Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series.

Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 415 pages of information about Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series.

A swallow is asked to lend the same kind service (p. 179):—­

 O swallow, swallow, flying through the air,
  Turn, turn, I prithee, from thy flight above! 
  Give me one feather from thy wing so fair,
  For I will write a letter to my love. 
  When I have written it and made it clear,
  I’ll give thee back thy feather, swallow dear;
  When I have written it on paper white,
  I’ll make, I swear, thy missing feather right;
  When once ’tis written on fair leaves of gold,
  I’ll give thee back thy wing and flight so bold.

Long before Tennyson’s song in the ‘Princess,’ it would seem that swallows were favourite messengers of love.  In the next song which I translate, the repetition of one thought with delicate variation is full of character (p. 178):—­

  O swallow, flying over hill and plain,
  If thou shouldst find my love, oh bid him come! 
  And tell him, on these mountains I remain
  Even as a lamb who cannot find her home: 
  And tell him, I am left all, all alone,
  Even as a tree whose flowers are overblown: 
  And tell him, I am left without a mate
  Even as a tree whose boughs are desolate: 
  And tell him, I am left uncomforted
  Even as the grass upon the meadows dead.

The following is spoken by a girl who has been watching the lads of the village returning from their autumn service in the plain, and whose damo comes the last of all (p. 240):—­

  O dear my love, you come too late! 
  What found you by the way to do? 
  I saw your comrades pass the gate,
  But yet not you, dear heart, not you! 
  If but a little more you’d stayed,
  With sighs you would have found me dead;
  If but a while you’d keep me crying,
  With sighs you would have found me dying.

The amantium irae find a place too in these rustic ditties.  A girl explains to her sweetheart (p. 240):—­

  ’Twas told me and vouchsafed for true,
  Your kin are wroth as wroth can be;
  For loving me they swear at you,
  They swear at you because of me;
  Your father, mother, all your folk,
  Because you love me, chafe and choke! 
  Then set your kith and kin at ease;
  Set them at ease and let me die: 
  Set the whole clan of them at ease;
  Set them at ease and see me die!

Another suspects that her damo has paid his suit to a rival (p. 200):—­

  On Sunday morning well I knew
  Where gaily dressed you turned your feet;
  And there were many saw it too,
  And came to tell me through the street: 
  And when they spoke, I smiled, ah me! 
  But in my room wept privately;
  And when they spoke, I sang for pride,
  But in my room alone I sighed.

Then come reconciliations (p. 223):—­

  Let us make peace, my love, my bliss! 
  For cruel strife can last no more. 
  If you say nay, yet I say yes: 
  ’Twixt me and you there is no war. 
  Princes and mighty lords make peace;
  And so may lovers twain, I wis: 
  Princes and soldiers sign a truce;
  And so may two sweethearts like us: 
  Princes and potentates agree;
  And so may friends like you and me.

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Sketches and Studies in Italy and Greece, Second Series from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.