Page:Orion, an epic poem - Horne (1843, 3rd edition).djvu/115

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Canto II.]
Orion.
109
Such was the lore which now his thoughts attained,
And he to Eos ventured to display,
Beseeching her response? She only gazed
With an approving smile upon the earth,
That rolled beneath, and rendered back the gleam
With tender radiance over many a field.

The story of his life Orion told—
His youth—his labours—lastly of his loves;
Nor what for Artemis his opening soul
Had felt—what deep desire for Merope—
Sought to conceal. How much his intellect,
And entire nature, owed to the pale Queen
Of night's illumined vault, with grateful sighs
Of reverential memory he declared;
To Eos turning with a pleading look,
Lest she might not approve. She took his hand,
And placed it on her side beneath her heart,
Which beat a sphery music audibly.
He, listening, still enraptured, countless echoes,
Rang sweetly faint from distant groves beneath
Upon the earth. Within his hurrying heart
The trembling echoes now Orion felt,
And silent stood as one who apprehends