The Earthly Paradise, (March-August), by William Morris, [1868], at sacred-texts.com
PSYCHE, a king's daughter, by her exceeding beauty caused the people to forget Venus; therefore the goddess would fain have destroyed her: nevertheless she became the bride of Love, yet in an unhappy moment lost him by her own fault, and wandering through the world suffered many evils at the hands of Venus, for whom she must accomplish fearful tasks. But the gods and all nature helped her, and in process of time she was reunited to Love, forgiven by Venus, and made immortal by the Father of gods and men.
IN the Greek land of old there was a King
 Happy in battle, rich in everything;
 Most rich in this, that he a daughter had
 Whose beauty made the longing city glad.
 She was so fair, that strangers from the sea
 Just landed, in the temples thought that she
 Was Venus visible to mortal eyes,
 New come from Cyprus for a world's surprise.
 She was so beautiful that had she stood
 On windy Ida by the oaken wood, p. 348
 And bared her limbs to that bold shepherd's gaze,
 Troy might have stood till now with happy days;
 And those three fairest, all have gone away
 And left her with the apple on that day.
   And Psyche is her name in stories old,
 As ever by our fathers we were told.
   All this beheld Queen Venus from her throne,
 And felt that she no longer was alone
 In beauty, but, if only for a while,
 This maiden matched her god-enticing smile;
 Therefore, she wrought in such a wise, that she,
 If honoured as a goddess, certainly
 Was dreaded as a goddess none the less,
 And midst her wealth, dwelt long in loneliness.
    Two sisters had she, and men deemed them fair,
 But as King's daughters might be anywhere,
 And these to men of name and great estate
 Were wedded, while at home must Psyche wait.
 The sons of kings before her silver feet
 Still bowed, and sighed for her; in measures sweet
 The minstrels to the people sung her praise,
 Yet must she live a virgin all her days.
   So to Apollo's fane her father sent,
 Seeking to know the dreadful Gods intent,
 And therewith sent he goodly gifts of price
 A silken veil, wrought with a paradise, p. 349
 Three golden bowls, set round with many a gem,
 Three silver robes, with gold in every hem,
 And a fair ivory image of the god
 That underfoot a golden serpent trod;
 And when three lords with these were gone away,
 Nor could return until the fortieth day,
 Ill was the King at ease, and neither took
 Joy in the chase, or in the pictured book
 The skilled Athenian limner had just wrought,
 Nor in the golden cloths from India brought.
    At last the day came for those lords return,
 And then twixt hope and fear the king did burn,
 As on his throne with great pomp he was set,
 And by him Psyche, knowing not as yet
 Why they had gone: thus waiting, at noontide
 They in the palace heard a voice outside,
 And soon the messengers came hurrying,
 And with pale faces knelt before the King,
 And rent their clothes, and each man on his head
 Cast dust, the while a trembling courtier read
 This scroll, wherein the fearful answer lay,
 Whereat from every face joy passed away.
THE ORACLE.
O FATHER of a most unhappy maid,
 O King, whom all the world henceforth shall know
 As wretched among wretches, be afraid p. 350
 To ask the gods thy misery to show,
 But if thou needs must hear it, to thy woe
 Take back thy gifts to feast thine eyes upon,
 When thine own flesh and blood some beast hath won.
   "For hear thy doom, a rugged rock there is
 Set back a league from thine own palace fair,
 There leave the maid, that she may wait the kiss
 Of the fell monster that Both harbour there:
 This is the mate for whom her yellow hair
 And tender limbs have been so fashioned,
 This is the pillow for her lovely head.
   "O what an evil from thy loins shall spring,
 For all the world this monster overturns,
 He is the bane of every mortal thing,
 And this world ruined, still for more he yearns;
 A fire there goeth from his mouth that burns
 Worse than the flame of Phlegethon the red
 To such a monster shall thy maid be wed.
   "And if thou sparest now to do this thing,
 I will destroy thee and thy land also,
 And of dead corpses shalt thou be the King,
 And stumbling through the dark land shalt thou go,
 Howling for second death to end thy woe;
 Live therefore as thou mayst and do my will,
 And be a King that men may envy still." p. 351
    What man was there, whose face changed not for grief
 At hearing this? Psyche, shrunk like the leaf
 The autumn frost first touches on the tree,
 Stared round about with eyes that could not see,
 And muttered sounds from lips that said no word,
 And still within her ears the sentence heard
 When all was said and silence fell on all
 Twixt marble columns and adorned wall.
    Then spoke the King, bowed down with misery.
 "What help is there! O daughter, let us die,
 Or else together fleeing from this land,
 From town to town go wandering hand in hand;
 Thou and I, daughter, till all men forget
 That ever on a throne I have been set,
 And then, when houseless and disconsolate,
 We ask an alms before some city gate,
 The gods perchance a little gift may give,
 And suffer thee and me like beasts to live."
    Then answered Psyche, through her bitter tears,
 "Alas! my father, I have known these years
 That with some woe the gods have dowered me,
 And weighed gainst riches infelicity;
 Ill is it then against the gods to strive;
 Live on, O father, those that are alive
 May still be happy; would it profit me
 To live awhile, and ere I died to see
 Thee perish, and all folk who love me well,
 And then at last be dragged myself to hell
 Cursed of all men? nay, since all must die, p. 352
 And I have dreamed not of eternity,
 Why weepest thou that I must die to-day?
 Why weepest thou? cast thought of shame away,
 The dead are not ashamed, they feel no pain;
 I have heard folk who spoke of death as gain
 And yetah, God, if I had been some maid,
 Toiling all day, and in the night-time laid
 Asleep on rusheshad I only died
 Before this sweet life I had fully tried,
 Upon that day when for my birth men sung,
 And oer the feasting folk the sweet bells rung."
   And therewith she arose and gat away,
 And in her chamber, mourning long she lay,
 Thinking of all the days that might have been,
 And how that she was born to be a queen,
 The prize of some great conqueror of renown,
 The joy of many a country and fair town,
 The high desire of every prince and lord,
 One who could fright with careless smile or word
 The hearts of heroes fearless in the war,
 The glory of the world, the leading-star
 Unto all honour and all earthly fame
 Round goes the wheel, and death and deadly shame
 Shall be her lot, while yet of her men sing
 Unwitting that the gods have done this thing.
 Long time she lay there, while the sunbeams moved
 Over her body through the flowers she loved;
 And in the eaves the sparrows chirped outside, p. 353
 Until for weariness she grew dry-eyed,
 And into an unhappy sleep she fell.
   But of the luckless King now must we tell,
 Who sat devising means to scape that shame,
 Until the frightened people thronging came
 About the palace, and drove back the guards,
 Making their way past all the gates and wards;
 And, putting chamberlains and marshals by,
 Surged round the very throne tumultuously.
 Then knew the wretched King all folk had heard
 The miserable sentence, and the word
 The gods had spoken; and from out his seat
 He rose, and spoke in humble words, unmeet
 For a great King, and prayed them give him grace,
 While twixt his words the tears ran down his face
 On to his raiment stiff with golden thread.
    But little heeded they the words he said,
 For very fear had made them pitiless;
 Nor cared they for the maid and her distress,
 But clashed their spears together and gan cry:
 "For one man's daughter shall the people die,
 And this fair land become an empty name,
 Because thou art afraid to meet the shame
 Wherewith the gods reward thy hidden sin?
 Nay, by their glory do us right herein!"
    "Ye are in haste to have a poor maid slain,"
 The King said; "but my will herein is vain,
 For ye are many, I one aged man: p. 354
 Let one man speak, if for his' shame he can."
    Then stepped a sturdy dyer forth, who said,
 "Fear of the gods brings no shame, by my head.
 Listen; thy daughter we would have thee leave
 Upon the fated mountain this same eve;
 And thither must she go right well arrayed
 In marriage raiment, loose hair as a maid,
 And saffron veil, and with her shall there go
 Fair maidens bearing torches, two and two;
 And minstrels, in such raiment as is meet
 The god-ordained fearful spouse to greet.
 So shalt thou save our wives and little ones,
 And something better than a heap of stones,
 Dwelt in by noisome things, this town shall be,
 And thou thyself shalt keep thy sovereignty;
 But if thou wilt not do the thing I say,
 Then shalt thou live in bonds from this same day,
 And we will bear thy maid unto the hill,
 And from the dread gods save the city still."
    Then loud they shouted at the words he said,
 And round the head of the unhappy maid,
 Dreaming uneasily of long-past joys,
 Floated the echo of that dreadful noise,
 And changed her dreams to dreams of misery.
 But when the King knew that the thing must be,
 And that no help there was in this distress,
 He bade them have all things in readiness
 To take the maiden out at sun-setting,
 And wed her to the unknown dreadful thing. p. 355
 So through the palace passed with heavy cheer
 Her women gathering the sad wedding gear;
 Who lingering long, yet at the last must go,
 To waken Psyche to her bitter woe.
 So coming to her bower, they found her there,
 From head to foot rolled in her yellow hair,
 As in the saffron veil she should be soon
 Betwixt the setting sun and rising moon;
 But when above her a pale maiden bent
 And touched her, from her heart a sigh she sent,
 And waking, on their woeful faces stared,
 Sitting upright, with one white shoulder bared
 By writhing on the bed in wretchedness.
 Then suddenly remembering her distress,
 She bowed her head and gan to weep and wail,
 But let them wrap her in the bridal veil,
 And bind the sandals to her silver feet,
 And set the rose-wreath on her tresses sweet;
 But spoke no word, yea, rather, wearily
 Turned from the yearning face and pitying eye
 Of any maid who seemed about to speak.
    Now through the garden trees the sun gan break,
 And that inevitable time drew near;
 Then through the courts, grown cruel, strange, and drear,
 Since the bright morn, they led her to the gate,
 Where she beheld a golden litter wait.
 Whereby the King stood, aged and bent to earth,
 The flute-players with faces void of mirth,
 The down-cast bearers of the ivory wands, p. 356
 The maiden torch-bearers unhappy bands.
   So then was Psyche taken to the hill,
 And through the town the streets were void and still;
 For in their houses all the people stayed,
 Of that most mournful music sore afraid.
 But on the way a marvel did they see,
 For, passing by, where wrought of ivory,
 There stood the Goddess of the flowery isle,
 All folk could see the carven image smile.
    But when anigh the hill's bare top they came,
 Where Psyche must be left to meet her shame,
 They set the litter down, and drew aside
 The golden curtains from the wretched bride,
 Who at their bidding rose and with them went
 Afoot amidst her maids with head down-bent,
 Until they came unto the drear rock's brow;
 And there she stood apart, not weeping now,
 But pale as privet blossom is in June.
 There as the quivering flutes left off their tune,
 In trembling arms the weeping, haggard King
 Caught Psyche, who, like some half-lifeless thing,
 Took all his kisses, and no word could say,
 Until at last perforce he turned away;
 Because the longest agony has end,
 And homeward through the twilight did they wend.
   But Psyche, now faint and bewildered,
 Remembered little of her pain and dread; p. 357
 Her doom drawn nigh took all her fear away,
 And left her faint and weary; as they say
 It haps to one who neath a lion lies,
 Who stunned and helpless feels not ere he dies
 The horror of the yellow fell, the red
 Hot mouth, and white teeth gleaming oer his head;
 So Psyche felt, as sinking on the ground
 She cast one weary vacant look around,
 And at the ending of that wretched day
 Swooning beneath the risen moon she lay.
NOW backward must our story go awhile
 And unto Cyprus the fair flowery isle,
 Where hid away from every worshipper
 Was Venus sitting, and her son by her
 Standing to mark what words she had to say,
 While in his dreadful wings the wind did play:
 Frowning she spoke, in plucking from her thigh
 The fragrant flowers that clasped it lovingly.
    "In such a town, O son, a maid there is
 Whom any amorous man this day would kiss
 As gladly as a goddess like to me,
 And though I know an end to this must be,
 When white and red and gold are waxen grey
 Down on the earth, while unto me one day
 Is as another; yet behold, my son, p. 358
 And go through all my temples one by one
 And look what incense rises unto me;
 Hearken the talk of sailors from the sea
 Just landed, ever will it be the same,
 'Hast thou then seen her?'Yea, unto my shame
 Within the temple that is called mine,
 As through the veil I watched the altar shine
 This happed; a man with outstretched hand there stood,
 Glittering in arms, of smiling joyous mood,
 With crisp, black hair, and such a face one sees
 But seldom now, and limbs like Hercules;
 But as he stood there in my holy place,
 Across mine image came the maiden's face,
 And when he saw her, straight the warrior said
 Turning about unto an earthly maid,
 'O, lady Venus, thou art kind to me
 After so much of wandering on the sea
 To show thy very body to me here,'
 But when this impious saying I did hear,
 I sent them a great portent, for straightway
 I quenched the fire, and no priest on that day
 Could light it any more for all his prayer.
    "So must she fall, so must her golden hair
 Flash no more through the city, or her feet
 Be seen like lilies moving down the street;
 No more must men watch her soft raiment cling
 About her limbs, no more must minstrels sing
 The praises of her arms and hidden breast. p. 359
 And thou it is, my son, must give me rest
 From all this worship wearisomely paid
 Unto a mortal who should be afraid
 To match the gods in beauty; take thy bow
 And dreadful arrows, and about her sow
 The seeds of folly, and with such an one
 I pray thee cause her mingle, fair my son,
 That not the poorest peasant girl in Greece
 Would look on for the gift of Jason's fleece.
