She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;
Above her glared the noon; beneath, the sea.
Upon the white horizon Atho's
Weltered in burning haze; all airs were dead;
The cicale slept among the tamarisk's hair;
The birds sat dumb and drooping.
Far
The lazy sea-weed glistened in the sun;
The lazy sea-fowl dried their steaming wings;
The lazy swell crept whispering up the ledge,
And sank again.
Great Pan was laid to rest;
And Mother Earth watched by him as he slept,
And hushed her myriad children for a while.
She lay among the myrtles on the cliff;
And sighed for sleep, for sleep that would not hear,
But left her tossing still; for night and dayA mighty hunger yearned within her heart,
Till all her veins ran fever; and her cheek,
Her long thin hands, and ivory-channelled feet,
Were wasted with the wasting of her soul.
Then peevishly she flung her on her face,
And hid her eyeballs from the blinding glare,
And fingered at the grass, and tried to
Her crisp hot lips against the crisp hot sward:
And then she raised her head, and upward
Wild looks from homeless eyes, whose liquid
Gleamed out between deep folds of blue-black hair,
As gleam twin lakes between the purple
Of deep Parnassus, at the mournful moon.
Beside her lay her lyre.
She snatched the shell,
And waked wild music from its silver strings;
Then tossed it sadly by.—'Ah, hush!' she cries;'Dead offspring of the tortoise and the mine!
Why mock my discords with thine harmonies?
Although a thrice-Olympian lot be thine,
Only to echo back in every
The moods of nobler natures than thine own.'Eversley,
From Yeast.