Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes. Asia: Vols. XXIXXIII. 187679. | | | | Mesopotamia: Babylon | | Vision of Belshazzar | | Lord Byron (17881824) |
| | | THE KING was on his throne, | |
| The satraps thronged the hall: | |
| A thousand bright lamps shone | |
| Oer that high festival. | |
| A thousand cups of gold, | 5 |
| In Judah deemed divine, | |
| Jehovahs vessels hold | |
| The godless heathens wine! | |
| |
| In that same hour and hall | |
| The fingers of a hand | 10 |
| Came forth against the wall | |
| And wrote as if on sand: | |
| The fingers of a man; | |
| A solitary hand | |
| Along the letters ran, | 15 |
| 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. | 20 |
| Let the men of lore appear, | |
| The wisest of the earth, | |
| And expound the words of fear, | |
| Which mar our royal mirth. | |
| |
| Chaldeas seers are good, | 25 |
| But here they have no skill; | |
| And the unknown letters stood | |
| Untold and awful still. | |
| And Babels men of age | |
| Are wise and deep in lore; | 30 |
| But now they were not sage, | |
| They sawbut knew no more. | |
| |
| A captive in the land, | |
| A stranger and a youth, | |
| He heard the kings command, | 35 |
| He saw that writings truth. | |
| The lamps around were bright, | |
| The prophecy in view; | |
| He read it on that night | |
| The morrow proved it true. | 40 |
| |
| Belshazzars grave is made, | |
| His kingdom passed away; | |
| He, in the balance weighed, | |
| Is light and worthless clay. | |
| The shroud his robe of state, | 45 |
| His canopy the stone: | |
| The Mede is at his gate! | |
| The Persian on his throne! | | | | |
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