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Equinox I (04).pdf

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4<br />

THE HIGH HISTORY OF GOOD<br />

So halted he his horse, and bent<br />

To catch remembrance from the eyes<br />

That stared to God, whose ardour sent<br />

His radiance from the ruthless skies.<br />

Then like a statue still he sate;<br />

Nor quivered nerve, nor muscle stirred;<br />

While round them flapped insatiate<br />

The fell, abominable bird.<br />

But the coldest horror drave the light<br />

From knightly eyes. How pale thy bloom,<br />

Thy blood, O brow whereon that night<br />

Sits like a serpent on a tomb!<br />

For Palamede those eyes beheld<br />

The iron image of his own;<br />

On those dead brows a fate he spelled<br />

To strike a Gorgon into stone.<br />

He knew his father. Still he sate,<br />

Nor quivered nerve, nor muscle stirred;<br />

While round them flapped insatiate<br />

The fell, abominable bird.<br />

The knight approves the justice done,<br />

And pays with that his rowels’ debt;<br />

While yet the forehead of the son<br />

Stands beaded with an icy sweat.

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