Hyperion. Book II
Just
at
the
self-same
beat
of
Time's
wide
wings
Hyperion
slid
into
the
rustled
air,
And
Saturn
gain'd
with
Thea
that
sad
place
Where
Cybele
and
the
bruised
Titans
mourn'd.
It
was
a
den
where
no
insulting
light
Could
glimmer
on
their
tears;
where
their
own
groans
They
felt,
but
heard
not,
for
the
solid
roar
Of
thunderous
waterfalls
and
torrents
hoarse,
Pouring
a
constant
bulk,
uncertain
where.
Crag
jutting
forth
to
crag,
and
rocks
that
seem'd
Ever
as
if
just
rising
from
a
sleep,
Forehead
to
forehead
held
their
monstrous
horns;
And
thus
in
thousand
hugest
phantasies
Made
a
fit
roofing
to
this
nest
of
woe.
Instead
of
thrones,
hard
flint
they
sat
upon,
Couches
of
rugged
stone,
and
slaty
ridge
Stubborn'd
with
iron.
All
were
not
assembled:
Some
chain'd
in
torture,
and
some
wandering.
Caus,
and
Gyges,
and
Briareus,
Typhon,
and
Dolor,
and
Porphyrion,
With
many
more,
the
brawniest
in
assault,
Were
pent
in
regions
of
laborious
breath;
Dungeon'd
in
opaque
element,
to
keep
Their
clenched
teeth
still
clench'd,
and
all
their
limbs
Lock'd
up
like
veins
of
metal,
crampt
and
screw'd;
Without
a
motion,
save
of
their
big
hearts
Heaving
in
pain,
and
horribly
convuls'd
With
sanguine
feverous
boiling
gurge
of
pulse.
Mnemosyne
was
straying
in
the
world;
Far
from
her
moon
had
Phoebe
wandered;
And
many
else
were
free
to
roam
abroad,
But
for
the
main,
here
found
they
covert
drear.
Scarce
images
of
life,
one
here,
one
there,
Lay
vast
and
edgeways;
like
a
dismal
cirque
Of
Druid
stones,
upon
a
forlorn
moor,
When
the
chill
rain
begins
at
shut
of
eve,
In
dull
November,
and
their
chancel
vault,
The
Heaven
itself,
is
blinded
throughout
night.
Each
one
kept
shroud,
nor
to
his
neighbour
gave
Or
word,
or
look,
or
action
of
despair.
Creus
was
one;
his
ponderous
iron
mace
Lay
by
him,
and
a
shatter'd
rib
of
rock
Told
of
his
rage,
ere
he
thus
sank
and
pined.
Iapetus
another;
in
his
grasp,
A
serpent's
plashy
neck;
its
barbed
tongue
Squeez'd
from
the
gorge,
and
all
its
uncurl'd
length
Dead:
and
because
the
creature
could
not
spit
Its
poison
in
the
eyes
of
conquering
Jove.
Next
Cottus:
prone
he
lay,
chin
uppermost,
As
though
in
pain;
for
still
upon
the
flint
He
ground
severe
his
skull,
with
open
mouth
And
eyes
at
horrid
working.
Nearest
him
Asia,
born
of
most
enormous
Caf,
Who
cost
her
mother
Tellus
keener
pangs,
Though
feminine,
than
any
of
her
sons:
More
thought
than
woe
was
in
her
dusky
face,
For
she
was
prophesying
of
her
glory;
And
in
her
wide
imagination
stood
Palm-shaded
temples,
and
high
rival
fanes
By
Oxus
or
in
Ganges'
sacred
isles.
Even
as
Hope
upon
her
anchor
leans,
So
leant
she,
not
so
fair,
upon
a
tusk
Shed
from
the
broadest
of
her
elephants.
Above
her,
on
a
crag's
uneasy
shelve,
Upon
his
elbow
rais'd,
all
prostrate
else,
Shadow'd
Enceladus;
once
tame
and
mild
As
grazing
ox
unworried
in
the
meads;
Now
tiger-passion'd,
lion-thoughted,
wroth,
He
meditated,
plotted,
and
even
now
Was
hurling
mountains
in
that
second
war,
Not
long
delay'd,
that
scar'd
the
younger
Gods
To
hide
themselves
in
forms
of
beast
and
bird.
Not
far
hence
Atlas;
and
beside
him
prone
Phorcus,
the
sire
of
Gorgons.
Neighbour'd
close
Oceanus,
and
Tethys,
in
whose
lap
Sobb'd
Clymene
among
her
tangled
hair.
