Acle At The Graye Of Nero Poem Rhyme Scheme and Analysis

Rhyme Scheme: ABCD EFGHIJKL MNOP QRSS TUFF VWRQ XYZZ A2A2B2B2 C2C2D2D2 E2E2F2G2 LLH2H2

It is a circumstance connected with the history of Nero thatA
every spring and summer for many years after his death freshB
and beautiful flowers were nightly scattered upon his grave byC
some unknown handD
-
Tradition relates that it was done by a young maiden of CorinthE
named Acle whom Nero had brought to Rome from her native cityF
whither he had gone in the disguise of an artist to contend inG
the Nemean Isthinian and Floral games celebrated there andH
whence he returned conqueror in the Palaestra the chariot raceI
and the song bearing with him like Jason of old a second MedeaJ
divine in form and feature as the first and who like her had leftK
father friends and country to follow a strangerL
-
Even the worse than savage barbarity of this sanguinary tyrantM
had not cut him off from all human affection and those flowersN
were doubtless the tribute of that young girl's holy and enduringO
loveP
-
Whose name is on yon lettered stone whose ashes rest beneathQ
That thus you come with flowers to deck the mournful home of deathR
And thou why darkens so thy brow with grief's untimely gloomS
Thou art fitter for a bride than for a watcher by the tombS
-
It is the name of one whose deeds made men grow pale with fearT
And Nero's stranger is the dust that lies sepulchred hereU
That name may be a word of harsh and boding sound to theeF
But oh it has a more than mortal melody for meF
-
And I my heart has grown to age in girlhood's fleeting yearsV
And has one only task to bathe its buried love in tearsW
The all of life that yet remains to me is but its breathR
Then tell me is it meet that I should seek the bridal wreathQ
-
But maiden he of whom yon speak was of a savage moodX
That took its joy alone in scenes of carnage tears and bloodY
His dark wild spirit bore the stain of crime's most loathsome hueZ
And love is for the high of soul the gentle and the trueZ
-
The voice that taught an abject world to tremble at its wordsA2
To me was mild and musical and mellow as a bird'sA2
A bird's that couched among the green broad branches of the dateB2
Tells in its silvery songs its gushing gladness to its mateB2
-
I saw him first beside the sea near to ray father's homeC2
When like an ocean deity he bounded from the foamC2
Ev'n then a glory seemed to breathe around him as he trodD2
And my haughty soul was bowed as in the presence of a GodD2
-
I knew not till my heart was his the darkness of his ownE2
Nor dreamed that he who knelt to me was master of a throneE2
And when the fearful knowledge came its coming was in vainF2
I had forsaken all for him and would do so againG2
-
Is love the offspring of the will or is it like a flowerL
So frail that it may fade and be forgotten in an hourL
No no it springs unbidden where the heart's deep fountains playH2
And cherished by their hallowed dew it cannot pass awayH2

George W. Sands



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