All up the mountain’s side,
All down the woody vale,
All by the rolling tide
Waved the Persian banners
pale.
And foremost from the pass,
Among the slumbering band,
Sprang King Leonidas,
Like the lightning’s
living brand.
Then double darkness fell,
And the forest ceased its
moan;
But there came a clash of steel,
And a distant dying groan.
Anon, a trumpet blew,
And a fiery sheet burst high,
That o’er the midnight threw
A blood-red canopy.
A host glared on the hill;
A host glared by the bay;
But the Greeks rushed onward still,
Like leopards in their play.
The air was all a yell,
And the earth was all a flame,
Where the Spartan’s bloody steel
On the silken turbans came;
And still the Greek rushed on
Where the fiery torrent rolled,
Till like a rising sun
Shone Xerxes’ tent of
gold.
They found a royal feast,
His midnight banquet, there;
And the treasures of the East
Lay beneath the Doric spear.
Then sat to the repast
The bravest of the brave!
That feast must be their last,
That spot must be their grave.
They pledged old Sparta’s name
In cups of Syrian wine,
And the warrior’s deathless fame
Was sung in strains divine.
They took the rose-wreathed lyres
From eunuch and from slave,
And taught the languid wires,
The sounds that Freedom gave.
But now the morning star
Crowned Oeta’s twilight
brow;
And the Persian horn of war
From the hills began to blow.
Up rose the glorious rank,
To Greece one cup poured high,
Then hand in hand they drank,
“To immortality!”
Fear on King Xerxes fell,
When, like spirits from the
tomb,
With shout and trumpet knell,
He saw the warriors come.
But down swept all his power,
With chariot and with charge;
Down poured the arrows’ shower.
Till sank the Dorian’s
targe.
They gathered round the tent,
With all their strength unstrung;
To Greece one look they sent,
Then on high their torches
flung.
The king sat on the throne,
His captains by his side,
While the flame rushed roaring on,
And their Paean loud replied.
Thus fought the Greek of old!
Thus will he fight again!
Shall not the self-same mould
Bring forth the self-same
men?
GEORGE CROLY.
* * * * *
SONG OF THE GREEKS.
[1821.]