Page:Mistral - Mirèio. A Provençal poem.djvu/44

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
18
MIRÈIO.
[Canto I.

"Whereon, 'Oh, bah!' cried foolish little I
(Just think!—I only chanced to stand thereby),
'I can run too!' Forthwith they all surround me:
'Run, then!' Alas! my foolish words confound me;
For I had run with partridges alone,
And only the old oaks for lookers-on.

"But now was no escape. 'My poor boy, hasten,'
Says Lagalanto, 'and your latchets fasten.'
Well, so I did. And the great man meanwhile
Drew o'er his mighty muscles, with a smile,
A pair of silken hose, whereto were sewn
Ten tiny golden bells of sweetest tone.

"So 'twas we three. Each set between his teeth
A bit of willow, thus to save his breath;
Shook hands all round; then, one foot on the line,
Trembling and eager we await the sign
For starting. It is given. Off we fly;
We scour the plain like mad,—'tis you! 'tis I!

"Wrapped in a cloud of dust, with smoking hair,
We strain each nerve. Ah, what a race was there!
They thought we should have won the goal abreast,
Till I, presumptuous, sprang before the rest:
And that was my undoing; for I dropped
Pale, dying as it seemed. But never stopped