The sun for you is always setting
On New and Ancient Rome,
And eyes, in evening light, forgetting
The path that leads to home.
The wheels invest,
The hours dressed
From May to mourning weeds,
And speak of death,
So look ye West
And bear your souls to me!
A darkness sits upon the city,
A hush becalms the sea.
And stars blink out their votive-spillings,
And Caesar dreams beneath.
And he wakes not
Enrobed in rot,
He dreams of Roman day,
Which is but caught
To be then lost
As visions, broken, flee away.
So, flee the burning city, bid
Creusa’s soul to sleep.
Thyself of every anchor rid
Which holds thee from the reef
Beyond which shines
The brimming wine
Spilt from the dripping Sun,
Back to its vine
For which souls pine
With fevered eye and tongue.
And look away, today’s horizon
Beckons thee but beyond
Thy world, so stoutly keep thine eyes on
The land where youth hath gone.
Thine anchors shed!
Thy sail be spread!
Cleave not to land or wife—
Nor turn thy head
To mourn the dead
And lose my Paradise.