University of Virginia Library


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1. PART FIRST

BOOK I. TIRESIAS.

Pallas Athena, perfect, powerful, Wise!
As Gods revered art thou, O Chariclo;
And less of mortal than a life divine;
At all times having served Her lofty hest.
Therefore, O Mother, soothed by thee to peace,
I on thy bosom weeping dare disclose
The story of my blindness born of light.
Half the day long had I been in pursuit
Of one wide-antlered stag, that oftentimes
Passed me within an easy range, or stood
Proudly at gaze, prick-eared, snuffing the wind.
Oft raised my bended bow; but ere I drew
The arrow backward to its biting point,

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I paused for pity, as the creature bent
His clear full gaze on mine: and ever he
Within these lapses turned from me and fled.
At length this faltering in my hunter craft
So shamed my practice I unstrung my bow,
And thought of home: but first the Fates decreed
My feet to wander into ways obscure;
Between gaunt rocks, and overshadowing trees
Whose twisting rootage gripped the rocks like prey;
By shrubs whose shrewd incline seemed questioning;
Where rills thro' clefts came spurting in disdain,
Then vanished haughtily amid the flowers
That peered with saucy looks or sidewise smile;
All seeming aliens in my native land,
And I intrusive on their privacy;
While thro' the silence of the steadfast woods,
Afar-off, sad, one solitary croak
Was answered by another more remote.

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What meant this daylight mystery, and murk
Of cloying, dull stagnation in my blood?
Had I given chase to hart of Artemis,
And angering Her, the Huntress keen, been smit
With lifelong tremor for unconscious crime?
A grim high-shouldered boar of shining tusks,
And graceful fir-tree, young, with slender shoots,
Must straightway be my offering at Her shrine,
While, contrite, meekly I beseech Her grace!
This reverent spirit, Mother, nerved my strength
Like breezes from the sea, and bore me on
Where lay the land, whose favouring bosom beat
All tremulous, there welcoming with smiles
To her embrace the ardent gazing sun;
And, looking back, I saw the woodland wane
To blank and vanish into mist away.
In newborn exaltation, as tho' wings

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Lifting my brows had raised me from myself,
I came to where a yawning ridged ravine,
Rill-streaked, and breathing vapour, closed in gloom.
Adown this ridged descent I leapt my way,
Certain of footfall, lightly as a bird.
Thro' tangled bushes thralled in eglantine
I strove unbaffled, when a vale of grass,
Quivering in flower and parted by a stream,
That bore the sunshine on its winding way,
With sudden beauty held me motionless.
Why went I not a down-stream wanderer,
Pacing in measure to the river-song?
Fate, with resistless hand then clasping mine,
Enticed me upward, and ordained that I
Never again might wander with the flow!
On in pleased conflict with the thronging flowers,
Taking their golden tribute as I went;
Across fresh rillets innocently clear;
Grass, laced with thyme and smiles of gold and blue,

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To where I saw a rocky headland cleave
The river's margin and oppose advance.
Abruptly rose its smouldering naked flank,
And reached a forest where Titanic growth
Lay mixed in darkness with a world of cloud,
That eagles haunted circling till they poised,
And quitted not their station in the sky.
My heart, as tho' unleashed, sprang in my breast
And checked my breath, “For there great Zeus,” I knew,
“Or Pallas, His great daughter, was below,
Their eagles watching Them!”
Audaciously
Skirting the rock, I trod a crescent lawn
Of brilliant emerald, screened by shadowy trees;
Then, while in marvel why so quenched and lone
I shrank in precincts of Elysian calm,
I heard a wondrous splash, as tho' some wing
Had struck the water with a sudden beat.

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Awe-smitten, kneeling in bewildered fear,
I felt the presence of a God.
Lo, high,
Leaning against an oak, Athena's spear
Pulsed fiercely, edge and point! The golden scales
That guard Her breast, a shimmering net of flame,
Lay with Her garment by the Gorgon shield,
Its visage turned in mercy toward the tree.
But how to tell of great Athena's Self,
When She in overwhelming stately power,
With light inscrutable, before me shone!
Resplendent from the water, on the grass,
Within a shower of trembling sparkles She
Stood wringing out the river from Her hair.
Stretching Her hand to shake the drops away,
She showed the length, the strength, the rounded glow
Of beauty gleaming in Her mighty arm;
And hallowed, twin in glory, proudly rose

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Her sacred bosom lifted loftily.
While living radiance round Her presence clung
And moved in faithful concord as She turned
And bent Her gaze on mine. O not in scorn,
Approval, nor surprise; but as a star,
Serene, remote, and unapproachable,
Beams upon water troubled in the wind.
And I in worship strove to penetrate
Deep in the brightness of those azure heavens,
But felt their lustre pierce into my brain,
And I myself in darkness; evermore
Closed from adventure in the world of men.
Since that dark hour, I say it not in pride,
I have not tasted life nor known regret.

