FROM THE ITALIAN OF FILACAJA.
Here, from laborious Art, proud TOWNS, ye rose!
Here, in an instant, sunk! - nor ought remains
Of all ye were! - on the wide, lonely plains
Not e'en a stone, that might these words disclose,
"Here stood CATANIA;" - or whose surface shows
That this was SYRACUSE: - but louring reigns
A trackless DESOLATION. - Dim Domains!
Pale, mournful Strand! how oft, with anxious throes,
Seek I sad relics, which no spot supplies! -
A SILENCE - a fix'd HORROR sears my soul,
Arrests my foot! - Dread DOOM of human crimes,
What art thou? - Ye o'erwhelmed Cities, rise!
That your terrific skeletons may scowl
Portentous warning to succeeding Times!
Sonnet Lxxxiii. On Catania And Syracuse Swallowed Up By Earthquake
Anna Seward
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Poem topics: lonely, rose, sad, silence, warning, soul, human, rise, wide, surface, stone, horror, anxious, Print This Poem , Rhyme Scheme
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About Sonnet Lxxxiii. On Catania And Syracuse Swallowed Up By Earthquake
Sonnet Lxxxiii. On Catania And Syracuse Swallowed Up By Earthquake is a poem by Anna Seward. This page includes the poem text, poet information, related topics, comments, and similar poems.