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TO THE SPHINX

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O sleepless Sphinx!

Thy sadly patient eyes,

Forever gazing o'er the shifting sands,

Have watched Earth's countless dynasties arise,

Stalk forth like spectres waving gory hands,

Then fade away with scarce a lasting trace

To mark the secret of their dwelling place:

O sleepless Sphinx!

O changeless Sphinx!

The very dawn of Time

Beheld thee sculptured from the living rock!

Still wears thy face its primal look sublime,

Surviving all the hoary ages' shock:

Still royal art thou in thy proud repose,

As when the sun on tuneful Memnon rose,

O changeless Sphinx!

O voiceless Sphinx!

Thy solemn lips are dumb;

Time's awful secrets lie within thy breast;

Age follows age; revering pilgrims come

From every clime to urge the same request—

That thou wilt speak! Poor creatures of a day,

In calm disdain thou seest them die away:

O voiceless Sphinx!

Majestic Sphinx!

Thou crouchest by a sea

Whose fawn-hued wavelets clasp thy buried feet:

Whose desert-surface, petrified like thee,

Gleams white with sails of many an Arab fleet:

Whose tawny billows, surging with the storm,

Break on thy flanks, and overleap thy form;

Majestic Sphinx!

Eternal Sphinx!

The Pyramids are thine;

Their giant summits guard thee night and day,

On thee they look when stars in splendor shine,

Or while around their crests the sunbeams play:

Thine own coevals, who with thee remain

Colossal Genii of the boundless plain!

Eternal Sphinx!

Poems

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