Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, ed. Poems of Places: An Anthology in 31 Volumes.
Greece and Turkey in Europe: Vol. XIX. 1876–79.
To the Venus of Melos
By John Lawson Stoddard (18501931)O
Whose shore the blue Ægean laves,
Whose cliffs repeat with answering smile
Their features in its sun-kissed waves,—
We view thee in a northern clime,
Yet mark on thy majestic face
A glory still undimmed by time.
Portray to us thy gorgeous fane,
Where Melian suitors thronged to seek
Thine aid, love’s paradise to gain;
Day’s jewelled gates were open flung,
With stately pomp the attendant priest
Drew back the veil before thee hung;
Empurpling, made thy charms more fair,
Sweet strains, from unseen minstrels born,
Awoke from dreams the perfumed air.
From doubts pertaining to thy charms;
The meaning of thy bended knee,
The secret of thy vanished arms!
Did thy fair hands his shield embrace,
The surface of whose golden bars
Grew lovely from thy mirrored face?
Thus poised on thine extended knee,
Upon which thou didst trace the name
Of that fierce god so dear to thee?
Was thine, the glittering prize to hold;
Not thine the form which met thy sight
Replying from the burnished gold!
Thy gaze was fixed beyond, above;
Some dearer object held enchained
The goddess of immortal love!
And smile,—for heldst thou shield or scroll,
A tender love-glance we surprise
Which tells the secret of thy soul!