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BOOK II. CHARICLO.

Thou art Tiresias, my hapless son,
Tho' sad indeed, yet more than others blessed.
Thy guides for ever gone from this dark life
Wherein we stumble, tho' our sight be keen;
A need the poorest creeping things enjoy,
And Gods themselves cannot restore when lost.
Great Pallas, wise Athena heard my prayer,
And granted that which makes thee more than man:
Yea, made thee as the Gods with power to see
Determined courses rule far times to come;
But made thee not as Gods with power to aid
The due fulfilment of Their wills divine.
Tho' thus denied; and men seem unto thee

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As fevered victims in their chase for power;
Yet happily their tumult canst thou shun
For blossoming sweets that breathe around thine home,
Within whose shadow, smiling, dwells content.
Thy fateful glimpse of Wisdom left thee dazed
And listless from thy terrible delight:
Regardful, I discerned thine eyes were clear,
Without a wound or scar to mark their scath,
But taking shapes as mirrors void of life.
Ah, could I brook thee mine, but one of those
Who eat and sleep, and only sleep and eat!
Faith fired the hope my Goddess might incline
To hear the prayer of suffering Chariclo;
And, strong in resolution, timidly
Her temple steps ascending, bent I down
Before Athena's statue, where I wept.
The lifelong issue or of joy or woe,
Awe weighted me to silence while I kissed
The ground made sacred by Her sandalled feet.

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I strove to make each sentence close and true
To urge my supplication piercingly,
Lest its defect should cause thy suit to fail
And leave thee hapless.
“Goddess loved,” I cried,
“We know Thine owls, that blink in films, more wise
Than all the fluttering birds that haunt the day,
And sleep at dusk with bill pushed under wing.
When wasteful mice, unwelcome, taint the stores
Of corn our anxious men have heaped by toil,
Thy mute-winged favorites, sure of claw, descend,
Seize and devour the tiny plunderers.
“Thy serpents, lithe as winding water, glide,
And moving watchful with attentive eyes
Are wisely silent till a danger threats,
When, hissing terror, they recoil and gape,
And, breathing horror, fright away the foe.
“Thy birds of battle crow to greet the morn,
Or challenge rivals to a gallant main;

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Defending chick and dame, with wing and spur
They front the prowling fox and strike him dead.
“Enriching food, and mitigating pain,
Thine olives, more to man than horse or kine,
Cheer him with light, and shield his tender flesh
Against the sun at noon and wintry chill;
And make a woodland meet for loitering
When fall at eventide the shadows cool.
“Kindly to man and his desires art Thou;
But kindliest when, decisive Monitress,
Directing him on narrow perilous paths!
So gracious in Thy justice, ah, vouchsafe
One beam of mercy on Tiresias,
Darkling from light's excess, O Loved, Revered!
For when by Fate impelled, when rapt he gazed
Near on Thy very loveliness, thro' light
Thy beauty shed, his mortal sight gave way
In utter gloom, and left him but as one
Helpless and hopeless in a dungeon bound.
Lift him from darkness into radiant day;
To freedom, joy; O bring him back to life!”

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Athena heard me. Her divine response
Came as the marshalled spirits of a dream;
Immortal following Immortal feet,
As star on star successive close in light,
And spacious wonder shining fills the heavens.
“Severely fortune smote Tiresias,
When he beheld Me neither clad for war,
Nor in the garment worn beneath My mail;
For as I glowing from the river sprang
The Gods themselves could scarce behold Me thus!
And mortal vision lacks the strength to bear
The lustre of My presence unassuaged.
Therefore thy son was blinded, and remains
In outer darkness till his days are done.
As voices mute can never sing again,
The Gods are powerless to recover power;
But injured worth receiving sure amends,
Tiresias, gladdened by immortal light,
The time, ere he beheld Me verily,

