The Spartan rogue who, boldly bent on
fraud,
Dared ask the god to sanction and applaud,
And sought for counsel at the Pythian
shrine,
Received for answer from the lips divine,—
“That he who doubted to restore
his trust,
And reasoned much, reluctant to be just,
Should for those doubts and that reluctance
prove
The deepest vengeance of the powers above.”
The tale declares that not pronounced
in vain
Came forth the warning from the sacred
fane:
Ere long no branch of that devoted race
Could mortal man on soil of Sparta trace!
Thus but intended mischief, stayed in
time,
Had all the mortal guilt of finished crime.
If such his fate who yet but
darkly dares,
Whose guilty purpose yet no act declares,
What were it, done! Ah! now farewell
to peace!
Ne’er on this earth his soul’s
alarms shall cease!
Held in the mouth that languid fever burns,
His tasteless food he indolently turns;
On Alba’s oldest stock his soul
shall pine!
Forth from his lips he spits the joyless
wine!
Nor all the nectar of the hills shall
now
Or glad the heart, or smooth the wrinkled
brow!
While o’er the couch his aching
limbs are cast,
If care permit the brief repose at last,
Lo! there the altar and the fane abused!
Or darkly shadowed forth in dream confused,
While the damp brow betrays the inward
storm,
Before him flits thy aggravated form!
Then as new fears o’er all his senses
press,
Unwilling words the guilty truth confess!
These, these be they whom secret terrors
try.
When muttered thunders shake the lurid
sky;
Whose deadly paleness now the gloom conceals
And now the vivid flash anew reveals.
No storm as Nature’s casualty they
hold.
They deem without an aim no thunders rolled;
Where’er the lightning strikes,
the flash is thought
Judicial fire, with Heaven’s high
vengeance fraught.
Passes this by, with yet more anxious
ear
And greater dread, each future storm they
fear;
In burning vigil, deadliest foe to sleep,
In their distempered frame if fever keep,
Or the pained side their wonted rest prevent,
Behold some incensed god his bow has bent!
All pains, all aches, are stones and arrows
hurled
At bold offenders in this nether world!
From them no crested cock acceptance meets!
Their lamb before the altar vainly bleats!
Can pardoning Heaven on guilty sickness
smile?
Or is there victim than itself more vile?
Where steadfast virtue dwells not in the
breast,
Man is a wavering creature at the best!
From the Latin of JUVENAL.
* * * * *
THE FOOLISH VIRGINS.
The Queen looked
up, and said,
“O maiden, if indeed you list to
sing,
Sing, and unbind my heart, that I may
weep.”
Whereat full willingly sang the little
maid: