Public Domain Poetry And Stories - At Eleusis by Algernon Charles Swinburne
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At Eleusis

    By Algernon Charles Swinburne



    Men of Eleusis, ye that with long staves
    Sit in the market-houses, and speak words
    Made sweet with wisdom as the rare wine is
    Thickened with honey; and ye sons of these
    Who in the glad thick streets go up and down
    For pastime or grave traffic or mere chance;
    And all fair women having rings of gold
    On hands or hair; and chiefest over these
    I name you, daughters of this man the king,
    Who dipping deep smooth pitchers of pure brass
    Under the bubbled wells, till each round lip
    Stooped with loose gurgle of waters incoming,
    Found me an old sick woman, lamed and lean,
    Beside a growth of builded olive-boughs
    Whence multiplied thick song of thick-plumed throats
    Also wet tears filled up my hollow hands
    By reason of my crying into them
    And pitied me; for as cold water ran
    And washed the pitchers full from lip to lip,
    So washed both eyes full the strong salt of tears.
    And ye put water to my mouth, made sweet
    With brown hill-berries; so in time I spoke
    And gathered my loose knees from under me.
    Moreover in the broad fair halls this month
    Have I found space and bountiful abode
    To please me. I Demeter speak of this,
    Who am the mother and the mate of things:
    For as ill men by drugs or singing words
    Shut the doors inward of the narrowed womb
    Like a lock bolted with round iron through,
    Thus I shut up the body and sweet mouth
    Of all soft pasture and the tender land,
    So that no seed can enter in by it
    Though one sow thickly, nor some grain get out
    Past the hard clods men cleave and bite with steel
    To widen the sealed lips of them for use.
    None of you is there in the peopled street
    But knows how all the dry-drawn furrows ache
    With no green spot made count of in the black:
    How the wind finds no comfortable grass
    Nor is assuaged with bud nor breath of herbs;
    And in hot autumn when ye house the stacks,
    All fields are helpless in the sun, all trees
    Stand as a man stripped out of all but skin.
    Nevertheless ye sick have help to get
    By means and stablished ordinance of God;
    For God is wiser than a good man is.
    But never shall new grass be sweet in earth
    Till I get righted of my wound and wrong
    By changing counsel of ill-minded Zeus.
    For of all other gods is none save me
    Clothed with like power to build and break the year.
    I make the lesser green begin, when spring
    Touches not earth but with one fearful foot;
    And as a careful gilder with grave art
    Soberly colours and completes the face,
    Mouth, chin and all, of some sweet work in stone,
    I carve the shapes of grass and tender corn
    And colour the ripe edges and long spikes
    With the red increase and the grace of gold.
    No tradesman in soft wools is cunninger
    To kill the secret of the fat white fleece
    With stains of blue and purple wrought in it.
    Three moons were made and three moons burnt away
    While I held journey hither out of Crete
    Comfortless, tended by grave Hecate
    Whom my wound stung with double iron point;
    For all my face was like a cloth wrung out
    With close and weeping wrinkles, and both lids
    Sodden with salt continuance of tears.
    For Hades and the sidelong will of Zeus
    And that lame wisdom that has writhen feet,
    Cunning, begotten in the bed of Shame,
    These three took evil will at me, and made
    Such counsel that when time got wing to fly
    This Hades out of summer and low fields
    Forced the bright body of Persephone:
    Out of pure grass, where she lying down, red flowers
    Made their sharp little shadows on her sides,
    Pale heat, pale colour on pale maiden flesh
    And chill water slid over her reddening feet,
    Killing the throbs in their soft blood; and birds,
    Perched next her elbow and pecking at her hair,
    Stretched their necks more to see her than even to sing.
    A sharp thing is it I have need to say;
    For Hades holding both white wrists of hers
    Unloosed the girdle and with knot by knot
    Bound her between his wheels upon the seat,
    Bound her pure body, holiest yet and dear
    To me and God as always, clothed about
    With blossoms loosened as her knees went down,
    Let fall as she let go of this and this
    By tens and twenties, tumbled to her feet,
    White waifs or purple of the pasturage.
    Therefore with only going up and down
    My feet were wasted, and the gracious air,
    To me discomfortable and dun, became
    As weak smoke blowing in the under world.
    And finding in the process of ill days
    What part had Zeus herein, and how as mate
    He coped with Hades, yokefellow in sin,
    I set my lips against the meat of gods
    And drank not neither ate or slept in heaven.
    Nor in the golden greeting of their mouths
    Did ear take note of me, nor eye at all
    Track my feet going in the ways of them.
    Like a great fire on some strait slip of land
    Between two washing inlets of wet sea
    That burns the grass up to each lip of beach
    And strengthens, waxing in the growth of wind,
    So burnt my soul in me at heaven and earth,
