Textarchiv - Charles Kingsley https://www.textarchiv.com/charles-kingsley English Clergyman, University professor, Historian and Writer. Born 12 June 1819 in Holne, Devon, England. Died 23 January 1875 in Eversley, Hampshire, England. de Andromeda https://www.textarchiv.com/charles-kingsley/andromeda <div class="field field-name-body field-type-text-with-summary field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:text content:encoded"><p>Over the sea, past Crete, on the Syrian shore to the southward,<br /> Dwells in the well-tilled lowland a dark-haired AEthiop people,<br /> Skilful with needle and loom, and the arts of the dyer and carver,<br /> Skilful, but feeble of heart; for they know not the lords of Olympus,<br /> Lovers of men; neither broad-browed Zeus, nor Pallas Athene,<br /> Teacher of wisdom to heroes, bestower of might in the battle;<br /> Share not the cunning of Hermes, nor list to the songs of Apollo.<br /> Fearing the stars of the sky, and the roll of the blue salt water,<br /> Fearing all things that have life in the womb of the seas and the livers,<br /> Eating no fish to this day, nor ploughing the main, like the Phoenics,<br /> Manful with black-beaked ships, they abide in a sorrowful region,<br /> Vexed with the earthquake, and flame, and the sea-floods, scourge of Poseidon.<br /> Whelming the dwellings of men, and the toils of the slow-footed oxen,<br /> Drowning the barley and flax, and the hard-earned gold of the harvest,<br /> Up to the hillside vines, and the pastures skirting the woodland,<br /> Inland the floods came yearly; and after the waters a monster,<br /> Bred of the slime, like the worms which are bred from the slime of the Nile-bank,<br /> Shapeless, a terror to see; and by night it swam out to the seaward,<br /> Daily returning to feed with the dawn, and devoured of the fairest,<br /> Cattle, and children, and maids, till the terrified people fled inland.<br /> Fasting in sackcloth and ashes they came, both the king and his people,<br /> Came to the mountain of oaks, to the house of the terrible sea-gods,<br /> Hard by the gulf in the rocks, where of old the world-wide deluge<br /> Sank to the inner abyss; and the lake where the fish of the goddess,<br /> Holy, undying, abide; whom the priests feed daily with dainties.<br /> There to the mystical fish, high-throned in her chamber of cedar,<br /> Burnt they the fat of the flock; till the flame shone far to the seaward.<br /> Three days fasting they prayed; but the fourth day the priests of the goddess,<br /> Cunning in spells, cast lots, to discover the crime of the people.<br /> All day long they cast, till the house of the monarch was taken,<br /> Cepheus, king of the land; and the faces of all gathered blackness.<br /> Then once more they cast; and Cassiopoeia was taken,<br /> Deep-bosomed wife of the king, whom oft far-seeing Apollo<br /> Watched well-pleased from the welkin, the fairest of AEthiop women:<br /> Fairest, save only her daughter; for down to the ankle her tresses<br /> Rolled, blue-black as the night, ambrosial, joy to beholders.<br /> Awful and fair she arose, most like in her coming to Here,<br /> Queen before whom the Immortals arise, as she comes on Olympus,<br /> Out of the chamber of gold, which her son Hephaestos has wrought her.<br /> Such in her stature and eyes, and the broad white light of her forehead.<br /> Stately she came from her place, and she spoke in the midst of the people.<br /> &#039;Pure are my hands from blood: most pure this heart in my bosom.<br /> Yet one fault I remember this day; one word have I spoken;<br /> Rashly I spoke on the shore, and I dread lest the sea should have heard it.<br /> Watching my child at her bath, as she plunged in the joy of her girlhood,<br /> Fairer I called her in pride than Atergati, queen of the ocean.<br /> Judge ye if this be my sin, for I know none other.&#039; She ended;<br /> Wrapping her head in her mantle she stood, and the people were silent.<br /> Answered the dark-browed priests, &#039;No word, once spoken, returneth,<br /> Even if uttered unwitting. Shall gods excuse our rashness?<br /> That which is done, that abides; and the wrath of the sea is against us;<br /> Hers, and the wrath of her brother, the Sun-god, lord of the sheepfolds.<br /> Fairer than her hast thou boasted thy daughter? Ah folly! for hateful,<br /> Hateful are they to the gods, whoso, impious, liken a mortal,<br /> Fair though he be, to their glory; and hateful is that which is likened,<br /> Grieving the eyes of their pride, and abominate, doomed to their anger.<br /> What shall be likened to gods? The unknown, who deep in the darkness<br /> Ever abide, twyformed, many-handed, terrible, shapeless.