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Classic poem

Fragments Written for Hellas

by Percy Bysshe Shelley

Fairest of the Destinies,

Disarray thy dazzling eyes:

Keener far thy lightnings are

Than the winged thou bearest,

And the smile thou wearest

Wraps thee as a star

Is wrapped in light.

Could Arethuse to her forsaken urn

From Alpheus and the bitter Doris run,

Or could the morning shafts of purest light

Again into the quivers of the Sun

Be gathered--could one thought from its wild flight

Return into the temple of the brain

Without a change, without a stain,--

Could aught that is, ever again

Be what it once has ceased to be,

Greece might again be free!

A star has fallen upon the earth

Mid the benighted nations,

A quenchless atom of immortal light,

A living spark of Night,

A cresset shaken from the constellations.

Swifter than the thunder fell

To the heart of Earth, the well

Where its pulses flow and beat,

And unextinct in that cold source

Burns, and on ... course

Guides the sphere which is its prison,

Like an angelic spirit pent

In a form of mortal birth,

Till, as a spirit half-arisen

Shatters its charnel, it has rent,

In the rapture of its mirth,

The thin and painted garment of the Earth,

Ruining its chaos--a fierce breath

Consuming all its forms of living death.

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Public domain/Source

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