Chorus of Satyrs, Driving Their Goats, by Euripides

Chorus of Satyrs, Driving Their Goats

Chorus from The Cyclops Where has he of race divine
Wandered in the winding rocks?
Here the air is calm and fine
For the father of the flocks;
Here the grass is soft and sweet,
And the river-eddies meet
In the trough beside the cave,
Bright as in their fountain wave.
Neither here, nor on the dew
Of the lawny uplands feeding?
Oh, you come!--a stone at you
Will I throw to mend your breeding;
Get along, you hornè d thing,
Wild, seditious, rambling!
An Iacchic melody
To the golden Aphrodite
Will I lift, as erst did I
Seeking her and her delight
With the Mæ nads, whose white feet
To the music glance and fleet.
Bacchus, O belovè d, where
Shaking wide thy yellow hair,
Wanderest thou alone, afar?
To the one-eyed Cyclops we,
Who by right thy servants are,
Minister in misery,
In these wretched goat-skins clad,
Far from thy delights and thee.

poems.one - Euripides