University of Virginia Library

1. PART THE FIRST.


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— Genus mortale sub undis
Perdere, et ex omni nimbos dimittere cœlo.
Ovid. Metam.

In Thessaly, while yet the world was young,—
Soon after Chaos, touched with light and form,
Lost its vague being, and sprung up alarm'd
To beautiful order,—in the pleasant vale
Of Tempé, where the meadows still are green,
The waters bright, the forests flourishing,
Lived Pyrrha and the young Deucalion.
—She was Pandora's child, who in gone days

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Had for her dowry that most deadly gift
Which filled the world with pain: His sire was called
Prometheus, the great Titan, who lay stretch'd
Huge as a mammoth on the barren edge
Of Caucasus, where day by day, earth-lured,
Jove's bird, the ravenous vulture, like a cloud
Came sailing by the sun to feast on blood.
He was the Titan's son; yet did he bow
To Themis and before great Jove who reigned
Supreme upon the hills Olympian:
First God and reigning spirit was he who hurled
The scythed Saturn from his ancient throne,
And cast him with an arm unfilial
Headlong from out the skies, to walk the earth
Undeified, where as a man he taught
The Latian people many an useful art,
And shed the golden time o'er Italy.
Pyrrha and young Deucalion!—fair names
As ever shone in fable or old song,
Tradition or recording history:
In green youth were they lovers, tho' scarce known

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The bud which after blossom'd into love;
Still lovers, tho' now wedded with consent
Of their own gentle hearts, before the face
Of all the stars that crowd the summer sky.
How beautiful they were may not be told;
Yet both were beautiful, and one so fair
That when her glossy ringlets downwards fell,
Serpenting o'er her shoulders smooth and white
As marble, (such the Parians wrought) she seemed
A happy Dryad from the woods escaped,
Or Naiad who had left her watery cave
Content to dwell with man:—Deucalion trod
The green earth as the feathered herald trod,
(Jove's son and starry Maia's,—always young)
And round about his temples the black curls
Hung thick, and clustering left his forehead bare.
His eye was like the eagle's, wild and keen,
And his mouth parted but to speak of love:
Not huge, yet giant-sprung, his towering youth
Rose into manhood, like a Titan born.
Careless of all the world save one sweet care,
And in each other lost they dreamt away

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The hours, well pleased on fragrant lawns to stray
In balmy autumn, or thro' summer groves,
Or beside fountains where the noonday heat
Came never; gentlest Pyrrha silent then,
And listening to her lover's voice so low,
Which, while it languish'd or spoke soft reproach,
Hung like sweet music in her charmed ear.
At last they wed: No voice of parent spoke
Ungentle words which now too often mar
Life's first fair passion: then no gods of gold
Usurping swayed with bitter tyranny
That sad domain the heart. Love's rule was free,
(Ranging through boundless air and happy heaven,
And earth) when Pyrrha wed the Titan's son.
—The winds sang at their nuptial gentle tunes,
And roses opened, on whose crimson hearts
The colour of love is stamped; and odours rare
Came steaming from the morn-awakening flow'rs,
Which then forgot to close: Thessalian pipes
Were heard in vallies, and from thickets green
The Sylvans peeped delighted, then drew back
And shouted thro' the glades: Wood nymphs lay then

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Beside the banks of running rivers, glad
For once to hear the shepherd's simple song;
And many a pleasant strife that night was had
On oaten reed and pastoral instrument,
Beneath the mild eye of the quiet moon.
“Joy to Pandora's child! Supreme delight
To the great Titan's son!”—all shouted forth.
“Joy!” and the words went through the far vales sounding,
And thro' the forests tall, and over hills
And dells, where slumberous melancholy streams
Awoke and gave an echo. In dark woods
The wild horse started from his midnight sleep,
And shook his mane and shrilly spoke aloud.
The Nightingale lay silent in the leaves,
For joy was grief to her: the timorous sheep
Were silent; and the backward-glancing hare
Lay close, and scarce the wild deer stirred the fern.
O happy amorous hours! O gentlest night!
When Pleasure left her home with winged Love:—
How often was that night in after times