<br /> Woe to the queen; for the land is defiled, and the people accursed.<br /> Take thou her therefore by night, thou ill-starred Cassiopoeia,<br /> Take her with us in the night, when the moon sinks low to the westward;<br /> Bind her aloft for a victim, a prey for the gorge of the monster,<br /> Far on the sea-girt rock, which is washed by the surges for ever;<br /> So may the goddess accept her, and so may the land make atonement,<br /> Purged by her blood from its sin: so obey thou the doom of the rulers.&#039;<br /> Bitter in soul they went out, Cepheus and Cassiopoeia,<br /> Bitter in soul; and their hearts whirled round, as the leaves in the eddy.<br /> Weak was the queen, and rebelled: but the king, like a shepherd of people,<br /> Willed not the land should waste; so he yielded the life of his daughter.<br /> Deep in the wane of the night, as the moon sank low to the westward,<br /> They by the shade of the cliffs, with the horror of darkness around them,<br /> Stole, as ashamed, to a deed which became not the light of the sunshine,<br /> Slowly, the priests, and the queen, and the virgin bound in the galley,<br /> Slowly they rowed to the rocks: but Cepheus far in the palace<br /> Sate in the midst of the hall, on his throne, like a shepherd of people,<br /> Choking his woe, dry-eyed, while the slaves wailed loudly around him.<br /> They on the sea-girt rock, which is washed by the surges for ever,<br /> Set her in silence, the guiltless, aloft with her face to the eastward.<br /> Under a crag of the stone, where a ledge sloped down to the water;<br /> There they set Andromeden, most beautiful, shaped like a goddess,<br /> Lifting her long white arms wide-spread to the walls of the basalt,<br /> Chaining them, ruthless, with brass; and they called on the might of the Rulers.<br /> &#039;Mystical fish of the seas, dread Queen whom AEthiops honour,<br /> Whelming the land in thy wrath, unavoidable, sharp as the sting-ray,<br /> Thou, and thy brother the Sun, brain-smiting, lord of the sheepfold,<br /> Scorching the earth all day, and then resting at night in thy bosom,<br /> Take ye this one life for many, appeased by the blood of a maiden,<br /> Fairest, and born of the fairest, a queen, most priceless of victims.&#039;<br /> Thrice they spat as they went by the maid: but her mother delaying<br /> Fondled her child to the last, heart-crushed; and the warmth of her weeping<br /> Fell on the breast of the maid, as her woe broke forth into wailing.<br /> &#039;Daughter! my daughter! forgive me! Oh curse not the murderess! Curse not!<br /> How have I sinned, but in love? Do the gods grudge glory to mothers?<br /> Loving I bore thee in vain in the fate-cursed bride-bed of Cepheus,<br /> Loving I fed thee and tended, and loving rejoiced in thy beauty,<br /> Blessing thy limbs as I bathed them, and blessing thy locks as I combed them;<br /> Decking thee, ripening to woman, I blest thee: yet blessing I slew thee!<br /> How have I sinned, but in love? Oh swear to me, swear to thy mother,<br /> Never to haunt me with curse, as I go to the grave in my sorrow,<br /> Childless and lone: may the gods never send me another, to slay it!<br /> See, I embrace thy knees--soft knees, where no babe will be fondled--<br /> Swear to me never to curse me, the hapless one, not in the death-pang.&#039;<br /> Weeping she clung to the knees of the maid; and the maid low answered--<br /> &#039;Curse thee! Not in the death-pang!&#039; The heart of the lady was lightened.<br /> Slowly she went by the ledge; and the maid was alone in the darkness.<br /> Watching the pulse of the oars die down, as her own died with them,<br /> Tearless, dumb with amaze she stood, as a storm-stunned nestling<br /> Fallen from bough or from eave lies dumb, which the home-going herdsman<br /> Fancies a stone, till he catches the light of its terrified eyeball.<br /> So through the long long hours the maid stood helpless and hopeless,<br /> Wide-eyed, downward gazing in vain at the black blank darkness.<br /> Feebly at last she began, while wild thoughts bubbled within her--<br /> &#039;Guiltless I am: why thus, then? Are gods more ruthless than mortals?<br /> Have they no mercy for youth? no love for the souls who have loved them?<br /> Even as I loved thee, dread sea, as I played by thy margin,<br /> Blessing thy wave as it cooled me, thy wind as it breathed on my forehead,<br /> Bowing my head to thy tempest, and opening my heart to thy children,<br /> Silvery fish, wreathed shell, and the strange lithe things of the water,<br /> Tenderly casting them back, as they gasped on the beach in the sunshine,<br /> Home to their mother--in vain! for mine sits childless in anguish!