Blest he whose feet have stood Beside the fount of good; Blest he whose will could break Earth’s chains for wisdom’s sake! The Thracian bard, ’tis said, Mourned his dear consort dead; To hear the plaintive strain The woods moved in his train, And the stream ceased to flow, Held by so soft a woe; The deer without dismay Beside the lion lay; The hound, by song subdued, No more the hare pursued, But the pang unassuaged In his own bosom raged. The music that could calm All else brought him no balm. Chiding the powers immortal, He came unto Hell’s portal; There breathed all tender things Upon his sounding strings, Each rhapsody high-wrought His goddess-mother taught—
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