The Earthly Paradise, (September-November), by William Morris, [1870], at sacred-texts.com
A CERTAIN man coming to Delos beheld a noble damsel there, and was smitten with the love of her, and made all things of no account but the winning of her, which at last he brought about in strange wise.
A CERTAIN island-man of old,
 Well fashioned, young, and wise and bold,
 Voyaged awhile in Greekish seas,
 Till Delos of the Cyclades
 His keel made, and ashore he went;
 And, wandering with no fixed intent,
 With others of the shipmen there,
 They came into a garden fair,
 Too sweet for sea-tossed men, I deem,
 If they would scape the lovesome dream
 That youth and May cast oer the earth,
 If they would keep their careless mirth
 For hands of eld to deal withal.
So in that close did it befall p. 164 
 That neath the trees well wrought of May
 These sat amidmost of the day
 Not dry-lipped, and belike a-strain,
 All gifts of that sweet time to gain,
 And yet not finding all enow
 That at their feet the May did throw,
 But longing, half-expecting still
 Some new delight their cup to fill
 Yea, overfill, to make all strange
 Their lazy joy with piercing change.
 Therewith their youngest, even he
 I told of first, all suddenly
 Gan sing a song that fitted well
 The thoughts that each man's heart did tell
 Unto itself, and as his throat
 Moved with the music, did he note
 Through half-shut eyes a company
 Of white-armed maidens drawing nigh,
 Well marshalled, as if there they went
 Upon some serious work intent.
SONG.
FAIR is the night and fair the day,
 Now April is forgot of May,
 Now into June May falls away;
 Fair day, fair night, O give me back
 The tide that all fair things did lack
 Except my love, except my sweet! p. 165
   Blow back, O wind! thou art not kind,
 Though thou art sweet; thou hast no mind
 Her hair about my sweet to wind;
 O flowery sward, though thou art bright,
 I praise thee not for thy delight,
 Thou hast not kissed her silver feet.
   Thou knowst her not, O rustling tree,
 What dost thou then to shadow me,
 Whose shade her breast did never see?
 O flowers, in vain ye bow adown!
 Ye have not felt her odorous gown
 Brush past your heads my lips to meet.
   Flow on, great riverthou mayst deem
 That far away, a summer stream,
 Thou sawest her limbs amidst thee gleam,
 And kissed her foot, and kissed her knee,
 Yet get thee swift unto the sea!
 With nought of true thou wilt me greet.
   And thou that men call by my name,
 O helpless one, hast thou no shame
 That thou must even look the same,
 As while agone, as while agone,
 When thou and she were left alone,
 And hands, and lips, and tears did meet?
   Grow weak and pine, lie down to die,
 O body in thy misery,,
 Because short time and sweet goes by; p. 166
 O foolish heart, how weak thou art!
 Break, break, because thou needs must part
 From thine own love, from thine own sweet! 
   What was it that through half-shut eyes
 Pierced to his heart, and made him rise
 As one the July storm awakes
 When through the dawn the thunder breaks?
 What was it that the languor clove,
 Wherewith unhurt he sang of love?
 How was it that his eyes had caught
 Her eyes alone of all; that nought
 The others were but images,
 While she, while she amidst of these
 Not first or lastwhen she was gone,
 Why must he feel so left alone?
 An image in his heart there was
 Of how amidst them one did pass
 Kind-eyed and soft, and looked at him;
 And now the world was waxen dim
 About him, and of little worth,
 Seemed all the wondrous things of earth,
 And fain would he be all alone,
 To wonder why his mirth was gone;
 To wonder why it seemed so strange
 That in nought else was any change,
 When his old life seemed passed away,
 And joy in narrow compass lay, p. 167
 He scarce knew where. With laugh and song
 His fellows mocked the dim world's wrong,
 Nor noted him as changed oermuch;
 Or if their jests his mood did touch,
 To his great wonder lightly they
 By stammering word were turned away.
   Well, from the close they went at last,
 And through the noble town they passed,
 And saw the wonders wrought of old
 Therein, and heard famed stories told
 Of many a thing; and as a dream
 Did all things to Accontius seem.
 But when night's wings came oer that place,
 And men slept, piteous seemed his case
 And wonderful, that therewithal
 Night helped him not. From wall to wall
 Night-long his weary eyes he turned,
 Till in the east the daylight burned.
 And then the pang he would not name,
 Stung by the world's change, fiercer came
 Across him, and in haste he rose,
 Driven unto that flowery close
 By restless longing, knowing not
 What part therein his heart had got,
 Nor why he thitherward must wend.
   And now had night's last hope an end,
 When to the garden-gate he came. p. 168
 In grey light did the tulip flame
 Over the sward made grey with dew,
 And as unto the place he drew
 Where yesterday he sang that song
 The ousel-cock sang sweet and strong,
 Though almost ere the sky grew grey
 Had he begun to greet the day.
 There now, as by some strong spell bound,
 Accontius paced that spot of ground,
 Restless, with wild thoughts in his head;
 While round about the white-thorn shed
 Sweet fragrance, and the lovely place,
 Lonely of mankind, lacked no grace
 That love for his own home would have.
 Well sang the birds, the light wind drave
 Through the fresh leaves, untouched as yet
 By summer and its vain regret;
 Well piped the wind, and as it swept
 The garden through, no sweet thing slept,
 Nor might the scent of blossoms hide
 The fresh smell of the country side
 It bore with it; and the green bay,
 Whose breast it kissed so far away,
 Spake sometimes yet amid the noise
 Of rustling leaves and song-birds' voice.