<br /> O false sea! false sea! I dreamed what I dreamed of thy goodness;<br /> Dreamed of a smile in thy gleam, of a laugh in the plash of thy ripple:<br /> False and devouring thou art, and the great world dark and despiteful.&#039;<br /> Awed by her own rash words she was still: and her eyes to the seaward<br /> Looked for an answer of wrath: far off, in the heart of the darkness,<br /> Blight white mists rose slowly; beneath them the wandering ocean<br /> Glimmered and glowed to the deepest abyss; and the knees of the maiden<br /> Trembled and sunk in her fear, as afar, like a dawn in the midnight,<br /> Rose from their seaweed chamber the choir of the mystical sea-maids.<br /> Onward toward her they came, and her heart beat loud at their coming,<br /> Watching the bliss of the gods, as they wakened the cliffs with their laughter.<br /> Onward they came in their joy, and before them the roll of the surges<br /> Sank, as the breeze sank dead, into smooth green foam-flecked marble,<br /> Awed; and the crags of the cliff, and the pines of the mountain were silent.<br /> Onward they came in their joy, and around them the lamps of the sea-nymphs,<br /> Myriad fiery globes, swam panting and heaving; and rainbows<br /> Crimson and azure and emerald, were broken in star-showers, lighting<br /> Far through the wine-dark depths of the crystal, the gardens of Nereus,<br /> Coral and sea-fan and tangle, the blooms and the palms of the ocean.<br /> Onward they came in their joy, more white than the foam which they scattered,<br /> Laughing and singing, and tossing and twining, while eager, the Tritons<br /> Blinded with kisses their eyes, unreproved, and above them in worship<br /> Hovered the terns, and the seagulls swept past them on silvery pinions<br /> Echoing softly their laughter; around them the wantoning dolphins<br /> Sighed as they plunged, full of love; and the great sea-horses which bore them<br /> Curved up their crests in their pride to the delicate arms of the maidens,<br /> Pawing the spray into gems, till a fiery rainfall, unharming,<br /> Sparkled and gleamed on the limbs of the nymphs, and the coils of the mermen.<br /> Onward they went in their joy, bathed round with the fiery coolness,<br /> Needing nor sun nor moon, self-lighted, immortal: but others,<br /> Pitiful, floated in silence apart; in their bosoms the sea-boys,<br /> Slain by the wrath of the seas, swept down by the anger of Nereus;<br /> Hapless, whom never again on strand or on quay shall their mothers<br /> Welcome with garlands and vows to the temple, but wearily pining<br /> Gaze over island and bay for the sails of the sunken; they heedless<br /> Sleep in soft bosoms for ever, and dream of the surge and the sea-maids.<br /> Onward they passed in their joy; on their brows neither sorrow nor anger;<br /> Self-sufficing, as gods, never heeding the woe of the maiden.<br /> She would have shrieked for their mercy: but shame made her dumb; and their eyeballs<br /> Stared on her careless and still, like the eyes in the house of the idols.<br /> Seeing they saw not, and passed, like a dream, on the murmuring ripple.<br /> Stunned by the wonder she gazed, wide-eyed, as the glory departed.<br /> &#039;O fair shapes! far fairer than I! Too fair to be ruthless!<br /> Gladden mine eyes once more with your splendour, unlike to my fancies;<br /> You, then, smiled in the sea-gleam, and laughed in the plash of the ripple.<br /> Awful I deemed you and formless; inhuman, monstrous as idols;<br /> Lo, when ye came, ye were women, more loving and lovelier, only;<br /> Like in all else; and I blest you: why blest ye not me for my worship?<br /> Had you no mercy for me, thus guiltless? Ye pitied the sea-boys:<br /> Why not me, then, more hapless by far? Does your sight and your knowledge<br /> End with the marge of the waves? Is the world which ye dwell in not our world?&#039;</p> <p>Over the mountain aloft ran a rush and a roll and a roaring;<br /> Downward the breeze came indignant, and leapt with a howl to the water,<br /> Roaring in cranny and crag, till the pillars and clefts of the basalt<br /> Rang like a god-swept lyre, and her brain grew mad with the noises;<br /> Crashing and lapping of waters, and sighing and tossing of weed-beds,<br /> Gurgle and whisper and hiss of the foam, while thundering surges<br /> Boomed in the wave-worn halls, as they champed at the roots of the mountain.<br /> Hour after hour in the darkness the wind rushed fierce to the landward,<br /> Drenching the maiden with spray; she shivering, weary and drooping,<br /> Stood with her heart full of thoughts, till the foam-crests gleamed in the twilight,<br /> Leaping and laughing around, and the east grew red with the dawning.