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Shall seem uncertain, and a wavering mist,
Where hovered vague inexplicable shapes,
In phantom mimicry of restless man,
Building up palaces with crumbling towers,
And sailing fleets to sea-washed mountain crags
That fold their tops in cloud; where trampling hosts
Without a sound in ghostly combat close,
And high-walled towns are captured by surprise.
Where whirlwinds spin ripe harvest into ruin;
And ever-striving ever ends in waste,
Until thro' heaven a sword of sunshine cleaves
The shrinking vapour down and strikes the earth,
When, softly melting, opens forth the day!
Blest in this light will your Tiresias dwell,
And, Godlike, thro' the tangle of desires,
Shall mark its value in an aim pursued,
And balance cost against the substance won.
Now are his inborn hopes for ever fled!
But cheered by Truth's imperishable smile;

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Aloof from strife, well knowing craft and strength,
Unceasing struggle for ascendency,
He shall, forecasting issues, now behold
The future fixed and certain as the past.
His sayings shall be winged with prophecy!
Fulfilment following prescience, in due course
He will be honoured as the living voice
Discoursing Destiny and laws divine!
Tho' towns arisen in splendour from the earth
Are worn to dust by Time's unheeded feet,
Time cannot, nor can God-compelling Fate
Once overthrow a wise man's simple word;
Whose wisdom mellowing slowly age by age
Augments the treasures of futurity.
But nerves must tingle to the touch of joy;
Piping and dancing after labour done!
As now Tiresias can watch no more
The shining clouds nor shadows they let fall;
The many-coloured garb of spring to him
Being but as winter's gray, his vision closed:
I will the hindrance from his ears withdraw,

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And then your son shall understand the birds,
Their music, and the meaning in their songs:
And with these blest ones, in their lovely lives
Rejoicing, he will know his vanished world
But as the memory of a raging war
Where sang and whistled arrows carrying death.

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BOOK III. TIRESIAS.

O Mother, careless ears can never learn
Nor rightly ponder words of mighty Gods!
His watch must constant be, his spirit meek
Whose will with Their's unflagging would keep pace.
Weak dalliance shuns he, and the lavish grape,
And dares not spur dark passion to attain
The reigning heights few clamber but to fall;
For unto him pursuits of fretful men,
Unconsecrated by divine intent,
Shall seem a dance of folly, or a chase
That finds disaster, or the quarry fled.
Apart from men I now am less than they,

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The active, who beat substance into shape,
Or guide the streams of power; but more am blest
In fortune; for, by contact unbegrimed
In the foul reek of contest, I maintain
My force unwasted by antagonism;
And clearly know at what they darkly grope,
Or vainly guess.
Sometimes when faint, and hope
Reluctantly folds over-wearied wings,
And I am fain in peaceful death to cease,
That vision of Her glowing purity
Transmutes my sorrow into secret joy!
To these blank eyes the outer world is blank;
The pale blue hills afar, beneath my feet,
The happy flowers alike are blank to me.
But pastures ever rich in flowers divine,
Unfading, lustrous, of ethereal hue,
Are mine, and cheer the margin where a stream,

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Brimmed with celestial light, for ever flows
Toward some great ocean washing nameless shores.
O Mother, from the rough and roaring world,
I feel as one now safe on blessed earth;
Borne thitherward by savage billows churned
And gnashed to foam betwixt the teeth of rocks!
Impious indeed it were to think it truth;
But I have known such evil wrought meseemed
The Gods had left their power to evil men;
Or that dark Chaos ruling meant to strike
These slaves corrupted into endless night!
Think but of Titias, whose continual tongue
Assailed our Council, and revealed the faults
They dared not for high dignity resent,
And thus lay at the mercy of this daw;
Until at length descrying plain escape,
They smiled in easy unanimity.

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Straightway they shipped him for a distant clime,
To govern stout adventurers from our shores,
Who, thriven by labour, waxed content and glad
There he, by substituting pettish will
For treaties fixed, embroiled the state in war
That cost our armies sore to save our sons.
When here at length disgust to clamour raged,
And Titias was recalled; the pecking beak,
Again triumphant, made the Council quail.
To rule a wealthy isle they sent him, where,
Warmly enamoured of his own intent,
Some factions pressing hard, and fostering
Their crafty rivals, fanned he smouldering hate
That burst outright in open massacre;
And he in terror from the fell results
That chase ungainly skill, took ship and fled.
Our Council, uninstructed by events,
Sent him again to rule a greater charge,
Where now he plots to worst and circumvent,
And hatch disasters dire in natural course.

