LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. DELPHIC DAYS BY DENTON J. SNIDER. ^-aX^N OF L ,., -;h divinities new here are enthroned out of place: ! i For the dark-stolcd Saint now presides in the bright-dro]iping fountain, — \ The fair fane of the Muse yields to the shrine of Saint John. : i Still there is joy in the thought that continually hei'e is devotion, ] That the beauty antique gleams through the ages of night. ' But the black robe of the Saint supersedes the white folds of the Goddess j; Long are his hair and his beard, gloomy his thoughts are and grim j \ Skull and bones lie around him, while he on eternity maunders, ; Starved into tatters of flesh, wrinkled in form to a raa;. ' This is the body that made revelations of beasts and of monsters Whose grisly offspring have slimed many Parnassian rills. | Banish Oh Psycho forever the brood of dragons and devils, I The dark brood of Hell born in the brain of the Saints, j i Who have changed the beautiful world to a jungle of goblins, : Till the horrible ci-azc seems to have inade us all mad. \ i What a pity that now they possession should have of Castalia, j And such monsters should breed right in the Muses' glad stream! ' So have the clear voiced vSisters been frightened away from their waters^; Always to sing they refuse when they with horror are filled. i Delphi. ^8 Oh the Saints atrabiliaiy, dismal their thought and their raiment, Dark they are to the eye, equally dark to the soul. And I confess, the angels are not to my liking, though radiant, They are some neutral thing, though all their wings be of gold, For they seem but of one sex, or what is the same thing, of no sex;. If they be woman or man, surely it does them no good. But the nymphs I adore, as they show their forms in the fountain. Often I look at them bathe, sporting their limbs in its plash, Nor do they hide the white body away in the dungeon of gavmenls,. As if guilty they were, having divinity's form. 2. What is that sound re-cehoing out of the gorge ol Bagenyi When the Caslalian fount shows the first ciystalline throb ? Oft the dull thud is repeated and smites the rough side of the mountaui' 'Tis the blow of a maul in the firm hand of a dame AVho is washing and poiinding the folds into whiteness and order; Even the folds must be beat ere to new music they move. Then they will glide most winsomcl}' into the rhythm of sculpture,. And they will glow in the dance on the fair 3'outh as he treads. Just behold those vigorous blows from the arm of the washer: Seeing a thing made clean gives a delight to the Gods. Many Nausicaas now are p)i'eparing their own and their bi'others' Irreproachable robes for the gay dance at the feast. But Oh think — this is poesy's fount, this is the rill of Castalia Which is now used by the town cleansing its filth in the stream. What do the Muses say to it as the}^ arise from the water ? j 34 DelpJii. I i Are thoy, 1 wonder, in wrath, or do they sanction this use ? : But a voice, playing over the sui'face, thus spake from the brooklet : It is right, it is right, and I approve every blow. ,; Many a stain besmirches the raiment of sunny Parnassus; 1 Clrcat is the need just now that it be thoroughly bucked. ; Pound the garments, Oh washers,w^ith all the tierce might of your muscle, 1 For they again must be clean ere we the Muses arise. ' Dash them and drench them and rinse them i n the clear depths of Castalia ' That they not only white but also musical be. i Long and carelessly have they been woimt, until the white drapery Seems the dress of despair, rumpled to numberless rucks. — ,; So I look at the washerwomen there wielding the beetle ' Pitiless on the grim tilth with irrepressible brawn ; j These are now the true nymphs of the stream, full of anger and vengeance : That the bright robes have been so'lcd with all the dirt of the earth. : Many a feature they have that tells of their pedigree ancient, \ Still their limbs ai^e undraped as in the ages of old ; j Full the bare arms are of swift-sweeping, merciless tendon and muscle, i And there peers the nude thigh from the short kn'tle below ; ; But still fuller tlie breasts are, reflecting their dance in the water, ■ Softly imparting their swell to the white folds in the stream. j i Sad necessity — nymphs of Caslalia transformed into washers, ; Turned to Furies of thews, forced to belabor mere filth ! i i But for the festival wait, when the youths shall move in the chorus, 1 Then the glory of brawn from every ruffle will gleam, | And the folds of the garments antique will leap in their splendor, : For once more they are new, fresh from the Muses' clear ril'. i Del^pM. 35 3. On the edge of the chasm behold yon child ni the distance Gathering flowers alone, lost in the joy of the hours. With its own sweet thoughts it pleasantty seems to he sporting, As it doth skip round the rocks, busy from blossom to bloom. While I look at its play I feel indefinable longing, For a young voice I can hear echoing over the seas. Nearer it comes to the perilous edge of the cliff— and yet nearer : 1 am afraid lest it fall — what a fierce pang in my breast ! Still along on the brink of the chasm in peace it is playing ; I would shout, but a bridge built of one voice can not reach. ISTow it sees a new flower inclining just over the margin With a cup of fresh red ; thither it springs and bends Over that precipice deep of hundreds of horrible fathoms, Reaching out its small hand -for the bright gem of the clifP. Agony gives a rude wrench to the heart— it seizes the fancy : See ! down, down the child falls into the depths with a plunge ! Brains are dashed on the rocks that bloodily now are bespattered, Crushed ai^e its flesh and bones to an indifferent pulp ; Eed with the stain has become the pure flow of the rill of Castalia, Its white pebbles are fouled with the thick blotches of blood. — Hold, oh Fancy, for-thou hast defiled the stream of the Muses, These are thine own ghastly shows, hideous spectres of death, For the child is safe — now it runs in delight up the hill-side Quite away from the brink ; also the flower it has, Which along with a nosegaj" it joyously brings to its father, 3 36 Delphi. Who in an Olive's fresh shade rests from the heat of the day. [ Oh grisly Fancy, Castalia cannot endure thy horrors, , From grim phantoms she flees back to her cave in the rocks. ! One drop of scarlet thrown into her stream will stain her clear waters;^ vStay thy sanguineous hand, smear not the Muses with gore, ; For the white folds of their robes most quickly will show the dark i blood-spot, : So that the Furies they seem, not the mild Gi-oddesses, bright With these rays wherein they now dwell mid choruses happy, Here in the Delphian world ruled from Parnassian tops. , For each song of the Sisters is closely inwoven of sunshine, i Every note is a joy hymned in accord with the beams. So let me banish forever all blood, all terror and darkness : Only with Phoebus henceforth I am determined to dwell. i 4. \ At the waters of joyous Castalia I met an old woman, ^ Often she crossed herself as she was passing the brook ; • From her lips of lean wrinkles darkly she muttered a prayer j To the Saint in the fount where the bright Muses once dwelt. i I must acknowledge, the presence here of that weazen old woman, ' With the thought of that Saint, drove all the Sisters away, i And called up in my soul the waters of bitter resentment, \ So that my Delphian mood nearly was drowned in their surge. : When she had ended her prayer, quickly she turned and addressed me :'. Why, oh stranger, I ask, do you not make sacred signs , Of the Cross on your breast as you pass St. John's holy chapel ? i Delphi. 37 Infidel art thou — a Tai"k — thus t > neglect Christian rites ? Yes, I fear it is true, thy belief is not mine — I answered : In my heart I abhor here such a gesture to make, Or now even to think of the Cross with its horrible torture : Any thought of the kind hurls into chaos my days. Here at Delphi there is no death — only life in its beauty — Save the death through that Cross, death of the Muses and Gods, lam one with the Earth now, and with the goodness of JN'ature, Simply I live through the hours filled with the joy of her strain ; After this life I think not of realms of tumultuous anguish; IN'or do I wish for myself any one's death, not Christ's ; Time was once when I hoped for decease or desired some Redeemer For me to die, and perchance thus to relieve me of pain ; But 1 live now in this Delphian sunshine, I sigh for no Heaven, Merely I wish to remain blent in the haruiony sweet That doth SAvell from the two great worlds without and within me : Double that chorus of worlds, but their deej) music is one. Yery different once, it is true, were my thoughts and my feelings. And again they may change in the still beat of the years. — I do not think the old woman could know quite what I was saying, Still I continued to speak, talking perchance to myself: Do not suppose that harmonious living is not a religion. Though it be not thine own, though too its source be remote. Like some melody sweeter by distance, the old Grods of Hellas Softly arise and attune to a new concord ray life, And at this moment they are commanding most decplj" raj worshijD ; The Castalian nymphs, too, I adore from my soul. 38 Delphi. , j And far above all others I daily commune with Apollo, \ "Who still loves his old haunts, though he iiiikinged must come. \ Look up yonder at Delphi — -think what Apollo once made it — ' For he made it the soul in the fair body of Greece, ; And he decked it with all of the splendor of shrines and of temples : : Look at it now, the poor clump — 'tis the abode of the Saints. ] So, good woman, to these do not ask me to offer devotion ; \ i Hero I will see the old Gods as they once reigned from those heights.; I 5. ■ ■ > In the moonlight yonder U23rises to heaven Phloumbouki, \ All alive it appears under the beams of the night; i Monsters of darkness are, crawling far up to the perch of its summit, I While its cavernous sides house many hideous shapes. Not for the world would I enter this hour the gorge of Bagenyi, ! Out of fear of the ghosts which there abide in the dark. I Now is the reign of Artemis, sister of bright-faced Apollo, ^ But the clear God has fled from the dim earth and its nooks ; Men are asleep until his return, avoiding the Goddess, j 1 Not a fold can be seen in the faint glimmer of rays ; ; Hushed are also the hymns of the maidens, the children of sunshine, j All the birds are at rest, save the dull brooders of night. ' But the fantastic huge monsters of chaos break loose from the mountain,! Out of the caverns they come whither they fled from the God: | For the sister, though gracious, is weak and can not control them, i Can not the dragons control fi'eed from the light of the sun. ] At her spell the whole brood doth seem to leap forth to existence, ; Delphi. 39 Under her smile they are born, born in her mystical beams. Oh high Apollo, well wert thou named the slayer of Python ; The huge serpent was pierced by the keen arrow shot forth From thy bow all light; of old it was slain here at Delphi, And this rock was transformed into the eye of the world. Once again, oh day-g.id, place on the bow-string that arrow, Slaughter the numberless brood which has been reared in the night, And the infinite throng of phantasmas, the monster-begotten, Pierce — and restore thy bright reign as it was once on these heights. 6. On this hill-side who built the first temple to far-darting Phoebus ? An old story it is, ancient js too the dispute. Three are the legends which are now graceful]}^ asking our credence : Out of the authors of old let them with prudence be scanned. This is the first report, that the structure was built of the laurel, Tree of Apollo's love — whom he once wooed as a maid, Beautiful Daphne, changed to a tree and then wrought to a temple: This account I believe, for it is worthy of faith. I myself have built a small fane out of leaflets and branches, In it I sing to the Grod many a laurel-crowned hymn, That the harmony sweet of the Muses may float in his presence : There he gives me to dwell viewing his glorious face. Then the second report of it comes, and this I must tell thee : It was built by the bees, architects first of the world. And its walls they made of their cells, and the mortar was honey, Sweetest of artists they build all of their instinct to form. 40 I)elj)lii. \ 1 \ Then they filled the fair home of Apollo with stores from the flowers, \ So that the dew of these bees sweetened the bread of mankind. j Also this storj^ I can not deny, for I ate of the honey, j And the same structure beheld where dear Apollo resides. Yet the third account too I believe — it was builded by Yulcan — On the Olympian heights fair it arose in his shop. ^ Many a line can be seen that was drawn by his compass. ; All the stones have been hewn by a divinity's skill, To a deep subtle music taking their place in the building, ,: Chanting when they are there soft unaccountable hymns. ; i Bound this fane is forever rej)osing a chorus of sculpture, ' Forms of the Gods above, copied from thence into stone ; 1 And this temple entire was borne down to men from Olympus, In a transport divine guided by Hoi'mes the swift ; ! For it is modeled, they say, from palaces mighty of marble, | Which there repose on the heights in a perpetual day, . Eeared b}"" Vulcan himself when he built the Olympian city For the bright Gods to indwell ; — whence they come down to our i i earth. '; Air the reports I believe — all three are worthy of credence — j And they are true I maintain, if thou but know what is true. \ In the old ages was Delphi prophetic, doubly prophetic; Destiny distant it showed both for itself and the woidd. What it to others in vision foretold Avas what itself sutfered. Always the arrow turned back into itself that it shot. Delphi. 41 What it saw in the sport of the hours, was but its own image, For in its soul. was the type of the Great One and the All. So in revealing itself, it the universe ever revealed — What else could it declare but what it had in itself? Such is the prophet, alas ! and such is the painful prefiiction, ^Gainst his own heart he directs what he presages to man, For he too is a man. When beautiful Hellas in passion Turned against its dear self arms that were meant for its foe, So too Delphi Avas turned, of its own foreknowledge the victim, For it also was Greek and was involved in the doom. That irreversible word which was uttered by priestess enraptured, Held the dim fate of herself, also the fate of the iane ; She was rent in her soul by the might of the same strong convulsion Which she saw in the land, since it lay too in herself Brother was turned against brother and Delphi was turned against Delphi- Then fair Hellas was lost — Delphi the seeress was lost. Look at these ruins which peep here — they lay in the foresight of Delphi, Still she could not escape what she so clearly foresaw ; JSTor yet could she by silence avoid her dolorous duty : When to be prophet she ceased, then she had ceased to be. Strange is, oh prophet, thy lot, — what thou seest and sayest to others Is but thyself and thy fate which thou behold'st in the Hours. It is night. From bcloAv to the highest Delphian summits Darkness covers the earth. Silence has opened her reign. 42 Delphi. JSTo one would say that here was once the bright home of Aj^ollo, So completely extinct are all the beams of his face. Yet behold a siiigle dim light far off in the valley, Where the Olives are — what can it mean, do yon think ? 