Sacred Texts  Classics  Sappho  Index  Previous  Next 


The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com


p. 84

TIDINGS

She wrapped herself in linen woven close,
Stuffs delicate and texture-fine as those
The dark Nile traders for our bartering
From Egypt, Crete and far Phocea bring.

Love lent her feet the wings of winds to reach
(Whose steps stir not the shingle of the beach)
My marble court and, breathless, bid me know
My lover's sails across the harbor blow.

He seemed to her, as to himself he seems,
Like some bright God long treasured in her dreams;
She saw him standing at his galley's prow—
My Phaon, mine, in Mitylene now!


Next: Hesperus