Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XXXV. by Thomas Moore
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Odes Of Anacreon - Ode XXXV.

    By Thomas Moore



[1]


    Cupid once upon a bed
    Of roses laid his weary head;
    Luckless urchin not to see
    Within the leaves a slumbering bee;
    The bee awaked--with anger wild
    The bee awaked, and stung the child.
    Loud and piteous are his cries;
    To Venus quick he runs, he flies;
    "Oh mother!--I am wounded through--
    I die with pain--in sooth I do!
    Stung by some little angry thing,
    Some serpent on a tiny wing--
    A bee it was--for once, I know,
    I heard a rustic call it so."
    Thus he spoke, and she the while,
    Heard him with a soothing smile;
    Then said, "My infant, if so much
    Thou feel the little wild-bee's touch,
    How must the heart, ah, Cupid be,
    The hapless heart that's stung by thee!"



Extra Info:
[1] Theocritus has imitated this beautiful ode in his nineteenth idyl; but is very inferior, I think, to his original, in delicacy of point and naïveté of expression. Spenser, in one of his smaller compositions, has sported more diffusely on the same subject. The poem to which I allude begins thus:--

Upon a day, as Love lay sweetly slumbering
All in his mother's lap;
A gentle bee, with his loud trumpet murmuring,
About him flew by hap, etc.



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