Page:The Hermaphrodite (1926).pdf/21

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Cry of a bird, soul of a beast;
Until in all the city wide
There was no heart unpacified.
Only before Apollo’s shrine,
From the lit mouth there came forth wine,
Wine and more wine — and yet more ills;
But far upon the terrene hills,
Beneath the moonlight one arose
And said: “Too long have we been foes;
The moaning and the madness past,
Let holiness return at last......” ’ ”

I mused: “The frenzy that one sees,
Or reads of in Euripides,
Is like. Of Agavè, who slew
Her son, not knowing what she knew;
And on Cithæron, wild and dim,
The horror took her, even as him;
I felt it once....but thou, my friend,
Didst not partake of such an end!”

He answered: “I, who had been shy,
Laughed with their joy, wept with their cry,
Knew this alone, in me was come
Rapture a long time tranced and dumb;
Beneath the vine-leaves and my dress
Burned still a hidden loveliness,
As a flower sways in sleep and light,

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