 Do this, and see thy mother glad again,
 And free from insult, in her temples reign
 Over the hearts of lovers in the spring."
   "Mother," he said, "thou askest no great thing,
 Some wretch too bad for death I soon shall find,
 Who round her perfect neck his arms shall. wind.
 She shall be driven from the palace gate
 Where once her crowd of worshippers would wait
 From earliest morning till the dew was dry
 On chance of seeing her gold gown glancing by;
 There through the storm of curses shall she go.
 In evil raiment midst the winter snow,
 Or in the summer in rough sheepskins clad.
 And thus, O mother, shall I make thee glad
 Remembering all the honour thou hast brought
 Unto mine altars; since as thine own thought
 My thought is grown, my mind as thy dear mind."
   Then straight he rose from earth and down the wind p. 360
 Went glittering twixt the blue sky and the sea,
 And so unto the place came presently
 Where Psyche dwelt, and through the gardens fair
 Passed seeking her, and as he wandered there
 Had still no thought but to do all her will,
 Nor cared to think if it were good or ill:
 So beautiful and pitiless he went,
 And toward him still the blossomed fruit-trees leant,
 And after him the wind crept murmuring,
 And on the boughs the birds forgot to sing.
   Withal at last amidst a fair green close,
 Hedged round about with woodbine and red rose,
 Within the flicker of a white-thorn shade
 In gentle sleep he found the maiden laid;
 One hand that held a book had fallen away
 Across her body, and the other lay
 Upon a marble fountain's plashing rim,
 Among whose brokers waves the fish showed dim,,
 But yet its wide-flung spray now woke her not,
 Because the summer day at noon was hot,
 And all sweet sounds and scents were lulling her.
    So soon the rustle of his wings gan stir
 Her looser folds of raiment, and the hair
 Spread wide upon the grass and daisies fair,
 As Love cast down his eyes with a half smile
 Godlike and cruel; that faded in a while,
 And long he stood above her hidden eyes
 With red lips parted in a god's surprise. p. 361
    Then very Love knelt down beside the maid
 And on her breast a hand unfelt he laid,
 And drew the gown from off her little feet,
 And set his fair cheek to her shoulder sweet,
 And kissed her lips that knew of no love yet,
 And wondered if his heart would eer forget
 The perfect arm that oer her body lay.
   But now by chance a damsel came that way,
 One of her ladies, and saw not the god,
 Yet on his shafts cast down had well-nigh trod
 In wakening Psyche, who rose up in haste
 And girded up her gown about her waist,
 And with that maid went drowsily away.
   From place to place Love followed her that day
 And ever fairer to his eyes she grew,
 So that at last when from her bower he flew,
 And underneath his feet the moonlit sea
 Went shepherding his waves disorderly,
 He swore that of all gods and men, no one
 Should hold her in his arms but he alone;
 That she should dwell with him in glorious wise
 Like to a goddess in some paradise;
 Yea, he would get from Father Jove this grace
 That she should never die, but her sweet face
 And wonderful fair body should endure
 Till the foundations of the mountains sure
 Were molten in the sea; so utterly p. 362
 Did he forget his mother's cruelty.
   And now that he might come to this fair end,
 He found Apollo, and besought him lend
 His throne of divination for a while,
 Whereby he did the priestess so beguile,
 She gave the cruel answer ye have heard
 Unto those lords, who wrote it word by word,
 And back unto the King its threatenings bore,
 Whereof there came that grief and mourning sore,
 Of which ye wot; thereby is Psyche laid
 Upon the mountain-top; thereby, afraid
 Of some ill yet, within the city fair
 Cower down the people that have sent her there.
   Withal did Love call unto him the Wind
 Called Zephyrus, who most was to his mind,
 And said, "O rainy wooer of the spring,
 I pray thee, do for me an easy thing;
 To such a hill-top go, O gentle wind,
 And there a sleeping maiden shalt thou find;
 Her perfect body in thy arms with care
 Take up, and unto the green valley bear
 That lies before my noble house of gold;
 There leave her lying on the daisies cold."
    Then, smiling, toward the place the fair Wind went,
 And neath his wing the sleeping lilies bent,
 And flying twixt the green earth and the sea
 Made the huge anchored ships dance merrily, p. 363
 And swung round from the east the gilded vanes
 On many a palace, and from unhorsed wains
 Twitched off the wheat-straw in his hurried flight;
 And in no long time he came full in sight
 Of Psyche laid in swoon upon the hill,
 And smiling, set himself to do Love's will;
 For in his arms he took her up with care,
 Wondering to see a mortal made so fair,
 And came into the vale in little space,
 And set her down in the most flowery place;
 And then unto the plains of Thessaly
 Went ruffling up the edges of the sea.
   Now underneath the world the sun was gone,
 But brighter shone the stars so left alone,
 Until a faint green light began to show
 Far in the east, whereby did all men know,
 Who lay awake either with joy or pain,
 That day was coming on their heads again;
 Then widening, soon it spread to grey twilight,
 And in a while with gold the east was bright;
 The birds burst out a-singing one by one,
 And oer the hill-top rose the mighty sun.
    Therewith did Psyche open wide her eyes,
 And rising on her arm, with great surprise
 Gazed on the flowers wherein so deep she lay,
 And wondered why upon that dawn of day
 Out in the fields she had lift up her head
 Rather than in her balmy gold-hung bed. p. 364
 Then, suddenly remembering all her woes,
 She sprang upon her feet, and yet arose
 Within her heart a mingled hope and dread
 Of some new thing: and now she raised her head,
 And gazing round about her timidly,
 A lovely grassy valley could she see,
 That steep grey cliffs upon three sides did bound,
 And under these, a river sweeping round,
 With gleaming curves the valley did embrace,
 And seemed to make an island of that place;
 And all about were dotted leafy trees,
 The elm for shade, the linden for the bees,
 The noble oak, long ready for the steel
 That ill that place it had no fear to feel;
 The pomegranate, the apple, and the pear,
 That fruit and flowers at once made shift to bear,
 Nor yet decayed therefore, and in them hung
 Bright birds that elsewhere sing not, but here sung
 As sweetly as the small brown nightingales
 Within the wooded, deep Laconian vales.
    But right across the vale, from side to side,
 A high white wall all further view did hide,
 But that above it, vane and pinnacle
 Rose up, of some great house beyond to tell,
 And still betwixt these, mountains far away
 Against the sky rose shadowy, cold, and grey.
   She, standing in the yellow morning sun,
 Could scarcely think her happy life was done, p. 365
 Or that the place was made for misery;
 Yea, some lone heaven it rather seemed to be,
 Which for the coming band of gods did wait;
 Hope touched her heart; no longer desolate,
 Deserted of all creatures did she feel,
 And oer her face sweet colour gan to steal,
 That deepened to a flush, as wandering thought
 Desires before unknown unto her brought,
 So mighty was the God, though far away.
    But trembling midst her hope, she took her way
 Unto a little door midmost the wall,
 And still on odorous flowers her feet did fall,
 And round about her did the strange birds sing,
 Praising her beauty in their carolling.
 Thus coming to the door, when now her hand
 First touched the lock, in doubt she needs must stand,
 And to herself she said, "Lo, now the trap!
 And yet, alas! whatever now may hap,
 How can I scape the ill which waiteth me?
 Let me die now!" and herewith, tremblingly,
 She raised the latch, and her sweet sinless eyes
 Beheld a garden like a Paradise,
 Void of mankind, fairer than words can say,
 Wherein did joyous harmless creatures play
 After their kind, and all amidst the trees
 Were strange-wrought founts and wondrous images;
 And glimmering twixt the boughs could she behold
 A house made beautiful with beaten gold,
 Whose open doors in the bright sun did gleam; p. 366
 Lonely, but not deserted did it seem.
    Long time she stood debating what to do,
 But at the last she passed the wicket through,
 Which, shutting clamorously behind her, sent
 A pang of fear throughout her as she went;
 But when through all that green place she had passed,
 And by the palace porch she stood at last,
 And saw how wonderfully the wall was wrought,
 With curious stones from far-off countries brought,
 And many an image and fair history
 Of what the world has been, and yet shall be,
 And all set round with golden craftsmanship,
 Well-wrought as some renowned cup's royal lip,
 She had a thought again to turn aside:
 And yet again, not knowing where to bide,
 She entered softly, and with trembling hands
 Holding her gown; the wonder of all lands
 Met there the wonders of the land and sea.
   Now went she through the chambers tremblingly,
 And oft in going would she pause and stand,
 And drop the gathered raiment from her hand,
 Stilling the beating of her heart for fear
 As voices whispering low she seemed to hear,
 But then again the wind it seemed to be
 Moving the golden hangings doubtfully,
 Or some bewildered swallow passing close
 Unto the pane, or some wind-beaten rose.
    Soon seeing that no evil thing came near, p. 367
 A little she began to lose her fear,
 And gaze upon the wonders of the place,
 And in the silver mirrors saw her face
 Grown strange to her amidst that loneliness,
 And stooped to feel the web her feet did press,
 Wrought by the brown slim-fingered Indian's toil
 Amidst the years of war and vain turmoil;
 Or she the figures of the hangings felt,
 Or daintily the unknown blossoms smelt,
 Or stood and pondered what new thing might mean
 The images of knight and king and queen
 Wherewith the walls were pictured here and there,
 Or touched rich vessels with her fingers fair,
 And oer her delicate smooth cheek would pass
 The fixed bubbles of strange works of glass:
 So wandered she amidst these marvels new
 Until anigh the noontide now it grew.
    At last she came unto a chamber cool
 Paved cunningly in manner of a pool,
 Where red fish seemed to swim through floating weed
 And at the first she thought it so indeed,
 And took the sandals quickly from her feet,
 But when the glassy floor these did but meet
 The shadow of a long-forgotten smile
 Her anxious face a moment did beguile;
 And crossing oer, she found a table spread
 With dainty food, as delicate white bread
 And fruits piled up and covered savoury meat,
 As though a king were coming there to eat, p. 368
 For the worst vessel was of beaten gold.
    Now when these dainties Psyche did behold
 She fain had eaten, but did nowise dare,
 Thinking she saw a god's feast lying there.
 But as she turned to go the way she came
 She heard a low soft voice call out her name,
 Then she stood still, and trembling gazed around,
 And seeing no man, nigh sank upon the ground,
 Then through the empty air she heard the voice.
   "O, lovely one, fear not! rather rejoice
 That thou art come unto thy sovereignty:
 Sit now and eat, this feast is but for thee,
 Yea, do whatso thou wilt with all things here,
 And in thine own house cast away thy fear,
 For all is thine, and little things are these
 So loved a heart as thine, awhile to please.
    "Be patient! thou art loved by such a one
 As will not leave thee mourning here alone,
 But rather cometh on this very night;
 And though he needs must hide him from thy sight
 Yet all his words of love thou well mayst hear,
 And pour thy woes into no careless ear.
    "Bethink thee then, with what solemnity
 Thy folk, thy father, did deliver thee
 To him who loves thee thus, and void of dread
 Remember, sweet, thou art a bride new-wed."
   Now hearing this, did Psyche, trembling sore, p. 369
 And yet with lighter heart than heretofore,
 Sit down and eat, till she grew scarce afeard;
 And nothing but the summer noise she heard
 Within the garden, then, her meal being done,
 Within the window-seat she watched the sun
 Changing the garden-shadows, till she grew
 Fearless and happy, since she deemed she knew
 The worst that could befall, while still the best
 Shone a fair star far off: and mid the rest
 This brought her after all her grief and fear,
 She said, "How sweet it would be, could I hear,
 Soft music mate the drowsy afternoon,
 And drown awhile the bees' sad murmuring tune
 Within these flowering limes." Een as she spoke,
 A sweet-voiced choir of unknown unseen folk
 Singing to words that match the sense of these
 Hushed the faint music of the linden trees.
SONG.
O PENSIVE, tender maid, downcast and shy,
 Who turnest pale een at the name of love,
 And with flushed face must pass the elm-tree by
 Ashamed to hear the passionate grey dove
 Moan to his mate, thee too the god shall move,
 Thee too the maidens shall ungird one day,
 And with thy girdle put thy shame away.
   What then, and shall white winter neer be done
 Because the glittering frosty morn is fair? p. 370
 Because against the early-setting sun
 Bright show the gilded boughs though waste and bare?
 Because the robin singeth free from care?
 Ah! these are memories of a better day
 When on earth's face the lips of summer lay.
   Come then, beloved one, for such as thee
 Love loveth, and their hearts he knoweth well,
 Who hoard their moments of felicity,
 As misers hoard the medals that they tell,
 Lest on the earth but paupers they should dwell:
 We hide our love to bless another day;
 The world is hard, youth passes quick," they say.
   Ah, little ones, but if ye could forget
 Amidst your outpoured love that you must die,
 Then ye, my servants, were death's conquerers yet,
 And love to you should be eternity
 How quick soever might the days go by:
 Yes, ye are made immortal on the day
 Ye cease the dusty grains of time to weigh.
