

The Poems of Sappho, by John Myers O'Hara, [1910], at sacred-texts.com
Now the silver crescent
 Of the moon has vanished,
 With the golden Pleiads
 Drifting down the west.
It is after midnight
 And the time is passing,
 Hours we pledged to passion
 And I sleep alone.
Anger ill becomes thee,
 Tender-souled Gyrinno,
 Shapelier is Dica
 But less loved by me.
Art thou still relentless,
 Wilful one, annulling
 All thy protestations
 In the fervid past?
Can it, O Charites,
 Be thou hast forgotten?
 Dost thou love another,
 Even now, perchance?
Ah, my tears are falling,
 Yet in my despairing
 Mood I lie and listen
 For thy furtive step;
For the lightest rustle
 Of thy flowing garment,
 For thy sweet and panting
 Whisper at the door.
Now the moon has vanished
 With the golden Pleiads;
 It is after midnight
 And I sleep alone.