   So there awhile our man did pace,
 Still wondering at his piteous case
 That, certes, not to anyone p. 169
 Had happed beforeawhile agone
 So pleased to watch the world pass by
 With all its changing imagery;
 So hot to play his part therein,
 From each day's death good life to win;
 And now, with a great sigh, he saw
 The yellow level sunbeams draw
 Across the wet grass, as the sun
 First smote the trees, and day begun
 Smiled on the world, whose summer bliss
 In nowise seemed to better his.
 Then, as he thought thereof, he said:
 "Surely all wisdom is clean dead
 Within me. Nought I lack that I,
 By striving, may not come anigh
 Among the things that men desire;
 And why, then, like a burnt-out fire,
 Is my life grown?"
                        Een as he spoke
 A throstle-cock beside him broke
 Into the sweetest of his song,
 Yet with his sweet note seemed to wrong
 The unknown trouble of that morn,
 And made him feel yet more forlorn.
 Then he cried out, "O fool, go forth!
 The world is grown of no less worth
 Than yester-morn it was; go then
 And play thy part among brave men
 As thou hadst will to do before p. 170
 Thy feet first touched this charmed shore
 Where all is changed."
                         But now the bird
 Flew from beside him, and he heard
 A rustling nigh, although the breeze
 Had died out mid the thick-leaved trees.
 Therewith he raised his eyes and turned,
 And a great fire within him burned,
 And his heart stopped awhile, for there,
 Against a flowering thorn-bush fair,
 Hidden by tulips to the knee,
 His heart's desire his eyes did see.
 Clad was she een as is the dove,
 Who makes the summer sad with love;
 High-girded as one hastening
 In swift search for some longed-for thing;
 Her hair drawn by a silken band
 From her white neck, and in her hand
 A myrtle-spray. Panting she was
 As from the daisies of the grass
 She raised her eyes, and looked around
 Till the astonished eyes she found
 That saw not aught but even her.
   There in a silence hard to bear,
 Impossible to break, they stood,
 With faces changed by love, and blood
 So stirred, that many a year of life
 Had been made eager with that strife p. 171
 Of minutes; and so nigh she was
 He saw the little blue veins pass
 Over her heaving breast; and she
 The trembling of his lips might see,
 The rising tears within his eyes.
   Then standing there in mazed wise
 He saw the black-heart tulips bow
 Before her knees, as wavering now
 A half-step unto him she made.
 With a glad cry, though half afraid,
 He stretched his arms out, and the twain,
 Een at the birth of love's great pain,
 Each unto each-so nigh were grown,
 That little lacked to make them one
 That little lacked but they should be
 Wedded that hour; knee touching knee,
 Cheek laid to cheek. So seldom fare
 Love's tales, that men are wise to dare;
 Rather, dull hours must pass away,
 And heavy day succeed to day,
 And much be changed by misery,
 Ere two that love may draw anigh-
 And so with these. What fear or shame
 Twixt longing heart and body came
 T were hard to tellthey lingered yet.
 Well-nigh they deemed that they had met,
 And that the worst was oer; een then
 There drew anigh the sound of men p. 172
 Loud laugh, harsh talk. With ill surprise ,
 He saw fear change her lovesome eyes;
 He knew her heart bethought it now
 Of other folk, and ills that grow
 From overmuch of love; but he
 Cried out amidst his agony,
 Yet stood there helpless, and withal
 A mist across his eyes did fall,
 And all seemed lost indeed, as now
 Slim tulip-stem and hawthorn-bough
 Slipped rustling back into their place,
 And all the glory of her face
 Had left the world, at least awhile,
 And once more all was base and vile.
   And yet, indeed, when that sharp pain
 Was something dulled, and once again
 Thought helped him, then to him it seemed
 That she had dreamed as he had dreamed,
 And, hoping not for any sight
 Of love, had come made soft by night,
 Made kind by longings unconfessed,
 To give him good hope of the best.
 Then pity came to help his love,
 For now, indeed, he knew whereof
 He sickened; pity came, and then
 The fear of the rough sons of men,
 Sore hate of things that needs must part
 The loving heart from loving heart;p. 173
 And at each turn it seemed as though
 Fate some huge net round both did throw
 To stay their feet and dim their sight
 Till they were clutched by endless night;
 And then he fain had torn his hair,
 And cried aloud in his despair,
 But stayed himself as still he thought
 How even that should help him nought,
 That helpless patience needs must be
 His loathed fellow. Wearily
 He got him then from out the place,
 Made lovely by her scarce-seen face,
 And knew that day what longing meant.
   But when the restless daylight went
 From earth's face, through the weary night
 He lay again in just such plight
 As on the last night he had lain;
 But deemed that he would go again
 At daylight to that place of flowers.
 So passed the night through all its hours,
 But ere the dawn came, weak and worn
 He fell asleep, nor woke that morn
 Till all the city was astir;
 And waking must he think of her
 Stolen to that place to find, to find him not
 Her parted lips, her face flushed hot,
 Her panting breast and girt-up gown,
 Her sleeve ill-fastened, fallen adown p. 174
 From one white shoulder, her grey eyes
 Fixed in their misery of surprise,
 As nought they saw but birds and trees;
 Her woeful lingering, as the breeze
 Died neath the growing sun, and folk
 Fresh silence of the morning broke;
 And then, the death of hope confessed,
 The quivering lip and heaving breast,
 The burst of tears, the homeward way
 Made hateful by joy past away,
 The dreary day made dull and long
 By hope deferred and gathering wrong.
