The Earthly Paradise, (March-August), by William Morris, [1868], at sacred-texts.com
How on an Image that stood anciently in Rome were written certain words, which none understood, until a Scholar, coming there, knew their meaning, and thereby discovered great marvels, but withal died miserably.
IN half-forgotten days of old,
 As by our fathers we were told,
 Within the town of Rome there stood
 An image cut of cornel wood,
 And on the upraised hand of it
 Men might behold these letters writ
 "PERCUTE HIC:" which is to say,
 In that tongue that we speak to-day,
 "Strike here!" nor yet did any know
 The cause why this was written so.
   Thus in the middle of the square,
 In the hot sun and summer air,
 The snow-drift and the driving rain,
 That image stood, with little pain,
 For twice a hundred years and ten; p. 441
 While many a band of striving men
 Were driven betwixt woe and mirth
 Swiftly across the weary earth,
 From nothing unto dark nothing:
 And many an Emperor and King,
 Passing with glory or with shame,
 Left little record of his name,
 And no remembrance of the face
 Once watched with awe for gifts or grace.
    Fear little, then, I counsel you,
 What any son of man can do;
 Because a log of wood will last
 While many a life of man goes past,
 And all is over in short space.
   Now so it chanced that to this place
 There came a man of Sicily,
 Who when the image he did see,
 Knew full well who, in days of yore,
 Had set it there; for much strange lore,
 In Egypt and in Babylon,
 This man with painful toil had won;
 And many secret things could do;
 So verily full well he knew
 That master of all sorcery
 Who wrought the thing in days gone by,
 And doubted not that some great spell
 It guarded, but could nowise tell
 What it might be. So, day by day, p. 442
 Still would he loiter on the way,
 And watch the image carefully,
 Well mocked of many a passer-by.
    And on a day he stood and gazed
 Upon the slender finger, raised
 Against a doubtful cloudy sky,
 Nigh noontide; and thought, "Certainly
 The master who made thee so fair
 By wondrous art, had not stopped there,
 But made thee speak, had he not thought
 That thereby evil might be brought
 Upon his spell." But as he spoke,
 From out a cloud the noon sun broke
 With watery light, and shadows cold
 Then did the Scholar well behold
 How, from that finger carved to tell
 Those words, a short black shadow fell
 Upon a certain spot of ground,
 And thereon, looking all around
 And seeing none heeding, went straightway
 Whereas the finger's shadow lay,
 And with his knife about the place
 A little circle did he trace;
 Then home he turned with throbbing head,
 And forthright gat him to his bed,
 And slept until the night was late
 And few men stirred from gate to gate.
    So when at midnight he did wake,
 Pickaxe and shovel did he take, p. 443
 And, going to that now silent square,
 He found the mark his knife made there,
 And quietly with many a stroke
 The pavement of the place he broke:
 And so, the stones being set apart,
 He gan to dig with beating heart,
 And from the hole in haste he cast
 The marl and gravel; till at last,
 Full shoulder high, his arms were jarred,
 For suddenly his spade struck hard
 With clang against some metal thing:
 And soon he found a brazen ring,
 All green with rust, twisted, and great
 As a man's wrist, set in a plate
 Of copper, wrought all curiously
 With words unknown though plain to see,
 Spite of the rust; and flowering trees,
 And beasts, and wicked images,
 Whereat he shuddered: for he knew
 What ill things he might come to do,
 If he should still take part with these
 And that Great Master strive to please.
    But small time had he then to stand
 And think, so straight he set his hand
 Unto the ring, but where he thought
 That by main strength it must be brought
 From out its place, to! easily
 It came away, and let him see
 A winding staircase wrought of stone,p. 444
 Wherethrough the new-come wind did moan.
    Then thought he, "If I come alive
 From out this place well shall I thrive,
 For I may look here certainly
 The treasures of a king to see,
 A mightier man than men are now.
 So in few days what man shall know
 The needy Scholar, seeing me
 Great in the place where great men be,
 The richest man in all the land?
 Beside the best then shall I stand,
 And some unheard-of palace have;
 And if my soul I may not save
 In heaven, yet here in all men's eyes
 Will I make some sweet paradise,
 With marble cloisters, and with trees
 And bubbling wells, and fantasies,
 And things all men deem strange and rare,
 And crowds of women kind and fair,
 That I may see, if so I please,
 Laid on the flowers, or mid the trees
 With half-clad bodies wandering.
