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LIV.

As the black eunuch entered with his brace
Of purchased Infidels, some raised their eyes
A moment without slackening from their pace;
But those who sate, ne'er stirred in any wise:
One or two stared the captives in the face,

Just as one views a horse to guess his price;
Some nodded to the negro from their station,
But no one troubled him with conversation.

LV.

He leads them through the hall, and, without stopping,
On through a farther range of goodly rooms,
Splendid but silent, save in one, where, dropping, (6)
A marble fountain echoes through the glooms
Of night, which robe the chamber, or where popping
Some female head most curiously presumes
To thrust its black eyes through the door or lattice,
As wondering what the devil noise that is.

LVI.

Some faint lamps gleaming from the lofty walls
Gave light enough to hint their farther way,
But not enough to show the imperial halls
In all the flashing of their full array;
Perhaps there's nothing-I'll not say appals,
But saddens more by night as well as day,
Than an enormous room without a soul

To break the lifeless splendor of the whole.

LVII.

Two or three seem so little, one seems nothing:
In deserts, forests, crowds, or by the shore,
There solitude, we know, has her full growth in
The spots which were her realms for evermore;
But in a mighty hall or gallery, both in

More modern buildings and those built of yore,
A kind of death comes o'er us all alone
Seeing what's meant for many with but one.

LVIII.

A neat, snug study on a winter's night,

A book, friend, single lady, or a glass Of claret, sandwich, and an appetite,

Are things which make an English evening pass; Though certes by no means so grand a sight

As is a theatre lit up by gas.

I pass my evenings in long galleries solely,
And that's the reason I'm so melancholy.

LIX.

Alas! man makes that great which makes him little :
I grant you in a church 'tis very well:

What speaks of Heaven should by no means be brittle,
But strong and lasting, till no tongue can tell
Their names who reared it; but huge houses fit ill—
And huge tombs worse-mankind, since Adam fell:
Methinks the story of the tower of Babel

Might teach them this much better than I'm able.

LX.

Babel was Nimrod's hunting-seat, and then

A town of gardens, walls, and wealth amazing, Where Nabuchadonosor, king of men,

Reign'd, till one summer's day he took to grazing, And Daniel tamed the lions in their den,

The people's awe and admiration raising;

"Twas famous, too, for Thisbe and for Pyramus, And the calumniated Queen Semiramis.

LXI.

*

LXII.

But to resume, should there be (what may not
Be in these days?) some infidels, who don't,
Because they can't, find out the very spot

Of that same Babel, or because they won't,
(Though Claudius Rich, Esquire, some bricks has got
And written lately two memoirs upon't)
Believe the Jews, those unbelievers, who

Must be believed, though they believe not you.

LXIII.

Yet let them think that Horace has exprest
Shortly and sweetly the masonic folly

Of those, forgetting the great place of rest,
Who give themselves to architecture wholly ;
We know where things and men must end at last:
A moral (like all morals) melancholy,

And "Et sepulchri immemor struis domos"

Shows that we build when we should but entomb us.

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