'Tis the camp-fire' lit by a shepherd — Wallaehian shepherd, Who sojourns for a time that he may pasture his flock On the thyme that sprouts in the spring from the sides o? Parnassus : Stranger he comes from aiiar, seeking the fragrant herbs. That small light with its rays bores a hole through the darkness to Delphi Till it reaches the eye ; by it white fragments I see Faintly trying to send some gleam of their ancient perfection As they peer out at my feet, with their bright smile broke in twain. Here the shepherd remains for the festival fair of the spring-tide And on the slant of the hills mingles his herd with the flowers. But when the summer has come he flies to his home in the mountains Toward the distant IS'orth, shunning the rage of the Dog. There he recounts to his rustic neighbors who gather around him, What he has seen fiar away — wonders of climate and skj-, Wonders of ruins festooned with many a song and story, Dowered with magical spell by the weird hand of a God. Notice his light, how it shimmers across the waves of the darkness ! ISTow it doth seem to go out; now it doth flicker anew Dimly, as if ^twere a beacon tossing about on the ocean ; Now a blaze it sends uj) flashing the ti|)s of the cUfi's. Yet all alone it shines in the valley — no other shepherd Hither has come from abroad for the Parnassian food. Delphi. 43 But I can see in that flamelet, though distant, the Olives rejoicing, Its small glow they feel like the apjjroach of the dawn ; Also Castalia leaps in its light with a fresh laugh of gladness, As her diamonds are lit by a soft ray in the night. Still 'tis only a wandering flash by a stranger enkindled, Throwing its sheen for a time over the village and hills ; He will sojourn in the valle^^ merely along with the flowers, Then for his home he departs ; with many yeanlings increased Is his herd, and is fed to sleek fatness on thyme of Parnassus ; Fragrance also is borne from the sweet flowers and herbs. So the rude shepherd — the distant Wallachian shepherd. Builds a small camp-fire here where was the Muses' abode. Book Second. It th^ mM^~ CYCLET FIEST. In fair Hellas there grow manj^^.joj^ous j^oung sprouts, but the Olive Was the first love of my heart, and will remain the last. See how it shoots up there on the hill-side and in the valley ! Youth is the name of that tree, beauty its form and its life. Softly it waves in the wind that comes like a breath from Parnassus — Wind sweetly tuned in the twigs, sent from the heights by a Muse, Who outpours her melodious tones in the rustle of branches, And imbreathes all her grace on the young leaves in the dance. So each tree, each leaflet doth move in the mei'riest humor, Yet they all move at once, forming a chorus of joy Over the fields, far down through the vale, to the limit of vision, Turning their silver-green robes to the mild sway of the breeze. Everywhere on the branches there hang multitudinous berries, All in a laugh and a dance with the gay leaves and the limbs. Some are ripe with dark-brown visage, and ready to gather, Often they fall of themselves into the lap of the earth ; Others are young, quite young, and still cling to the arms of the mother. Though their cheeks have a flush, turning to blushes of love. Why do the Olives rejoice so ? Under them are the Parnassian maidens, Wafted by thoughts of the dance like the light leaves of the tree In the Avind. The fruit from the ground and the branches they gather — 48 In the Olives. j 1 r'airest fruit themselves, tinted by airs from the hills — ^ All with fluttering hearts, as they think of the chorus to-morrow, For then a festival is, with the bright dance at the trees. ! 2. i i What a choir of birds I hear as I pass through the Olives ! i Spring has just come down the vale, now it is tunmg all throats. I Each glad songster doth seem in this gi'ove his voice to be testing j On the sunny bland air made for the note of the heart. I Thousandfold are the tones that through one another are darting, "Winding around in soft turns 5 tender with love they embrace. j Yet the whole orchestra deeply to one limpid note is attuned, | Though some discords may rise o'er the clear lake of the sound. 1 What is the strain that they carol ? List, till we catch its fine pulses — I 'Tis the gladness of youth throbbing in hymns at the spring. j j Thousands are also the songsters mid the new leaves of the branches, 1 i Each one piping his best, each with some trill of his own. I Some have a loud full voice heard afar, but it has little beauty, Some have a small low note, but it of sweetness is full ; j i Some utter sounds that ferociously hiss with the hiss of a serpent, ' Even the sound will bite though but of air be its fangs ; . Some are old, going back in their strain to the ages heroic : ■"{ Oft deep voices I hear, chanting, I fancy, of Troy. 1 Some are young, just fledged, and can not yet fly from the branches, f Or if they did seek to fly, down they would flutter to earth. i Still they all sang — the Greek songsters — sang in melodious measures, \ Though there were many engulphed in the grand swell of the whole. : In the Olives. 49 Each seemed trying to drown all the others in oceans of music : But I could hear one voice sweeter than all the rest And much stronger; for in some of its notes it rang like a bugle, Then it would melt in its strain till the soul gushed at the eye. So they continued to sing — that tuneful Parnassian army, Mid the poetical leaves adding their sparkle to song. What are the songsters trying to do ? As I think, I shall tell thee — They are trying to win places of perch in this grove, That they forever may dwell in the glittering palace of Olives, And he heard of all men, haply, who stroll through the trees. Often concealed from the eye they are chanting melodious roundels ; On the dark berries they feast, nourishment rich for the song. All are my j 03', both the broad-winged poets and pin-feathered nurse- lings. For each one of them sips music and mirth from the clime. I too am going to stretch out my wings and hoj) in the branches. Also my throat I shall tune though it should fright all the grove. 3. Hear the glad voices that pass down the Delphian way in the morning ! Who are these j^eople ? I ask, — why do they sing on the road ? Pickers of Olives they are, now hastening into the orchards Where yon silvery creek spans with its girdle the dale. All day long they must stoop, still joyously chant they a ditty, As they pick, one by one, berries that lie on the ground. Toilsome yet merry the task is, since labor is seasoned with gladness, So they love their fatigue, for 'tis the food of their mirth. 50 In the Olives. Thus they sing as they toil, and they mid the Ohves are happy, Ere the Parnassian tops yet have been clomb by the sun ; Maidens are most of them singing along with the birds before sunrise, While the long shades of the hills stretch from the East down the vale. Just where the road is crossed by the runnel my stand I have taken : There the paths from the town all come together in one ; There I look at the merry j^oung throng and receive friendly greeting From cerulean eyes set in a frame of gold hair. The fresh hummers continue to pour from the hives of the village For an hour or two ; each in mine ejo droj5S a smile, That is shed from the lips as invisible dew of the Graces ; 'Tis their alms to my heart, which a poor pilgrim has come. Still the one has not passed yet, the right one; impatient I loiter Till she arrive from the heights, winged as a sweet morning dream. To her glance I am bound, and by it am borne to the Olives, There now with it I sport, happy the rest of the day. 4. List to yon maid who is singing far up on the side of the mountain. Where the vineyards hang, slanting adown with the steep; All alone she works, and a hj-mn she attunes to her labor. While she is trimming the vines for the bright nectar of Fall ; Scarce her shape can I see, but her voice rings over the, valley, Wafting its notes through the air, till they rebound from the hills That lie opposite ; then, most lightly they fall to the Olives Where underneath the young trees hundreds of maidenly hands In the Olives. 51 Are now busy— busy in picking the harvest of berries ; Though they are hid by the leaves, still I well know they are there. Hark ! it is the resi^onse ; not unheard have the notes of the maiden Fallen into that grove; list to the echo from thence. For from the trees another refrain swells up to the mountain; Many voices there are, melted by distance to one. Eesonant, clear and full is the strain from the Olives ascending And it responds to the first with a deepfervor of song. What are they singing of? Love— the oneness of man and of woman; Mouths by nature are twain, but the fond kiss makes them one; Two pairs of eyes with one glance, and two pairs of lips with one promise — And in the breasts of the two one happy heart with its throb. Let the bodies be double, within them is only one feeling; Yoiees may also be twain, but the sweet song makes them one. Love has transmuted into one harmony both of these echoes. Swift- winged Eros now sweeps over the mountain and vale. Thus the vineyard answers the Olives, the Olives the vineyard; Though far asunder in space, both have one passionate strain. 5. In the new rays of the morning I walk to the Delphian Olives That are strown on the hill warm w^ith the love of the sun • Far down the valley they reach to the crystalline ripple of Pleistus "Whose slender form they embrace in a soft forest of limbs. Mild is the breath of the wind that sets all the branches in motion, While the green wavelets of leaves roll down the sides of the mount. 4 52 In the Olives. Thither I turn my wandering steps in search of a maiden, Whom this morn I beheld there as I entered the trees; | Whom before I had seen in my dreams as a vision of beauty, IsTow the dim shadow is filled with the fresh fullness of life. \ 'Twas a form that always would draw the eye of a stranger, ; Who to Parnassus had come seeking the face of a maid - That had haunted his fancy from youth in all his high moments, \ To him had spoken perchance in his most raj)turous mood. ; Passing the fount of the Muses she sped from the heights of the village,' Seemed on the air to uprise, when her swift features I spied ; \ As on a picture above me I gazed at the beautiful image ; All of me changed to a hope which she most sweetly returned. In the glint of her eyes I beheld waving torches of Eros | Who before Helen's look flew and enkindled the air. 1 One more glance she threw back at me just as she entered the Olives,: Then disappeared in the leaves as a bright dream in the clouds ; I ~EoM I must follow her footsteps till perchance I may find her, ,j For some priestess she was once when Apollo here ruled. 8. I As I stray round the hills through the Olives, soon I grow thirsty, i And this thirst is so sharj) that it cuts down to my soul. \ So I seek for a spring which will cool the throbs of my fever : Here is a basin of stone filled with a crystalline draught. " Deftly the rock has been hewn to receive the rill of the mountain, j Which transjDarenlly rests in the embrace of the moss ; In ihe Olives. 53 And a small groove has been scratched in the stone for the fall of the water, Thence down the side of the rock trickles the thirst-quenching stream. Two little lips it doth fashion through which the runnel is gliding, Just where the drops with a laugh over the brim give a leap, And the stranger they gently invite to their pearls with a babble, Promising kisses of joy to every one of his sips. The fond brooklet has wound its way down from Parnassian summits, Bringing along in its breast all the fresh breath of the Spring — Whispering many a hymn from above on the brink in its passage : 'Tis impregnated still with the low note of the Muse. So I lean down on the sedge and lay my mouth to the crystal, Touch the sweet lips of the stream while of another I think. But this stone — look how it is worn — worn off with the kisses Which the passers have laid, ages on ages before. Still' the musical burn unceasing flows down from the mountain. Still the lips in the rock are just as fresh as of yore. Now every day for my walk I go by the rill in the Olives, Held as I saunter along in the soft arms of a Muse : Then when I drink, I fervently press those lips of the brooklet, While I list to the hymn sung in its dance down the hill. Draught of Parnassus — what could I do but join in the music ? So I in unison chant, tuning my voice to the stream. 7. Many an hour I wander amid the vast orchard of Olives, Gaze at the sparkle of leaves silvering over the hills ; 54 In the Olives. Even the branches I love as they rollick and laugh in the sunbeams,, And their gay humor instil into each throb of the heart. Under the trees 1 stop wherever a maiden is working, Furtive glances I east into the path of her eye, That she may see them and with them perchance she may covertly 1 dally: \ Then I pass on in my search for 'tis another I seek. : Long I hunt, deceived in my way by fantastic vain glimmers, '•■ Often I stray from the road, often I think of return. ■ But at last I discover the form that imbreathes all my fancies ; ] Deep in the grove she is hid where but few strangers approach. ; Great is my joj^; she knows too my face from the morn when she saw me ; At the Castalian rill, bent o'er the stream for a drink. > At the exchange of a look I begin to gather the Olives Scattered there under the trees — such was her laughing command;; T, the servant of Eros, now find it the sweetest of labor ,j When I stoop to the ground, thence to collect the rich fruit; \ And my delight is to heap in the basket which is the Greek maiden's] All of the Olives T pick, passing the day in fond toil. \ One subtle ray from her eye overflows me with beautiful visions; All the pay that I ask is but to look in her face. ' Many the paths are that lead from the village down to the Olives, All directions they branch, winding amid the dense trees. This is the first one — it goes direct to the ancient Metochi, In the Olives. •SS Where the monks have theii' home ma low cloister of gloom. Gentle and good are those men, they have breathed all their days into prayer. All their thoughts rise above, shunning the Olives below Where ai'e the maids. From the hill I look at the roof of the cloister, As it peacefully lies in the embrace of the leaves j But this path I avoid as if mid its rocks dwelt a dragon Snapj)ing its jaws in my face. So 1 pass on to the next Which is the second, and leads to the mill that presses the berries, Where only men are at work, making the sweet-flavored oil. Clear is the flow of the brook through the moss to the whirl of the mill- wheel, Friendly the look of the men seeing the sti'anger appear. But not the flow of the brook with its babble along the fresh channel, Not the old rustic mill, not the kind welcome of men Can detain me from this path — the third one that leads to the Olives Down in the valley below whither the maidens have gone. There at times I can see, as it flits mid the trees a red apron, Like a small tongue of flame leaj)irig in folds from the ground ; Or perchance in a flutter of wind I behold the white garment. As it seemeth to fl}^, winged with a pinion of red ; For it appears in the distance some bird of gracefullest plumage, Crimson doth flow down its breast, snow doth reflect from its back. Then, oh hear, that merry bright bird with song too is gifted, Now in the Olives it sings notes that well out of the trees Wave after wave, until they flow over me up to the hill-tops : Undulations of hymns thrilled from a joyous young heart. 56 In the Olives. This is the path lam led in by Eros unerring, my master — Down to the Olives I go, down to the Olives I go. 9. Ah I confess, the Metochi I shun — the place of calm prayer, Lapped in eternal repose mid the soft plies of the limbs, Placid it rests as if now in Heaven. Old are the Olives That around it have grown — sentinels faithful and fond, Though their trunks, so twisted and scarred, have lost their fresh juices 2^ot a maid can be found who will delay in their shade ; Into the valley below they look, where sprout the young Olives, With a mild disdain from the high perch of their site. Holy the men are who dwell there, devoted to prayer incessant ; Every moment they turn into the notes of a psalm That like incense sweet rises up from their cells into Heaven : ISTow their low chant I can hear from the small chapel of Saints, Gently accusing me thence for my sins. Shall I enter the chapel ? 1^0 — ^Eros now is my God, here I am tied to his wings ; He has my soul and has flown long before me far down to the valley Where the young Olives are, glorious sprouts of the Earth, That are leaping in sunlight away from the gloomy Metochi — Each little leaf on its twig sings a small poem of love. What will boot all my prayers, without any soul ? Let me tell thee, Body must follow the soul — down to the Olives I go. In the Olives. 