   Thou hearkenest, love? O, make no semblance then
 Thou art beloved, but as thy wont is
 Turn thy grey eyes away from eyes of men,
 With hands down-dropped, that tremble with thy bliss,
 With hidden eyes, take thy first lover's kiss;
 Call this eternity which is to-day,
 Nor dream that this our love can pass away. p. 371
   They ceased, and Psyche pondering oer their song,
 Not fearing now that aught would do her wrong,
 About the chambers wandered at her will,
 And on the many marvels gazed her fill,
 Whereer she passed still noting everything,
 Then in the gardens heard the new birds sing
 And watched the red fish in the fountains play,
 And at the very faintest time of day
 Upon the grass lay sleeping for a while
 Midst heaven-sent dreams of bliss that made her smile;
 And when she woke the shades were lengthening,
 So to the place where she had heard them sing
 She came again, and through a little door
 Entered a chamber with a marble floor,
 Open a-top unto the outer air,
 Beneath which lay a bath of water fair,
 Paved with strange stones and figures of bright gold,
 And from the steps thereof could she behold
 The slim-leaved trees against the evening sky
 Golden and calm, still moving languidly.
    So for a time upon the brink she sat,
 Debating in her mind of this and that,
 And then arose and slowly from her cast
 Her raiment, and adown the steps she passed
 Into the water, and therein she played,
 Till of herself at last she grew afraid,
 And of the broken image of her face,
 And the loud splashing in that lonely place.
 So from the bath she gat her quietly, p. 372
 And clad herself in whatso haste might be;
 And when at last she was apparelled
 Unto a chamber came, where was a bed
 Of gold and ivory, and precious wood
 Some island bears where never man has stood;
 And round about hung curtains of delight,
 Wherein were interwoven Day and Night
 Joined by the hands of Love, and round their wings
 Knots of fair flowers no earthly May-time brings.
 Strange for its beauty was the coverlet,
 With birds and beasts and flowers wrought over it;
 And every cloth was made in daintier wise
 Than any man on earth could well devise:
 Yea, there such beauty was in everything,
 That she, the daughter of a mighty king,
 Felt strange therein, and trembled lest that she,
 Deceived by dreams, had wandered heedlessly
 Into a bower for some fair goddess made.
 Yet if perchance some man had thither strayed,
 It had been long ere he had noted aught
 But her sweet face, made pensive by the thought
 Of all the wonders that she moved in there.
    But looking round, upon a table fair
 She saw a book wherein old tales were writ,
 And by the window sat, to read in it
 Until the dusk had melted into night,
 When waxen tapers did her servants light
 With unseen hands, until it grew like day.
    And so at last upon the bed she lay, p. 373
 And slept a dreamless sleep for weariness,
 Forgetting all the wonder and distress.
   But at the dead of night she woke, and heard
 A rustling noise, and grew right sore afeard,
 Yea, could not move a finger for afright;
 And all was darker now than darkest night.
   Withal a voice close by her did she hear.
 "Alas, my love! why tremblest thou with fear,
 While I am trembling with new happiness?
 Forgive me, sweet, thy terror and distress:
 Not otherwise could this our meeting be.
 O loveliest! such bliss awaiteth thee,
 For all thy trouble and thy shameful tears,
 Such nameless honour, and such happy years,
 As fall not unto women of the earth.
 Loved as thou art, thy short-lived pains are worth
 The glory and the joy unspeakable
 Wherein the Treasure of the World shall dwell:
 A little hope, a little patience yet,
 Ere everything thou wilt, thou mayst forget,
 Or else remember as a well-told tale,
 That for some pensive pleasure may avail.
 Canst thou not love me, then, who wrought thy woe,
 That thou the height and depth of joy mightst know?"
   He spoke, and as upon the bed she lay,
 Trembling amidst new thoughts, he sent a ray p. 374
 Of finest love unto her inmost heart,
 Till, murmuring low, she strove the night to part,
 And like a bride who meets her love at last,
 When the long days of yearning are oerpast,
 She reached to him her perfect arms unseen,
 And said, "O Love, how wretched I have been!
 What hast thou done?" And by her side he lay,
 Till just before the dawning of the day.
THE sun was high when Psyche woke again,
 And turning to the place where he had lain
 And seeing no one, doubted of the thing
 That she had dreamed it, till a fair gold ring,
 Unseen before, upon her hand she found,
 And touching her bright head she felt it crowned
 With a bright circlet; then withal she sighed,
 And wondered how the oracle had lied,
 And wished her father knew it, and straightway
 Rose up and clad herself. Slow went the day,
 Though helped with many a solace, till came night;
 And therewithal the new, unseen delight,
 She learned to call her Love.
                                   So passed away
 The days and nights, until upon a day
 As in the shade, at noon she lay asleep,
 She dreamed that she beheld her sisters weep, p. 375
 And her old father clad in sorry guise,
 Grown foolish with the weight of miseries,
 Her friends black-clad and moving mournfully,
 And folk in wonder landed from the sea,
 At such a fall of such a matchless maid,
 And in some press apart her raiment laid
 Like precious relics, and an empty tomb
 Set in the palace telling of her doom.
    Therefore she wept in sleep, and woke with tears
 Still on her face, and wet hair round her ears,
 And went about unhappily that day,
 Framing a gentle speech wherewith to pray
 For leave to see her sisters once again,
 That they might know her happy, and her pain
 Turned all to joy, and honour come from shame.
    And so at last night and her lover came,
 And midst their fondling, suddenly she said,
 "O Love, a little time we have been wed,
 And yet I ask a boon of thee this night."
    "Psyche," he said, "if my heart tells me right,
 This thy desire may bring us bitter woe,
 For who the shifting chance of fate can know?
 Yet, forasmuch as mortal hearts are weak,
 To-morrow shall my folk thy sisters seek,
 And bear them hither; but before the day
 Is fully ended must they go away.
 And thoubewarefor, fresh and good and true,
 Thou knowest not what worldly hearts may do,
 Or what a curse gold is unto the earth. p. 376
 Beware lest from thy full heart, in thy mirth,
 Thou tellst the story of thy love unseen:
 Thy loving, simple heart, fits not a queen."
    Then by her kisses did she know he frowned,
 But close about him her fair arms she wound,
 Until for happiness he gan to smile,
 And in those arms forgat all else awhile.
   So the next day, for joy that they should come,
 Would Psyche further deck her strange new home,
 And even as she gan to think the thought,
 Quickly her will by unseen hands was wrought,
 Who came and went like thoughts. Yea, how should I
 Tell of the works of gold and ivory,
 The gems and images, those hands brought there;
 The prisoned things of earth, and sea, and air,
 They brought to please their mistress? Many a beast,
 Such as King Bacchus in his reckless feast
 Makes merry withhuge elephants, snow-white
 With gilded tusks, or dusky-grey with bright
 And shining chains about their wrinkled necks;
 The mailed rhinoceros, that of nothing recks;
 Dusky-maned lions; spotted leopards fair
 That through the cane-brake move, unseen as air;
 The deep-mouthed tiger, dread of the brown man;
 The eagle, and the peacock, and the swan
 These be the nobles of the birds and beasts.
 But therewithal, for laughter at their feasts,
 They brought them the gods jesters, such as be p. 377
 Quick-chattering apes, that yet in mockery
 Of anxious men wrinkle their ugly brows;
 Strange birds with pouches, birds with beaks like prows
 Of merchant-ships, with tufted crests like threads,
 With unimaginable monstrous heads.
 Lo, such as these, in many a gilded cage
 They brought, or chained for fear of sudden rage.
    Then strewed they scented branches on the floor,
 And hung rose-garlands up by the great door,
 And wafted incense through the bowers and halls,
 And hung up fairer hangings on the walls,
 And filled the baths with water fresh and clear,
 And in the chambers laid apparel fair,
 And spread a table for a royal feast.
    Then when from all these labours they had ceased,
 Psyche they sung to sleep with lullabies;
 Who slept not long, but opening soon her eyes,
 Beheld her sisters on the threshold stand:
 Then did she run to take them by the hand,
 And laid her cheek to theirs, and murmured words
 Of little meaning, like the moan of birds,
 While they bewildered stood and gazed around,
 Like people who in some strange land have found,
 One that they thought not of; but she at last
 Stood back, and from her face the strayed locks cast,
 And, smiling through her tears, said, "Ah, that ye
 Should have to weep such useless tears for me!
 Alas, the burden that the city bears
 For nought! O me, my father's burning tears, p. 378
 That into all this honour I am come!
 Nay, does he live yet? Is the ancient home
 Still standing? do the galleys throng the quays?
 Do the brown Indians glitter down the ways
 With rubies as of old? Yes, yes, ye smile,
 For ye are thinking, but a little while
 Apart from these has she been dwelling here;
 Truly, yet long enough, loved ones and dear,
 To make me other than I was of old,
 Though now when your dear faces I behold
 Am I myself again. But by what road
 Have ye been brought to this my new abode?"
    "Sister," said one, "I rose up from my bed
 It seems this morn, and being apparelled,
 And walking in my garden, in a swoon
 Helpless and unattended I sank down,
 Wherefrom I scarce am waked, for as a dream
 Dost thou with all this royal glory seem,
 But for thy kisses and thy words, O love."
    "Yea, Psyche," said the other, "as I drove
 The ivory shuttle through the shuttle-race,
 All was changed suddenly, and in this place
 I found myself, and standing on my feet,
 Where me with sleepy words this one did greet.
 Now, sister, tell us whence these wonders come
 With all the godlike splendour of your home."
   "Sisters," she said, "more marvels shall ye see
 When ye have been a little while with me, p. 379
 Whereof I cannot tell you more than this
 That midst them all I dwell in ease and bliss,
 Well-loved and wedded to a mighty lord,
 Fair beyond measure, from whose loving word
 I know that happier days await me yet.
 But come, my sisters, let us now forget
 To seek for empty knowledge; ye shall take
 Some little gifts for your lost sister's sake;
 And whatso wonders ye may see or hear
 Of nothing frightful have ye any fear."
    Wondering they went with her, and looking round,
 Each in the other's eyes a strange look found,
 For these, her mother's daughters, had no part
 In her divine fresh singleness of heart,
 But longing to be great, remembered not
 How short a time one heart on earth has got.
    But keener still that guarded look now grew
 As more of that strange lovely place they knew,
 And as with growing hate, but still afeard,
 The unseen choirs heart-softening strains they heard,
 Which did but harden these; and when at noon
 They sought the shaded waters freshening boon,
 And all unhidden once again they saw
 That peerless beauty, free from any flaw,
 Which now at last had won its precious meed,
 Her kindness then but fed the fire of greed
 Within their heartsher gifts, the rich attire
 Wherewith she clad them, where like sparks of fire
 The many-coloured gems shone midst the pearls, p. 380
 The soft silks winding lines, the work of girls
 By the Five Rivers; their fair marvellous crowns,
 Their sandals fastenings worth the rent of towns,
 Zones and carved rings, and nameless wonders fair,
 All things her faithful slaves had brought them there,
 Given amid kisses, made them not more glad;
 Since in their hearts the ravening worm they had
 That love slays not, nor yet is satisfied
 While aught but he has aught; yet still they tried
 To look as they deemed loving folk should look,
 And still with words of love her bounty took.
   So at the last all being apparelled,
 Her sisters to the banquet Psyche led,
 Fair were they, and each seemed a glorious queen
 With all that wondrous daintiness beseen,
 But Psyche clad in gown of dusky blue
 Little adorned, with deep grey eyes that knew
 The hidden marvels of Love's holy fire,
 Seemed like the soul of innocent desire,
 Shut from the mocking world, wherefrom those twain
 Seemed come to lure her thence with labour vain.
   Now having reached the place where they should eat,
 Ere neath the canopy the three took seat,
 The eldest sister unto Psyche said,
 "And he, dear love, the man that thou hast wed,
 Will he not wish to-day thy kin to see?
 Then could we tell of thy felicity p. 381
 The better, to our folk and father dear."
    Then Psyche reddened, "Nay, he is not here,"
 She stammered, "neither will be here to-day,
 For mighty matters keep him far away."
 "Alas!" the younger sister said, "Say then,
 What is the likeness of this first of men;
 What sayest thou about his loving eyne,
 Are his locks black, or golden-red as thine?"
 "Black-haired like me," said Psyche stammering,
 And looking round, "what say I? like the king
 Who rules the world, he seems to me at least
 Come, sisters, sit, and let us make good feast!
 My darling and my love ye shall behold
 I doubt not soon, his crispy hair of gold,
 His eyes unseen; and ye shall hear his voice,
 That in my joy ye also may rejoice."
   Then did they hold their peace, although indeed
 Her stammering haste they did not fail to heed.
 But at their wondrous royal feast they sat
 Thinking their thoughts, and spoke of this or that
 Between the bursts of music, until when
 The sun was leaving the abodes of men;
 And then must Psyche to her sisters say
 That she was bid, her husband being away,
 To suffer none at night to harbour there,
 No, not the mother that her body bare
 Or father that begat her, therefore they
 Must leave her now, till some still happier day. p. 382
 And therewithal more precious gifts she brought
 Whereof not een in dreams they could have thought,
 Things whereof noble stories might be told;
 And said; "These matters that you here behold
 Shall be the worst of gifts that you shall have;
 Farewell, farewell! and may the high gods save
 Your lives and fame; and tell our father dear
 Of all the honour that I live in here,
 And how that greater happiness shall come
 When I shall reach a long-enduring home."
