Page:The Soul of a Century.djvu/139



Atop Golgotha, tower three darkened crosses; Atop each cross, a bloody, lifeless form.

The evening clouds stretch out their crimson wings Above the city’s mansions and cathedrals, Above the homes, the walls and fragrant gardens, While the winds that drive the restless roaming clouds, Ruffle the silvery waves of ripened olives Upon the mountain tops of distant Cedron. Toward the city’s gates are noisily returning The multitudes who saw the gruesome hanging, Satisfied now, the lifeless forms ceased swaying.

A lonely soldier stands beneath each cross, The first, a Roman, of his Rome is thinking, Of Roman women, theatres and baths, Longingly thinking of the crowded Forum, The while he casts his brutal coarse damnation Upon the stench-filled city, dormant at his feet, And on the race of filthy Jews therein.

The second soldier sends to distant Gaul His hope filled dreams and thoughts. He thinks of woods alive with birds and beasts, Of cooling streams with pure transparent waters, Of light-haired women with their tempting charms, The feasts, the songs, the cups o’erfilled with wine— Of these he thinks, and casts a look of utter hatred Scornfully, bitterly across the sleeping land.

The third, a dusky Ethiopian soldier, Resting on his upward pointing spear Rolls lazily his large, white gleaming eyeballs Towards the swaying bodies, bedecked with smears of blood Towards the rolling waves of gardens filled with olives, The dreaming city bathing in the sunset, The darkened, mystic, distant mountain tops He neither thinks nor dreams But nods his head and yawns.