Page:Frogs (Murray 1912).djvu/103

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ARISTOPHANES' FROGS
95

While left and right, before, behind,
Your fingers wi-i-i-i-ind
The treasures of the labouring loom,
Fruit of the shuttle's minstrel mind,
Where many a songful dolphin trips
To lead the dark-blue-beakèd ships,
And tosses with aërial touch
Temples and race-courses and such.
O bright grape tendril's essence pure,
Wine to sweep care from human lips;
Grant me, O child, one arm-pressúre!"
[Breaking off.
That foot, you see?


Dionysus.

I do.


Aeschylus.

And he?


Euripides.

Of course I see the foot!


Aeschylus.

And this is the stuff to trial you bring
And face my songs with the kind of thing
That a man might sing When he dances a fling
To mad Cyrênê's flute!

There, that's your choral stuff! But I've not finished,
I want to show the spirit of his solos!