    Then these, though burning through the night to stay,
 Spake loving words, and went upon their way,
 When weeping she had kissed them; but they wept
 Such tears as traitors do, for as they stepped
 Over the threshold, in each other's eyes
 They looked, for each was eager to surprise
 The envy that their hearts were filled withal,
 That to their lips came welling up like gall.
   "So," said the first, "this palace without folk,
 These wonders done with none to strike a stroke,
 This singing in the air, and no one seen,
 These gifts too wonderful for any queen,
 The trance wherein we both were wrapt away,
 And set down by her golden house to-day
 These are the deeds of gods, and not of men;
 And fortunate the day was to her, when
 Weeping she left the house where we were born,
 And all men deemed her shamed and most forlorn," p. 383
    Then said the other, reddening in her rage,
 "She is the luckiest one of all this age;
 And yet she might have told us of her case,
 What god it is that dwelleth in the place,
 Nor sent us forth like beggars from her gate.
 And beggarly, O sister, is our fate,
 Whose husbands wring from miserable hinds
 What the first battle scatters to the winds;
 While she to us whom from her door she drives
 And makes of no account or honour, gives
 Such wonderful and priceless gifts as these,
 Fit to bedeck the limbs of goddesses!
 And yet who knows but she may get a fall?
 The strongest tower has not the highest wall,
 Think well of this, when you sit safe at home."
    By this unto the river were they come,
 Where waited Zephyrus unseen, who cast
 A languor over them that quickly passed
 Into deep sleep, and on the grass they sank;
 Then straightway did he lift them from the bank,
 And quickly each in her fair house set down,
 Then flew aloft above the sleeping town.
    Long in their homes they brooded over this,
 And how that Psyche nigh a goddess is;
 While all folk deemed that she quite lost had been,
 For nought they said of all that they had seen.
   But now that night when she, with many a kiss,
 Had told their coming, and of that and this p. 384
 That happed, he said, "These things, O Love, are well;
 Glad am I that no evil thing befell.
 And yet, between thy father's house and me
 Must thou choose now; then either royally
 Shalt thou go home, and wed some King at last,
 And have no harm for all that here has passed;
 Or else, my love, bear as thy brave heart may,
 This loneliness in hope of that fair day,
 Which, by my head, shall come to thee; and then
 Shalt thou be glorious to the sons of men,
 And by my side shalt sit in such estate
 That in all time all men shall sing thy fate."
    But with that word such love through her he breathed,
 That round about him her fair arms she wreathed;
 And so with loving passed the night away,
 And with fresh hope came on the fresh May-day.
 And so passed many a day and many a night.
 And weariness was balanced with delight,
 And into such a mind was Psyche brought,
 That little of her father's house she thought,
 But ever of the happy day to come
 When she should go unto her promised home.
   Till she that threw the golden apple down
 Upon the board, and lighted up Troy town,
 On dusky wings came flying oer the place,
 And seeing Psyche with her happy face
 Asleep beneath some fair tree blossoming,
 Into her sleep straight cast an evil thing; p. 385
 Whereby she dreamed she saw her father laid
 Panting for breath beneath the golden shade
 Of his great bed's embroidered canopy,
 And with his last breath moaning heavily
 Her name and fancied woes; thereat she woke,
 And this ill dream through all her quiet broke,
 And when next morn her love from her would go,
 And going, as it was his wont to do,
 Would kiss her sleeping, he must find the tears
 Filling the hollows of her rosy ears
 And wetting half the golden hair that lay
 Twixt him and her: then did he speak and say,
    "O Love, why dost thou lie awake and weep,
 Who for content shouldst have good heart to sleep
 This cold hour ere the dawning?" Nought she said,
 But wept aloud. Then cried he, "By my head!
 Whateer thou wishest I will do for thee;
 Yea, if it make an end of thee and me."
 "O Love," she said, "I scarce dare ask again,
 Yet is there in mine heart an aching pain
 To know what of my father is become:
 So would I send my sisters to my home,
 Because I doubt indeed they never told
 Of all my honour in this house of gold;
 So now of them a great oath would I take."
    He said, "Alas! and hast thou been awake
 For them indeed? who in my arms asleep
 Mightst well have been; for their sakes didst thou weep, p. 386
 Who mightst have smiled to feel my kiss on thee?
 Yet as thou wishest once more shall it be,
 Because my oath constrains me, and thy tears.
 And yet again beware, and make these fears
 Of none avail; nor waver any more,
 I pray thee: for already to the shore
 Of all delights and joys thou drawest nigh."
   He spoke, and from the chamber straight did fly
 To highest heaven, and going softly then,
 Wearied the father of all gods and men
 With prayers for Psyche's immortality.
   Meantime went Zephyrus across the sea,
 To bring her sisters to her arms again,
 Though of that message little was he fain,
 Knowing their malice and their cankered hearts.
    For now these two had thought upon their parts,
 And made up a false tale for Psyche's ear;
 For when awaked, to her they drew anear,
 Sobbing, their faces in their hands they hid,
 Nor when she asked them why this thing they did
 Would answer aught, till trembling Psyche said,
 "Nay, nay, what is it? is our father dead?
 Or do ye weep these tears for shame that ye
 Have told him not of my felicity,
 To make me weep amidst my new-found bliss?
 Be comforted, for short the highway is
 To my forgiveness: this day shall ye go p. 387
 And take him gifts, and tell him all ye know
 Of this my unexpected happy lot."
    Amidst fresh sobs one said, "We told him not;
 But by good counsel did we hide the thing,
 Deeming it well that he should feel the sting
 For once, than for awhile be glad again,
 And after come to suffer double pain."
    "Alas! what mean you, sister?" Psyche said,
 For terror waxing pale as are the dead.
 "O sister, speak!" "Child, by this loving kiss,"
 Spake one of them, "and that remembered bliss
 We dwelt in when our mother was alive,
 Or ever we began with ills to strive,
 By all the hope thou hast to see again
 Our aged father and to soothe his pain,
 I charge thee tell me,Hast thou seen the thing
 Thou callest Husband?"
                           Breathless, quivering,
 Psyche cried out, "Alas! what sayest thou?
 What riddles wilt thou speak unto me now?"
    "Alas!" she said; "then is it as I thought.
 Sister, in dreadful places have we sought
 To learn about thy case, and thus we found
 A wise man, dwelling underneath the ground
 In a dark awful cave: he told to us
 A horrid tale thereof, and piteous,
 That thou wert wedded to an evil thing,
 A serpent-bodied fiend of poisonous sting,
 Bestial of form, yet therewith lacking not p. 388
 Een such a soul as wicked men have got,
 Thus ages long agone the gods made him,
 And set him in a lake hereby to swim;
 But every hundred years he hath this grace,
 That he may change within this golden place
 Into a fair young man by night alone.
 Alas, my sister, thou hast cause to groan!
 What sayest thou?His words are fair and soft;
 He raineth loving kisses on me oft,
 Weeping for love; he tells me of a day
 When from this place we both shall go away,
 And he shall kiss me then no more unseen,
 The while I sit by him a glorious queen
 Alas, poor child! it pleaseth thee, his kiss?
 Then must I show thee why he doeth this:
 Because he willeth for a time to save
 Thy body, wretched one! that he may have
 Both child and mother for his watery hell
 Ah, what a tale this is for me to tell!
    "Thou prayest us to save thee, and we can;
 Since for nought else we sought that wise old man,
 Who for great gifts and seeing that of kings
 We both were come, has told us all these things,
 And given us a fair lamp of hallowed oil
 That he has wrought with danger and much toil;
 And thereto has he added a sharp knife,
 In forging which he well-nigh lost his life,
 About him so the devils of the pit
 Came swarmingO, my sister, hast thou it?" p. 389
    Straight from her gown the other one drew out
 The lamp and knife, which Psyche, dumb with doubt
 And misery at once, took in her hand.
    Then said her sister, "From this doubtful land
 Thou gavst us royal gifts a while ago,
 But these we give thee, though they lack for show,
 Shall be to thee a better gift,thy life.
 Put now in some sure place this lamp and knife,
 And when he sleeps rise silently from bed
 And hold the hallowed lamp above his head,
 And swiftly draw the charmed knife across
 His cursed neck, thou well mayst bear the loss,
 Nor shall he keep his man's shape more, when he
 First feels the iron wrought so mysticly:
 But thou, flee unto us, we have a tale,
 Of what has been thy lot within this vale,
 When we have scaped therefrom, which we shall do
 By virtue of strange spells the old man knew.
 Farewell, sweet sister! here we may not stay,
 Lest in returning he should pass this way;
 But in the vale we will not fail to wait
 Till thou art loosened from thine evil fate."
    Thus went they, and for long they said not aught,
 Fearful lest any should surprise their thought,
 But in such wise had envy conquered fear,
 That they were fain that eve to bide anear
 Their sister's ruined home; but when they came
 Unto the river, on them fell the same
 Resistless languor they had felt before, p. 390
 And from the blossoms of that flowery shore
 Their sleeping bodies soon did Zephyr bear,
 For other folk to hatch new ills and care.
   But on the ground sat Psyche all alone,
 The lamp and knife beside her, and no moan
 She made, but silent let the long hours go,
 Till dark night closed around her and her woe.
    Then trembling she arose, for now drew near
 The time of utter loneliness and fear,
 And she must think of death, who until now
 Had thought of ruined life, and love brought low;
 And with that thought, tormenting doubt there came,
 And images of some unheard-of shame,
 Until forlorn, entrapped of gods she felt,
 As though in some strange hell her spirit dwelt.
    Yet driven by her sisters words at last,
 And by remembrance of the time now past,
 When she stood trembling, as the oracle
 With all its fearful doom upon her fell,
 She to her hapless wedding chamber turned,
 And while the waxen tapers freshly burned
 She laid those dread gifts ready to her hand,
 Then quenched the lights, and by the bed did stand,
 Turning these matters in her troubled mind;
 And sometimes hoped some glorious man to find
 Beneath the lamp, fit bridegroom for a bride
 Like her; ah, then! with what joy to his side
 Would she creep back in the dark silent night; p. 391
 But whiles she quaked at thought of what a sight
 The lamp might show her; the hot rush of blood
 The knife might shed upon her as she stood,
 The dread of some pursuit, the hurrying out,
 Through rooms where every sound would seem a shout
 Into the windy night among the trees,
 Where many a changing monstrous sight one sees,
 When nought at all has happed to chill the blood.
   But as among these evil thoughts she stood,
 She heard him coming, and straight crept to bed,
 And felt him touch her with a new-born dread,
 And durst not answer to his words of love.
 But when he slept, she rose that tale to prove,
 And sliding down as softly as might be,
 And moving through the chamber quietly,
 She gat the lamp within her trembling hand,
 And long, debating still these things, did stand
 In that thick darkness, till she seemed to be
 A dweller in some black eternity,
 And what she once had called the world did seem
 A hollow void, a colourless mad dream;
 For she felt so alonethree times in vain
 She moved her heavy hand, three times again
 It fell adown; at last throughout the place
 Its flame glared, lighting up her woeful face,
 Whose eyes the silken carpet did but meet,
 Grown strange and awful, and her own wan feet
 As toward the bed she stole; but come thereto p. 392
 Back with closed eyes and quivering lips, she threw
 Her lovely head, and strove to think of it,
 While images of fearful things did flit
 Before her eyes; thus, raising up the hand
 That bore the lamp, one moment did she stand
 As man's time tells it, and then suddenly
 Opened her eyes, but scarce kept back a cry
 At what she saw; for there before her lay
 The very Love brighter than dawn of day;
 And as he lay there smiling, her own name
 His gentle lips in sleep began to frame,
 And as to touch her face his hand did move;
 O then, indeed, her faint heart swelled for love,
 And she began to sob, and tears fell fast
 Upon the bed.But as she turned at last
 To quench the lamp, there happed a little thing
 That quenched her new delight, for flickering
 The treacherous flame cast on his shoulder fair
 A burning drop; he woke, and seeing her there
 The meaning of that sad sight knew full well,
 Nor was there need the piteous tale to tell.
   Then on her knees she fell with a great cry,
 For in his face she saw the thunder nigh,
 And she began to know what she had done,
 And saw herself henceforth, unloved, alone,
 Pass onward to the grave; and once again
 She heard the voice she now must love in vain. p. 393
    "Ah, has it come to pass? and hast thou lost
 A life of love, and must thou still be tossed
 One moment in the sun twixt night and night?
 And must I lose what would have been delight,
 Untasted yet amidst immortal bliss,
 To wed a soul made worthy of my kiss,
 Set in a frame so wonderfully made.
    "O wavering heart, farewell! be not afraid
 That I with fire will burn thy body fair,
 Or cast thy sweet limbs piecemeal through the air;
 The fates shall work thy punishment alone,
 And thine own memory of our kindness done.
