The Poetry Corner

Lines Written To A Translator Of Greek Poetry.

By Margaret Steele Anderson

A wild spring upland all this charmed page, Where, in the early dawn, the maenads rage, Mad, chaste, and lovely! This, a darker spot Where lone Antigone bewails her lot. Death for her spouse, her bridal-bed the tomb. And this, again, is some rich palace-room. Where Phsedra pines: "0 woodlands! 0, the sea!" Or some sweet walk of Sappho, beauteously Built o'er with rose, with bloom of purple grapes! They are all here, the ancient Attic shapes Of passion, beauty, terror, love, and shame; Proud shadows, you do summon them by name: Achaean princes, Helen, the young god. Fair Dionysus, CEdipus, who trod Such ways of doom! Aye, these and more than these You call across the ages and the seas! And each one, answering, doth dream he lists To the great voices of old tragedists!