Rhea On her shut lids the lightning flickers, Thunder explodes above her bed, An inch from her lax arm the rain hisses; Discrete she lies, Not dead but entranced, dreamlessly With slow breathing, her lips curved In a half-smile archaic, her breast bare, Hair astream. The house rocks, a flood suddenly rising Bears away bridges: oak and ash Are shivered to the roots - royal green timber. She nothing cares. (Divine Augustus, trembling at the storm, Wrapped sealskin on his thumb; divine Gaius Made haste to hide himself in a deep cellar, Distraught by fear.) Rain, thunder, lightning: pretty children. "Let them play," her mother-mind repeats; "They do no harm, unless from high spirits Or by mishap." Robert Graves