    "Alas! what wilt thou do? how shalt thou bear
 The cruel world, the sickening still despair,
 The mocking, curious faces bent on thee,
 When thou hast known what love there is in me?
 O happy only, if thou couldst forget,
 And live unholpen, lonely, loveless yet,
 But untormented through the little span
 That on the earth ye call the life of man.
 Alas! that thou, too fair a thing to die,
 Shouldst so be born to double misery!
    "Farewell! though I, a god, can never know
 How thou canst lose thy pain, yet time will go
 Over thine head, and thou mayst mingle yet
 The bitter and the sweet, nor quite forget,
 Nor quite remember, till these things shall seem
 The wavering memory of a lovely dream." p. 394
    Therewith he caught his shafts up and his bow,
 And striding through the chambers did he go,
 Light all around him; and she, wailing sore,
 Still followed after; but he turned no more,
 And when into the moonlit night he came
 From out her sight he vanished like a flame,
 And on the threshold till the dawn of day
 Through all the changes of the night she lay.
AT daybreak when she lifted up her eyes,
 She looked around with heavy dull surprise,
 And rose to enter the fair golden place;
 But then remembering all her piteous case
 She turned away, lamenting very sore,
 And wandered down unto the river shore;
 There, at the head of a green pool and deep,
 She stood so long that she forgot to weep,
 And the wild things about the water-side
 From such a silent thing cared not to hide;
 The dace pushed gainst the stream, the dragon-fly,
 With its green-painted wing went flickering by;
 The water-hen, the lustred kingfisher,
 Went on their ways and took no heed of her;
 The little reed birds never ceased to sing,
 And still the eddy, like a living thing,
 Broke into sudden gurgles at her feet. p. 395
 But midst these fair things, on that morning sweet,
 How could she, weary creature, find a place?
 She moved at last, and lifting up her face,
 Gathered her raiment up and cried, "Farewell,
 O fairest lord! and since I cannot dwell
 With thee in heaven, let me now hide my head
 In whatsoever dark place dwell the dead!"
    And with that word she leapt into the stream,
 But the kind river even yet did deem
 That she should live, and, with all gentle care,
 Cast her ashore within a meadow fair.
 Upon the other side, where Shepherd Pan
 Sat looking down upon the water wan,
 Goat-legged and merry, who called out, "Fair maid,
 Why goest thou hurrying to the feeble shade
 Whence none return? Well do I know thy pain,
 For I am old, and have not lived in vain;
 Thou wilt forget all that within a while,
 And on some other happy youth wilt smile;
 And sure he must be dull indeed if he
 Forget not all things in his ecstasy
 At sight of such a wonder made for him,
 That in that clinging gown makes mine eyes swim,
 Old as I am: but to the god of Love
 Pray now, sweet child, for all things can he move."
    Weeping she passed him, but full reverently,
 And well she saw that she was not to die
 Till she had filled the measure of her woe. p. 396
 So through the meads she passed, half blind and slow,
 And on her sisters somewhat now she thought;
 And, pondering on the evil they had wrought,
 The veil fell from her, and she saw their guile.
    "Alas!" she said, "can death make folk so vile?
 What wonder that the gods are glorious then,
 Who cannot feel the hates and fears of men?
 Sisters, alas, for what ye used to be!
 Once did I think, whatso might hap to me,
 Still at the worst, within your arms to find
 A haven of pure love; then were ye kind,
 Then was my joy een as my very own
 And now, and now, if I can be alone
 That is my best: but that can never be,
 For your unkindness still shall stay with me
 When ye are deadBut thou, my love! my dear!
 Wert thou not kind?I should have lost my fear
 Within a littleYea, and een just now
 With angry godhead on thy lovely brow,
 Still thou wert kindAnd art thou gone away
 For ever? I know not, but day by day
 Still will I seek thee till I come to die,
 And nurse remembrance of felicity
 Within my heart, although it wound me sore;
 For what am I but thine for evermore!"
   Thenceforth her back upon the world she turned
 As she had known it; in her heart there burned
 Such deathless love, that still untired she went: p. 397
 The huntsman dropping down the woody bent,
 In the still evening, saw her passing by,
 And for her beauty fain would draw anigh,
 But yet durst not; the shepherd on the down
 Wondering, would shade his eyes with fingers brown,
 As on the hill's brow, looking oer the lands,
 She stood with straining eyes and clasped hands,
 While the wind blew the raiment from her feet;
 The wandering soldier her grey eyes would meet,
 That took no heed of him, and drop his own;
 Like a thin dream she passed the clattering town;
 On the thronged quays she watched the ships come in
 Patient, amid the strange outlandish din;
 Unscared she saw the sacked towns' miseries,
 And marching armies passed before her eyes.
 And still of her the god had such a care
 None did her wrong, although alone and fair.
 Through rough and smooth she wandered many a day,
 Till all her hope had well-nigh passed away.
   Meanwhile the sisters, each in her own home,
 Waited the day when outcast she should come
 And ask their pity; when perchance, indeed,
 They looked to give her shelter in her need,
 And with soft words such faint reproaches take
 As she durst make them for her ruin's sake;
 But day passed day, and still no Psyche came,
 And while they wondered whether, to their shame,
 Their plot had failed, or gained its end too well, p. 398
 And Psyche slain, no tale thereof could tell.
 Amidst these things, the eldest sister lay
 Asleep one evening of a summer day,
 Dreaming she saw the god of love anigh,
 Who seemed to say unto her lovingly,
 "Hail unto thee, fair sister of my love;
 Nor fear me for that thou her faith didst prove,
 And found it wanting, for thou, too, art fair,
 Her place unfilled; rise then, and have no care
 For father or for friends, but go straightway
 Unto the rock where she was borne that day;
 There, if thou hast a will to be my bride,
 Put thou all fear of horrid death aside,
 And leap from off the cliff, and there will come
 My slaves, to bear thee up and take thee home.
 Haste then, before the summer night grows late,
 For in my house thy beauty I await!"
   So spake the dream; and through the night did sail,
 And to the other sister bore the tale,
 While this one rose, nor doubted of the thing,
 Such deadly pride unto her heart did cling;
 But by the tapers light triumphantly,
 Smiling, her mirrored body did she eye,
 Then hastily rich raiment on her cast
 And through the sleeping serving-people passed,
 And looked with changed eyes on the moonlit street,
 Nor scarce could feel the ground beneath her feet.
 But long the time seemed to her, till she came p. 399
 There where her sister once was borne to shame;
 And when she reached the bare cliff's rugged brow
 She cried aloud, "O Love receive me now,
 Who am not all unworthy to be thine!"
 And with that word, her jewelled arms did shine
 Outstretched beneath the moon, and with one breath
 She sprung to meet the outstretched arms of Death,
 The only god that waited for her there,
 And in a gathered moment of despair
 A hideous thing her traitrous life did seem.
   But with the passing of that hollow dream
 The other sister rose, and as she might,
 Arrayed herself alone in that still night,
 And so stole forth, and making no delay
 Came to the rock anigh the dawn of day;
 No warning there her sister's spirit gave,
 No doubt came nigh her the doomed soul to save,
 But with a fever burning in her blood,
 With glittering eyes and crimson cheeks she stood
 One moment on the brow, the while she cried,
 "Receive me, Love, chosen to be thy bride
 From all the million women of the world!"
 Then oer the cliff her wicked limbs were hurled,
 Nor has the language of the earth a name
 For that surprise of terror and of shame.
NOW, midst her wanderings, on a hot noontide,
 Psyche passed down a road, where, on each side
 The yellow cornfields lay, although as yet
 Unto the stalks no sickle had been set;
 The lark sung over them, the butterfly
 Flickered from ear to ear distractedly,
 The kestrel hung above, the weasel peered
 From out the wheat stalks on her unafeard,
 Along the road the trembling poppies shed
 On the burnt grass their crumpled leaves and red;
 Most lonely was it, nothing Psyche knew
 Unto what land of all the world she drew;
 Aweary was she, faint and sick at heart,
 Bowed to the earth by thoughts of that sad part
 She needs must play: some blue flower from the corn
 That in her fingers erewhile she had borne,
 Now dropped from them, still clung unto her gown;
 Over the hard way hung her head adown
 Despairingly, but still her weary feet
 Moved on half conscious, her lost love to meet.
    So going, at the last she raised her eyes,
 And saw a grassy mound before her rise
 Over the yellow plain, and thereon was
 A marble fane with doors of burnished brass,
 That twixt the pillars set about it burned;
 So thitherward from off the road she turned,
 And soon she heard a rippling water sound,
 And reached a stream that girt the hill around, p. 401
 Whose green waves wooed her body lovingly;
 So looking round, and seeing no soul anigh,
 Unclad, she crossed the shallows, and there laid
 Her dusty raiment in the alder-shade,
 And slipped adown into the shaded pool,
 And with the pleasure of the water cool
 Soothed her tired limbs awhile, then with a sigh
 Came forth, and clad her body hastily,
 And up the hill made for the little fane.
    But when its threshold now her feet did gain,
 She, looking through the pillars of the shrine,
 Beheld therein a golden image shine
 Of golden Ceres; then she passed the door,
 And with bowed head she stood awhile before
 The smiling image, striving for some word
 That did not name her lover and her lord,
 Until midst rising tears at last she prayed:
    "O kind one, if while yet I was a maid
 I ever did thee pleasure, on this day
 Be kind to me, poor wanderer on the way,
 Who strive my love upon the earth to meet!
 Then let me rest my weary, doubtful feet
 Within thy quiet house a little while,
 And on my rest if thou wouldst please to smile,
 And send me news of my own love and lord,
 It would not cost thee, lady, many a word."
 But straight from out the shrine a sweet voice came,
    "O Psyche, though of me thou hast no blame,
 And though indeed thou sparedst not to give p. 402
 What my soul loved, while happy thou didst live,
 Yet little can I give now unto thee,
 Since thou art rebel, slave, and enemy
 Unto the love-inspiring Queen; this grace
 Thou hast alone of me, to leave this place
 Free as thou camest, though the lovely one
 Seeks for the sorceress who entrapped her son
 In every land, and has small joy in aught,
 Until before her presence thou art brought."
    Then Psyche, trembling at the words she spake,
 Durst answer nought, nor for that counsel's sake
 Could other offerings leave except her tears,
 As now, tormented by the new-born fears
 The words divine had raised in her, she passed
 The brazen threshold once again, and cast
 A dreary hopeless look across the plain,
 Whose golden beauty now seemed nought and vain
 Unto her aching heart; then down the hill
 She went, and crossed the shallows of the rill,
 And wearily she went upon her way,
 Nor any homestead passed upon that day,
 Nor any hamlet, and at night lay down
 Within a wood, far off from any town.
   There, waking at the dawn, did she behold,
 Through the green leaves, a glimmer as of gold,
 And, passing on, amidst an oak grove found
 A gold-adorned pillared temple round,
 Whose walls were hung with rich and precious things, p. 403
 Worthy to be the ransom of great kings;
 And in the midst of gold and ivory
 An image of Queen Juno did she see;
 Then her heart swelled within her, and she thought,
 "Surely the gods hereto my steps have brought,
 And they will yet be merciful and give
 Some little joy to me, that I may live
 Till my love finds me." Then upon her knees
 She fell, and prayed, "O Crown of goddesses,
 I pray thee, give me shelter in this place,
 Nor turn away from me thy much-loved face,
 If ever I gave golden gifts to thee
 In happier times when my right hand was free."
    Then from the inmost shrine there came a voice
 That said, "It is so, well mayst thou rejoice
 That of thy gifts I yet have memory,
 Wherefore mayst thou depart forewarned and free;
 Since she that won the golden apple lives,
 And to her servants mighty gifts now gives
 To find thee out, in whatso land thou art,
 For thine undoing: loiter not, depart!
 For what immortal yet shall shelter thee
 From her that rose from out the unquiet sea?"
    Then Psyche moaned out in her grief and fear,
 "Alas! and is there shelter anywhere
 Upon the green flame-hiding earth?" said she,
 "Or yet beneath it is there peace for me?
 O Love, since in thine arms I cannot rest,
 Or lay my weary head upon thy breast, p. 404
 Have pity yet upon thy love forlorn,
 Make me as though I never had been born!"
   Then wearily she went upon her way,
 And so, about the middle of the day,
 She came before a green and flowery place,
 Walled round about in manner of a chase,
 Whereof the gates as now were open wide;
 Fair grassy glades and long she saw inside
 Betwixt great trees, down which the unscared deer
 Were playing; yet a pang of deadly fear,
 She knew not why, shot coldly through her heart,
 And thrice she turned as though she would depart,
 And thrice returned, and in the gateway stood
 With wavering feet: small flowers as red as blood
 Were growing up amid the soft green grass,
 And here and there a fallen rose there was,
 And on the trodden grass a silken lace,
 As though crowned revellers had passed by the place;
 The restless sparrows chirped upon the wall
 And faint far music on her ears did fall,
 And from the trees within, the pink-foot doves
 Still told their weary tale unto their loves,
 And all seemed peaceful more than words could say.
    Then she, whose heart still whispered, "Keep away,"
 Was drawn by strong desire unto the place,
 So toward the greenest glade she set her face,
 Murmuring, "Alas! and what a wretch am I,
 That I should fear the summer's greenery! p. 405
 Yea, and is death now any more an ill,
 When lonely through the world I wander still."