    Each way a ruin and a hungry plague,
    Visible evil; nor could any night
    Put cool between mine eyelids, nor the sun
    With competence of gold fill out my want.
    Yea so my flame burnt up the grass and stones,
    Shone to the salt-white edges of thin sea,
    Distempered all the gracious work, and made
    Sick change, unseasonable increase of days
    And scant avail of seasons; for by this
    The fair gods faint in hollow heaven: there comes
    No taste of burnings of the twofold fat
    To leave their palates smooth, nor in their lips
    Soft rings of smoke and weak scent wandering;
    All cattle waste and rot, and their ill smell
    Grows alway from the lank unsavoury flesh
    That no man slays for offering; the sea
    And waters moved between the heath and corn
    Preserve the people of fin-twinkling fish,
    And river-flies feed thick upon the smooth;
    But all earth over is no man or bird
    (Except the sweet race of the kingfisher)
    That lacks not and is wearied with much loss.
    Meantime the purple inward of the house
    Was softened with all grace of scent and sound
    In ear and nostril perfecting my praise;
    Faint grape-flowers and cloven honey-cake
    And the just grain with dues of the shed salt
    Made me content: yet my hand loosened not
    Its gripe upon your harvest all year long.
    While I, thus woman-muffled in wan flesh
    And waste externals of a perished face,
    Preserved the levels of my wrath and love
    Patiently ruled; and with soft offices
    Cooled the sharp noons and busied the warm nights
    In care of this my choice, this child my choice,
    Triptolemus, the king’s selected son:
    That this fair yearlong body, which hath grown
    Strong with strange milk upon the mortal lip
    And nerved with half a god, might so increase
    Outside the bulk and the bare scope of man:
    And waxen over large to hold within
    Base breath of yours and this impoverished air,
    I might exalt him past the flame of stars,
    The limit and walled reach of the great world.
    Therefore my breast made common to his mouth
    Immortal savours, and the taste whereat
    Twice their hard life strains out the coloured veins
    And twice its brain confirms the narrow shell.
    Also at night, unwinding cloth from cloth
    As who unhusks an almond to the white
    And pastures curiously the purer taste,
    I bared the gracious limbs and the soft feet,
    Unswaddled the weak hands, and in mid ash
    Laid the sweet flesh of either feeble side,
    More tender for impressure of some touch
    Than wax to any pen; and lit around
    Fire, and made crawl the white worm-shapen flame,
    And leap in little angers spark by spark
    At head at once and feet; and the faint hair
    Hissed with rare sprinkles in the closer curl,
    And like scaled oarage of a keen thin fish
    In sea-water, so in pure fire his feet
    Struck out, and the flame bit not in his flesh,
    But like a kiss it curled his lip, and heat
    Fluttered his eyelids; so each night I blew
    The hot ash red to purge him to full god.
    Ill is it when fear hungers in the soul
    For painful food, and chokes thereon, being fed;
    And ill slant eyes interpret the straight sun,
    But in their scope its white is wried to black:
    By the queen Metaneira mean I this;
    For with sick wrath upon her lips, and heart,
    Narrowing with fear the spleenful passages,
    She thought to thread this web’s fine ravel out,
    Nor leave her shuttle split in combing it;
    Therefore she stole on us, and with hard sight
    Peered, and stooped close; then with pale open mouth
    As the fire smote her in the eyes between
    Cried, and the child’s laugh, sharply shortening
    As fire doth under rain, fell off; the flame
    Writhed once all through and died, and in thick dark
    Tears fell from mine on the child’s weeping eyes,
    Eyes dispossessed of strong inheritance
    And mortal fallen anew. Who not the less
    From bud of beard to pale-grey flower of hair
    Shall wax vinewise to a lordly vine, whose grapes
    Bleed the red heavy blood of swoln soft wine,
    Subtle with sharp leaves’ intricacy, until
    Full of white years and blossom of hoary days
    I take him perfected; for whose one sake
    I am thus gracious to the least who stands
    Filleted with white wool and girt upon
    As he whose prayer endures upon the lip
    And falls not waste: wherefore let sacrifice
    Burn and run red in all the wider ways;
    Seeing I have sworn by the pale temples’ band
    And poppied hair of gold Persephone
    Sad-tressed and pleached low down about her brows,
    And by the sorrow in her lips, and death
    Her dumb and mournful-mouthèd minister,
    My word for you is eased of its harsh weight
    And doubled with soft promise; and your king
    Triptolemus, this Celeus dead and swathed
    Purple and pale for golden burial,
    Shall be your helper in my services,
    Dividing earth and reaping fruits thereof
    In fields where wait, well-girt, well-wreathen, all
    The heavy-handed seasons all year through;
    Saving the choice of warm spear-headed grain,
    And stooping sharp to the slant-sided share
    All beasts that furrow the remeasured land
    With their bowed necks of burden equable.



Extra Info:
From "Poems and Ballads" - 1866


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