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Poem March 31, 1832

New Hampshire Statesman And State Journal

Concord, Merrimack County, New Hampshire

What is this article about?

Poem evoking the night before Jerusalem's fall and the Second Temple's destruction in 70 AD, with Roman tents encircling the city, internal revelry and strife amid omens, and a divine voice crying 'Let us depart!' from the temple's heart.

Clipping

OCR Quality

98% Excellent

Full Text

LET US DEPART!

Louder and louder, gathering round, there wander'd
Over the oracular woods and divine sea,
Prophesyings which grew articulate.

SHELLEY.

Night hung on Salem's towers,
And a brooding hush profound
Lay where the Roman Eagle shone,
High o'er the tents around—
The tents that rose by thousands
In the moonlight glimmering pale;
Like white waves of a frozen sea,
Filling an Alpine vale.

And the temple's massy shadow
Fell broad, and dark, and still;
In peace, as if the Holy One
Yet watch'd his chosen hill.

But a fearful sound was heard
In that old fane's deepest heart,
As if mighty wings rush'd by,
And a dread voice raised the cry,
"Let us depart!"

Within the fated city
E'en then fierce discord raved,
Tho' thro' three nights heaven the comet-sword
Its vengeful token waved.

There were shouts of kindred warfare
Through the dark streets ringing high;
Though every sign was full which told
Of the bloody vintage nigh:
Though the wild red spear and arrow
Of many a meteor host,
Went flashing o'er the holy altars,
In the sky now seen, now lost.

And that fearful sound was heard
In the temple's deepest heart,
As if mighty wings rush'd by,
And a voice cried mournfully,
"Let us depart!"

But within the fated city
There was revelry that night;
The wine-cup and the timbrel note,
And the blaze of banquet light.
The footsteps of the dancer
Went bounding through the hall,
And the music of the dulcimer
Summon'd to festival.

While the clash of brother-weapons
Made lightning in the air,
And the dying at the palace-gates
Lay down in their despair.

And that fearful sound was heard
At the temple's thrilling heart,
As if mighty wings rush'd by,
And a dread voice raised the cry—
"Let us depart!"

What sub-type of article is it?

Ballad

What themes does it cover?

War Military Religious Faith

What keywords are associated?

Jerusalem Temple Roman Siege Divine Voice Prophetic Cry City Destruction Internal Strife Heavenly Omens

Poem Details

Title

Let Us Depart!

Subject

Destruction Of The Temple In Jerusalem

Form / Style

Rhymed Stanzas With Refrain

Key Lines

Night Hung On Salem's Towers, And A Brooding Hush Profound But A Fearful Sound Was Heard In That Old Fane's Deepest Heart, "Let Us Depart!"

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