Quote Daedalus to Icarus:
"With rule and plumbline,—thus, and—thus,
We space and build our labyrinth,
And build, besides, a graven plinth
To bear the future fame of Us,"
Quote Daedalus to Icarus.
Quoth Icarus to Daedalus:
"Before these Cretans make a fuss,
And set our names up with a shout,
Perhaps we'd better first get out,
And show the master-mind of Us,"
Quoth Icarus to Daedalus.
Then round and round went Daedalus,
And out and in went Icarus.
They parted for an hour's whole space....
They met upon the selfsame place!
"I think we're stuck," quoth Icarus,
"I think we are," quoth Daedalus.
In short, to be perspicuous,
Like this old tale of Daedalus;
'Spite of our mouths with freedom filled,
From life's poor trivial things we build
A maze about the feet of us
That shuts us in like Daedalus.
But Daedalus and Icarus
Made wings, and set them—thus, and—thus;
And that blind maze that hemmed them in
They sloughed, as drops the snake its skin:
And so at last shall all of us,
Like Daedalus and Icarus.

A PARAPHRASE

From the Prose of Jeremy Taylor

As the silk-worm, shut from sight,
Cuts a pathway into light;
Makes on mottled leaves repast
Till its wormy coat is cast;
Winds itself in silken weed;
Sheds the future's pearly seed;
Leaves behind its dower of silk,
And with wings as white as milk
Spread for flight, completes its span;
So evolves the soul of man.

HOSPITALITY

From the Irish, Seventh to Tenth Century