
The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com
Daughter of mine, so fair,
   With a form like a golden flower,
 Wherefore thy pensive air
   And the dreams in the myrtle bower?
Clëis, beloved, thy eyes
   That are turned from my gaze, thy hand
 That trembles so, I prize
   More than all the Lydian land;
More than the lovely hills
   With the Lesbian olive crowned;
 Tell me, darling, what ills
   In the gloom of thy thought are found?
Daughter of mine, come near
   And thy head on my knees recline;
 Whisper and never fear,
   For the beat of thy heart is mine.
Sweet mother, I can turn
   With content to my loom no more;
 My bosom throbs, I yearn
   For a youth that my eyes adore;
Lykas of Eresus,
   Whom I knew when a little child;
 My heart by Love is thus
   With the sweetest of pain beguiled.