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The Survival

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The Survival
written by Rudyard Kipling
First published in the collection Debits and Credits (1926), accompanying the story The Janeites. Also in Twenty-one Tales (1946).




(HORACE, Bk. V, Ode 22.[1])

Securely, after days
Unnumbered, I behold
Kings mourn that promised praise
Their cheating bards foretold.

Of earth-constricting wars,
Of Princes passed in chains,
Of deeds out-shining stars,
No word or voice remains.

Yet furthest times receive
And to fresh praise restore
Mere flutes that breathe at eve,
Mere seaweed on the shore.

A smoke of sacrifice;
A chosen myrtle-wreath;
An harlot's altered eyes;
A rage 'gainst love or death;

Glazed snow beneath the moon;
The surge of storm-bowed trees-
The Cæsars perished soon,
And Rome Herself: But these

Endures while Empires fall
And God for Gods make room ...
Which greater God than all
Imposed the amazing doom?

Wikilivres footnotes

  1. The Odes of Horace. Fifth Book. Translated by R.Kipling and C. Graves (1920) did not contain this poem [1]


SemiPD-icon.svg This work is in the public domain in countries where the copyright term is the author's life plus 70 years or less.
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