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Acton1

By Arthur Hugh Clough

Topics: classic

Over a mountain slope with lentisk, and with abounding     Arbutus, and the red oak overtufted, mid a noontide     Now glowing fervidly, the Leto-born, the divine one,     Artemis, Arcadian wood-rover, alone, hunt-weary,     Unto a dell centring many streamlets her foot unerring     Had guided. Platanus with fig-tree shaded, a hollow,     Shaded a waterfall, where pellucid yet abundant     Streams from perpetual full-flowing sources a current:     Lower on either bank in sunshine flowered the oleanders:     Plenteous under a rock green herbage here to the margin     Grew with white poplars overcrowning. She thither arrived,     Unloosening joyfully the vest enfolded upon her,     Swift her divine shoulders discovering, swiftly revealing     Her maidenly bosom and all her beauty beneath it,     To the river water overflowing to receive her     Yielded her ambrosial nakedness. But with an instant     Conscious, with the instant the immortal terrific anger     Flew to the guilty doer: that moment, where amid amply     Concealing plane-leaves he the opportunity pursued,     Long vainly, possessed, unwise, Acton, of hunters,     Hapless of Arcadian, and most misguided of hunters,     Knew the divine mandate, knew fate directed upon him.     He, to the boughs crouching, with dreadful joy the desired one     Had viewed descending, viewed as in a dream, disarraying,     And the unclad shoulders awestruck, awestruck let his eyes see     The maidenly bosom, but not dim fear fell upon them     Not more had witnessed. Not, therefore, less the forest through     Ranging, their master ceasing thenceforth to remember,     With the instant together came trooping, as to devour him,     His dogs from the ambush. Transformed suddenly before them,     He fled, an antlered stag wild with terror to the mountain.     She, the liquid stream in, her limbs carelessly reclining,     The flowing waters collected grateful about her.

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Author:Arthur Hugh Clough

"Over a mountain slope with lentisk, and with aboun..." by Arthur Hugh Clough

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"The Text is taken from Percy's Reliques (1765), vol. i. p. 71, 'given from two MS. copies, transmitted from Scotland.' Herd had a very similar bal"

Arthur Hugh Clough

About Arthur Hugh Clough

Arthur Hugh Clough (1819–1861) was an English poet whose work explores Victorian doubt and moral uncertainty. His poems "Say Not the Struggle Naught Availeth" and "The Latest Decalogue" are sharp, thoughtful, and still widely anthologized.

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"Cease, empty Faith, the Spectrum saith,     I was,..."

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