Page:Agamemnon (Murray 1920).djvu/69

vv. 1150–1172.

Whence is it sprung, whence wafted on God's breath,

This anguish reasonless?

This throbbing of terror shaped to melody,

Moaning of evil blent with music high?

Who hath marked out for thee that mystic path

Through thy woe's wilderness?

Alas for the kiss, the kiss of Paris, his people's bane!

Alas for Scamander Water, the water my fathers drank!

Long, long ago, I played about thy bank,

And was cherished and grew strong;

Now by a River of Wailing, by shores of Pain,

Soon shall I make my song.

How sayst thou? All too clear,

This ill word thou hast laid upon thy mouth!

A babe could read thee plain.

It stabs within me like a serpent's tooth,

The bitter thrilling music of her pain:

I marvel as I hear.

Alas for the toil, the toil of a City, worn unto death!

Alas for my father's worship before the citadel,

The flocks that bled and the tumult of their breath!

But no help from them came

To save Troy Towers from falling as they fell!

And I on the earth shall writhe, my heart aflame.