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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:38:59 -0700
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidus Naso in
+English blank verse Vols. I & II, by Ovid
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidus Naso in English blank verse Vols. I & II
+
+Author: Ovid
+
+Translator: J. J. Howard
+
+Release Date: April 27, 2009 [EBook #28621]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK METAMORPHOSES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Michael Roe, Ted Garvin and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE
+
+
+In this eBook, a circumflex (^) is used to indicate that the rest of
+the word is a superscript. Asterisks (*) are placed around words that
+were typeset in a Blackletter typeface in the original book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Book 3 p. 105._
+
+[Illustration]
+
+ _R. Westall R.A. del^l._ _E. Scriven sculp^t_
+
+ _Caught by the image of his beauteous face,
+ He loves th' unbody'd form: a substance thinks
+ The shadow:----_
+
+ _Pub. 1807, for the Author._
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ METAMORPHOSES
+ OF
+ PUBLIUS OVIDIUS NASO
+ IN
+ *English Blank Verse*
+
+
+ Translated by
+ J. J. HOWARD.
+
+ VOL. 1.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+_London 1807. Printed for the Author; & Sold by John Hatchard,
+Bookseller to Her Majesty. Piccadilly; H. D. Symonds, Paternoster Row
+& James Asperne Cornhill._
+
+ TO
+ The Patronage
+ OF
+ THE RIGHT HONORABLE
+ WILLIAM,
+ EARL OF LONSDALE,
+ KNIGHT
+ OF THE
+ MOST NOBLE ORDER OF THE GARTER,
+ &c. &c. &c.
+
+THE TRANSLATOR CONFIDES HIS ATTEMPT TO RENDER THE BEAUTIES OF OVID
+MORE ACCESSIBLE TO ENGLISH READERS, AND TO CHASTEN THE PRURIENCE OF
+HIS IDEAS AND HIS LANGUAGE, SO AS TO FIT HIS WRITINGS FOR MORE
+GENERAL PERUSAL.
+
+_Pimlico, Aug. 22, 1807._
+
+ _Bailey & Macdonald, Printers,
+ 3, Harris's Place, Pantheon, Oxford-Street._
+
+
+
+
+THE *First Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ From bodies various form'd, mutative shapes
+ My Muse would sing:--Celestial powers give aid!
+ From you those changes sprung,--inspire my pen;
+ Connect each period of my venturous song
+ Unsever'd, from old Chaoes' rude misrule,
+ Till now the world beneath Augustus smiles.
+
+ While yet nor earth nor sea their place possest,
+ Nor that cerulean canopy which hangs
+ O'ershadowing all, each undistinguish'd lay,
+ And one dead form all Nature's features bore;
+ Unshapely, rude, and Chaos justly nam'd.
+ Together struggling laid, each element
+ Confusion strange begat:--Sol had not yet
+ Whirl'd through the blue expanse his burning car:
+ Nor Luna yet had lighted forth her lamp,
+ Nor fed her waning light with borrowed rays.
+ No globous earth pois'd inly by its weight,
+ Hung pendent in the circumambient sky:
+ The sky was not:--Nor Amphitrite had
+ Clasp'd round the land her wide-encircling arms.
+ Unfirm the earth, with water mix'd and air;
+ Opaque the air; unfluid were the waves.
+ Together clash'd the elements confus'd:
+ Cold strove with heat, and moisture drought oppos'd;
+ Light, heavy, hard, and soft, in combat join'd.
+
+ Uprose the world's great Lord,--the strife dissolv'd,
+ The firm earth from the blue sky plac'd apart;
+ Roll'd back the waves from off the land, and fixt
+ Where pure ethereal joins with foggy air.
+ Defin'd each element, and from the mass
+ Chaoetic, rang'd select, in concord firm
+ He bound, and all agreed. On high upsprung
+ The fiery ether to the utmost heaven:
+ The atmospheric air, in lightness next,
+ Upfloated:--dense the solid earth dragg'd down
+ The heavier mass; and girt on every side
+ By waves circumfluent, seiz'd her place below.
+
+ This done, the mass this deity unknown
+ Divides;--each part dispos'd in order lays:
+ First earth he rounds, in form a sphere immense,
+ Equal on every side: then bids the seas,
+ Pent in by banks, spread their rude waves abroad,
+ By strong winds vext; and clasp within their arms
+ The tortuous shores: and marshes wide he adds,
+ Pure springs and lakes:--he bounds with shelving banks
+ The streams smooth gliding;--slowly creeping, some
+ The arid earth absorbs; furious some rush,
+ And in the watery plain their waves disgorge;
+ Their narrow bounds escap'd, to billows rise,
+ And lash the sandy shores. He bade the plains
+ Extend;--the vallies sink;--the groves to bloom;--
+ And rocky hills to lift their heads aloft.
+ And as two zones the northern heaven restrain,
+ The southern two, and one the hotter midst,
+ With five the Godhead girt th' inclosed earth,
+ And climates five upon its face imprest.
+ The midst from heat inhabitable: snows
+ Eternal cover two: 'twixt these extremes
+ Two temperate regions lie, where heat and cold
+ Meet in due mixture; 'bove the whole light air
+ Was hung:--as water floats above the land,
+ So fire 'bove air ascends. Here he bade lodge,
+ Thick clouds and vapors; thunders bellowing loud
+ Terrific to mankind, and winds; which mixt
+ Sharp cold beget. But these to range at large
+ The air throughout, his care forbade. E'en now
+ Their force is scarce withstood; but oft they threat
+ Wild ruin to the universe, though each
+ In separate regions rules his potent blasts.
+ Such is fraternal strife! Far to the east
+ Where Persian mountains greet the rising sun
+ Eurus withdrew. Where sinking Phoebus' rays
+ Glow on the western shores mild Zephyr fled.
+ Terrific Boreas frozen Scythia seiz'd,
+ Beneath the icy bear. On southern climes
+ From constant clouds the showery Auster rains.
+ The liquid ether high above he spread,
+ Light, calm, and undefil'd by dregs terrene.
+ Scarce were those bounds immutable arrang'd,
+ When upward sprung the stars so long press'd down
+ Beneath the heap chaoetic, and along
+ The path of heaven their blazing courses ran.
+
+ Next that each separate element might hold
+ Appropriate habitants,--the vault of heaven,
+ Bright constellations and the gods receiv'd.
+ To glittering fish allotted were the waves:
+ To earth fierce brutes:--to agitated air,
+ Light-plumag'd birds. A being more divine,
+ Of soul exalted more, and form'd to rule
+ The rest was wanting. Then he finish'd MAN!
+ Or by the world's creator, power supreme,
+ Form'd from an heavenly seed; or new-shap'd earth
+ Late from celestial ether torn, and still
+ Congenial warmth retaining, moisten'd felt,
+ Prometheus' fire, and moulded took the form
+ Of him all-potent. Others earth behold
+ Pronely;--to man a face erect was given.
+ The heavens he bade him view, and raise his eyes
+ High to the stars. Thus earth of late so rude,
+ So shapeless, man, till now unknown, became.
+
+ First sprung the age of gold. Unforc'd by laws
+ Strict rectitude and faith, spontaneous then
+ Mankind inspir'd. No judge vindictive frown'd;
+ Unknown alike were punishment and fear:
+ No strict decrees on brazen plates were seen;
+ Nor suppliant crowd, with trembling limbs low bent,
+ Before their judges bow'd. Unknown was law,
+ Yet safe were all. Unhewn from native hills,
+ The pine-tree knew the seas not, nor had view'd
+ Regions unknown, for man not yet had search'd
+ Shores distant from his own. The towns ungirt
+ By trenches deep, laid open to the plain;
+ Nor brazen trump, nor bended horn were seen,
+ Helmet, nor sword; but conscious and secure,
+ Unaw'd by arms the nations tranquil slept.
+ The teeming earth by barrows yet unras'd,
+ By ploughs unwounded, plenteous pour'd her stores.
+ Content with food unforc'd, man pluck'd with ease
+ Young strawberries from the mountains; cornels red;
+ The thorny bramble's fruit; and acorns shook
+ From Jove's wide-spreading tree. Spring ever smil'd;
+ And placid Zephyr foster'd with his breeze
+ The flowers unsown, which everlasting bloom'd.
+ Untill'd the land its welcome produce gave,
+ And unmanur'd its hoary crop renew'd.
+ Here streams of milk, there streams of nectar flow'd;
+ And from the ilex, drop by drop distill'd,
+ The yellow honey fell. But, Saturn down
+ To dusky Tartarus banish'd, all the world
+ By Jove was govern'd. Then a silver age
+ Succeeded; by the golden far excell'd;--
+ Itself surpassing far the age of brass.
+ The ancient durance of perpetual spring
+ He shorten'd, and in seasons four the year
+ Divided:--Winter, summer, lessen'd spring,
+ And various temper'd autumn first were known.
+ Then first the air with parching fervor dry,
+ Glow'd hot;--then ice congeal'd by piercing winds
+ Hung pendent;--houses then first shelter'd man;
+ Houses by caverns form'd, with thick shrubs fenc'd,
+ And boughs entwin'd with osiers. Then the grain
+ Of Ceres first in lengthen'd furrows lay;
+ And oxen groan'd beneath the weighty yoke.
+ Third after these a brazen race succeeds,
+ More stern in soul, and more in furious war
+ Delighting;--still to wicked deeds averse.
+ The last from stubborn iron took its name;--
+ And now rush'd in upon the wretched race
+ All impious villainies: Truth, faith, and shame,
+ Fled far; while enter'd fraud, and force, and craft,
+ And plotting, with detested avarice.
+ To winds scarce known the seaman boldly loos'd
+ His sails, and ships which long on lofty hills
+ Had rested, bounded o'er the unsearch'd waves.
+ The cautious measurer now with spacious line
+ Mark'd out the land, in common once to all;
+ Free as the sun-beams, or the lucid air.
+ Nor would the fruits and aliments suffice,
+ The rich earth from her surface threw, but deep
+ Within her womb they digg'd, and thence display'd,
+ Riches, of crimes the prompter, hid far deep
+ Close by the Stygian shades. Now murderous steel,
+ And gold more murderous enter'd into day:
+ Weapon'd with each, war sallied forth and shook
+ With bloody grasp his loud-resounding arms.
+ Now man by rapine lives;--friend fears his host;
+ And sire-in-law his son;--e'en brethren's love
+ Is rarely seen: wives plot their husbands' death;
+ And husbands theirs design: step-mothers fierce
+ The lurid poisons mix: th' impatient son
+ Enquires the limits of his father's years:--
+ Piety lies neglected; and Astraea,
+ Last of celestial deities on earth,
+ Ascends, and leaves the sanguine-moisten'd land.
+
+ Nor high-rais'd heaven was more than earth secure.
+ Giants, 'tis said, with mad ambition strove
+ To seize the heavenly throne, and mountains pile
+ On mountains till the loftiest stars they touch'd.
+ But with his darted bolt all-powerful Jove,
+ Olympus shatter'd, and from Pelion's top
+ Dash'd Ossa. There with huge unwieldy bulk
+ Oppress'd, their dreadful corses lay, and soak'd
+ Their parent earth with blood; their parent earth
+ The warm blood vivify'd, and caus'd assume
+ An human form,--a monumental type
+ Of fierce progenitors. Heaven they despise,
+ Violent, of slaughter greedy; and their race
+ From blood deriv'd, betray.
+
+ Saturnian Jove
+ This from his lofty seat beheld, and sigh'd;
+ The recent bloody fact revolving deep,
+ The Lycaoenian feast, to few yet known.
+ Incens'd with mighty rage, rage worthy Jove,
+ He calls the council;--none who hear delay.
+ A path sublime, in cloudless skies fair seen,
+ They tread when tow'rd the mighty thunderer's dome,
+ His regal court, th' immortals bend their way.
+ On right and left by folding doors enclos'd,
+ Are halls where gods of rank and power are set;
+ Plebeians far and wide their place select:
+ More potent deities, in heaven most bright,
+ Full in the front possess their shining seats.
+ This place, (might words so bold a form assume)
+ I'd term Palatium of the lofty sky.
+ Here in his marble niche each god was plac'd
+ And on his eburn sceptre leaning, Jove
+ O'er all high tower'd; the dread-inspiring locks
+ Three times he shook; and ocean, earth, and sky,
+ The motion felt and trembled. Then in rage
+ The silence thus he broke:--"Not more I fear'd
+ "Our kingdom's fate in those tempestuous times,
+ "When monsters serpent-footed furious strove,
+ "To clasp within their hundred arms the heavens,
+ "Already captive deem'd. Though fierce our foe,
+ "One race alone warr'd with us, sprung from one.
+ "Now all must perish; all within the bounds
+ "By Nereus circled with his roaring waves.
+ "I swear by Styx, by those infernal streams,
+ "Through shades slow creeping. All I could I've try'd.
+ "But lest to parts unsound the taint should spread,
+ "What baffles cure, the knife must lop away.
+ "Our demi-gods we have,--we have our nymphs,
+ "Our rustic deities,--our satyrs,--fawns,
+ "And mountain sylvans--whose deserts we grant
+ "Celestial honors claim not,--yet on earth,
+ "By us assign'd, they safely sure should rest.
+ "But, oh! ye sacred powers,--but oh! how safe
+ "Are these, when fierce Lycaoen plots for me!
+ "Me! whom the thunders and yourselves obey?"
+
+ Loud murmurs fill the skies--swift vengeance all
+ With eager voice demand. When impious hands
+ With Caesar's blood th' immortal fame of Rome,
+ Rag'd to extinguish--all the world aghast,
+ With horror shook, and trembled through its frame.
+ Nor was thy subjects' loyalty to thee
+ More sweet, Augustus, than was theirs to Jove.
+ His hand and voice, to still their noise he rais'd:
+ Their clamors loud were hush'd, all silence kept;
+ When thus the thunderer ends his angry tale:
+ "Dismiss your care, his punishment is o'er;
+ "But hear his crimes, and hear his well-earn'd fate.
+ "Of human vice the fame had reach'd mine ear,
+ "With hop'd exaggeration; gliding down,
+ "From proud Olympus' brow, I veil'd the god,
+ "And rov'd the world in human form around.
+ "'Twere long to tell what turpitude I saw
+ "On every side, for rumor far fell short,
+ "Of what I witness'd. Through the dusky woods
+ "Of Maenalus I pass'd, where savage lurk
+ "Fierce monsters; o'er the cold Lycean hill,
+ "With pine-trees waving; and Cyllene's height.
+ "Thence to th' Arcadian monarch's roof I came,
+ "As dusky twilight drew on sable night.
+ "Gave signs a god approach'd. The people crowd
+ "In adoration: but Lycaoen turns
+ "Their reverence and piety to scorn.
+ "Then said,--not hard the task to ascertain,
+ "If god or mortal, by unerring test:
+ "And plots to slay me when oppress'd with sleep.
+ "Such proof his soul well suited. Impious more,
+ "An hostage from Molossus sent he slew;
+ "His palpitating members part he boil'd,
+ "And o'er the glowing embers roasted part:
+ "These on the board he serves. My vengeful flames
+ "Consume his roof;--for his deserts, o'erwhelm
+ "His household gods. Lycaoen trembling fled
+ "And gain'd the silent country; loud he howl'd,
+ "And strove in vain to speak; his ravenous mouth
+ "Still thirsts for slaughter; on the harmless flocks
+ "His fury rages, as it wont on man:
+ "Blood glads him still; his vest is shaggy hair;
+ "His arms sink down to legs; a wolf he stands.
+ "Yet former traits his visage still retains;
+ "Grey still his hair; and cruel still his look;
+ "His eyes still glisten; savage all his form.
+ "Thus one house perish'd, but not one alone
+ "The fate deserves. Wherever earth extends,
+ "The fierce Erinnys reigns; men seem conspir'd
+ "In impious bond to sin; and all shall feel
+ "The scourge they merit: fixt is my decree."
+
+ Part loud applaud his words, and feed his rage;
+ The rest assent in silence; yet to all,
+ Man's loss seems grievous; anxious all enquire
+ What form shall earth of him depriv'd assume?
+ Who then shall incense to their altars bring?
+ And if those rich and fertile lands he means
+ A spoil for beasts ferocious? Their despair
+ He bade them banish, and in him confide
+ For what the future needed; held them forth
+ The promise of a race unlike the first;
+ Originating from a wonderous stock.
+
+ And now his lightenings were already shot,
+ And earth in flames, but that a fire so vast,
+ He fear'd might reach Olympus, and consume
+ The heavenly axis. Also call'd to mind
+ What fate had doom'd, that all in future times
+ By fire should perish, earth, and sea, and heaven;
+ And all th' unwieldy fabric of the world
+ Should waste to nought. The Cyclops' labor'd bolts
+ Aside he laid. A different vengeance now,
+ To drench with rains from every part of heaven,
+ And whelm mankind beneath the rising waves,
+ Pleas'd more th' immortal. Straightway close he pent
+ The dry north-east, and every blast to showers
+ Adverse, in caves AEolian, and unbarr'd
+ The cell of Notus. Notus rushes forth
+ On pinions dropping rain; his horrid face
+ A pitchy cloud conceals; pregnant with showers
+ His beard; and waters from his grey hairs flow:
+ Mists on his forehead sit; in dews dissolv'd
+ His arms and bosom, seem to melt away.
+ With broad hands seizing on the pendent clouds
+ He press'd them--with a mighty crash they burst,
+ And thick and constant floods from heaven pour down.
+ Iris meantime, in various robe array'd,
+ Collects the waters and supplies the clouds.
+ Prostrate the harvest lies, the tiller's hopes
+ Turn to despair. The labors of an year,
+ A long, long year, without their fruit are spent.
+ Nor Jove's own heaven his anger could suffice,
+ His brother brings him his auxiliar waves.
+ He calls the rivers,--at their monarch's call
+ His roof they enter, and in brief he speaks:
+ "Few words we need, pour each his utmost strength,
+ "The cause demands it; ope' your fountains wide,
+ "Sweep every mound before you, and let gush
+ "Your furious waters with unshorten'd reins."
+ He bids--the watery gods retire,--break up
+ Their narrow springs, and furious tow'rd the main
+ Their waters roll: himself his trident rears
+ And smites the earth; earth trembles at the stroke,
+ Yawns wide her bosom, and upon the land
+ A flood disgorges. Wide outspread the streams
+ Rush o'er the open fields;--uproot the trees;
+ Sweep harvests, flocks, and men;--nor houses stood;
+ Nor household gods, asylums hereto safe.
+ Where strong-built edifice its walls oppos'd
+ Unlevell'd in the ruin, high above
+ Its roof the billows mounted, and its towers
+ Totter'd, beneath the watery gulf oppress'd.
+ Nor land nor sea their ancient bounds maintain'd,
+ For all around was sea, sea without shore.
+ This seeks a mountain's top, that gains a skiff,
+ And plies his oars where late he plough'd the plains.
+ O'er fields of corn one sails, or 'bove the roofs
+ Of towns immerg'd;--another in the elm
+ Seizes th' intangled fish. Perchance in meads
+ The anchor oft is thrown, and oft the keel
+ Tears the subjacent vine-tree. Where were wont
+ The nimble goats to crop the tender grass
+ Unwieldy sea-calves roll. The Nereid nymphs,
+ With wonder, groves, and palaces, and towns,
+ Beneath the waves behold. By dolphins now
+ The woods are tenanted, who furious smite
+ The boughs, and shake the strong oak by their blows.
