Page:King Alfred's Version of the Consolations of Boethius.djvu/292

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This same Apollo was of princely race,

Son of Jove. This Jove was a king

Who to great and little lying feigned,

To every goodman, that he was a god

Most high and holy. Thus this hero

The silly people pleased with error,

Till countless folk his feigning trusted

For he was rightly the realm's protector,

Of royal birth. 'Tis known abroad

That in those days each folk deemed

Its sovereign head the Highest God,

And gave him honour as King of Glory,

If to be ruler he was rightly born.

Jove's father also was further a god,

And the sea-dwellers Saturn named him,

The sons of men. Soon folk named

Each in turn God eternal.

Men say there was also Apollo's daughter,

Well descended, to witless mortals

A goddess seeming, skilled in magic,

In witchcraft dealing and in the delusions,

More than all men, of many a nation.

She was a king's daughter, Circe was called

Among the multitude, and she ruled men

Upon the island to which Aulixes

Chief of Thracia had chanced to come,

In his ship sailing. Soon was it known

To all the troop that tarried there with her,

The prince's coming. Then Circe herself

Loved beyond measure that lord of seamen,