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Thus our dishonoured Guides, from cowardice,
To shun a pertling daw that pecked their heels,
Have thrice their trust betrayed. Thrice on fair Peace
Begotten wrong, and war, and massacre!
Thrice violated their own sacred Charge!
Yea, thrice while slumbering within their care!
Contrast Pylaon's with this Titias' fate.
Pylaon's gentle voice and courtesy
Warmed every heart to measure with his own.
Yet soft of touch he held in Titan grip
The state's advantage and our honour pledged.
Once on a time, ruling a dangerous tribe
In some wild far-away dependency;
While war in many flames between our sons
And natives fiercely raged; Godlike, inspired,
Pylaon gathering in his whole command,
Sent them with all his trained and bravest chiefs

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To aid our brethren in their bitter hour;
Leaving himself, and dearer yet than self,
Bereft of power save an unflinching will,
Alone amid the lately conquered who,
Cunning and stern, were scarcely tamed to law.
Such was the man.
Our Council driven by need
Of firm authority and kindly craft,
Sent great Pylaon to a troubled land
To soothe some factions there, whose differing aims
Issued unhindered in continuous strife.
When there Pylaon, as a warrior, scanned
His foes before him marshalled for assault,
And swiftly marching on them unforeseen,
Delivering his own forces breaks their ranks
And rolls them backward on their native wilds.
For thus, by prowess and perfected skill,
He brought contention to a welcome close;
And promised plenty flowered the slopes of peace.

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Pylaon thus was kneading their rude lives
Surely to fashion of an ordered state,
When here some money-bags, athirst for praise,
Puffed chatterers vain with cross-grained paradox,
Flattering the people's ear with fallacies,
And undigested rumour, raised a storm
Of howling hate against his noble name;
And our half-hearted caitiff rulers cast,
To save their fondled popularity,
Cast forth their noblest to these howling wolves!
Throughout that troubled province yet again
Ramp dock and thistle where they choke the corn;
Stray torrents rut the road; the watercourse,
Checked by accumulated tangle, spreads,
And overflowing meadows soak to swamp;
Men frown and leave their useful husbandry,
The silent plough, the music of the flail;

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Dark herds that teem increasing opulence,
The bleating cries from fields and pasture lands,
They leave and swelter in the fields of war;
Where they, instead of sweet productive showers,
Meet showers that carry grisly wounds and death;
Instead of milk, that quenches thirsting toil,
Comes the fell thirst is only quenched in blood.
He, my Pylaon, gentle, learned, wise;
Whose dearest pastime was the work ordained;
Who lived to shape, augment, and purify;
By clamour driven from his usefulness
Into an empty name! Ingratitude
From those he served had chilled the hero's soul,
And curdled thro' his frame the generous blood,
Beating no more attuned to high resolve,
But shrunken as a brook, when after drought
No longer singing on its wonted way.
He left us while that furious tempest raged,

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“Killed by the sudden cold,” the mourners said:
But he was slain by shameful cowardice,
And broken-hearted our Pylaon died.
Wretches are honoured now, and heroes slain.
Is there then no appeal, O Chariclo?
Can crime thus vault and yet the race endure?
These sons of glory, favoured of the Gods,
Thus slain and unavenged!
From age to age
Run stories of a mighty day when Greeks
Were God-directed, and when men obeyed.
But when I strive to pierce the black abyss
Of unborn time I see but shameful shades!
O, sight of horror; rent that blank abyss!
Where, thunder-armed, the great Olympian Gods
All breathe indignant vengeance as one face,
And storm their chariots over thundering plains;

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Forth stream their hissing bolts, speed swift their shafts;
In lines of lightning sing their angry spears!
And flanking hard move strange stupendous Shapes
Who, plucking splintered rocks, and forest trees,
Dash cities out of being at a blow;
And monstrous creatures leap whose caverned jaws
Crash and make havoc on distracted flocks.
Last famine stalks close linked with pestilence;
And blight that chars the traversed space like flame.
The Gods have gone and left the smitten land,
Where lies their anger black in ghastly heaps;
All left of Greeks and their intolerant pride;
Their haughty sages and heroic chiefs;
Their beauty fairer than sweet flowers in bloom;
Their Temples, where the only sacrifice

