Came golden-haired Ganymede,
As bard in ancient story read,
The dark-winged eagle's prey.
And when no earthly tongue could tell, The fate of thee, invisible;—
Nor friends, who sought thee wide in vain, To soothe thy weeping mother's pain, Could bring the wanderer home again; Some envious neighbor's spleen,
In distant hints, and darkly, said, That in the caldron hissing red, And on the god's great table spread, Thy mangled limbs were seen.
But who shall tax, I dare not, I, The blessed gods with gluttony ?— Full oft the slanderous tongue has felt By their high wrath the thunder dealt;— And sure, if ever mortal head Heaven's holy watchers honored,
That head was Lydia's lord. Yet, could not mortal heart digest The wonders of that heavenly feast; Elate with pride, a thought unblest Above his nature soared.
And now, condemned to endless dread,- (Such is the righteous doom of fate,)
He eyes, above his guilty head,
The shadowy rocks' impending weight: The fourth with that tormented three In horrible society !—
For that, in frantic theft,
The nectar cup he reft,
And to his mortal peers in feasting poured
For whom a sin it were
With mortal life to share
The mystic dainties of th' immortal board :
And who by policy
Can hope to 'scape the eye
Of him who sits above by men and gods adored?
For such offence, a doom severe, Sent down the sun to sojourn here Among the fleeting race of man; Who when the curly down began To clothe his cheek in darker shade, To car-borne Pisa's royal maid
A lover's tender service paid. But, in the darkness first he stood Alone, by ocean's hoary flood, And raised to him the suppliant cry, The hoarse earth-shaking deity.
Nor called in vain, through eloud and storm Half-seen, a huge and shadowy form,
The god of waters came.
He came, whom thus the youth addressed— O thou, if that immortal breast
Have felt a lover's flame,
A lover's prayer in pity hear, Repel the tyrant's brazen spear
That guards my lovely dame,— And grant a car whose rolling speed May help a lover at his need; Condemned by Pisa's hand to bleed, Unless I win the envied meed In Elis' field of fame.
For youthful knights thirteen
By him have slaughtered been, His daughter vexing with perverse delay. Such to a coward's eye
Nor durst a coward's heart the strife essay. Yet since alike to all
The doom of death must fall,
Ah, wherefore, sitting in unseemly shade, Wear out a nameless life,
Remote from noble strife,
And all the sweet applause to valor paid ?— Yes, I will dare the course; but, thou, Immortal friend, my prayer allow!'
Thus, not in vain, his grief he told- The ruler of the watery space Bestowed a wondrous car of gold,
And tireless steeds of winged pace. So, victor in the deathful race,
He tamed the strength of Pisa's king, And from his bride of beauteous face, Beheld a stock of warriors spring, Six valiant sons, as legends sing. And now, with fame and virtue crowned, Where Alpheus' stream in wat'ry ring, Encircles half his turfy mound,
He sleeps beneath the piled ground;
Near that blessed spot where strangers move
In many a long procession round
The altar of protecting Jove.
Yet chief, in yonder lists of fame, Survives the noble Pelop's name; Where strength of hands and nimble feet In stern and dubious contest meet; And high renown and honeyed praise, And following length of honored days, The victor's weary toil repays.
But what are past or future joys?—
The present is our own.
And he is wise who best employs
The passing hour alone.
To crown with knightly wreath the king, (A grateful task,) be mine;
And on the smooth Æolian string To praise his ancient line.
For ne'er shall wandering minstrel find A chief so just,-a friend so kind; With every grace of fortune blest ; The mightiest, wisest, bravest, best.
God, who beholdeth thee and all thy deeds, Have thee in charge, king Hiero!—so again The bard may sing thy horny-hoofed steeds In frequent triumph o'er the Olympian plain; Nor shall the Bard awake a lowly strain, His wild notes flinging o'er the Cronian steep; Whose ready muse, and not invoked in vain, For such high mark her strongest shaft shall keep.
Each hath his proper eminence.
To kings indulgent, Providence (No farther search the will of heaven) The glories of the earth hath given. Still mayest thou reign! enough for me, To dwell with heroes like to thee, Myself the chief of Grecian minstrelsy,
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