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Brought back! How often looks all light went forth,
And kisses pressed on lips glistening with dew,
And words more soft than zephyr ever breathed
In May, and sighs more soft than any word.
On the swift pinions of untired delight
Passed the bright year; and one fair infant, while
On the young mother's swelling breast it lay,—
Lay like a sleeping flower, blooming lone
In beauty, with no sweet companion nigh,
Drew heart to heart, and with unconscious power
Breathed pleasures new, pure, and ineffable.
—A lovely sight it was, when from his toil
Returning, or grave thought, or mountain sport,
Deucalion reached his home. By the rude door
Grew sycamore and limes whose branches hung
Like amorous tresses, and around whose trunks
The honey-suckle wound its fragrant arms;
And laurels always green and myrtle-flowers
Were there, which shook their white buds to the moon,
And there, long waiting his return, was she,

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The gentlest Pyrrha, who each happy day
Gathered her fairest fruits to welcome him.
Thus did the God-descended Titan dwell
Thro' hours and months of joy; Pyrrha the while,
Meek handmaid, happy mother, fondest wife
And faithful, to her most harmonious thoughts
Gave voice, and uttered music to the morn;
And told how grateful was she to the skies,
To silence, and the air, which on its wings
Carried her sweet thanks past the farthest tops
Of Pelion, and grey Ossa, and beyond
Lone Athos, thro' the golden gates of Jove,—
Where on imperial cloud he singly sits,
Pavilioned by the rainbows, but uncrowned
Save by his hyacinthine locks which hang
Down like a cloud, and cast for ever out
Quick splendours, fiercer than are seen at noon
When bright Apollo wears his Syrian rays.
There sits he in his state, and there around
Stand all the Olympian gods and shapes, save one,
Juno his Queen, who near his feet reclines.

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—From that high station Jove doth watch the world:
Its happiness and woe; its good and evil;
Its many hopes, and dumb unspoken doubts,
And the first births of error; lonely pain;
Madness, and mirth, and heart-corroding care;
And fears which plough the forehead with deep lines,
Like wisdom; and electric thought that springs
Like lightning from the inspired poet's brain.
Thus, bound in amorous chains, the lovers lived.—
Meantime, in Thessaly the times were rank:
Men grew degenerate; women sank abased;
And childhood lost its smile, and age its claim
To honour. Jove upon his skiey throne
Heard now no incense rise, no prayer, no thanks;
But, in their stead, commotions that shook towns,
Curses and vain defiance laughing loud:
And black abominations and foul thoughts
Were bred and nourished, till the heart became
Spotted as with a plague.—
Then Falsehood first was known, lean Avarice, Hate,
Hot Vengeance, and the virgin's ravishment,

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Cunning, and Theft; and Murder stalked abroad,
Till sleep forsook the night and Fear was born.—
Such sin was never done nor stain beheld
Thro' wide creation since the world began,
Save when Jehovah shot his fiery rain
Down on Gomorrah, and that city razed
And ruined, and its tenants all destroyed.
Jove saw the sin, and o'er his forehead large
(Whereon, as on a map, the world is seen)
There passed the shadow of a storm.—‘Behold!
He said; and as he spoke the vassal skies
Trembled, and white Olympus to its heart
Sickened and shook: then, stretching wide abroad
His sceptre which doth compass land and sea,
He pointed towards the ocean caverns, where
Upon his coral bed the sea-god lay
Reposing:—thro' the hollows of the deep
Where tempests come not, and thro' all the caves
Of that green world and watery palaces,
The word resounded:—from his bed uprose
The brother of Jove, and with a sign replied.

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Then in a moment from their quartered homes
The winds came muttering,—West and blighting East,
And South; while Boreas prison-doomed and mad
Flew to the North, and shivering branch and trunk
Lifted the billows till their curling heads
Struck the pale stars.—At last the wet South hung
Brooding alone, down-weighed by cloud and shower,
And bound in black, mourning the coming doom,
And with his raven wings and misty breath
Allured the storms. Wide-stretching clouds around
(A dark confederacy) in silence met,
Hiding all Heaven. Towards the glooming shore
The tempest sailed direct, and on the top
Of Pelion burst and swept away its pines
By thousands:—Where it burst a way was made
Like that torn by the avalanche, when it falls
Louder than crashing thunder, amidst smoke
And ruin, bounding from the topmost Alps
O'er chasm and hill, and strips the forests bare.
Oh! woe, deep woe to fruitful Thessaly!
That tempest-shock sounded all o'er the land,

