Choral Song

From the Greek by Henry Hart Milman From “The Bacchæ” ON the mountains wild ’t is sweet, When faint with rapid dance our feet, Our limbs on earth all careless thrown With the sacred fawn-skins strown, To quaff the goat’s delicious blood, A strange, a rich, a savage food. Then off again the revel goes O’er Phrygian, Lydian mountain brows; Evoë! Evoë! leads the road, Bacchus’s self the maddening god! And flows with milk the plain, and flows with wine, Flows with the wild bees’ nectar-dews divine; And soars, like smoke, the Syrian incense pale— The while the frantic Bacchanal The beaconing pine torch on her wand Whirls around with rapid hand, And drives the wandering dance about, Beating time with joyous shout, And casts upon the breezy air All her rich luxuriant hair; Ever the burthen of her song:— “Raging, maddening, haste along, Bacchus’s daughters, ye the pride Of golden Tmolus’s fabled side; While your heavy cymbals ring, Still your ’Evoë! Evoë!’ sing!” Evoë! the Evian god rejoices In Phrygian tones and Phrygian voices, When the soft holy pipe is breathing sweet, In notes harmonious to her feet, Who to the mountain, to the mountain speeds; Like some young colt that by its mother feeds, Gladsome with many a frisking bound, The Bacchanal goes forth and treads the echoing ground.

Collection: 
500
Sub Title: 
IV. Inland Waters: Highlands

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From the Greek by Henry Hart Milman From “The Bacchæ” ON the mountains wild ’t is sweet, When faint with rapid dance our feet, Our limbs on earth all careless thrown With the sacred fawn-skins strown, To quaff the goat’s delicious blood, A strange, a rich, a...