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Byron's Poetical Works, Volume 1

Lord George Gordon Byron
FROM ANACREON.

ODE 3.

THE EPISODE OF NISUS AND EURYALUS. [1] >

  ’Twas now the hour when Night had driven
  Her car half round yon sable heaven;
  Boötes, only, seem’d to roll [i]
  His Arctic charge around the Pole;
  While mortals, lost in gentle sleep,
  Forgot to smile, or ceas’d to weep: 
  At this lone hour the Paphian boy,
  Descending from the realms of joy,
  Quick to my gate directs his course,
  And knocks with all his little force;
  My visions fled, alarm’d I rose,—­
  “What stranger breaks my blest repose?”
  “Alas!” replies the wily child
  In faltering accents sweetly mild;
  “A hapless Infant here I roam,
  Far from my dear maternal home. 
  Oh! shield me from the wintry blast! 
  The nightly storm is pouring fast. 
  No prowling robber lingers here;
  A wandering baby who can fear?”
  I heard his seeming artless tale, [ii]
  I heard his sighs upon the gale: 
  My breast was never pity’s foe,
  But felt for all the baby’s woe. 
  I drew the bar, and by the light
  Young Love, the infant, met my sight;
  His bow across his shoulders flung,
  And thence his fatal quiver hung
  (Ah! little did I think the dart
  Would rankle soon within my heart). 
  With care I tend my weary guest,
  His little fingers chill my breast;
  His glossy curls, his azure wing,
  Which droop with nightly showers, I wring;
  His shivering limbs the embers warm;
  And now reviving from the storm,
  Scarce had he felt his wonted glow,
  Than swift he seized his slender bow:—­
  “I fain would know, my gentle host,”
  He cried, “if this its strength has lost;
  I fear, relax’d with midnight dews,
  The strings their former aid refuse.” 
  With poison tipt, his arrow flies,
  Deep in my tortur’d heart it lies: 
  Then loud the joyous Urchin laugh’d:—­
  “My bow can still impel the shaft: 
  ’Tis firmly fix’d, thy sighs reveal it;
  Say, courteous host, canst thou not feel it?”

[Footnote 1:  The motto does not appear in ‘Hours of Idleness’ or ‘Poems O. and T.’]

[Footnote i:  The Newstead MS. inserts—­

  ’No Moon in silver robe was seen
  Nor e’en a trembling star between’.]

[Footnote ii: 

  ’Touched with the seeming artless tale
  Compassion’s tears o’er doubt prevail;
  Methought I viewed him, cold and damp,
  I trimmed anew my dying lamp,
  Drew back the bar—­and by the light
  A pinioned Infant met my sight;
  His bow across his shoulders slung,
  And hence a gilded quiver hung;
  With care I tend my weary guest,
  His shivering hands by mine are pressed: 
  My hearth I load with embers warm
  To dry the dew drops of the storm: 
  Drenched by the rain of yonder sky
  The strings are weak—­but let us try.’

—­[’MS. Newstead’.]]

FROM ANACREON.

ODE 3.

THE EPISODE OF NISUS AND EURYALUS. [1] >

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