
The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com
A far-seen cliff
 Stands in the western sea
 Toward Cephallenian lands.
Apollo's temple crowns
 Its whitened crest,
 And at its base
 The waves eternal beat.
Its leap has power
 To cure the pangs
 Of unrequited love.
Thither pale lovers go
 With anguished hearts
 To dare the deep and quench
 Love's slow consuming flame.
Urged to the edge
 By maddening desire,
 I, too, shall fling myself
 Imploring thee,
 Apollo, lord and king!
Into the chill
 Embraces of the sea,
 Less cold than thine, O Phaon,
 I shall fall
 Fall with the flutter of a wounded dove;
And I shall rise
 Indifferent forever to love's dream,
 Or find below
 The sea's eternal voice,
 Eternal peace.