 All this for him!and thinking thus
 Their twinlife seemed so piteous
 That all his manhood from him fled,
 And cast adown upon the bed
 He sobbed and wept full sore, until
 When he of grief had had his fill
 He gan to think that he might see
 His love, and cure her misery
 If she should be in that same place
 At that same hour when first her face
 Shone on him.
                   So time wore away
 Till on the world the high noon lay,
 And then at the due place he stood,
 Wondering amid his love-sick mood
 Which blades of grass her foot had bent;
 And there, as to and fro he went, p. 175
 A certain man who seemed to be
 A fisher on the troubled sea,
 An old man and a poor, came nigh
 And greeted him and said:
                               "Hereby
 Thou doest well to stand, my son,
 Since thy stay here will soon be done,
 If of that ship of Crete thou be,
 As well I deem. Here shalt thou see
 Each day at noon a company
 Of all our fairest maids draw nigh;
 To such an one each day they go
 As best can tell them how to do
 In serving of the dreadful queen,
 Whose servant long years bath she been,
 And dwelleth by her chapel fair
 Within this close; they shall be here,
 Een while I speak. Wot well, fair son,
 Good need it is this should be done,
 For whatso hasty word is said
 That day unto the moon-crowned maid,
 For such an oath is held, as though
 The whole heart into it did go
 Behold, they come! A goodly sight
 Shalt thou have seen, een if to-night
 Thou diest!"
                 Grew Accontius wan
 As the sea-cliffs, for the old man
 Now pointed to the gate, wherethrough p. 176
 The company of maidens drew
 Toward where they stood; Accontius,
 With trembling lips, and piteous
 Drawn brow, turned toward them, and afar
 Beheld her like the morning-star
 Amid the weary stars of night.
 Midmost the band went his delight,
 Clad in a gown of blue, whereon
 Were wrought fresh flowers, as newly won
 From the May fields; with one hand she
 Touched a fair fellow lovingly,
 The other, hung adown, did hold
 An ivory harp well strung with gold;
 Gaily she went, nor seemed as though
 One troublous thought her heart did know.
 Accontius sickened as she came
 Anigh him, and with heart aflame
 For very rage of jealousy,
 He heard her talking merrily
 Unto her fellowthe first word
 From those sweet lips he yet had heard,
 Nor might he know what thing she said;
 Yet presently she turned her head
 And saw him, and her talk she stopped
 Een therewith, and her lips down dropped,
 And trembling amid love and shame
 Over her face a bright flush came;
 Nathless without another look
 She passed him by, whose whole frame shook p. 177
 With passion as an aspen leaf.
 But she being gone, all blind with grief,
 He stood there long, and muttered:
                                     "Why
 Would she not note my misery?
 Had it been then so hard to turn
 And show me that her heart did yearn
 For something nigher like mine own?
 O well content to leave me lone,
 O well content to stand apart,
 And nurse a pleasure in thine heart,
 The joy of being so well beloved,
 Still taking care thou art not moved
 By aught like trouble!yet beware,
 For thou mayst fall for all thy care!"
   So from the place he turned away;
 Some secret spell he deemed there lay,
 Some bar unseen athwart that grass,
 Oer which his feet might never pass
 Whatso his heart bade. Hour by hour
 Passed of the day, and ever slower
 They seemed to pass, and ever he
 Thought of her last look wearily
 Now meant it that, now meant it this;
 Now bliss, and now the death of bliss.
 'But O, if once again,' he thought,
 'Face unto face we might be brought, p. 178
 Then doubt I not but I should read
 What at her hands would be my meed,
 And in such wise my life would guide;
 Either the weary end to bide
 Een as I might, or strengthen me
 To take the sweet felicity,
 Casting by thought of fear or death
 But now when I must hold my breath,
 Who knows how long, while scale mocks scale
 With trembling joy, and trembling bale
 O hard to bear! O hard to bear!'
   So spake he, knowing bitter fear
 And hopeful longing's sharp distress,
 But not the weight of hopelessness.
   And now there passed by three days more,
 And to the flowery place that bore
 The sharp and sweet of his desire
 Each day he went, his heart afire
 With foolish hope. Each day he saw
 The band of damsels toward him draw,
 And trembling said, "Now, now at last
 Surely her white arms will be cast
 About my neck before them all;
 Or at the worst her eyes will call
 My feet to follow. Can it be
 That she can bear my misery,
 When of my heart she surely knows?" p. 179
 And every day midmost the close
 They met, and on the first day she
 Did look upon him furtively
 In loving wise; and through his heart
 Love sent a pleasure-pointed dart
 A minute, and away she went,
 And left him nowise more content
 Than erst he had been.
                           The next day
 Needs must she flush and turn away
 Before their eyes met, and he stood
 When she was gone in wretched mood,
 Faint with desire.
                     The third hope came,
 And then his hungry eyes, aflame
 With longing wild, beheld her pass
 As though amidst a dream she was;
 Then een ere she had left the place
 With his clenched hand he smote his face,
 And void of everything but pain,
 Through the thronged streets the sea did gain,
 Not recking aught, and there at last
 His body on the sand he cast,
 Nigh the green waves, till in the end
 Some thought the crushing cloud did rend,
 And down the tears 'rushed from his eyes
 For ruth of his own miseries;
 And with the tears came thought again
 To mingle with his formless pain p. 180
 And hope withalbut yet more fear,
 For he bethought him now that near
 The time drew for his ship to sail.
