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CATULLUS.

CATULLUS.

ATYS.

Arys o'er the distant waters, driving in his rapid

bark,

Soon with foot of wild impatience touch'd the Phry

gian forest dark,

Where amid the awful shades possessed by mighty

Cybele,

In his zealous frenzy blind,

And wand'ring in his hapless mind,

With flinty knife he gave to earth the weights that

stamp virility.

Then as the widowed being saw it's wretched limbs

bereft of man,

And the unaccustom'd blood that on the ground

polluting ran,

With snowy hand it snatch'd in haste the timbrel's airy round on high,

That opens with the trumpet's blast, thy rites, Maternal Mystery ;

And upon it's whirling fingers, while the hollow parchment rung,

Thus in outcry tremulous to it's wild companions

[blocks in formation]

Now come along, come along with me,

Worshippers of Cybele,

To the lofty groves of the deity!

Ye vagabond herds that bear the name

Of the Dindymenian dame!

Who seeking strange lands, like the banished of

home,

With Atys, with Atys distractedly roam;

Who your limbs have unmann'd in a desperate hour With a frantic disdain of the Cyprian pow'r;

Who have carried my sect through the dreadful salt

sea,

Rouse, rouse your wild spirits careeringly!

No delay, no delay,

But together away,

And follow me up to the Dame all-compelling,

To her high Phrygian groves and her dark Phrygian

dwelling,

Where the cymbals they clash, and the drums they resound,

And the Phrygian's curv'd pipe pours it's moanings

around,

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