@3Thetis@1. O Peleus! whom the Gods have given me For all my happiness on earth, a bliss I thought too great.. @3Peleus@1. Why sighest thou? why shed Those tears? why sudden silence? our last tears Should then have fallen when the Fates divided us, Saying, earth is not thine; that he who rules The waters call'd thee. Bitter those that flow Between the loved and loving when they part, And ought to be; woe to the inhuman wretch Who wishes they were not: but such as fall At the returning light of blessed feet Should be refreshing and divine as morn. @3Thetis@1. Support me, O support me in thy arms Once more, once only. Lower not thy cheek In sadness; let me look into thine eyes; Tho' the heavens frown on us, they, now serene, Threaten us no fresh sorrow..@3us?@1 ah me! The word of Zeus is spoken: our Achilles Discovered, borne away in the Argive ships To Aulis, froward youth! his fearless heart Had bounded faster than those ships to Troy. Ah! surely there are some among the Gods Or Goddesses who might have, knowing all, Forewarn'd thee. Were there neither auguries Nor dreams to shake off thy security, No priest to prophesy, no soothsayer? And yet what pastures are more plentiful Than round Larissa? victims where more stately? Come, touch the altar with me. Pious man, Doth not thy finger even now impress The embers of an incense often burnt For him, for thee? The lowing of the herds Are audible, whose leaders lead them forth For sacrifice from where Apidanos Rises, to where Enipeus widens, lost In the sea-beach: and these may yet avail. @3Peleus@1. Alas! alas! priests may foretell calamity But not avert it: all that they can give Are threats and promises and hopes and fears. Despond not, long-lost Thetis! hath no God Now sent thee back to me? why not believe He will preserve our son? which of them all Hath he offended? @3Thetis@1. Yet uncertainties, Worse than uncertainties, oppress my heart, And overwhelm me. @3Peleus.@1 Thetis! in the midst Of all uncertainties some comfort lies, Save those which even perplex the Gods on high And which confound men the most godlike..love, Despond not so. Long may Achilles live Past our old-age..@3ours?@1 had I then forgot, Dazed by thy beauty, thy divinity? @3Thetis@1. Immortal is thy love, immutable. @3Peleus@1. Time without grief might not have greatly changed me. @3Thetis@1. There is a loveliness which wants not youth, And which the Gods may want, and sometimes do. The soft voice of compassion is unheard Above; no shell of ocean is attuned To that voice there; no tear hath ever dropt Upon Olympos. Fondly now as ever Thou lookest, but more pensively; hath grief Done this, and grief alone? tell me at once, Say have no freshly fond anxieties.. @3Peleus@1. Smile thus, smile thus anew. Ages shall fly Over my tomb while thou art flourishing In youth eternal, the desire of Gods, The light of Ocean to its lowest deep, The inspirer and sustainer here on earth Of ever-flowing song. @3Thetis@1. I bless thy words And in my heart will hold them; Gods who see Within it may desire me, but they know I have loved Peleus. When we were so happy They parted us, and, more unmerciful, Again unite us in eternal woe. @3Peleus@1. Powerfuller than the elements their will, And swifter than the light, they may relent, For they are mutable, and thou mayest see Achilles every day and every hour. @3Thetis@1. Alas! how few! ..I see him in the dust, In agony, in death, I see his blood Along the flints, his yellow hair I see Darken'd, and flapping a red stream, his hand Unable to remove it from the eyes. I hear his voice..his voice that calls on @3me@1. I could not save him; and he would have left The grots of Nereus, would have left the groves And meadows of Elysium, bent on war. @3Peleus@1. Yet Mars may spare him. Troy hath once been won. @3Thetis@1. Perish he must, perish at Troy, and now. @3Peleus@1. The @3now@1 of Gods is more than life's duration; Other Gods, other worlds, are form'd within it. If he indeed must perish, and at Troy, His ashes will lie softly upon hers, Thus fall our beauteous boy, thus fall Achilles. Songs such as Keiron's harp could never reach Shall sound his praises, and his spear shall shine Over far lands, when even our Gods are mute. @3Thetis@1. Over his head nine years had not yet past When in the halls of Tethys these were words Reiterated oftenest..@3O thou brave@1 @3Golden-hair'd son of Peleus!@1 What a heap Of shells were broken by impatient Nymphs Because of hoarseness rendering them unfit For their high symphonies! and what reproofs Against some Tritons from their brotherhood For breaking by too loud a blast the slumber Of those who, thinking of him, never slept. To me appear'd the first light of his eyes, The dayspring of the world; such eyes were thine At our first meeting on the warm sea-shore. Why should youth linger with me? why not come Age, and then death? The beast of Kalydon Made his impetuous rush against this arm No longer fit for war nor for defence Of thy own people; is the day come too When it no longer can sustain thy Thetis? Protend it not toward the skies, invoke not, Name not, a Deity; I dread them all. No; lift me not above thy head, in vain Reproving them with such an awful look, A look of beauty which they will not pity, And of reproaches which they may not brook. @3Peleus@1. Doth not my hand now, Thetis, clasp that foot Which seen the Powers of ocean cease to rage, Indignant when the brood of AEolos Disturbs their rest? If that refreshing breath Which now comes over my unquiet head Be not the breath of immortality, If Zeus hath any thunderbolt for it, Let this, beloved Thetis, be the hour! | Discover our Poem Explanations and Poet Analyses!Other Poems of Interest...THE LANDLADY'S DAUGHTER by JOHANN LUDWIG UHLAND GREAT THOUGHTS by PHILIP JAMES BAILEY CROSS AND THRONE by HORATIO (HORATIUS) BONAR HINC LACHRIMAE; OR THE AUTHOR TO AURORA: 14 by WILLIAM BOSWORTH DEDICATIONS AND INSCRIPTIONS: 11. TO EDWARD THOMAS, WITH A PLAY by GORDON BOTTOMLEY LADIES FAIR by ANNA HEMPSTEAD BRANCH MILTON AT CRIPPLEGATE by CHARLES WILLIAM BRODRIBB |