Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

HERO AND LEANDER.

FOURTH SESTYAD.

The Argument of the Fourth Sestyad.

Hero, in sacred habit deck'd,
Doth private sacrifice effect.

Her scarf's description wrought by Fate.
Ostents, that threaten her estate.
The strange, yet physical events,
Leander's counterfeit presents.
In thunder, Cyprides descends,
Presaging both the lovers' ends:
Ecte, the goddess of Remorse,
With vocal and articulate force
Inspires Leucote, Venus' swan,
T'excuse the beauteous Sestian.
Venus, to wreak her rites' abuses,
Creates the monster Eronusis;
Enflaming Hero's sacrifice,

With lightning darted from her eyes:
And thereof springs the painted beast,
That ever since taints every breast.

HERO AND LEANDER.

THE FOURTH SESTYAD.

Now from Leander's place she rose, and found
Her hair and rent robe scatter'd on the ground:
Which taking up, she every piece did lay

Upon the altar; where in youth of day
She us'd t' exhibit private sacrifice:

Those would she offer to the deities

Of her fair Goddess, and her powerful son,
As relics of her late-felt passion:

And in that holy sort she vow'd to end them;
In hope her violent fancies, that did rend them,
Would as quite fade in her love's holy fire,
As they should in the flames she meant t' inspire.
Then put she on all her religious weeds,

That deck'd her in her secret sacred deeds:

A crown of icicles, that sun nor fire
Could ever melt, and figur'd chaste desire.
A golden star shin'd in her naked breast,
In honour of the queen-light of the east.
In her right hand she held a silver wand,
On whose bright top Peristera did stand,
Who was a nymph, but now transform'd a dove,
And in her life was dear in Venus' love:

And for her sake she ever since that time

Choos'd doves to draw her coach through Heav'n's

blue clime:

Her plenteous hair in curled billows swims

On her bright shoulder: her harmonious limbs
Sustain'd no more but a most subtilé veil,

That hung on them, as it durst not assail
Their different concord: for the weakest air
Could raise it swelling from her beauties* fair;

Nor did it cover, but adumbrate only
Her most heart-piercing parts, that a bless'd eye
Might see, as it did shadow, fearfully,

All that ali-love-deserving paradise:

It was as blue as the most freezing skies;

* beauteous, edit. 1637, a reading more consonant with the genius of Chapman; the adjective fair being, by a figure, taken for her fair limbs.

« ZurückWeiter »