 Yet was the thought of some avail
 To heal the unreason of his 'heart,
 For now he needs must play a part
 Wherein was something to be done,
 If he would not be left alone
 Life-long, with love unsatisfied.
   So now he rose, and looking wide
 Along the edges of the bay,
 Saw where his fellows tall ship lay
 Anigh the haven, and a boat
 Twixt shore and ship-side did there float
 With balanced oars; but on the shroud
 A shipman stood, and shouted loud
 Unto the boatwords lost, in sooth,
 But which no less the trembling youth
 Deemed certainly of him must be
 And where he was; then suddenly
 He turned, though none pursued, and fled
 Along the sands, nor turned his head
 Till round a headland he did reach
 A long cove with a sandy beach;
 Then looking landward he saw where
 A streamlet cleft the sea-cliffs bare,
 Making a little valley green,
 Beset with thorn-trees; and between p. 181
 The yellow strand and cliff's grey brow
 Was built a cottage white and low
 Within a little close, upon
 The green slope that the stream had won
 From rock and sea; and thereby stood
 A fisher, whose grey homespun hood
 Covered white locks: so presently
 Accontius to that man drew nigh,
 Because he seemed the man to be
 Who told of that fair company,
 Deeming that more might there be learned
 About the flame wherewith he burned.
   Withal he found it even so,
 And that the old man him did know,
 And greeted him, and fell to talk,
 As such folk will of things that balk
 The poor man's fortune, waves and winds,
 And changing days and great men's minds;
 And at the last it so befell
 That this Accontius came to tell
 A tale unto the manhow he
 Was fain to scape the uneasy sea,
 And those his fellows, and would give
 Gold unto him, that he might live
 In hiding there, till they had sailed.
 Not strange it was if he prevailed
 In few words, though the elder smiled
 As not all utterly beguiled, p. 182
 Nor curious therewithal to know
 Such things as he cared not to show.
   So there alone a while he dwelt,
 And lonely there, all torment felt,
 As still his longing grew and grew;
 And ever as hot noontide drew
 From dewy dawn and sunny morn,
 He felt himself the most forlorn;
 For then the best he pictured her:
   "Now the noon wind, the scent-bearer
 Is busy midst her gown," he said,
 "The fresh-plucked flowers about her head
 Are drooping now with their desire;
 The grass with unconsuming fire
 Faints neath the pressure of her feet;
 The honey-bees her lips would meet,
 But fail for fear; the swift's bright eyes
 Are eager round the mysteries
 Of the fair hidden fragrant breast,
 Where now alone may I know rest
 Ah pity me, thou pityless!
 Bless me who knowst not how to bless;
 Fall from thy height, thou highest of all,
 On me a very wretch to call!
 Thou, to whom all things fate doth give,
 Find without me thou canst not live!
 Desire me, O thou world's desire, p. 183
 Light thy pure heart at this base fire!
 Save me, save me, thou knowest nought,
 Of whom thou never hadst a thought!
 O queen of all the world, stoop down,
 Before my feet cast thou thy crown!
 Speak to me, as I speak to thee!"
   He walked beside the summer sea
 As thus he spake, at eventide;
 Across the waste of waters wide;
 The dead sun's light a wonder cast,
 That into grey night faded fast;
 And ever as the shadows fell,
 More formless grew the unbreaking swell
 Far out to sea; more strange and white,
 More vocal through the hushing night,
 The narrow line of changing foam,
 That twixt the sand and fishes home
 Writhed, driven onward by the tide
 So slowly by the ocean's side
 He paced, till dreamy passion grew;
 The soft wind oer the sea that blew,
 Dried the cold tears upon his face,
 Kindly if sad seemed that lone place,
 Yea, in a while it scarce seemed lone,
 When now at last the white moon shone
 Upon the sea, and showed that still
 It quivered, though a moveless hill
 A little while ago it seemed. p. 184
   So, turning homeward now, he dreamed
 Of many a help and miracle,
 That in the olden time befell
 Unto love's servants; een when he
 Had clomb the hill anigh the sea,
 And reached the hut now litten bright,
 Not utterly with food and light
 And common talk his dream passed by.
 Yea, and with all this, presently
 Gan tell the old man when it was
 That the great feast should come to pass
 Unto Diana: Yea, and then
 He, among all the sons of men,
 Een of that very love must speak;
 Then grew Accontius faint and weak,
 And his mouth twitched, and tears began
 To pain his eyes; for the old man,
 As one possessed, went on to tell
 Of all the loveliness that well
 Accontius wotted of, and now
 For the first time he came to know
 What name among her folk she had,
 And, half in cruel pain, half glad,
 He heard the old man say:
                               "Indeed
 This sweet Cydippe bath great need
 Of one to save her life from woe,
 Because or ere the brook shall flow
 Narrow with August twixt its banks, p. 185
 Her folk, to win Diana's thanks,
 Shall make her hers, and she shall be
 Honoured of all folk certainly,
 But unwed, shrunk as time goes on
 Into a sour-hearted crone."