<br /> Then on the ridge of the hills rose the broad bright sun in his glory,<br /> Hurling his arrows abroad on the glittering crests of the surges,<br /> Gilding the soft round bosoms of wood, and the downs of the coastland;<br /> Gilding the weeds at her feet, and the foam-laced teeth of the ledges,<br /> Showing the maiden her home through the veil of her locks, as they floated<br /> Glistening, damp with the spray, in a long black cloud to the landward.<br /> High in the far-off glens rose thin blue curls from the homesteads;<br /> Softly the low of the herds, and the pipe of the outgoing herdsman,<br /> Slid to her ear on the water, and melted her heart into weeping.<br /> Shuddering, she tried to forget them; and straining her eyes to the seaward,<br /> Watched for her doom, as she wailed, but in vain, to the terrible Sun-god.<br /> &#039;Dost thou not pity me, Sun, though thy wild dark sister be ruthless;<br /> Dost thou not pity me here, as thou seest me desolate, weary,<br /> Sickened with shame and despair, like a kid torn young from its mother?<br /> What if my beauty insult thee, then blight it: but me--Oh spare me!<br /> Spare me yet, ere he be here, fierce, tearing, unbearable! See me,<br /> See me, how tender and soft, and thus helpless! See how I shudder,<br /> Fancying only my doom. Wilt thou shine thus bright, when it takes me?<br /> Are there no deaths save this, great Sun? No fiery arrow,<br /> Lightning, or deep-mouthed wave? Why thus? What music in shrieking,<br /> Pleasure in warm live limbs torn slowly? And dar&#039;st thou behold them!<br /> Oh, thou hast watched worse deeds! All sights are alike to thy brightness!<br /> What if thou waken the birds to their song, dost thou waken no sorrow;<br /> Waken no sick to their pain; no captive to wrench at his fetters?<br /> Smile on the garden and fold, and on maidens who sing at the milking;<br /> Flash into tapestried chambers, and peep in the eyelids of lovers,<br /> Showing the blissful their bliss--Dost love, then, the place where thou smilest?<br /> Lovest thou cities aflame, fierce blows, and the shrieks of the widow?<br /> Lovest thou corpse-strewn fields, as thou lightest the path of the vulture?<br /> Lovest thou these, that thou gazest so gay on my tears, and my mother&#039;s,<br /> Laughing alike at the horror of one, and the bliss of another?<br /> What dost thou care, in thy sky, for the joys and the sorrows of mortals?<br /> Colder art thou than the nymphs: in thy broad bright eye is no seeing.<br /> Hadst thou a soul--as much soul as the slaves in the house of my father,<br /> Wouldst thou not save? Poor thralls! they pitied me, clung to me weeping,<br /> Kissing my hands and my feet--What, are gods more ruthless than mortals?<br /> Worse than the souls which they rule? Let me die: they war not with ashes!&#039;<br /> Sudden she ceased, with a shriek: in the spray, like a hovering foam-bow,<br /> Hung, more fair than the foam-bow, a boy in the bloom of his manhood,<br /> Golden-haired, ivory-limbed, ambrosial; over his shoulder<br /> Hung for a veil of his beauty the gold-fringed folds of the goat-skin,<br /> Bearing the brass of his shield, as the sun flashed clear on its clearness.<br /> Curved on his thigh lay a falchion, and under the gleam of his helmet<br /> Eyes more blue than the main shone awful; around him Athene<br /> Shed in her love such grace, such state, and terrible daring.<br /> Hovering over the water he came, upon glittering pinions,<br /> Living, a wonder, outgrown from the tight-laced gold of his sandals;<br /> Bounding from billow to billow, and sweeping the crests like a sea-gull;<br /> Leaping the gulfs of the surge, as he laughed in the joy of his leaping.<br /> Fair and majestic he sprang to the rock; and the maiden in wonder<br /> Gazed for a while, and then hid in the dark-rolling wave of her tresses,<br /> Fearful, the light of her eyes; while the boy (for her sorrow had awed him)<br /> Blushed at her blushes, and vanished, like mist on the cliffs at the sunrise.<br /> Fearful at length she looked forth: he was gone: she, wild with amazement,<br /> Wailed for her mother aloud: but the wail of the wind only answered.<br /> Sudden he flashed into sight, by her side; in his pity and anger<br /> Moist were his eyes; and his breath like a rose-bed, as bolder and bolder,<br /> Hovering under her brows, like a swallow that haunts by the house-eaves,<br /> Delicate-handed, he lifted the veil of her hair; while the maiden<br /> Motionless, frozen with fear, wept loud; till his lips unclosing<br /> Poured from their pearl-strung portal the musical wave of his wonder.