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108
PINDAR.

Transfix'd by Dian's shafts, the maid 15
Went down to Pluto's dreary shore;
A.nd lifeless in her chamber lay,
A victim to the god of day.
No slight or trivial wounds proceed
From wrath of Jove's immortal seed. 20
Her sire beguiled—her mind subdued
By folly—with contempt she view'd
The ties that charm'd her heart before;
Loved by the god, whose locks unshorn
His brow with youthful grace adorn, 25
The fruit of heavenly race she bore.
Her haughty soul could ne'er sustain
To see the marriage table spread,
Or listen to the nuptial strain
By the coeval virgins led; 30
Whose melody their raptured ear
At evening's hour delights to hear:
But sicken'd with desire to prove
The ardours of an absent love.
Full many share the damsel's pain— 35
What tribes of mortals, rash and vain,
Blind to the good that courts their view,
Eager some distant joy pursue!
And lured by hope's delusive gleam
Chase but an unsubstantial dream. 41 40


Fair-robed Coronis' scornful mind
Such fate was justly doom'd to find;
For in the stranger's couch she lay,
Who from Arcadia bent his way.
But Loxias, who on Pytho's shrine [1] 45
With kingly eye in act divine
Sees many a victim bleed,
He who by wisdom all his own
Makes to himself each action known,

Survey'd the impious deed. 50
  1. Apollo or the Sun, so named from his oblique course through the ecliptic.