Читать книгу Yale Classics - Ancient Greek Literature - Anacreon - Страница 134

Phaon

Оглавление

Table of Contents

PHILOMEL


Philomel in my garden,

Messenger sweet of springtide,

From the bough of the olive tree utter

Tidings ecstatic.


Linger long on thy olden

Note as in days remembered;

Ere the Boatman that knew Aphrodite

Ravished my vision.


Fatal glamor of beauty,

Beauty of Gods made mortal;

Ah, before its delight I am ever

Fearful of heaven.


Spring in breeze and the blossom,

Grasses and leaves and odors,

On my heart with the breath of a vanished

April is shaken;


Shaken with thrill and regret of

Lost caresses and kisses;

Anactoria's memory, Atthis

Never forgotten.


Philomel in my garden,

Messenger sweet of springtide,

From the bough of the olive tree utter

Tidings ecstatic.


GOLDEN PULSE


Golden pulse grew on the shore,

Ferns along the hill,

And the red cliff roses bore

Bees to drink their fill;


Bees that from the meadows bring

Wine of melilot,

Honey-sups on golden wing

To the garden grot.


But to me, neglected flower,

Phaon will not see,

Passion brings no crowning hour,

Honey nor the bee.


THE SWALLOW


Daughter of Pandion, lovely

Swallow that veers at my window,

Swift on the flood of the sunshine

Darting thy shadow;


What is thy innocent purpose,

Why dost thou hover and haunt me?

Is it a kinship of sorrow

Brings thee anear me?


Must thou forever be tongueless,

Flying in fear of Tereus?

Must he for Itys pursue thee,

Changed to a lapwing?


Tireless of pinion and never

Resting on bush or the branches,

Close to the earth, up the azure,

Over the treetops;


After thy wing in its madness

Follows my glance, as a flitting

Child on the track of its mother

Hastens in silence.


Daughter of Pandion, lovely

Swallow that veers at my window,

Hast thou a message from Cyprus

Telling of Phaon?


TIDINGS


She wrapped herself in linen woven close,

Stuffs delicate and texture-fine as those

The dark Nile traders for our bartering

From Egypt, Crete and far Phocea bring.


Love lent her feet the wings of winds to reach

(Whose steps stir not the shingle of the beach)

My marble court and, breathless, bid me know

My lover's sails across the harbor blow.


He seemed to her, as to himself he seems,

Like some bright God long treasured in her dreams;

She saw him standing at his galley's prow—

My Phaon, mine, in Mitylene now!


HESPERUS


Hesperus shines

Low on the eastern wave,

Off toward the Asian shore;


Over faint lines

Whose grays and purples pave

Where seas night-calmed adore.


Fair vesper fire,

Fairest of stars, the light

Benign of secret bliss;


Star of desire,

Bringing to me with night

Dreams and my Phaon's kiss.


DAWN


Just now the golden-sandalled Dawn

Peered through the lattice of my room;

Why must thou fare so soon, my Phaon?


Last night I met thee at the shore,

A thousand hues were in the sky;

The breeze from Cyprus blew, my Phaon!


I drew, to lave thy heated brow,

My kerchief dripping from the sea;

Why hadst thou sailed so far, my Phaon?


Far up the narrow mountain paths

We heard the shepherds fluting home;

Like some white God thou seemed, my Phaon!


And through the olive trees we saw

The twinkle of my vesper lamp;

Wilt kiss me now as then, my Phaon?


Nay, loosen not with gentle force

The clasp of my restraining arms;

I will not let thee go, my Phaon!


See, deftly in my trailing robe

I spring and draw the lattice close;

Is it not night again, my Phaon?


THE FAREWELL


Beloved, stand face to face,

And, lifting lids, disclose to me the grace,

The Paphic fire that lingers yet and lies

Reflected in thy eyes.


Phaon, my sole beloved,

Stand not to my mad passion all unmoved;

O let, ere thou to far Panormus sail,

One hour of love prevail.


Dear ingrate, come and let

Thy breath like odor from a cassolet,

Thy smile, the clinging touch of lips and heart

Anoint me, ere we part.


Phaon, I yearn and seek

But thee alone; and what I feel must speak

In all these fond and wilful ways of mine,

O mortal, made divine!


My girl friends now no more

Hang their sweet gifts of garlands at my door;

Dear maids, with all your vanished empery

Ye now are naught to me.


Phaon, thy galley rides

Within the harbor's mouth and waits the tides

And favoring winds, far to the west to fly

And leave me here to die.


The brawny rowers lean

To bend long-stroking oars; and changing scene

And fairer loves than mine shall soon efface

This last divine embrace.


Phaon, the lifting breeze!

See, at thy feet I kneel and clasp thy knees!

Go not, go not! O hear my sobbing prayer,

And yield to my despair!


DARK-EYED SLEEP


Dark-eyed Sleep, child of Night,

Come in thy shadow garment to my couch,

And with thy soothing touch,

Cool as the vesper breeze,

Grant that I may forget;


Bestow condign release,

A taste of rest that comes with endless sleep;

Lure off the haunting dreams,

The dire Eumenides

That torture my repose.


For I would live a space

Though Phaon has forsaken me, nor yet

Be found on shadow fields

Among the lilies tall

Of pale Persephone.


THE CLIFF OF LEUCAS


Afar-seen cliff

Stands in the western sea

Toward Cephallenian lands.


Apollo's temple crowns

Its whitened crest,

And at its base

The waves eternal beat.


Its leap has power

To cure the pangs

Of unrequited love.


Thither pale lovers go

With anguished hearts

To dare the deep and quench

Love's slow consuming flame.


Urged to the edge

By maddening desire,

I, too, shall fling myself

Imploring thee,

Apollo, lord and king!


Into the chill

Embraces of the sea,

Less cold than thine, O Phaon,

I shall fall—

Fall with the flutter of a wounded dove;


And I shall rise

Indifferent forever to love's dream,

Or find below

The sea's eternal voice,

Eternal peace.

Yale Classics - Ancient Greek Literature

Подняться наверх