The Huntress rides no moreAcross the upturned faces of the stars:'Tis but the dead shell of a frozen world,Glittering with desolation. Earth's old gods—The gods that haunt like dreams each planet's youth—Are fled from years incredulous, and tiredWith penetrating of successive masks,That give but emptiness they served to hide.Remains not faith enough to bring them back—Pan to his wood, Diana to her moon,And all the visions that made populousAn eager world where Time grows weary now.Yet Youth, that lives, might for a little claimThe pantheon of dream, on such a night,When 'neath the growing marvel of the moonThe films of time wear perilously thin,And thought looks backward to the simpler years,Till all the vision seems but just beyond.If one have faith, it may be that he shallBehold the gods—once only, and no more,Because of Time's inhospitality,For which they may not stay.THE POETWithin the marvel of the light, what flowerOf active wonder from quiescence springs!Is it a throng of luminous white clouds,Phantoms of some old storm's death-driven Titans,That float beneath the moon, and speak with voicesLike the last echoes of a thunder spent?'Tis the forsaken gods, that win a footholdAbout the magic circle which the moonDraws like some old enchantress round the glade.THE PHILOSOPHERI see them not: the vision is addressedOnly to thine acute and eager youth.JOVEAll heaven and earth were once my throne;Now I have but the wind aloneFor shifting judgment-seat.The pillared world supported me:Yet man's old incredulityLeft nothing for my feet.PANMan hath forgotten me:Yet seems it that my memorySaddens the wistful voices of the wood;Within each erst-frequented spotEcho forgets my music not,Nor Earth my tread where trampling years have stood.ARTEMISTime hath grown coldToward beauty loved of old.The gods must quakeWhen dreams and hopes forsakeThe heart of man,And disillusion's banMore chill than stone,Rears till the former throneOf lovelinessIs dark and tenantless.Now must I weep—Homeless within the deepWhere once of oldMine orbèd chariot rolled,—And mourn in vainMan's immemorial painUncomfortedOf light and beauty fled.APOLLOTime wearied of my song—A satiate and capricious kingWho for his pleasure bade me sing,First of his minstrel throng.Till, cloyed with melody,His ear grew faint to voice and lyre;Forgotten then of Time's desire,His thought was void of me.APHRODITE