<br /> &#039;Ah, well spoke she, the wise one, the gray-eyed Pallas Athene,--<br /> Known to Immortals alone are the prizes which lie for the heroes<br /> Ready prepared at their feet; for requiring a little, the rulers<br /> Pay back the loan tenfold to the man who, careless of pleasure,<br /> Thirsting for honour and toil, fares forth on a perilous errand<br /> Led by the guiding of gods, and strong in the strength of Immortals.<br /> Thus have they led me to thee: from afar, unknowing, I marked thee,<br /> Shining, a snow-white cross on the dark-green walls of the sea-cliff;<br /> Carven in marble I deemed thee, a perfect work of the craftsman.<br /> Likeness of Amphitrite, or far-famed Queen Cythereia.<br /> Curious I came, till I saw how thy tresses streamed in the sea-wind,<br /> Glistening, black as the night, and thy lips moved slow in thy wailing.<br /> Speak again now--Oh speak! For my soul is stirred to avenge thee;<br /> Tell me what barbarous horde, without law, unrighteous and heartless,<br /> Hateful to gods and to men, thus have bound thee, a shame to the sunlight,<br /> Scorn and prize to the sailor: but my prize now; for a coward,<br /> Coward and shameless were he, who so finding a glorious jewel<br /> Cast on the wayside by fools, would not win it and keep it and wear it,<br /> Even as I will thee; for I swear by the head of my father,<br /> Bearing thee over the sea-wave, to wed thee in Argos the fruitful,<br /> Beautiful, meed of my toil no less than this head which I carry,<br /> Hidden here fearful--Oh speak!&#039;<br /> But the maid, still dumb with amazement,<br /> Watered her bosom with weeping, and longed for her home and her mother.<br /> Beautiful, eager, he wooed her, and kissed off her tears as he hovered,<br /> Roving at will, as a bee, on the brows of a rock nymph-haunted,<br /> Garlanded over with vine, and acanthus, and clambering roses,<br /> Cool in the fierce still noon, where streams glance clear in the mossbeds,<br /> Hums on from blossom to blossom, and mingles the sweets as he tastes them.<br /> Beautiful, eager, he kissed her, and clasped her yet closer and closer,<br /> Praying her still to speak--<br /> &#039;Not cruel nor rough did my mother<br /> Bear me to broad-browed Zeus in the depths of the brass-covered dungeon;<br /> Neither in vain, as I think, have I talked with the cunning of Hermes,<br /> Face unto face, as a friend; or from gray-eyed Pallas Athene<br /> Learnt what is fit, and respecting myself, to respect in my dealings<br /> Those whom the gods should love; so fear not; to chaste espousals<br /> Only I woo thee, and swear, that a queen, and alone without rival<br /> By me thou sittest in Argos of Hellas, throne of my fathers,<br /> Worshipped by fair-haired kings: why callest thou still on thy mother?<br /> Why did she leave thee thus here? For no foeman has bound thee; no foeman<br /> Winning with strokes of the sword such a prize, would so leave it behind him.&#039;<br /> Just as at first some colt, wild-eyed, with quivering nostril,<br /> Plunges in fear of the curb, and the fluttering robes of the rider;<br /> Soon, grown bold by despair, submits to the will of his master,<br /> Tamer and tamer each hour, and at last, in the pride of obedience,<br /> Answers the heel with a curvet, and arches his neck to be fondled,<br /> Cowed by the need that maid grew tame; while the hero indignant<br /> Tore at the fetters which held her: the brass, too cunningly tempered,<br /> Held to the rock by the nails, deep wedged: till the boy, red with anger,<br /> Drew from his ivory thigh, keen flashing, a falchion of diamond--<br /> &#039;Now let the work of the smith try strength with the arms of Immortals!&#039;<br /> Dazzling it fell; and the blade, as the vine-hook shears off the vine-bough,<br /> Carved through the strength of the brass, till her arms fell soft on his shoulder.<br /> Once she essayed to escape: but the ring of the water was round her,<br /> Round her the ring of his arms; and despairing she sank on his bosom.<br /> Then, like a fawn when startled, she looked with a shriek to the seaward.<br /> &#039;Touch me not, wretch that I am! For accursed, a shame and a hissing,<br /> Guiltless, accurst no less, I await the revenge of the sea-gods.<br /> Yonder it comes! Ah go! Let me perish unseen, if I perish!<br /> Spare me the shame of thine eyes, when merciless fangs must tear me<br /> Piecemeal! Enough to endure by myself in the light of the sunshine<br /> Guiltless, the death of a kid!&#039;<br /> But the boy still lingered around her,<br /> Loth, like a boy, to forego her, and waken the cliffs with his laughter.<br /> &#039;Yon is the foe, then? A beast of the sea? I had deemed him immortal.