 There, dwelling happier than the king.
 What lovely days may yet be mine!
 How shall I live with love and wine,
 And music, till I come to die!
 And thenWho knoweth certainly
 What haps to us when we are dead?
 Truly I think by likelihead p. 445
 Nought haps to us of good or bad;
 Therefore on earth will I be glad
 A short space, free from hope or fear;
 And fearless will I enter here
 And meet my fate, whatso it be."
   Now on his back a bag had he,
 To bear what treasure he might win,
 And therewith now did he begin
 To go adown the winding stair;
 And found the walls all painted fair
 With images of many a thing,
 Warrior and priest, and queen and king,
 But nothing knew what they might be.
 Which things full clearly could he see,
 For lamps were hung up here and there
 Of strange device, but wrought right fair,
 And pleasant savour came from them.
    At last a curtain, on whose hem
 Unknown words in red gold were writ,
 He reached, and softly raising it
 Stepped back, for now did he behold
 A goodly hall hung round with gold,
 And at the upper end could see
 Sitting, a glorious company:
 Therefore he trembled, thinking well
 They were no men, but fiends of hell.
 But while he waited, trembling sore,
 And doubtful of his late-learned lore, p. 446
 A cold blast of the outer air
 Blew out the lamps upon the stair
 And all was dark behind him; then
 Did he fear less to face those men
 Than, turning round, to leave them there
 While he went groping up the stair.
 Yea, since he heard no cry or call
 Or any speech from them at all,
 He doubted they were images
 Set there some dying king to please
 By that Great Master of the art;
 Therefore at last with stouter heart
 He raised the cloth and entered in
 In hope that happy life to win,
 And drawing nigher did behold
 That these were bodies dead and cold
 Attired in full royal guise,
 And wrought by art in such a wise
 That living they all seemed to be,
 Whose very eyes he well could see,
 That now beheld not foul or fair,
 Shining as though alive they were.
 And midmost of that company
 An ancient king that man could see,
 A mighty man, whose beard of grey
 A foot over his gold gown lay;
 And next beside him sat his queen
 Who in a flowery gown of green
 And golden mantle well was clad, p. 447
 And on her neck a collar had
 Too heavy for her dainty breast;
 Her loins by such a belt were prest
 That whoso in his treasury
 Held that alone, a king might be.
 On either side of these, a lord
 Stood heedfully before the board,
 And in their hands held bread and wine
 For service; behind these did shine
 The armour of the guards, and then
 The well-attired serving-men,
 The minstrels clad in raiment meet;
 And over against the royal seat
 Was hung a lamp, although no flame
 Was burning there, but there was set
 Within its open golden fret
 A huge carbuncle, red and bright;
 Wherefrom there shone forth such a light
 That great hall was as clear by it,
 As though by wax it had been lit,
 As some great church at Easter-tide.
    Now set a little way aside,
 Six paces from the dais stood
 An image made of brass and wood,
 In likeness of a full armed knight
 Who pointed gainst the ruddy light
 A huge shaft ready in a bow.
    Pondering how he could come to know
 What all these marvellous matters meant, p. 448
 About the hall the scholar went,
 Trembling, though nothing moved as yet;
 And for awhile did he forget
 The longings that had brought him there
 In wondering at these marvels fair;
 And still for fear he doubted much
 One jewel of their robes to touch.
   But as about the hall he passed
 He grew more used to them at last,
 And thought, "Swiftly the time goes by,
 And now no doubt the day draws nigh
 Folk will be stirring: by my head
 A fool I am to fear the dead,
 Who have seen living things enow,
 Whose very names no man can know,
 Whose shapes brave men might well affright
 More than the lion in the night
 Wandering for food;" therewith he drew
 Unto those royal corpses two,
 That on dead brows still wore the crown;
 And midst the golden cups set down
 The rugged wallet from his back,
 Patched of strong leather, brown and black.
 Then, opening wide its mouth, took up
 From off the board, a golden cup
 The King's dead hand was laid upon,
 Whose unmoved eyes upon him shone
 And recked no more of that last shame p. 449
 Than if he were the beggar lame,
 Who in old days was wont to wait
 For a dog's meal beside the gate.