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Was flesh of beast and gold-bought offering;
Their palaces, where dwelt unkingly kings
Who throve in costly state, and could not rule;
Now all have vanished like a waking dream
That leaves a growing taint of certainty
Its visions but foreshadowed danger near.
Uprising slowly in that wasted scene
Crawl dwindled forms in search for something hid,
That keeps their faces spell-bound near the soil;
Anon, in mockery of ancient deeds
They seem a world of phantoms lacking life.
My gift of gazing thus on pictured doom,
Is but a doubtful boon, O Chariclo!
However crime corrupt our rulers' blood,
However basely are their wills obeyed,
However dire the vengeance justly due,

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Alas, the speeding thunderbolts, that burst
Among the guilty, likewise overwhelm
With woe, or crush the guiltless into ruin!
Stern, unrelenting are the Gods, and mark
That man accursed; mark him for ever cursed
Who lifts a knave to high authority,
And drives the hero from his sacred trust.
And ever must our mortal race endure
The chastisement Fate wills, and angry Gods
Ordain for men unfaithful to their charge.
Abject and haughty, both alike as one
Swept unappealably to nothingness.
Heedless of frowning Doom's unfaltering eye,
Lightly they laugh; they wave their arms abroad
And cry, “This good old earth and all her fruit
Are ours of right; then let us every one
Enjoy the fragrant juices of the vine;

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Clasping fair woman let us round the dance,
And dance together until sunken day
Leaves us a safe example, where the stars
Still burn in glory and rejoice the night!
For now, the waves away, sand smooth and dry,
The beaming Hours will not our arms escape
Till taxed of rosy smile and sweeter kiss,
And lips made redder with the crimson draught.
Thus, fondling beauty, her new-quickened breath
Runs thro' our veins in swift delicious fire;
Until our rapture slacken in repose,
And languor lapt by music softly sleep.”
On the warmed beach they breathe the summer wind,
And wear a transient pallor of the moon,
Where sprinkled snug, like sheep ere breaking dawn,

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They rest in dreams of never-ending bliss.
And meanwhile rising clear from ocean gloom,
Creeps, white-lipped, hissing, the returning tide.

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BOOK IV. CHARICLO AND TIRESIAS.

When preening downy breasts the waterfowl
Quiver, ere spreading timorous wings to rise
From water freshened with the breath of morn,
And span the dazzled distance into space;
So freshly wing our lives Tiresias,
So bright with promise are the days to come.”
“O Mother, grateful sound! Fair are thy words;
And touch me as pale shivering in the leaves
Whispers of rainy wind on scorching days,
Before the summer showers on meads athirst
Awaken hushed and grateful murmurings;

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So thirsting I thy pleasant accents take,
And like the warblers roundabout I hear
I would in music like to their's respond!
“That vision of annihilated Greeks,
Tho' justly due to vengeance, wrings my heart.
Save for my strange God-stricken destiny,
Could I not hope by mixing much with men,
Thro' clear, persuasive, seasonable words,
To reach their temper at the wavering pause;
And, gently aiding undetermined bent,
To turn their footsteps into settled ways
Approved by wisdom, and of Gods beloved!
But now, alas, unable, I discern,
Dimly as thro' a veil, our people range
Disorderly wide trackless waste, with eyes
Hard set on fancies they have cast before,
To find delusive nothing in their grasp;
Or phantoms fair that smile and lure advance,
Till seized at length they change to demons dire
And rend them out of life!”

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“Thy words ring true
And tuned on tender chords, Tiresias!
But the dread Goddess, is Her charge forgot?
Not lightly will She pardon shouldst thou fail
In reverent concord with Her will divine.
Thine own bow in obedience, nor allow
Winged hopes to hover where they may not rest;
For Gods despise the foolish tears of men
Born of unchecked desire. No, let the vain
Hither and thither gad a senseless dance,
Their course of no more count than wind-borne leaves.
Exalted, thou shalt know the living truth
Athena signified, and sun thy soul
In ever-varying beauty born of law
That love, wing-folded from pursuit, adores.
It is not thine to toil and herd with men,
Who fondly trust they track their purposes,
But are blind shuttles in the loom of Fate,
Each working out his doom. Thy deathless glance