   Accontius gan the room to pace
 Ere he had done; with curious face
 The old man gazed, but uttered nought;
 Then in his heart Accontius thought,
 "Ah when her image passeth by
 Like a sweet breath, the blinded eye
 Gains sight, the deaf man heareth well,
 The dumb man lovesome tales can tell,
 Hopes dead for long rise from their tombs,
 The barren like a garden blooms;
 And I aloneI sit and wait,
 With deedless hands, on black-winged fate."
   And so, when men had done with day,
 Sleepless upon his bed he lay,
 Striving to think if aught might move
 Hard fate to give him his own love;
 And thought of what would do belike,
 And said, "Tomorrow will I strike
 Before the iron groweth dull."
 And so, with mind of strange things full,
 Just at the dawn he fell asleep,
 Yet as the shadows gan to creep p. 186
 Up the long slope before the sun,
 His blinking, troubled sleep was done;
 And with a start he sat upright,
 Now deeming that the glowing light
 Was autumn's very sun, that all
 Of ill had happed that could befall;
 Yet fully waked up at the last,
 From out the cottage-door he passed,
 And saw how the old fisherman
 His coble through the low surf ran
 And shouted greeting from the sea;
 Then neath an ancient apple-tree,
 That on the little grassy slope
 Stood speckled with the autumn's hope
 He cast him down, and slept again;
 And sleeping dreamed about his pain,
 Yet in the same place seemed to be,
 Beneath the ancient apple-tree.
 So in his dream he heard a sound
 Of singing fill the air around,
 And yet saw nought; till in a while
 The twinkling sea's uncounted smile
 Was hidden by a rosy cloud,
 That seemed some wondrous thing to shroud,
 For in its midst a bright spot grew
 Brighter and brighter, and still drew
 Unto Accontius, till at last
 A woman from amidst it passed,
 And, wonderful in nakedness, p. 187
 With rosy feet the grass did press,
 And drew anigh; he durst not move
 Or speak, because the Queen of Love
 He deemed he knew; she smiled on him,
 And, even as his dream waxed dim,
 Upon the tree-trunk gnarled and grey
 A slim hand for a while did lay;
 Then all waxed dark, and then once more
 He lay there as he lay before,
 But all burnt up the green-sward was,
 And songless did the throstle pass
 Twixt dark green leaf and golden fruit,
 And at the old tree's knotted root
 The basket of the gatherer
 Lay, as though autumn-tide were there.
 Then in his dream he thought he strove
 To speak that sweet name of his love
 Late learned, but could not; for away
 Sleep passed, and now in sooth he lay
 Awake within the shadow sweet,
 The sunlight creeping oer his feet.
   Then he arose to think upon
 The plans that he from night had won,
 And still in each day found a flaw
 That night's half-dreaming eyes neer saw,
 And far away all good hope seemed,
 And the strange dream he late had dreamed
 Of no account he made, but thought p. 188.
 That it had come and gone for nought.
   And now the time went by till he
 Knew that his keel had put to sea,
 Yet after that a day or two
 He waited, ere he dared to do
 The thing he longed for most, and meet
 His love within the garden sweet.
 He saw her there, he saw a smile
 The paleness of her face beguile
 Before she saw him; then his heart
 With pity and remorse gan smart;
 But when at last she turned her head,
 And he beheld the bright flush spread
 Over her face, and once again
 The pallor come, twixt joy and pain
 His heart was torn; he turned away,
 Thinking: "Long time ere that worst day
 That unto her a misery
 Will be, yea even as unto me,
 And many a thing ere then may fall,
 Or peaceful death may end it all."
   The host that night his heart did bless
 With praises of her loveliness
 Once more, and said: "Fools men are
 Who work themselves such bitter care
 That they may live when they are dead;
 Her mother's stern cold hardihead p. 189
 Shall make this sweet but dead-alive;
 For who in all the world shall strive
 With such an oath as she shall make?"
   Accontius, for self-pity's sake,
 Must steal forth to the night to cry
 Some wordless prayer of agony;
 And yet, when he was come again,
 Of more of such-like speech was fain,
 And needs must stammer forth some word,
 That once more the old fisher stirred
 To speech; who now began to tell
 Tales of that oath as things known well,
 To wise men from the days of old,
 Of how a mere chance-word would hold
 Some poor wretch as a life-long slave;
 Nay, or the very wind that drave
 Some garment's hem, some lock of hair
 Against the dreadful altar there,
 Had turned a whole sweet life to ill;
 So heedfully must all fulfil
 Their vows unto the dreadful maid.
 Accontius heard the words he said
 As through a thin sleep fraught with dreams,
 Yet afterward would fleeting gleams
 Of what the old man said confuse
 His weary heart, that neer was loose
 A minute from the bonds of love,
 And still of all, strange dreams he wove. p. 190
   So the time passed; a brooding life
 That with his love might hold no strife
 Accontius led; he did not spare
 With torment vain his soul to tear
 By meeting her in that same place:
 No fickle hope now changed her face,
 No hot desire therein did burn,
 Rather it seemed her heart did yearn
 With constant sorrow, and such love
 As surely might the hard world move.
 Ah! shall it? Love shall go its ways,
 And sometimes gather useless praise
 From joyful hearts, when now at rest
 The lover lies, but oftenest
 To hate thereby the world is moved,
 But oftenest the well-beloved
 Shall pay the kiss back with a blow,
 Shall smile to see the hot tears flow,
 Shall answer with scarce-hidden scorn
 The bitter words by anguish torn
 From such a heart, as fain would rest
 Silent until death brings the best.
