Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Germany: Vols. XVII–XVIII. 1876–79.
The Church of St. John, and the Ruins of Lahneck Castle
By Letitia Elizabeth Landon (18021838)O
Flinging long shadows on the watery plains,
Crowned with gray towers, and girdled by the vine,
How little of the warlike past remains!
Usurp the crimson banner’s former sign.
Where are the haughty Templars and their powers?
Their forts are perished, but not so their shrine.
Her twilight histories of the olden time;
How few the records of those craggy dells
But what recall some sorrow or some crime!
When the world’s sceptre was the sword; and power,
Unfit for human weakness, wrong, and rage,
Knew not that curb which waits a wiser hour.
Authority needs rule, restraint, and awe;
Order and peace spread gradual through the land,
And force submits to a diviner law.
The many find their way; truth after truth
Doth starlike rise on depths of moral night,
Though even now is knowledge in its youth.
The iron harvest of the sword and spear,
Are now with purple vineyards covered o’er,
While cornfields fill the fertile valleys near:
Much has the Past by thought and labor done;
Knowledge and Peace pursue the steps of Hope,
Whose noblest victories are yet unwon.