57 CYCLET SECOND. I. In the hut I stopped where Philemon dwelt with his Baucis, Aged they were and infirm, still they were living alone ; Happy their days sped along like the mellowest hours of antumn, — Hazy and dim to the sight, yet they of sunshine are full. Love is here seen in its purity, cleansed from the dross of its passion, Though the senses subside, still it remains in. its glow ; And it often doth seem in the soul to redouble its fervor. Love of Psyche it is, bodiless spirit divine. Long they together have lived till each resembles the other, Time has them moulded to one till they no longer need speech ; Each doth feel as the other, each doth think as the other, Though the hearts may be twain, still there is felt but one pulse. Always they go down together at sunrise into the Olives, There they remain all the day, culling the fruit at their ease ; Then at eve they return to their home of delight in the cabin. Sweetly they lie down to rest, labor and years give repose ; And in the trance of the night, in the sj^ell that is wrought by soft slumber. Both are caressed by one song, both of them have the same dream. Aged Olives they are and wrinkled — but notice them closely : All the year round on the twigs blossoms are bursting to light. 58 In the Olives. \ So may I be when Time has crowned me with garlands of silver, \ Though he bend the old trunk, still it shall flower anew. \ Yet in my heart I would rather remain the young tree of the orchard ' Eound which the maidens will dance with the fresh rose in their | \ cheeks. \ \ 2 I Look at yon crow as he skims through the sunshine over the treetops i ^Tis a dark spot with wings playing mid beams of mild light. How he rejoices to sport all the day in etherial splendor, \ Though each feather be dipped in the grave color of night! . ; List to his note : Cluck, cluck — through the hills re-echoing deeply. Like the low hollow sound from two quick blows on a drum. Down the vale he flies, to a dot soon shrinking by distance : '- Still his voice can be heard from the black speck in the sky. • Where is he going, I wonder ? Cluck, cluck — see now he is sinking ; Down to the orchard below where his dark spouse he beholds i i Sitting expectant, alone, on the lust}^ young branch of an Olive ; Thence too her cluck can be heard, clucking her ebony lord. , That hoarse caw was the note,warm and tender, of love— of the crow's \ love : I JSTow he vaults to the twigs that to soft dalliance bid. ' There is the silvei'-green sparkle of leaves, hke the laughter of waters, i There are the maids underneath tuning their throats for the hymnj < Thither too I must go ; Cluck, cluck — the crow I must follow, Clucking me down to the trees that so much music conceal. \ In the Olives. 59 I had wound many hours through tortuous paths in the Olives, Wasting the minutes with joys under the laugli of the leaves, When not far from Arachoba, town of the beautiful women. Pearly a fountain sprang out just at the edge of the road; In the sti-eam, as it gently flowed over jiebbles, stood washers — • Fifty maidens or more who from the village had come. Fair was the vision to fall in the eye of the way-worii stranger, Healing the journey's fatigue more than a bath in the brook. There I stopjjed on the bank and watched the harmonious movement Flowing in glee out of forms tuned to a rhj'thm unheard. In that crystalline water stood many a Phidian model — Many a snow-white limb dimpled to folds by the waves ; And they seemed as if all were begotten of antique sculpture, Which an artist of old once may have wrought on these hills, Or were the daughters breathed into life by some ancient jjoet, As in his rapture he sang over these valleys his strain, leaked the hinge of the knee is, and naked the white is above it, While the pale modest thigh hides in the kirtle for shame ; And the waters are whirled in a fit of sujjreme exaltation. As the tremulous rill leaps round the ankles below ; Arms are bared to the shoulder while hands are in play with the streamlet, Round the loose garment a zone hardly restrains the co}'' dance Of those fair twin sisters that ride on the swell of the bosom : Thus in that gallery ne\y wander I long and reflect. 60 In the Olives. From the brink I touch with mine eye each turn of their members, Drink the Olympian draughts which are distilled from their forms. This is my wish : That I were but one little drop of the brooklet, That I might innocent play round the domains of their wealth. And unsuspected might brush in my sportiveness o'er the white sur- face : Now 'tis the beautiful world wholly forbidden to touch. But the eye must select — it rests on a deep-bosomed maiden, Wound are the strands other hair into long tresses of gold. Freely they fall down her neck and drop at her side to the water, Bushy tips of the braid lave in the sport of the rill. Then she stands in the crystal, intent on the glow of a garment, Phoustanella 'tis called, rutfled to many a ply; Even the folds sing a strain in the dexterous hand of the maiden. Falling in graceful grooves as they grow white at her touch. When from the bank I addressed her, she turned her face from the fountain, Wrapped me in eyes of soft blue, gently caressing with looks That I thought 1 was borne in a dream to the blue dome of Heaven : ''Grive me that vestment," I cried, "long have I sought such a garb; Shining reward I shall give thee if I can now but possess it, If the white folds shall be mine trained to the skill of thy hand. For my bod}^ I long to enwrap in the waves of their music, And my soul to attune unto their rhythmical flow, Maid of Arachoba, thine is the handy-work which I shall treasure — It I intend to transfer over the sea to my home." In the Olives. 61 I had intended to stop making Delphian hymns on the washers, But when I see them at work, I cannot bridle my verse. In the bare limb and its movement of grace there is soft attraction: It is wicked, they say, still 1 delight in these shapes. If I now were at home, I would shun them for moral example. And my head I would turn quickly a different way When I saw them; but here propriety slightly may slacken, No staid dame me beholds — lot me indulge then mine eye. Hundreds of washers there are, now standing by groups in the water, Swashing the garments about in the clear flow of the rill. What a clatter of tongues amid gay laughter and gossip ! All the love in the town now is discussed and much more. Out of the hundreds one I select, altogether the fairest. For without just the one, hundreds and hundreds, were none. Thither I loiter and stop on the brink of the brook where she washes, Quickly she takes up a cup, goes to the head of the spring, Where the gush of the crj'-stalline water first leaps to the sunlight: To me she offers a drink with a sweet welcome of words. But an old crone beside her me asks the ridiculous question — Art thou married or not — stranger, at home hast a wife? To your question, said I, in this presence there is but one answer : ]^ot a man would confess though a new bride he have led Not an hour ago from the chui-ch ; indeed I am certain, Not a man would confess that he before ever loved. 62 In the Olives. Then I threw in the face of the maiden a small jet of water To whose droplets my lips just had been fervently touched. Thus I secretly sent her a kiss in the dash of the crystal — How all the washers there laughed, hundreds were laughing at me. Yet the maid was not angry but asked me : Hast a mantili ? Give it into my hand — let me but wash it for thee. So I reached her my handkerchief soiled with the sweat of the journey ; Under her touch it was changed into a pearl of the rill, And in the sun she outstretched it on a Parnassian laurel Till my mantili was filled with high Apollo's mild glow. That is a glorious prize, — a handkerchief full of glad sunshine ; Now 1 can wipe from my brow all my vexation and toil. — Long I sat on a stone and looked at the joy of her motions, While she was working for me with a sweet thought on her face. But that maiden was washing something beside my mantili, In her glances she laved every quick throb of my heart; And with the beams of her face she filled each nook of my bosom, So that I carry them there with her fair picture enshrined. 5. See yon eagle, how proudly he sails round the crags of the mountain ! Tawny and dark is his suit, stretched are his talons and beak, And his eye fiercely glistens afar, throwing fiery glances Down to the Olives beneath, — what can he mean, do jou think ? Prey — for into the silver-green orchard comes the shy pheasant, That it may warily taste there a delicious repast. So in innocence sweetly it feasts and plays after dinner In the Olives. 63 Hide-and-go-seek mid the rocks till it has wearied of sport. There — see the swoop — down pounces the robber, and soon the poor pheasant Is borne up to the clouds and is consumed on the cliff. Maiden, beware, who art singing and jDlaying now under the Olives, The destroj^er may come, unto thy hiding-place lured By the song and the laugh which are rising up over the tree-tops : Like the eagle he seeks banquets of innocent flesh. — These words spake the old moralizer, moralizing within me ; Me he intended to hit, thus then I answered his thrusts : My little wings are not of the eagle, but of light-flying Eros ; Beak he has none, I affirm, but a sweet mouth for a kiss; . 'Nov has he talons, but the wee j^retty hand of the baby; JSTor upon flesh does he feed but upon fancj^'s bright flowers. Look in mine eye, old Goody, — there's not the fierce flash of the falcon, But its soft amorous globe melts in the glance of a maid. 64 In the O'dvis. CYCLET THIRD. 1. "Have you, stranger, in your country Olives?" the rude peasant asks me, As I look up at the limbs hung with large droppings of jet. Ah, Good Friend, I reply, my country produces no Olives, Carpets of silver-green leaves sparkle not over our plains ; On the wajT^sido you find not these trees with a dome built of berries, And with the twigs in between holding rich layers of fruit. There is not seen this light-hearted, delicate sway of the tree-tops. As they move in the breeze sent from Parnassus above. ISTor is there under the branches the graceful dance of the maidens. In sweet concord attuned to the bright movement of leaves ; I«ror is heard there the hj'mn a« it breathes from the hearts of the youthful, Winning the body to rhythm as in the chorus it moves. There we sing not, because, I should say, we j)ossess not the Olive, Work is not seasoned with song, crowned not with poesy's bloom. ISTor the folds do we own, the immaculate folds of the dancers Waving soft notes in accord with the glad leaves and the lay. Yes, the truth must be told — my country produces no Olives, And by some it is said that they will never there grow, In the Olives. 65 Eut I do not believe it. So I say to the peasant, Who in deep marvel is lost how any land can exist Wholly without the beautiful world of the silvery Olives, And all the music and mirth which underneath them are born. I must confess too, now that I think of the matter more closely, I have to wonder mj^self how without Olives man is. 2. There is one ugly sound I sometimes hear in the Olives ; IsTo where pleasant to me, here it is doubly accursed : 'Tis the crack of a gun. The fire-red cap and shag mantle Yonder I dimly can see gliding along through the trees ; There the hunter stealthily lurks for the hare or the pheasant, Or for the birds in the twigs at the great feast of the fruit. Through the orchard afar the report on the silence is carried Where a transparent repose lay in the beams of the sun ; Every Olive is frightened to a continuous flutter, Por their enemy comes who is here shooting their peace — Driving off from their leafy embrace the Parnassian songsters,' Driving the poesy off which the glad Olives enfolds. The rude echo chimes not with the notes of the lyre or j)ansi3ipe, lior with the voices of maids ever jDreluding the hymn. But the whiff from that gun is the breath of some demon infernal Which doth obscure in a cloud even Apollo's high lam^j. I too am frightened, carelessly stretched in the shade of an Olive, Playing on a soft lute that is enluned to the clime ; For I did not expect to hear such a sound in this orchard 66 In the Olives. Where in ages antique I was disporting my hours. Now 1 am roused, but the joyous old reahn de2:>arts from my vision, I At the rude shock of that crack vanishing into the years. j So at once I wake up in this world, yet somewhat astonished, ,: As a sulphurous smell greets my return to my time. l That was the putf which blew the old world into the neAv one, ■ Blew the whole race with a whiff thorough these thousands of years ; ■ For on gunpowder's flash we moderns have come from old Hellas [ To our realms by the West on either side of the sea. I too am blown by that putf just while I lie here in this orchard, ' I Ages on ages I whiz, j)ressed in a sharp point of time; \ 1 Out of the temples of Gods I drop to this Byzantine chapel, \ Blasted from Delphi the old, down into Kastri the new. \ 3. : In our world there are many fools, many kinds too of folly; • i i But the greatest fool 'mong the great types of his kind \ Is the man who in stupid caprice is enraged at the Muses, ^ For a refusal to grant gifts which are theirs to bestow. ] Yet of such folly to-day I was guilty and them I berated : * " Your stale fount may I shun, never again hear jovlY name ! : Both are always cut up in the hash of merciless rhymesters ; \ Men in two thousand years weary have grown of that dish. \ Would that old Seismos might sink Castalia into his caverns, j So that never again one single drojD of her ]'ill ! Would appear on the face of the earth, or flow down to the Olives : For some dolt will be found always intent on her stream. In the Olives. 67 And of her drops lie will ever be tipjsling, declaring them sovereign In all cases of rage from a poetic flea-bite. Then he'll continue to scribble in verse his delirious frenzies, And ascribe them all to his deep draught at the spring; Though his fancj^ steps not a Grace but capers a Dervish — Morbid caprice of disease, not the mild movement of health." Thus many voices were chiding around me in horrible discord — Each one trying to scold louder than all of the rest; Into the world of the damned I thought for a time I had fallen. Into the Hades new, made of the Critic's curse; For I imagined that I was one of those critical spu'its Plunged into torture eterne at the mere name of the Muse, And within me I heard only bla8j)hemy, pain, and confusion, Just because for a day all the sweet Sisters I banned. Where they are not, ah, there is the dolorous realm of Pluto, There are the sunless daj'S passed in damnation and ruth. Back I rush to the Delphian hill-side and to its fountain. That I be free from the fiends which are now biting my soul : Never, I swear it, again in my life shall I mock you, oh Muses, But if you will permit, alwa^-s your mocker I'll mock. 4. Once on a visit to Delphi there came a Cahokian grocer. Sugar and Coffee and Tea, Sugar and Coffee and Tea Had been the single refrain of his life, his soul's sweetest music, Which underneath evermore had a metallic shar}) clink. When he looked at the Delphian walls written over with letters, 5 68 In the Olives. In that work he beheld nought but a j)ile of old rocks ; Then I triumphantly showed him a column's most beautiful fragment : It was a broken stone good for a counter, perhaps ; Also I stepped off the space and sought to build up the old temple For his fancy anew, decked with its gables and frieze, Quite as it lay manj^ ages ago in the smile of the sungod — " Stick to the facts, the hard facts," was his response to my words. Here stood the Hall of the Council far overlooking the valley, There the Gymnasium lay, shining with forms of the youths, Yonder above sat the people beholding the games of the Stadion — " What is the good of all that ? " asked his inquisitive mind. Now in our walk let us pass uj) the rill to the cleft of Castalia, j Where the Muses once rose from the clear fountain of pearls, I Singing their strains till the mountain broke open this passage to hear ^ them : i '' 'Tis but a gully, I guess, worn in the cliff b}^ this run," \ And he began to grow weary. I said : Let us go to the Olives Where they reach to the vale down from the tops of the hills, Forming an ocean of leaves full of points of a silvery sparkle : ' '' Silver, Sir, did you say ? That is the point I would see." But the merry young trees were but wood — a lot of green saplings — I And the berries I plucked fresh from the twigs he declared Crude to his taste and rank to his smell and deformed to his eyesight: ; Still I continued to talk of the Parnassian breath, ' And of the manifold play of the leaves in the sunbeams, i And of the laiighter of rills as through the orchard they le^p. And of the trill of the birds attuned to the hue of the flowers : J% tlie Olives. 