Priapeia

Priaepia

by divers poets in English verse and prose. Translated by Sir Richard Burton and Leonard C. Smithers

  1. He that aye chaunted his dirge of distress to the lyre Pelethronian,
  2. Lyre of the stiff taut string, stiffer the string of himself.
  3. Ilias, noble poem, was gotten and born of such direful
  4. Ire, of that Sacred Song such was original cause.
  5. Matter of different kind was the wander of crafty Ulysses:
  6. An thou would verity know Love too was motor of this.
  7. Hence does he gather the root whence springs that aureate blossom
  8. Which whenas 'Moly' hight, 'Moly' but 'Mentula' means.
  9. Here too of Circe we read and Calypso, daughter of Atlas,
  10. Bearing the mighty commands dealt by Dulichian Brave
  11. Whom did Alcinous' maiden admire by cause of his member
  12. For with a leafy branch hardly that yard could be dad.
  13. Yet was he hasting, his way to regain his little old woman:
  14. Thy coynte (Penelope!) claiming his every thought;