   So drew the time on to the day
 When all hope must be cast away;
 Late summer now was come, and still
 As heeding neither good or ill
 Of living men, the stream ran down
 The green slope to the sea-side brown, p. 191
 Singing its changeless song; still there
 Accontius dwelt twixt slope-side fair
 And changing murmur of the sea.
   The night before all misery
 Should be accomplished, red-eyed, wan,
 He gave unto the ancient man
 What wealth he had, and bade farewell
 In such a voice as tale doth tell
 Unto the wise; then to his bed
 He crept, and still his weary head
 Tossed on the pillow, till the dawn
 The fruitful mist from earth had drawn.
 Once more with coming light he slept,
 Once more from out his bed he leapt,
 Thinking that he had slept too fast,
 And that all hope was over-past;
 And with that thought he knew indeed
 How good is hope to man at need,
 Yea, even the least ray thereof.
 Then dizzy with the pain of love
 He went from out the door, and stood
 Silent within the fruitful rood.
 Still was the sunny morn and fair,
 A scented haze was in the air;
 So soft it was, it seemed as spring
 Had come once more her arms to fling
 About the dying year, and kiss
 The lost world into dreams of bliss. p. 192
   Now neath the tree he sank adown,
 Parched was the sward thereby and brown,
 Save where about the knotted root
 A green place spread. The golden fruit
 Hung on the boughs, lay on the ground;
 The spring-born thrushes lurked around,
 But sang not, yet the stream sang well,
 And gentle tales the sea could tell.
 Ere sunrise was the fisher gone,
 And now his brown-sailed boat alone,
 Some league or so from off the shore,
 Moved slowly neath the sweeping oar.
 So soothed by sights and sounds that day,
 Sore weary, soon Accontius lay
 In deep sleep as he erst had done,
 And dreamed once more, nor yet had gone
 Een this time from that spot of ground;
 And once more dreaming heard the sound
 Of unseen singers, and once more
 A pink-tinged cloud spread thwart the shore,
 And a vague memory touched him now
 Amid his sleep; his knitted brow
 Gan to unfold, a happy smile
 His long love-languor did beguile
 As from the cloud the naked one
 Came smiling forthbut not alone;
 For now the image of his love,
 Clad like the murmuring summer dove,
 She held by the slim trembling hand, p. 193
 And soon he deemed the twain did stand
 Anigh his head. Round Venus feet
 Outbroke the changing spring-flowers sweet
 From the parched earth of autumn-tide;
 The long locks round her naked side
 The sea-wind drave; lily and rose,
 Plucked from the heart of her own close,
 Were girdle to her, and did cling,
 Mixed with some marvellous golden thing,
 About her neck and bosom white,
 Sweeter than they; with eyes that bliss
 Changed not, her doves brushed past to kiss
 The marvel of her limbs; yet bright,
 Fair beyond words as she might be,
 So fell it by love's mystery
 That open-mouthed Accontius lay
 In that sweet dream, nor drew away
 His eyes from his love's pitying eyes;
 And at the last he strove to rise,
 And dreamed that touch of hand in hand
 Made his heart faint; alas! the band
 Of soft sleep, overstrained therewith,
 Snapped short, and left him there to writhe
 In helpless woe.
                     Yet in a while
 Strange thoughts anew did him beguile;
 Well-nigh he dreamed again, and saw
 The naked goddess toward him draw,
 Until the sunshine touched his face p. 194
 And stark awake in that same place
 He sighed, and rose unto his knee,
 And saw beneath the ancient tree,
 Close by his hand, an apple lie,
 Great, smooth, and golden. Dreamily
 He turned it oer, and in like mood
 A long sharp thorn, as red as blood,
 He took into his hand, and then,
 In language of the Grecian men,
 Slowly upon its side he wrote,
 As one who thereof took no note,
 Accontius will I wed to-day;
 Then stealthily across the bay
 He glanced, and trembling gat him down
 With hurried steps unto the town,
 Where for the high-tide folk were dight,
 And all looked joyous there and bright,
 As toward the fane their steps they bent.
 And thither, too, Accontius went,
 Scarce knowing if on earth or air
 His feet were set; he coming there,
 Gat nigh the altar standing-place,
 And there with haggard eyes gan gaze
 Upon the image of the maid
 Whose wrath makes man and beast afraid.
   So in a while the rites began,
 And many a warrior and great man
 Served the hard-hearted one, until p. 195
 Of everything she had her fill
 That Gods desire; and, trembling now,
 Accontius heard the curved horns blow
 That heralded the damsels band;
 And scarce for faintness might he stand,
 When now, the minstrels gowns of gold
 Being past, he could withal behold
 White raiment fluttering, and he saw
 The fellows of his own love draw
 Unto the altar; here and there
 The mothers of those maidens fair
 Went by them, proud belike, and fain
 To note the honour they should gain.
   Now scarce with hungry eyes might he
 Gaze on those fair folk steadily,
 As one by one they passed by him;
 His limbs shook, and his eyes did swim,
 And if he heard the words they said,
 As outstretched hand and humble head
 Strengthened the trembling maiden's vow,
 Nought of their meaning did he know
 And still she came notwhat was this?
 Had the dull death of hope of bliss
 Been her death tooah, was she dead?
 Or did she lie upon her bed,
 With panting mouth and fixed bright eyes,
 Waiting the new life's great surprise,
 All longings past, amid the hush p. 196
 Of life departing?