+ Swims with the flock the wolf; and swept along,
+ Tigers and tawny lions strive in vain.
+ Now not his thundering strength avails the boar;
+ Nor, borne away, the fleet stag's slender limbs:
+ And land, long sought in vain, to rest her feet,
+ The wandering bird draws in her weary wings,
+ And drops into the waves, whose uncheck'd roll
+ The hills have drown'd; and with un'custom'd surge
+ Foam on the mountain tops. Of man the most
+ They swallow'd; whom their fierce irruption spar'd,
+ By hunger perish'd in their bleak retreat.
+
+ Between th' Aoenian and Actaeian lands
+ Lies Phocis; fruitful were the Phocian fields
+ While fields they were, but now o'erwhelm'd, they form
+ A region only of the wide-spread main.
+ Here stands Parnassus with his forked top,
+ Above the clouds high-towering to the stars.
+ To this Deucalion with his consort driven
+ O'er ridgy billows in his bark clung close;
+ For all was sea beside. There bend they down;
+ The nymphs, and mountain gods adore, and she
+ Predicting Themis, then oraculous deem'd.
+ No man more upright than himself had liv'd;
+ Than Pyrrha none more pious heaven had seen.
+
+ Now Jove beheld a mighty lake expand
+ Where late was earth, and from the swarming crowds
+ But one man sav'd--of woman only one:
+ Both guiltless,--pious both. He chas'd the clouds
+ And bade the dry north-east to drive the showers
+ Far distant, and display the earth to heaven,
+ And unto earth the skies. The ocean's rage
+ Remains no more. Mild Neptune lays aside
+ His three-fork'd weapon, and his surges smoothes;
+ Then calls blue Triton from the dark profound.
+ Above the waves the god his shoulders rears,
+ With inbred purple ting'd: He bids him sound
+ His shelly trump, and back the billows call;
+ And rivers to their banks again remand.
+ The trump he seizes,--broad above it wreath'd
+ From narrow base;--the trump whose piercing blast
+ From east to west resounds through every shore.
+ This to his mouth the watery-bearded god
+ Applies, and breathes within the stern command.
+ All hear the sound, or waves of earth or sea,
+ And all who hear obey. Sea finds a shore;
+ Floods flow within their channels; rivers sink;
+ Hills lift their heads; and as the waves decrease,
+ In numerous islets solid earth appears.
+ A tedious time elaps'd, and now the woods
+ Display'd their leafless summits, and their boughs
+ Heavy with mud. At length the world restor'd
+ Deucalion saw, but empty all and void;
+ Deep silence reigning through th' expansive waste:
+ Tears gush'd while thus his Pyrrha he address'd:
+ "O sister! wife! O woman sole preserv'd!--
+ "By nature, kindred, and the marriage-bed,
+ "To me most closely join'd. Now nearer still
+ "By mutual perils. We, of all the earth
+ "Beheld by Sol in his diurnal course,
+ "We two alone remain. The mighty deep
+ "Entombs the rest. Nor sure our safety yet;
+ "Still hang the clouds dark louring. Wretched wife,
+ "What if preserv'd alone? What hadst thou done
+ "Of me bereft? How singly borne the shock?
+ "Where found condolement in thy load of grief?
+ "For me,--and trust, my dearest wife, my words,--
+ "Hadst thou amidst the billows been ingulph'd,
+ "Me also had they swallow'd. Oh! for power
+ "To form mankind, as once my father did,
+ "And in the shapen earth true souls infuse!
+ "In us rests human race, so will the gods,
+ "A sample only of mankind we live."
+ He spoke and Pyrrha's tears join'd his. To heaven
+ They raise their hands in prayer, and straight resolve
+ To ask through oracles divine its aid.
+ Nor long delay. Quick to Cephisus' streams
+ They hasten; muddy still Cephisus flows,
+ Yet not beyond its wonted boundaries swol'n.
+ Libations thence they lift, and o'er their heads
+ And garments cast the sprinklings;--then their steps
+ To Themis' temple bend. The roof they found
+ With filthy moss o'ergrown;--the altars cold.
+ Prone on the steps they fell, and trembling kiss'd
+ The gelid stones, and thus preferr'd their words:
+ "If righteous prayers can move the heavenly mind,
+ "And soften harsh resolves, and soothe the rage
+ "Of great immortals, say, O Themis, say,
+ "How to the world mankind shall be restor'd;
+ "And grant, most merciful, in our distress
+ "Thy potent aid." The goddess heard their words,
+ And instant gave reply. "The temple leave,
+ "Ungird your garments, veil your heads, and throw
+ "Behind your backs your mighty mother's bones."
+ Astonish'd long they stood! and Pyrrha first
+ The silence broke; the oracle's behest
+ Refusing to obey; and earnest pray'd,
+ With trembling tongue for pardon for her sin:
+ Her mother's shade to violate she dreads,
+ Her bones thus rudely flinging. But meantime
+ Deep in their minds, in dark mysterious veil
+ Obscurely hid, the sentence they revolve.
+ At length Deucalion sooths his wife with words
+ Of cheering import: "Right, if I divine,
+ "No impious deed the deity desires:
+ "Earth is our mighty mother, and her bones
+ "The stony rocks within her;--these behind
+ "Our backs to cast, the oracle commands."
+ With joy th' auspicious augury she hears,
+ But joy with doubt commingled, both so much
+ The heavenly words distrust; yet still they hope
+ The essay cannot harm. The temple left,
+ Their heads they cover, and their vests unbind;
+ And o'er their heads as order'd heave the stones.
+ The stones--(incredible! unless the fact
+ Tradition sanction'd doubtless) straight began
+ To lose their rugged firmness,--and anon,
+ To soften,--and when soft a form assume.
+ Next as they grew in size, they felt infus'd
+ A nature mild,--their form resembled man!
+ But incorrectly: marble so appears,
+ Rough hewn to form a statue, ere the hand
+ Completes the shape. What liquid was, and moist,
+ With earthy atoms mixt, soft flesh became;
+ Parts solid and unbending chang'd to bone;
+ In name unalter'd, veins the same remain'd.
+ Thus by the gods' beneficent decree,
+ And brief the change, the stones Deucalion threw,
+ A manly shape assum'd; but females sprung
+ From those by Pyrrha cast behind; and hence
+ A patient, hard, laborious race we prove,
+ And shew the source, by actions, whence we sprung.
+
+ Beings all else the teeming earth produc'd
+ Spontaneous. Heated by the solar rays,
+ The stagnant water quicken'd;--marshy fens
+ Swell'd up their oozy loads to meet the beams:
+ And nourish'd by earth's vivifying soil,
+ The fruitful elements of life increas'd,
+ As in a mother's womb; and in a while
+ Assum'd a certain shape. So when the floods
+ Of seven-mouth'd Nile desert the moisten'd fields,
+ And to their ancient channels bring their streams,
+ The soft mud fries beneath the scorching sun;
+ And midst the fresh-turn'd earth unnumber'd forms
+ The tiller finds: some scarcely half conceiv'd;
+ Imperfect some, their bodies wanting limbs:
+ And oft he beings sees with parts alive,
+ The rest a clod of earth: for where with heat
+ Due moisture kindly mixes, life will spring:
+ From these in concord all things are produc'd.
+ Though fire with water strives; yet vapour warm,
+ Discordant mixture, gives a birth to all.
+
+ Thus when the earth, with filthy ooze bespread
+ From the late deluge, felt the blazing sun;
+ His burning heat productive caus'd spring forth
+ A countless race of beings. Part appear'd
+ In forms before well-known; the rest a group
+ Of monsters strange. Then, but unwilling, she
+ Produc'd terrific Python, serpent huge!
+ A mighty mountain with his bulk he hid;
+ A plague unknown, the new-born race to scare.
+ The quiver-shoulder'd god, unus'd before
+ His arms to launch, save on the flying deer,
+ Or roebuck fleet, the horrid monster slew:
+ A thousand arrows in his sides he fix'd,
+ His quiver's store exhausting; through the wounds
+ Gush'd the black poison. To contending games,
+ Hence instituted for the serpent slain,
+ The glorious action to preserve through times
+ Succeeding, he the name of Pythian gave.
+ And here the youth who bore the palm away
+ By wrestling, racing, or in chariot swift,
+ With beechen bough was crown'd. Nor yet was known
+ The laurel's leaf: Apollo's brows, with hair
+ Deck'd graceful, no peculiar branches bound.
+
+ Penaeian Daphne first his bosom charm'd;
+ No casual flame but plann'd by Love's revenge.
+ Him, Phoebus flush'd with conquest late obtain'd,
+ His bow saw bend, and thus exclaim'd in taunt:
+ "Lascivious boy! How ill with thee assort
+ "Those warlike arms?--how much my shoulders more
+ "Beseem the load, whose arm can deadly wounds
+ "In furious beasts, and every foe infix!
+ "I who but now huge Python have o'erthrown;
+ "Swol'n with a thousand darts; his mighty bulk
+ "Whole acres covering with pestiferous weight?
+ "Content in vulgar hearts thy torch to flame,
+ "To me the bow's superior glory leave."
+ Then Venus' son: "O Phoebus, nought thy dart
+ "Evades, nor thou canst 'scape the force of mine:
+ "To thee as others yield,--so much my fame
+ "Must ever thine transcend." Thus spoke the boy,
+ And lightly mounting, cleaves the yielding air
+ With beating wings, and on Parnassus' top
+ Umbrageous rests. There from his quiver drew
+ Two darts of different power:--this chases love;
+ And that desire enkindles; form'd of gold
+ It glistens, ending in a point acute:
+ Blunt is the first, tipt with a leaden load;
+ Which Love in Daphne's tender breast infix'd.
+ The sharper through Apollo's heart he drove,
+ And through his nerves and bones;--instant he loves:
+ She flies of love the name. In shady woods,
+ And spoils of captive beasts alone she joys;
+ To copy Dian' emulous; her hair
+ In careless tresses form'd, a fillet bound.
+ By numbers sought,--averse alike to all;
+ Impatient of their suit, through forests wild,
+ And groves, in maiden ignorance she roams;
+ Nor cares for Cupid, nor hymeneal rites,
+ Nor soft connubial joys. Oft cry'd her sire;
+ "My Daphne, you should bring to me a son;
+ "From you, my child, I hope for grandsons too."
+ But she detesting wedlock as a crime,
+ (Suffus'd her features with a bashful glow)
+ Around his aged neck, her beauteous arms,
+ Winds blandishing, and cries, "O sire, most dear!
+ "One favor grant,--perpetual to enjoy
+ "My virgin purity;--the mighty Jove
+ "The same indulgence has to Dian' given."
+ Thy sire complies;--but that too beauteous face,
+ And lovely form, thy anxious wish oppose:
+ Apollo loves thee;--to thy bed aspires;--
+ And looks with anxious hopes, his wish to gain:
+ Futurity, by him for once unseen.
+ As the light stubble when the ears are shorn,
+ The flames consume: as hedges blaze on high
+ From torches by the traveller closely held,
+ Or heedless flung, when morning gilds the world:
+ So flaming burnt the god;--so blaz'd his breast,
+ And with fond hopes his vain desires he fed.
+ Her tresses careless flowing o'er her neck
+ He view'd, and, "Oh! how beauteous, deck'd with care,"
+ Exclaim'd: her eyes which shone like brilliant fire,
+ Or sparkling stars, he sees; and sees her lips;
+ Unsated with the sight, he burns to touch:
+ Admires her fingers, and her hands, her arms,
+ Half to the shoulder naked:--what he sees
+ Though beauteous, what is hid he deems more fair.
+ Fleet as the wind, her fearful flight she wings,
+ Nor stays his fond recalling words to hear:
+ "Daughter of Peneus, stay! no foe pursues,--
+ "Stay, beauteous nymph!--so flies the lamb the wolf;
+ "The stag the lion;--so on trembling wings
+ "The dove avoids the eagle:--these are foes,
+ "But love alone me urges to pursue.
+ "Ah me! then, shouldst thou fall,--or prickly thorns
+ "Wound thy fair legs,--and I the cause of pain!--
+ "Rough is the road thou runnest; slack, I pray,
+ "Thy speed;--I swear to follow not so fast.
+ "But hear who loves thee;--no rough mountain swain;
+ "No shepherd;--none in raiments rugged clad,
+ "Tending the lowing herds: rash thoughtless nymph,
+ "Thou fly'st thou know'st not whom, and therefore fly'st!
+ "O'er Delphos' lands, and Tenedos I sway,
+ "And Claros, and the Pataraean realms.--
+ "My sire is Jove. To me are all things known,
+ "Or present, past, or future. Taught by me
+ "Melodious sounds poetic numbers grace.--
+ "Sure is my dart, but one more sure I feel
+ "Lodg'd in this bosom; strange to love before.--
+ "Medicine me hails inventor; through the world
+ "My help is call'd for; unto me is known
+ "The powers of plants and herbs:--ah! hapless I,
+ "Nor plants, nor herbs, afford a cure for love;
+ "Nor arts which all relieve, relieve their lord."
+ All this, and more:--but Daphne fearful fled,
+ And left his speech unfinish'd. Lovely then
+ She running seem'd;--her limbs the breezes bar'd;
+ Her flying raiment floated on the gale;
+ Her careless tresses to the light air stream'd;
+ Her flight increas'd her beauty. Now no more
+ The god to waste his courteous words endures,
+ But urg'd by love himself, with swifter pace
+ Her footsteps treads: the rapid greyhound so,
+ When in the open field the hare he spies,
+ Trusts to his legs for prey,--as she for flight;
+ And now he snaps, and now he thinks to hold,
+ And brushes with his outstretch'd nose her heels;--
+ She trembling, half in doubt, or caught or no,
+ Springs from his jaws, and mocks his touching mouth.
+ Thus fled the virgin and the god;--he fleet
+ Through hope, and she through fear,--but wing'd by love
+ More rapid flew Apollo;--spurning rest,
+ Approach'd her close behind, and panting breath'd
+ Upon her floating tresses. Pale with dread,
+ Her strength exhausted in the lengthen'd flight,
+ Old Peneus' streams she saw, and loud exclaim'd:--
+ "O sire, assist me, if within thy streams
+ "Divinity abides. Let earth this form,
+ "Too comely for my peace, quick swallow up;
+ "Or change those beauties to an harmless shape."
+ Her prayer scarce ended, when her lovely limbs
+ A numbness felt; a tender rind enwraps
+ Her beauteous bosom; from her head shoots up
+ Her hair in leaves; in branches spread her arms;
+ Her feet but now so swift, cleave to the earth
+ With roots immoveable; her face at last
+ The summit forms; her bloom the same remains.
+ Still loves the god the tree, and on the trunk
+ His right hand placing, feels her breast yet throb,
+ Beneath the new-grown bark: around the boughs,
+ As yet her limbs, his clasping arms he throws;
+ And burning kisses on the wood imprints.
+ The wood his lips repels. Then thus the god:--
+ "O laurel, though to be my bride deny'd,
+ "Yet shalt thou be my tree; my temples bind;
+ "My lyre and quiver shalt thou still adorn:
+ "The brows of Latian conquerors shalt thou grace,
+ "When the glad people sing triumphant hymns,
+ "And the long pomp the capitol ascends.
+ "A faithful guard before Augustus' gates,
+ "On each side hung;--the sturdy oak between.
+ "And as perpetual youth adorns my head
+ "With locks unshorn, thou also still shalt bear
+ "Thy leafy honors in perpetual green."
+ Apollo ended, and the laurel bow'd
+ Her verdant summit as her grateful head.
+
+ Within AEmonia lies a grove, inclos'd
+ By steep and lofty hills on every side:
+ 'Tis Tempe call'd. From lowest Pindus pour'd
+ Here Peneus rolls his foaming waves along:
+ Thick clouds of smoke, and dark and vapoury mists
+ The violent falls produce, sprinkling the tops
+ Of proudest forests with the plenteous dew;
+ And distant parts astounding with the roar.
+ Here holds the watery deity his throne;--
+ Here his retreat most sacred;--seated here,
+ Within the rock-form'd cavern, to the streams
+ And stream-residing nymphs, his laws he gives.
+ Here flock the neighbouring river-gods, in doubt
+ Or to condole, or gratulate the sire.
+ Here Spercheus came, whose banks with poplars wave;
+ Rapid Enipeus; Apidanus slow;
+ Amphrysos gently flowing; AEaes mild;
+ And other streams which wind their various course,
+ Till in the sea their weary wanderings end,
+ By natural bent directed. Absent sole
+ Was Inachus;--deep in his gloomy cave
+ Dark hidden, with his tears he swells his floods.
+ He, wretched sire, his Ioe's loss bewails;
+ Witless if living air she still enjoys,
+ Or with the shades she dwells; and no where found
+ He dreads the worst, and thinks her not to be.
+ The beauteous damsel from her father's banks
+ Jove saw returning, and, "O, maid!" exclaim'd,
+ "Worthy of Jove, whose charms will shortly bless
+ "Some youth desertless; come, and seek the shade,
+ "Yon lofty groves afford,"--and shew'd the groves,--
+ "While now Sol scorches from heaven's midmost height.
+ "Fear not the forests to explore alone,
+ "But in their deepest shades adventurous go;
+ "A god shall guard thee:--no plebeian god,
+ "But he whose mighty hand the sceptre grasps
+ "Of rule celestial, and the lightening flings.
+ "O fly me not"--for Ioe fled, amaz'd.
+ Now Lerna's pastures, and Lyrcaea's lands
+ With trees thick-planted, far behind were left;
+ When with a sudden mist the god conceal'd
+ The wide-spread earth, and stopp'd her eager flight;
+ And in his arms the struggling maid compress'd.
+ Meantime did Juno cast her eyes below,
+ The floating clouds surpris'd to see produce
+ A night-like shade amidst so bright a day.
+ No common clouds, from streams exhal'd, she knew;
+ Nor misty vapours from the humid earth.
+ Suspicions rise; her sharpness oft had caught
+ Her amorous husband in his thefts of love.
+ She search'd around the sky, its lord explor'd,--
+ But not in heaven he sate;--then loud exclaim'd:
+ "Much must I err, or much my bed is wrong'd."
+ Down sliding from the topmost heaven, on earth
+ She lights, and bids the cloudy mists recede.
+ Prepar'd already, Jove the nymph had chang'd,
+ And in a lovely heifer's form she stood.
+ A shape so beauteous fair,--though sore chagrin'd,
+ Unwilling Juno prais'd; and whence she came,
+ And who her owner asks; and of what herd?
+ Her prying art, as witless of the truth,
+ To baffle, from the earth he feigns her sprung;
+ And straight Saturnia begs the beauteous gift.
+ Embarrass'd now he stands,--the nymph to leave
+ Abandon'd, were too cruel;--to deny
+ His wife, suspicious: shame compliance urg'd;
+ Love strong dissuaded: love had vanquish'd shame,
+ Save that a paltry cow to her refus'd,
+ Associate of his race and bed, he fear'd
+ More than a cow the goddess would suspect.
+ Her rival now she holds; but anxious, still
+ She Jove distrusts, and fears her prize to lose;
+ Nor safe she deem'd her, till to Argus' care
+ Committed. Round the jailor's watchful head
+ An hundred eyes were set. Two clos'd in turn;
+ The rest with watchful care, kept cautious guard.
+ Howe'er he stands, on Ioe still he looks;
+ His face averse, yet still his eyes behold.
