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Poem by Alan Seeger


Thirty Sonnets. 30. At the Tomb of Napoleon before the Elections in America--November, 1912


I stood beside his sepulchre whose fame,
Hurled over Europe once on bolt and blast,
Now glows far off as storm-clouds overpast
Glow in the sunset flushed with glorious flame.
Has Nature marred his mould?  Can Art acclaim
No hero now, no man with whom men side
As with their hearts' high needs personified?
There are will say, One such our lips could name;
Columbia gave him birth.  Him Genius most
Gifted to rule.  Against the world's great man
Lift their low calumny and sneering cries
The Pharisaic multitude, the host
Of piddling slanderers whose little eyes
Know not what greatness is and never can.



Alan Seeger


Alan Seeger's other poems:
  1. Thirty Sonnets. 5. Sonnet 5. A tide of beauty with returning May
  2. Thirty Sonnets. 13. Sonnet 13. I fancied, while you stood conversing there
  3. Tithonus
  4. Thirty Sonnets. 15. Sonnet 15. Above the ruin of God's holy place
  5. The Sultan's Palace


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