Home
Fictions/Novels
Short Stories
Poems
Essays
Plays
Nonfictions
 
Authors
All Titles
 






In Association with Amazon.com

Home > Authors Index > Browse all available works of James Russell Lowell > Text of Sonnet, On Being Asked For An Autograph In Venice

A poem by James Russell Lowell

Sonnet, On Being Asked For An Autograph In Venice

________________________________________________
Title:     Sonnet, On Being Asked For An Autograph In Venice
Author: James Russell Lowell [More Titles by Lowell]

Amid these fragments of heroic days
When thought met deed with mutual passion's leap,
There sits a Fame whose silent trump makes cheap
What short-lived rumor of ourselves we raise.
They had far other estimate of praise
Who stamped the signet of their souls so deep
In art and action, and whose memories keep
Their height like stars above our misty ways:
In this grave presence to record my name
Something within me hangs the head and shrinks.
Dull were the soul without some joy in fame;
Yet here to claim remembrance were, methinks,
Like him who, in the desert's awful frame,
Notches his cockney initials on the Sphinx.


[The end]
James Russell Lowell's poem: Sonnet, On Being Asked For An Autograph In Venice

________________________________________________



GO TO TOP OF SCREEN