Here you will find the Poem On The Conflagration Of The Po of poet Walter Savage Landor
Why is, and whence, the Po in flames? and why In consternation do its borderers raise Imploring hands to mortal men around And Gods above? Are Gods implacable? Or men bereft of sight at such a blaze? Apollo hath no more a son; his breath Is stifled, and smoke only fills the air Where once was fire, and men to men were true. Fierce ones and faithless now approach the waste, Who look transversely with an evil eye, And scowl and threaten, and uplift the sword, And, if they lower it, 'tis but to grasp more And more of amber left on either bank. Apollo hates the land he once so loved, Nor swan is seen nor nightingale is heard Nigh the dead river and affrighted vale, For every Nymph shed there incessant tears, And into amber hardened all they shed.