+ By day she pastures, but beneath the earth
+ When Phoebus sinks, he drags her to the stall,
+ And binds with cords her undeserving neck.
+ Arbutus' leaves, and bitter herbs her food:
+ Her wretched bed is oft the cold damp earth;
+ A strawy couch deny'd:--the muddy stream
+ Her constant drink: when suppliant she would raise
+ Her arms to Argus, arms to raise were none.
+ To moan she tries; loud bellowings echo wide,--
+ She starts and trembles at her voice's roar.
+ Now to the banks she comes where oft she'd play'd,--
+ The banks of Inachus, and in his streams
+ Her new-form'd horns beheld;--in wild affright
+ From them she strove, and from herself to fly.
+ Her sister Naiads know her not, nor he
+ Griev'd Inachus, his long-lost daughter knows.
+ But she her sisters and her sire pursues;
+ Invites their touch, as wondering they caress.
+ Old Inachus the gather'd herbs presents;
+ She licks his hands, and presses with her lips
+ His dear paternal fingers. Tears flow quick,
+ And could words follow she would ask his aid;
+ And speak her name, and lamentable state.
+ Marks for her words she form'd, which in the dust
+ Trac'd by her hoof, disclos'd her mournful change.
+ "Ah wretch!" her sire exclaim'd, "unhappy wretch!"
+ And o'er the weeping heifer's snowy neck,
+ His arms he threw, and round her horns he hung
+ With sobs redoubled:--"Art thou then, my child,
+ "Through earth's extent so sought? Ah! less my grief,
+ "To find thee not, than thus transform'd to find!
+ "But dumb thou art, nor with responsive words,
+ "Me cheerest. From thy deep chest sighs alone
+ "Thou utterest, and loud lowings to my words:
+ "Thou canst no more. Unwitting I prepar'd
+ "Thy marriage torches, anxious to behold
+ "A son, and next a son of thine to see.
+ "Now from the herd a husband must thou seek,
+ "Now with the herd thy sons must wander forth.
+ "Nor death my woes can finish: curst the gift
+ "Of immortality. Eternal grief
+ "Must still corrode me; Lethe's gate is clos'd."
+ Thus griev'd the god, when starry Argus tore
+ His charge away, and to a distant mead
+ Drove her to pasture;--he a lofty hill's
+ Commanding prospect chose, and seated there
+ View'd all around alike on every side.
+
+ But now heaven's ruler could no more contain,
+ To see the sorrows Ioe felt:--he calls
+ His son, of brightest Pleiaed mother born,
+ And bids him quickly compass Argus' death.
+ Instant around his heels his wings he binds;
+ His rod somniferous grasps; nor leaves his cap.
+ Accoutred thus, from native heights he springs,
+ And lights on earth; removes his cap; his wings
+ Unlooses; and his wand alone retains:
+ Through devious paths with this, a shepherd now,
+ A flock he drives of goats, and tunes his pipe
+ Of reeds constructed. Argus hears the sound,
+ Junonian guard, and captivated cries,--
+ "Come, stranger, sit with me upon this mount:
+ "Nor for thy flock more fertile pasture grows,
+ "Than round this spot;--and here the shade thou seest
+ "To shepherds' ease inviting."--Hermes sate,
+ And with his converse stay'd declining day.
+ Long he discours'd, and anxious strove to lull
+ With music sweet, the all-observant eyes;
+ But long he strove in vain: soft slumber's bonds
+ Argus opposes;--of his numerous lights,
+ Part sleep, but others jealous watch his charge.
+ And now he questions whence the pipe was form'd,
+ The pipe but new-discover'd to the world.
+
+ Then thus the god:--"A lovely Naiaed nymph,
+ "With bleak Arcadia's Hamadryads nurs'd,
+ "And on Nonacrine for beauty fam'd
+ "Was Syrinx. Oft the satyrs wild she fled;
+ "Nor these alone, but every god that roves
+ "In shady forests, or in fertile fields.
+ "Dian' she follows, and her virgin life.
+ "Like Dian' cinctur'd, she might Dian' seem,
+ "Save that a golden bow the goddess bears;
+ "The nymph a bow of horn: yet still to most
+ "Mistake was easy. From Lycaeum's height,
+ "His head encompass'd with the pointed pine,
+ "Returning, her the lustful Pan espy'd,
+ "And cry'd:--Fair virgin grant a god's request,--
+ "A god who burns to wed thee. Here he stays.
+ "Through pathless forests flies the nymph, and scorns
+ "His warm intreaties, till the gravelly stream
+ "Of Ladon, smoothly winding, she beheld.
+ "The waves impede her flight. She earnest prays
+ "Her sister-nymphs her human form to change.
+ "Now thinks the sylvan god his clasping arms
+ "Inclose her, whilst he grasps but marshy reeds.--
+ "He mournful sighs; the light reeds catch his breath,
+ "And soft reverberate the plaintive sound.
+ "The dulcet movement charms th' enraptur'd god,
+ "Who,--thus forever shall we join,--exclaims!
+ "With wax combin'd th' unequal reeds he forms
+ "A pipe, which still the virgin's name retains."
+ While thus the god, he every eye beheld
+ Weigh'd heavy, sink in sleep, and stopp'd his tale.
+ His magic rod o'er every lid he draws,
+ His sleep confirming, and with crooked blade
+ Severs his nodding head, and down the mount
+ The bloody ruin hurls,--the craggy rock
+ With gore besmearing. Low, thou Argus liest!
+ Extinct thy hundred lights; one night obscure
+ Eclipsing all. But Juno seiz'd the rays,
+ And on the plumage of her favor'd bird,
+ In gaudy pride, the starry gems she plac'd.
+
+ With furious ire she flam'd, and instant sent
+ The dread Erinnys to the Argive maid.
+ Before her eyes, within her breast she dwelt
+ A secret torment, and in terror drove
+ Her exil'd through the world. 'Twas thou, O Nile!
+ Her tedious wandering ended. On thy banks
+ Weary'd she kneel'd, and on her back, supine
+ Her neck she lean'd:--her sad face to the skies,
+ What could she more?--she lifted. Unto Jove
+ By groans, and tears, and mournful lows she plain'd,
+ And begg'd her woes might end. The mighty god
+ Around his consort's neck embracing hung.
+ And pray'd her wrath might finish. "Fear no more
+ "A rival love, in her," he said, "to see;"
+ And bade the Stygian streams his words record.
+ Appeas'd the goddess, Ioe straight resumes
+ Her wonted shape, as lovely as before.
+ The rough hair flies; the crooked horns are shed;
+ Her visual orbits narrow; and her mouth
+ In size contracts; her arms and hands return;
+ Parted in five small nails her hoofs are lost:
+ Nought of the lovely heifer now remains,
+ Save the bright splendor. On her feet erect
+ With two now only furnish'd, stands the maid.
+ To speak she fears, lest bellowing sounds should break,
+ And timid tries her long-forgotten words.
+ Of mighty fame a goddess now, she hears
+ Of nations linen-clad the pious prayers.
+
+ Then bore she Epaphus, whose birth deriv'd
+ From mighty Jove, his temples through the land,
+ An equal worship with his mother's claim.
+ Him Phaeton, bright Phoebus' youthful son,
+ In years and spirit equall'd,--whose proud boasts,
+ To all his sire preferring, Ioe's son
+ Thus check'd: "O simple! thee thy mother's arts
+ "To ought persuade. A feigned sire thou boast'st."
+ Deep blush'd the youth, but shame his rage repress'd,
+ And each reproach to Clymene he bore.
+ "This too," he says, "O mother, irks me more,
+ "That I so bold, so fierce, urg'd no defence:
+ "Which shame is greater? that they dare accuse,
+ "Or that accus'd, we cannot prove them false?
+ "Do thou my mother,--if from heaven indeed
+ "Descent I claim,--prove from what stock I spring.
+ "My race divine assert." He said,--and flung
+ Around her neck his arms; and by his life,
+ The life of Merops, and his sisters' hopes
+ Of nuptial bliss, adjures her to obtain
+ Proofs of his birth celestial. Prayers like these
+ The mother doubtless mov'd;--and rage no less
+ To hear the defamation. Up to heaven
+ Her arms she raises, gazing on the sun,
+ And cries,--"My child! by yon bright rays I swear
+ "In brilliance glittering, which now hear and view,
+ "Our every word and action--thou art sprung
+ "From him, the sun thou see'st;--the sun who rules
+ "With tempering sway the seasons:--If untrue
+ "My words, let me his light no more behold!
+ "Nor long the toil to seek thy father's dome,
+ "His palace whence he rises borders close
+ "On our land's confines.--If thou dar'st the task,
+ "Go forth, and from himself thy birth enquire."
+ Elate to hear her words, the youth departs
+ Instant, and all the sky in mind he grasps.
+ Through AEthiopia's regions swiftly went,
+ With India plac'd beneath the burning zone:
+ And quickly reach'd his own paternal east.
+
+
+
+
+*The Second Book.*
+
+
+ Palace of the Sun. Phaeton's reception by his father. His request
+ to drive the chariot. The Sun's useless arguments to dissuade him
+ from the attempt. Description of the car. Cautions how to perform
+ the journey. Terror of Phaeton, and his inability to rule the
+ horses. Conflagration of the world. Petition of Earth to Jupiter,
+ and death of Phaeton by thunder. Grief of Clymene, and of his
+ sisters. Change of the latter to poplars, and their tears to
+ amber. Transformation of Cycnus to a swan. Mourning of Phoebus.
+ Jupiter's descent to earth; and amour with Calistho. Birth of
+ Arcas, and transformation of Calistho to a bear; and afterwards
+ with Arcas to a constellation. Story of Coronis. Tale of the daw
+ to the raven. Change of the raven's color. Esculapius. Ocyrrhoe's
+ prophecies, and transformation to a mare. Apollo's herds stolen
+ by Mercury. Battus' double-dealing, and change to a touchstone.
+ Mercury's love for Herse. Envy. Aglauros changed to a statue.
+ Rape of Europa.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Second Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ By towering columns bright with burnish'd gold,
+ And fiery gems, which blaz'd their light around,
+ Upborne, the palace stood. The lofty roof
+ With ivory smooth incas'd. The folding doors,
+ Of silver shone, but much by sculpture grac'd,
+ For Vulcan there with curious hand had carv'd
+ The ocean girding in the land; the land;
+ And heaven o'ershadowing: here cerulean gods
+ Sport in the waves, grim Triton with his shell;
+ Proteus shape-changing; and AEgeon huge,--
+ His mighty arms upon the large broad backs
+ Of whales hard pressing: Doris and her nymphs:
+ Some sportive swimming; on a rocky seat
+ Some their green tresses drying; others borne
+ By fish swift-gliding: nor the same all seem'd,
+ Yet sister-like a close resembling look
+ Each face pervaded. Earth her natives bore,
+ Mankind;--and woods, and cities, there were seen;
+ Wild beasts, and streams, and nymphs, and rural gods.
+ 'Bove all the bright display of heaven was hung--
+ Six signs celestial o'er each portal grav'd.
+
+ The daring youth, the steep ascent attain'd,
+ O'erstepp'd the threshold of his dubious sire,
+ And hasty rush'd to meet paternal eyes;
+ But sudden stay'd: so fierce a blaze of light
+ No nearer he sustain'd. In purple clad,
+ The god a regal emerald throne upheld;
+ Encircled round by hours which space the day;
+ By days themselves; and ages, months, and years.
+ Crown'd with a flowery garland Spring appear'd:
+ Chaplets of grain the swarthy brows adorn'd
+ Of naked Summer: smear'd with trodden grapes
+ Stood Autumn: icy Winter fill'd the groupe;--
+ Snow-white his shaggy locks. Sol from the midst
+ His eyes all-seeing glanc'd upon the youth,
+ Startled and trembling at the wonderous sight;
+ And cried:--"What brings my Phaeton, my son,
+ "Whose sire shall ne'er disclaim him? tell me now,
+ "What here thou seekest?" Thus the youth replies:--
+ "O father, Phoebus, universal light!
+ "If justly, I thy honor'd name may use,
+ "Nor proudly boasting Clymene conceals
+ "A crime by falshood; grant paternal signs,
+ "The world convincing that from thee I spring;
+ "Reproachful doubts erasing from my mind."
+ He said;--the sire the glittering rays removes
+ That blaz'd around his head,--invites him nigh,
+ And thus embracing:--"Proud I own thee, son,
+ "For all is true by Clymene disclos'd.
+ "If still thou doubtest, name the gift thou lik'st,--
+ "That shalt thou have; for that will I bestow.
+ "Ye streams unseen, which hear celestial oaths
+ "My vows attest!" But scarce had Phoebus spoke,
+ When Phaeton, the fiery car demands,--
+ Demands his sway the winged-footed steeds
+ One day should suffer. Soon the solemn oath
+ Phoebus lamented: three times mournful shook
+ His glorious tresses and in sorrow cry'd--
+ "Would I could yet deny thee!--O my son!
+ "All else with gladness will I hear thee ask;--
+ "List to persuasion,--perseverance sure
+ "Will risk thy ruin. Phaeton, my child!
+ "The task thou seek'st is arduous; far unfit
+ "For those weak arms, and age so immature.
+ "Mortal,--thou would'st a seat immortal press.
+ "Ignorant of grasping more than all the gods
+ "Attempt to manage. Every power we grant
+ "Diverse excels; but I of all the gods,
+ "Have force in that igniferous car to stand.
+ "Ev'n Jove, the ruler of Olympus vast,
+ "Whose right hand terrible fierce lightenings hurls,
+ "This chariot never rul'd: and who than Jove,
+ "More mighty deem we? Steep the first ascent,
+ "The fresh steeds clamber up the height with pain:
+ "High in mid heaven arriv'd, to view beneath
+ "Ocean and earth, oft strikes even me with fear,
+ "And with dread palpitation shakes my breast.
+ "Prerupt the end, and asks a firm restraint;
+ "Tethys herself who nightly me receives,
+ "Beneath the waves, fears oft my headlong fall.
+ "Nor all;--the skies a constant whirling bears
+ "In rapid motion, and the heavenly orbs
+ "Sweep with them swift; I strive the adverse my;
+ "Nor can th' impetuous force which whirls the rest
+ "Bear with them me; I stem the rapid world
+ "With force superior. Grant, the car I yield,--
+ "Could'st thou the swift rotation of the poles
+ "Stem nervous, nor be borne with them along?
+ "Perchance imagination fills thy mind,
+ "With groves, and dwellings of celestial gods,
+ "And temples richly deck'd with offer'd gold,
+ "Where thou shall pass. Far else;--thy journey lies,
+ "Through ambushes, and savage monsters' forms.
+ "Ev'n shouldst thou lucky not erratic stray,
+ "Yet must thou pass the Bull's opposing horns;
+ "The bow Haemonian, by the Centaur bent;
+ "The Lion's countenance grim; the Scorpion's claws
+ "Bent cruel in a circuit large; the Crab
+ "In lesser compass curving. Hard the task
+ "To rule the steeds with those fierce fires inflam'd,
+ "Within their breasts, which through their nostrils glow.
+ "Scarce bear they my control, when mad with heat
+ "Their high necks spurn the rein. But, oh! my son,
+ "Beware lest I a fatal gift bestow.
+ "Retract, while yet thou may'st, thy rash demand.
+ "Sure tokens thou requir'st to prove thee sprung
+ "From me,--the genuine offspring of my blood:
+ "My anxious trembling is a token true;
+ "Paternal terrors plainly prove the sire.
+ "Lo! on my features fix thine eyes; as well,
+ "I would thou could'st them place within my breast,
+ "And view the anguish of a father's cares.
+ "Last throw thy looks around; the riches view,
+ "Whatever earth contains, and some demand;
+ "Some of so many and such mighty gifts:
+ "In heaven, or earth, or sea, 'tis undeny'd.
+ "This only would I grant not, as its grant
+ "Is punishment, not favor. Phaeton
+ "Asks evil for a gift. Why, foolish boy,
+ "Hang on my neck thus coaxing with thine arms?
+ "Whate'er thou would'st, thou shalt. The Stygian streams
+ "Have heard me swear. But make a wiser wish."
+ His admonition ceas'd, but all advice
+ Was bootless: still his resolution holds;
+ To guide the chariot still his bosom burns.
+ The sire, his every effort vain, at length
+ Forth to the lofty car, Vulcanian gift,
+ Brings the rash youth. Of gold the axle shone;
+ The pole of gold; by gold the rolling wheels
+ Were circled; every spoke with silver bright;
+ Upon the seat bright chrysolites display'd,
+ With various jewels shed a dazzling light,
+ From Sol reflected. All the high-soul'd youth
+ Admir'd, and while he curious view'd each part,
+ Behold Aurora from the purple east
+ Wide throws the ruddy portals, and displays
+ The halls with roses strewn: the starry host
+ Fly, driven by Lucifer,--himself the last
+ To quit his heavenly station. Sol beheld
+ The earth and sky grow red, and Luna's horns
+ Blunt, and prepar'd to vanish. Straight he bade
+ The flying hours to yoke the steeds: his words
+ The nimble goddesses obey, and lead
+ The steeds fire-breathing from their lofty stalls,
+ Ambrosia fed, and fix the sounding reins.
+ Then with a sacred ointment Phoebus smear'd
+ The face of Phaeton,--unscorch'd to bear
+ The fervid blaze; and on his head a crown
+ Of rays he fix'd. His smother'd sighs within
+ His anxious breast, sad presages of woe
+ Suppressing, thus he spoke:--"If now my words
+ "Though late, thou heedest, spare, O boy! the lash,
+ "But tightly grasp the reins: unbid they run,
+ "They fly; to check their flight thy labor asks.
+ "Not through the five bright zones thy journey lies:
+ "Obliquely winds the path, with spacious curve,
+ "Three girdles only touching; leaving far
+ "The pole Antarctic, and the northern Bear:
+ "Be this thy track; there plain thou may'st discern
+ "The marks my wheels have made. Since heaven and earth
+ "An equal portion of my influence claim;
+ "Press not the car too low, nor mount aloft
+ "Near topmost heaven: there would'st thou fire the roof
+ "Celestial;--here the earth thou would'st consume.
+ "For safety keep the midst. Let thy right wheel
+ "Approach the tortuous Snake not: nor thy left
+ "Press near the Altar:--hold the midmost course.
+ "Fortune the rest must rule; may she assist
+ "Thy undertaking; for thy safety act
+ "Better than thou. But more delay deny'd,
+ "Lo! whilst I speak the dewy night has touch'd
+ "The boundaries plac'd upon th' Hesperian shore.
+ "I'm call'd,--for, darkness fled, Aurora shines.
+ "Seize then, the reins, or if thy mind relents,
+ "My counsel rather than my chariot take.
+ "Now whilst thou can'st; whilst on a solid base
+ "Thou standest, ere thou yet unskilful mount'st
+ "The chariot ev'lly wish'd: give me to dart
+ "Those rays on earth which thou may'st safely view:"
+ Agile the youth bounds from his sire, and stands
+ Proud in the chariot; joyously he holds
+ Th' entrusted reigns, and from the seat glad thanks
+ Th' unwilling parent gives. Meantime neigh'd loud
+ In curling flames, the winged steeds of Sol,
+ Pyroeis, AEthon, Phlegon, Eous swift;
+ And with impatient hoofs the barrier beat;
+ Which Tethys, ignorant of her grandson's fate,
+ Drove back, and open laid the range of heaven.