                  A great rush
 Of fearful pain stopped all his blood
 As thus he thought; a while he stood
 Blinded and tottering, then the air
 A great change on it seemed to bear,
 A heavenly scent; and fear was gone,
 Hope but a name; as if alone
 Mid images of men he was,
 Alone with her who now did pass
 With fluttering hem and light footfall
 The corner of the precinct wall.
 Time passed, she drew nigh to the place,
 Where he was standing, and her face
 Turned to him, and her steadfast eyes
 Met his, with no more of surprise
 Than if in words she had been told
 That each the other should behold
 Een in such wisePale was she grown;
 Her sweet breath, that an unheard moan
 Seemed to her lover, scarce might win
 Through her half-opened lips; most thin
 The veil seemed twixt her mournful eyes,
 And death's long-looked-for mysteries;
 Frail were her blue-veined hands; her feet
 The pink-tinged marble steps did meet
 As though all will were gone from her.
 There went a matron, tall and fair,
 Noble to look on, by her side,p. 197
 Like unto her, but for cold pride
 And passing by of twenty years,
 And all their putting back of tears;
 Her mother, certes, and a glow
 Of pleasure lit her stern face now
 At what that day should see well done.
   But now, as the long train swept on,
 There on the last step of the fane
 She stood, so loved, so loved in vain;
 Her mother fallen aback from her,
 Yet eager the first word to hear
 Of that her dreadful oathso nigh
 Were misery to misery,
 That each might hear the other's breath;
 That they this side of fair hope's death
 Might yet have clung breast unto breast,
 And snatched from life a little rest,
 And snatched a little joy from pain.
   O weary hearts, shall all be vain,
 Shall all be nought, this strife and love?
 Once more with slow foot did she move
 Unto the last step, with no sound
 Unto Accontius turning round,
 Who spake not, but, as moved at last
 By some kind God, the apple cast
 Into her bosom's foldsonce more
 She stayed, while a great flush came oer p. 198
 Her sweet face erst half-dead and wan;
 Then went a sound from man to man
 So fair she seemed, and some withal
 Failed not to note the apple fall
 Into her breast.
                 Now while with fear
 And hope Accontius trembled there
 And to her side her mother came,
 She cast aside both fear and shame
 From out her noble heart, and laid
 Upon the altar of the maid
 Her fair right hand, clasped firm around
 The golden fruit, and with no sound
 Her lips moved, and her eyes upraised
 Upon the marble image gazed,
 With such a fervour as if she
 Would give the thing humanity
 And love and pitythen a space
 Unto her love she turned her face
 All full of love, as if to say,
 "So ends our trouble from to-day,
 Either with happy life or death."
   Yet anxious still, with held-back breath,
 He saw her mother come to her
 With troubled eyes. "What hast thou there?"
 He heard her say. "Is the vow made?
 I heard no word that thou hast said?" p. 199
   Then through him did her sweet voice thrill:
 "No word I spake for good or ill;
 But this spake for me; so say ye
 What oath in written words may be;
 Although, indeed, I wrote them nought;
 And in my heart had got no thought,
 When first I came hereto this morn,
 But here to swear myself forlorn
 Of love and hopebecause the days
 Of life seemed but a weary maze,
 Begun without leave asked of me,
 Whose ending I might never see,
 Or what came after thembut now
 Backward my life I will not throw
 Into your deep-dug, spice-strewn grave,
 But either all things will I save
 This day, or make an end of all."
   Then silence on the place did fall;
 With frowning face, yet hand that shook,
 The fated fruit her mother took
 From out her hand, and pale she grew,
 When the few written words she knew,
 And what they meant; but speedily
 She brushed the holy altar by,
 Unto the wondering priests to tell
 What things there in their midst befell.
   There, in low words, they spoke awhile, p. 200
 How they must deal with such a guile,
 Cast by the goddess of desire
 Into the holy maiden's fire.
 And to the priests it seemed withal,
 That a full oath they needs must call
 That writing on the altar laid:
 Then, wroth and fearful, some there bade
 To seek a death for these to die,
 If even so they might put by
 The maid's dread anger; crueller
 They grew as still they gathered fear,
 And shameful things the dusk fane heard,
 As grey beard wagged against grey beard,
 And fiercer grew the ancient eyes.
   But from the crowd, meanwhile, did rise
 Great murmuring, for from man to man
 The rumour of the story ran,
 I know not how; and therewithal
 Some god-sent lovesome joy did fall
 On all hearts there, until it seemed
 That each one of his own soul dreamed,
 Beloved, and loving well; and when
 Some cried out that the ancient men
 Had mind too slay the lovers there,
 A fierce shout rent the autumn air:
 "Nay, wed the twain; love willeth it!"
 But silent did the elders sit,
 With death and fear on either hand, p. 201
 Till one said, "Fear not, the whole land,
 Not we, take back what they did give;
 With many scarce can one man strive;
 Let be, themselves shall make amends."
   "Yea, let be," said the next; "all ends,
 Despite the talk of mortal men,
 Who deem themselves undying, when,
 Urged by some unknown God's commands,
 They snatch at love with eager hands,
 And gather death that grows thereby,
 Yet swear that love shall never die
 Let bein their own hearts they bear
 The seeds of pangs to pierce and tear.
 What need, White-armed, to follow them,
 With well-strung bow and fluttering hem,
 Adown the tangle of life's wood?
