"Cross Adria’s gulf, and land where softly glide A stream’s crisp waves, to join blue Ocean’s tide; Still westward hold thy way, till Alps look down On old Verona’s walled and classic town. Fair is the prospect; palace, tower, and spire, And blossomed grove, the eye might well admire; Heaven-piercing mountains capped with endless snow, Where winter reigns, and frowns on earth below; Old castles crowning many a craggy steep, From which in silver sounding torrents leap: Southward the plain where Summer builds her bowers, And floats on downy gales the soul of flowers; Where orange-blossoms glad the honeyed bee, And vines in festoons wave from tree to tree; While, like a streak of sky from heaven let fall, The deep blue river, glittering, winds through all; The woods that whisper to the zephyr’s kiss, Where nymphs might taste again Arcadian bliss; The sun-bright hills that bound the distant view, And melt like mists in skies of tenderest blue,— All charm the ravished sense, and dull is he Who, cold, unmoved, such glorious scene can see. Here did the famed Catullus rove and dream, And godlike Pliny drink of Wisdom’s stream; Wronged by his friends, and exiled by his foes, Amid these vales did Dante breathe his woes, Raise demons up, call seraphs from the sky, And frame the dazzling verse that ne’er shall die. Here, too, hath Fiction weaved her loveliest spell, Visions of beauty float o’er crag and dell; But chief we seem to hear at evening hour The sigh of Juliet in her starlit bower, Follow her form slow gliding through the gloom, And drop a tear above her mouldered tomb. Sweet are these thoughts, and in such favoured scene Methinks life’s stormiest skies might grow serene, Care smooth her brow, the troubled heart find rest, And, spite of crime and passion, man be blest. But to our theme: The pilgrim comes to trace Verona’s ruins, not bright Nature’s face; Be still, chase lightsome fancies, ere thou dare Approach yon pile, so grand yet softly fair; The mighty circle, breathing beauty, seems The work of genii in immortal dreams. So firm the mass, it looks as built to vie With Alps’ eternal ramparts towering nigh. Its graceful strength each lofty portal keeps, Unbroken round the first great cincture sweeps; The marble benches, tier on tier, ascend, The winding galleries seem to know no end. Glistening and pure, the summer sunbeams fall, Softening each sculptured arch and rugged wall. We tread the arena; blood no longer flows, But in the sand the pale-eyed violet blows, While ivy, covering many a bench, is seen, Staining its white with lines of liveliest green,— Age-honouring plant! that weds not buildings gay, With love, still faithful, clinging to decay."
Quote Details
Added by wikiquote-import-bot
Unverified quote
0 likes
Original Language: English
Available Languages (1)
Sources
, from Ruins of Many Lands (1849)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Verona
Revision History
No revisions have been submitted for this quote.
Categories
Verona
10 quotes on TrueQuotesView all quotes by Verona →
Related Quotes
"Pleasant Verona! With its beautiful old palaces, and charming country in the distance, seen from terrace walks, and s…"
"Chorus: Two households, both alike in dignity (In fair Verona, where we lay our scene), From ancient grudge break to …"
"Prince: Three civil brawls, bred of an airy word, By thee, old Capulet, and Montague, Have thrice disturb’d the quiet…"
"Lady Capulet: Verona’s summer hath not such a flower."
"Friar Lawrence: Hence from Verona art thou banishèd. Be patient, for the world is broad and wide.Romeo: There is no w…"
"Happy the Man, who his whole time doth bound Within th' enclosure of his little ground. Happy the Man, whom the same …"
"Near to his evening region was the Sun, When Hurgonil with his lamented load, And faithful Tybalt their sad march beg…"
"Thrice blest Verona! since the holy three With their imperial presence shine on thee; Honoured by them, thy treachero…"
"Fame tells us that Verona’s court Was a fair place. The feet might still Wander forever at their will In many ways of…"
"O Milan, O the chanting quires, The giant windows’ blazon’d fires, The height, the space, the gloom, the glory! A mou…"