    But when she was amidst those ancient groves,
 Whose close green leaves and choirs of moaning doves
 Shut out the world, then so alone she seemed,
 So strange, her former life was but as dreamed;
 Beside the hopes and fears that drew her on,
 Till so far through that green place she had won,
 That she a rose-hedged garden could behold
 Before a house made beautiful with gold;
 Which, to her mind beset with that past dream,
 And dim foreshadowings of ill fate, did seem
 That very house, her joy and misery,
 Where that fair sight her longing eyes did see
 They should not see again; but now the sound
 Of pensive music ringing all around,
 Made all things like a picture, and from thence
 Bewildering odours floating, dulled her sense,
 And killed her fear, and, urged by strong desire
 To see how all should end, she drew yet nigher,
 And oer the hedge beheld the heads of girls
 Embraced by garlands fresh and orient pearls,
 And heard sweet voices murmuring; then a thrill
 Of utmost joy all memory seemed to kill
 Of good or evil, and her eager hand
 Was on the wicket, then her feet did stand
 Upon new flowers, the while her dizzied eyes
 Gazed wildly round on half-seen mysteries,
 And wandered from unnoting face to face. p. 406
    For round a fountain midst the flowery place
 Did she behold full many a minstrel girl;
 While nigh them, on the grass in giddy whirl,
 Bright raiment and white limbs and sandalled feet
 Flew round in time unto the music sweet,
 Whose strains no more were pensive now or sad,
 But rather a fresh sound of triumph had;
 And round the dance were gathered damsels fair,
 Clad in rich robes adorned with jewels rare;
 Or little hidden by some woven mist,
 That, hanging round them, here a bosom kissed
 And there a knee, or driven by the wind
 About some lily's bowing stem was twined.
   But when a little Psyche's eyes grew clear,
 A sight they saw that brought back all her fear
 A hundred fold, though neither heaven nor earth
 To such a fair sight elsewhere could give birth;
 Because apart, upon a golden throne
 Of marvellous work, a woman sat alone,
 Watching the dancers with a smiling face,
 Whose beauty sole had lighted up the place.
 A crown there was upon her glorious head,
 A garland round about her girdlestead,
 Where matchless wonders of the hidden sea
 Were brought together and set wonderfully;
 Naked she was of all else, but her hair
 About her body rippled here and there,
 And lay in heaps upon the golden seat, p. 407
 And even touched the gold cloth where her feet
 Lay amid rosesah, how kind she seemed!
 What depths of love from out her grey eyes beamed;
   Well might the birds leave singing on the trees
 To watch in peace that crown of goddesses,
 Yet well might Psyche sicken at the sight,
 And feel her feet wax heavy, her head light;
 For now at last her evil day was come,
 Since she had wandered to the very home
 Of her most cruel and bitter enemy.
    Half-dead, yet must she turn about to flee,
 But as her eyes back oer her shoulder gazed,
 And with weak hands her clinging gown she raised,
 And from her lips unwitting came a moan,
 She felt strong arms about her body thrown,
 And, blind with fear, was haled along till she
 Saw floating by her faint eyes dizzily
 That vision of the pearls and roses fresh,
 The golden carpet and the rosy flesh.
    Then, as in vain she strove to make some sound,
 A sweet voice seemed to pierce the air around
 With bitter words; her doom rang in her ears,
 She felt the misery that lacketh tears.
 "Come hither, damsels, and the pearl behold
 That hath no price? See now the thrice tried gold,
 That all men worshipped, that a god would have
 To be his bride! how like a wretched slave
 She cowers down, and lacketh even voice p. 408
 To plead her cause! Come, damsels, and rejoice,
 That now once more the waiting world will move,
 Since she is found, the well-loved soul of love!
    "And thou poor wretch, what god hath led thee here?
 Art thou so lost in this abyss of fear,
 Thou canst not weep thy misery and shame?
 Canst thou not even speak thy shameful name?"
   But even then the flame of fervent love
 In Psyche's tortured heart began to move,
 And gave her utterance, and she said, "Alas!
 Surely the end of life has come to pass
 For me, who have been bride of very Love,
 Yet love still bides in me, O Seed of Jove,
 For such I know thee; slay me, nought is lost!
 For had I had the will to count the cost
 And buy my love with all this misery,
 Thus and no otherwise the thing should be.
 Would I were dead, my wretched beauty gone,
 No trouble now to thee or any one!"
    And with that last word did she hang her head,
 As one who hears not, whatsoeer is said;
 But Venus rising with a dreadful cry
 Said, "O thou fool, I will not let thee die!
 But thou shalt reap the harvest thou hast sown
 And many a day thy wretched lot bemoan.
 Thou art my slave, and not a day shall be
 But I will find some fitting task for thee,
 Nor will I slay thee till thou hopst again. p. 409
 What, thinkest thou that utterly in vain
 Jove is my sire, and in despite my will
 That thou canst mock me with thy beauty still?
 Come forth, O strong-armed, punish this new slave,
 That she henceforth a humble heart may have."
    All round about the damsels in a ring
 Were drawn to see the ending of the thing,
 And now as Psyche's eyes stared wildly round
 No help in any face of them she found
 As from the fair and dreadful face she turned
 In whose grey eyes such steadfast anger burned;
 Yet midst her agony she scarcely knew
 What thing it was the goddess bade them do,
 And all the pageant, like a dreadful dream
 Hopeless and long-enduring grew to seem;
 Yea, when the strong-armed through the crowd did break,
 Girls like to those, whose close-locked squadrons shake
 The echoing surface of the Asian plain,
 And when she saw their threatening hands, in vain
 She strove to speak, so like a dream it was;
 So like a dream that this should come to pass,
 And neath her feet the green earth opened not.
    But when her breaking heart again waxed hot
 With dreadful thoughts and prayers unspeakable
 As all their bitter torment on her fell,
 When she her own voice heard, nor knew its sound,
 And like red flame she saw the trees and ground,
 Then first she seemed to know what misery p. 410
 To helpless folk upon the earth can be.
   But while beneath the many moving feet
 The small crushed flowers sent up their odour sweet,
 Above sat Venus, calm, and very fair,
 Her white limbs bared of all her golden hair,
 Into her heart all wrath cast back again,
 As on the terror and the helpless pain
 She gazed with gentle eyes, and unmoved smile;
 Such as in Cyprus, the fair blossomed isle,
 When on the altar in the summer night
 They pile the roses up for her delight,
 Men see within their hearts, and long that they
 Unto her very body there might pray.
    At last to them some dainty sign she made
 To hold their cruel hands, and therewith bade
 To bear her slave new gained from out her sight
 And keep her safely till the morrow's light:
 So her across the sunny sward they led
 With fainting limbs, and heavy downcast head,
 And into some nigh lightless prison cast
 To brood alone oer happy days long past
 And all the dreadful times that yet should be.
    But she being gone, one moment pensively
 The goddess did the distant hills behold,
 Then bade her girls bind up her hair of gold,
 And veil her breast, the very forge of love,
 With raiment that no earthly shuttle wove,
 And gainst the hard earth arm her lovely feet: p. 411
 Then she went forth, some shepherd king to meet
 Deep in the hollow of a shaded vale,
 To make his woes a long-enduring tale.
BUT over Psyche, hapless and forlorn,
 Unseen the sun rose on the morrow morn,
 Nor knew she aught about the death of night
 Until her gaoler's torches filled with light
 The dreary place, blinding her unused eyes,
 And she their voices heard that bade her rise;
 She did their bidding, yet grown faint and pale
 She shrank away and strove her arms to veil
 In her gown's bosom, and to hide from them
 Her little feet within her garment's hem;
 But mocking her, they brought her thence away,
 And led her forth into the light of day,
 And brought her to a marble cloister fair
 Where sat the queen on her adorned chair,
 But she, as down the sun-streaked place they came,
 Cried out, "Haste! ye, who lead my grief and shame."
 And when she stood before her trembling, said,
 "Although within a palace thou wast bred
 Yet dost thou carry but a slavish heart,
 And fitting is it thou shouldst learn thy part,
 And know the state whereunto thou art brought;
 Now, heed what yesterday thy folly taught, p. 412
 And set thyself to-day my will to do;
 Ho ye, bring that which I commanded you."
   Then forth came two, and each upon her back
 Bore up with pain a huge half-bursten sack,
 Which, setting down, they opened on the floor,
 And from their hempen mouths a stream did pour
 Of mingled seeds, and grain, peas, pulse, and wheat,
 Poppies and millet, and coriander sweet,
 And many another brought from far-off lands,
 Which mingling more with swift and ready hands
 They piled into a heap confused and great.
    And then said Venus, rising from her seat,
 "Slave, here I leave thee, but before the night
 These mingled seeds thy hands shall set aright,
 All laid in heaps, each after its own kind,
 And if in any heap I chance to find
 An alien seed; thou knowest since yesterday
 How disobedient slaves the forfeit pay."
    Therewith she turned and left the palace fair
 And from its outskirts rose into the air,
 And flew until beneath her lay the sea,
 Then, looking on its green waves lovingly,
 Somewhat she dropped, and low adown she flew
 Until she reached the temple that she knew
 Within a sunny bay of her fair isle.
   But Psyche sadly labouring all the while
 With hopeless heart felt the swift hours go by, p. 413
 And knowing well what bitter mockery
 Lay in that task, yet did she what she might
 That something should be finished ere the night,
 And she a little mercy yet might ask;
 But the first hours of that long feverish task
 Passed amid mocks; for oft the damsels came
 About her, and made merry with her shame,
 And laughed to see her trembling eagerness,
 And how, with some small lappet of her dress,
 She winnowed out the wheat, and how she bent
 Over the millet, hopelessly intent;
 And how she guarded well some tiny heap
 But just begun, from their long raiments sweep;
 And how herself, with girt gown, carefully
 She went betwixt the heaps that gan to lie
 Along the floor; though they were small enow,
 When shadows lengthened and the sun was low;
 But at the last these left her labouring,
 Not daring now to weep, lest some small thing
 Should scape her blinded eyes, and soon far off
 She heard the echoes of their careless scoff.
    Longer the shades grew, quicker sank the sun,
 Until at last the day was well-nigh done,
 And every minute did she think to hear
 The fair Queen's dreaded footsteps drawing near;
 But Love, that moves the earth, and skies, and sea,
 Beheld his old love in her misery,
 And wrapped her heart in sudden gentle sleep;
 And meanwhile caused unnumbered ants to creep p. 414
 About her, and they wrought so busily
 That all, ere sundown, was as it should be,
 And homeward went again the kingless folk.
    Bewildered with her joy again she woke,
 But scarce had time the unseen hands to bless,
 That thus had helped her utter feebleness,
 Ere Venus came, fresh from the watery way,
 Panting with all the pleasure of the day;
 But when she saw the ordered heaps, her smile
 Faded away, she cried out, "Base and vile
 Thou art indeed, this labour fitteth thee;
 But now I know thy feigned simplicity,
 Thine inward cunning, therefore hope no more,
 Since thou art furnished well with hidden lore,
 To scape thy due reward, if any day
 Without some task accomplished, pass away!"
    So with a frown she passed on, muttering,
 "Nought have I done, to-morrow a new thing."
   So the next morning Psyche did they lead
 Unto a terrace oer a flowery mead,
 Where Venus sat, hid from the young sun's rays,
 Upon the fairest of all summer days;
 She pointed oer the meads. as they drew nigh,
 And said, "See how that stream goes glittering by,
 And on its banks my golden sheep now pass,
 Cropping sweet mouthfuls of the flowery grass;
 If thou, O cunning slave, to-day art fain
 To save thyself from well-remembered pain, p. 415
 Put forth a little of thy hidden skill,
 And with their golden fleece thy bosom fill;
 Yet make no haste, but ere the sun is down
 Cast it before my feet from out thy gown;
 Surely thy labour is but light to-day."
    Then sadly went poor Psyche on her way,
 Wondering wherein the snare lay, for she knew
 No easy thing it was she had to do;
 Nor had she failed indeed to note the smile
 Wherewith the goddess praised her for the guile
 That she, unhappy, lacked so utterly.
    Amidst these thoughts she crossed the flowery lea,
 And came unto the glittering river's side;
 And, seeing it was neither deep nor wide,
 She drew her sandals off, and to the knee
 Girt up her gown, and by a willow-tree
 Went down into the water, and but sank
 Up to mid-leg therein; but from the bank
 She scarce had gone three steps, before a voice
 Called out to her, "Stay, Psyche, and rejoice
 That I am here to help thee, a poor reed,
 The soother of the loving hearts that bleed,
 The pourer forth of notes, that oft have made
 The weak man strong, and the rash man afraid.
    "Sweet child, when by me now thy dear foot trod,
 I knew thee for the loved one of our god;
 Then prithee take my counsel in good part;
 Go to the shore again, and rest thine heart
 In sleep awhile, until the sun get low, p. 416
 And then across the river shalt thou go
 And find these evil creatures sleeping fast,
 And on the bushes whereby they have passed
 Much golden wool; take what seems good to thee,
 And ere the sun sets go back easily.