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Of Pallas great Athena's very self,
Enwrapt thee Her's in worship evermore:
For having seen perfection in pure light,
No earthly memory can seem to thee
Other than darkness shown by glimmering rays,
Or form unfashioned yet to comely shape.
Thy mortal loss being thus immortal gain,
Saved art thou now the dolour and despair
Of seeing wounds thou lackest skill to heal;
Or tottering blindness that will not be led;
And, breathing air attempered to response,
The voices of the high Olympian Gods
Shall sanction thine in music with Their own.”
“Take, take, O Mother, take my trembling thanks!
As beat his heart who clomb to weary heights
When blew the gracious zephyrs round his brow;
So braced by loving words, my life rebounds
Within obedient range, and gathers strength

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To pace the lonely path prescribed by Fate,
Athena's self disclosed.
“Once on a day,
Upon the ledge of rock that overhangs
Where one huge torrent thrills the mountaincleft,
I lay and listened to the constant roar
Of leaves and water musically mixed,
And heard high voices of the earth and air,
Discourse of stars, and whisper of the force
That vomits blocks of fire, or by a smile
Clusters the primroses to living light.
Rapt thus lay I and wondered.
As they kiss,
Are tempests fired with transport mortals feel
When eager lips unite? Or, is it hate,
When in mad thunder rushing they expire!
“While thus by strangeness lured, or beauty caught;

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Where secrets opened to my will, or closed
For future pondering in some happy hour;
More purely blew the wind; a glory smote
These sightless balls as on that day of doom
When I beheld Her silent on the grass
And clad in light alone. But now Her voice
Pierced me with music, such as wildest love
Could never hope for utterance, tho' his fate
Hung in the balance of a blissful word.
“‘Hail my Tiresias, to the Gods endeared!
Thy thoughts wing happily an even pace,
And happily alight to muse their gains.
Thy swift exultant march cut off and balked
By sheer impossibility,
Thou didst not dash thy breast against the wall,
And bruised and bleeding, clamour unto Gods
For aid to break the laws themselves obey;
But meek, submissive, paid'st thy forfeiture
Without rebellious questioning, or hope
The will of Gods might change for thy behoof.

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Thus, tho' perforce a rugged path is thine,
Thy quickened sense shall be to thee a staff
To guide thee on thy way: for thou shalt feel
The wandering air, checked by the rocks and trees,
Beat backward on thy face; and steadfastly
Threading obstructions, as a bird in flight,
Pursue thy needs in safety as before.
“ ‘When silvery dawn warms into golden day
And hearts of men are glad, the feathered world
In voices infinite salute the morn;
And stooping their horned brows the cattle graze
With faces toward the sun; their manes asweep,
Horses while thundering over plains proclaim
Their joy aloud in stormy clarion shouts;
While flocks at feed upon the happy hills,
Pause at short intervals to bleat delight;
And all awakened glow in life renewed
From dark unfeeling night. And thou shalt wake

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From gloom to living glory; truth on truth
Unfolding lovely secrets to thy love,
Shall breathe their rarest sweetnesses unsought;
When thou shalt learn that loveliness in flowers
Is one with women and their gracious smiles;
And crawling eyeless worms that feed on clay
Own life identical with scornful man;
And woodland berries, fed on earth and air,
And every drop of dew that weights the grass
Is fashioned by the force that moulds the stars.
“ ‘Clear to the wise, but hidden from the dull,
All life unites inspired by harmony,
From inborn essence to the outward hue;
And life, tho' ever-varying, onward moves
From earth thro' herbage and becomes the brute:
Thus men from earth divine the laws of heaven,
And seek by day the stars in deepest wells,
Tho' oft, by noon-sun dazzled, blind to flowers
In constellations shining at their feet!

