Paler than grass in summer.—Sapphics.

and—

Made like white summer-coloured grass.

Aholibah.

Longinus, about 250 A.D., uses this, The Ode to Anactoria, or To a beloved Woman, or To a Maiden, as tradition variously names it, to illustrate the perfection of the Sublime in poetry, calling it 'not one passion, but a congress of passions,' and showing how Sappho had here seized upon the signs of love-frenzy and harmonised them into faultless phrase. Plutarch had, about 60 A.D., spoken of this ode as 'mixed with fire,' and quoted Philoxenus as referring to Sappho's 'sweet-voiced songs healing love.'

3

Ἄστερες μὲν ἀμφὶ κάλαν σελάνναν

αἶψ ἀπυκρύπτοισι φάεννον εἶδος,

ὄπποτα πλήθοισα μάλιστα λάμπῃ

γᾶν [ἐπὶ πᾶσαν]