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And men left their low dwellings, and came forth
And saw the sheeted cataracts gush from Heaven,
Like rivers that had burst their bonds, and fall
Darkening the day, until those ceaseless floods
Drowned and destroyed the herbs and bended corn,
Flowers and fruits, the wealth of all the year.—
For a time the earth drank in the mighty rains;
For a time,—but sated soon, morasses shone
Where plains had stretched, and ripling rivers left
Their channels old and wandered far away.
Upon a hilly slope lay Pyrrha's home
Still safe from the rising waters; yet she feared.
“Deucalion!”—(on their mossy bed they lay,
And heard without the hissing rain descend.)
“Deucalion! Ah! I fear, Deucalion,
The gods are angered; not with thee, dear friend,
For, tho' the Titan's son, thy vows have been
Constant, thine actions holy. Unto Jove
And Themis have we bowed and prayed—in vain:
For lo! the storms are out, and Heaven is dark
Perpetually. Apollo now no more
Rises at morning nor at evening fades;

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And Dian, who when the year was wasting looked
But pale amidst the fighting elements,
Hath vanish'd quite: the stars are gone; the day
Hath died:—the earth itself passeth away.”—
Thus spoke that gentle woman and lay still,
Weeping and full of fears: Deucalion took
Her nearer to his heart:—“Themis is just,”
Sighing he said, “and kind, and tho' a frown
Hath hung upon the forehead of great Jove
Awhile, yet clearer light will come at last,
And he will smile and we rejoice again.
Believe it, love: and know, a dream—a thought
How thou may'st yet be saved hath come to me,
And I will labour long and shape a raft
Wherein upon the rough wave thou shalt pass
To happier shores, sweet Pyrrha.”—Still she sighed,
While he, still soothing, from her forehead pale
Parted the dark brown hair, and pressed thereon
His lips in silence. Thus, heart-folded close
She wept away her fears, and slumber fell
Like snow-down on her:—Quietly she slept
Without a dream until the morning came.

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Morn came: but that broad light which hung so long
In heaven forsook the showering firmament.—
The clouds went floating on their fatal way.
Rivers had grown to seas: the great sea swol'n
Too mighty for his bound broke on the land,
Roaring and rushing, and each flat and plain
Devoured.—Upon the mountains now were seen
Gaunt men, and women hungering with their babes,
Eying each other, or with marble looks
Measuring the space beneath swift-lessening.
At times a swimmer from some distant rock
Less high, came struggling with the waves, but sank
Back from the slippery soil. Pale mothers then
Wept without hope, and aged heads struck cold
By agues trembled like red autumn leaves;
And infants moaned and young boys shrieked with fear.
Stout men grew white with famine. Beautiful girls
Whom once the day languished to look on, lay
On the wet earth and wrung their drenched hair;
And fathers saw them there, dying, and stole
Their scanty fare, and while they perished thrived.

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Then Terror died, and Grief, and proud Despair,
Rage and Remorse, infinite Agony,
Love in its thousand shapes, weak and sublime,
Birth-strangled; and strong Passion perished.
The young, the old, weak, wise, the bad, the good
Fell on their faces, struck,—whilst over them
Washed the wild waters in their clamorous march.
Still fell the flooding rains. Great Ossa stood
Lone, like a peering Alp, when vapours shroud
Its sides, unshaken in the restless waves;
But from the weltering deeps Pelion arose
And shook his piny forehead at the clouds,
Moaning, and crown'd Olympus all his snows
Lost from his hundred heads, and shrank aghast.
Day, Eve, Night, Morning came and passed away.
No Sun was known to rise and none to set:
'Stead of its glorious beams a sickly light
Paled the broad East what time the day is born:
At others a thick mass vaporous and black,
And firm like solid marble, roofed the sky;
Yet gave no shelter.

