Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Gargaphie by Madison Julius Cawein
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Gargaphie

    By Madison Julius Cawein



"Succinctæ sacra Dianæ."

Ovid


I.

    There the ragged sunlight lay
    Tawny on thick ferns and gray
    On dark waters: dimmer,
    Lone and deep, the cypress grove
    Bowered mystery and wove
    Braided lights, like those that love
    On the pearl plumes of a dove
    Faint to gleam and glimmer.

II.

    There centennial pine and oak
    Into stormy cadence broke:
    Hollow rocks gloomed, slanting,
    Echoing in dim arcade,
    Looming with long moss, that made
    Twilight streaks in tatters laid:
    Where the wild hart, hunt-affrayed,
    Plunged the water, panting.

III.

    Poppies of a sleepy gold
    Mooned the gray-green darkness rolled
    DOWN its vistas, making
    Wisp-like blurs of flame. And pale
    Stole the dim deer down the vale:
    And the haunting nightingale
    Throbbed unseen the olden tale
    All its wild heart breaking.

IV.

    There the hazy serpolet,
    Dewy cistus, blooming wet,
    Blushed on bank and bowlder;
    There the cyclamen, as wan
    As first footsteps of the dawn,
    Carpeted the spotted lawn:
    Where the nude nymph, dripping drawn,
    Basked a wildflower shoulder.

V.

    In the citrine shadows there
    What tall presences and fair,
    Godlike, stood! or, gracious
    As the rock-rose there that grew,
    Delicate and dim as dew,
    Stepped from boles of oaks, and drew
    Faunlike forms to follow, who
    Filled the forest spacious!

VI.

    Guarding that Bœotian
    Valley so no foot of man
    Soiled its silence holy
    With profaning tread save one,
    The Hyantian: Actæon,
    Who beheld, and might not shun
    Pale Diana's wrath; undone
    By his own mad folly.

VII.

    Lost it lies that valley: sleeps
    In serene enchantment; keeps
    Beautiful its banished
    Bowers that no man may see;
    Fountains that her deity
    Haunts, and every rock and tree
    Where her hunt goes swinging free
    As in ages vanished.



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