In
midst
of
all
lay
Themis,
at
the
feet
Of
Ops
the
queen;
all
clouded
round
from
sight,
No
shape
distinguishable,
more
than
when
Thick
night
confounds
the
pine-tops
with
the
clouds:
And
many
else
whose
names
may
not
be
told.
For
when
the
Muse's
wings
are
air-ward
spread,
Who
shall
delay
her
flight?
And
she
must
chaunt
Of
Saturn,
and
his
guide,
who
now
had
climb'd
With
damp
and
slippery
footing
from
a
depth
More
horrid
still.
Above
a
sombre
cliff
Their
heads
appear'd,
and
up
their
stature
grew
Till
on
the
level
height
their
steps
found
ease:
Then
Thea
spread
abroad
her
trembling
arms
Upon
the
precincts
of
this
nest
of
pain,
And
sidelong
fix'd
her
eye
on
Saturn's
face:
There
saw
she
direst
strife;
the
supreme
God
At
war
with
all
the
frailty
of
grief,
Of
rage,
of
fear,
anxiety,
revenge,
Remorse,
spleen,
hope,
but
most
of
all
despair.
Against
these
plagues
he
strove
in
vain;
for
Fate
Had
pour'd
a
mortal
oil
upon
his
head,
A
disanointing
poison:
so
that
Thea,
Affrighted,
kept
her
still,
and
let
him
pass
First
onwards
in,
among
the
fallen
tribe.
As
with
us
mortal
men,
the
laden
heart
Is
persecuted
more,
and
fever'd
more,
When
it
is
nighing
to
the
mournful
house
Where
other
hearts
are
sick
of
the
same
bruise;
So
Saturn,
as
he
walk'd
into
the
midst,
Felt
faint,
and
would
have
sunk
among
the
rest,
But
that
he
met
Enceladus's
eye,
Whose
mightiness,
and
awe
of
him,
at
once
Came
like
an
inspiration;
and
he
shouted,
"Titans,
behold
your
God!"
at
which
some
groan'd;
Some
started
on
their
feet;
some
also
shouted;
Some
wept,
some
wail'd,
all
bow'd
with
reverence;
And
Ops,
uplifting
her
black
folded
veil,
Show'd
her
pale
cheeks,
and
all
her
forehead
wan,
Her
eye-brows
thin
and
jet,
and
hollow
eyes.
There
is
a
roaring
in
the
bleak-grown
pines
When
Winter
lifts
his
voice;
there
is
a
noise
Among
immortals
when
a
God
gives
sign,
With
hushing
finger,
how
he
means
to
load
His
tongue
with
the
filll
weight
of
utterless
thought,
With
thunder,
and
with
music,
and
with
pomp:
Such
noise
is
like
the
roar
of
bleak-grown
pines;
Which,
when
it
ceases
in
this
mountain'd
world,
No
other
sound
succeeds;
but
ceasing
here,
Among
these
fallen,
Saturn's
voice
therefrom
Grew
up
like
organ,
that
begins
anew
Its
strain,
when
other
harmonies,
stopt
short,
Leave
the
dinn'd
air
vibrating
silverly.
Thus
grew
it
up—-"Not
in
my
own
sad
breast,
Which
is
its
own
great
judge
and
searcher
out,
Can
I
find
reason
why
ye
should
be
thus:
Not
in
the
legends
of
the
first
of
days,
Studied
from
that
old
spirit-leaved
book
Which
starry
Uranus
with
finger
bright
Sav'd
from
the
shores
of
darkness,
when
the
waves
Low-ebb'd
still
hid
it
up
in
shallow
gloom;—-
And
the
which
book
ye
know
I
ever
kept
For
my
firm-based
footstool:—-Ah,
infirm!
Not
there,
nor
in
sign,
symbol,
or
portent
Of
element,
earth,
water,
air,
and
fire,—-
At
war,
at
peace,
or
inter-quarreling
One
against
one,
or
two,
or
three,
or
all
Each
several
one
against
the
other
three,
As
fire
with
air
loud
warring
when
rain-floods
Drown
both,
and
press
them
both
against
earth's
face,
Where,
finding
sulphur,
a
quadruple
wrath
Unhinges
the
poor
world;—-not
in
that
strife,
Wherefrom
I
take
strange
lore,
and
read
it
deep,
Can
I
find
reason
why
ye
should
be
thus:
No,
nowhere
can
unriddle,
though
I
search,
And
pore
on
Nature's
universal
scroll
Even
to
swooning,
why
ye,
Divinities,
The
first-born
of
all
shap'd
and
palpable
Gods,
Should
cower
beneath
what,
in
comparison,
Is
untremendous
might.