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“ ‘Thy soul responsive to their warbling tongues
Thou hear'st the stories little songsters tell
On thorns bloom-smothered in the odorous spring,
And read'st their merry-making poured aloof
In veiled security of loftiest leaves,
Or quivering upward singing into light.
Their witchery cast upon thy loosened lips
Shall tell in singing what was caught of songs
Tuned deep in woodland shade, or windy banks,
Or fields of spacious air. As now thine eyes
Are closed to every being of thy love,
Thou now art granted vision, grace divine
To penetrate and know each dark recess,
From subtle motives to their plain escape
In action issuing to remotest time.
And men shall be thy friends, in knowing thou
Can'st rightly scan what unto most will seem
An untold message or a senseless vaunt.
Thy sway shall be as kings'. Wise men shall take
Direction from thy maxims, proven and found

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Trusty upon the strain, and furtherance
To purposes that strike and flower in deeds.
For thou, undoubting, undismayed, shalt know
The will of Gods, and speak the voice of Fate;
Resistless Fate for ever following fast
On any trodden pathway, foul or fair!
“ ‘But many a harvest moon shall light the land,
And many a season will release its showers,
And gather night in midday thunderstorms,
Ere men will give a welcome to thy words;
For, as at peril, will they start, and shun
The plainest blessing pregnant with delight,
When seen in guise unknown to them before.
But meantime can'st thou loiter while the grass
Plays to the pleasant singing of the rain;
And join in laughter when tempestuous fire
Rioting shatters throughout iron skies
In far redoubled roars that shake the world,
And rends an azure emptiness in space.

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Flower-laden winds shall breathe and whisper thee
If over primroses or violets borne,
Or deeply-blushing roses sore ashamed,
To languish zephyr-plundered of their sweets.
Softly, with babbling lips, these winds shall lisp
Of timorous lovers glimmering in the dawn,
And sighing for noontide's unattainable
Delight of brightest heaven. Or they shall tell
Of streams, where golden-hearted lotus flowers
Shed spectral light beneath the gloom of plams;
Where dusky women launch their babes to float,
Then in the water flashing breast the flow;
Or bring dark hints of contest from afar
Where numbers meet in fell resolve to smite
Each unknown other into senseless death.
“ ‘And thus in beauty hallowed safe art thou
From cares that poison gladness with distrust,

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And doubts of danger that may never rise:
But open, unobstructed, as the flow
Of mighty rivers, will thy seasons glide,
That wind by many a reach of flowery mead
To find like others their great ocean home.’
“Athena spake no more; and then I seemed
To traverse airily the boundless waves,
Wind-borne thro' space and penetrating light,
That glorified my being as the flowers
Are glorified by morn. The Goddess' words
Still singing by me, underneath my feet,
In shoals the wondrous creatures of the deep,
Of richest hues and silvery brightness sped,
By huge ones followed swiftly and devoured.
And passing over cities I beheld
Great nations spread and cover smaller states,
And flourish into temples, towers, and fleets;
Then coil themselves together, leopard-like,
To watch with evil eyes should any chance
Relax some other's guard, or weight his lids

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In sleep, and give the fatal vantage sought.
Afar then I descried an eagle swoop
And strike a great swan soaring dead to earth;
But being near man's home, the eagle fled
Until the sun grew crimson, then returned
To gorge his prey; marked by a fowler, who
Hard by in ambush with a ready bow,
Pierced his fierce heart with death. The fowler, proud,
Boasting of twofold spoil and subtle skill,
Hoisted the prize for praises from his dame;
But she, cross-grained, upbraided him for loss
And waste on eagles, worthless on the board,
When all his children cried with hungry maws!
To her sharp tongue he daring no reply,
And needing solace, roundly beat his babes.
“Such the strange pastime of that mighty world
I have for ever lost. Where beauty dies
Fresh in her dawn of trustful innocence,
Mammocked by ruthless force and cast away;

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Where wise men bow unhonoured heads, while fools,
In loud-pitched shouts, assert that Wisdom's ways
Are better now forgot for pathways new,
Obvious and sweeping. Where lithe Falsehood's self,
Wearing a scanty garment filched from Truth,
Flaunts her bedizened foulness to the crowd,
Pronouncing Truth a worn-out blunderer,
Unneeded in this growing world of ours,
Where things so mixed and complex must be touched
By lighter fingers, or their bloom will fly!
And gaping multitudes agrin with joy
Strain their deep throats to inharmonious howl;
As wolves at midnight when they scent the fold,
And rage against her worthless purity,
Her worn-out useless rags. Tho' beaming clear
Her purity, clad in eternal light!
“All this is darkness murkier than the gloom

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Whereon these blank orbs dwell; but when I heard
The door, by which ye entered, opening, came
With thy dear voice the welcome joy of love,
And now, within mine arms, to hear and and feel
My home, the beating of thy tuneful heart,
I have no other wish, but rest content;
Contented with my fate, and most with thee.”