<br /> Titan, or Proteus&#039; self, or Nereus, foeman of sailors:<br /> Yet would I fight with them all, but Poseidon, shaker of mountains,<br /> Uncle of mine, whom I fear, as is fit; for he haunts on Olympus,<br /> Holding the third of the world; and the gods all rise at his coming.<br /> Unto none else will I yield, god-helped: how then to a monster,<br /> Child of the earth and of night, unreasoning, shapeless, accursed?&#039;<br /> &#039;Art thou, too, then a god?&#039;<br /> &#039;No god I,&#039; smiling he answered;<br /> &#039;Mortal as thou, yet divine: but mortal the herds of the ocean,<br /> Equal to men in that only, and less in all else; for they nourish<br /> Blindly the life of the lips, untaught by the gods, without wisdom:<br /> Shame if I fled before such!&#039;<br /> In her heart new life was enkindled,<br /> Worship and trust, fair parents of love: but she answered him sighing.<br /> &#039;Beautiful, why wilt thou die? Is the light of the sun, then, so worthless,<br /> Worthless to sport with thy fellows in flowery glades of the forest,<br /> Under the broad green oaks, where never again shall I wander,<br /> Tossing the ball with my maidens, or wreathing the altar in garlands,<br /> Careless, with dances and songs, till the glens rang loud to our laughter.<br /> Too full of death the sad earth is already: the halls full of weepers,<br /> Quarried by tombs all cliffs, and the bones gleam white on the sea-floor,<br /> Numberless, gnawn by the herds who attend on the pitiless sea-gods,<br /> Even as mine will be soon: and yet noble it seems to me, dying,<br /> Giving my life for a people, to save to the arms of their lovers<br /> Maidens and youths for a while: thee, fairest of all, shall I slay thee?<br /> Add not thy bones to the many, thus angering idly the dread ones!<br /> Either the monster will crush, or the sea-queen&#039;s self overwhelm thee,<br /> Vengeful, in tempest and foam, and the thundering walls of the surges.<br /> Why wilt thou follow me down? can we love in the black blank darkness?<br /> Love in the realms of the dead, in the land where all is forgotten?<br /> Why wilt thou follow me down? is it joy, on the desolate oozes,<br /> Meagre to flit, gray ghosts in the depths of the gray salt water?<br /> Beautiful! why wilt thou die, and defraud fair girls of thy manhood?<br /> Surely one waits for thee longing, afar in the isles of the ocean.<br /> Go thy way; I mine; for the gods grudge pleasure to mortals.&#039;<br /> Sobbing she ended her moan, as her neck, like a storm-bent lily,<br /> Drooped with the weight of her woe, and her limbs sank, weary with watching,<br /> Soft on the hard-ledged rock: but the boy, with his eye on the monster,<br /> Clasped her, and stood, like a god; and his lips curved proud as he answered--<br /> &#039;Great are the pitiless sea-gods: but greater the Lords of Olympus;<br /> Greater the AEgis-wielder, and greater is she who attends him.<br /> Clear-eyed Justice her name is, the counsellor, loved of Athene;<br /> Helper of heroes, who dare, in the god-given might of their manhood,<br /> Greatly to do and to suffer, and far in the fens&#039; and the forests<br /> Smite the devourers of men, Heaven-hated, brood of the giants,<br /> Twyformed, strange, without like, who obey not the golden-haired Rulers.<br /> Vainly rebelling they rage, till they die by the swords of the heroes,<br /> Even as this must die; for I burn with the wrath of my father,<br /> Wandering, led by Athene; and dare whatsoever betides me.<br /> Led by Athene I won from the gray-haired terrible sisters<br /> Secrets hidden from men, when I found them asleep on the sand-hills,<br /> Keeping their eye and their tooth, till they showed me the perilous pathway<br /> Over the waterless ocean, the valley that led to the Gorgon.<br /> Her too I slew in my craft, Medusa, the beautiful horror;<br /> Taught by Athene I slew her, and saw not herself, but her image,<br /> Watching the mirror of brass, in the shield which a goddess had lent me.<br /> Cleaving her brass-scaled throat, as she lay with her adders around her,<br /> Fearless I bore off her head, in the folds of the mystical goat-skin<br /> Hide of Amaltheie, fair nurse of the AEgis-wielder.<br /> Hither I bear it, a gift to the gods, and a death to my foe-men,<br /> Freezing the seer to stone; to hide thine eyes from the horror.<br /> Kiss me but once, and I go.&#039;<br /> Then lifting her neck, like a sea-bird<br /> Peering up over the wave, from the foam-white swells of her bosom,<br /> Blushing she kissed him: afar, on the topmost Idalian summit<br /> Laughed in the joy of her heart, far-seeing, the queen Aphrodite.<br /> Loosing his arms from her waist he flew upward, awaiting the sea-beast.