69 "All that we have at home, better, I think, than here." But at last the Greek maiden I pointed out thej-e in the Olives : Look in the dej)th of her eye dipped in the blue of yon sky, JSTotice the Phidian forearm, turned to the gracefullest taper, And the white bend of her brow swept o'er with wavelets of gold. And ihe movement of form that is filling- the air with its fragrance : " Oh good lord " he cried " she is some country wench ; Look, she has no stockings, merely a pair of blue leggins Which do not hide her nude feet slipped in the scrfiggy old shoes." Ended our Delphian walk, 1 conducted him. home to my cabin, ]^or could the secret I keep which the dear Sisters me told. But after bashful pretences began I to read him my poems : " Friend, isn't what thou hast read, rather a fanciful thing ? " Ah, no Xymphs he saw in the stream, no Muses he heard, but Sugar and Coffee and Tea, Sugar and Coffee and Tea. 5: Thereunto said the grocer who came from the fens of Cahokia : ISTow I have seen all Greece — merely a fraud it is ; — And the words of his voice were pitched in a screech of defiance, Discontent had her seat just on the carl of his lip. No one need talk to mo now — he continued — T know all about it^ All that is here I have seen, all too that ever was here. When I go home, a book I have the intention of writing, Just in order to show what the delusions have been. And I purpose to prove to the world the j)lain proposition. That the Greeks are cheats, having deceived mankind. 70 In the Olives. \ 1 For they have said that Castalia here is the fount of the Muses ; i But of its waters I drank, yet not a poem I made ; ' And I labored a day to climb to the peak of Parnassus, Those false Sisters to see — only a rock I beheld. — Ah, my friend, I replied, the market already is glutted, G-rocers have written ere this many a book on Greece, i And YQYj learned Professors who had as great talent as Grocers, \ Weighing Olympian Gods as the}- would sugar and tea. 6. I was passing along on the cliff of steep Pappadeia, ; To the brink I slipped and in the chasm I joeered i Where manj^ hundreds of feet the rocks leajD straight to the bottom, J Till they reach a dark mouth gaping adown the gorge. \ I am quaked with shudders that come from invisible monsters, ; As my head I extend o'er the precipitous edge; ' Out the abysm beneath there darts through the eye a keen torture — « Out the passionate gloom couched far below in the rift: ' There lies Zalisca. Scarcely I dare look down, I look forward i, To the opposite bank where are huge columns of stone ; , Slowly I sink with mine eye on its layers down to the wolf-hole, \ Prom the summit half way -, round it the eagles now fly, \ For like fortresses there they have built inaccessible eyries : i Thence I began with a look lower, still lower, to sink, ! When of a sudden I fell — fell down the dire steep in my fancy, • Whizzed along by the rocks, by the wild eagles I whizzed : j So I fell — I never could light, but still I kept falling ; In the Olives. 71 Down that infernal chasm — never could get on my feet. It was a dream of a fall and yet it was horribly real ; Thus my fancy me tricked, for it would give me no ground, But it cheated my eyes with an empty appearance of landing, Which merely gave a fresh start to a new furious descent. Finally from the abyss IS'ymph Zalisca spoke in higlj anger : Thy weak sight cannot reach thus the inside of my fane ; Now I have punished thee, also have punished presumptuous fancy ; If thou wouldst come where I am, seek not the horrors of night, Shun the chaotic chasm forever devoid of the sunshine, But above all, ray abode seek not with fancy alone. Go down slowly this mountain, then ascend the small valley, Every step is firm ground, though somewhat long is the road. There at once you will enter my door, and I shall receive thee, There too Apollo will shine just at the mid-hour of day. — ■ So the JSTymph reprovingly said as I turned from my gazing, Still to be falling I seemed though I was walking away. For my fancy still sought to keep up that play of delusion. Like a machine in the brain wdiich in its whirl could not stop. Such was Zalisca's penalty for the abuse of the Muses, Some other way I must seek to the enchantress' grot. 7. It is nighty I go out from my hut for a view- of the Olives, That I may see how they look when great Apollo withdi-aws. So I cast a long glance far over the sweep of the valley : 72 In the Olives. Trees are a dark dense coil winding around up the hills. Only to sunshine do they belong — e'en the sister of Phoebus, Mild-beaming Artemis there can not illumine the leaves ; Yet to-day when I passed underneath them how gaily they fluttered' As with the sun-rays they played soft intertwinings of love. In the night theii; glister doth change into dark lines of silence, ; Moonlight can not entice from their glum sparkle a laugh. ' But beyond them leaps up the huge mountain with three-j^ronged trident, ■, Like a wraith of desj)air under the sheen of the moon ; And it seems to threaten the Olives that cower below it, ' i Sinking to darkness in fright, till they can flee to the Dawn. At those shapes too I shudder, I haste to my cabin in terror — Shadows I can not endure, nor the great giant up there. For I now have become so at one with the sport of the Olives That unhappy I am when I behold not their dance. So I stretch out on the rug, and speedily grasp for my note-book, , Scribble by fl.ickers of light that a faint taper sends out, And I seek to illumine myself from the thoughts of the daytime ; ; Scarcely a flash can I get out of my memory's ward, ' Suddenly then I drop over a dream — the Olives return now. All the darkness has fled, Phoebus is shining on high. What is the reason the dream-god sends me so often one vision ? Three successive nights has he despatched the same dream. Seldom his messages hither withstand the light of the morning : In the Olives. 73 Into Lethe they fly borne on the jiinions of Sleep. This one, however, always persists in remaining the clay-time, G-ently it hovers above while I am taking my walk Through the Olives, whose leaves in a thrill attune my bright vision, Till I am swaying aloft on the vast swell of their notes. Over the ocean I pass to my home, transj)lanting the Olive Into a golden vale lying afar b}^ the West, Where flows down to the realms of the sun the wonderful Biver, Banding together the world in the soft span of its stream, Laughingly joining the summer to winter, the winter to summer, While on its path each clime plants a fair garden of fruits. On the banks of that river, just where it laves its dear city, Over a bottom of marl rests the vast surface of trees ; And the barbarian Boreas seems not to mangle their leaflets, •Which with the sparkle of seas sweep to the North and the South. Long I looked at the infinite stretch of the silver-green Olives, As they lay in the sun, waving betimes in the wind. Quite as much they appeared to rejoice in the name of Cahokia, As in Delphi's fond name they are rejoicing to-day. Pruit too they bore, the fairest and richest — richer than Delphian — All around in the twigs densely the berries hung down. Just from the soil rose the trees where once was the stench of foul water, Where only reptiles bred, making their couch in the slime ; There the countless vermin that sting swarmed out of the quagmires, Pestilence hovered above, ready to pounce on its prey; And the only music there heard was the roar of the bull-frog Mid the million-fold buzz sent from an insect world. 74 In the Olives. But the Olive now is enthroned which I brought from Parnassus, Sloughs wear the smile of the Muse, banished are fever and noise, And the leaves, like the curl of the waters, send forth a soft laughter, As they join in the dance over the floor of the tops ; The bland breezes, fair daughters of iEolus, gently embrace them, Many sweet notes they lisp, as they unite in the sport. But behold ! a bright circle of forms are weaving delightfullest measures, While a glad music int wines into the movements of grace, Youths and maidens have joined their hands into links of the chorus, Songs now arise from the vale throughout the length of the stream ; Under the branches where once was heard but the discord of insects, Hymns sprout forth with the fruit, labor is lightened with lays ; All the great valley that was erewhile but a horrible jungle With the glad Olives is filled, filled is with music and song. Book Third. IrllJiuili CYCLET FIRST. 1. In these verses I wish to build a new temple to Fortune, For the Goddess to-day showed me a favor divine ; I shall raise her a temple and deck it with friezes of marble Which will emblazon her deed worthy of gl(»"ious Gods. For she led me direct to the house where dwells Elpinike, Whom to behold I had wished all the long day of unrest. Just at dusk I sauntered around through the lanes of the village, With a sweet image in mind ta'en from a maid I had seen Watering her horse at the gush of a fountain early this morning : Lorn and unhappy I strayed in a delicious still pain. When a door that stood right before me was oped and the image Flew into body at once, with transformation divine. Such is ahvays the brightest 01ymj)ian present of Fortune, When the dear shadow she turns into fresh life at her touch ; So I beheld the pale lines of my fancy to color transmuted. Till ray soul became eye — then too mine eye became soul. That was Elpinike. She spake and besought me to enter. Enter I did in her home, following footsteps so dear ; Then from the joist where it hung on a nail she took down a pome- Which had been plucked by her hand in the glad season of fruits ; 78 Elpinike. ] i And the heart within it was full of sweet juice and of redness, Warm with a passionate glow, soft to the lips as a kiss;- : Quickly she broke the hard rind, and quickly she peeled off its fragments, i When the heart was revealed, crimson, translucent all through. With her iingers gently she parted in twain the pomegranate, i And she reached me the half^ — half of that bright scarlet heart; ' Just in the middle most deftly she drew the line of partition, i So that each half seemed a whole while it remained still a half; | And no violence rude she emploj^ed to make the division, i But the parts of the iruit fell as by nature in twain ; ! For the one side had grown as if it belonged to me onl}", ] Grown to be given away with the coj blush of a maid ; j But the other red side that glowed in her hand like a beacon, | Wary she kept for herself — all she bestowed not at once. i What a joy for the soft-hearted fruit that no power convulsive j Tore asunder its cells filled with the blood of its life ! ! Then we sat down at the hearth by the fire and ate the pomegranate, ; 'Picking out one by one seeds sweetly wrapped in the puljD, j And each seed was a word ensanguined in the heart's color, I And each word was a note hymned bj- the Muses' mild breath. ; 2. i Hei-e I lie down on the sunlit slant of skyey Parnassus; \ j Thousands of hymns in a dance joyfully play through ni}^ brain ; i Every line is dipped in the beams that are sent from Apollo, ] In me all is transfused to a mild glow by their spell. -l Silent the hymns seem to follow each other in endless procession, ■ Elpinike. 79 Just their finger-tips touch as the}^ ghde by through the air, And they are formed out of hundreds of images, jointed with music: While they are flitting along in their sweet faces I peer. Then from the jjageant I snatch one, the shape that seems to me brightest, And I seek to impose fetters of verse on her form ; But she refuses to dance and to laugh as she did in her freedom. Only in freedom she sings joined to her sisters in song. So that train of translucent dreams in its center is broken When their beautiful queen falls into measures and feet. Ah, I feel that the best of my hymns are not those which are written, Brightest of visions are quenched in the embrace of the word; 'For they are born in a dance of the spirit and share in its movement, Left in the musical throng where they are joined to their kin. Still I shall catch them — the butterflies — e'en though many escape me. Though their wings of gold sheen rudely are brushed by my hand ; From their pinions bright scales will remain on the tips of my fingers, ' Though the fair phantom be flow^n, seen in its splendor no more. So the hymns of the ages drop many deeds into Lethe, Even the song of the houi- leaves many minutes unsung ; And to-day there are thousands of hymns rising up with the moments, And with the moments they sink down to oblivion's shades. But in their motion I live — I exist but a eyelet of visions Into the links of a chain woven by ticks of the clock. But here comes the maidenly form for which I was grasping, ^ot a dream mid dreams, but all alone and herself. 80 Ulpinilce. Oh, Eljiinike whenever I see the soft turn of thy bosom All my images vain dart at a glance into life. 3. To the house I came where dwelleth the fair Elpinike ; We sat down bj^ the fire that in the chimney was lit, On the hearth the twigs of the oak and the olive were sparkling, There on the mats Ave sat down round the bright blaze of the fire. Large was the company — youthful and old — about her assembled, Crowds of suitors and guests who find delight in her look. Many a story was told of the time of the Great Eevolution, How Palicains so bold slew then the barbarous T'ark. 'Next they sang, sang gaily of wine and of certain three maidens, Who disi)ensed to the guests liquid of poesy's flame. But to me Elpinike came with ajar full of sweetmeats, Bade me to eat of the fruit — citrons from Chios they were, Made by her hand of deep skill and then laid away for occasion, Till the right one should come who could enjoy her sweet art. Though she would not confess, I knew it was she who had made them^ For her delicate touch in the preserves I could taste. And the fragrance that flows from her look I found in each morsel, Now mildly flavored anew with the low whisper she breathed. Long she stood there before me, pretending to hold me the server, Longer I caused her to stand uttering words for delay Sweeter than citrons — words that were sweetened by Eros With the glance of the eye and the soft touch of the hand. • Then she reached* me a beaker that brimmed with Castalia's pure water Mpinike. 81 Just from the spring by the rock, redolent with a new song- Fresh from the Muse ; with her face in each drop I drank off the crystal — Draughts that reach to the soul, quenching its thirst by the hymn. ]S"ow all the day I do nothing but eat of the junkets of fair Elpinike^ With them I drink of the brook, limpid Castalia's stream. 4. Tell me, what is that voice which I hear, like the sound of a trumpet ? On the dusk air it rides down to the vale from the town. Some stern duty to men it commands as it were from the Heavens, Like the final loud blast bidding to judgment the world. — That sound — 'tis but the horn of the strict overseer of Olives Sumraoning all of our folk ouit of the orchard below. That he may measure the labor which has been done by our fingers : So we render account daily forthat Avhich we do. — Judgment it is, then ; well, let me be thy judge, Elpinike; What to-day hast thou done ? very severe I shall be. Thou has gathered, 1 notice, many a basket of olives. Here in the sack they all lie — each had a touch of thy hand. 