Page:Poetical Works of the Right Hon. Geo. Granville.djvu/128

116  built by gods, conſum’d by hoſtile flame Troy bury’d lies, yet lives the Trojan name; And ſo ſhall thine, tho’ with theſe walls were loſt All the records our anceſtors could boaſt. For Latium conquer’d, and for Turnus ſlain, Æneas lives, tho’ not one ſtone remain Where he aroſe. Nor art thou leſs renown’d For thy loud triumphs on Hungarian ground.
 * Those arms which, for nine centuries, had brav’d

The wrath of Time, on antique ſtone engrav’d, Now torn by mortars, ſtand yet undefac’d On nobler trophies, by thy valour rais’d: Safe on thy Eagle’s wings, they ſoar above The rage of war or thunder to remove, Borne by the bird of Cæſar and of Jove.