+ Swiftly they hasten,--swiftly fly their heels,
+ Through the thin air, and through opposing clouds.
+ Pois'd by their wings the eastern gales they pass,
+ Which started with them: but their burthen light,
+ Small felt the pressure on the chariot seat:
+ Not what the steeds of Sol had felt before.
+ As ships unpois'd reel tottering through the waves,
+ Light and unsteady, rambling o'er the main;
+ So bounds the car, void of its 'custom'd weight,
+ High-toss'd as though unfill'd. This quick perceiv'd,
+ Fierce rush the four-yok'd steeds, and quit the path
+ Beaten before, and tread a road unknown.
+ Trembling the youth nor knows to pull the reins
+ Which side, nor knowing would the steeds obey.
+ Then first the frozen Trioenes from Sol
+ Felt warm, and try'd, but try'd in vain, to dip
+ Beneath the sea. The frozen polar snake,
+ Sluggish with cold, and indolently mild,
+ Warm'd, and dire fierceness gather'd from the flames.
+ Thou too, Booetes, fled'st away disturb'd,
+ Though slow thy flight, retarded by thy teams.
+ And now the luckless Phaeton his eyes
+ Cast on the earth remote,--far distant spread
+ Beneath the lofty sky; pale grew his face
+ With sudden terror; trembled his weak knees;
+ O'ercome with light his eyes in darkness sunk:
+ Glad were he now, his father's steeds untouch'd:
+ Griev'd that his race he knows; griev'd his request
+ Was undeny'd: glad were he now if call'd
+ The son of Merops. Ev'n as Boreas sweeps
+ Furious the vessel, when the pilot leaves
+ The helm to heaven, and puts his trust in prayers
+ So was he hurry'd. What remains to do?
+ Vast space of heaven behind him lies;--much more
+ He forward views. Each distance in his mind
+ Compar'd he measures. Now he forward bends
+ To view the west, forbidden him to reach;
+ Now to the east he backward turns his eyes.
+ With terror stunn'd his trembling hands refuse
+ To hold the reins with vigor; yet he holds.
+ The coursers' names, affrighted he forgets:
+ Trembling he views the various monsters spread
+ Through every part above; and figures huge
+ Of beasts ferocious. Heaven a spot contains,
+ Where Scorpio bends in two wide bows his arms,
+ His tail, and doubly-stretching claws;--the space
+ Encompassing of two celestial signs.
+ Soon as the youth the monstrous beast beheld,
+ Black poison sweating, and with crooked sting
+ Threatening fierce wounds, he nerveless dropp'd the reins:
+ Pale dread o'ercame him. Quick the steeds perceiv'd
+ The loose thongs playing on their backs, and rush'd
+ Wide from the path, uncheck'd;--through regions strange,
+ Now here, now there, impetuous;--unrestrain'd,
+ Amidst the loftiest stars they dash, and drag
+ The car through pathless places: upward now
+ They labor;--headlong now they down descend,
+ Nearing the earth. With wonder Luna sees
+ Her brother's coursers run beneath her own;
+ And sees the burnt clouds smoking. Lofty points
+ Of earth, feel first the flames, and fissures wide,
+ Departing moisture prove. The forage green,
+ Whitens; trees crackle with their burning leaves;
+ And ripe corn adds its fuel to the blaze.
+ Why mourn we trifles? Mighty cities fall;
+ Their walls protect them not; their dwellers sink
+ To ashes with them. Woods on mountains flame;--
+ Athos, Cilician Taurus, Tmolus, burn;
+ Oete, and Ide, her pleasant fountains dry;
+ With virgin Helicon, and Haemus high,
+ OEagrius since. Now with redoubled flames
+ Fierce Etna blazes;--Eryx, Othrys too;
+ Cynthus, and fam'd Parnassus' double top,
+ And Rhodope, at length of snow depriv'd:
+ Dindyma, Mimas, and the sacred hill
+ Cythaeron nam'd, and lofty Mycale:
+ Nor aid their snows the Scythians: Ossa burns,
+ Pindus, and Caucasus, and, loftier still,
+ The huge Olympus; with the towering Alps;
+ And cloud-capt Apennines. Now the youth,
+ Beholds earth flaming fierce from every part;--
+ The heat o'erpowers him; fiery air he breathes
+ As from a furnace; and the car he rides
+ Glows with the flame beneath him: sore annoy'd
+ On every side by cinders, and by smoke
+ Hot curling round him. Whither now he drives,
+ Or where he is, he knows not; in a cloud
+ Of pitchy night involv'd; swept as the steeds
+ Swift-flying will. The AEthiopians then,
+ 'Tis said, their sable tincture first receiv'd;
+ Their purple blood the glowing heat call'd forth
+ To tinge their skins. Then dry'd the scorching fire
+ From arid Lybia all her fertile streams.
+ Now with dishevell'd locks the nymphs bewail'd
+ Their fountains and their lakes. Boeotia mourns
+ The loss of Dirce: Argos Amymone:
+ Corinth laments Pirene. Nor yet safe
+ Were rivers bounded by far distant shores,
+ Tanais' midmost waves fume to the sky;
+ And ancient Peneus smokes: Ismenos swift;
+ Caicus, Teuthrantean; and the flood
+ Of Phocis, Erymanthus: Xanthus too,
+ Doom'd to be fir'd again: Lycormas brown;
+ Maeander's sportive oft recircling waves;
+ Mygdonian Melas; and the Spartan flood,
+ Eurotas; with Euphrates burn: and burn,
+ Orontes; and the rapid Thermodoon;
+ Ganges; and Phasis; and the Ister swift.
+ Alpheus boils; the banks of Spercheus burn;
+ And Tagus' golden sands the flames dissolve.
+ Stream-loving swans, whose song melodious rung
+ Throughout Maeonian regions, feel the heat,
+ Caister's streams amid. In terror Nile
+ Fled to the farthest earth, and sunk his head,
+ Yet undiscover'd!--void the seven-fold stream,
+ His mouth seven dry and dusty vales disclos'd.
+ Now Hebrus dries, and Strymon, Thracian floods:
+ And streams Hesperian, Rhine; and Rhone; and Po;
+ And Tiber, destin'd all the world to rule.
+ Asunder split the globe, and through the chinks
+ Darted the light to hell: the novel blaze,
+ Pluto and Proserpine with terror view'd.
+ The ocean shrinks;--a dry and scorching plain
+ Where late was sea appears. Hills lift their heads
+ Late by the deep waves hid, and countless seem
+ The scatter'd Cyclades. Deep crouch the fish;--
+ The crooked dolphins dare not leap aloft,
+ As, custom'd in the air; with breasts upturn'd
+ The gasping sea-calves float upon the waves:
+ Nereus, with Doris and her daughter-nymphs
+ Deep plung'd to seek their low, but tepid caves.
+ Thrice Neptune ventur'd to upraise his arms
+ Grim frowning,--thrice the flames too fierce he found,
+ And shrunk beneath the waters. Earth at length,
+ (By streams and founts encircled,--for her womb
+ Trembling they sought for refuge) rais'd on high
+ Her face omniferous, dry and parch'd with heat;
+ Her burning forehead shaded with her hand;
+ Shook all with tremor huge; then shrank for shade
+ Beneath, and gasping, thus to heaven she plain'd:
+
+ "Almighty lord! if such thy sovereign will,
+ "And I deserve it, why thy lightenings hold
+ "Thus idle? If by fire to perish doom'd,--
+ "Be it by thine,--an honorable fate!
+ "Scarce can my lips now utter forth my pains!--
+ Volumes of smoke oppress'd her--"See, my hair
+ "Sing'd with the flames! Behold my face,--my eyes,
+ "Scorch'd with hot embers! Is no better boon
+ "Due for the fruits I furnish? Such reward,
+ "Suits it my fertile crops? or cruel wounds
+ "Of harrow, rake, and plough, which through the year
+ "Enforc'd I suffer? For the herds I bring
+ "Green herbs and grass; bland aliments, ripe fruit
+ "For man; and incense for ye mighty gods:
+ "Faulty is this? But grant thy wrath deserv'd,
+ "How do the waves, thy brother's realm offend?
+ "Why does the main, to him by lot decreed,
+ "Shrink and retreat from heaven? Thy brother's weal,
+ "Say it concerns thee not, nor my distress;
+ "Care for thy own paternal heaven may move.
+ "Thine eyes cast round,--black smoke from either pole
+ "Mounts!--soon the greedy flames your halls will seize.
+ "Lo! Atlas labors;--scarcely he sustains
+ "The burning load. If earth and ocean flame,
+ "And heaven too perish, all to chaoes turn'd,
+ "Confounded we shall sink. Snatch from the flames
+ "What yet, if ought, remains, and nature save."
+ No more could Earth, for now thick vapors rose,
+ Her speech obstructing; down she shrunk her head,
+ And shelter'd 'midst the cool Tartarian shades.
+
+ Now Jove, the gods, all witness to the fact
+ Conven'd; ev'n Sol, the donor of the car,
+ That but for him the world in ruins soon
+ Would lie. The loftiest height of heaven he gains,
+ Whence clouds he wont upon the wide-spread earth
+ To shower;--from whence his thunders loud he hurl'd;
+ And quivering lightenings flung: but now nor clouds,
+ Nor showers to rain on earth the sovereign had.
+ He thunders;--from his right-ear pois'd, the bolt
+ Hurls on the charioteer. Life, and the car,
+ Phaeton quits at once;--his fatal fires,
+ By fires more fierce extinguish'd. Startled prance
+ The steeds confounded; free their fiery necks
+ From the torn reins: here lie the traces broke;
+ There the strong axle, sever'd from the seat;
+ Spokes of the shatter'd wheels are here display'd;
+ And scatter'd far and wide the car's remains.
+ Hurl'd headlong falls the youth, his golden locks,
+ Flame as he tumbles, swept through empty air,
+ A lengthen'd track he forms: so seems a star
+ In night serene, but only seems, to shoot.
+ Far from paternal home, the mighty Po
+ Receiv'd his burning corps, and quench'd the flames.
+
+ Due rites the nymphs Hesperian gave the limbs
+ From the fork'd lightening flaming. On his tomb
+ This epitaph they grav'd: "Here Phaeton
+ "Intombed rests; the charioteer so bold,
+ "Of Phoebus' car, which though he fail'd to rule,
+ "He perish'd greatly daring." Griev'd his sire,
+ Veil'd his sad face; and, were tradition true,
+ One day saw not the sun; the embers blaz'd
+ Sufficient light: thus may misfortune aid.
+
+ When Clymene with all that sorrow could
+ To ease her woes give utterance, loud had wail'd
+ In wild lament; all spark of reason fled,
+ Her bosom tearing, through the world she roam'd.
+ And now his limbs inanimate she sought;
+ Then for his whiten'd bones: his bones she found,
+ On banks far distant from his home inhum'd.
+ Prone on his tomb her form she flung, and pour'd
+ Her tears in floods upon the graven lines:
+ And with her bosom bar'd, the cold stone warm'd.
+ His sisters' love their fruitless offerings bring,
+ Their griefs and briny droppings; cruel tear
+ Their beauteous bosoms; while they loudly call
+ Phaeton, deaf to all their mournful cries.
+ Stretch'd on his tomb, by night, by day they call'd.
+ Till Luna's circle four times fill'd was seen;
+ Their blows still given as 'custom'd, (use had made
+ Their forms of grief as nature). Sudden plain'd
+ Fair Phaethusa, eldest of the three,
+ Of stiffen'd feet; as on the tomb she strove
+ To cast her body prone. Lampetie bright,
+ Rushing in hope to aid, a shooting root
+ Abruptly held. With lifted hands the third
+ Her locks to tear attempted; but green leaves
+ Tore off instead. Now this laments her legs,
+ Bound with thin bark; that mourns to see her arms
+ Shoot in long branches. While they wonder thus,
+ Th' increasing bark their bodies upward veils,
+ Their breasts, their arms, and hands, with gradual growth:
+ Their mouths alone remain; which loudly call
+ Their mother. What a mother could, she did:
+ What could she do? save, here and there to fly,
+ Where blind affection dragg'd her; and while yet,
+ 'Twas given to join, join with them mouth to mouth.
+ Nor this contents; she strives to tear the rind,
+ Their limbs enwrapping; and the tender boughs
+ Pluck from their hands: but from the rended spot
+ The sanguine drops flow swift. Each suffering nymph
+ Cries,--"Spare me, mother!--spare your wounded child;
+ "I suffer in the tree.--farewell!--farewell!"--
+ For as they spoke the rind their mouths inclos'd.
+ From these new branches tears were dropp'd, and shap'd
+ By solar heat, bright amber straight compos'd.
+ Dropt in the lucid stream, the prize was borne
+ To Latium, and its gayest nymphs adorn'd.
+
+ This wonderous change Sthenelian Cycnus saw;
+ To thee, O Phaeton, by kindred join'd,
+ But by affection closer. He his realms,
+ (For o'er Liguria's large and populous towns
+ He reign'd) had then relinquish'd. With his plaints,
+ The Po's wide stream was fill'd; and fill'd the banks
+ With his lamentings; ev'n the woods, whose shade
+ The sister poplars thicken'd. Soon he feels
+ His utterance shrill and weak: his streaming locks
+ Soft snowy plumes displace: high from his chest,
+ His lengthen'd neck extends: a filmy web
+ Unites his ruddy toes: his sides are cloth'd
+ With quills and feathers: where his mouth was seen
+ Expanded, now a blunted beak obtains;
+ And Cycnus stands a bird;--but bird unknown
+ In days of yore. Mistrustful still of Jove,
+ His heaven he shuns; as mindful of the flames
+ From thence unjustly hurl'd. Wide lakes and ponds
+ He seeks to habit now;--indignant shuns
+ What favors fire, and joys in purling streams.
+
+ Meantime was Phoebus dull, his blaze obscur'd,
+ As when eclips'd his orb: his rays he hates;
+ Himself; and even the day. To grief his soul
+ He gives, and anger to his grief he joins;
+ Depriving earth of all its wonted light.
+ "Troubled my lot has been," he cry'd, "since first
+ "Was publish'd my existence:--urg'd my toil
+ "Endless,--still unremitted, still unprais'd.
+ "Now let who will my furious chariot drive
+ "Flammiferous! If every god shall shrink
+ "Inadequate,--let Jove the task attempt:
+ "Then while my reins he tries, at least those flames,
+ "Which cause parental grief must peaceful rest.
+ "Then when the fiery flaming coursers strain
+ "His nervous arms, no more he'll judge the youth
+ "Of death deserving, who could less control."
+ Sol, grieving thus, the deities surround,
+ And suppliant beg that earth may mourn no more,
+ By darkness 'whelm'd. Ev'n Jove concession gave,--
+ And why his fiery bolts were launch'd explain'd;
+ But threats and prayers majestically mix'd.
+ The steeds with terror trembling, Phoebus seiz'd,
+ Wild from their late affright, and rein'd their jaws;
+ Furious he wields his goad and lash, and fierce
+ He storms, and their impetuous fury blames
+ At every blow, as murderers of his son.
+
+ High heaven's huge walls the mighty sire explores,
+ With eye close searching, lest a weakening flaw,
+ Might hurl some part to ruin. All he found
+ Firm in its pristine strength;--then glanc'd his eye
+ Around the earth, and toils of man below.
+ 'Bove all terrestrial lands, Arcadia felt--
+ His own Arcadia--his preserving care.
+ Her fountains he restores; her streams not yet
+ To murmur daring; to her fields he gives
+ Seed-corn; and foliage to her spreading boughs;
+ And her scorch'd forests bids again look green.
+ Through here as oft he journey'd, and return'd,
+ A virgin of Nonacrine he spy'd,
+ And instant inward fire the god consum'd.
+ No nymph was she whose skill the wool prepar'd;
+ Nor comb'd with art her tresses seem'd; full plain,
+ Her vest a button held; a fillet white
+ Careless her hair confin'd. Now pois'd her hand
+ A javelin light, and now a bow she bore:
+ In Dian's train she ran, nor nymph more dear
+ To her the mountain Maenalus e'er trode.
+ But brief the reign of favor! Sol had now
+ Beyond mid-heaven attain'd; Calistho sought
+ A grove where felling axe had never rung:
+ Here was her quiver from her shoulder thrown;
+ Her slender bow unstrung; and on the ground
+ With soft grass clad she rested: 'neath her neck
+ Was plac'd the painted quiver. Jove, the maid
+ Weary'd beheld, and from her wonted troop
+ Far distant. "Surely now, my wife," he cries,
+ "This theft can ne'er discover. Should she know,
+ "What is her rage with such a prize compar'd?"
+ Then Dian's face and form the god conceal'd;
+ Loud calling,--"Where, O virgin, hast thou stray'd?
+ "What hills, my comrade, hast thou crost in chase?"
+ Light springing from the turf, the nymph reply'd,--
+ "Hail goddess, greater, if with me the palm,
+ "Than Jove himself, though Jove himself should hear."
+ The feign'd Diana smil'd, and joy'd to hear
+ Him to himself preferr'd; then press'd her lips
+ With kisses, such as virgins never give
+ To virgins. Her, prepar'd to tell the woods
+ Where late she hunted, with a warm embrace
+ He hinder'd; and his crime the god disclos'd.
+ Hard strove the nymph,--and what could female more?
+ (O Juno, hadst thou seen her, less thy ire!)
+ Long she resists, but what can nymph attain,
+ Or any mortal, when to Jove oppos'd?
+ Victor the god ascends th' ethereal court.
+
+ The groves and forests, conscious of the deed,
+ Calistho hates; so swift she flies the spot,
+ Her quiver, and her darts, and slender bow
+ Suspended on the tree, through eager haste
+ Were nigh forgotten. Lo! Diana comes,
+ By clustering nymphs attended, o'er the hills
+ Of lofty Maenalus, from slaughter'd beasts,
+ Proudly triumphant. She Calistho sees,
+ And calls her;--as the goddess calls she flies,
+ Fearing another Jove disguis'd to meet.
+ But when th' attendant virgin-troop appear'd,
+ Fraud she no more suspected, but the train
+ Join'd fearless. Hard the countenance to form,
+ And not betray a perpetrated crime!
+ Scarce from the ground she dar'd her looks to raise;
+ Nor with her wonted ardor press'd before,
+ First of the throng, close to Diana's side.
+ Silent she moves; her blushes prove a wound
+ Her modesty had felt. E'en Dian' might,
+ (But that a virgin,) all the truth have known.
+ By numerous proofs and strong. Nay, fame reports
+ Her sister-nymphs had long her shame perceiv'd.
+ Nine times had Luna now her orb renew'd,
+ When Dian' from the chase retreating faint
+ By Phoebus' rays, had gain'd a forest cool,
+ Where flow'd a limpid stream with murmuring noise,
+ The shining sand upturning. Much the spot
+ The goddess tempted, and her feet she dipp'd
+ Light in the waves, as to the nymphs she cry'd:--
+ "Hence far each prying eye, we'll dare unrobe
+ "And lave beneath the stream." Calistho blush'd;--
+ Quick while the other nymphs their bodies bare,
+ Protracting she undresses. From her limbs,
+ Suspicious they the garments rend, and view
+ Her body naked, and her fault is plain.
+ To her, confus'd, whose trembling hands essay'd
+ Her shame to hide, Diana spoke;--"Hence fly,--
+ "Far hence, nor more these sacred streams pollute."
+ And drove her instant from her spotless train.