Yet
ye
are
here,
O'erwhelm'd,
and
spurn'd,
and
batter'd,
ye
are
here!
O
Titans,
shall
I
say
'Arise!'—-Ye
groan:
Shall
I
say
'Crouch!'—-Ye
groan.
What
can
I
then?
O
Heaven
wide!
O
unseen
parent
dear!
What
can
I?
Tell
me,
all
ye
brethren
Gods,
How
we
can
war,
how
engine
our
great
wrath!
O
speak
your
counsel
now,
for
Saturn's
ear
Is
all
a-hunger'd.
Thou,
Oceanus,
Ponderest
high
and
deep;
and
in
thy
face
I
see,
astonied,
that
severe
content
Which
comes
of
thought
and
musing:
give
us
help!"
So
ended
Saturn;
and
the
God
of
the
sea,
Sophist
and
sage,
from
no
Athenian
grove,
But
cogitation
in
his
watery
shades,
Arose,
with
locks
not
oozy,
and
began,
In
murmurs,
which
his
first-endeavouring
tongue
Caught
infant-like
from
the
far-foamed
sands.
"O
ye,
whom
wrath
consumes!
who,
passion-stung,
Writhe
at
defeat,
and
nurse
your
agonies!
Shut
up
your
senses,
stifle
up
your
ears,
My
voice
is
not
a
bellows
unto
ire.
Yet
listen,
ye
who
will,
whilst
I
bring
proof
How
ye,
perforce,
must
be
content
to
stoop:
And
in
the
proof
much
comfort
will
I
give,
If
ye
will
take
that
comfort
in
its
truth.
We
fall
by
course
of
Nature's
law,
not
force
Of
thunder,
or
of
Jove.
Great
Saturn,
thou
Hast
sifted
well
the
atom-universe;
But
for
this
reason,
that
thou
art
the
King,
And
only
blind
from
sheer
supremacy,
One
avenue
was
shaded
from
thine
eyes,
Through
which
I
wandered
to
eternal
truth.
And
first,
as
thou
wast
not
the
first
of
powers,
So
art
thou
not
the
last;
it
cannot
be:
Thou
art
not
the
beginning
nor
the
end.
From
Chaos
and
parental
Darkness
came
Light,
the
first
fruits
of
that
intestine
broil,
That
sullen
ferment,
which
for
wondrous
ends
Was
ripening
in
itself.
The
ripe
hour
came,
And
with
it
Light,
and
Light,
engendering
Upon
its
own
producer,
forthwith
touch'd
The
whole
enormous
matter
into
life.
Upon
that
very
hour,
our
parentage,
The
Heavens
and
the
Earth,
were
manifest:
Then
thou
first
born,
and
we
the
giant
race,
Found
ourselves
ruling
new
and
beauteous
realms.
Now
comes
the
pain
of
truth,
to
whom
'tis
pain;
O
folly!
for
to
bear
all
naked
truths,
And
to
envisage
circumstance,
all
calm,
That
is
the
top
of
sovereignty.
Mark
well!
As
Heaven
and
Earth
are
fairer,
fairer
far
Than
Chaos
and
blank
Darkness,
though
once
chiefs;
And
as
we
show
beyond
that
Heaven
and
Earth
In
form
and
shape
compact
and
beautiful,
In
will,
in
action
free,
companionship,
And
thousand
other
signs
of
purer
life;
So
on
our
heels
a
fresh
perfection
treads,
A
power
more
strong
in
beauty,
born
of
us
And
fated
to
excel
us,
as
we
pass
In
glory
that
old
Darkness:
nor
are
we
Thereby
more
conquer'd,
than
by
us
the
rule
Of
shapeless
Chaos.
Say,
doth
the
dull
soil
Quarrel
with
the
proud
forests
it
hath
fed,
And
feedeth
still,
more
comely
than
itself?
Can
it
deny
the
chiefdom
of
green
groves?
Or
shall
the
tree
be
envious
of
the
dove
Because
it
cooeth,
and
hath
snowy
wings
To
wander
wherewithal
and
find
its
joys?
We
are
such
forest-trees,
and
our
fair
boughs
Have
bred
forth,
not
pale
solitary
doves,
But
eagles
golden-feather'd,
who
do
tower
Above
us
in
their
beauty,
and
must
reign
In
right
thereof;
for
'tis
the
eternal
law
That
first
in
beauty
should
be
first
in
might:
Yea,
by
that
law,
another
race
may
drive
Our
conquerors
to
mourn
as
we
do
now.
Have
ye
beheld
the
young
God
of
the
seas,
My
dispossessor?
