
The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com
All around through the apple boughs in blossom
 Murmur cool the breezes of early summer,
 And from leaves that quiver above me gently
             Slumber is shaken;
Glades of poppies swoon in the drowsy languor,
 Dreaming roses bend, and the oleanders
 Bask and nod to drone of bees in the silent
             Fervor of noontide;
Myrtle coverts hedging the open vista,
 Dear to nightly frolic of Nymph and Satyr,
 Yield a mossy bed for the brown and weary
             Limbs of the shepherd.
Echo ever wafts through the drooping frondage,
 Ceaseless silver murmur of water falling
 In the grotto cool of the Nymphs, the sacred
             Haunt of Immortals;
Down the sides of rocks that are gray and lichened
 Trickle tiny rills, whose expectant tinkle
 Drips with gurgle hushed in the clear glimmering
             Depths of the basin.
Fair on royal couches of leaves recumbent,
 Interspersed with languor of waxen lilies,
 Lotus flowers empurple the pool whose edge is
             Cushioned with mosses;
Here recline the Nymphs at the hour of twilight,
 Back in shadows dim of the cave, their golden
 Sea-green eyes half lidded, up to their supple
             Waists in the water.
Sheltered once by ferns I espied them binding
 Tresses long, the tint of lilac and orange;
 Just beyond the shimmer of light their bodies
             Roseate glistened;
Deftly, then, they girdled their loins with garlands,
 Linked with leaves luxuriant limb and shoulder;
 On their breasts they bruised the red blood of roses
             Fresh from the garden.
She of orange hair was the Nymph Euxanthis,
 And the lilac-tressed were Iphis and Io;
 How they laughed, relating at length their ease in
             Evading the Satyr.