On Seeing the Elgin Marbles
To see more Elgin Marbles, click on the photograph above.
- My spirit is too weak; mortality
- Weighs heavily on me like unwilling sleep,
- And each imagined pinnacle and steep
- Of godlike hardship tells me I must die
- Like a sick eagle looking at the sky.
- Yet 'tis a gentle luxury to weep,
- That I have not the cloudy winds to keep
- Fresh for the opening of the morning's eye.
- Such dim-conceived glories of the brain
- Bring round the heart an indescribable feud;
- So do these wonders a most dizzy pain,
- That mingles Grecian grandeur with the rude
- Wasting of old Time -- with a billowy main,
- A sun, a shadow of a magnitude.
- John Keats
The Elgin Marbles come from the Parthenon in Greece. To learn more about this building, click on the photograph below.

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