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NORTON: THE COLLECTED WRITINGS OF CAROLINE NORTON (1808-1877)

A Picture of Sappho

I.

THOU!  whose impassion’d face

The Painter loves to trace,

Theme of the Sculptor’s art and Poet’s story –

How many a wand’ring thought

Thy loveliness hath brought,

Warming the heart with its imagined glory!

II.

Yet, was it History’s truth,

That tale of wasted youth,

Of endless grief, and Love forsaken pining?

What wert thou, thou whose woe

The old traditions show

With Fame’s cold light around thee vainly shining?

III.

Didst thou indeed sit there

In languid lone despair –

Thy harp neglected by thee idly lying –

Thy soft and earnest gaze

Watching the lingering rays

In the far west, where summer-day was dying –

IV.

While with low rustling wings:

Among the quivering strings

The murmuring breeze faint melody was making,

As though it wooed thy hand

To strike with new command,

Or mourn’d with thee because thy heart was breaking?

V.

Dids’t thou, as day by day

Roll’d heavily away,

And left anxious, nerveless, and dejected,

Wandering thro’ bowers beloved –

Roving where he had roved –

Yearn for his presence, as for one expected?

VI.

Didst thou, with fond wild eyes

Fix’d on the starry skies,

Wait feverishly for each new day to waken –

Trusting some glorious morn

Might witness his return,

Unwilling to believe thyself forsaken?

VII.

And when conviction came,

Chilling that heart of flame,

Dids’t thou, O saddest of earth’s grieving daughters!

From the Leucadian steep

Dash, with a desperate leap,

And hide thyself within the whelming waters?

VIII.

Yea, in their hollow breast

Thy heart at length found rest!

The ever-moving waves above thee closing –

The winds, whose ruffling sigh

Swept the blue waters by,

Disturb’d thee not! – thou wert in peace reposing!

IX.

Such is the tale they tell!

Vain was thy beauty’s spell –

Vain all the praise thy song could still inspire –

Through many a happy band

Rung with less skilful hand

The borrowed love-notes of thy echoing lyre.

X.

FAME, to thy breaking heart

No comfort could impart,

In vain thy brow the laurel wreath was wearing;

One grief and one alone

Could bow thy bright head down –

Thou wert a WOMAN, and wert left despairing!

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