Even as she bade he looked again : From his high throne the dwarf was gone. Lo! there, as in the Thespian fane, Uranian Love! His bow was bent: The arrow to its head was drawn: His frowning brow was fixed intent On Rhododaphne. Scarce did rest Upon that form Anthemion's view, When, sounding shrill, the arrow flew, And lodged in Rhododaphne's breast. It was not Love's own shaft, the giver Of life and joy and tender flame; But, borrowed from Apollo's quiver, The death-directed arrow came.
Long, slow, distinct in each stern word, A sweet deep-thrilling voice was heard: "With impious spells hast thou profaned My altars; and all-ruling Jove,
Though late, yet certain, has unchained The vengeance of Uranian Love !"*- The marble palace burst asunder, Riven by subterranean thunder. Sudden clouds around them rolled, Lucid vapour, fold on fold. Then Rhododaphne closer prest Anthemion to her bleeding breast, As, in his arms upheld, her head All languid on his neck reclined; And in the curls that overspread His cheek, her temple-ringlets twined: Her dim eyes drew, with fading sight, From his their last reflected light, And on his lips, as nature failed,
Her lips their last sweet sighs exhaled.
"Farewell!"-she said-" another bride
The partner of thy days must be:
But do not hate my memory:
*The late but certain vengeance of the gods, occurs in many forms as a sentence among the classical writers; and is the subject of an interesting dialogue, among the moral works of Plutarch, which concludes with the fable of Thespesius, a very remarkable prototype of the Inferno of Dante.
And build a tomb by Ladon's tide, To her, who, false in all beside, Was but too true in loving thee!"-
The quivering earth beneath them stirred. In dizzy trance upon her bosom He fell, as falls a wounded bird Upon a broken rose's blossom.)
What sounds are in Anthemion's ear? It is the lark that carols clear, And gentle waters murmuring near. He lifts his head: the new-born day Is round him, and the sun-beams play On silver eddies. Can it be? The stream he loved in infancy? The hills? the Aphrodisian grove? The fields that knew Calliroë's love? And those two sister trees, are they The cedar and the poplar gray, That shade old Pheidon's door? Alas! Sad vision now! Does Phantasy Play with his troubled sense, made dull By many griefs? He does not dream: It is his own Arcadian stream, The fields, the hills: and on the grass, The dewy grass of Ladon's vale, Lies Rhododaphne, cold and pale, But even in death most beautiful; And there, in mournful silence by her, Lies on the ground her golden lyre.
He knelt beside her on the ground: On her pale face and radiant hair He fixed his eyes, in sorrow drowned. That one so gifted and so fair, All light and music, thus should be Quenched like a night-star suddenly, Might move a stranger's tears; but he Had known her love; such love as yet Never could heart that knew forget! He thought not of his wrongs. Alone Her love and loveliness possest
His memory, and her fond cares, shown
In seeking, nature's empire through, Devices ever rare and new,
To make him calm and blest.
Two maids had loved him; one, the light Of his young soul, the morning star Of life and love; the other, bright As are the noon-tide skies, when far The vertic sun's fierce radiance burns: The world had been too brief to prove The measure of each single love: Yet, from this hour, forlorn, bereft, Compassionless, where'er he turns, Of all that love on earth is left No trace but their cinereal urns.
But Pheidon's door unfolds; and who Comes forth in beauty? Qh! 'tis she, Herself, his own Calliroë!
And in that burst of blest surprise, Like Lethe's self upon his brain Oblivion of all grief and pain
Descends, and tow'rds her path he flies. The maiden knew
To meet him, and her dear arms threw Around his neck, and wept for bliss, And on his lips impressed a kiss He had not dared to give. The spell Was broken now, that gave before Not death, but magic slumber. More The closing measure needs not tell. Love, wonder, transport wild and high, Question that waited not reply, And answer unrequired, and smiles Through such sweet tears as bliss beguiles, Fixed, mutual looks of long delight, Soft chiding for o'erhasty flight, And promise never more to roam,
Old Pheidon from his home Came forth, to share their joy, and bless Their love, and all was happiness.
But when the maid Anthemion led To where her beauteous rival slept
The long last sleep, on earth dispread, And told her tale, Calliroë wept Sweet tears for Rhododaphne's doom; For in her heart a voice was heard:
""Twas for Anthemion's love she erred !"- They built by Ladon's banks a tomb; And, when the funeral pyre had burned, With seemly rites they there inurned The ashes of the enchantress fair; And sad, sweet verse they traced, to show That youth, love, beauty, slept below; And bade the votive marble bear The name of RHODODAPHNE.
The laurel-rose luxuriant sprung,
And in its boughs her lyre they hung, And often, when, at evening hours,
They decked the tomb with mournful flowers,
The lyre upon the twilight breeze
Would pour mysterious symphonies.
KING ARTHUR is said to have disappeared after the battle of Camlan, and to have never been seen again; which gave rise to a tradition, that he had been carried away by Merlin, a famous prophet and magician of his time, and would return to his kingdom at some future period. The Welsh continued to expect him for many hundred years; and it is by no means certain that they have entirely given him up. He is here represented as inhabiting a solitary island, under the influence of the prophet Merlin; by whose magic power he is shown all the kings and queens who have sat on his throne since his death, and giving to them a grand feast, at his old established round table, attended by their principal secretaries, dukes, lords, admirals, generals, poets, and a long train of courtiers. The kings are of course mentioned in the order of succession. The allegory is illustrated as concisely as possible in the notes. So many histories of England being published for the use of young persons, we have only attached the names of the kings, and to such instances as might not be considered sufficiently explanatory.
ING ARTHUR sat down by the lonely sea-coast, As thin as a lath, and as pale as a ghost:
He looked on the east, and the west, and the south, a tear in his eye, and a pipe in his mouth; And he said to old Merlin, who near him did stand, Drawing circles, triangles, and squares on the sand, "Sure nothing more dismal and tedious can be, Than to sit always smoking and watching the sea : Say when shall the fates re-establish my reign, And spread my round-table in Britain again?"
Old Merlin replied: "By my art it appears, Not in less than three hundred and seventy years ; But in the meantime I am very well able
To spread in this island your ancient round table; And to grace it with guests of unparalleled splendour, 'I'll summon old Pluto forthwith to surrender
All the kings who have sat on your throne, from the day When from Camlan's destruction I snatched you away."
King Arthur's long face, by these accents restored, Grew as round as his table, as bright as his sword; While the wand of old Merlin waved over the ocean, Soon covered its billows with brilliant commotion; For ships of all ages and sizes appearing, Towards the same shore were all rapidly steering, Came cleaving the billows with sail and with oar, Yacht, pinnace, sloop, frigate, and seventy-four.
King Arthur scarce spied them afar from the land, Ere their keels were fixed deep in the yellow sea-sand; And from under their canopies, golden and gay, Came kings, queens, and courtiers, in gallant array, Much musing and marvelling who it might be, That was smoking his pipe by the side of the sea; But Merlin stepped forth with a greeting right warm, And then introduced them in order and form.
The Saxons came first, the pre-eminence claiming, With scarce one among them but Alfred worth naming.
* The Saxons invaded England, and dispossessed the Britons. The most famous of the Saxon kings was Alfred.
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