<br /> Onward it came from the southward, as bulky and black as a galley,<br /> Lazily coasting along, as the fish fled leaping before it;<br /> Lazily breasting the ripple, and watching by sandbar and headland,<br /> Listening for laughter of maidens at bleaching, or song of the fisher,<br /> Children at play on the pebbles, or cattle that pawed on the sand-hills.<br /> Rolling and dripping it came, where bedded in glistening purple<br /> Cold on the cold sea-weeds lay the long white sides of the maiden,<br /> Trembling, her face in her hands, and her tresses afloat on the water.<br /> As when an osprey aloft, dark-eyebrowed, royally crested,<br /> Flags on by creek and by cove, and in scorn of the anger of Nereus<br /> Ranges, the king of the shore; if he see on a glittering shallow,<br /> Chasing the bass and the mullet, the fin of a wallowing dolphin,<br /> Halting, he wheels round slowly, in doubt at the weight of his quarry,<br /> Whether to clutch it alive, or to fall on the wretch like a plummet,<br /> Stunning with terrible talon the life of the brain in the hindhead:<br /> Then rushes up with a scream, and stooping the wrath of his eyebrows<br /> Falls from the sky, like a star, while the wind rattles hoarse in his pinions.<br /> Over him closes the foam for a moment; and then from the sand-bed<br /> Rolls up the great fish, dead, and his side gleams white in the sunshine.<br /> Thus fell the boy on the beast, unveiling the face of the Gorgon;<br /> Thus fell the boy on the beast; thus rolled up the beast in his horror,<br /> Once, as the dead eyes glared into his; then his sides, death-sharpened,<br /> Stiffened and stood, brown rock, in the wash of the wandering water.<br /> Beautiful, eager, triumphant, he leapt back again to his treasure;<br /> Leapt back again, full blest, toward arms spread wide to receive him.<br /> Brimful of honour he clasped her, and brimful of love she caressed him,<br /> Answering lip with lip; while above them the queen Aphrodite<br /> Poured on their foreheads and limbs, unseen, ambrosial odours,<br /> Givers of longing, and rapture, and chaste content in espousals.<br /> Happy whom ere they be wedded anoints she, the Queen Aphrodite!<br /> Laughing she called to her sister, the chaste Tritonid Athene,<br /> &#039;Seest thou yonder thy pupil, thou maid of the AEgis-wielder?<br /> How he has turned himself wholly to love, and caresses a damsel,<br /> Dreaming no longer of honour, or danger, or Pallas Athene?<br /> Sweeter, it seems, to the young my gifts are; so yield me the stripling;<br /> Yield him me now, lest he die in his prime, like hapless Adonis.&#039;<br /> Smiling she answered in turn, that chaste Tritonid Athene:<br /> &#039;Dear unto me, no less than to thee, is the wedlock of heroes;<br /> Dear, who can worthily win him a wife not unworthy; and noble,<br /> Pure with the pure to beget brave children, the like of their father.<br /> Happy, who thus stands linked to the heroes who were, and who shall be;<br /> Girdled with holiest awe, not sparing of self; for his mother<br /> Watches his steps with the eyes of the gods; and his wife and his children<br /> Move him to plan and to do in the farm and the camp and the council.<br /> Thence comes weal to a nation: but woe upon woe, when the people<br /> Mingle in love at their will, like the brutes, not heeding the future.&#039;<br /> Then from her gold-strung loom, where she wrought in her chamber of cedar,<br /> Awful and fair she arose; and she went by the glens of Olympus;<br /> Went by the isles of the sea, and the wind never ruffled her mantle;<br /> Went by the water of Crete, and the black-beaked fleets of the Phoenics;<br /> Came to the sea-girt rock which is washed by the surges for ever,<br /> Bearing the wealth of the gods, for a gift to the bride of a hero.<br /> There she met Andromeden and Persea, shaped like Immortals;<br /> Solemn and sweet was her smile, while their hearts beat loud at her coming;<br /> Solemn and sweet was her smile, as she spoke to the pair in her wisdom.<br /> &#039;Three things hold we, the Rulers, who sit by the founts of Olympus,<br /> Wisdom, and prowess, and beauty; and freely we pour them on mortals;<br /> Pleased at our image in man, as a father at his in his children.<br /> One thing only we grudge to mankind: when a hero, unthankful,<br /> Boasts of our gifts as his own, stiffnecked, and dishonours the givers,<br /> Turning our weapons against us. Him Ate follows avenging;<br /> Slowly she tracks him and sure, as a lyme-hound; sudden she grips him,<br /> Crushing him, blind in his pride, for a sign and a terror to folly.<br /> This we avenge, as is fit; in all else never weary of giving.<br /> Come, then, damsel, and know if the gods grudge pleasure to mortals.