Have
ye
seen
his
face?
Have
ye
beheld
his
chariot,
foam'd
along
By
noble
winged
creatures
he
hath
made?
I
saw
him
on
the
calmed
waters
scud,
With
such
a
glow
of
beauty
in
his
eyes,
That
it
enforc'd
me
to
bid
sad
farewell
To
all
my
empire:
farewell
sad
I
took,
And
hither
came,
to
see
how
dolorous
fate
Had
wrought
upon
ye;
and
how
I
might
best
Give
consolation
in
this
woe
extreme.
Receive
the
truth,
and
let
it
be
your
balm."
Whether
through
pos'd
conviction,
or
disdain,
They
guarded
silence,
when
Oceanus
Left
murmuring,
what
deepest
thought
can
tell?
But
so
it
was,
none
answer'd
for
a
space,
Save
one
whom
none
regarded,
Clymene;
And
yet
she
answer'd
not,
only
complain'd,
With
hectic
lips,
and
eyes
up-looking
mild,
Thus
wording
timidly
among
the
fierce:
"O
Father!
I
am
here
the
simplest
voice,
And
all
my
knowledge
is
that
joy
is
gone,
And
this
thing
woe
crept
in
among
our
hearts,
There
to
remain
for
ever,
as
I
fear:
I
would
not
bode
of
evil,
if
I
thought
So
weak
a
creature
could
turn
off
the
help
Which
by
just
right
should
come
of
mighty
Gods;
Yet
let
me
tell
my
sorrow,
let
me
tell
Of
what
I
heard,
and
how
it
made
me
weep,
And
know
that
we
had
parted
from
all
hope.
I
stood
upon
a
shore,
a
pleasant
shore,
Where
a
sweet
clime
was
breathed
from
a
land
Of
fragrance,
quietness,
and
trees,
and
flowers.
Full
of
calm
joy
it
was,
as
I
of
grief;
Too
full
of
joy
and
soft
delicious
warmth;
So
that
I
felt
a
movement
in
my
heart
To
chide,
and
to
reproach
that
solitude
With
songs
of
misery,
music
of
our
woes;
And
sat
me
down,
and
took
a
mouthed
shell
And
murmur'd
into
it,
and
made
melody—-
O
melody
no
more!
for
while
I
sang,
And
with
poor
skill
let
pass
into
the
breeze
The
dull
shell's
echo,
from
a
bowery
strand
Just
opposite,
an
island
of
the
sea,
There
came
enchantment
with
the
shifting
wind,
That
did
both
drown
and
keep
alive
my
ears.
I
threw
my
shell
away
upon
the
sand,
And
a
wave
fill'd
it,
as
my
sense
was
fill'd
With
that
new
blissful
golden
melody.
A
living
death
was
in
each
gush
of
sounds,
Each
family
of
rapturous
hurried
notes,
That
fell,
one
after
one,
yet
all
at
once,
Like
pearl
beads
dropping
sudden
from
their
string:
And
then
another,
then
another
strain,
Each
like
a
dove
leaving
its
olive
perch,
With
music
wing'd
instead
of
silent
plumes,
To
hover
round
my
head,
and
make
me
sick
Of
joy
and
grief
at
once.
Grief
overcame,
And
I
was
stopping
up
my
frantic
ears,
When,
past
all
hindrance
of
my
trembling
hands,
A
voice
came
sweeter,
sweeter
than
all
tune,
And
still
it
cried,
'Apollo!
young
Apollo!
The
morning-bright
Apollo!
young
Apollo!'
I
fled,
it
follow'd
me,
and
cried
'Apollo!'
O
Father,
and
O
Brethren,
had
ye
felt
Those
pains
of
mine;
O
Saturn,
hadst
thou
felt,
Ye
would
not
call
this
too
indulged
tongue
Presumptuous,
in
thus
venturing
to
be
heard."
So
far
her
voice
flow'd
on,
like
timorous
brook
That,
lingering
along
a
pebbled
coast,
Doth
fear
to
meet
the
sea:
but
sea
it
met,
And
shudder'd;
for
the
overwhelming
voice
Of
huge
Enceladus
swallow'd
it
in
wrath:
The
ponderous
syllables,
like
sullen
waves
In
the
half-glutted
hollows
of
reef-rocks,
Came
booming
thus,
while
still
upon
his
arm
He
lean'd;
not
rising,
from
supreme
contempt.
"Or
shall
we
listen
to
the
over-wise,
Or
to
the
over-foolish,
Giant-Gods?