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—Still the ravenous wolf
Howled, and wild foxes and the household dog
Grown wild, upon the mountains fought and fed
Each on the other. The great Eagle still
In his home brooded, inaccessible,
Or, when the gloomy morning seemed to break,
Floated in silence o'er the shoreless seas.
Still the quick snake unclasped its glittering eyes,
Or shivering hung about the roots of pines;
And still all round the vultures flew, and watched
The tumbling waters thick with bird and beast;
Or, dashing in the midst their ravenous beaks,
Plundered the screaming billows of their dead.
Ne'er has such ruin been or such despair
Since, in records or tales of Thessaly.
Earth shook, great Mother, and from all her limbs
Sent signs of terror and unnatural pain:
The vallies trembled, and great lakes unlocked
Their dark foundations, and laid bare to day
Naiads with watery locks and elfish shapes,
Half sylvan, such as loved of old to haunt

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On the fresh edge of forest-girded pools,
And shook the gladed echoes with their laugh.
Whole plains heaved up: meadows were torn and turn'd
Downwards, and ancient oaks whose crooked feet
Were riveted in rocks were wrenched away
And bared to the wild blast and sullen rain.
Wonder grew plain as truth. Etna, far off—
Terrible Etna, spuming, cast abroad
Her blazing rivers with loud groaning sounds
That tore the amazed heart of Sicily:—
Such noise was never bred on the great shores
Where Orinoco, huge sea-creature, comes
Rolling his shining train, o'er rapids and gulphs
Descending swift, and for a thousand leagues
Ravages wood and wild, and mad at last
Dashes his watery scorn against the breast
That fed him:—She, fond ocean-mother, still
Receives him to deep calm within her arms.
Higher and higher fled the wasted throngs,
And still they hoped for life, and still they died,

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One after one, some worn, some hunger-mad:
Here lay a giant's limbs sodden and shrunk,
And there an infant's, white like wax, and close
A matron with grey hairs, all dumb and dead:—
Meanwhile, upon the loftiest summit safe,
Deucalion laboured through the dusky day,
Completing as he might his floating raft,
And Pyrrha, sheltered in a cave, bewailed
Her child which perished.—
Still the ruin fell:
No pity, no relapse, no hope:—The world
Was vanishing like a dream. Lightning and Storm,
Thunder and deluging rain now vexed the air
To madness, and the riotous winds laughed out
Like Bacchanals, whose cups some God has charmed.
Beneath the headlong torrents towns and towers
Fell down, temples all stone, and brazen shrines;
And piles of marble, palace and pyramid
(Kings' homes or towering graves) in a breath were swept
Crumbling away. Masses of ground and trees
Uptorn and floating, hollow rocks brute-crammed,

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Vast herds, and bleating flocks, reptiles, and beasts
Bellowing, and vainly with the choaking waves
Struggling, were hurried out,—but none returned:
All on the altar of the giant Sea
Offered, like twice ten thousand hecatombs,
Whose blood allays the burning wrath of Gods.
—Day after day the busy Death passed on
Full, and by night returned hungering anew;
And still the new morn filled his horrid maw,
With flocks, and herds, a city, a tribe, a town,
One after one borne out, and far from land
Dying in whirlpools or the sullen deeps.
All perished then:—The last who lived was one
Who clung to life because a frail child lay
Upon her heart: weary, and gaunt, and worn,
From point to point she sped, with mangled feet,
Bearing for aye her little load of love:—
Both died,—last martyrs of another's sins,
Last children they of Earth's sad family.
Still fell the flooding rains. Still the Earth shrank:
And Ruin held his strait terrific way.

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Fierce lightnings burnt the sky, and the loud thunder
(Beast of the fiery air) howled from his cloud,
Exulting, towards the storm-eclipsed moon.
Below, the Ocean rose boiling and black,
And flung its monstrous billows far and wide
Crumbling the mountain joints and summit hills;
Then its dark throat it bared and rocky tusks,
Where, with enormous waves on their broad backs,
The demons of the deep were raging loud;
And racked to hideous mirth or bitter scorn
Hissed the Sea-angels; and earth-buried broods
Of Giants in their chains tossed to and fro,
And the sea-lion and the whale were swung
Like atoms round and round.—
Mankind was dead:
And birds whose active wings once cut the air,
And beasts that spurned the waters,—all were dead:
And every reptile of the woods had died
Which crawled or stung, and every curling worm:—
The untamed tiger in his den, the mole
In his dark home—were choaked: the darting ounce,
And the blind adder and the stork fell down

