C.D. Warner, et al., comp. The Library of the World’s Best Literature.
An Anthology in Thirty Volumes. 1917.
To Aphrodite
By Sappho (fl. c. 610580 B.C.)
T
Immortal Venus, artful child of Jove,—
Forsake me not, O Queen, I pray! nor bruise
My heart with pain of love.
Thine ear hath heard mine oft-repeated calls;
If thou hast yoked thy golden car and come,
Leaving thy father’s halls;
And swift on wheeling pinions bore thee nigher,
From heights of heaven above the darkened earth,
Down through the middle fire.
With countenance immortal smile on me,
And ask me what it was that ailed me now,
And why I called on thee;
To still my soul inspired: “Whom dost thou long
To have Persuasion lead to thine embrace?
Who, Sappho, does thee wrong?
If gifts she take not, gifts she yet shall bring;
And if she love not, love shall thrill her through,
Though strongly combating.”
From sore disquiet; and that for which I sigh
With fervent spirit, bring to pass for me:
Thyself be mine ally!