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The Hermit's Sacrifice.

Topics: classic

From Rome's palaces and villas          Gaily issued forth a throng;      From her humbler habitations          Moved a human tide along.      Haughty dames and blooming maidens,          Men who knew not mercy's sway,      Thronged into the Coliseum          On that Roman holiday.      From the lonely wilds of Asia,          From her jungles far away,      From the distant torrid regions,          Rome had gathered beasts of prey.      Lions restless, roaring, rampant,          Tigers with their stealthy tread,      Leopards bright, and fierce, and fiery,          Met in conflict wild and dread.      Fierce and fearful was the carnage          Of the maddened beasts of prey,      As they fought and rent each other          Urged by men more fierce than they.      Till like muffled thunders breaking          On a vast and distant shore,      Fainter grew the yells of tigers,          And the lions' dreadful roar.      On the crimson-stained arena          Lay the victims of the fight;      Eyes which once had glared with anguish,          Lost in death their baleful light.      Then uprose the gladiators          Armed for conflict unto death,      Waiting for the prefect's signal,          Cold and stern with bated breath.      "Ave Caesar, morituri,          Te, salutant," rose the cry      From the lips of men ill-fated,          Doomed to suffer and to die.      Then began the dreadful contest,          Lives like chaff were thrown away,      Rome with all her pride and power          Butchered for a holiday.      Eagerly the crowd were waiting,          Loud the clashing sabres rang;      When between the gladiators          All unarmed a hermit sprang.      "Cease your bloodshed," cried the hermit,          "On this carnage place your ban;"      But with flashing swords they answered,          "Back unto your place, old man."      From their path the gladiators          Thrust the strange intruder back,      Who between their hosts advancing          Calmly parried their attack.      All undaunted by their weapons,          Stood the old heroic man;      While a maddened cry of anger          Through the vast assembly ran.      "Down with him," cried out the people,          As with thumbs unbent they glared,      Till the prefect gave the signal          That his life should not be spared.      Men grew wild with wrathful passion,          When his fearless words were said      Cruelly they fiercely showered          Stones on his devoted head.      Bruised and bleeding fell the hermit,          Victor in that hour of strife;      Gaining in his death a triumph          That he could not win in life.      Had he uttered on the forum          Struggling thoughts within him born,      Men had jeered his words as madness,          But his deed they could not scorn.      Not in vain had been his courage,          Nor for naught his daring deed;      From his grave his mangled body          Did for wretched captives plead.      From that hour Rome, grown more thoughtful,          Ceased her sport in human gore;      And into her Coliseum          Gladiators came no more.

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"From Rome's palaces and villas..."

This evocative piece by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, titled "The Hermit's Sacrifice.", represents a masterful exploration of classic. The lines capture a profound emotional resonance... ### Why We Love This Line At Linespedia, we believe that poetry is the ultimate sanctuary for the soul...

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