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Dead, and the stifled mammoth, a vast bulk,
Was washed far out amongst the populous foam:
And there the serpent, which few hours ago
Could crack the panther in his scaly arms,
Lay lifeless, like a weed, beside his prey.
And now, all o'er the deeps corpses were strewn,
Wide-floating millions, like the rubbish flung
Forth when a plague prevails; the rest down-sucked,
Sank, buried in the world-destroying seas.—
Confusion raged and ruled. At last, up-grew
A mingling of Earth, Sea, and Heaven and Air;
All one they looked, impenetrable, black
As Chaos, when the salient atoms flew
Around the abyss and made all space a Hell.
Nature lay drowned and dead. Fens, moors, and bogs,
And pleasant vallies and aspiring hills,
Rivers and trees were lost, mountains and lakes:
Even Heaven eternal, whom no cloud before
Utterly barred, thro' its serene domain
Kept captive all the Gods and lucid stars,

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Mercurius and Apollo and the rest;
And hid their beauty from the fainting world.
—A mass like the great ocean when all winds
Blow and lay bare its hollows, and shake forth
The century-sleeping sands, until the foam
Grows thick and dark, rolled over sea and land,—
A perilous mass of floods, fierce as the North
In March, when scything blasts strip all the bones,
And loud as when the riven air proclaims
Earthquakes at Hecla, or once bright Peru.
—It is a task beyond the Muse,—and yet
Sometimes she writeth with a golden pen,—
Witness those tales breathing of Paradise
And all that sinful mirth of Circe's son,
And where the mightiest poet open lays
Red Pandæmonium to eternal view,
And numbereth out the Peers of Satan, all
Tossed on the fiery waters, and bewailing
Their frightful fall; from Heaven's precipitous bounds
Cast like the refuse, to find out their way
Thro' depths and dark abysses, and the jar

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Earlier than Order, till the mouths of Hell
Received them flaming,—a tremendous home.
It is a task beyond the Muse, too far,
To paint that leaden darkness which obscured
The world, or that wide horror which was born
When every element forsook its name
And nature, and all dumb and innocent things
Perished, because imperial man had erred.—
A dreariness there is which chills the heart,
When the sun dies on some ice-barren plain,
Cheerless and wintry-pale; and when the wind
Waileth in loud December, calling ghosts
To feed the sight of credulous age; and when
The hail-storm comes; and when the great sea chafes,
And the wild horses of the Atlantic shake
Their sounding manes and dash the foam to Heaven.
These sights are vanquished by the painter's toil:
But when the intolerable flood prevailed,—
That watery massacre, which quite destroyed
Thessaly, man and woman, and children frail,
Birds, beasts, the very worm, the tree, the flower,
When nothing was—but ruin, and nought seen

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But one monotonous dreary waste of waves
Tumbling in monstrous eddies, and a light
Like an eclipse complete when day is hid,
The painter's pencil and the poet's pen
Must fail, confounded at a scene so dire.—
On a drear morning, ague-cold and dark,
Deucalion from the mountain's lonely top
Launched his frail raft, rich with its living freight
And laden full: Scarce light enough was seen
To show that quarter of the sky 'neath which
The green Parnassus (when that mount was green)
Held station; yet with hands which trembled not
He struck his piny oar against the soil
And floated on the waters.—
—So he left
The failing land, and then loud gusts uprose
Curling the billows with unnatural rage,
Till on the summit of the desert hill
They rushed, and in the Titan's sight tore up

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The knarled oaks, washing and wasting all
The ruinous earth until no trace was seen.
“Whither, ah! whither—to what happier shore
Steer'st thou thy way, Deucalion?” Pyrrha spoke.
He, glancing at the sky, just where the North
Is cut by the eastern light at early dawn,
(The mid-point of the compass) bade her gaze:
“What see'st thou—nought?—Poor girl, thine eye is dim:
For hope still lives.—Come! Bride of my despair,
(Now of my hope,) we'll live or die together.
Along the desarts of the deep we'll go,
Along the wide and wave-blown wilderness,
Undaunted and untiring. Some fair land
There is which Jove designs shall be our home:
Believe it. O Thessalian Pyrrha!—Thou,
Child of the ocean, canst thou fear its rage?”—
So spoke he, smiling thro' deep sorrow,—filled
With fear which yet he kept hid in his heart;
And with prevailing looks and voice all love
Cheered the sad Pyrrha on her watery way.

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—Morn passed, and noon, and eve along; and night
Over their heads hung like a pall, through which
No minute star nor glimpse of faintest light
Could pierce; but all was dark,—dark like the grave.
—And so they floated on their fated track,
Borne onwards till the o'erwhelming rains had ceased,
And the wild winds were sleeping: and around
No noise was heard, save from their beating hearts,
And the lone dashings of the endless seas.