
The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com
Cold of heart and strangely
 Uninclined to passion,
 Wisdom's vigil leaves thee,
 Proud Damophyla.
Sapphics thou hast written,
 Verses in my metre,
 With a skill surpassing
 In the melic art.
Love's superb enchantment
 Thou art fain to banish,
 Like the virgin Huntress
 Long by thee adored.
Molded by thy tunic,
 Every arching contour
 Of her chaste and noble
 Form I dream to see;
Even view her stepping
 From the leafy covert
 Down the dawn-white valley,
 Stately as a stag.
Long I sued but found thee
 Deaf to all entreaty,
 Till one summer twilight
 Listless in the heat;
Soothed by slumber's languor,
 And my low monodic
 Voice that hymned a pæan
 In the praise of love;
Loth to yield yet vanquished,
 As I knelt beside thee,
 All thy long resistance
 To my kiss succumbed.