CEASE to complain of what the Gods decree, Whether by death or (harder!) by the hand Of one prefer'd thy loves be torn away, For even against the bourn of Arcady Beats the sad Styx, heaving its wave of tears, And nought on earth so high but Care flies higher. A maid was wooed by Boreas and by Pan, Pitys her name, her haunt the wood and wild; Boreas she fled from; with more placid eye Lookt she on Pan; yet chided him, and said .. "Ah, why should men or clearer-sighted Gods Propose to link our hands eternally? That which o'er raging seas is wildly sought Perishes and is trampled on in port; And they where all things are immutable Beside, even they, the very Gods, are borne Unsteadily wherever love impels; Even he who rules Olympus, he himself Is lighter than the cloud beneath his feet. Lovers are ever an uncertain race, And they the most so who most loudly sing Of truth and ardour, anguish and despair, But thou above them all. Now tell me, Pan, How thou deceivedst the chaste maid of night, Cynthia, thou keeper of the snow-white flock! Thy reed had crackled with thy flames, and split With torture after torture; thy lament Had fill'd the hollow rocks; but when it came To touch the sheep-fold, there it paus'd and cool'd. Wonderest thou whence the story reacht my ear? Why open those eyes wider? why assume The ignorant, the innocent? prepared For refutation, ready to conceal The fountain of Selinos, waving here On the low water its long even grass, And there (thou better may'st remember this) Paved with smooth stones, as temples are. The sheep Who led the rest, struggled ere yet half-shorn, And dragged thee slithering after it: thy knee Bore long the leaves of ivy twined around To hide the scar, and still the scar is white. Dost thou deny the giving half thy flock To Cynthia? hiding tho' the better half, Then all begrimed producing it, while stood Well-washt and fair in puffy woolliness The baser breed, and caught the unpracticed eye." Pan blusht, and thus retorted. "Who hath told That idle fable of an age long past? More just, perhaps more happy, hadst thou been, Shunning the false and flighty. Heard I have Boreas and his rude song, and seen the goats Stamp on the rock and lick the affrighted eyes Of their young kids; and thee too, then averse, I also saw, O Pitys! Is thy heart, To what was thy aversion, now inclined? Believest thou my foe? the foe of all I hold most dear. Had Cynthia been prefer'd She would not thus have taunted me: unlike Thee, Pitys, she looks down with gentle glance On them who suffer; whether they abide In the low cottage or the lofty tower She tends them, and with silent step alike And watchful eye their aching vigil soothes. I sought not Cynthia; Cynthia lean'd to me. Not pleased too easily, unlovely things She shuns, by lovely (and none else) detain'd. Sweet, far above all birds, is philomel To her; above all scenes the Padan glades And their soft-whispering poplars; sweet to her The yellow light of box-tree in full bloom Nodding upon Cytoros. She delights To wander thro' the twinkling olive-grove, And where in clusters on Lycaean knolls Redden the berries of the mountain-ash; In glassy fountain, and grey temple-top, And smooth sea-wave, when Hesperus hath left The hall of Tethys, and when liquid sounds (Uncertain whence) are wafted to the shore . . Never in Boreas." "What a voice is thine!" She said, and smiled. "More roughly not himself Could sound with all his fury his own name. But come, thou cunning creature! tell me how Thou couldst inveigle Goddesses without Thinning thy sheepfold." "What! again," cried he, "Such tart and cool twitting? She received, Not as belov'd, but loving me, my gift. I gave her what she askt, and more had given, But half the flock was all that she required; Need therefor was it to divide in twain The different breeds, that she might make her choice. One, ever meagre, with broad bony front, Shone white enough, but harder than goat's hair The wool about it; and loud bleatings fill'd The plains it battened on . . for only plains It trod; and smelt . . as all such coarse ones smell. Avarice urged the Goddess: she sprang forth And took, which many more have done, the worse. "Why shake thy head? incredulous! Ah why, When none believe the truth, should I confess? Why, one who hates and scorns the lover, love? Once thou reposedest on the words I spake, And, when I ceast to speak, thou didst not cease To ponder them, but with thy cool plump palm Unconsciously didst stroke that lynx-skin down Which Bacchus gave me, toucht with virgin shame If any part slipt off and bared my skin. I then could please thee, could discourse, could pause, Could look away from that sweet face, could hide All consciousness that any hand of mine Had crept where lifted knee would soon unbend. Ah then how pleasant was it to look up (If thou didst too) from the green glebe supine, And drink the breath of all sweet herbs, and watch The last rays run along the level clouds, Until they kindle into living forms And sweep with golden net the western sky. Meanwhile thou notedst the dense troop of crows Returning on one track and at one hour In the same darkened intervals of heaven. Then mutual faith was manifest, but glad Of fresh avowal; then securely lay Pleasure, reposing on the crop she reapt. "The oleaster of the cliff; the vine Of leaf pellucid, clusterless, untamed; The tufts of cytisus that half-conceal'd The craggy cavern, narrow, black, profound; The scantier broom below it, that betray'd Those two white fawns to us . . what now are they? How the pine's whispers, how the simpering brook's, How the bright vapour trembling o'er the grass Could I enjoy, unless my Pitys took My hand and show'd me them; unless she blew My pipe when it was hoarse; and, when my voice Fail'd me, took up, and so inspired, my song." Thus he, embracing with brown brawny arm Her soft white neck, not far from his declined, And with sharp finger parting her smooth hair. He paus'd. "Take now that pipe," said she, "and since Thou findest joyance in things past, run o'er The race-course of our pleasures: first will I The loves . . of Boreas I abhor . . relate. He his high spirit, his uprooted oaks, And heaven confused with hailstones, may sing on: How into thine own realms his breath has blown The wasting flames, until the woods bow'd low Their heads with heavy groans, while he alert Shook his broad pinions and scream'd loud with joy. He may sing on, of shattered sails, of ships Sunk in the depths of ocean, and the sign Of that wide empire from Jove's brother torn; And how beneath the rocks of Ismaros Deluded he with cruel sport the dream That brought the lost one back again, and heard The Manes clap their hands at her return. Always his pastime was it, not to shake Light dreams away, but change them into forms Horrific; churl, from peace and truth averse. What in such rival ever couldst thou fear?" Boreas heard all she spoke, amid the brake Conceal'd: rage seiz'd him: the whole mountain shook. "Contemn'd!" said he, and as he said it, split A rock, and from the summit with his foot Spurn'd it on Pitys. Ever since, beneath That rock sits Pan: her name he calls; he waits Listening, to hear the rock repeat it; wipes The frequent tear from his hoarse reed, and wears Henceforth the pine, her pine, upon his brow. | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...PROTESTS (AFTER A PAINTING BY HUGO BALLIN) by LOUIS UNTERMEYER THE BURIED LADY by PAUL VALERY THE LATE SINGER by WILLIAM CARLOS WILLIAMS A DIRGE FOR MCPHERSON; KILLED IN FRONT OF ATLANTA by HERMAN MELVILLE THE NOTHING REDEMPTION by BRUCE WEIGL ANECDOTE FOR FATHERS by WILLIAM WORDSWORTH ONE PRAYER by GEORGE BARLOW (1847-1913) |