Ionica Author:William Johnson Cory Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: CAWS GRACCHUS I Mind the day, when thou didst cheat Those rival dames with answer meet; When, toiling at the loom, Unblest with bracelet, ring, or chain, T... more »hou alone didst dare disdain To toil in tiring-room. Merely thou saidst: " At set of sun My humble taskwork will be done; And through the twilight street Come back to view my jewels, when Pattering through the throng of men Go merry schoolboys' feet." 16 CAIUS GRACCHUS They came, and sneered : for thou didst stand, The web well finished up, one hand Laid on my yielding shoulder: The sternest stripling in the land Grasped the other, boldly scanned Their faces, and grew bolder: And said : " Fair ladies, by your leave I would exhort you spin and weave Some frugal homely cloth. I warn you, when I lead the tribes Law shall strip you; threats nor bribes Shall blunt the just man's wrath." How strongly, gravely did he speak ! I shivered, hid my tingling cheek Behind thy marble face; And prayed the gods to be like him, Firm in temper, lithe of limb, Right worthy of our race. CAIUS GRACCHUS 17 Oh, mother, didst thou bear me brave ? Or was I weak, till, from the grave So early hollowed out, Tiberius sought me yesternight, Blood upon his mantle white, A vision clear of doubt ? What can I fear, oh mother, now ? His dead cold hand is on my brow; Rest thou thereon thy lips : His voice is in the night-wind's breath, " Do as I did," still he saith ; With blood his finger drips. ASTEROPE Child of the summer cloud, upon thy birth,— And thou art often born to die again,— Follow loud groans, that shake the darkening earth, And break the troublous sleep of guilty men. Thou leapest from the thinner streams of air To crags where vapours cling, where ocean frets ; ...« less