The Poetry Corner

A Palinode. I-16 (From The Odes Of Horace)

By Helen Leah Reed

Oh, daughter, lovelier than your lovely mother, Whatever punishment you may desire Give my offending verses; in the fire Throw them, please you, or in the Adriatic. Not Dindymene, no, nor even Apollo So shakes the minds of priests within the shrine; Nor so disturbing is the God of wine, Nor Corybantes doubling their shrill cymbals, As direful fits of anger that are frightened Neither by Noric sword nor savage flame, Nor by ship-wrecking seas, nor them can tame Great Jupiter himself, with all his thunders. To our original clay, they say Prometheus Was forced to add a portion he had made Of bits from every creature, and he laid In human hearts rage from the furious lion. With crushing ruin rage destroyed Thyestes; And as a final cause rage may be known Why mighty cities fell, quite overthrown, And why upon their walls a sneering army Its plowshare drags along. But keep your temper! Me, too in my sweet youth a frenzied heart Has tempted sorely, and its maddening dart Has driven me to write impetuous verses To change sad things for brighter I am seeking, And since my offending verses I retract, I beg of you in turn a friendly act, That you again to me your heart give over.