+
+ Long time the mighty thunderer's queen had known
+ Calistho's state; but curb'd her furious ire
+ Till ripe occasion suited: longer now
+ Delay were needless; now the nymph produc'd
+ Arcas; whom Juno more enrag'd beheld.
+ With savage mind, and furious look she ey'd
+ The boy, and spoke;--"Adulteress! this alone
+ "Was wanting! fruitful, harlot, hast thou prov'd?
+ "Must by this birth my wrongs in public glare?
+ "And what dishonor I from Jove receive
+ "Be palpable to sight. Expect not thou
+ "Impunity to find. Thy form I'll change,--
+ "To thee so pleasing, and so dear to Jove."
+ She said; and on the flowing tresses seiz'd
+ Which o'er her forehead stream'd, and prostrate dragg'd
+ The nymph to earth. She rais'd her suppliant hands,--
+ With black hairs cover'd, rough her arms appear'd;
+ Bent were her hands, and, with her lengthen'd nails
+ To claws transform'd, press'd on the ground as feet;
+ Her mouth so beauteous, late of Jove admir'd,
+ Yawn'd wide deformity;--and lest soft prayers
+ And flowing words, might pity move, no power
+ To speak she left. Now through her hoarse throat sounds
+ An angry threatening voice that fear instills;
+ A bear becoming, though her sense the same:
+ Her sufferings proving by her constant groans.
+ Lifting to heaven such hands as lift she could,
+ Jove she ungrateful found, but Jove to call
+ Ungrateful, strove in vain. Alas! how oft
+ In woods and solitudes, to sleep afraid,
+ She roam'd around the house and fertile fields
+ Of late her own!---Alas, how oft thence driven
+ By yelping hounds o'er craggy steeps she fled!
+ Thou dread'st the hunters though an huntress thou!
+ Oft was her form forgotten, and in fear
+ From beasts she crouch'd conceal'd: the shaggy bear
+ Shudder'd to see the bears upon the hills;
+ And at the wolves she trembled, though with wolves
+ Her sire Lycaoen howl'd. Now Arcas comes;
+ Arcas, her son, unconscious of his race.
+ Near fifteen suns the youth had seen revolv'd;
+ And while the game he chases, while he seeks
+ Thickets best suited for his sports, and round
+ The Erymanthean woods his toils he sets,
+ He meets his mother:--at his sight she stay'd,
+ The well-known object viewing. Arcas fled
+ Trembling, unconscious why those eyes were fix'd
+ On him immoveably. His spear, prepar'd
+ To pierce his mother's breast, as near she draws
+ The youth protends. But Jove the deed prevents:
+ Both bears away, and stays the matricide.
+ Swept through the void of heaven by rapid whirl
+ They're borne, and neighbouring constellations made,
+ Loud Juno rag'd, to see the harlot shine,
+ Amid the stars; and 'neath the deep descends,
+ To hoary Tethys, and her ancient spouse;
+ Where reverence oft the host of heaven had shewn.
+ And thus to them, who anxious seek the cause,
+ Why there she journeys. "Wish ye then to know
+ "Why I the queen of heaven, my regal seat
+ "Now leave? Another fills my lofty throne!
+ "Nor false I speak,--for when gray night shall spread
+ "O'er all,--new constellations shall you see
+ "Me irking,--on the utmost bounds of heaven,
+ "Where the last shorten'd zone the axis binds.
+ "Now surely none, t' insult shall rashly dare
+ "The thunderer's spouse, but tremble at her frown;
+ "For she who most offends is honor'd most!
+ "Much has my power perform'd!--vast is my sway!
+ "Her human form I chang'd,--and lo! she shines
+ "A goddess;--thus the guilty feel my ire!
+ "Thus potent I. Why not her form restore,
+ "And change that beastly shape, as Ioe once
+ "In Argolis, the same indulgence felt.
+ "Why drives he not his consort from his bed,
+ "Calistho placing there;--for sire-in-law
+ "The wolf Lycaoen chusing? If to you
+ "Your foster-daughter's insults ought import,
+ "Forbid these stars to touch the blue profound:
+ "Repel those constellations, plac'd in heaven,
+ "Meed of adultery; lest the harlot dip
+ "In your pure waves."--The gods their promise gave
+ And through the liquid air Saturnia flies,
+ Borne in her chariot by her peacocks bright;
+ Their coats gay studded from fall'n Argus' eyes.
+
+ Less beauteous was the change, loquacious crow,
+ Thy plumage suffer'd,--snowy white to black.
+ With silvery brightness once his feathers shone;
+ Unspotted doves outvying; nor to those
+ Preserving birds the capital whose voice
+ So watchful sav'd;--nor to the stream-fond swans,
+ Inferior seem'd his covering: but his tongue,
+ His babbling tongue his ruin wrought; and chang'd
+ His hue from splendid white to gloomy black.
+
+ No fairer maid all Thessaly contain'd,
+ Than young Coronis,--to the Delphic god
+ Most dear while chaste, or while her fault unknown.
+ But Corvus, Phoebus' watchman, spy'd the deed
+ Adulterous;--and inexorably bent
+ To tell the secret crime, his flight directs
+ To seek his master. Him the daw pursues,
+ On plumes quick waving, curious all to learn.
+ His errand heard, she cries;--"Thy anxious task,
+ "A journey vain, pursue not: mark my words;--
+ "Learn what I have been;--see what now I am;
+ "And hear from whence my change: a fault you'll find
+ "Too much fidelity, which wrought my woe.
+
+ "Time was, when Pallas, Ericthonius took,
+ "Offspring created motherless, and close
+ "In basket twin'd with Attic twigs conceal'd.
+ "The charge to keep, three sister-maids she chose,
+ "Daughters of Cecrops double-form'd, but close,
+ "Conceal'd what lodg'd within; and strict forbade
+ "All prying, that her secret safe might rest.
+ "On a thick elm, behind light leaves conceal'd,
+ "I mark'd their actions. Two their sacred charge
+ "Hold faithful; Pandrosos, and Herse they:
+ "Aglauros calls her sisters cowards weak;
+ "The twistings with bold hand unloosening, sees
+ "Within an infant, and a dragon stretch'd.
+ "The deed I tell to Pallas, and from her
+ "My service this remuneration finds:
+ "Driven from her presence, she my place supplies
+ "Of favorite with the gloomy bird of night.
+ "All other birds my fate severe may warn,
+ "To seek not danger by officious tales.
+ "Pallas, perhaps you think, but lightly lov'd
+ "One whom she thus so suddenly disgrac'd.
+ "But ask of Pallas;--she, though much enrag'd
+ "Will yet my truth confirm. A regal maid
+ "Was I,--of facts to all well-known I speak:
+ "Coroneus noble, of the Phocian lands
+ "As sire I claim. Me wealthy suitors sought--
+ "Contemn me not,--my beauty was my bane.
+ "While careless on the sandy shore I roam'd,
+ "With gentle pace as wont, the ocean's god
+ "Saw me and lov'd: persuasive words in vain
+ "Long trying, force prepar'd, and me pursu'd.
+ "I fled; the firm shore left, and tir'd my limbs
+ "Vainly, upon the light soft sinking sand.
+ "There to assist me men and gods I call'd;
+ "Deaf to the sound was every mortal ear:
+ "But by a virgin's cries a virgin mov'd,
+ "Assistance gave. Up to the skies my arms
+ "I stretch'd; and black my arms began to grow,
+ "With waving pinions. From my shoulders, back
+ "My robes I strove to fling,--my robes were plumes;
+ "Deep in my skin the quills were fix'd: I try'd
+ "On my bare bosom with my hands to beat;
+ "Nor hands nor naked bosom now were found:
+ "I ran; the sand no longer now retain'd
+ "My feet, but lightly o'er the ground I skimm'd;
+ "And soon on pinions through the air was borne;
+ "And Pallas' faultless favorite I became.
+ "What now avail to me my pure deserts?
+ "Nyctimene, whose horrid crime deserv'd
+ "Her transformation, to my place succeeds.
+ "The deed so wide through spacious Lesbos known,
+ "Ere this has reach'd thee;--how Nyctimene--
+ "Her father's bed defil'd,--a bird became.
+ "Conscious of guilt, she shuns the sight of man;
+ "Flies from the day, and in nocturnal shades
+ "Conceals her shame; by every bird assail'd
+ "And exil'd from the skies." The crow in rage
+ To her still chattering, cry'd;--"May each delay
+ "Thy babbling causes, prove to thee a curse.
+ "I scorn thy foolish presages,"--and flew
+ His journey urging. When his master found,
+ He told him where Coronis he had seen
+ Claspt by a young Thessalian. Down he dropp'd
+ His laurel garland, when the crime he heard
+ Of her he lov'd;--his harp away he flung;
+ His countenance fell, and pale his visage grew.
+ Now with fierce rage his swelling bosom fires;
+ His wonted arms he seizes; draws his bow,
+ Bent to the horns; and through that breast so oft
+ Embrac'd,--th' inevitable weapon drove.
+ Deep groan'd the wounded nymph, and tearing out
+ The arrow from her breast, a purple flood
+ Gush'd o'er her shining limbs. She sighing cry'd,--
+ "This fate, O Phoebus, I deserv'dly meet,
+ "Were but thy infant born;--two now in one
+ "Thy dart has slain!"--She spoke,--her vital blood
+ Fast flow'd, and stay'd her voice. A deadly chill
+ Seiz'd all her members, now of life bereft.
+ Too late, alas! her sorrowing lover mourns
+ His cruel vengeance; and himself he hates,
+ Too credulous listening, and too soon enflam'd:
+ The bird he hates, who first betray'd the deed
+ And caus'd him first to grieve: his bow he hates;
+ His bowstring; arm; and with his arm the dart,
+ Shot vengeful. Fond he clasps her fallen form;
+ And strives by skill, by skill too late apply'd
+ To conquer fate:--his healing arts he tries,--
+ All unavailing. Fruitless he beholds
+ His each attempt, and sees the pile prepar'd;
+ And final flames her limbs about to burn.
+ Then from his deepest bosom burst his groans;
+ (For tears on cheeks celestial ne'er are seen,)
+ Such groans are utter'd when the heifer sees,
+ The weighty mallet, from the right ear pois'd,
+ Crush down the forehead of her suckling calf.
+ And now his useless odors in her breast
+ He pour'd; embrac'd her; to her last rites gave
+ Solemnization due. The greedy fires
+ His offspring were not suffer'd to consume.
+ Snatch'd from the curling flames, and from the womb
+ Of his dead mother, he the infant bore
+ To double-body'd Chiron's secret cave.
+ But bade the self-applauding crow, fill'd big
+ With hopes of favor for his faithful tale,
+ With snowy-plumag'd birds no more to join.
+
+ Meantime while Chiron, human half, half beast,
+ Proud of his deity-descended charge,
+ Joy'd in the honor with the task bestow'd:--
+ Behold, her shoulders with her golden locks
+ Shaded, the daughter of the Centaur comes;
+ Whom fair Chariclo, on a river's brink
+ Swift-rolling, bore, and thence Ocyrrhoe nam'd.
+ She not content her father's arts to know,
+ The hidden secrets of the fates disclos'd.
+ Now was her soul with fate-foretelling sounds
+ Fill'd, and within her fiercely rag'd the god:
+ The infant viewing;--"Grow," she said, "apace,
+ "Health-bearer through the world. To thee shall oft
+ "Expiring mortals owe returning life!
+ "To thee 'tis given to render souls again
+ "Back to their bodies! Once thou'lt dare the deed;--
+ "The angry god's forbidding flames, thy power
+ "Further preventing:--and a bloodless corps
+ "Heaven-born, thou ly'st;---but what thy body form'd
+ "A god becomes,--resuscitated twice.
+ "Thou too, my dearest and immortal sire!
+ "To ages never-ending, born to live,
+ "Shalt wish for death in vain; when writhing sad
+ "From the dire serpent's venom in thy limbs,
+ "By wounds instill'd. The pitying gods will change
+ "Thy destin'd fate, and let immortal die:
+ "The triple sisters shall thy thread divide.
+ "More yet untold remains;"--Deep from her chest
+ The sighs burst forth, and starting tears stream down,
+ Laving her cheeks, while thus the maid pursues:
+ "The fates prevent me, and forbid to tell
+ "What more I would;--all power to speak deny.
+ "Those arts, alas! heaven's anger which have drawn,--
+ "What were they? Would I ne'er the future knew!
+ "Now seems my human shape to leave me. Now
+ "The verdant grass a pleasing food appears.
+ "Now am I urg'd along the plain to bound;
+ "Chang'd to a mare: unto my sire ally'd
+ "In form,--but why sole chang'd? my father bears
+ "A two-form'd body;"--Wailing thus, her words
+ Confus'd and indistinct at length are heard.
+ Next sounds are utter'd partly human, more
+ A mare's resembling:--then she neighs aloud;
+ Treading with alter'd arms the ground: fast join'd
+ Her fingers now become: a slender hoof
+ Her toes connecting with continuous horn.
+ Her head enlarges; and her neck expands;
+ Her spreading garment floats a beauteous tail:
+ Her scatter'd tresses o'er her shoulders flung,
+ Form a thick mane to clothe her spacious neck:
+ Her voice is alter'd with her alter'd shape:
+ And change of name the wonderous deed attends.
+
+ Deep Chiron mourn'd, O Phoebus, and thy aid
+ In vain invok'd; for bootless was thy power
+ Jove's mandate to resist; nor if thou could'st
+ Then wast thou nigh to help. In Elis far,
+ And fields Messenian then was thy abode.
+ Then was the time when shepherd-like a robe
+ Of skins enwrapp'd thee;--when thy left hand bore
+ A sylvan staff;--thy right a pipe retain'd,
+ Of seven unequal reeds. While love engag'd
+ Thy thoughts, and dulcet music sooth'd thy cares,
+ 'Tis said, thy herds without their herdsman stray'd,
+ Far to the Pylian meadows. These the son
+ Of Atlantean Maiae espy'd;
+ And, slily driven away, within the woods
+ The cattle artful hid. None saw the deed,
+ Save one old hoary swain, well known around,
+ And Battus nam'd; whose post it was to guard
+ The groves, the grassy meads, and high-bred mares
+ Of wealthy Neleus. Him the robber fear'd;
+ Drew him aside, and coaxing thus address'd;--
+ "Whoe'er thou art, good friend, if here perchance,
+ "Someone should seek an herd,--say that thou here
+ "No herd hast seen;--thou shall not lack reward:
+ "Take this bright heifer:"--and the cow he gave.
+ The bribe receiv'd, the shepherd thus replies;
+ "Friend, thou art safe,--that stone shall sooner speak
+ "And tell thy deed than I:"--and shew'd the stone.
+ The son of Jove departs, or seems to go;
+ But soon with alter'd form and voice returns.
+ "Here, countryman," he cries, "hast thou an herd
+ "This way observ'd to pass?--no secret keep,
+ "To aid the theft; an heifer with a bull
+ "Await thy information." Doubly brib'd,
+ The hoary rogue betray'd his former trust.
+ "Beneath those hills," he said, "the herd you'll find."
+ Beneath the hills they were. Loud laugh'd the god
+ And cry'd,--"Thou treacherous villain, to myself
+ "Wouldst thou betray me? wouldst thou to myself
+ "My deeds betray?" And to a flinty stone
+ His perjur'd breast he chang'd, which still retains
+ The name of Touchstone;--on the harmless rock
+ His infamous demerits firmly fix'd.
+
+ Hermes from hence, on waving wings upborne
+ Darted, and in his flight beneath him saw
+ The Attic pastures,--the much-favor'd land
+ Of Pallas; and Lyceum's cultur'd groves.
+ It chanc'd that day, as wont, the virgins chaste,
+ Bore on their heads in canisters festoon'd,
+ Their offerings pure to Pallas' sacred fane.
+ Returning thence the winged god espy'd
+ The troop, and straight his onward flight restrain'd;
+ Wheeling in circles round. As sails the kite,
+ Swiftest of birds, when entrails seen from far
+ By holy augurs thick beset,--he fears
+ A near approach, but circling steers his flight
+ On beating wings, around his hopes and round.
+ So 'bove the Athenian towers the light-plum'd god
+ Swept round in circles on the self-same air.
+ As Phosphor far outshines the starry host;
+ As silver Cynthia Phosphor bright outshines;
+ So much did Herse all the nymphs excel,
+ The bright procession's ornament; the pride
+ Of all th' accompanying nymphs. Her beauteous mien
+ Stagger'd Jove's son, who hovering in the air
+ Fierce burns with love. The Balearic sling,
+ Thus shoots a ball; quick through the air it flies,
+ Warms in its flight, and feels beneath the clouds
+ Flames hereto known not. Alter'd now his route
+ The skies he leaves, and holds a different flight:
+ Nor veils his figure,--such reliance gave
+ His beauteous form: and beauteous though that form,
+ Yet careful did the god his looks adorn;
+ He smoothes his tresses, and his robe adjusts
+ To hang in graceful folds, and fair display
+ The golden fringe; his round and slender wand,
+ Of sleep-procuring, sleep-repelling power,
+ His right hand bears; and on his comely feet
+ His plumed sandals shine. Within the house
+ Three separate chambers were secluded form'd,
+ With tortoise and with ivory rich adorn'd.
+ Thou, Pandrosos, within the right repos'd;
+ And on the left hand thou Aglauros, slept;
+ Fair Herse in the midst. Aglauros first
+ The god's approach descry'd, and daring ask'd
+ Who he?--and what he sought?--To whom the god;
+ "Him you behold, who through the air conveys
+ "His sire's commands: Almighty Jove that sire.
+ "Nor will I feign my errand. So may'st thou
+ "True to thy sister prove, and soon be call'd
+ "My offspring's aunt. 'Tis Herse draws me here.
+ "Help then a lover in his warm pursuit."
+ Aglauros bends on Mercury those eyes,
+ Which yellow-hair'd Minerva's secret saw;
+ And ponderous sums for her assistance claims;
+ Driving the god meantime without the gates.
+ With angry glare the warlike goddess view'd
+ The mercenary nymph, and angry sighs,
+ Which shook her bosom heav'd; the AEgis shook,
+ On that strong bosom fix'd. Now calls to mind
+ Minerva how with hands prophane, the maid
+ Her strict behests despising, daring pry'd
+ To know her secrets; and the seed beheld
+ Of Vulcan, child without a mother form'd:
+ Now to her sister and the god unkind;
+ Rich with the gold her avarice had claim'd.
+ To Envy's gloomy cell, where clots of gore
+ The floor defil'd, enrag'd Minerva flew:
+ A darkened vale, deep sunk, the cavern held,
+ where vivid sun ne'er shone, nor freshening breeze
+ Health wafted: torpid melancholy rul'd,
+ And sluggish cold; and cheering light unknown,
+ Damp darkness ever gloom'd. The goddess here
+ In conflict dreaded came, but at the doors
+ Her footsteps staid, for entrance Fate forbade.
+ The gates she strikes--struck by her spear, the gates
+ Wide open fly, and dark within disclose,
+ On vipers gorging, (her accustom'd feast,)
+ The envious fiend: back from the hideous sight
+ Recoils the goddess, and averts her eyes.
+ Slow rising from the ground, her half chew'd food
+ She quits, advancing indolently forth:
+ The maid, in warlike brightness clad, she saw,
+ In form divine, and heavy sighs burst forth
+ Deep from her bosom's black recess: pale gloom.