'Now as I think of their destiny happy, I become jealous, What I can not obtain, they without asking possess ; For they receive the glance of thnie eye, and are gra8j)ed by thy fingers, Then they rej)0se for awhile in the caress of thy palm. Would that I were an olive that I by thee might be gathered, Softly be ta'en to thy hand for a sweet moment's embrace ! Naj, I would like to be crushed in the might of its fervidest pressure, 82 Ulpinike. Till I would redden the palm with the warm drops from my breast. \ But this is not all of thy work, for I see the hea,rt of a stranger \ As the chief j)rize of to-day — which thou didst pluck with thine eyes • When this morning thou wert descending the hillside of Delphi : ; Here it lies mid the fruit, mid the dark berries it throbs .1 In the strain of a hymn and beats time with a curious movement : j It in these Delj)hian groves thou art detaining in song. ; But the just judge releases it not, and this is his judgment : ^ Thou hast no blame, oh maid, thou canst not help being fair ; ] ISTor can I censure this heart for being the captive of beautj^ : Let it sing on in its bonds till it shall sing itself free. \ 5. ' "; -''"What is your name ?" — she asked me as if she was eager to know it, | For the laugh that was gay fell into soberer tones. ■'' What is your name, pray, tell it me V — thus she descends to petition : '• So I look in her eyes as I pronounce her my name. i Then she seeks to repeat it, but the rude sounds make her stumble : ] Still I love her mistakes filled with her voice and her soul; | For the erratic light j)lay of her words doth seem a lost rainbow, ] And each lisp of her tongue is the straj^ note of a hymn. | ^' What is your name ?" again she demands and again I repeat it : i Many a lesson she learns syllabled after my sj)eech. . I But the melodious blunders that fall from her lips I pity. : Pity the Delphian note tied to a barbarous word. i ^' Leave the harsh tones that only belong in the throat of a stranger, j Whisper nought in mine ear but that soft music of thine ; " 1 MpiniTte. 83 So I say to her, yet she persists in trying to utter With exactness my name wound in a wreath of sweet sound. Eros, the flattering rogue, has shot a bad thought in my bosom : That the Greek maid by some spell seeks to get hold of my name And to make it her own. Still daily continued her effort Till the rude Saxon she tamed to the soft kiss of her lips ; 'Now she has learned my name and also pronounces it rightly, Tuned to the accents of love which the fair Helen once spoke. I confess hitherto my name was not to my liking, But it I took as it came, from an invisible fate, IS'ot of my choice or control. But as uttered by Greek Elpinike, ]Srow 1 hear with delight what was distasteful before ; For of the rough blocks of sound she has built a fair temple, Earest rhj^thmical notes rise from untunable speech. And in my soul the fond image she wakes of a new revelation Which I never had dreamed dwelt in the breath of a maid ; Deep are the throbs that are borne on the air that is pulsed from her bosom, Borne on the wings of the word which she has caught from mj' lips. Bat not only my name she winds in a garland of music. Even myself she surrounds with the refrain of her voice. So that she changes me into a subtle, harmonious measure. And all the day I can hear choruses over the heights ; Fain would I swoon forever away to a hymn of her breathing, Till each word of my voice rayed the full grace of her form. Thus she gently transforms me along with my name and my language. The whole world she transforms into her melody sweet ; 84 JElpinike. j J All the trees of the forest, all the stars of the Heavens, -; Even the soul of man hymns to the sway of her song \ \ ■I 6. : Why in such rapturous mood do I walk through the Olives this | morning ? Something within me has wings and is attempting to fly; ] For my feet have no weight and are set on the earth with an effort : j Elpinike I saw leading her horse down the hill ! On whose slant are strown the high rocky nests of the Delphians, i By them spiti called — built on the rock out of rock ; : Soon she stoj)2Ded at the rill which flows from the source of the Muses, | Me she invited to drink, scooping her cup in the stream ; j So I drank off the draught — in each drop there sj)^!'^^®^ ^ verselet, ; Then the beaker she took, drinking herself of its strain. j Sweet was the laugh of the brook o'er the pebbles, yet sweeter the ! maiden ; : ".I Both in beauty seemed one, both in the soul sang a hymn. Stooping near to the current she bathed face and hands in the water, • When like a nymph she arose out of the crystalline stream ; j Over her cheek had spread the soft glow of the dawn rosy-fingered. And her form was a dream sent from some Goddess of old. j Well I know that then she was touched b}^ one of the Muses i Eeaching out of their brook where they have always their home ; For by hand divine had her body become a sweet poem, : Which all her motions sane; tuned to the softest refrain. i El'pini'ke. 85 Still on my heart-strings now I can hear the strains of that music As thi-ough the Ohves I walk, dreaming of what I beheld. I am seeking some word to express what I feel in this sunlight, As through the village I go, thi-eading around in the lanes ; Quite im2D0ssible 'tis to find any name for the humor, Which refuses to slip into the trammels of speech; But Tranquility let it be called for the sake of these verses, Since they demand some word, though not exactly it fit. Tranquil I saunter along, the village also is tranquil. Both of us have the same mood, both of us seem all alone; For the people have gone to the fields — to the Olives and vineyards : Labor is lord of the place and he keeps busy his folk. Hark ! through the passionless plaj' of the sunbeams falls a low music, • Like the chord of a lyre by a weird fingei"-tip touched; Into this radiant repose so softly the tones are transfused, That they seem to be one with the calm soul of the hour, And to embosom Avithin their lull some speechless emotion, Which on the air of to-day rests in serenest delight. But what causes that sound ? On tip-toe I slip to the dwelling Out of which wells to the sun all that sweet fountain of notes ; Open the window stands — sly curious glimpses I cast there : Look ! it is but a loom, ancient in form and much worn. But the hand of deft Elpinike is plying the shuttle : There she sits on the stool — slightly she tips it aside, That it moves with her body which steadil}^ backwards and forwards HO Ulpinike. Sweeps with a manifold grace flowing down into the threads. Out of her fingers the shuttle doth dart through the warp like a dolphin Under the waves, while the woof thrills at the touch of her skill. Also she rouses the loom into singing through all of its timbers, And she subtly entwines in its refrain her own self, For she builds a sweet poem out of the movements of body Sent in soft waves through that room with the deep throbs of her soul. Tell me, I beg thee, what art thou thinking about, Elpinike ? Much would I like to be told— aught of great joy it must be, Thus to attune thy body, and even the loom and the shuttle. That they unite in one strain with the glad sport of the rays. She replied : For thee I am weaving a white phoustanella; When thy costume I see, deeply ashamed I feel ; All those drab dapple garments of Franks, the tasteless barbarians. Throw now quickly away that thou aj^pear in new dress; Truly this is no -place for them here in the dells of Parnassus, Even the child in the fields laughs at their graceless shape. Yet not one but a dozen, nay I a hundred shall make thee : Hence in secret I weave busily all the day long. This is my hope supreme that thou move in folds like the chorus, And each fold be a note sung to the tread of the youths. More than a hundred fair vestments I'm making — with rhythm I fill them, Whose clear strain thou wilt hear as they encircle thy form. S,) she arranged the weft that ever a harmony subtle Flowed from the quick-fiying threads after the stroke of the loom : Every thread had a thrill in accord with the whole of the music. JiJlpinike. 87 For it was touched b}^ the thought that was inspiring the maid : And that thought was of me when I would appear in her vesture — - Graceful white folds falling down, echoing softly her soul. When I go now on my walk through Delj)hi, every one knows me, Gives a familiar salute with a fair word or a nod, And they call me Didaskali — that is, the Master or Teacher, With a strange guess at my life, hinted j)erchance in my face. I accept the kind title and always return friendly greeting To every nod of the head, to every smile of the eye. Even the children no longer laugh at the foreigner's costume, But they will follow my steps, gently take me by the hand, Babbhng their little delights in many a word of old Homer, And these words too I greet like the dear faces of friends. Also the mother will stop the full sweep of her loom to salute me. As she sits weaving the threads for the phoustana's white folds. With the Papas too, the priest, I oft take a stroll uj) the mountain - Dark-haired, long-robed priest, with his hair parted like Christ's Just in the middle, and falling loosely over his shoulders ; Kindly and good is the man, with not a stain on his soul. Hours pass unnoticed as over the valley we look from the summit, Talking of things far away on the wide world's other half Where is my home by the River. But to Elpinikc I j)lay now Teacher all the day long, teaching her mouth- wrenching words Ta'en from my language — words that before never flowed from her tongue- tip : ^o UlpiniJce Willing the Master doth work, willing too seemeth the maid; — For she keeps asking : What is the name of this thing in English ? ; So I utter the sounds which she attempts to repeat ; ! O'er the rough vocables then she skips like a brook over boulders— J Still her stammer I love, for it is fair as herself, • ■ Even new beauty reveals, for she alwa^'s resembles Castalia | When a rock may be cast into the flow of its stream : | i For it will ripple and w-arble around the ugly intruder, j Maknig a melody new sung from the rill of the Muse; I Were there naught in the way of the stream, the beautiful water ; Onward would flow in its course, lisping not even a note, | But with the babble and dash of its drops now a hymn it is singing i In the struggle it makes for its owai happy repose. 1 Often merely a pebble thrown into pearly Castalia j Tunes her to sweetest of notes which she before never sang. j So in that streamlet I throw a large stone or perchance a small pebble, ' Which the clear waters embrace with a pellucid soft throb. ; Such is the way that I teach Elpinike the words of my language, j Which with her musical breath she doth convert to a song. ; Sweet are all her mistakes for they drip with melodious honey, ] Sweeter by far is her mouth twisted to utter my words, | And the rude sounds of my voice that through her soft lijjs are but spoken i Changed are at once to a strain that hath the breath of the Muse. | But the day on which the Greek maiden has learned to talk English, <■ Shall a holiday be for the whole Delphian world, ' Elpinike. 89 And a great pomj) of the God that moves with the notes of high music I myself shall arrange to an Olj^mpian hymn. 9. Industry sends not the cloud of its smoke through the Delphian valley, The black vomit of coal is not beheld from high flues. Xor can be heard the unmusical hum that floats from great cities, Crazing the ear and the soul with the mad sounds of unrest. Not a wagon is here, not even two wheels with their axle ; And if they were now here, there is no road in the town. No, not the hub of a cart can be found in the j)recincts of Delphi, Merely a sculptured wheel once I beheld on a stone. So from these ways is absent vehicular rumble and rattle, Dust defiles not the robes, silver and green, of the trees, JSTor does soot in the Heavens besmirch the gold beams of Apollo, Nor on Earth does it soil here the white folds of the youths And of the maids as they joyously move to the step of the chorus : Heaven and Eai-th are two notes blent into one sweet accord. Marble would glisten to-day, as if it were in the old temple Which on this hillside was jjerched with the bright column and frieze j Many the far-darting gleains it would send down over the valley, On every sunbeam a thrill thence it would pulse to the eye. Nor has Castalia, pure virgin, been soiled by the ooze of the sewer, But the sweet Nymph has a face sparkling, translucent with smiles. Steam, the rude blower and puffer, and always in a great hui-ry Has not disturbed the repose that still envelopes these hills. What then is here, dost thou ask ? Let me tell thee — 'tis the glad Olives, 90 JElpinike. 'Tis the poetical life, visions ovitsido of the world, 'Tis the fair setting of Nature for each appearance of beauty, ^Tis the hymn that is sung both by us mortals and Gods. Also still here are the folds and the form of divine Elpinike, Fairest of maids on the Earth, dream of what Helen once was. Smut from Industry's chimney, dust from Commerce's highway, Have not blotched her pure robes, have not begrimed her white limbs. UlpiniTce. 91 CYOLET SECOND. 1. Ask me not what I am going to do on the morrow — Whether I Delphi shall leave, or shall remain yet awhile — I do not know, G-ood Host, for I can not form any purpose : All my intentions are bound with the tight cords of a God ; 'Tis a small merry God whose life is merely to dally, Yet his wee little arms strong are as Hercules' limbs. To the endless caprice of his wings on my back I am fastened, Ever together we sport round the new flowers of Spring, And we scent in each blossom the freshest Parnassian fragrance. Even the honey we sip, dripping it into a hymn. Only so much of myself I can tell thee : down to the Olives Once at least I shall go, there fondly wasting the hours. For there always the maidens are near, and still nearer is dreamland — Both even melt into one under the dance of the leaves. There I lie on the grass by the runnel of pearly Castalia Mid the trees, while I list to the small voices of JSTymphs, If perchance some low little whisper of theirs may be uttered. That will redouble my joy, turning the minutes to hymns. Long in waiting I lie without any note of their presence, Till Elpinike appear on the green brink of the stream. 92 JElpinike. Then at once the coy ISTymphs are starting to rise from the water, Graceful and joyous they rise out of the ripple serene; Softly the lilies are peering above the ciystalline surface, And their bosoms unfold whitest Parnassian snows ; All undraped are their forms of delight — sweet Nature's own daughters, Born now into the world, loosed from the trammels of shame Which jealous custom has thrown over beauty. But in Castalia They are free from their bonds, free from the prison of clothes. This is the reason why so intently I peer in that fountain ; Tor some bathers divine always I see in its depths. Out of the long dripping tresses of jet they are pressing the water ; Mark the hands softly white laid on the locks that are dark. Under the glassy transparency purling over the pebbles I behold the fair limbs tremulous in the clear wave : ^uite enough of Olympian beauty to wake soft suggestion, As the outlines of white swim in the wavering stream. Slowly they come up the shelve of the bank from the watery mirror, Shining their bodies arise, marbles that move into life, And at each step they bring to the vision fresh raptures, revealing Some new perfection of form hitherto lost in the wave. There at last all the IS^ymj^hs of the stream are standing before me, As the Goddesses stood once before Paris the judge Judging the boon of the world. The hours have flown into seconds, Time has a thousand new wings freshly put on for his flight, While I am lying and looking, entranced in Olympian visions : Life is with them too short, yet is without them too long. Smite me dead at this view, I would pray, that never another Elpinike. 