CLOSED had the darkened day of Corythos. When Agelaos heard the first report, Curses he uttered on the stepmother, Fewer on Paris by her spells enthrall'd, For in the man he now but saw the child, Ingenuous, unsuspicious. He resolved To hasten back to Ida, praying death To come and intercept him on the way. What tale to tell CEnone! and what thanks From parent at a prosperous son's return, Anxiously hoped for after many years, Last gift of wife deserted, now deprived Of him whose voice, whose gesture, day and night Brought the beloved betrayer back again Into her closing and unclosing eyes, And sometimes with her child upon the knee Of her who knew him not, nor cared to know. Grief and indignant virtue wrung her breast When she repeated to the fond old man Such intermingled and such transient joys; But when she met him on his sad return Ida was hateful in her eyes, for there Love bore such bitter and such deadly fruit. When Paris knew the truth, on cheek supine And cold a thousand kisses he imprest, Weeping and wailing; he would expiate (If expiation there might ever be) The murderous deed: he built up high a pyre Of fragrant cedar, and in broken voice Call'd on the name, a name he knew so late. "O Corythos! my son! my son! " he cried, And smote his breast and turn'd his eyes away; Grief wrencht him back, grief that impell'd him on, But soon return'd he, resolute to catch The fleeting ashes and o'ertake the winds; So from the brittle brands he swept away The whiter ashes, placed them in their urn, And went back slowly, often went alone In the still night beneath the stars that shed Light on a turf not solid yet, above The priceless treasure there deposited. Achaians, wandering on the shore, observ'd His movements thither, Laertiades, Epeos, and that hero last arrived, Paeantios, catching the cool air with gasps. There rose the foss before them: they advanced From the Sigaean side thro' copse and brake Along the winding dell of darker shade, Awaiting Paris. Under a loose string Rattles a quiver; and invisibly Hath flown an arrow, and a shout succeeds: No voices answer it. One listens, groans, Calls for his foe; but calls not any God's Or any mortal's aid; he raves, and rests Upon his elbow. Back thro' the soft sands They from their ambush hasten, for no shield, No helmet had they taken, no defence. Below his knee the arrow has transfixt The pulp, and hindered all pursuit; in vain Strove he to tear it out; his vigorous arm Could only break the arrow; blood flow'd hot Where he would wrench it. All night thro', he roll'd His heavy eyes; he saw the lamps succeed Each other in the city far below, He saw them in succession dim and die. In the fresh morn, when iron light awakes The gentle cattle from their brief repose, His menials issue thro' the nearer fields And groves adjacent to explore their lord, And lastly (where perchance he might be found) Nearer the pointed barrow of his son. Thither ran forward that true-hearted race Which cheers the early morn, and shakes the frost From stiffened herbs, which lies before the gate Alike of rich and poor, but faithful most To the forsaken and afflicted, came And howl'd and croucht and lickt their master's face, And now unchided mixt their breath with his. When man's last day is come, how clear are all The former ones! Now appear manifest Neglected Gods, now Sparta's Furies rise, Now flames the fatal torch of Hecuba Portended at his birth, but deem'd extinct Until that arrow sped across the tombs Of heroes, by a hand unseen, involves In flame and smoke the loftiest tower of Troy. Such were the thoughts that vanisht like a mist, And thee, Cenone, thee alone he sees, He sees thee under where the grot was strown With the last winter leaves, a couch for each, Sees thee betrotht, deserted, desolate, Childless .. how lately not so! what avail The promises of Gods? false! false as mine! "Seek out, ye trusty men, seek out," said he, "The Nymph CEnone: tell her that I lie Wounded to death: tell her that I implore Her pardon not her aid." They, when they reacht High up the hill the woodland's last recess, And saw her habitation, saw the door Closed, and advancing heard deep groans, which brought Even to the sill her favourite doe and stag Springing before them with defiant breasts, They paus'd; they entered; few and slow the words They brought with them, the last they heard him speak. Briefly she answered with her face aside. "I could not save my child; one who could save Would not." Thick sobs succeeded. 'Twas not long Ere down the narrow and steep path are heard The pebbles rattling under peasants' feet, Whose faces the dense shrubs at every side Smite as they carry on his bier the man Who thinks his journey long; 'twas long to him Wounded so grievously, to him about To close his waning day, before his eyes Might rest on hers and mix with hers his tears. How shall he meet her? Where the rocks were clear Of ivy, more than once the trace is seen Of name or verse, the hunter's idle score Indifferent to pursue the chase; and where There was a leveler and wider track He might remember, if indeed he cared For such remembrances, the scene of games At quoit or cestus closed by dance and feast. He drew both hands before his face, and wept, And those who carried him, and found him faint And weary, placed their burden on the ground, And with averted faces they wept too. CEnone came not out; her feet were fixt Upon the threshold at the opened door, Her head turn'd inward that her tears might fall Unseen by stranger; but not long unseen By Paris: he was in his youth's domains, He view'd his earliest home, his earliest loves, And heard again his earliest sighs, and hers. "After how many and what years! " he cried, "Return I, O CEnone! thus to thee!" She answered not; no anger, no reproach; For, hours before, she prayed the Eumenides That they would, as befits the just, avenge The murder of her Corythos; she prayed That she might never have the power to help The cruel father in the hour of need. A voice now tells her from her inmost heart, Voice never, to the listener, indistinct, It is not granted to so wild a prayer. Weary of light and life, again she prayed. "Grant me, O Zeus! what thou alone canst grant. Is death too great a boon? too much for me, A wretched Nymph, to ask? bestow it now." When she had spoken, on the left was heard Thunder, and there shone flame from sky serene; Now on her child and father of her child Equally sad and tender were her thoughts; She saw them both in one, and wept the more. Heedless and heartless wretch she call'd herself, But her whole life, now most, those words belied. Paris had heard the words. "Those words were mine Could I have uttered them: wounds make men weak, Shame makes them weaker: neither knowest thou, Pure soul! one fit for immortality! Let us, CEnone, shouldst thou ever die, Be here united, here is room for both .. Both did I say? and not for one beside? Oh! will his ashes ever rest near mine?" To these few words he added these few more. "Restrain, CEnone, those heartrending sobs!" His he could not restrain, nor deeper groans, Yet struggled to console her. "Are not these Our true espousals? Many may have loved But few have died together! " Then she shriekt "Let me die first, O husband! Hear my prayer Tho' the Gods have not heard it! one embrace! Paris is mine at last; eternally Paris is mine. Oh do not thou, my child, Shun or disdain amid the shades below Those who now die, and would have died for thee! The gift of Venus I have often mourn'd, With this one consolation, that my grief Could not increase: such consolation lasts No longer: pnnishment far less severe Could Here or could Pallas have decreed Than Venus on this Ida, where she won A prize so fatal, and to more than me." The maidens of the mountain came and rais'd Her drooping head, and drew from tepid springs The water of her grot, and, from above, Cedar and pine of tender spray, and call'd Her father Cebren: he came forth, and fill'd After due sacrifice the larger space That was remaining of the recent urn. Paris had given his faithful friends command, Whether the Fates might call him soon or late, That, if were found some ashes on his breast, Those to the bones they covered be restored. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PRAYERS by HENRY CHARLES BEECHING LAMENT OF THE FRONTIER GUARD by LI PO AT THE PICTURE-SHOW by KARLE WILSON BAKER A WHITE NIGHT by MATHILDE BLIND ASPIRATIONS: 4 by MATHILDE BLIND PILLBOX by EDMUND CHARLES BLUNDEN |