    But if within that mead thou settst thy feet
 While yet they wake, an ill death shalt thou meet,
 For they are of a cursed man-hating race,
 Bred by a giant in a lightless place."
 But at these words soft tears filled Psyche's eyes
 As hope of love within her heart did rise;
 And when she saw she was not helpless yet
 Her old desire she would not quite forget;
 But turning back, upon the bank she lay
 In happy dreams till nigh the end of day;
 Then did she cross and gather of the wool,
 And with her bosom and her gown-skirt full
 Came back to Venus at the sun-setting;
 But she afar off saw it glistering
 And cried aloud, "Go, take the slave away,
 And keep her safe for yet another day,
 And on the morning will I think again
 Of some fresh task, since with so little pain
 She doeth what the gods find hard enow;
 For since the winds were pleased this waif to blow
 Unto my door, a fool I were indeed,
 If I should fail to use her for my need."
    So her they led away from that bright sun,
 Now scarce more hopeful that the task was done, p. 417
 Since by those bitter words she knew full well
 Another tale the coming day would tell.
   But the next morn upon a turret high,
 Where the wind kissed her raiment lovingly,
 Stood Venus waiting her; and when she came
 She said, "O slave, thy city's very shame,
 Lift up thy cunning eyes, and looking hence
 Shalt thou behold betwixt these battlements,
 A black and barren mountain set aloof
 From the green hills, shaped like a palace roof.
 Ten leagues from hence it lieth, toward the north,
 And from its rocks a fountain welleth forth,
 Black like itself, and floweth down its side,
 And in a while part into Styx doth glide,
 And part into Cocytus runs away;
 Now coming thither by the end of day,
 Fill me this ewer from the awful stream;
 Such task a sorceress like thee will deem
 A little matter; bring it not to pass,
 And if thou be not made of steel or brass,
 To-morrow shalt thou find the bitterest day
 Thou yet hast known, and all be sport and play
 To what thy heart in that hour shall endure
 Behold, I swear it, and my word is sure!"
    She turned therewith to go down toward the sea,
 To meet her lover, who from Thessaly
 Was come from some well-foughten field of war. p. 418
    But Psyche, wandering wearily afar,
 Reached the bare foot of that black rock at last,
 And sat there grieving for the happy past,
    For surely now, she thought, no help could be,
 She had but reached the final misery,
 Nor had she any counsel but to weep.
 For not alone the place was very steep,
 And craggy beyond measure, but she knew
 What well it was that she was driven to,
 The dreadful water that the gods swear by,
 For there on either hand, as one draws nigh,
 Are long-necked dragons ready for the spring,
 And many another monstrous nameless thing,
 The very sight of which is well-nigh death;
 Then the black water as it goes crieth,
 "Fly, wretched one, before you come to die!
 Die, wretched man! I will not let you fly!
 How have you heart to come before me here?
 You have no heart, your life is turned to fear!"
 Till the wretch falls adown with whirling brain,
 And far below the sharp rocks end his pain.
    Well then might Psyche wail her wretched fate,
 And strive no more, but sitting weep and wait
 Alone in that black land for kindly death,
 With weary sobbing, wasting life and breath;
 But oer her head there flew the bird of Jove,
 The bearer of his servant, friend of Love,
 Who, when he saw her, straightway towards her flew,
 And asked her why she wept, and when he knew, p. 419
 And who she was, he said, "Cease all thy fear,
 For to the black waves I thy ewer will bear,
 And fill it for thee; but, remember me,
 When thou art come unto thy majesty."
    Then straight he flew, and through the dragon's wings
 Went carelessly, nor feared their clatterings,
 But set the ewer, filled, in her right hand,
 And on that day saw many another land.
   Then Psyche through the night toiled back again,
 And as she went, she thought, "Ah! all is vain,
 For though once more I just escape indeed,
 Yet hath she many another will at need;
 And to these days when I my life first learn,
 With unavailing longing shall I turn,
 When this that seemeth now so horrible
 Shall then seem but the threshold of her hell.
 Alas! what shall I do? for even now
 In sleep I see her pitiless white brow,
 And hear the dreadful sound of her commands,
 While with my helpless body and bound hands
 I tremble underneath the cruel whips;
 And oft for dread of her, with quivering lips
 I wake, and waking know the time draws nigh
 When nought shall wake me from that misery
 Behold, O Love, because of thee I live,
 Because of thee, with these things still I strive."
NOW with the risen sun her weary feet
 The fresh-strewn roses of the floor did meet
 Upon the marble threshold of the place;
 But she being brought before the matchless face,
 Fresh with the new life of another day,
 Beheld her wondering, for the goddess lay
 With half-shut eyes upon her golden bed,
 And when she entered scarcely turned her head,
 But smiling spake, "The gods are good to thee,
 Nor shalt thou always be mine enemy;
 But one more task I charge thee with to-day,
 For unto Proserpine take thou thy way,
 And give this golden casket to her hands,
 And pray the fair Queen of the gloomy lands
 To fill the void shell with that beauty rare
 That long ago as queen did set her there;
 Nor needest thou to fail in this new thing,
 Who hast to-day the heart and wit to bring
 This dreadful water, and return alive;
 And, that thou mayst the more in this thing strive,
 If thou returnest I will show at last
 My kindness unto thee, and all the past
 Shalt thou remember as an ugly dream."
    And now at first to Psyche did it seem
 Her heart was softening to her, and the thought
 Swelled her full heart to sobbing, and it brought
 Into her yearning eyes half-happy tears: p. 421
 But on her way cold thoughts and dreadful fears
 Rose in her heart, for who indeed could teach
 A living soul that dread abode to reach
 And yet return? and then once more it seemed
 The hope of mercy was but lightly dreamed,
 And she remembered that triumphant smile,
 And needs must think, "This is the final wile,
 Alas! what trouble must a goddess take
 So weak a thing as this poor heart to break.
    "See now this tower! from off its top will I
 Go quick to Proserpineah, good to die!
 Rather than hear those shameful words again,
 And bear that unimaginable pain
 She has been treasuring up against this day!
 O Love, farewell, thou seest all hope is dead,
 Thou seest what torments on my wretched head
 Thy bitter mother doth not cease to heap;
 Farewell, O Love, for thee and life I weep.
 Alas, my foolish heart! alas, my sin!
 Alas, for all the love I could not win!"
   Now was this tower both old enough and grey,
 Built by some king forgotten many a day,
 And no man dwelt there, now that bitter war
 From that bright land had long been driven afar;
 There now she entered, trembling and afraid;
 But neath her doubtful steps the dust long laid
 In utter rest, rose up into the air,
 And wavered in the wind that down the stair p. 422
 Rushed to the door; then she drew back a pace,
 Moved by the coldness of the lonely place
 That for so long had seen no ray of sun.
    Then shuddering did she hear these words begun,
 Like a wind's moaning voice, "Have thou no fear
 The hollow words of one long slain to hear!
 Thou livest, and thy hope is not yet dead,
 And if thou heedest me, thou well mayst tread
 The road to hell, and yet return again.
    "For thou must go oer many a hill and plain
 Until to Sparta thou art come at last,
 And when the ancient city thou hast passed
 A mountain shalt thou reach, that men now call
 Great Tænarus, that riseth like a wall
 Twixt plain and upland, therein shalt thou find
 The wide mouth of a cavern huge and blind,
 Wherein there cometh never any sun,
 Whose dreadful darkness all things living shun;
 This shun thou not, but yet take care to have
 Three honey-cakes thy soul alive to save,
 And in thy mouth a piece of money set,
 Then through the dark go boldly, and forget
 The stories thou hast heard of death and hell,
 And heed my words, and then shall all be well.
    "For when thou hast passed through that cavern blind,
 A place of dim grey meadows shalt thou find,
 Wherethrough to inmost hell a path doth lead,
 Which follow thou, with diligence and heed; p. 423
 For as thou goest there, thou soon shalt see
 Two men like peasants loading painfully
 A fallen ass; these unto thee will call
 To help them, but give thou no heed at all,
 But pass them swiftly; and then soon again
 Within a shed three crones shalt thou see plain
 Busily weaving, who shall bid thee leave
 The road and fill their shuttles while they weave;
 But slacken not thy steps for all their prayers,
 For these are shadows only, and set snares.
    "At last thou comest to a water wan,
 And at the bank shall be the ferryman
 Surly and grey; and when he asketh thee
 Of money for thy passage, hastily
 Show him thy mouth, and straight from off thy lip
 The money he will take, and in his snip
 Embark thee and set forward; but beware.
 For on thy passage is another snare
 From out the waves a grisly head shall come,
 Most like thy father thou hast left at home,
 And pray for passage long and piteously,
 But on thy life of him have no pity,
 Else art thou lost; also thy father lives,
 And in the temples of the high gods gives
 Great daily gifts for thy returning home.
    "When thou unto the other side art come,
 A palace shalt thou see of fiery gold,
 And by the door thereof shalt thou behold
 An ugly triple monster, that shall yell p. 424
 For thine undoing; now behold him well,
 And into each mouth of him cast a cake,
 And no more heed of thee then shall he take,
 And thou mayst pass into a glorious hall
 Where many a wonder hangs upon the wall;
 But far more wonderful than anything
 The fair slim consort of the gloomy King,
 Arrayed all royally shalt thou behold,
 Who sitting on a carven throne of gold,
 Wheneer thou enterest shall rise up to thee,
 And bid thee welcome there most lovingly,
 And pray thee on a royal bed to sit,
 And share her feast; yet eat thou not of it,
 But sitting on the ground eat bread alone,
 Then do thy message kneeling by her throne;
 And when thou hast the gift, return with speed;
 The sleepy dog of thee shall take no heed,
 The ferryman shall bear thee on thy way
 Without more words, and thou shalt see the day
 Unharmed if that dread box thou openest not;
 But if thou dost, then death shall be thy lot.
   "O beautiful, when safe thou comst again,
 Remember me, who lie here in such pain
 Unburied; set me in some tomb of stone.
 When thou hast gathered every little bone;
 But never shalt thou set thereon a name,
 Because my ending was with grief and shame,
 Who was a Queen like thee long years agone, p. 425
 And in this tower, so long have lain alone."
   Then, pale and full of trouble, Psyche went
 Bearing the casket, and her footsteps bent
 To Lacedæmon, and thence found her way
 To Tænarus, and there the golden day
 For that dark cavern did she leave behind;
 Then, going boldly through it, did she find
 The shadowy meads which that wide way ran through,
 Under a seeming sky twixt grey and blue;
 No wind blew there, there was no bird or tree,
 Or beast, and dim grey flowers she did but see
 That never faded in that changeless place,
 And if she had but seen a living face
 Most strange and bright she would have thought it there,
 Or if her own face, troubled yet so fair,
 The still pools by the road-side could have shown
 The dimness of that place she might have known;
 But their dull surface cast no image back,
 For all but dreams of light that land did lack.
    So on she passed, still noting every thing,
 Nor yet had she forgotten there to bring
 The honey-cakes and money: in a while
 She saw those shadows striving hard to pile
 The bales upon the ass, and heard them call,
 "O woman, help us! for our skill is small
 And we are feeble in this place indeed;"
 But swiftly did she pass, nor gave them heed,
 Though after her from far their cries they sent. p. 426
    Then a long way adown that road she went,
 Not seeing aught, till, as the Shade had said,
 She came upon three women in a shed
 Busily weaving, who cried, "Daughter, leave
 The beaten road a while, and as we weave
 Fill thou our shuttles with these endless threads,
 For here our eyes are sleepy, and our heads
 Are feeble in this miserable place."
 But for their words she did but mend her pace,
 Although her heart beat quick as she passed by.
   Then on she went, until she could espy
 The wan, grey river lap the leaden bank
 Wherefrom there sprouted sparsely sedges rank,
 And there the road had end in that sad boat
 Wherein the dead men unto Minos float;
 There stood the ferryman, who now, seeing her, said,
 "O living soul, that thus among the dead
 Hast come, on whatso errand, without fear,
 Know thou that penniless none passes here;
 Of all the coins that rich men have on earth
 To buy the dreadful folly they call mirth,
 But one they keep when they have passed the grave
 That oer this stream a passage they may have;
 And thou, though living, art but dead to me,
 Who here, immortal, see mortality
 Pass, stripped of this last thing that men desire
 Unto the changeless meads or changeless fire."
    Speechless she shewed the money on her lip p. 427
 Which straight he took, and set her in the ship,
 And then the wretched, heavy oars he threw
 Into the rowlocks and the flood they drew;
 Silent, with eyes that looked beyond her face,
 He laboured, and they left the dreary place.
    But midmost of that water did arise
 A dead man, pale, with ghastly staring eyes
 That somewhat like her father still did seem,
 But in such wise as figures in a dream;
 Then with a lamentable voice it cried,
 "O daughter, I am dead, and in this tide
 For ever shall I drift, an unnamed thing,
 Who was thy father once, a mighty king,
 Unless thou takest pity on me now,
 And bidd'st the ferryman turn here his prow,
 That I with thee to some abode may cross;
 And little unto thee will be the loss,
 And unto me the gain will be to come
 To such a place as I may call a home,
 Being now but dead and empty of delight,
 And set in this sad place twixt dark and light."