 Thou knowest what the fates deem good
 For wretches that love overmuch
 One mad desire for sight and touch;
 One spot alone of all the earth
 That seems to them of any worth;
 One sound alone that they may bear
 Amidst earth's joyful sounds to hear;
 And sight, and sound, and dwelling-place,
 And soft caressing of one face,
 Forbidden, and forbidden still,
 Or granted een for greater ill,
 But for a while, that they may be p. 202
 Sunk deeper into misery
 Great things are granted unto those
 That love notfar-off things brought close,
 Things of great seeming brought to nought,
 And miracles for them are wrought;
 All earth and heaven lie underneath
 The hand of him who wastes not breath
 In striving for another's love,
 In hoping one more heart to move.
 A light thing and a little thing,
 Ye deem it, that two hearts should cling
 Each unto each, till two are one,
 And neither now can be alone?
 O fools, who know not all has sworn
 That those shall ever be forlorn
 Who strive to bring this thing to pass
 So is it now, as so it was,
 And so it shall be evermore,
 Till the world's fashion is passed oer."
   White-bearded was the ancient man
 Who spoke, with wrinkled face and wan;
 But as unto the porch he turned
 A red spot in his cheek there burned,
 And his eyes glittered, for, behold! .
 Close by the altar's horns of gold,
 There stood the weary ones at last,
 Their arms about each other cast,
 Twain no more now, they saidno more p. 203
 What things soeer fate had in store.
 Careless of life, careless of death;
 Now, when each felt the other's breath
 On lip and cheek, and many a word
 By all the world beside unheard,
 Or heard and little understood,
 Each spake to each, and all seemed good;
 Yea, though amid the world's great wrong,
 Their space of life should not be long;
 O bitter sweet if they must die!
 O sweet, too sweet, if time passed by;
 If time made nought for them, should find
 Their arms in such wise intertwined
 Years hence, with no change drawing near!
   Nor says the tale, nor might I hear,
 That aught of evil on them fell.
 Few folk there were but thought it well,
 When saffron-robed, fair-wreathed, loose-haired
 Cydippe through the city fared
 Well won at last; when lingering shame
 Somewhat upon the lovers came,
 Now that all fear was quite bygone,
 And yet they were not all alone,
 Because, from men the sun was fain
 A little more of toil to gain
 Awhile in prison of his light,
 To hold aback the close-lipped night. p. 204
SILENCE a little when the tale was told,
 Soon broken by the merry-voiced and bold
 Among the youths, though some belike were fain
 For more of silence yet, that their sweet pain
 Might be made sweeter still by hope and thought
 Amid the words of the old story caught
 Might be made keener by the pensive eyes
 That half-confessed love made so kind and wise;
 Yet these too, mid the others, went their way,
 To get them through the short October day
 Twixt toil and toilsome love, een as they might;
 If so, perchance, the kind and silent night
 Might yet reward their reverent love with dreams
 Less full of care.
                     But round the must's red streams,
 Twixt the stripped vines the elders wandered slow,
 And unto them, een as a soothing show
 Was the hid longing, wild desire, blithe hope,
 That seethed there on the tangled sun-worn slope
 Twixt noon and moonrise. Resolute were they
 To let no pang of memory mar their day,
 And long had fear, before the coming rest,
 Been set aside. And so the changed west,
 Forgotten of the sun, was grey with haze;
 The moon was high and bright, when through the maze p. 205
 Of draggled tendrils back at last they turned,
 And red the lights within the fair house burned
 Through the grey night; strained string, and measured voice
 Of minstrels, mingled with the varying noise
 Of those who through the deep-cut misty roads
 Went slowly homeward now to their abodes.
 A short space more of that short space was gone,
 Wherein each deemed himself not quite alone.
IN late October, when the failing year
 But little pleasure more for men might bear,
 They sat within the city's great guest-hall,
 Nigh enow to the sea to hear the fall
 Of the low haven-waves when night was still.
 But on that day wild wind and rain did fill
 The earth and sea with clamour, and the street
 Held few who cared the driving scud to meet.
 But inside, as a little world it was,
 Peaceful amid the hubbub that did pass
 Its strong walls in untiring waves of rage,
 With the earth's intercourse wild war to wage.
 Bright glowed the fires, and cheerier their light
 Fell on the gold that made the fair place bright
 Of roof and wall, for all the outside din.
 Yet of the world's woe somewhat was within
 The noble compass of its walls, for there
 Were histories of great striving painted fair,
 Striving with love and hate, with life and death,
 With hope that lies, and fear that threateneth.
    And so mid varied talk the day went by,
 As such days will, not quite unhappily,
 Not quite a burden, till the evening came
 With lulling of the storm: and little blame
 The dark had for the dull day's death, when now p. 207
 The good things of the hall were set aglow
 By the great tapers. Midmost of the board
 Sat Rolf, the captain, who took up the word,
 And said:
            "Fair fellows, a strange tale is this,
 Heard and forgotten midst my childish bliss,
 Little remembered midst the change and strife,
 Come back again this latter end of life,
 I know not why; yet as a picture done
 For my delight, I see my father's son,
 My father with the white cloth on his knees,
 Beaker in hand, amid the orange-trees
 At Micklegarth, and the high-hatted man
 Over against him, with his visage wan,
 Black beard, bright eyes, and thin composed hands,
 Telling this story of the fiery lands."