. Thou wilt not care for that, to let it grieve thee ! I know thee, fair one, why thou springest loose From my arm round thee. Why? I tell thee, Dear! One shaggy eyebrow draws its smudging road One eye rolls underneath ; and yawning, broad Do feed a thousand oxen ! When I have done, I lack no cheese, while summer keeps the sun; And after, in the cold, it's ready prest ! And then, I know to sing, as there is none a song of thee, And all in fawn; and four tame whelps of bears. In change for love! I will not halve the shares. Leave the blue sea, with pure white arms extended To the dry shore ; and, in my cave's recess, For here be laurels, spiral cypresses, The wooded Ætna pours down through the trees To drink in turn with nectar. Who with these Would choose the salt wave of the lukewarm seas? Nay, look on me! If I am hairy and rough, I have an oak's heart in me; there 's a fire In these grey ashes which burns hot enough ; And when I burn for thee, I grudge the pyre No fuel . . not my soul, nor this one eye, a Most precious thing I have, because thereby And kiss thy glittering hand between the weeds, Each lily white, and poppy fair that bleeds Of summer,—one, for winter ; since, to cheer thee, If stranger in a ship sailed nigh, I wis, That I may know how sweet a thing it is And having come, forget again to go ! Could sit for ever. Come up from below! me, my kine,Come, press my cheese, distrain my whey and curd ! Ah, mother ! she alone . . that mother of mine .. Did wrong me sore ! I blame her !-Not a word She saw me wasting, wasting, day by day; Both head and feet were aching, I will say, All sick for grief, as I myself was sick. O Cyclops, Cyclops, whither hast thou sent Thy soul on fluttering wings? If thou wert bent thee Thy Galatea thou shalt haply find,- a For many girls do call me through the night, And, as they call, do laugh out silverly. While thus the Cyclops love and lambs did fold, SONG OF THE ROSE. ATTRIBUTED TO SAPPHO : FROM ACHILLES TATIUS. IF Zeus chose us a king of the flowers in his mirth, He would call to the rose and would royally crown it; For the rose, ho, the rose ! is the grace of the earth, Is the light of the plants that are growing upon it : For the rose, ho, the rose ! is the eye of the flowers, Is the blush of the meadows that feel themselves fair, Is the lightning of beauty that strikes through the bowers. On pale lovers who sit in the glow unaware. Ho, the rose breathes of love ! ho, the rose lifts the cup To the red lips of Cypris invoked for a guest ! Takes delight in the motion its petals keep up, ANACREON'S ODE TO THE SWALLOW. Thou indeed, little Swallow, Builds his nest in my heart, young bolder If a noise comes from one, a THE DEAD PAN. GODS of Hellas, gods of Hellas, Pan, Pan is dead. Pan, Pan is dead. Do ye sit there still in slumber The black poppies out of number Pan, Pan is dead. Or lie crushed your stagnant corses · Where the silver spheres roll on, Stung to life by centric forces Thrown like rays out from the sun ? While the smoke of your old altars Is the shroud that round you welters ? Great Pan is dead. “Gods of Hellas, gods of Hellas," Since Pan is dead? Do you leave your rivers flowing All alone, O Naiades, While your drenchëd locks dry slow in This cold feeble sun and breeze? Not a word the Naiads say, Though the rivers run for aye ; For Pan is dead. From the gloaming of the oak-wood, For Pan is dead. |