throne.
And then at last our bliss
Full and perfect is—
But now begins: for from this happy
day
The old dragon, under ground
In straiter limits bound,
Not half so far casts his usurped sway,
And, wroth to see his kingdom fail,
Swinges the scaly horror of his folded
tail.
The oracles are dumb:
No voice or hideous hum
Runs through the arched roof in words
deceiving;
Apollo from his shrine
Can no more divine,
With hollow shriek the steep of Delphos
leaving;
No nightly trance, or breathed spell,
Inspires the pale-eyed priest from the
prophetic cell.
The lonely mountains o’er,
And the resounding shore,
A voice of weeping heard and loud lament;
From haunted spring, and dale
Edged with poplar pale,
The parting genius is with sighing sent;
With flower-inwoven tresses torn
The nymphs in twilight shade of tangled
thickets mourn.
In consecrated earth,
And on the holy hearth,
The lares and lemures moan with midnight
plaint;
In urns and altars round
A drear and dying sound
Affrights the flamens at their service
quaint;
And the chill marble seems to sweat,
While each peculiar power forgoes his
wonted seat.
Peor and Baaelim
Forsake their temples dim,
With that twice-battered god of Palestine;
And mooned Ashtaroth,
Heaven’s queen and mother
both.
Now sits not girt with tapers’ holy
shine;
The Lybic Hammon shrinks his horn—
In vain the Tyrian maids their wounded
Thammuz mourn.
And sullen Moloch fled,
Hath left in shadows dread
His burning idol all of blackest hue;
In vain, with cymbal’s
ring,
They call the grisly king,
In dismal dance about the furnace blue;
The brutish gods of Nile as fast—
Isis and Orus, and the dog Anubis—haste.
Nor is Osiris seen
In Memphian grove or green,
Trampling the unshowered grass with lowings
loud,
Nor can he be at rest
Within his sacred chest—
Naught but profoundest hell can be his
shroud;
In vain, with timbrelled anthems dark.
The sable-stoled sorcerers bear his worshipped
ark.
He feels from Juda’s
land
The dreaded infant’s
hand—
The rays of Bethlehem blind his dusky
eyne;
Nor all the gods beside
Longer dare abide—
Not Typhon huge, ending in snaky twine;
Our babe, to show His God-head true,
Can in His swaddling-bands control the
damned crew.