A SHOAL of idlers, from a merchant craft Anchor’d off Alexandria, went ashore, And mounting asses in their headlong glee, Round Pompey’s Pillar rode with hoots and taunts, As men oft say, “What art thou more than we?” Next in a boat they floated up the Nile, Singing and drinking, swearing senseless oaths, Shouting, and laughing most derisively At all majestic scenes. A bank they reach’d, And clambering up, play’d gambols among tombs; And in portentous ruins (through whose depths, The nightly twilight of departed gods, Both sun and moon glanced furtive, as in awe) They hid, and whoop’d, and spat on sacred things. At length, beneath the blazing sun they lounged Near a great Pyramid. Awhile they stood In the recoil of meanness from the vast; And gathering stones, they with coarse oaths and gibes (As they would say, “What art thou more than we?”) Pelted the Pyramid! But soon these men, Hot and exhausted, sat them down to drink— Wrangled, smok’d, spat, and laugh’d, and drowsily Curs’d the bald Pyramid, and fell asleep. Night came. A little sand went drifting by, And morn again was in the soft blue heavens. The broad slopes of the shining Pyramid Look’d down in their austere simplicity Upon the glistening silence of the sands, Whereon no trace of mortal dust was seen. Richard Hengist Horne. |