93 May hereafter intrude into the scope of mine eye ; Or this lot would I choose, Oh mysterious fates of existence, Let me eternally live with this fair dream in my soul ; For the dull life of man niay be worth immortality's dower, If it some image embalm that is immortal in joy. Such are the beautiful shaj^es that start up fi-om the brook of C'astalia, When on the brink thou dost stand, Oh Elpinike my fair, At my side here under the Olives, the famous green sprouthngs, Which at the view of the jSTymj^hs quiver with love in each leaf 2. JSTotice, Oh Dearest, this marble that lies in the vineyard, Stained with the rust of the years, gnawed by the frost and the rain ; Yet in old Deljjhian days it was jDerfect and white as the linen Which then shrouded the form laid in its snowy embrace. This was the lid of the tomb and on it is sculptured the princess^ — She who once must have lived, hence she who once must have loved. Still in the stone you can see the white folds wave down her fair body. As on the cushion she lies propping her head with her arm ; And the neat zone round her waist hath the span of the hand of a lover Just beneath the shy breasts swoln with the first thought of youth. From the hem of the loose-flowing vestment is peering the ankle, While the lines of the limbs upwards are traced in the folds. But the soft curves of her body are only alive in this fragment, The fond clasj) of those arms long since has fallen to dust. And the hue of the eyes, once brimming with flashes of Eros, Now forever is lost in an impassive blank stare ; 94 Elpinike. What thinkest thou has become of the millions on millions of treasure That poured out of those lips at the low whisper of love ? Lost, all lost forever and ever. Come then, and quickly ; For each moment is winged bearing away in its flight Opportunity : life is the use of opportune moments; Swift, now give me thine eyes raying with sweetest desire ; And, may I ask it ? — with violence throw thy embraces around me That I may see in thy glance all the bright rainbows of life. And be chained to thy breast in the tight living links of thy fetters, Ere thy body be chilled into this stone on a tomb. Earth is the happy abode of love with its fount of caresses : Hades will cut them all off — quick, let each minute be gain. 3. 'Tis not every da}^ Elpinike I find in gay humor : For sometimes she looks back to her bright days in the pastj Retrospection for all is a sigh-heaving work of the spirit, But for the Grrecian maid doubly redoubles the pang. '' See yon dwelling, inwards have fiillen the roof and the rafters^ Only the walls now stand — they too are rifted with creaks. Many a tendril and vine have begun to creej) over the ruins, In their luxuriant folds soon will be hidden each stone. Once we there lived, and yet can be seen the form of my lattice Which the foliage trains still to its winding embrace. Everywhere overgrown is my garden with weeds and with brambles. Though pretty flowers peep out from the rank growth of the soil. But behold here also the fragments of some ancient temple Ulpinike. 95 That once stood on this spot, far overlooking the vale ; IS" ever again will a mortal be able to put them together Into the whole of that fane as it once rose on this height. Over the hill-side are scattered the beautiful bits of white marble, Often I gather them still, piece them iu fancy to one. They were broken by Seismos, the dark-minded shaker of Delphi, . Once he the temple destroyed, he is our enemy yet; Even our modest abode he smote and upheaved in bis anger; Here deserted it lies, still by the c]-ecpers beloved. Often my father has told mc with sighs, this house was my dower, All the wealth that I had now is reduced to these stones. And my inheritance, splendid of old, is invested in ruins — Seismos my dower has seized, dowerless now I am left. Once I possessed for myself this beautiful dwelling and garden, Many suitors I bad fi'om all Parnassian towns, AVhen to my Delphian home there came the hour of convulsion ; Now all alone I must mourn left a poor dowerless maid." — Ocase thy plaint, Elpinike, sorrow becomes not thy presence; — Think a dower thou hast richer than any on earth. Has not the world ever wooed thee, and sought to inherit thy beauty ? Seismos may rave in his wrath, thou in thy ruins hast all. Part of th}' wealth may be wasted, still thou art queen of Parnassus, Holding melodious sway over the songs of its youths ; Xiook now at me who have crossed the broad ocean simply to hce thee, Simply to carry thy face back to my homo in my soul. 96 JElpinike. 4. . ■ Here in this alley there lies the fragment of some ancient column, Half imbedded in soil, tij^ped to one side in its fall ; See the shape of the flower there sculptured in happiest outline, Just in the bloom of its growth with all the leaves on the stalk. Even in marble it has a fresh look as if blowing in springtide, Though rude handfuls of Time long have been flung on its form; Gently it clings to the stone and lovingly winds round the pillar. Yet it turns to my glance with a soft smile in its eye. So art thou, divine Elpinike, the flower of Delphi, Ancient thou art, I should say, just in the bud of thy youth ; For if the Delphian priestess now were alive in her beauty. She thy form would assume, robed in the waves of white folds. But though so 3^oung, thou art hid, raethinks in the ages of Delphi, Beautiful flower in stone sprung from a fancy of old. JSTote but this 'leaf, how graceful it lies in the curve of the marble ; Then another succeeds — half of it only you see ; Then still further below is beheld the mere tip of a leaflet. All the others are hid in the dark tomb of the ground. But the day will come Avhen the leaves shall leap from their cover, .And the day will come when Elpinike shall bloom. Xow I am going to dig from the rubbish this column of flowers, Piece together its parts, cleanse from the dirt every line. Set up the column in light that again it may sun itself proudly : Then what a fragrance will rise out of that flowery shaft ! MpihAlce. 97 5. 'Tis not the first, not the second nor third time that I have listened To the tale of thy dreams — was Elpinike's reply. This is the reason I love thee ; because thou art a good dreamer. And because thou canst dream better awake than asleep. Now it is my turn — list then while I shall tell thee a vision Which ingrains all my life both in the day-time and night. Once mid these hills and valleys I passed a sunny existence, Though between now and then ages have thrust all their wrath. Full of action heroic a youth I sprang down the mountain, In each motion of limb felt I the might of a God; And as I wrought, I sang in harmonious measures of beauty, To my action I sang fitting the voice to the hand. JN^ay, each feat, each movement dropped of itself into music, Every deed was a song, every song was a deed. Suddenly then on the side of these hills I was changed to a flower. Flower that merely was fair while here inactive it bloomed. Thousands and thousands of years I continued to grow on the hill-side, All men my beauty admired, sought me often to pluck ; Some dug me out by the roots and bore me to far-distant countries, For a while I would thrive nursed in the warmth of their love. Still of the pang I never was rid that I dwelt among strangers, So I wilted at heart — then I would die from the soil. But when elsewhere I drooped I continued to bloom on Parnassus, And my fragrance I threw into each no(!k of the vvorld. But they treated me as they would treat some small pretty flower. ■98 Elpinike. They would sport with my buds, breathe in my heart's rich perfume, And would admire the shape of my leaves bedewed of the Graces, Oft in their rude native clay sought they to copy my form. Oh how tired I grew of being forever a flower, Longed for sinews and blood, longed for the man-making deed 1 Once 1 dreamed that I rose like a youth — the ancient Achilles — For the armor I sprang, though in the dress of a maid ; Over the tops of the hills there came to me blasts of a trumj^et Calling me back to the life which I once led in the world; Up from the ground leaped the flower — anew I was storming old Ilium, Nobly I sang of my act, nobly I acted my song. Bat again I was slain by divine irreversible aiTOw — Then with my death I awoUe, just as to Hades I fell. Still in my heart, though awake I may be, T have a deep longing, For — I can not tell what — still a deep longing I have. As I arose from my cot, I had a disgust this morning, Which had crept in my soul during the visions of night, And I said to myself: " To-day I'll not make any poems. For I am tired to death, dreaming so much in the sun. Of the ceaseless procession of fancies fully I'm sated. Proper it is some rest now I should have from the throng ; Grant me a day without the Muses, without the Greek maiden, Oh for one day of repose, free from the Olives and leaves ! Let Castalia flow down to the sea without giving mp trouble. And the Nymphs in the rill bathe out of reach of mine eye." — Elpinike. 99 So vcij course I direct to the rocks, the bare rocks on the mountain, And as bare as a rock is the white page of my brain. Also to Krissa I go, prosaic in dress and in customs, Freed from the memories old which on the Delphian stones Are engraved everywhere that they speak with the breath of Apollo : ]Srow mine ears I have stopped to the sweet notes of their voice. Then I scourge from my presence each rapturous child of my fancy, Till in terror it flies, seeking a nook in the clouds ; Almost with anger out of the air I smite every image That for a moment may dance, trying to flatter mine eye. But above all other shapes Elpinike I shunned in the Olives, During one day I resolved not to behold the Greek maid. Strictly my promise I kept until the first shade of the nightfall, When I went by the spring, thinking of nought in my mood. There she was standing right in the line of my eye — the enchantress — • Purpose melted away like a thin frost in the sun. Home I am driven amid the incessant wild dance of the visions That had snapped the weak thread which them had tied in their cells j All the orgies of fancy broke loose in a fierce Bacchic frenzy. To revenge the restraint put on one Del]3hian day. Bring me a light, Oh hostess — where is my paper and pencil? For these riotous shapes I must enchain in my verse ; Ere they will cease I must cast them in musical far-shining fetters : If the riii'ht word I can catch, then I am freed from their throng. 100 JSIpmike. Mockery was "to-night the new strain of bright Elpinil^e, Grecian moclceiy too, drenching me through with its spray; And there Avas salt in tliat dash of her spirits from oceans of humor, Nor could refuge I find as it would sjDlash in my face. First she jnocked my gait with the strut and stride of an actor, Then my titter she mocked with a low titter herself ; Turns of my head, the roll of mine eye, my hands' thoughtless gesture' Also my Humj)h and my Ha — even my silence she mocked. So I was forced to look at myself in the mirror of Comus ; And my accent I heard, say what I might to that Greek : All the twists and turns of my tongue in speaking her language Were thrown back on my ear treblj'^ contorted and gnarled, While a thousandfold mimicry wantonly plaj^ed in her features. To the words of her speech adding much salt of their own. Trul}^ to-day tart Comedy's Muse held sway in Castalia, And from the fount to the maid handed a mask as she drank, Early this morning, when from the village she passed to the Olives : For each morning she drinks oiit of a wonderful cup Wrought both outside and inside with many a figure of fancy; E'en on the rim the clear draught touches her lips through a dance Wreathed of the bodies of maidens and youths to a cii-cle of garlands Whom the Graces bedew Mdth all their fragrance of form. Also the cup is reached by a Muse to her out of the fountain Bubbling forth from the depths, dark and unknown, of the Earth. MpimJce. 101 Every day from some one of the Sisters she hath inspiration, As from the beaker of pearls she may have di'unk in the morn. So the Nine take tiii-ns in the gift that her days may all differ : Thus her laborious hours lined are with poesy's dreams, And in each jet of her humor there plays a poetical rainbow Leaping in bright-colored mirth out of my reach to the skies. There — ;just now she was mocking me whilst I spoke of the Muses : — Then the Olives she mocks — mocks e'en my love for herself. But at last I caught her and kissed her : " Mock that, merry mocker, Just as oft as you wish " ; onlj- my language she mocked. Certainly all the hours of to-day I was laughed at by Eros, For the triumphant young scamp led me astray from my plan. As I sauntered along, projecting a new might}^ poem That would reveal all the G-ods, mysteries deep would unfold, That would the universe set to new music and make me immortal, — Into the Olives I strolled, secretly fanned by his wings. Suddenly there, as I wandered around, I met Elpinike : Eros, the rogue, was my guide, always he plays me such pranks. Not a step further I went, I could not move a step further ; There I had to remain till of his spell I was free. So the flexible rod I grasped, and then began beating On the limbs of the trees till the rijie berries would fall ; Long I labored and hard, for under the branches the maiden Was with her mother at work, picking the fruit from the gromid. When everv twio; of the tree I had bared of its delicate burden, 102 Mpinilie. And a dark layer of fruit wound through the blades of the grain, Then for hours I stooped and helped to gather the berries : Simply a look was my pay, furtively wreathed in. a smile, As her hood she adjusted over her chin and her forehead. Always trying to hide what she was careful to show. Meanwhile I was attentively talking to the dear mother Of small things far away; mothers have also their charm. Thus I was bound in a chain that Avas linked with successions of glances There the trees underneath, nor could I stir from the spot. Freedom's wildest delight I had in the trammels of prison, All the while too a hymn swelled in my bosom suppressed. While I was thralled beneath the green leaves in the laugh of his fetters, Eros fluttered in sport over the tops of the trees ; Often I saw just the tip of his wing or the j)oint of his arrow. As he would flit through the twigs, leaving a radiant film That would hang in the air for a moment then pass .into nothing; When I looked for his form, always he vanished away. Often too over my head I heard the low chuck of his titter, As he would giggle in glee, mocking my limbs in the gyves. So the young scapegrace till nightfall o'er me continued to triumph, Badgered me there with his jibes as I lay helpless in bonds ; And instead of the mighty magnificent poem I planned there, Now I have written these small silliest verses of love Dictated madly by him, the tyrant of soul and of body : Only disgust I can feel now as the poem I read. Ulpinike. 103 9. A new maiden I met in my stroll through the Olives — fStephane; She had one eye of blue that in its depth showed a sky, While the other was black and was lit with fieiy glances ; Eros had into them both shot all the might of his dart. When I went wp and talked to the maid, I was greatly embarassed Which of the eyes to address, each one demanding my look ; Each was a jealous tyrant, shamefully lording the other, Each had a spy of her acts following just at her side. Each of those sjjheres I loved all alone, but both not together, Separate each I would seek, both I would flee for my life. 