Then Philoctetes crawl’d into his den
And hugg’d himself against the bitter cold,
While round their leader came the Trojan men
And bound his wound, and bare him o’er the wold,
Back to the lights of Ilios; but the gold
Of Dawn was breaking on the mountains white,
Or ere they won within the guarded fold,
Long ’wilder’d in the tempest and the night.

LIV.

And through the gate, and through the silent street,
And houses where men dream’d of war no more,
The bearers wander’d with their weary feet,
And Paris to his high-roof’d house they bore.
But vainly leeches on his wound did pore,
And vain was Argive Helen’s magic song,
Ah, vain her healing hands, and all her lore,
To help the life that wrought her endless wrong.

LV.

Slow pass’d the fever’d hours, until the grey
Cold light was paling, and a sullen glow
Of livid yellow crown’d the dying day,
And brooded on the wastes of mournful snow.
Then Paris whisper’d faintly, “I must go
And face that wild wood-maiden of the hill;
For none but she can win from overthrow
Troy’s life, and mine that guards it, if she will.”

LVI.

So through the dumb white meadows, deep with snow,
They bore him on a pallet shrouded white,
And sore they dreaded lest an ambush’d foe
Should hear him moan, or mark the moving light
That waved before their footsteps in the night;
And much they joy’d when Ida’s knees were won,
And ’neath the pines upon an upland height,
They watch’d the star that heraldeth the sun.

LVII.

For under woven branches of the pine,
The soft dry needles like a carpet spread,
And high above the arching boughs did shine
In frosty fret of silver, that the red
New dawn fired into gold-work overhead:
Within that vale where Paris oft had been
With fair Œnone, ere the hills he fled
To be the sinful lover of a Queen.

LVIII.