"More lovely than Pandora, whom the gods Endowed with all their gifts; and O, too like In sad event, when to the unwiser son Of Japhet brought by Hermes, she insnared Mankind with her fair looks, to be avenged On him who had stole Jove's authentic fire."
"Titan! To whose immortal eyes The sufferings of mortality, Seen in their sad reality, Were not as things that gods despise; What was thy pity's recompense? A silent suffering, and intense; The rock, the vulture, and the chain; All that the proud can feel of pain; The agony they do not show; The suffocating sense of woe. Thy godlike crime was to be kind; To render with thy precepts less The sum of human wretchedness, And stengthen man with his own mind. And, baffled as thou wert from high, Still, in thy patient energy In the endurance and repulse Of thine impenetrable spirit, Which earth and heaven could not convulse, A mighty lesson we inherit."
"Or, like the thief of fire from heaven, Wilt thou withstand the shock? And share with him - the unforgiven - His vulture and his rock?"
Next: Apollo and Daphne - Pyramus and Thisbe - Cephalus and Procris
|
Copied without permission - all of you, go buy the book.
HTML © 1996
Bryan Fullerton |
|