'Tis not easy to manage two lovers though kept far asunder, But if they happen to meet both may be lost by a look. What a torture I felt in answering two diverse glances ! Eor whichever I chose, that was the end of my joy. Only when into the one burning look two eyes may be melted, Is the fervor redoubled till it flames down to the soul. But alas ! now the glances are twain — to each other are hostile — With two looks from one face, tell me, I pray, what to do. This misfortune, however, was not the end of my troubles : Elpmike me saw as I conversed with that maid. Jealousy then for the first time she showed in a frown on her visage, Saying : which eye dost thou love — is it the blue or the black ? In one body Stephane encloses two souls, each pulling asunder : Ha, two sweethearts in one fine it must be to possess. Wive her, I pray thee, and then thou Avilt have two wives in thy household, 104 Elpinike. Though her sweet person be one in the embrace of thuie arms; And whenever she looks in thine eyes that are brimmmg with rapture, I defy thee to tell which of thy wives it may be. So thy kisses must always be halved for concord domestic, Lest the one of her looks eat up the other in wrath. In that quarrel of glances thy life will be merry with asking : Please now, what says the blue ? what says the black, if it please ? Go thy ways — thou art double thyself as the eyes of Stephane, Thy false heart has two beats, thou hast two masks in one face. 10. I Thrice already have I resolved on departure from Delphi, ; Thrice has my purpose been smit by the strong hand of a God, \ So that it prostrate has lain in my bosom and helplessl}^ quivered, Faint were its struggles to rise after that blow from above. ; But again there comes to my soul the pang of decision, For the hours of my stay haste to their limit in time ; Shall I remain still longer, or shall I set out to-morrow ? Shall I quit the bright fount with all its pearls unstrung ? : Shall I suddenly leave the fair image and stop making poems ? \ Shall the Delj)hian days live or be changed to a dream ? ! JSTow in my life they are real, deej)-linked in the chain of my moments, • But they must lapse when I leave into pale Memory's shades. \ Yet it is time I should start. By mj thoughts torn asunder, ; ■i I go down to the vale, under the Olives I walk; \ \ Every leaflet is stirring its wings to fly from the tree tops, / \ Elpinilie. 105 Pinions to me it doth give that I take part in its flight ; And the green millions with silver-starred sjmrkle now dance in^the sunlight. Till their lustre and sport seem to be part of myself. Under the fairest young tree now I saunter — I find Elj^inikc — Purpose again is laid out by a soft dart of the Clod. Ulpinihe. CYCLET THIED. 1. Cast thy look upwards — ^yonder, glistens the snow of Parnassus, Downward now let it fall — there is the glow of the rays ; Winter thou seest above, while below in the vale is the summer. Both an influence fair lend to the eye and the soul. But at my feet here cometh the spring leaping out of the mountain, With young flowers and buds in his soft finger-tips held. ♦Seasons now fly not in terror away from the face of each other, But together they dwell, for they are brothered in joy, And to-day they are dressed in light folds of azure translucence — All can be seen through the haze, yet too the haze can be seen. The bright world is beheld in a dream behind its blue curtain, Still that curtain so fine wondrously too is beheld; While it is subtly revealing fair Nature, itself is revealed. While it others adorns, ^tis thus adorned itself. So art thou, Elpinike, here in the midst of the Olives, Through thee I see all the world, clearly reflected and new ; The old Earth has become a new planet in thee discovered, I a new person am born, born while I gaze in thine eyes ; All is seen with new vision and is enrobed in new colors. Which do not hide or distort, but which reveal what is true ; JElpinike. 107 And at the same time, thee Elj^inike, sweet mirror of JSTature, Thee I behold in thj'setf while in thee all I behold. 2. Thou hast read me, Oh friend, thy new poem, — replied Elpinike, And translated it too, still 1 can not understand ; Surely thou wert possessed when writing to-day by a spirit From thy home far away; here it belongs not, I know. For in Hellas we dij) each word in the beams of Apollo, That they illume what they touch while too thej" shine of themselves. Look at yon Olive that stands on the edge of steep Pappadeia Where the cleft descends hundreds of feet straight down ; Over the dismal abyss more than half of the tree is inclining, While its stubborn roots grapple for help in the rocks. But the fruit, the fair crop of the branches, drops off in the chasm, Where it is dark as night, nought can be seen from the to]); And for man there is no descent, whatever his courage, Into that depth below — steep as a line is the wall ; ISTor durst any one venture to climb on the limbs for the berries. Lest the treacherous tree loosen its grasp from the brink. Thus all its Olive? are wasted because they fall into darkness, Yet they are good as the rest, excellent dainties would make. And they would serve well to nourish the voice of the singer Who doth sing at the feast hymns full of Delphic dehght. But not a man will descend to that gloom — much less will a woman : Thus are thy Avords sometimes, just like those Olives, my friend. For they fall down deej) into darkness, said Elpinike, 108 JElpiniTce. Whence I can not for my life gather their forms or their sense. So, let me frankly confess to thy face, were also thy verses Which you were reading just now — Olives that fell in the gorge. They may be good, but so deep they lie that I can not get at them ; How I quake to go down into that rayless abyss Where they are lodged now ! Think, but a Avoman 1 am, a Greek maiden Gloomy depths I avoid — give me my place in the sun Making the world as cheerful and bright as a temple of marble : Oh the dark chasms of soul, worse them I hate than this gorge ! Look, Oh dearest, away from this summit down into yon valley ! There is the mantle of haze spread o'er the Olives and plain ; From the heights far above, it reaches below to the waters Of the Corinthian Sea tying in azure repose, Xear us light blue is the mountain ; deep blue it grows in the distance, Whilst through the colors so faint, Helius scatters his gold. Why, thou asiiest, was made this haze, and what is it good for ? — Beautiful merely to be and to delight with its hue. For it attuneth the soul with its quiet harmonious grandeur ; All of it thou must behold, else thou beholdest but naught. JN'ear by it will not be seen — only in the aerial distance Canst thou observe its frail form, ever refusing the touch. Here thou canst not say that it is, nor j)oint to it yonder In a particular spot ; still it exists and is fair. So do I feel when I look on thy beauty. Oh Elpinike, I can not say that it lies in thy sweet lips or thy cheek Elfinilie 109' Or thy forehead ; I know thou art fail', I question no further, But delight my fond eye viewing the whole of thy form. I desire not to seek for the deep-hidden reason of beauty, Lest it should vanish like haze when it is sought to be grasped ; In thy presence I lose every thought— am. transformed to pure vision ^ Simply I know thou art fair — what of thee more would I know ? 4. Who made the haze and what he made it for, are stupid questions,, Any answer thereto I in my soul do disdain ; Look ! it is one fair color upon this picture of ISTature That is stretched till the sea for the delight of iis all. IN'ot any origin wish I to seek of the beautiful object, Not any use shall I ask when it before me doth lie; Simply I try to surrender myself to its waters of beautj^', There unconsciously float while I am rocked to repose. Clouds are Avhite, and valleys are green, and mountains are mottled^ Yet they all are but one, and they excite but one joy. Silver-green are the leaves of the Olive, golden the sunbeams, But the mild haze draws a veil wove of transparent light blue. In the distance shineth the sea ; beheld through this curtain, In a calm rapture it lies passing beyond out of sight. And it speaks to the soul of some tranquil home in the future That doth rise far away out of the ken of the ISTow, Dimly receding in haze, and yet from this summit revealed, Hinting of worlds that have been, hinting of worlds still to be. Whither the heart doth turn oftentimes with deep aspiration : — 110 Ulpinike. Hold ! the Olives appear, thither at once let us go ; To this glorious world they belong — I seek not another, Here is the strain of the Muse, here is the rapture of love, But above all, th}^ form is beheld on our Earth, Elpinike, Bound thee now Olives have joined in the gay whirl of the dance; See how the tops of the trees in the sunshine with light palpitation Flutter afar down the mount full of the joy of the hour ! Under the sport of the leaflets are winding the youths of the chorus, There is the home of my heart, thither I pass through the haze. 5. Often it seemeth to me that Apollo doth play with his Delphi, Hiding his joyous young fiacc merely for sport in the clouds For a few moments, till he ma}^ see what the world is without him. Then he throws off the mask, making us laugh in his beams. Thrice to-day I attemj)ted to stir from the house when 1 saw him Out on the mountains above, dancing in glee o'er the tops. Thither I also wanted to go and join in that chorus. All of sunbeams comjjosed, over Parnassian heights. But at once he would dive in a cloud and there remain hidden. Even some droplets of rain would he dash down in mj face. I, beholding him frown from his darkened throne in the heavens, Quickly returned to the house, deeming him moody the while. But as soon as 1 passed in the door and was looking behind me, Shining he was again — laughing aloud at my fright. So three times to-day he has acted, — so, Elpinike, Thou hast acted to-day, Delphian child of the God. UlpiniJce. Ill For thoii hast told the story, so pitiful, of thy misfortunes, That I was ready to weep, when just behind in thine eyes I beheld the faint twinkle of smiles pursuing each other, So that I answered their laugh right in thy mirror of tears. ^Tis thy delight to make me afraid with thy frown for a moment, But the cloud in thy face breaks into dimples of joy. 6. Wretched hovels now hold the high site of Apollo's great temple, Yet some walls can be seen which of the past try to tell ; But no more we behold the smooth white embi-ace of the columns Eound the cell of the God which his clear shape indwelt ; And the front of the temple is gone, the far-shining forehead. Where in sculpture were read deeds of the Grod in his might ; Also the frieze, the soft fillet around the head of the structure. Telling a story of old in a low hymn writ of stone, Has been lost from Delphi along with thousands of marbles. Singing each one some strain to the Crreat Man or the God. — ' 'No, these words are not true, for I saw erewhile the old temple : I can the secret impart hoAV thou canst see it as well. I was doAvn in the valley where sports the orchard of Olives, Elpinike was there — stood at my side as I looked, And she lent me her beautiful eyes,, her soul too she lent me, Bade me upward to glance where was the Delphian town • Through a long verdant view enchased by the weft of the branches The old temple I saw rise once again in its pride ; Thither the leaves made a framework of gracefullest lines for its splendor, 112 UlpiniTce. Through them the marble upsprang gleaming anew from the hill, Just as fair Elpiuike begau in her smiles to enwrap me, And as I felt her mild breath freighted Avith words from her soul. I looked up through the twigs and the leaves and beheld ancient Delphi Filled with beauty and light, moving to measures of hymns. 7. Out on the slant of the hill-side lies the old Delphian graveyard : By it oft I must pass when to the Olives I go ; Ancient coffins of stone through the fields in disorder are scattered: 8ome are just broken in twain smote b}^ a single rude blow, Others have had many blows from the ages and crumbled to fragments, Still a few have remained whole in the temjDest of time. But they all are now empty where once were laid the dear bodies, Laid wnth many a tear in the thick casket of rock, Strong enough to preserve what it held in its chamber forever : But not e'en ashes are here speaking of life and its sleep. How I would like to behold some one of the shapes in its splendor Else now out of this stone, in a new Delphian birth. And with the flow of the folds sweep there through the Halls of Apollo, Mid the high columns that shine as in the days of the Clod I But the fair body has perished in spite of the 'strength of the fortress : So Elpinike thou too must by dark Death be entombed. But let us fly from the thought — let us hurry away to the Olives : There cheerless Acheron's stream dries in the sheen of the leaves. There are the happy domains of our Eros illumed by the sunbeams, There let us know what is love, yielding to honeyed caress Ulpihike. 113 While the Hours still lend us their wings and bedew the sweet senses: For I feel sorely afi-aid, love may not be after death ; F^ros, the gladsome, flees from the gloomy regard of grim Pluto, But the Olives he seeks sporting his wings in the trees; JSTor wdl Apollo, the light-darter, descend to the realm of Hades, Only over the Earth hovers his gold-dropping car. Didst' thou notice just now that rattle of sash at the window ? On its hinge turned the door, yet at the sill is no guest. Also the pan on the fire slightly tipped, and in it the water Quivered from some hidden touch with rajjid shvidders of fear. List ! a low heav}- rumble that i-olls far away in the distance — Then it dies with a gasp, in a faint mutter of wrath ; Pray, what is it ? To thee I shall tell the truth undistorted, Though I love not to think what I now feel I must speak ; But thou must know what is here; That was Seismos, the God of the Earthquake, Who just turned on his side in a wild frenzy of dreams; For he is still here l)eneath us, and often he gives us a warning That he feverish is, restless for deeper revenge. When he turns in his bed, he rumples the earth like a covci': Just at present he sleeps under this quilt of the groimd. And in his dream he grasps it and Avrinkles it oft till it ti-emble : Rigid Parnassian tops roll like the waves of the sea. And the rock-pdlared plane of the earth at his touch is as water: Even its billows' low I'oar was the dull sound thou hast heard. 