Color
Record No. 24, Side A:
and I’m
moving on to the third piece on my list (the Dryden is still unclear to me, but
I’ll just return to it later):
The
Vision of Belshazzar
By George
Gordon, Lord Byron
The King
was on his throne,
The
Satraps thronged the hall;
A
thousand bright lamps shone
O’er that
high festival.
A
thousand cups of gold,
In Judah
seemed divine—
Jehovah’s
vessel hold
The
godless Heathen’s wine.
In that
same hour and hall,
The
fingers of a hand
Came
forth against the wall,
And wrote
as if on sand:
The
fingers of a man;—
A
solitary hand
Along the
letters ran,
And
traced them like a wand.
The
monarch saw, and shook,
And bade
no more rejoice;
All bloodless
waxed his look,
And
tremulous his voice.
“Let the
men of lore appear,
The
wisest of the earth,
And
expound the words of fear,
Which mar
our royal mirth.”
Chaldea's
seers are good,
But here
they have no skill;
And the
unknown letters stood
Untold
and awful still.
And
Babel's men of age
Are wise
and deep in lore;
But now
they were not sage,
They saw—but
knew no more.
A captive
in the land,
A
stranger and a youth,
He heard
the King's command,
He saw
that writing's truth.
The lamps
around were bright,
The
prophecy in view;
He read
it on that night—
The
morrow proved it true.
“Belshazzar's
grave is made.
His
kingdom passed away,
He, in
the balance weighed,
Is light
and worthless clay;
The
shroud, his robe of state,
His
canopy the stone;
The Mede
is at his gate!
The
Persian on his throne!”
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