+ Dwells on her forehead; lean her fleshless form;
+ Askaunce her eyes; encrusted black her teeth;
+ Green'd deep with gall her breasts; her hideous tongue
+ With poisons lurid; laughter knows her not,
+ Save woes and pangs unmerited she sees;
+ Sleep flies her couch, by cares unceasing wrung;
+ At men's success she sickens, pining sad;
+ But stung herself, while others feel her sting
+ Her torture closely grasps her.--Much the maid
+ The sight abhors; and thus in brief she speaks:--
+ "Deep in the breast of Cecrops' daughter fix
+ "Thy venom'd sting--Aglauros is the nymph.--
+ "More needs not."--Speaking so Minerva fled,
+ Upbounding, earth she with her spear repell'd.
+ Glancing asquint the fury saw her rise,
+ And inly groan'd,--that she success should gain.
+ Her staff with prickly thorns enwreath'd she takes,
+ And forth she sallies, wrapp'd in gloomy clouds.
+ Where'er she flies she blasts the flowery fields;
+ Consumes the herbage; and the harvest blights.
+ Her breath pestiferous felt the cities round,
+ Houses and 'habitants where'er she flew.
+ At length the towers of Athens she beheld
+ With arts and riches flourishing, and blest
+ With holy peace. Scarce could she tears withhold,
+ No tearful eye throughout the place to see.
+ Straight to the room of Cecrops' daughter now
+ Her route she urges, and her task performs:
+ Her rusty hand upon the maiden's breast
+ She plants, and with sharp thorns that bosom fills;
+ Breathes noxious poison through her frame; imbues
+ With venom black her heart, and all her limbs.
+ Lest from her eyes escap'd, the maddening scene
+ Should cease to vex her, full in view she plac'd
+ Her sister, and her sister's nuptial rites;
+ And Hermes beauteous in the bridal pomp:
+ In beauty all, and splendor all increas'd.
+ Mad with the imag'd sight, the maid is gnawn
+ With secret pangs;--deep groans the lengthen'd night,
+ And deep the morning hears; she wastes away
+ Silently wretched, lingeringly slow.
+ As Sol's faint rays the summer ice dissolves:
+ So burns she to behold the envy'd lot
+ Of Herse; not with furious flames,--as weeds
+ Blaze not when damp, but with slow heat consume.
+ Oft would she wish to die: and oft the deed
+ To hinder, thinks to tell her rigid sire
+ Her sister's fault. At length her seat she takes
+ Across the threshold, and th' approaching god
+ Repuls'd; and to his blandishments, and words
+ Beseeching fair, and soft-alluring prayers,
+ She cry'd,--"Desist,--from hence I ne'er will move
+ "Till thou art driven away." Swift Hermes said.--
+ "Keep firmly that resolve." And with his wand
+ The sculptur'd portals touching, wide they flew.
+ But when her limbs to raise, the virgin strove,
+ A weighty numbness o'er the members crept
+ Which bend in sitting, and their movement staid.
+ Strenuous she strives to raise her form erect,
+ But stiffen'd feels her knees; chill coldness spreads
+ Through all her toes; and, fled the purple stream,
+ Her veins turn pallid: cruel cancer thus,
+ Disease incurable, spreads far and wide,
+ Sound members adding to the parts diseas'd.
+ So gradual, o'er her breast the chilling frost
+ Crept deadly, and the gates of life shut close.
+ Complaint she try'd not; had she try'd, her voice
+ Had found no passage, for the stone had seiz'd
+ Her throat,--her mouth; to marble all was chang'd.
+ She sat a pallid statue;--all the stone
+ Her envy tainted with a livid hue.
+
+ His vengeance, when Jove's son complete had seen,
+ Due to her avarice, and her envious soul;
+ He left Minerva's land, and up the sky
+ On wafting pinions mounted. There his sire,
+ Him from th' assembly drew; nor yet disclos'd,
+ The object of his love:--"Son, quickly haste,--
+ "Thou faithful messenger of my commands,
+ "Urge rapid thy descending flight, and seek
+ "The realm whose northern bounds thy mother star
+ "O'erlooks,--the land by natives Sidon call'd.
+ "There wilt thou pasturing find the royal herd,
+ "'Neath hills not distant from the sea: turn down
+ "This herd to meadows bordering on the beach."
+ He said;--the cattle tow'rd the sea shore move,
+ Where sported with her Tyrian maids as wont,
+ The monarch's daughter. Ill majestic state
+ And love agree; nor long combin'd remain.
+ The sire and ruler of the gods resigns
+ His weighty sceptre: he whose right hand bears
+ The three-fork'd fires; whose nod creation shakes,
+ Assumes a bull's appearance:--with the herd
+ Mingles; and strolling lets the tender shrubs
+ Brush his fair sides. Of snowy white his skin;
+ Such snow as rugged feet has never soil'd,
+ Nor southern showers dissolv'd: his brawny neck,
+ Strong from his shoulders stands: beneath extends
+ The dewlap pendulous: small are his horns;
+ But smooth as polish'd by the workman's hand;--
+ Pellucid as the brightest gems they shine:
+ No threatenings wear his brow; no fire his eyes
+ Flame fierce; but all his countenance peace proclaims.
+ Him much Agenor's royal maid admir'd;--
+ His form so beauteous, and his look so mild.
+ Yet peaceful as he seem'd, she fear'd at first
+ A close approach;--but nearer soon she drew,
+ And to his shining mouth the flowery food
+ Presented. Joy'd th' impatient lover stands,
+ Her fingers kissing; and with sore restraint
+ Defers his look'd for pleasures. Sportive now
+ He wantons, frisking in the grass; now rolls
+ His snowy sides upon the yellow sand.
+ Her apprehensions chas'd, by slow degrees,
+ The virgin's fingers playful stroke his breast;
+ Then bind with wreaths his horns: more daring now
+ Upon his back the royal maid ascends;--
+ Witless a god she presses. From the fields,
+ His steps deceitful gradual turn'd, he bends,
+ And seeks the shore; then playful in the waves
+ Just dips his feet;--thence plunging deep, he swims
+ Through midmost ocean with his ravish'd prize.
+ Trembling the nymph beholds the lessening shore;----
+ Firm grasps one hand his horn; upon his back,
+ Secure the other resting: to the wind,
+ Her fluttering garments floating as she sails.
+
+
+
+
+*The Third Book.*
+
+
+ Unsuccessful search of Cadmus for his sister. Death of his
+ companions by the dragon. Overthrow of the dragon, and production
+ of armed men from his teeth. Thebes. Actaeon devoured by his
+ hounds. Semele destroyed by lightening, and the birth of Bacchus.
+ The prophet Tiresias. Echo: and the transformation of Narcissus.
+ Impiety of Pentheus. Change of the Tyrrhenian sailors to
+ dolphins. Massacre of Pentheus.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Third Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ And now the god, his bestial form resign'd,
+ Shone in his form celestial as he gain'd
+ The Cretan shore. Meantime, the theft unknown,
+ Mourn'd her sad sire, and Cadmus sent to seek
+ The ravish'd maid; stern threatening as he went,
+ Perpetual exile if his searching fail'd:--
+ Parental love and cruelty combin'd!
+ All earth explor'd in vain, (for who shall find
+ The amorous thefts of Jove?) the exile shuns
+ His father's anger, and paternal soil.
+ A suppliant bends before Apollo's shrine,
+ To ask his aid;--what region he should chuse
+ To fix his habitation. Phoebus thus;--
+ "A cow, whose neck the yoke has never prest,
+ "Strange to the crooked plough, shall meet thy steps,
+ "Lone in the desert fields: the way she leads
+ "Chuse thou,--rand where upon the grass she rests,
+ "Erect thy walls;--Boeotia call the place."
+ Scarce had the cave Castalian Cadmus left,
+ When he an heifer, gently pacing, spy'd
+ Untended; one whose neck no mark betray'd
+ Of galling service. Closely treads the youth,
+ Slow moving in her footsteps, and adores
+ In silence Phoebus, leader of his way.
+ Now had he pass'd the Cephisidian stream,
+ And meads of Panope, when stay'd the beast;
+ Her broad front lifted to the sky; reverse
+ Her lofty horns reclining, shook the air
+ With lowings loud; back then her face she bent,
+ And saw the comrades following close behind:
+ Down low she couch'd, and press'd the yielding grass,
+ Glad thanks to Phoebus, Cadmus gave, and kiss'd
+ The foreign soil;--the unknown hills, and land
+ Saluted. Then a sacrifice to Jove
+ Preparing, sent his followers to explore
+ Streams flowing from the living fountain clear.
+
+ An ancient forest hallow'd from the axe,
+ Not far there stood; in whose dark bosom gloom'd
+ A cavern:--twigs and branches thick inwove
+ With rocky crags, a low arch'd entrance form'd;
+ Where pure and copious, gush'd transparent waves.
+ Deep hid within a monstrous serpent lay,
+ Sacred to Mars. Bright shone his crested head;
+ His eyeballs glow'd with fire; his body swell'd
+ Bloated with poison; o'er a threefold row
+ Of murderous teeth, three quivering tongues he shook.
+ This grove the Tyrians with ill-fated feet
+ Now enter'd; and now in the waters threw,
+ With noisy dash, their urns. Uprears his head,
+ The azure serpent from the cavern deep;
+ And breathes forth hisses dire: their urns they drop;
+ The blood forsakes their bodies; sudden fear
+ Chills their astonish'd limbs. He writhing quick,
+ Forms scaly circles; spiral twisting round,
+ Bends in an arch immense to leap, and rears
+ In the thin air erect, 'bove half his height;
+ All the wide grove o'erlooking. Such his size,
+ Could all be seen, than that vast snake no less,
+ Whose huge bulk lies the Arctic bears between.
+ The Tyrians quick he seizes; some their arms
+ Vain grasping,--flying some,--and some through fear
+ To fight or fly unable:--these his jaws
+ Crash murderous; those his writhing tail surrounds;
+ Others his breath, with poison loaded, kills.
+
+ Now loftiest Phoebus shorten'd shadows gave,
+ When Cadmus, wondering much why still his friends
+ Tarried so long, their parting footsteps trac'd.
+ His robe an hide torn from a lion's back;
+ A dart and spear of shining steel his arms;
+ With courage, arms surpassing. Now the grove
+ He enters, and their breathless limbs beholds;--
+ Their victor foe's huge bulk upon them stretch'd;
+ Licking with gory tongue their mournful wounds.
+ "My faithful friends," he cry'd, "I will avenge
+ "Your fate,--or perish with you." Straight a rock
+ His right hand rais'd, and with impetuous force,
+ Hurl'd it right on. A city's lofty walls
+ With all its towers, to feel the blow had shook!
+ Yet lay the beast unwounded; safely sheath'd
+ With scaly armour, and his harden'd hide:--
+ His skin alone the furious blow repell'd.
+ Not so that hardness mocks the javelin,--fixt
+ Firm in the bending of the pliant spine
+ His weapon stood,--and all the iron head
+ Deep in his entrails sunk. Mad with the pain,
+ Reverse he writhes his head;--beholds the wound;
+ Champs the fixt dart;--by many forceful tugs
+ Loosen'd at length, he tears the shaft away;
+ But deep the steel within his bones remains.
+ Now to his wonted fury fiercer flames
+ This torture adding, big with poison swells
+ His throat; and flowing, round his venom'd jaws,
+ White foam appears; deep harrow'd with his scales
+ Loud sounds the earth; and vapours black, breath'd out
+ His mouth infernal, taint with death the air.
+ Now roll'd in spires, he forms an orb immense:
+ Now stretch'd at length he seems a monstrous beam:
+ Now rushing forward with impetuous force,
+ As sweeps a torrent swell'd by rain, his breast
+ Bears down th' opposing forest. Cadmus back
+ A step recedes, and on his lion's hide
+ The shock sustains;--then with protended spear
+ Checks his approaching jaws. Furious he strives
+ To wound the harden'd steel;--on the sharp point
+ He grinds his teeth: now from his poisonous mouth,
+ Began the blood to flow, and sprinkling ting'd
+ The virid grass; but trivial still the hurt;
+ For shrinking from the blow, and twisting back
+ His wounded neck, the stroke he still prevents
+ Deeper to pierce, by yielding to its force.
+ But pushing arduous on, Agenor's son,
+ Fix'd in his throat the steel;--and the sharp point
+ Forc'd through his neck: an oak oppos'd behind;--
+ The tree and neck the spear at once transfix'd.
+ Dragg'd by the monster's weight low bends the tree,
+ And groans and cracks, as lashing blows, his tail
+ Immense, deals round. Now whilst the victor stands
+ And wondering views the conquer'd serpent's size,
+ Sudden a voice is heard, (from whence unknown,--
+ But plain the words he hears) "Why view'st thou thus,
+ "Agenor's son, the foe by thee destroy'd?
+ "Thou one day like this serpent shalt be seen."
+ Aghast he stood,--the warm blood fled his cheeks;
+ His courage chang'd to terror; freezing fear
+ Rais'd his stiff locks erect. Lo! Pallas comes,
+ Pallas, the known protectress of the brave.
+ Smooth sliding from the higher clouds she comes;
+ Bids him remove the soil, and place beneath,
+ The serpent's fangs, a future offspring's pledge.
+ The prince obeys; and as with crooked share,
+ The ground he opens, in the furrows throws
+ The teeth directed. Thence, (beyond belief!)
+ The clods of earth at once began to move;
+ Then in the furrows glitter'd, first, the points
+ Of spears: anon fair painted crests arose,
+ Above bright helmets nodding: shoulders next;
+ And breasts; and arms, with javelins loaded came:
+ Thickening the harvest grew of shielded men.
+ Thus shews the glad theatric curtain; rais'd
+ The painted figures' faces first appear,
+ Gradual display'd; and more by slow degrees;
+ At length the whole stand forth, their feet all fix'd
+ Firm on the lower margin. Wondering, he
+ His new-made foe beheld; and grasp'd his arms.
+ But one whom earth had just produc'd, exclaim'd;--
+ "Arm not, nor meddle in our civil broils."
+ He said,--an earth-born brother, hand to hand
+ With sword keen-edg'd attacking; but from far,
+ A javelin hurl'd, dispatch'd him. Short the boast
+ Of him who sent it;--his death wound infix'd,--
+ He breathes the air out he so late receiv'd.
+ So rage the rest, and in the furious war
+ The new-made brethren fall by mutual wounds:
+ And on their blood-stain'd mother, dash, the youths
+ To short existence born, their damp cold breasts.
+ Five only stand unhurt,--Echion one,--
+ Who threw, by Pallas prompted, down his arms
+ And peace propos'd: his brethren took his pledge.
+ These join the Tyrian prince, and social aid
+ His efforts, when th' appointed walls he builds;
+ Obedient to the Delphic god's commands.
+
+ The Theban walls now rais'd, thou, Cadmus seem'd
+ Blest in thy exile. Mars and Venus gave
+ Their daughter to thy wife. This spouse so fam'd,
+ Thee daughters brought, and sons,--a numerous tribe;
+ And grandsons, pledges dear of nuptial joys,
+ Already risen to manhood. But too true
+ That man should still his final day expect;
+ Nor blest be deem'd till flames his funeral pyre.
+ Thy grandson's fate, O, Cadmus! first with grief
+ Thy bosom wrung, amid thy prosperous state:
+ The alien horns which nodded o'er his brow;
+ And ye, voracious hounds, with blood full-gorg'd,
+ Your master's life-stream. Yet by close research,
+ We find unlucky chance, not vice, his crime.
+ What sin in error lies?
+
+ The hills were drench'd
+ With blood of numerous slaughter'd savage beasts;
+ And objects shorten'd shadows gave: the sun
+ Exalted view'd each equi-distant goal;
+ When the young Theban hunter thus address'd,
+ His fellow sportsmen with a friendly call;
+ As wide they rov'd the savage lairs among.
+ "Our weapons, comrades, and our nets are moist
+ "With blood of spoil; sufficient sport this day
+ "Has given. But when Aurora next appears,
+ "High on her saffron car, and light restores,
+ "Then be our pleasing exercise resum'd.
+ "Now Phoebus, distant far from west and east,
+ "Cracks the parch'd ground with heat;--desist from toil,
+ "And fold your knotted snares." His words obey,
+ His men, and from their sportive labor cease.
+
+ Near stood a vale, where pointed cypress form'd
+ With gloomy pines a grateful shade, and nam'd
+ Gargaphie;--sacred to the girded maid:
+ Its deep recess a shrubby cavern held,
+ By nature modell'd,--but by nature, art
+ Seem'd equall'd, or excell'd. A native arch
+ Of pumice light, and tophus dry, was form'd;
+ And from the right a stream transparent flow'd,
+ Of trivial size, which spread a pool below;
+ With grassy margin circled. Dian' here,
+ The woodland goddess, weary'd with the chace,
+ Had oft rejoic'd to bathe her virgin limbs.
+ As wont she comes;--her quiver, and her dart,
+ And unstrung bow, her armour-bearing nymph
+ In charge receives. Disrob'd, another's arms
+ Sustain her vest. Two from her feet unloose
+ Her sandals. Crocale, Ismenian nymph,
+ Than others more expert, her tresses binds,
+ Loose o'er her shoulders floating, in a knot;
+ Her own wild flowing still. Five more the streams
+ In huge urns lifting; Hyale, and Niphe,
+ Phiale, Rhanis, Psecas, lave her limbs.
+ Here while the goddess in the limpid wave
+ Washes as 'custom'd,--lo! Actaeon comes;--
+ His sportive toil till morning dawn deferr'd:
+ And roving through the vale with random steps,
+ By hapless fate conducted, he arrives
+ Close to the sacred grove. Within the grot
+ Stream-pouring, when he stept, the naked nymphs,--
+ Then first by man beheld,--their bosoms beat;
+ Fill'd the deep grove with outcries loud; and round
+ Diana crowded, screening as they could
+ Her limbs with theirs. Yet high above them tower'd
+ The goddess, and her neck their heads o'erlook'd.
+ As blush the clouds by Phoebus' adverse rays
+ Deep ting'd;--or as Aurora in the morn;
+ So blush'd the virgin-goddess, seen unrob'd.
+ Sideway she stood, though closely hemm'd around
+ By clustering nymphs, and backward bent her face:
+ Then anxious praying she could reach her darts,
+ In vain,--she seiz'd the waters which she could,
+ And dash'd them o'er his features:--as his locks,
+ The vengeful drops besprinkled, thus in rage,
+ She cry'd,--"Now tell thou hast Diana seen
+ "Disrob'd;--go tell it, if thou canst,"--no more,
+ With threatenings storm'd, but on his sprinkled head,
+ The antlers of the long-liv'd stag are plac'd.
+ His neck is lengthen'd; with a sharpen'd point,
+ His upright ears are form'd; to feet his hands,--
+ To long and slender legs his arms are chang'd;
+ And round his body clings a dappled coat.
+ Fear in his bosom she instils: the youth,
+ The bold Actaeon flies, and wondering feels
+ His bounding feet so rapid in the race.
+ But soon the waters shew'd his branching horns;
+ And,--"ah unhappy me!" he strove to cry:
+ His voice he found not; sighs and sobs were all;
+ And tears fast streaming down his alter'd face.
+ Still human sense remains. Where shall he turn?
+ His royal palace seek,--or in the woods
+ Secluded hide?--To tarry fear forbids,
+ And shame prevents returning. While he doubts
+ His hounds espy him. Quick-nos'd Tracer first,
+ And Blackfoot give the signal by their yell:
+ Tracer of Crete, and Blackfoot Spartan bred.
