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Clothed in the sackcloth of regret, she said,

She long had wept the past; but for my sake

She now would cast it off, and live for me.

I said that few could exculpate the past

From stormy doing with the ships of hope.

She said it made her sad to think upon

Their present dwindled fortune, and the yoke

Her people chafed their necks in, on the hills.

Her father was a brave Circassian chief;

But here he dwelt disguised, till once again

He could lead on his race, and wound the heel

That ground them to the dust.

Our hearts made new,

We kissed good-night, and parted. As I went,

A distant hill, all shadow, took new shape,

And seemed a sprawling spider, while two trees

That grew upon it, were his upraised arms

Clutching at two red fire-flies, that were stars.

II. THE SPIDER.

With day-break came a knuckle at my door;

I rose, and opened, and upon the porch,

His face like strange death's, and his dark eyes wide

With some vague horror, stood the fisherman.

"Come, hasten with me," were his only words.

We ran our best along the barren shore,

And gained his silent cottage. Entering,

He led me to his daughter's vacant couch.

The room had but one window, and the sash

Was raised. I looked out to the ground beneath.

A vine crept up, and with long fingers made

Abode secure upon the cottage side,

And o'er the window threw a leafy scarf.

But what was this, that fastened to the ledge

Trailed to the ground? A glutinous rope

Twisted with five strands. This the fisherman

Saw with new horror, while between white lips

He gasped, "The Spider!"

What was best to do?

We saw strange foot-prints on the moistened beach,

But these were lost soon in a wooded dell

Where all trace had an end. The long day through

We sought among the tombs, up from the dell;

But unrewarded, when the sun was quenched,

Sat down to weep. So darkness dropped,

And like an awful spider, o'er the earth

Crawled with gaunt legs of shadow. Then our homes

We sadly sought, to meet again at morn.

The night was warm, and with my window raised,

I sat and mourned, and wrung my hopeless hands.

No light was in the house. I half reclined-

My back toward the window. Something shut

The puny sheen of starlight from the room.

The Thing, a monstrous shape, was with me there,

And two hard arms were thrown about my waist.

For very terror I was hushed, nor moved

To cast my foe off. I was in the arms

Of the strong spider. As we went, I grew

Glad, for I thought that now I should be brought

To the great spider's web, and there, mayhap,

Learn the sad fate of her I loved so well.

Up a stark cliff we went, then crossed the web

Just as the red moon bloomed upon the hills

And silvered all the Panticapean vale.

The funnel of the web was in the mouth

Of a vast tomb, whose outside, hewn on rock,

Outlined a Gorgon's face with jaws agape-

Some stern Medusa, Stheno, or Euryale,

Changed to the stone that in the elder days

She changed the sons of men who looked on her.

We passed the funnel, entering the tomb.

About my arms the spider threw his cords,

And shackled them. I dared not move, but lay

Upon the smooth stone floor, inured to fear.

I fancied now that I was safe till dawn.

If I could use my hands I then might find

Some weapon of defense, some club, or stone,

And so resist with some small chance for life.

The thought bred strength. I slowly drew my arms

Upon my sides, and, with persistence, gained

Their freedom; though about the wrists, the flesh

Was bruised and harrowed, and my blood made wet

The spider's cord wherewith I had been bound.

The night seemed endless. As it came to dawn,

A faint moan woke an echo in the tomb.

The echo seemed a cry of pity, sent

For solace to the moan. As light grew strong,

I saw, not far from where I had been laid,

A maiden sitting. All her hair set free,

She made of it a pillow as she leaned

Against the painted wall. My heart threw wide

To her my arms, his hospitable doors;

The guest within, at once the doors were shut.

The sun came up, and spread a cloth of gold

Over the sea. We saw the vale beneath,

And there the town, and fancied where, among

The trees upon the shore, her cottage stood;

Then hoped 'gainst hope to enter it again.

Two thousand years ago, this distant sea

Teemed with the thrifty commerce of the world.

When Athens was, and when her scholars cut,

With thoughts of iron, their own deathless names

Into the stone page of fame, this vale beneath

Held a great city. These, its tombs, endure.

There is no better scoff at the parade

And vanity of life, than that a tomb suggests.

While we looked forth on the historic view,

We saw the subtle spider throw his cord

Over an eagle tangled in the web.

The eagle fought, not mildly overcome,

And spread his wings, and darted his sharp beak.

At last the spider caught him by the neck,

With his serrated claws that grew like horns,

And killed him; then plucked the vanquished plumes,

And sucked the warm blood from the sundered ends.

From this we knew the monster brought us here

To serve a hideous banquet, and that one

Must need be near, and see the other slain.

The web was like the sail of some large ship,

And reached forth from the Gorgon's open mouth,

On either side, to boughs of blighted trees.

Birds were caught in it, and about the place

Wherein the spider hid to watch for prey,

Their bones lay bleaching in the sun and rain.

Upon the web the winds laid violent hands,

And tugged at it, but lacked the sinewed strength

To tear it or divorce it from its place.

The rain left on it when the sun came up,

Dyed the vast cloth with all prismatic hues,

And made it glitter like the silken sail

Of Cleopatra's barge.

We felt quite sure

The eagle's death bequeathed new lease of life.

We cast about at once, in hope to find

Some object for defense. The tomb was strange.

Alone the spider could have known of it.

A rich sarcophagus stood in the midst,

Of deftly inlaid woods, or carved, or bronzed.

Within, a skeleton, its white skull crowned

With gold bestarred with diamonds, chilled my blood.

A bronze lamp, cast to represent the beast

Slain by Bellerophon, the Chimæra,

Was on the floor; and from its lion's mouth

The flame had issued, like the flame of life

That flickered and went out with him gold-crowned.

A target stood near by, and on it clashed

Griffon and stag, adverse as right and wrong.

About, lay cups of onyx set in gold.

On conic jars were bacchanalian scenes,-

Nude chubby Bacchi, grotesque leering fauns,

All linked 'neath vines that grew important grapes;

And in the jars were rings and flowers of gold.

We found twin ear-drops cut from choicest stone,

Metallic mirrors, and a statuette

Of amorous Dido naked to the waist.

Life is a harp, and all its nervous strings,

Touched by the fingers of the fear of death,

Jar with pathetic music. Having found

No trusty implement to bar the way

Of threatening peril, we embraced,

And kissed with silent kisses mixed with tears,

And waited for the end.

When no more,

Hope, like an eagle in the mountain air,