114 JiJlpiniJce. Once, it is said, long ago he in person rose up from these mountains^ Huge was his visage of stone, wrinkled with many a rift, Mighty the brawn of his arm, his legs had the totter of hill-tops : Eoiind him a barbarous blast swept from the wilds of the JSTorth, Temples were sunk in the earth, the G-ods disappeared in the tempest, Shice then our Delphi has been nought but the film of a dream. Even my days — said she — ^reach back to a year when he smote us, All of us fled from our homes, many were dragged to his cave. Since this spell of his ire, he feverish sleeps in his chamber, Still again he will rise for in his heart he is wroth, — Wroth at our Delphian God and wroth at our Delphian sunshine. Both he would sink into night where he has sway mid the rocks. — Elpinike, where is thy basket ? — cease thy foreboding, G-lorious AjDollo has come, peering just out of the clouds; — Wait till Seismos arrive of himself, do not bring him beforehand ; Down to the Olives we haste, great will the crop be to-day. 9. See this rock that is lying here in the midst of the village ; 'Tis as large as a house, rugged and sharp are its sides. Surl}^ and ugly it lies, crouched down in the street like a watch-dog That will not stir from his place however much we may coax. So we all when we enter our hamlet, have to go round it ; G-raze but the edges of flint, see, you are bitten by fangs. Whence the intruder, you ask ? Look upward to yon craggy summit Overhanging the town, thence you will see it was broke; For the rift is still fresh at the j)oint where the cliff was sundered, Ulpinike 115 And this fragment would fit were it but placed on that break : Now with its mass of huge ruin it stops up the entrance to Delphi For the stranger who seeks in his long journey our town. But for lis dwellers it is a dark threat as well as a hindrance, Hinting of chaos and death which were once rolled from the steep — Hither hurled by a God, by the dark-minded, rough-handed Seismos, Down on the hamlet in sleep at the still middle of night. That dire moment, oh friend, I still can distinctly remember, As my father me clasped from the soft rugs where I lay Wrapped in the folds of sweet slumber and cradled by beautiful visions : Quickly he bore me away, naked and bruised in limb. Up to that time I had lived an harmonious sport of existence, ISTow my life lies in twain, cleft by a horrible hour. — Thus Elpinike was speaking as she came out of the Olives, And with a shudder she brushed past the rough rock iji the path. Certain it is that barbarous Seismos was angry at Delphi, Seeking to whelm the whole town into his rocky domains ; For the broad earth there surged like a wave or whirled like an eddy, Mountains quivered above smit by the hand of the God; To and fro like a pendulum swung he lofty Phloumbouki, Crags he tore off in his wrath, hurling them down on the roofs. Fifty people were lost then, but the Greek maiden was rescued, Elpinike was saved, dowered with beauty divine ; Even Seismos, the brute, with rapture was seized, or with pity At her beauteous distress, and let her flee from his grasp. Now I tremble with terror and love as I think of her danger. And with a fervor more deep to my embrace her 1 clasp ; 116 Elpinike. ; Temples are buried, houses are crushed, whole peoples have perished — j But the Greek maiden survives, fair Elpinike still lives ; ; ! And when the morn has touched her soft eye with its .finger of roses, j Down to the Olives she speeds, singing a hymn on her way ; i The glad stream of her notes I wander along to the well-head, . ■ Beakers of pearls there I dijD out of the fountain of song. ; 10. ; Many the deeds of wickedness that are recorded of Seismos ; s But the one which is worst I shall relate to thee now — '■ He tried to ravish Castalia. Under her fountain \ The fast earth he quaked, sought to break up -to her bed, '. And to bear her away as once Proserpine from Enna i Was borne off by a God to the Tartarean realm, ; But our good mother Earth was firm and refused him a passage, ; Nor to his blows did she yield though she was sorely assailed. i Then he filled the fair laj) of the IS'ymph with stones from the moun- i tain, . ! Hurled from the summit above till she was lost to the sight, * Clasped in the rugged embraces of Seismos, of rock-he;irted Seismos : ' Still her low wail we heard and her clear tears bubbled out. So that we knew where she was, revealed by the sigh of her waters, ; And we rescued her thence when the old brute fell asleep. ■ Still she is fair as she rests in her bed though bruised by the Titan, i And a low music she makes with her transparent sweet song, ) When on the pebbles she dances away down into the valley j Where the Olives are seen — thither she hies with her stream. ] UlpiniTce. 117 11. Yet I am pained when I think how many a beautiful maiden In that convulsion was lost — lost to us all evermore. Oh the fair forms that lie in the cold embraces of Seismos, That would ravish the eye as they proceed to the dance, Festively dressed in white linen robes of gracefullest flexure, Moving in concord their limbs to the soft waving of sounds, Fragrantly breathed on by Muses from near Parnassian summits — One harmonious voice they would become in the soul. Little use can it be to seek for them since the dark giant Has devoured their forms or has them bitten to shreds. Even those whom after long labor we rescued, were mangled By his rude hand of rock till but a fragment they lay. But they are gone from our view, buried deep in the caverns of Seismos, Lost to Apollo's abode, temjjle of beauty and light. Who would not weep for them ? — Hold thy kindred tears, Elpinike ; Thou dost remain on our Earth, still too the Olives remain ; Thy bright eyes now reflect all that ever was lost in fair Hellas, In thee 1 see all its maids, Helen herself I behold. One is enough, I tell thee, one is far better than many — If only thee I can win, then I have won in thee all. 118 Mpinike. CYCLET FOUKTH. 1. Calmly has Phoebus laid down his bright shield 'gainst the top of the mountain, As in the West he descends, clad in his armor of gold ; Now he commences to cast off his mail for a plunge in the ocean, Like a warrior on high, weary with spoils of the day ; Badiant Delphi he leaves for a time and bright Elj)inike, While the afternoon sheen slowly is swooning to eve. Hark ! there rises a sullen low moan from the tops of the Olives : People are beating the fruit down with a pitiless rod. So the hapless young trees must surrender the stores of their branches. Scourged by the hand of harsh fate, stript of their glory and pride. Many a leat in a slow, sad whirl to the ground now is falling, Quits unwilling the twig where it could sport all day. Many a branch, too, full of fresh juices and tender, is broken By the rude blows that fall on the bright head of the tree. Even the limbs are lopped by the knife and are borne to the village, Where in the hearth they are cast, quickly to ashes are burnt. So there remains of the merry new dance that took place in the tree- tops, Nought but the dust of the pyre that in the chimney is left. MpiniJce. 119 As I walk through the trees of the orchard, a tear will keep dropping When I thhik of the fate which my young Olives has smit. ISTor can I tell what there is in the air of to-day that affects me ; Always I melt at some view, joining fair youth to decay. What are these fragnents of stone ? Sarcophagus, broken to pieces, Which I stumble against as they lie strown in my path. Here mid the fallen green branches and leaves is the hollow stone casket Where a young body once lay, torn from its parents' fond arms ; And in the midst of the Olives, under the sport of the -leaflets, Urns were once placed in the rock, holding sweet youth and its love. But the stone still remains, though long since has perished the treasure, Fate refuses return by an unchanging decree ; IN"or is l^ature, methinks, to her children wholly impartial, Some she recalls to her breast, others forever she sj)urns. Seasons depart and return w^ith delight to the Delphian hill-side. Disappear for a time but are restored with new birth; High Parnassus, propped on its pillars, knows no mutation, Though for the summer it change merely its vestment of snow ; Evergreen are the pines that slope down the sides of the mountain, While the leaf of the bush hints, when it falls, the new bud ; Still too Castalia is here — the perennial musical runnel. Singing the same happy strain heard by the poets of old ; But, ah youth, the fairest, supremest blossom of ISTature Passes away at its bloom by irreversible law ; ^ ' ] Man, the top of creation decays, and soon drops into ashes — Flung by time on the earth as a mere handful of dust. 120 Mpinilce. What is fairest must die, its place is soon filled by another, While there endures the rude rock ages on ages the same. Thus have perished the youths and thus have perished the Olives^ Eut not thus shall I die, if my behest be obeyed ; For a testament have I bequeathed with the single provision : Plant a young Olive or two over my grave by the rill ; Then I cannot but think I shall wake to the joy of the leaflets. As I lie in repose under my blanket of earth ; Or if I sleep, I shall dream once more the sweet dreams of my lifetime^ When I roanxed through the trees, sporting with image and song. But the Olive there jjlanted, I know, will rejoice to spread o'er me, Through the soil it will send rootlets to wreathe me in love ; With the sap I shall rise, and the tree I shall render immortal. For my deathless soul shall I imbreathe in the leaves ; There they forever will sport in the golden network of sunbeams^ Just as I saw them of old as I lay down by the stream. 2. True it is, Elpinike, of me, thou faithful observer — What thou hast said with a laugh, I must confess with a sigh : Silvery hairs have begun to intrude on the slant of my temples. With their dark comrades they stay winding in subtle embrace ; Nor can they be any longer expelled by the hand of rude power. For their sum is too great, so they defiant remain. Many a wrinkle has furrowed deeply the field of my forehead, Running aslant and across — marks by my life branded there ; Many a channel spreads out like a fan from the lake of my eyelids,. Mpinike. 121 Passages cut through my cheeks by the fierce tempest and flood ; Often, I tell thee, have they been filled with hot torrents of sorrow When the dark cloud of fate burst o'er my head in the air. JSTever again will these channels be smoothed from my visage, oh never ! Like the fair rose of youth which I behold in thy face ; "Worn too deejD in the storm they have been to be now leveled over, Traces will alwaj^s remain where the wild current once swept. Still, Elpinike, like thee I shall bloom in spite of my body, Eiehcr shall be, too, the yield from the deep furrows of life, Grolden forever the stream shall flow through the tear-riven channel. E'en from the wounds of the tree buds shall burst forth to the sun. For the glow of thy youth I shall hand thee sweet draughts of my fancy, And for the flash of thine eyes shall I throw sparkles of words ; With the red morn in thy cheek shall I mingle the gold of my evening. And with thy youthful embrace now I shall match a young dream. For my soul's latest garland exchange thy body's sweet poem, — I too fresh flowers shall wreathe while there is life in this frame. Know that age is transformed into youth by Love and the Muses, And though Time crisp the flesh, Poesy blossoms eterne. Look at this aged Olive beneath which now Ave are sitting, Centuries long have sought vainly to blast its j^oung life. Twisted and knotted andbent in all ways by the winds and the tempests, E'en full of holes is the stock, and it is hollow within. Here it was cruelly struck by an axe in the hands of a peasant, There a branch it once lost, dearer, methinks, than itself; !N"ay, it has once been rifted in twain from the top to the bottom In some violent storm sent from above by the Clods. 122 MpiniJce. Still it is giving forth branches and shoots from its body so shattered, E'en on its scars you may see spronts leaping out of the bark, And it bm-ies its wounds in an overgrowth smooth of new tissue, Still their place can be told by the fresh rind and the buds. Youthful its head of silver- green leaves rises up in the orchard, jfsTo one would think of its age, were the old trunk not beheld. Every branch too is laden above with a rich crop of Olives : Far more it bears of the fruit than the young tree in the soil; For out of each ancient fibre of wood shoots upward a sapling, Till around the hoar stem dances a cluster of youths With the thousandfold laugh of the leaves and the limbs on the hill-side : 'Tis a hymn, you would say, sung by Parnassian choirs. Tree of the Muses, thyself into youth eternally changing, Even thy age is the soil in which is nourished thy bloom. And the older thou growest, and the more wrinkled thy body, The more sprouts seem to spring from the rich fibre of years. Such may I be — age into youth forever transforming, Till the old trunk when it falls shall be borne off to the pyre. 3. Not every day does Apollo smile on the hill-side of Delphi, But he covers his face in the dark folds of the clouds ; For he has two garments — the white one of youth and of radiance, And another one grained in the deep colors of night. From the second he shakes out the showers and sjirinkles the Olives : Then I am driven to roof, while Elpinike remains Out in the storm at her work, and sings to the fall of the raindrops Ulpinike. 123 Melodies sweet of her soul, though all the Olives be wet. There in the cabin I couch on a rug alongside of the fireplace, Look at the blaze and think — think of the maid in the rain. But as I sit there alone, Apollo rises within me, Bright is the form of the God, mildly serene is his glance, Proud is the lip though and high is the tread of the slayer of Python, And from his body divine sjDarkles ambrosial youth. Of a sudden each hidden dark chamber within me is lighted, And a new sunrise I have all to myself in the hut. Thus he to me familiarly talks in tones of fair promise : ''Though unseen by thine eye, do not suppose I am lost; Por I oft leave the sky to rise in the hearts of my people, Often I change my abode here from without to within. He knoweth not my true worship who can not carry my sunshine Through the time of dark days that I insert in the bright; Por the world I have built out of layers of clouds and of sunlight, Although man I have made only of beams, if he will. Often the heavens must dai^ken and tempests will bury my visage. But my boon thou hast not till thou art Phoebus thyself. X/Ook now under the Olives, thine own Elpinike is busy In the fierce rain, still she sings — sings in the storm of her love. She my true worshipper is, for she bears my face in her bosom, So that wherever she stays, there I am shining all day. 124 MpiniJce. The last evening it was that I saw Elpinike at Delphi : Softl}^ her words in mine ear throbbed the low strain of a hymn After I had come home and laid down on my rugs at the hearthstone : There I lay down by myself, filled with her musical speech. Always my thoughts were lingering, over her tones and her glances, Till by degrees I had strayed into the realm of the dream ; Then each wandering fancy was buoyed with the wish of my waking,. And each hope of my heart turned at its birth to be true ; Every image in sleep was full of the glimpses of daj^time. And what I thought of awake changed to a vision by night. Eor I dreamed I had borne far away divine Elpinike, Out of her bright Greek home over the breadth of the seaj So infatuate had I become to possess ot her beauty That the Delphian rocks could I without her not leave. Then I led the Parnassian queen along in my journey, Joyous we turned from the Dawn glimmering faint on the heights^ Toward the Evening we fled on the fire-winged chariot of Hesper, Where are the garden and trees hanging with apples of gold, Which long ago were by Poets beheld from the toj) of Parnassus, Like an island of dreams floating Olympian fruits. As it lay far off in the West mid the sheen of Apollo : ]^ow the presage is true and Eljjinike has come. There in my land by the sunset I built her a home, a new temple, That she might have an abode fit for a Goddess of old 5 And I built it of whitest and purest of far-glancing marble, Mpinilce. 125 Bound it I drew a bright frieze leaping with forms of the feast, While the roof was suj)ported by many a glistening column ; Many a sculpture I placed in the fair hall of the fane. In the beams of the sun how merry the dance of the mai'bles ! The whole temple did dance as with new lustre it rose. There it stood on the banks that hold the great Father of Waters, Monster huge of the West — tawny the flow of his mane — Ever leaping along down his deep -delved path to the sea-caves Where he doth rest from his race mid his sleek dolphins and calves. Smeared is his face with the clay of each land that he laves in his passage ^ Cloudy with turmoil his brow as he defiantly rolls, Rearing his head from the stream, he shakes his muddy old chaplet,. In some anger he seems ever to hurry along. Hitherto he is said to have been the terror of Muses, And they have fled from his banks, shrieking in fear or disgust. Still 'there boldly 1 built a Greek fane to mine own Elpinike, And I installed her within, that of my house she be queen. Joyous and faithful she sped with me over the continents mighty^ Over the ocean she passed, neither she flinched nor she tired ; Soon a new Hellas she found, and a new Parnassian garden ' Filled with the fragrance of flowers grown in Apollo's domain. There she was happy — and in her new home by the side of the Eiver Always her glances serene tokened her loveliest mood ; Eobed too she was in the folds ; when she moved through the mansion of marble, Graces followed her train, strewing their wealth as she passed ; And on the shore where raged that turbulent God of the Eiver 126 Ulpinike. Then she attuned the sweet hymn, calming the wrath of the wave; Filled was her strain of delight with the ancient Delphian measures, That Castalia had throbbed from her clear source long ago, As she went dancing adown the green hill through the orchard and vineyard, Winding in choruses bright, garlands of maidens and youths. There Elpinike, with glances all golden, illumed her new temple, And with the voice of the Muse often she sang as of old. ■^