Hylas.
Not for us only, Nicias, (vain
the dream,)
Sprung from what
god soe’er, was Eros born:
Not to us only grace doth
graceful seem,
Frail things who
wot not of the coming morn.
No for Amphitryon’s
iron-hearted son,
Who braved the lion, was the
slave of one:
A fair curled creature, Hylas
was his name.
He taught him,
as a father might his child,
All songs whereby himself
had risen to fame;
Nor ever from
his side would be beguiled
When noon was high, nor when
white steeds convey
Back to heaven’s gates
the chariot of the day,
Nor when the hen’s shrill
brood becomes aware
Of bed-time, as
the mother’s flapping wings
Shadow the dust-browned beam.
’Twas all his care
To shape unto
his own imaginings
And to the harness train his
favourite youth,
Till he became a man in very
truth.
Meanwhile, when kingly Jason
steered in quest
Of the Gold Fleece,
and chieftains at his side
Chosen from all cities, proffering
each her best,
To rich Iolchos
came that warrior tried,
And joined him unto trim-built
Argo’s crew;
And with Alcmena’s son
came Hylas too.
Through the great gulf shot
Argo like a bird
And by-and-bye
reached Phasis, ne’er o’erta’en
By those in-rushing rocks,
that have not stirred
Since then, but
bask, twin monsters, on the main.
But now, when waned the spring,
and lambs were fed
In far-off fields, and Pleiads
gleamed overhead,
That cream and flower of knighthood
looked to sail.
They came, within
broad Argo safely stowed,
(When for three days had blown
the southern gale)
To Hellespont,
and in Propontis rode
At anchor, where Cianian oxen
now
Broaden the furrows with the
busy plough.
They leapt ashore, and, keeping
rank, prepared
Their evening
meal: a grassy meadow spread
Before their eyes, and many
a warrior shared
(Thanks to its
verdurous stores) one lowly bed.
And while they cut tall marigolds
from their stem
And sworded bulrush, Hylas
slipt from them.
Water the fair lad wont to
seek and bring
To Heracles and
stalwart Telamon,
(The comrades aye partook
each other’s fare,)
Bearing a brazen
pitcher. And anon,
Where the ground dipt, a fountain
he espied,
And rushes growing green about
its side.
There rose the sea-blue swallow-wort,
and there
The pale-hued
maidenhair, with parsley green
And vagrant marsh-flowers;
and a revel rare
In the pool’s
midst the water-nymphs were seen
To hold, those maidens of
unslumbrous eyes
Whom the belated peasant sees
and flies.
And fast did Malis and Eunica
cling,
And young Nychea
with her April face,
To the lad’s hand, as
stooping o’er the spring
He dipt his pitcher.
For the young Greek’s grace
Made their soft senses reel;
and down he fell,
All of a sudden, into that
black well.
So drops a red star suddenly
from sky
To sea and
quoth some sailor to his mate:
“Up with the tackle,
boy! the breeze is high.”
Him the nymphs
pillowed, all disconsolate,
On their sweet laps, and with
soft words beguiled;
But Heracles was troubled
for the child.
Forth went he; Scythian-wise
his bow he bore
And the great
club that never quits his side;
And thrice called ’Hylas’ ne’er
came lustier roar
From that deep
chest. Thrice Hylas heard and tried
To answer, but in tones you
scarce might hear;
The water made them distant
though so near.
And as a lion, when he hears
the bleat
Of fawns among
the mountains far away,
A murderous lion, and with
hurrying feet
Bounds from his
lair to his predestined prey:
So plunged the strong man
in the untrodden brake
(Lovers are maniacs) for
his darling’s sake.
He scoured far fields what
hill or oaken glen
Remembers not
that pilgrimage of pain?
His troth to Jason was forgotten
then.
Long time the
good ship tarried for those twain
With hoisted sails; night
came and still they cleared
The hatches, but no Heracles
appeared.
On he was wandering, reckless
where he trod,
So mad a passion
on his vitals preyed:
While Hylas had become a blessed
god.
But the crew cursed
the runaway who had stayed
Sixty good oars, and left
him there to reach
Afoot bleak Phasis and the
Colchian beach.