+ Swifter than air the noisy pack rush on;
+ Arcadian Quicksight; Glutton; Ranger, stout;
+ Strong Killbuck; Whirlwind, furious; Hunter, fierce;
+ Flyer, swift-footed; and quick-scented Snap:
+ Ringwood, late wounded by a furious bear;
+ And Forester, by savage wolf begot:
+ Flock-tending Shepherdess; with Ravener fierce,
+ And her two whelps; and Sicyonian Catch:
+ The thin flank'd greyhound, Racer; Yelper; Patch;
+ Tiger; Robust; Milkwhite, with snowy coat;
+ And coalblack Soot. First in the race, fleet Storm;
+ Courageous Spartan Swift; and rapid Wolf;
+ Join'd with his Cyprian brother, Snatch, well mark'd
+ With sable forehead on a coat of white:
+ Blackcoat: and thickhair'd Shag: Worrier; and Wild,--
+ Twins from a dam Laconian sprung, their sire
+ Dictaean: Babbler with his noisy throat:--
+ But all to name were endless. Urg'd by hope
+ Of prey they crowd; down precipices rush;
+ O'er rocks, and crags; through rugged paths, and ways
+ Unpass'd before. His hounds he flies, where oft
+ His hounds he had pursu'd. Poor wretch! he flies
+ His own domestics, striving hard to call,
+ "Actaeon am I!--villains, know your lord."
+ Words aid him not: loud rings the air with yells,
+ Howlings, and barkings:--Blackhair first, his teeth
+ Fix'd in his back; staunch Tamer fasten'd next;
+ And Rover seiz'd his shoulder: tardy these,
+ The rest far left behind, but o'er the hills
+ Athwart, the chase they shorten'd. Now the pack,
+ Join'd them their lord retaining; join'd their teeth
+ Their victim seizing:--now his body bleeds,
+ A wound continuous: deep he utters groans,
+ Not human, yet unlike a dying deer;
+ And fills the well-known mountains with his plaint.
+ Prone on his knees in suppliant form he bends;
+ And low beseeching waves his silent head,
+ As he would wave his hands. His witless friends,
+ The savage pack with joyous outcries urge;
+ Actaeon anxious seeking: echoing loud
+ Eager his name as absent. At the name,
+ His head he turns. His absence irks them sore,
+ As lazy loitering, not the noble prey
+ Obtain'd, beholding. Joyful could he be,
+ At distance now,--but hapless is too near:
+ Glad would he see the furious dogs their fangs,
+ On other prey than his torn limbs infix.
+ On every side they crowd; their dying lord,
+ A well-seem'd deer, they rend; their ravenous teeth
+ Deep tear his members. With a thousand wounds,
+ (Dian's insatiate anger less despis'd)
+ The hapless hunter yielded forth his breath.
+
+ Report flies dubious; some the goddess blame
+ For disproportion'd vengeance; others warm
+ Applaud the deed as worthy one so pure;
+ And reasons weighty either party urge:
+ Jove's consort only silent: she nor blames
+ The action, nor approves; but inward joys,
+ Agenor's house should such misfortune feel.
+ The hatred nourish'd for the Tyrian maid,
+ Her brother's offspring visits. Now fresh cause
+ Of wrath succeeds; enrag'd the goddess learns
+ That Semele, embrac'd by mighty Jove,
+ Is pregnant. Straight broke loose her angry tongue,
+ And loud she storm'd:--"Advantage much I gain
+ "By endless railing at unfaithful Jove!
+ "This harlot will I find,--and, if with truth
+ "They potent Juno stile me, she shall die.
+ "Destruction shall o'erwhelm her, if beseems
+ "My hand the sparkling sceptre of the sky:
+ "If queen I am to Jove;--if sister;--wife:--
+ "His sister doubtless am I, if no more.
+ "Content perchance is Semele to joy
+ "In pleasures briefly tasted; and my wrongs
+ "Though deep, not lasting. No!--she must conceive
+ "Foul aggravation of her shameless deed!
+ "Her swelling womb unblushing proves her crime:
+ "By Jove she longs to be a mother hail'd;
+ "Which scarcely I can boast. Such faith her pride,
+ "In conscious beauty places. Trust me not,
+ "Or she mistaken proves. As I am child
+ "Of hoary Saturn, she shall sink o'erwhelm'd
+ "By her own Jove; and dip in Stygian waves."
+
+ She said, and starting from her regal throne,
+ Wrapt in a dusky cloud descended; o'er
+ The threshold stepp'd of Semele, nor chas'd
+ Her darkening veil, till like an ancient dame
+ She stood display'd. White hairs her temples strew'd;
+ Deep furrows plough'd her skin; her bending limbs
+ Quiver'd beneath her weight; her tremulous voice
+ Exhausted age betray'd: she stood to view
+ Old Beroe, from Epidaurus come,
+ The nurse of Semele. With tedious tales
+ She garrulous amus'd:--when in her turn
+ Listening, the name of Jupiter she heard
+ She sigh'd, and said,--"May he be truly Jove!
+ "But age is still suspicious. Chastest beds
+ "Have been by these pretended gods defil'd:
+ "For if the deity supreme he be,
+ "Why comes he thus disguis'd? If true his love,
+ "Why prove it not? Urge thou an anxious wish
+ "To clasp him in his might, in such a sort,
+ "As lofty Juno he embraces;--round
+ "Begirt with all the ensigns of his power."
+ Thus Juno artful, Semele's desires
+ Apt moulded to her mind. From Jove she prays
+ A nameless boon: the ready god consents;--
+ "Chuse what thou wilt, nor least denial dread:
+ "To prove my faith, I call the Stygian streams
+ "To witness, terror of the god of gods."
+ Joy'd at her fatal prayer's too large success;
+ And by her lover's prompt compliance, doom'd
+ To sure destruction;--"This," said she, "I wish;--
+ "When with me next you love's delights enjoy,
+ "Appear as when Saturnia fills your arms."
+ Fain would the god have stopp'd her mouth:--too soon
+ The hasty words found entrance to his ears.
+ Deep mourn'd he. Equal now the fates forbid,
+ The wish retracted, or the oath absolv'd.
+ Sorrowing he seeks the lofty heaven: his nod
+ Dark rolling clouds collects: here form black showers;
+ And hurricanes; and flashing lightenings mixt;
+ Thunders; and his inevitable bolt:
+ Anxious he strives with all his power to damp,
+ The fierceness of his flames: nor arm'd him now,
+ With those dread fires that to the earth dash'd down
+ The hundred-handed foe:--too powerful they.
+ He chose a milder thunder;--less of rage,
+ Of fire, and fury, had the Cyclops given
+ The mass when forg'd; a second-rated bolt.
+ Clad in mild glory thus, the dome he seeks
+ Of Semele;--her mortal frame too weak,
+ To bear th' ethereal shock, fierce scorcht she sunk,
+ Beneath the nuptial grant. Th' imperfect babe,
+ Snatcht from his mother's smoking womb, was sew'd
+ (If faith the tale deserves) within his thigh;
+ There to complete the period of his growth.
+ Ino, his aunt maternal, then receiv'd
+ The boy; in private rear'd him, till the nymphs
+ Of Nysa's mountains, in their secret caves
+ Shelter'd, and fed with milk, th' entrusted charge.
+
+ While the rash promise caus'd on earth those deeds,
+ And twice-born Bacchus' cradle safe was hid;
+ 'Tis said that Jove with heavenly nectar flush'd,
+ All serious cares dismiss'd. With sportive jests,
+ At ease conversing, he and Juno sate:
+ When he:--"The thrilling ecstasies of love,
+ "Are surely strongest on the female side."
+ She differs,--and the question both agree
+ Tiresias, who each sex had prov'd, shall judge.
+ Two mighty snakes he spy'd upon the grass,
+ Twisted in Venus' wreaths; and with his staff
+ Hard smote them;--instant alter'd was his sex.
+ Wonderous! he woman of a man became,
+ Seven winters so he liv'd:--the eight, again
+ He spy'd the same; and cry'd,--"If such your power,
+ "That whoso strikes you must their gender change,
+ "Once more I'll try the spell." Straight as the blow
+ The snakes receiv'd, his pristine form return'd:
+ Hence was he chosen, in the strife jocose,
+ As umpire; and the words of Jove confirm'd.
+
+ Much, say they, Juno rag'd; more than beseem'd
+ The trivial cause, or sentence justly given;
+ And veil'd the judge's eyes in endless night.
+ But Jove omnipotent, him gave to know,
+ (For fate forbids to cancel others' deeds)
+ What future times conceal; a light divine;
+ An honor'd gift to mitigate his pain.
+
+ Fam'd far and wide through all Boeotia's towns,
+ Unerring answers still the prophet gave,
+ To all who sought him. Blue Liriope,
+ First prov'd his faith, and ne'er-deceiving words.
+ Her once Cephisus, in his winding stream
+ Entwin'd, and forceful in his waves enjoy'd.
+ The beauteous nymph's full womb, in time produc'd
+ A babe, whose features ev'n from birth inspir'd
+ Th' attendant nymphs with love; Narcissus nam'd.
+ For him enquiring, whether doom'd to see,
+ The peaceful period of maturest age,
+ The fate-foretelling prophet thus reply'd:--
+ "Yes,--if himself he never knows." The words
+ Were long absurd esteem'd: but well th' event
+ Their justice prov'd; his strange unheard of death;
+ And love of object never lov'd before.
+
+ Now sixteen summers had Narcissus seen,
+ A boy in beauty, but in growth a man;
+ And crowds of youths his friendship sought, and crowds
+ Of damsels sought his love: but fiercely pride
+ Swell'd in his snowy bosom; and he spurn'd
+ His friends' advances, and the love-sick maids.
+ A chattering nymph, resounding Echo, saw
+ The youth, when in his toils the trembling deer
+ He drove;--a nymph who ne'er her words retain'd,
+ Nor dialogue commenc'd. But then she bore
+ A body palpable; and not, as now,
+ Merely a voice:--yet garrulous, she then
+ That voice, nor other us'd; 'twas all she could,
+ The closing words of speakers to repeat.
+ Juno had this ordain'd: for oft the dame
+ The frailer nymphs upon the hills had caught,
+ In trespass with her Jove; but Echo sly
+ With lengthen'd speech the goddess kept amus'd,
+ Till all by flight were sav'd. Soon Juno saw
+ The trick:--"The power of that delusive tongue,"--
+ She cry'd, "I'll lessen, and make brief thy words;"
+ Nor stay'd, but straight her threaten'd vengeance took.
+ Now she redoubles (all she can) the words
+ Which end another's speech; reporting back,
+ But only what she hears.
+
+ Through pathless woods
+ As roves Narcissus, Echo sees, and burns;
+ Steals in his footsteps, following close, but flames
+ More fierce, more near approaching. Sudden thus,
+ The sulphurous daubing o'er the torches spread,
+ Snatches th' approaching flame. How oft she wish'd
+ With bland and soothing words to hail the youth;
+ But nature harsh forbids, nor grants to make
+ The first commencement; what she grants she takes,
+ And anxious waits to catch the wish'd-for sounds;
+ And speak responsive. Chance the youth had led
+ Far from his social troop, and loud he cry'd,--
+ "Who's he that hither comes?" Attentive she,--
+ Reply'd, "O hither come!" Amaz'd he stood,
+ Round searching whence the voice; and louder still,
+ "Here come!" exclaim'd,--and Echo answer'd,--"Come!"
+ To every part his eyes in vain are bent;
+ And, "why," laments he, "dost thou me avoid?"
+ Again he hears her,--"dost thou me avoid?"
+ Still he persists; th' alternate voice deceives,--
+ And,--"come, approach, together let us join,"
+ Impatient now he utters: ardent she
+ Exclaims, in joyful accents,--"let us join!"
+ Her wish in person urging, from the grove
+ She springs, and wide extends her arms to clasp
+ His neck:--Narcissus flies, and flying calls,--
+ "Desist!--hold off thy hands;--may sooner death
+ "Me seize, than thou enjoy me." Nought the maid
+ Re-echoes, but,--"enjoy me." Close conceal'd,
+ By him disdain'd, amid the groves she hides
+ Her blushing forehead, where the leaves bud thick;
+ And dwells in lonely caverns. Still her flame
+ Clings close around her heart; and sharper pangs
+ Repulse occasions: cares unceasing waste
+ Her wretched form: gaunt famine shrivels up
+ Her skin; and all the moistening juice which fed
+ Her body, flies in air: her voice and bones
+ Alone are left: her voice, unchang'd;--her bones
+ To craggy stones are harden'd. Still in groves
+ She hides secluded; nor on hills appears:
+ Heard frequent; only heard, and nought but sound.
+
+ Thus slighted he the nymph; nor her alone,
+ But numbers else who o'er the mountains rov'd;
+ Or sported in the waves. Nor less his pride,
+ When more mature: keen smarting from his scorn,
+ To heaven one rais'd her hands, and ardent pray'd;--
+ "Ordain that he may love, but love like me
+ "One ne'er to be enjoy'd!" Rhamnusia grants
+ To prayers so just, th' assenting nod. There stood,
+ A mudless pool, whose waters silvery bright,
+ The shepherds touch'd not,--nor the mountain goats,
+ Nor lowing herds: which birds, and fierce wild beasts,
+ Dabbling disturb'd not:--nor a wither'd branch,
+ Dropt from a tree o'erhanging. Round the brink,
+ Fed by the moisture, virid grass arose;
+ And trees impervious to the solar beam,
+ Screen'd the cool surface. Weary'd with the chase,
+ And faint with heat, here laid Narcissus down;
+ Charm'd with the place, and tempted by the pool.
+ Here as he seeks to quench his burning thirst,
+ He burns with other fires: and while he drinks,
+ Caught by the image of his beauteous face,
+ He loves th' unbody'd form: a substance thinks
+ The shadow:--loves enraptur'd,--loves himself!
+ Fixes with eager gaze upon the sight
+ As on a face in Parian marble wrought.
+ Stretcht on the ground, his own bright eyes he views,
+ Twin stars;--his fingers, such as Bacchus grace;
+ His tresses like Apollo's;--downy cheeks,
+ Unbearded yet; his neck as ivory white;
+ The roseate blooming fading into snow:
+ Each trait admiring which the hapless nymphs,
+ In him admir'd. Unwitting youth, himself
+ He wants;--at once beloving, and belov'd:
+ Himself desiring, by himself desir'd:
+ Burning with love, while by himself he burns.
+ Oft, stooping, were his fruitless kisses given:
+ Oft were his arms outstretch'd to clasp the neck
+ So plainly seen beneath the waters. No!--
+ Himself he could not clasp. Whom he beholds,
+ He knows not; but for whom he sees he burns.
+ The error that his eye deceives, provokes
+ His rage. O, foolish youth! why vainly grasp
+ A fleeting shadow? What thou seek'st is not:--
+ And what thou lov'st thou now destroy'st:--thou see'st
+ A semblance only;--a reflected shade--
+ Nought of itself: with thee it came;--with thee
+ It stays;--and with thee, if thou could'st, would go.
+ Not hunger's power has force to drag him thence;
+ Nor cares of sleep oppress him. Thrown along
+ The shaded grass, he bends insatiate eyes
+ Tow'rds the fallacious beauty;--by those eyes
+ He perishes. Now half-uprais'd, his arms
+ Outspread, to all the groves around he cry'd:--
+ "Ye woods, whose darken'd shades so oft have given
+ "Convenient privacies to lovers, say,
+ "Saw you e'er one so cruelly who lov'd?
+ "In ages heap'd on ages you have stood,
+ "Remember ye a youth who pin'd as I?
+ "Pleas'd with the object, I its form behold;
+ "But what I see, and what so pleases flies.
+ "I find it not: in such bewilder'd maze
+ "The lover stands. And what my grief augments,
+ "No mighty seas divide us; lengthen'd roads;
+ "Nor lofty hills; nor high embattled walls,
+ "With portals clos'd: asunder are we held
+ "By trivial drops of water. It no less
+ "Than I, would give th' embrace; for when I bend
+ "My lips to kiss it in the limpid stream;
+ "With rising lips to meet, it anxious strives:
+ "Then might you think we touch, so faint a line
+ "Sunders us lovers. Come! whate'er thou art,
+ "Come hither! why thus mock me, dearest form?
+ "Why fly my wooing thus? My beauty sure,
+ "Nor youth are such as should provoke thy flight:
+ "For numerous nymphs for me have burn'd. Some hope
+ "Thy kindly sympathizing face affords;
+ "And when my anxious arms I stretch,--thy arms
+ "Advance to clasp me:--when I smile, thou smil'st:
+ "And often have I noted, when the tears
+ "Stream'd down my cheeks, a rivulet on thine:
+ "I nod,--thou, answering, noddest: and those lips,
+ "Those beauteous lips, whose movements plain I see,
+ "Words utter sure to mine,--though I forbid,
+ "The sounds to hear. In thee am I!--no more
+ "My shadow me deceives: I see the whole;
+ "Love for myself consumes me:--flames self-rais'd,
+ "Myself torment. What hope? be woo'd,--or woo?
+ "Wooing, or being woo'd, where is my gain?
+ "Myself I wish, and plenty makes me poor.
+ "Would that my body from itself could part!
+ "Strange wish for lovers, what most dear they love,
+ "Absent to pray. Grief undermines my strength;
+ "Nor long my life can linger;--immature,
+ "In youth I perish: but in me no fears,
+ "Can death infuse, of all my woes the end;
+ "Might I but leave this lovely object, still
+ "Existing: now two images, alas!
+ "Sink with one soul in death." Narcissus wails;
+ And raving turns to view the face again.
+ His tears the waters trouble; and the face
+ So beauteous, scarce is seen. Griev'd, he exclaims,
+ When disappearing,--"Whither fly'st thou? stay--
+ "Stay, I beseech thee; cruel, fly me not,--
+ "Thy lover: grant me still to view the form,
+ "To touch forbidden:--food, at least, afford
+ "To this unhappy flame." Lamenting thus,
+ He from his shoulders tore his robe, and beat
+ With snow-white hands his bosom; at the blow
+ His bosom redden'd: so the cherry seems,
+ Here ruddy blushing, there as fair as snow:
+ Or grapes unripe, part purpling to the sun,
+ In vary'd clusters. This he soon espy'd,
+ Reflected in the placid pool; no more
+ He bore it, but as gentle fire dissolves
+ The yellow wax: as Phoebus' morning beams
+ Melt the light hoar;--so wasted he,--by love
+ Gradual consum'd, as by a secret fire.
+ No more the ruddy teints appear, with white
+ Soft blended. All his active strength decays;
+ And all that pleas'd so lately. Ev'n his form
+ So much by Echo lov'd, no more remains.
+
+ All Echo saw; and though of former slights
+ Still mindful, griev'd; and when the hapless youth
+ "Alas!" exclaim'd; responsive sigh'd, "Alas!"
+ When on his breast the blows resounded; blows
+ Loud answering his were heard. His final words,
+ Gazing still earnest on the wonted wave,
+ Were,--"dearest form, belov'd in vain!"--the words
+ Resounded from the grove: "farewel," he cry'd,
+ And Echo cry'd, "farewel." Weary'd he threw,
+ On the green turf his head. Night clos'd his eyes;
+ Their owner fond admiring. Now retir'd
+ To regions far beneath, the Stygian lake
+ Reflects his form. The Naiaed sisters wail,
+ Shorn of their tresses, which to him they throw:
+ The Dryads also mourn; their bosoms beat;
+ And Echo answers every tearful groan.
