An Epic of Women, and Other Poems by Arthur William Edgar O'Shaughnessy - HTML preview

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AN EPIC OF WOMEN.

 

I.
 
 CREATION.

 

Nam non in hac ærumnosa miseriarum valle, in qua ad laborem ceteri mortales nascimur, producta est.

 

BOCCACCIO: DE CLARIS MULIERIBUS.

 

AND God said, “Let us make a thing most fair,—

A Woman with gold hair, and eyes all blue:”

He took from the sun gold and made her hair,

And for her eyes He took His heaven’s own hue.

 

He sought in every precious place and store,

And gathered all sweet essences that are

In all the bodies: so He made one more

Her body, the most beautiful by far.

 

Pure coral with pure pearl engendering,

Bore Her the fairest flower of the sea;

And for the wonder of that new-made thing

God ceaséd then, and nothing more made He.

 

So the beginning of her was this way:

Full of sea savours, beautiful and good,

Made of sun, sky, and sea,—more fair than they—

On the green margin of the sea she stood.

 

The coral colour lasted in her veins,

Made her lips rosy like a sea-shell’s rims;

The purple stained her cheeks with splendid stains,

And the pearl’s colour clung upon her limbs.

 

She took her golden hair between her hands;

The faded gold and amber of the seas

Dropped from it in a shower upon the sands;

The crispéd hair enwrapped her like a fleece;

 

And through the threads of it the sun lost gold,

And fell all pale upon her throat and breast

With play of lights and tracings manifold:

But the whole heaven shone full upon the rest.

 

Her curvéd shapes of shoulder and of limb,

Wrought fairly round or dwindling delicate,

Were carven in some substance made to dim

With whiteness all things carven or create.

 

And every sort of fairness that was yet

In work of man or God was perfected

Upon that work her bosom, where were set

In snows two wondrous jewelries of red.

 

The sun and sea made haloes of a light

Most soft and glimmering, and wreathed her close

Round all her wondrous shapes, and kept her bright

In a fair mystery of pearl and rose.

 

The waves fell fawning all about her there

Down to her ancles; then, with kissing sweet,

Slackened and waned away in love and fear

From the bright presence of her new-formed feet.

 

The green-gray mists were gathering away

In distant hollows underneath the sun

Behind the round sea; and upon that day

The work of all the world-making was done.

 

The world beheld, and hailed her, form and face;

The ocean spray, the sunlight, the pure blue

Of heaven beheld and wondered at her grace;

And God looked out of heaven and wondered too.

 

And ere a man could see her with desire,

Himself looked on her so, and loved her first,

And came upon her in a mist, like fire,

And of her beauty quenched his god-like thirst.

 

He touched her wholly with his naked soul,

At once sufficing all the new-made sense

For ever: so the Giver Himself stole

The gift, and left indeed no recompense.

 

All lavishly at first He did entreat

His leman; yea, the world of things create

He rolled like any jewel at her feet,

And of her changeful whim He made a fate.

 

He feasted her with ease and idle food

Of gods, and taught her lusts to fill the whole

Of life; withal He gave her nothing good,

And left her as He made her—without soul.

 

And lo, when he had held her for a season

In His own pleasure-palaces above,

He gave her unto man; this is the reason

She is so fair to see, so false to love.