XXXVIII.

But slowly Paris raised him from the earth,
And read her face, and knew that she knew all,
No more her eyes, in tenderness or mirth,
Should answer his, in bower or in hall.
Nay, Love had fallen when his child did fall,
The stream Love cannot cross ran ’twixt them red;
No more was Helen his, whate’er befall,
Not though the Goddess drove her to his bed.

XXXIX.

This word he spake, “the Fates are hard on us”—
Then bade the women do what must be done
To the fair body of dead Corythus.
And then he hurl’d into the night alone,
Wailing unto the spirit of his son,
That somewhere in dark mist and sighing wind
Must dwell, nor yet to Hades had it won,
Nor quite had left the world of men behind.

XL.

But wild Œnone by the mountain-path
Saw not her son returning to the wold,
And now was she in fear, and now in wrath
She cried, “He hath forgot the mountain fold,
And goes in Ilios with a crown of gold:”
But even then she heard men’s axes smite
Against the beeches slim and ash-trees old,
These ancient trees wherein she did delight.

XLI.

Then she arose and silently as Sleep,
Unseen she follow’d the slow-rolling wain,
Beneath an ashen sky that ’gan to weep,
Too heavy laden with the latter rain;
And all the folk of Troy upon the plain
She found, all gather’d round a funeral pyre,
And thereon lay her son, her darling slain,
The goodly Corythus, her heart’s desire!

XLII.

Among the spices and fair robes he lay,
His arm beneath his head, as though he slept.
For so the Goddess wrought that no decay,
No loathly thing about his body crept;
And all the people look’d on him and wept,
And, weeping, Paris lit the pine-wood dry,
And lo, a rainy wind arose and swept
The flame and fragrance far into the sky.