i am lovely, o mortals, like a dream of stone,
and my bosom, where each one gets bruised in turn,
to inspire the love of a poet is prone,
like matter eternally silent and stern.
as an unfathomed sphinx, enthroned by the nile,
my heart a swan's whiteness with granite combines,
and i hate every movement, displacing the lines,
and never i weep and never i smile.
the poets in front of mine attitudes fine
(which the proudest of monuments seem to implant),
to studies profound all their moments assign,
for i have all these docile swains to enchant—
two mirrors, which beauty in all things ignite:
mine eyes, my large eyes, of eternal light!