    Now at these words the tears ran down apace
 For memory of the once familiar face,
 And those old days, wherein, a little child
 Twixt awe and love beneath those eyes she smiled;
 False pity moved her very heart, although
 The guile of Venus she failed not to know,
 But tighter round the casket clasped her hands,
 And shut her eyes, remembering the commands p. 428
 Of that dead queen: so safe to land she came.
   And there in that grey country, like a flame
 Before her eyes rose up the house of gold,
 And at the gate she met the beast threefold,
 Who ran to meet her open-mouthed, but she
 Unto his jaws the cakes cast cunningly,
 But trembling much; then on the ground he lay
 Lolling his Leads, and let her go her way;
 And so she came into the mighty hall,
 And saw those wonders hanging on the wall,
 That all with pomegranates was covered oer
 In memory of the meal on this sad shore,
 Whereby fair Enna was bewept in vain,
 And this became a kingdom and a chain.
    But on a throne, the Queen of all the dead
 She saw therein with gold-embraced head,
 In royal raiment, beautiful and pale;
 Then with slim hands her face did Psyche veil
 In worship of her, who said, "Welcome here,
 O messenger of Venus! thou art dear
 To me thyself indeed, for of thy grace
 And loveliness we know een in this place;
 Rest thee then, fair one, on this royal bed
 And with some dainty food shalt thou be fed;
 Ho, ye who wait, bring in the tables now!"
    Therewith were brought things glorious of show
 On cloths and tables royally beseen,
 By damsels each one fairer than a queen, p. 429
 The very latchets of whose shoes were worth
 The royal crown of any queen on earth;
 But when upon them Psyche looked, she saw
 That all these dainty matters without flaw
 Were strange of shape and of strange-blended hues,
 So every cup and plate did she refuse
 Those lovely hands brought to her, and she said,
 "O Queen, to me amidst my awe and dread
 These things are nought, my message is not done,
 So let me rest upon this cold grey stone,
 And while my eyes no higher than thy feet
 Are lifted, eat the food that mortals eat."
    Therewith upon the floor she sat her down
 And from the folded bosom of her gown
 Drew forth her bread and ate, while with cold eyes
 Regarding her twixt anger and surprise,
 The queen sat silent for awhile, then spoke,
 "Why art thou here, wisest of living folk?
 Depart in haste, lest thou shouldst come to be
 Thyself a helpless thing and shadowy!
 Give me the casket then, thou needst not say
 Wherefore thou thus hast passed the awful way;
 Bide there, and for thy mistress shalt thou have
 The charm that beauty from all change can save."
    Then Psyche rose, and from her trembling hand
 Gave her the casket, and awhile did stand
 Alone within the hall, that changing light
 From burning streams, and shadowy waves of night
 Made strange and dread, till to her, standing there p. 430
 The world began to seem no longer fair,
 Life no more to be hoped for, but that place
 The peaceful goal of all the hurrying race,
 The house she must return to on some day.
    Then sighing scarcely could she turn away
 When with the casket came the queen once more,
 And said, "Haste now to leave this shadowy shore
 Before thou changest; even now I see
 Thine eyes are growing strange, thou lookst on me
 Een as the linnet looks upon the snake.
 Behold, thy wisely-guarded treasure take,
 And let thy breath of life no longer move
 The shadows with the memories of past love."
   But Psyche at that name, with quickened heart
 Turned eagerly, and hastened to depart
 Bearing that burden, hoping for the day;
 Harmless, asleep, the triple monster lay,
 The ferryman did set her in his boat
 Unquestioned, and together did they float
 Over the leaden water back again:
 Nor saw she more those women bent with pain
 Over their weaving, or the fallen ass,
 But swiftly up the grey road did she pass
 And well-nigh now was come into the day
 By hollow Tænarus, but oer the way
 The wings of Envy brooded all unseen;
 Because indeed the cruel and fair Queen
 Knew well how she had sped; so in her breast, p. 431
 Against the which the dreadful box was pressed,
 Grew up at last this foolish, harmful thought.
    "Behold how far this beauty I have brought
 To give unto my bitter enemy;
 Might I not still a very goddess be
 If this were mine which goddesses desire;
 Yea, what if this hold swift consuming fire,
 Why do I think it good for me to live,
 That I my body once again may give
 Into her cruel handscome death! come life!
 And give me end to all the bitter strife!"
    Therewith down by the wayside did she sit
 And turned the box round, long regarding it;
 But at the last, with trembling hands, undid
 The clasp, and fearfully raised up the lid;
 But what was there she saw not, for her head
 Fell back, and nothing she remembered
 Of all her life, yet nought of rest she had,
 The hope of which makes hapless mortals glad;
 For while her limbs were sunk in deadly sleep
 Most like to death, over her heart gan creep
 Ill dreams; so that for fear and great distress
 She would have cried, but in her helplessness
 Could open not her mouth, or frame a word;
 Although the threats of mocking things she heard,
 And seemed, amidst new forms of horror bound,
 To watch strange endless armies moving round,
 With all their sleepless eyes still fixed on her,
 Who from that changeless place should never stir. p. 432
 Moveless she lay, and in that dreadful sleep
 Scarce had the strength some few slow tears to weep.
   And there she would have lain for evermore,
 A marble image on the shadowy shore
 In outward seeming, but within oppressed
 With torments, knowing neither hope nor rest
 But as she lay the Phoenix flew along
 Going to Egypt, and knew all her wrong,
 And pitied her, beholding her sweet face,
 And flew to Love and told him of her case;
 And Love in guerdon of the tale he told,
 Changed all the feathers of his neck to gold,
 And he flew on to Egypt glad at heart.
 But Love himself gat swiftly for his part
 To rocky Tænarus, and found her there
 Laid half a furlong from the outer air.
   But at that sight out burst the smothered flame
 Of love, when he remembered all her shame,
 The stripes, the labour, and the wretched fear,
 And kneeling down he whispered in her ear,
 "Rise, Psyche, and be mine for evermore,
 For evil is long tarrying on this shore."
 Then when she heard him, straightway she arose,
 And from her fell the burden of her woes;
 And yet her heart within her well-nigh broke,
 When she from grief to happiness awoke;
 And loud her sobbing was in that grey place, p. 433
 And with sweet shame she covered up her face.
    But her dear hands, all wet with tears, he kissed,
 And taking them about each little wrist
 Drew them away, and in a sweet voice said,
 "Raise up again, O Psyche, that dear head,
 And of thy simpleness have no more shame;
 Thou hast been tried, and cast away all blame
 Into the sea of woes that thou didst bear,
 The bitter pain, the hopelessness, the fear
 Holpen a little, loved with boundless love
 Amidst them allbut now the shadows move
 Fast toward the west, earth's day is well-nigh done,
 One toil thou hast yet; by to-morrow's sun
 Kneel the last time before my mother's feet,
 Thy task accomplished; and my heart, O sweet,
 Shall go with thee to ease thy toilsome way:
 Farewell awhile! but that so glorious day
 I promised thee of old, now cometh fast,
 When even hope thy soul aside shall cast,
 Amidst the joy that thou shalt surely win."
    So saying, all that sleep he shut within
 The dreadful casket, and aloft he flew,
 But slowly she unto the cavern drew
 Scarce knowing if she dreamed, and so she came
 Unto the earth where yet the sun did flame
 Low down between the pine-trunks, tall and red,
 And with its last beams kissed her golden head.
WITH what words Love unto the Father prayed
 I know not, nor what deeds the balance weighed;
 But this I know, that he prayed not in vain,
 And Psyche's life the heavenly crown shall gain;
 So round about the messenger was sent
 To tell immortals of their King's intent,
 And bid them gather to the Father's hall.
    But while they got them ready at his call,
 On through the night was Psyche toiling still,
 To whom no pain nor weariness seemed ill
 Since now once more she knew herself belovéd;
 But when the unresting world again had moved
 Round into golden day, she came again
 To that fair place where she had borne such pain,
 And flushed and joyful in despite her fear,
 Unto the goddess did she draw anear,
 And knelt adown before her golden seat,
 Laying the fatal casket at her feet;
 Then at the first no word, the Sea-born said,
 But looked afar over her golden head,
 Pondering upon the mighty deeds of fate;
 While Psyche still, as one who well may wait,
 Knelt, calm and motionless, nor said a word,
 But ever thought of her sweet lovesome lord.
    At last the Queen said, "Girl, I bid thee rise,
 For now hast thou found favour in mine eyes; p. 435
 And I repent me of the misery
 That in this place thou hast endured of me,
 Although because of it, thy joy indeed
 Shall now be more, that pleasure is thy meed."
    Then bending, on the forehead did she kiss
 Fair Psyche, who turned red for shame and bliss;
 But Venus smiled again on her, and said,
 "Go now, and bathe, and be as well arrayed
 As thou shouldst be, to sit beside my son;
 I think thy life on earth is well-nigh done."
   So thence once more was Psyche led away,
 And cast into no prison on that day,
 But brought unto a bath beset with flowers,
 Made dainty with a fount's sweet-smelling showers,
 And there being bathed, een in such fair attire
 As veils the glorious Mother of Desire
 Her limbs were veiled, then in the wavering shade,
 Amidst the sweetest garden was she laid,
 And while the damsels round her watch did keep,
 At last she closed her weary eyes in sleep,
 And woke no more to earth, for ere the day
 Had yet grown late, once more asleep she lay
 Within the West Wind's mighty arms, nor woke
 Until the light of heaven upon her broke,
 And on her trembling lips she felt the kiss
 Of very Love, and mortal yet, for bliss
 Must fall a-weeping still. Ah, me! that I,
 Who late have told her woe and misery, p. 436
 Must leave untold the joy unspeakable
 That on her tender wounded spirit fell!
 Alas! I try to think of it in vain,
 My lyre is but attuned to tears and pain,
 How shall I sing the never-ending day?
   Led by the hand of Love she took her way
 Unto a vale beset with heavenly trees,
 Where all the gathered gods and goddesses
 Abode her coming; but when Psyche saw
 The Father's face, she fainting with her awe
 Had fallen, but that Love's arm held her up.
    Then brought the cup-bearer a golden cup,
 And gently set it in her slender hand,
 And while in dread and wonder she did stand,
 The Father's awful voice smote on her ear,
 "Drink now, O beautiful, and have no fear!
 For with this draught shalt thou be born again,
 And live for ever free from care and pain."
   Then, pale as privet, took she heart to drink,
 And therewithal most strange new thoughts did think,
 And unknown feelings seized her, and there came
 Sudden remembrance, vivid as a flame,
 Of everything that she had done on earth,
 Although it all seemed changed in weight and worth,
 Small things becoming great, and great things small;
 And godlike pity touched her therewithal
 For her old self, for sons of men that die; p. 437
 And that sweet new-born immortality
 Now with full love her rested spirit fed.
   Then in that concourse did she lift her head,
 And stood at last a very goddess there,
 And all cried out at seeing her grown so fair.
   So while in heaven quick passed the time away,
 About the ending of that lovely day,
 Bright shone the low sun over all the earth
 For joy of such a wonderful new birth.
OR eer his tale was done, night held the earth;
 Yea, the brown bird grown bold, as sounds of mirth
 Grew faint and scanty, now his tale had done,
 And by his mate abode the next day's sun;
 And in those old hearts did the story move
 Remembrance of the mighty deeds of love,
 And with these thoughts did hopes of life arise,
 Till tears unseen were in their ancient eyes,
 And in their yearning hearts unspoken prayers,
 And idle seemed the world with all its cares.
   Few words they said; the balmy odorous wind
 Wandered about, some resting-place to find;
 The young leaves rustled neath its gentle breath,
 And here and there some blossom burst his sheath,
 Adding unnoticed fragrance to the night;
 But, as they pondered, a new golden light
 Streamed over the green garden, and they heard
 Sweet voices sing some ancient poet's word
 In praise of May, and then in sight there came
 The minstrels' figures underneath the flame
 Of scented torches passing twixt the trees,
 And soon the dusky hall grew bright with these,
 And therewithal they put all thought away,
 And midst the tinkling harps drank deep to May.
THROUGH many changes had the May-tide passed,
 The hope of summer oft had been oercast,
 Ere midst the gardens they once more were met;
 But now the full-leaved trees might well forget
 The changeful agony of doubtful spring,
 For summer pregnant with so many a thing
 Was at the door; right hot had been the day
 Which they amid the trees had passed away,
 And now. betwixt the tulip beds they went
 Unto the hall, and thoughts of days long spent
 Gathered about them, as some blossom's smell
 Unto their hearts familiar tales did tell.
    But when they well were settled in the hall,
 And now behind the trees the sun gan fall,
 And they as yet no history had heard,
 Laurence, the Swabian priest, took up the word,
 And said, "Ye know from what has gone before,
 That in my youth I followed mystic lore,
 And many books I read in seeking it,
 And through my memory this same eve doth flit
 A certain tale I found in one of these,
 Long ere mine eyes had looked upon the seas;
 It made me shudder in the times gone by,
 When I believed in many a mystery
 I thought divine, that now I think, forsooth,
 Men's own fears made, to fill the place of truth
 Within their foolish hearts; short is the tale,
 And therefore will the better now avail
 To fill the space before the night comes on,
 And unto rest once more the world is won.