    Of which shame nought our man did reck,
 But laid his hand upon the neck
 Of the slim Queen, and thence undid
 The jewelled collar, that straight slid
 Down her smooth bosom to the board.
 And when these matters he had stored
 Safe in his sack, with both their crowns,
 The jewelled parts of their rich gowns,
 Their shoes and belts, brooches and rings,
 And cleared the board of all rich things,
 He staggered with them down the hall..
 But as he went his eyes did fall
 Upon a wonderful green stone,
 Upon the hall-floor laid alone;
 He said, "Though thou art not so great
 To add by much unto the weight
 Of this my sack indeed, yet thou,
 Certes, would make me rich enow,
 That verily with thee I might
 Wage one-half of the world to fight
 The other half of it, and I
 The lord of all the world might die;
 I will not leave thee;" therewithal
 He knelt down midmost of the hall,
 Thinking it would come easily
 Into his hand; but when that he p. 450
 Gat hold of it, full fast it stack,
 So fuming, down he laid his sack,
 And with both hands pulled lustily,
 But as he strained, he cast his eye
 Unto the daïs, and saw there
 The image who the great bow bare
 Moving the bowstring to his ear,
 So, shrieking out aloud for fear,
 Of that rich stone he loosed his hold
 And catching up his bag of gold,
 Gat to his feet: but ere he stood
 The evil thing of brass and wood
 Up to his ear the notches drew;
 And clanging forth the arrow flew,
 And midmost of the carbuncle
 Clanging again, the forked barbs fell,
 And all was dark as pitch straightway.
   So there until the judgment day
 Shall come and find his bones laid low,
 And raise them up for weal or woe,
 This man must bide; cast down he lay
 While all his past life day by day
 In one short moment he could see
 Laid out before him, while that he
 In terror by that fatal stone
 Was laid, and scarcely dared to moan.
 But in a while his hope returned,
 And then, though nothing he discerned, p. 451
 He gat him up upon his feet,
 And all about the walls he beat
 To find some token of the door,
 But never could he find it more,
 For by some dreadful sorcery
 All was sealed close as it might be,
 And midst the marvels of that hall
 This scholar found the end of all.
   But in the town on that same night,
 An hour before the dawn of light,
 Such storm upon the place there fell,
 That not the oldest man could tell
 Of such another: and thereby
 The image was burnt utterly,
 Being stricken from the clouds above;
 And folk deemed that same bolt did move
 The pavement where that wretched one
 Unto his foredoomed fate had gone,
 Because the plate was set again
 Into its place, and the great rain
 Washed the earth down, and sorcery
 Had hid the place where it did lie.
    So soon the stones were set all straight,
 But yet the folk, afraid of fate,
 Where once the man of cornel wood
 Through many a year of bad and good
 Had kept his place, set up alone
 Great Jove himself, cut in white stone, p. 452
 But thickly overlaid with gold.
 "Which," saith my tale, "you may behold
 Unto this day, although indeed
 Some Lord or other, being in need,
 Took every ounce of gold away."
    But now, this tale in some past day
 Being writ, I warrant all is gone,
 Both gold and weather-beaten stone.
   Be merry, masters, while ye may,
 For men much quicker pass away.
THEY praised the tale, and for awhile they talked
 Of other tales of treasure-seekers balked,
 And shame and loss for men insatiate stored,
 Nitocris tomb, the Niflungs fatal hoard,
 The serpent-guarded treasures of the dead;
 Then of how men would be remembered
 When they are gone; and more than one could tell
 Of what unhappy things therefrom befel;
 Or how by folly men have gained a name;
 A name indeed, not hallowed by the fame
 Of any deeds remembered: and some thought,
 'Strange hopes and fears for what shall be but nought
 To dead men! better it would be to give
 What things they may, while on the earth they live
 Unto the earth, and from the bounteous earth
 To take their pay of sorrow or of mirth,
 Hatred or love, and get them on their way;
 And let the teeming earth fresh troubles make
 For other men, and ever for their sake
 Use what they left, when they are gone from it.'
   But while amid such musings they did sit,
 Dark night being come, men lighted up the hall,
 And the chief man for minstrelsy did call,
 And other talk their dull thoughts chased away,
 Nor did they part till night was mixed with day.