Hermes Trismegistus

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Still through Egypt's desert places
  Flows the lordly Nile,
From its banks the great stone faces
  Gaze with patient smile.
Still the pyramids imperious
  Pierce the cloudless skies,
And the Sphinx stares with mysterious,
  Solemn, stony eyes.

But where are the old Egyptian
  Demi-gods and kings?
Nothing left but an inscription
  Graven on stones and rings.
Where are Helios and Hephaestus,
  Gods of eldest eld?
Where is Hermes Trismegistus,
  Who their secrets held?

Where are now the many hundred
  Thousand books he wrote?
By the Thaumaturgists plundered,
  Lost in lands remote;
In oblivion sunk forever,
  As when o'er the land
Blows a storm-wind, in the river
  Sinks the scattered sand.

Something unsubstantial, ghostly,
  Seems this Theurgist,
In deep meditation mostly
  Wrapped, as in a mist.
Vague, phantasmal, and unreal
  To our thought he seems,
Walking in a world ideal,
  In a land of dreams.

Was he one, or many, merging
  Name and fame in one,
Like a stream, to which, converging
  Many streamlets run?
Till, with gathered power proceeding,
  Ampler sweep it takes,
Downward the sweet waters leading
  From unnumbered lakes.

By the Nile I see him wandering,
  Pausing now and then,
On the mystic union pondering
  Between gods and men;
Half believing, wholly feeling,
  With supreme delight,
How the gods, themselves concealing,
  Lift men to their height.

Or in Thebes, the hundred-gated,
  In the thoroughfare
Breathing, as if consecrated,
  A diviner air;
And amid discordant noises,
  In the jostling throng,
Hearing far, celestial voices
  Of Olympian song.

Who shall call his dreams fallacious?
  Who has searched or sought
All the unexplored and spacious
  Universe of thought?
Who, in his own skill confiding,
  Shall with rule and line
Mark the border-land dividing
  Human and divine?

Trismegistus! three times greatest!
  How thy name sublime
Has descended to this latest
  Progeny of time!
Happy they whose written pages
  Perish with their lives,
If amid the crumbling ages
  Still their name survives!

Thine, O priest of Egypt, lately
  Found I in the vast,
Weed-encumbered sombre, stately,
  Grave-yard of the Past;
And a presence moved before me
  On that gloomy shore,
As a waft of wind, that o'er me
  Breathed, and was no more.

© Henry Wadsworth Longfellow