Page:Atalanta in Calydon - a tragedy (IA atalantaincalydo00swinrich).pdf/87

 Pale as grass or latter flowers Or the wild vine’s wan wet rings Full of dew beneath the moon, And all day the nightingale Sleeps, and all night sings; There in cold remote recesses That nor alien eyes assail, Feet, nor imminence of wings, Nor a wind nor any tune, Thou, O queen and holiest, Flower the whitest of all things, With reluctant lengthening tresses And with sudden splendid breast Save of maidens unbeholden, There art wont to enter, there Thy divine swift limbs and golden Maiden growth of unbound hair, Bathed in waters white, Shine, and many a maid’s by thee In moist woodland or the hilly Flowerless brakes where wells abound Out of all men’s sight; Or in lower pools that see All their marges clothed all round With the innumerable lily, Whence the golden-girdled bee