Not
thunderbolt
on
thunderbolt,
till
all
That
rebel
Jove's
whole
armoury
were
spent,
Not
world
on
world
upon
these
shoulders
piled,
Could
agonize
me
more
than
baby-words
In
midst
of
this
dethronement
horrible.
Speak!
roar!
shout!
yell!
ye
sleepy
Titans
all.
Do
ye
forget
the
blows,
the
buffets
vile?
Are
ye
not
smitten
by
a
youngling
arm?
Dost
thou
forget,
sham
Monarch
of
the
waves,
Thy
scalding
in
the
seas?
What!
have
I
rous'd
Your
spleens
with
so
few
simple
words
as
these?
O
joy!
for
now
I
see
ye
are
not
lost:
O
joy!
for
now
I
see
a
thousand
eyes
Wide-glaring
for
revenge!"—-As
this
he
said,
He
lifted
up
his
stature
vast,
and
stood,
Still
without
intermission
speaking
thus:
"Now
ye
are
flames,
I'll
tell
you
how
to
burn,
And
purge
the
ether
of
our
enemies;
How
to
feed
fierce
the
crooked
stings
of
fire,
And
singe
away
the
swollen
clouds
of
Jove,
Stifling
that
puny
essence
in
its
tent.
O
let
him
feel
the
evil
he
hath
done;
For
though
I
scorn
Oceanus's
lore,
Much
pain
have
I
for
more
than
loss
of
realms:
The
days
of
peace
and
slumbrous
calm
are
fled;
Those
days,
all
innocent
of
scathing
war,
When
all
the
fair
Existences
of
heaven
Carne
open-eyed
to
guess
what
we
would
speak:—-
That
was
before
our
brows
were
taught
to
frown,
Before
our
lips
knew
else
but
solemn
sounds;
That
was
before
we
knew
the
winged
thing,
Victory,
might
be
lost,
or
might
be
won.
And
be
ye
mindful
that
Hyperion,
Our
brightest
brother,
still
is
undisgraced—-
Hyperion,
lo!
his
radiance
is
here!"
All
eyes
were
on
Enceladus's
face,
And
they
beheld,
while
still
Hyperion's
name
Flew
from
his
lips
up
to
the
vaulted
rocks,
A
pallid
gleam
across
his
features
stern:
Not
savage,
for
he
saw
full
many
a
God
Wroth
as
himself.
He
look'd
upon
them
all,
And
in
each
face
he
saw
a
gleam
of
light,
But
splendider
in
Saturn's,
whose
hoar
locks
Shone
like
the
bubbling
foam
about
a
keel
When
the
prow
sweeps
into
a
midnight
cove.
In
pale
and
silver
silence
they
remain'd,
Till
suddenly
a
splendor,
like
the
morn,
Pervaded
all
the
beetling
gloomy
steeps,
All
the
sad
spaces
of
oblivion,
And
every
gulf,
and
every
chasm
old,
And
every
height,
and
every
sullen
depth,
Voiceless,
or
hoarse
with
loud
tormented
streams:
And
all
the
everlasting
cataracts,
And
all
the
headlong
torrents
far
and
near,
Mantled
before
in
darkness
and
huge
shade,
Now
saw
the
light
and
made
it
terrible.
It
was
Hyperion:—-a
granite
peak
His
bright
feet
touch'd,
and
there
he
stay'd
to
view
The
misery
his
brilliance
had
betray'd
To
the
most
hateful
seeing
of
itself.
Golden
his
hair
of
short
Numidian
curl,
Regal
his
shape
majestic,
a
vast
shade
In
midst
of
his
own
brightness,
like
the
bulk
Of
Memnon's
image
at
the
set
of
sun
To
one
who
travels
from
the
dusking
East:
Sighs,
too,
as
mournful
as
that
Memnon's
harp
He
utter'd,
while
his
hands
contemplative
He
press'd
together,
and
in
silence
stood.
Despondence
seiz'd
again
the
fallen
Gods
At
sight
of
the
dejected
King
of
day,
And
many
hid
their
faces
from
the
light:
But
fierce
Enceladus
sent
forth
his
eyes
Among
the
brotherhood;
and,
at
their
glare,
Uprose
Iapetus,
and
Creus
too,
And
Phorcus,
sea-born,
and
together
strode
To
where
he
towered
on
his
eminence.
There
those
four
shouted
forth
old
Saturn's
name;
Hyperion
from
the
peak
loud
answered,
"Saturn!"
Saturn
sat
near
the
Mother
of
the
Gods,
In
whose
face
was
no
joy,
though
all
the
Gods
Gave
from
their
hollow
throats
the
name
of
"Saturn!"