Page:Psychology of the Unconscious (1916).djvu/508

438 Once lay thy most beautiful child under the grapes; Lay after a mild night; in the dawn, In the daybreak a child born to thee, O Earth! And the boy looks up familiarly To his Father, Helios, And, tasting the sweet grapes, He picked the sacred vine for his nurse, And soon he is grown; the beasts Fear him, for he is different from them: This man; he is not like thee, the father, For the lofty soul of the father, Is in him boldly united with thy pleasures, And thy sadness, O Earth, He may resemble the eternal Nature, The mother of Gods, the terrible Mother.

"Ah! therefore, O Earth, His presumption drives him away from thy breast, And thy gifts are vain, the tender ones; Ever and ever too high does the proud heart beat.

"Out from the sweet meadow of his shores Man must go into the flowerless waters, And tho his groves shine with golden fruit, Like the starry night, yet he digs, He digs caves in the mountains, and seeks in the mines, Far from the sacred rays of his father, Faithless also to the Sun-god, Who does not love weaklings, and mocks at cares.

"Ah! freer do the birds of the wood breathe: Although the breast of man heaves wilder and more proudly, His pride becomes fear, and the tender flowers Of his peace do not bloom for long."

This poem betrays to us the beginning of the discord between the poet and nature; he begins to be estranged from reality, the natural actual existence. It is a re