Leave them, O Muse,
in that so happy sleep!
Leave them to reap the
harvest of their toil,
While fast in moonlight
the glad vessel glides,
As if instinctive to
its forest home.
O Muse, that in all
sorrows and all joys,
Rapturous bliss and
suffering divine,
Dwellest with equal
fervour, in the calm
Of thy serene philosophy,
albeit
Thy gentle nature is
of joy alone,
And loves the pipings
of the happy fields,
Better than all the
great parade and pomp
Which forms the train
of heroes and of kings,
And sows, too frequently,
the tragic seeds
That choke with sobs
thy singing,—turn away
Thy lustrous eyes back
to the oath-bound man!
For as a shepherd stands
above his flock,
The lofty figure of
the king is seen,
Standing above his warriors
as they sleep:
And still as from a
rock grey waters gush,
While still the rock
is passionless and dark,
Nor moves one feature
of its giant face,
The tears fall from
his eyes, and he stirs not.
And O, bright Muse!
forget not thou to fold
In thy prophetic sympathy
the thought
Of him whose destiny
has heard its doom:
The Sacrifice thro’
whom the ship is saved.
Haply that Sacrifice
is sleeping now,
And dreams of glad tomorrows.
Haply now,
His hopes are keenest,
and his fervent blood
Richest with youth,
and love, and fond regard!
Round him the circle
of affections blooms,
And in some happy nest
of home he lives,
One name oft uttering
in delighted ears,
Mother! at which the
heart of men are kin
With reverence and yearning.
Haply, too,
That other name, twin
holy, twin revered,
He whispers often to
the passing winds
That blow toward the
Asiatic coasts;
For Crete has sent her
bravest to the war,
And multitudes pressed
forward to that rank,
Men with sad weeping
wives and little ones.
That other name—O
Father! who art thou,
Thus doomed to lose
the star of thy last days?
It may be the sole flower
of thy life,
And that of all who
now look up to thee!
O Father, Father! unto
thee even now
Fate cries; the future
with imploring voice
Cries ‘Save me,’
‘Save me,’ though thou hearest not.
And O thou Sacrifice,
foredoomed by Zeus;
Even now the dark inexorable
deed
Is dealing its relentless
stroke, and vain
Are prayers, and tears,
and struggles, and despair!
The mother’s tears,
the nation’s stormful grief,
The people’s indignation
and revenge!
Vain the last childlike
pleading voice for life,
The quick resolve, the
young heroic brow,
So like, so like, and
vainly beautiful!
Oh! whosoe’er
ye are the Muse says not,
And sees not, but the
Gods look down on both.


