Inscription V. For A Monument At Silbury-Hill.

    By Robert Southey



    This mound in some remote and dateless day
    Rear'd o'er a Chieftain of the Age [1] of Hills,
    May here detain thee Traveller! from thy road
    Not idly lingering. In his narrow house
    Some Warrior sleeps below: his gallant deeds
    Haply at many a solemn festival
    The Bard has harp'd, but perish'd is the song
    Of praise, as o'er these bleak and barren downs
    The wind that passes and is heard no more.
    Go Traveller on thy way, and contemplate
    Glory's brief pageant, and remember then
    That one good deed was never wrought in vain.



Extra Info:
1: The Northern Nations distinguished the two periods when the bodies of the dead were consumed by fire, and when they were buried beneath the tumuli so common in this country, by the Age of Fire and the Age of Hills.


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