Proserpine and Midas by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley
page 57 of 84 (67%)
page 57 of 84 (67%)
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Blinds the pale stars. Our rural tasks begin;
The young lambs bleat pent up within the fold, The herds low in their stalls, & the blithe cock Halloos most loudly to his distant mates. But who are these we see? these are not men, Divine of form & sple[n]didly arrayed, They sit in solemn conclave. Is that Pan, [36] Our Country God, surrounded by his Fauns? And who is he whose crown of gold & harp Are attributes of high Apollo? _Zopyr._ Best Your majesty retire; we may offend. _Midas._ Aye, and at the base thought the coward blood Deserts your trembling lips; but follow me. Oh Gods! for such your bearing is, & sure No mortal ever yet possessed the gold That glitters on your silken robes; may one, Who, though a king, can boast of no descent More noble than Deucalion's stone-formed men[,] May I demand the cause for which you deign To print upon this worthless Phrygian earth The vestige of your gold-inwoven sandals, Or why that old white-headed man sits there Upon that grassy throne, & looks as he Were stationed umpire to some weighty cause[?] _Tmolus._ God Pan with his blithe pipe which the Fauns love Has challenged Phoebus of the golden lyre[,] |
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