&#039;<br /> Loving and gentle she spoke: but the maid stood in awe, as the goddess<br /> Plaited with soft swift finger her tresses, and decked her in jewels,<br /> Armlet and anklet and earbell; and over her shoulders a necklace,<br /> Heavy, enamelled, the flower of the gold and the brass of the mountain.<br /> Trembling with joy she gazed, so well Haephaistos had made it,<br /> Deep in the forges of AEtna, while Charis his lady beside him<br /> Mingled her grace in his craft, as he wrought for his sister Athene.<br /> Then on the brows of the maiden a veil bound Pallas Athene;<br /> Ample it fell to her feet, deep-fringed, a wonder of weaving.<br /> Ages and ages agone it was wrought on the heights of Olympus,<br /> Wrought in the gold-strung loom, by the finger of cunning Athene.<br /> In it she wove all creatures that teem in the womb of the ocean;<br /> Nereid, siren, and triton, and dolphin, and arrowy fishes<br /> Glittering round, many-hued, on the flame-red folds of the mantle.<br /> In it she wove, too, a town where gray-haired kings sat in judgment;<br /> Sceptre in hand in the market they sat, doing right by the people,<br /> Wise: while above watched Justice, and near, far-seeing Apollo.<br /> Round it she wove for a fringe all herbs of the earth and the water,<br /> Violet, asphodel, ivy, and vine-leaves, roses and lilies,<br /> Coral and sea-fan and tangle, the blooms and the palms of the ocean:<br /> Now from Olympus she bore it, a dower to the bride of a hero.<br /> Over the limbs of the damsel she wrapt it: the maid still trembled,<br /> Shading her face with her hands; for the eyes of the goddess were awful.<br /> Then, as a pine upon Ida when southwest winds blow landward,<br /> Stately she bent to the damsel, and breathed on her: under her breathing<br /> Taller and fairer she grew; and the goddess spoke in her wisdom.<br /> &#039;Courage I give thee; the heart of a queen, and the mind of Immortals;<br /> Godlike to talk with the gods, and to look on their eyes unshrinking;<br /> Fearing the sun and the stars no more, and the blue salt water;<br /> Fearing us only, the lords of Olympus, friends of the heroes;<br /> Chastely and wisely to govern thyself and thy house and thy people,<br /> Bearing a godlike race to thy spouse, till dying I set thee<br /> High for a star in the heavens, a sign and a hope to the seamen,<br /> Spreading thy long white arms all night in the heights of the aether,<br /> Hard by thy sire and the hero thy spouse, while near thee thy mother<br /> Sits in her ivory chair, as she plaits ambrosial tresses.<br /> All night long thou wilt shine; all day thou wilt feast on Olympus,<br /> Happy, the guest of the gods, by thy husband, the god-begotten.&#039;<br /> Blissful, they turned them to go: but the fair-tressed Pallas Athene<br /> Rose, like a pillar of tall white cloud, toward silver Olympus;<br /> Far above ocean and shore, and the peaks of the isles and the mainland;<br /> Where no frost nor storm is, in clear blue windless abysses,<br /> High in the home of the summer, the seats of the happy Immortals,<br /> Shrouded in keen deep blaze, unapproachable; there ever youthful<br /> Hebe, Harmonie, and the daughter of Jove, Aphrodite,<br /> Whirled in the white-linked dance with the gold-crowned Hours and the Graces,<br /> Hand within hand, while clear piped Phoebe, queen of the woodlands.<br /> All day long they rejoiced: but Athene still in her chamber<br /> Bent herself over her loom, as the stars rang loud to her singing,<br /> Chanting of order and right, and of foresight, warden of nations;<br /> Chanting of labour and craft, and of wealth in the port and the garner;<br /> Chanting of valour and fame, and the man who can fall with the foremost,<br /> Fighting for children and wife, and the field which his father bequeathed him.<br /> Sweetly and solemnly sang she, and planned new lessons for mortals:<br /> Happy, who hearing obey her, the wise unsullied Athene.</p> <p>Eversley, 1852</p> </div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-author field-type-taxonomy-term-reference field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" rel="schema:author"><a href="/charles-kingsley" typeof="skos:Concept" property="schema:name" datatype="">Charles Kingsley</a></div></div></div><div class="field field-name-field-releasedate field-type-number-integer field-label-hidden"><div class="field-items"><div class="field-item even" property="schema:datePublished">1858</div></div></div><span rel="schema:url" resource="/charles-kingsley/andromeda" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span><span property="schema:name" content="Andromeda" class="rdf-meta element-hidden"></span> Mon, 16 Jan 2017 21:26:41 +0000 mrbot 5624 at https://www.textarchiv.com