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William Cullen Bryant - The Greek BoyWilliam Cullen Bryant - The Greek Boy
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Gone are the glorious Greeks of old,   Glorious in mien and mind; Their bones are mingled with the mould,   Their dust is on the wind; The forms they hewed from living stone Survive the waste of years, alone, And, scattered with their ashes, show What greatness perished long ago. Yet fresh the myrtles there--the springs   Gush brightly as of yore; Flowers blossom from the dust of kings,   As many an age before. There nature moulds as nobly now, As e`er of old, the human brow; And copies still the martial form That braved Plataea`s battle storm. Boy! thy first looks were taught to seek   Their heaven in Hellas` skies: Her airs have tinged thy dusky cheek,   Her sunshine lit thine eyes; Thine ears have drunk the woodland strains Heard by old poets, and thy veins Swell with the blood of demigods, That slumber in thy country`s sods. Now is thy nation free--though late--   Thy elder brethren broke-- Broke, ere thy spirit felt its weight,   The intolerable yoke. And Greece, decayed, dethroned, doth see Her youth renewed in such as thee: A shoot of that old vine that made The nations silent in its shade.
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