Page:The poetical works of Matthew Arnold, 1897.djvu/306

268 Of a social order he loved;

Outlived his brethren, his peers;

And, like the Theban seer,

Died in his enemies' day.

Cold bubbled the spring of Tilphusa,

Copais lay bright in the moon,

Helicon glassed in the lake

Its firs, and afar rose the peaks

Of Parnassus, snowily clear;

Thebes was behind him in flames,

And the clang of arms in his ear,

When his awe-struck captors led

The Theban seer to the spring.

Tiresias drank and died.

Nor did reviving Thebes

See such a prophet again.

Well may we mourn, when the head

Of a sacred poet lies low

In an age which can rear them no more!

The complaining millions of men

Darken in labor and pain;

But he was a priest to us all

Of the wonder and bloom of the world,

Which we saw with his eyes, and were glad

He is dead, and the fruit-bearing day

Of his race is past on the earth;

And darkness returns to our eyes.

For, oh! is it you, is it you,

Moonlight, and shadow, and lake,

And mountains, that fill us with joy,

Or the poet who sings you so well?

Is it you, O beauty, O grace,