+ A pile they build; the high-tost torches bring;
+ And funeral bier; but, lo! the corpse is gone:
+ A saffron-teinted flower alone is found,
+ Rising encircled with its snowy leaves.
+
+ Th' adventure spread through all the Achaian towns,
+ And much repute th' unerring augur gain'd.
+ Great now his prophesying fame. Alone,
+ Pentheus despis'd him;--(he the gods despis'd)
+ And only he;--he mock'd each holy word
+ Sagely prophetic:--with his rayless eyes
+ Reproach'd him. Angrily, his temples hoar
+ With reverend locks, the prophet shook, and said;--
+ "Happy for thee, if thus of light bereft,
+ "The Bacchanalian orgies ne'er to see!
+ "The day approaches, nor far distant now;
+ "My sight prophetic tells,--when here will come
+ "Bacchus new-born, of Semele the son,
+ "Whose rites, if thou with honor due, not tend'st
+ "In temples worthy,--scatter'd far and wide,
+ "Thy limbs dismember'd shall the ground bestrew:
+ "Thy blood the forests shall distain;--thy gore
+ "Thy aunts,--nay e'en thy mother, shall pollute:
+ "For thou such honors, as immortals claim,
+ "Shalt to the god deny; then wilt thou find
+ "Beneath this darkness I but see too well."
+ Thus speaking, Echion's son the prophet push'd
+ Harshly away; but his too faithful words
+ Time prov'd;--the threaten'd deeds accomplish'd all.
+
+ Lo! Bacchus comes, and all the country rings
+ With joyous outcries; crowds on crowds thick swarm;--
+ Matrons, and wives new-wedded, mixt with men;
+ Nobles, and commons; all the impulse bears,
+ To join the stranger's rites. But Pentheus thus;--
+ "Offspring of Mars! O nation, serpent born!
+ "What madness fills your minds? Can piercing sounds
+ "Of brass from brass rebounding; winding horns,
+ "And magic cheatings, then possess such power?
+ "You whom the warlike sword, the trumpet's clang,
+ "And battle's edge, dread bristling close with arms,
+ "Appal not; yield ye thus to female howls;
+ "Wine's maddening fumes; a filthy shameless crowd;
+ "And empty cymbals? In amaze, I see,
+ "You venerable men who plough'd the seas,
+ "And here, a refuge for your exil'd gods,
+ "This second Tyre have built,--without a blow,
+ "Yield it a spoil! Ye too, robuster youths,
+ "Of hardier age, and years more near my own;--
+ "Whom warlike arms, than Thyrsi more become;
+ "And brows with helmets than with leaves comprest:
+ "Think whence you sprang, and let the thought inspire
+ "Your souls with all the dragon's fierceness: he
+ Singly slew hosts: he for his fountain fell;
+ You for your honor vanquish. He destroy'd
+ The valiant; you th' effeminate expel;
+ And all the glory of your sire regain.
+ "If fate to Thebes a speedy fall decrees,
+ "May heroes, O, ye gods! with battering force
+ "O'erturn her walls;--may the sword rage, and flames
+ "Crackling, devour her. Wretched though our lot;
+ "Not criminal: our fate, though much bemoan'd,
+ "Would need concealment not: tears then might flow,
+ "But not from shame. Now unresisting Thebes,
+ "Yields to a boy unarm'd; who never joys
+ "In armies, steeds, nor swords;--but more in locks
+ "With myrrh moist-dropping, garlands soft, and robes
+ "Of various teints, with gold and purple gay.
+ "Rest ye but tranquil, and without delay,
+ "Him will I force to own his boasted sire
+ "Untrue; and forg'd those new invented rites.
+ "Had not Acrisius bravery to despise
+ "The counterfeited deity, and close
+ "The gates of Argos on him? And must now
+ "This wanderer come, and Pentheus terrify,
+ "With all the power of Thebes! Haste, quickly haste,"--
+ He bade his servants,--"hither drag, firm chain'd,
+ "This leader. Quick, nor brook my words delay!"
+ His grandsire, Athamas, and all the crowd
+ Reprove;--while thus he rails, with fruitless toil
+ Labor to stop him. Obstinate he stands,
+ More raging at remonstrance; and his ire
+ Restrain'd, increases; goading more and more;
+ Restraint itself enkindling more his rage.
+ So may be seen a river rolling smooth,
+ With murmuring nearly silent, while unchecked;
+ But when by rocks, or bulky trees oppos'd,
+ Foaming and boiling furious, on it sweeps
+ Impetuous raging; fiercer, more withstood.
+
+ With blood besmear'd, his men return;--their lord
+ For Bacchus anxious asks;--but Bacchus they,
+ To find, arriv'd too late;--"but here," they cry,--
+ "Here have we seiz'd his comrade;--one who joins
+ "His train, and joins his rites." (The Tuscans once
+ The Bacchanalian orgies follow'd.) Bound
+ Behind, his hands, their prisoner they present.
+ Pentheus survey'd the stranger, while his eyes
+ Sparkled with rage terrific: with constraint
+ His torture so deferring, thus he spoke;--
+ "Wretch! ere thou sufferest,--ere thy death shall give
+ "A public warning,--tell thy name;--confess
+ "Thy sire; declare thy country; and the cause
+ "Those rites thou celebratest in a mode
+ "Diverse from others." Fearless, he reply'd;--
+ "Acoetes is my name: my natal land,
+ "Tyrrhenia: from an humble stock I spring.
+ "Lands by strong oxen plough'd, or wool-clad flocks,
+ "Or lowing herds my father left me none:
+ "For poor was he;--his daily toil to catch
+ "With nets and lines the fish, and as they leap'd,
+ "Draw with his bending rod the prey to land:
+ "His skill his sole estate. When unto me
+ "This art he taught,--receive, said he, my wealth;
+ "Such wealth as I possess; heir to my toil,
+ "And to my toil successor: dying, he
+ "To me bequeath'd the waters;--nothing more:
+ "These only as paternal wealth I claim.
+ "But soon, disliking on the self-same rock
+ "To dwell, I learn'd the art to rule the track
+ "Plough'd by the keel, with skilful guiding hand;
+ "And learn'd th' Olenian sign, the showery goat;
+ "Taygete; and the Hyaedes; the Bear;
+ "The dwellings of the winds; and every port
+ "Where ships could shelter. Once for Delos bound,
+ "By chance, the shore of Chios' isle we near'd;
+ "And when our starboard oars the beach had touch'd,
+ "Lightly I leap'd, and rested on the land.
+ "Now, night expir'd, Aurora warmly glow'd,
+ "And rousing up from sleep, my men I bade
+ "Supplies of living waters bring; and shew'd
+ "What path the fountain led to. I meanwhile,
+ "A lofty hill ascending, careful mark'd
+ "The wish'd-for wind approaching;--loud I call'd
+ "My fellows, and with haste the vessel gain'd.
+ "Lo! cry'd Opheltes, chief of all my crew,--
+ "Lo! here we come;--and from the desart fields,
+ "(A prize obtain'd, he thought),--he dragg'd along
+ "A boy of virgin beauty tow'rd the sands:
+ "Staggering, the youth, with wine and sleep opprest,
+ "With difficulty follow'd. Closely I
+ "His dress, his countenance, and his gait remark;
+ "And all I see, displays no mortal man.
+ "Conscious, I speak my comrades thus:--Unknown
+ "To me, what deity before us stands,
+ "But sure I am, that form conceals a god.
+ "O thou! whoe'er thou art, assist us;--aid
+ "Our undertakings;--who have seiz'd thee, spare,
+ "Unknowing what they did. Bold Dictys cries,--
+ "Than whom none swifter gain'd the topmost yards,
+ "Nor on the cordage slid more agile down;--
+ "Prayers offer not for us. Him Lybis joins;
+ "And brown Melanthus, ruler of the helm;
+ "Alcimedon unites; Epopeus too,
+ "Who rul'd the rowers, and their restings mark'd;
+ "(Arduous they urg'd their sinews by his voice)--
+ "Nay all Opheltes join,--the lust of gain,
+ "So blinded all their judgments. Still I cry;--
+ "Ne'er will I yield my vessel to behold
+ "Burthen'd with such a sacrilegious load:
+ "Pre-eminent is here my right. I stand
+ "To those who strive to hoist him in, oppos'd.
+ "Bold and outrageous, far beyond the rest,
+ "Was Lycabas; from Tuscan shore exil'd
+ "For deeds of murderous violence: he grasp'd
+ "My throat with force athletic, as I stood,
+ "And in the waves had flung me; but sore stunn'd,
+ "A cable caught, and sav'd me. Loud the crew
+ "The impious deed applauded. Bacchus rose,
+ "(The boy was Bacchus!) with the tumult loud
+ "Rous'd from his sleep;--the fumes of wine dispell'd,
+ "His senses seem'd restor'd. What is't you do?
+ "What noise is this? he cry'd;--What brought me here?
+ "O, mariners! inform me;--tell me where
+ "You carry me! Fear not,--the pilot said,--
+ "Say but the port, where most thou'dst chuse to land;--
+ "Thither we straight will steer. The god reply'd;--
+ "To Naxos then your course direct; that isle
+ "My native soil I call:--to you that isle
+ "A friendly shore shall prove. False men, they swear,
+ "By ocean, and by all the sacred gods,
+ "This to perform; and order me to loose,
+ "The painted vessel's sails. Full on the right
+ "Stood Naxos. Loudly one to me exclaims;
+ "As tow'rd the right I trim the sails to steer;--
+ "What now, Acoetes? madman! fool! what now?
+ "Art thou distracted? to the left we sail.--
+ "Most nod significant their wishes: some
+ "Soft whisper in my ear. Astounded, I
+ "Let others guide!--exclaim,--and quit the helm;
+ "Guiltless of aiding in their treacherous guile.
+ "Loud murmurings sound from all; and loudly one,
+ "Ethalion, cries;--in thee alone is plac'd
+ "Our safety, doubtless!--forward steps himself;--
+ "My station seizes; and a different course
+ "Directs the vessel, Naxos left behind.
+ "The feigning god, as though but then, the fraud
+ "To him perceptible, the waves beholds
+ "From the curv'd poop, and tears pretending, cries;--
+ "Not this, O, seamen! is the promis'd shore:
+ "Not this the wish'd-for land! What deed of mine
+ "This cruel treatment merits? Where the fame
+ "Of men, a child deceiving; numbers leagu'd
+ "Misleading one? Fast flow'd my tears with his;
+ "Our tears the impious mob deride, and press
+ "The ocean with their strong-propelling oars.
+ "Now by the god himself, I swear, (and none
+ "To vows more ready listens) that the tale,
+ "Though in appearance credence far beyond,
+ "Is strictly true. Firm fixt amid the waves
+ "The vessel stands, as in a harbour laid
+ "Dry from the ocean! Wondering, they their oars,
+ "With strokes redoubled ply; loose to the wind
+ "More sails; and with this double aid essay
+ "Onward to urge. Their oars with ivy twin'd,
+ "Are clogg'd; the curving tendrils crooked spread;
+ "The sails with clustering berries loaded hang.
+ "His temples girded with a branchy crown,
+ "Whence grapes hang dangling, stands the god, and shakes
+ "A spear entwisted with the curling vine.
+ "Round seem to prowl the tiger, and the lynx,
+ "And savage forms of panthers, various mark'd.
+ "Up leap'd the men, by sudden madness mov'd;
+ "Or terror only: Medon first appear'd
+ "Blackening to grow, with shooting fins; his form
+ "Flatten'd; and in a curve was bent his spine.
+ "Him Lycabas address'd;--what wonderous shape
+ "Art thou receiving?--speaking, wide his jaws
+ "Expanded; flatten'd down, his nose appear'd;
+ "A scaly covering cloth'd his harden'd skin.
+ "Lybis to turn the firm fixt oars attempts,
+ "But while he tries, perceives his fingers shrink;
+ "And hands, now hands no longer, fins he sees.
+ "Another round the cordage strives his arms
+ "To clasp,--but arms he has not,--down he leaps
+ "Broad on his crooked back, and seeks the waves.
+ "Forkt is their new-made tail; like Luna's form
+ "Bent in the skies, ere half her orb is fill'd.
+ "Bounding all round they leap;--now down they dash,
+ "Besprinkling wide the foamy drops; now 'merge;
+ "And now re-diving, plunge in playful sport:
+ "As chorus regular they act, and move
+ "Their forms in shapes lascivious; spouting high,
+ "The briny waters through their nostrils wide.
+ "Of twenty now, (our ship so many bore)
+ "I only stand unchang'd; with trembling limbs,
+ "And petrify'd with fear. The god himself,
+ "Scarce courage in my mind inspires; when thus,--
+ "Pale terror from thy bosom drive, and seek
+ "The isle of Naxos.--Thither come, I tend
+ "On smoking altars, Bacchus' sacred rites."
+
+ Him Pentheus angry stopp'd. "Thy tedious tale,
+ "Form'd to divert my rage, in vain is told.
+ "Here, men, swift drag him hence!--dispatch his soul,
+ "Driven from his body, down to Stygian night;
+ "By pangs excruciating." Straight close pent,
+ In solid dungeon is Acoetes thrown,
+ While they the instruments of death prepare;
+ The cruel steel; the flames;--spontaneous fly
+ Wide ope the dungeon doors; spontaneous fall
+ The fetters from his arms, and freed he goes.
+ Stubborn, the son of Echion still persists;
+ But sends no messenger: himself proceeds,
+ To where Cythaeron, for the sacred rites
+ Selected, rings with Bacchanalian songs,
+ And outcries shrill. As foams an high-bred steed,
+ When through the speaking brass the warlike trump,
+ Sounds the glad signal; and with ardor burns
+ For battle: so the air, with howlings loud
+ Re-echoing, Pentheus moves, and doubly flames
+ His rage, to hear the clangor. Clear'd from trees,
+ A plain extends, from every part fair seen,
+ And near the mountain's centre: round its skirt,
+ Thick groves grow shady. Here his mother saw
+ His eye unhallow'd view the sacred rites;
+ And first,--by frantic madness urg'd,--she first
+ Furious the Thyrsus at her Pentheus flung:
+ Exclaiming loud;--"Ho, sisters! hither haste!
+ "Here stands the furious boar that wastes our grounds:
+ "My hand has smote him." Raging rush the crowd,
+ In one united body. All close join,
+ And all pursue the now pale trembling wretch.
+ No longer fierce he storms; but grieving blames
+ His rashness, and his obstinacy owns.
+ Wounded,--"dear aunt, Autonoe!"--he cries,
+ "Help me!--O, let your own Actaeon's ghost
+ "Move you to pity!" She, Actaeon's name
+ Nought heeding, tears his outstretcht arm away;
+ The other, Ino from his body drags!
+ And when his arms, unhappy wretch, he tries
+ To lift unto his mother, arms to lift
+ Were none;--but stretching forth his mangled trunk
+ Of limbs bereft;--"look, mother!"--he exclaims.
+ Loud howl'd Agave at the sight; his neck
+ Fierce grasping,--toss'd on high his streaming locks,
+ Her bloody fingers twisted in his hair.
+ Then clamor'd loudly;--"joy, my comrades, joy!
+ "The victory is mine!" Not swifter sweep
+ The winds those leaves which early frosts have nipp'd,
+ And lightly to the boughs attach'd remain,
+ Than scatter'd flew his limbs by furious hands.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fourth Book.*
+
+
+ Feast of Bacchus. Impiety and infidelity of Alcithoe and her
+ sisters. Story of Pyramus and Thisbe. Amour of Mars and Venus.
+ The lovers caught by Vulcan in a net. Sol's love for Leucothoe,
+ and her change to a tree of frankincense. Clytie transformed to a
+ sunflower. Tale of Salmacis and Hermaphroditus. Transformation of
+ Alcithoe and her sisters to bats. Juno's fury. Madness of
+ Athamas; and deification of Ino and Melicertes. Change of the
+ Theban women to rocks and birds. Cadmus and Hermione changed to
+ serpents. Perseus. Transformation of Atlas to a mountain.
+ Andromeda saved from the sea monster. Story of Medusa.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Fourth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Warn'd by the dreadful admonition, all
+ Of Thebes the new solemnities approve;
+ Bring incense, and to Bacchus' altars bend.
+ Alcithoe only, Minyaes' daughter, views
+ His orgies still with unbelieving eyes.
+ Boldly, herself and sisters, partners all
+ In impious guilt, refuse the god to own,
+ The progeny of Jove. The prophet bids
+ Each mistress with her maids, to join the feast:
+ (Sacred the day from toil). Their breasts to clothe
+ In skins; the fillets from their heads to loose;
+ With ivy wreathe their brows; and in their hands
+ The leafy Thyrsus grasp. Threatening, he spoke,
+ In words prophetic, how th' affronted god
+ Would wreak his ire. Matrons and virgins haste;
+ Throw by their baskets; quit the loom, and leave
+ Th' unfinish'd threads: sweet incense they supply
+ Invoking Bacchus by his various names.
+ Bromius! Lyaeus! power in flames produc'd!--
+ Produc'd a second time! god doubly born!
+ Born of two mothers! Nyseus! they exclaim;
+ Long-hair'd Thyoneus!--and the planter fam'd
+ Of genial grapes! Lenaeus! too, they sing;
+ Nyctelius! Elelcus! and aloud
+ Iaecchus! Evan! with the numerous names,
+ O Liber! in the Grecian land thou hold'st.
+ Unwaning youth is thine, eternal boy!
+ Most beauteous form in heaven! a virgin's face
+ Thou seem'st to bear, when seen without thy horns.
+ Stoops to thy arms the East, where Ganges bounds
+ The dusky India:--Deity rever'd!
+ Thou impious Pentheus sacrific'd; and thou,
+ The mad Lycurgus punish'd with his axe:
+ By thee the Tyrrhene traitors, in the main
+ Were flung: Adorn'd with painted reins, thou curb'st
+ The lynxes in thy chariot yok'd abreast:
+ Thy steps the Satyrs and Bacchantes tread;
+ And old Silenus; who with wine o'ercharg'd,
+ With a long staff his tottering steps sustains:
+ Or on a crooked ass, unsteady sits:
+ Where'er thou enterest shout the joyous youth,
+ Females and males immingled: loud the drums
+ Struck by their hands resound;--and loudly clash
+ The brazen cymbals: soft the boxen flutes
+ Deep and melodious sound!
+
+ Now prays all Thebes
+ The god's approach in mildness; and perform
+ His sacred rites as bidden. Sole remain
+ At home secluded, Minyaes' daughters,--they
+ With ill-tim'd industry the feast prophane.
+ Busy, they form the wool, and twirl the thread;
+ Or to the loom stick close, and all their maids
+ Urge to strict labor. One with dexterous thumb
+ The slender thread extending, cries;--"while all,
+ "Idly, those rites imaginary tend,
+ "Let us, whom Pallas, deity more great,
+ "Detains, our useful labors lighter make
+ "By vary'd converse. Each in turn relate
+ "Her tale, while others listen; thus the time
+ "Less tedious shall appear." All pleas'd applaud
+ The proposition; and her sisters beg
+ That she the tales commence. Long she demurs,
+ What story first, of those she knew, to tell;
+ For numerous was her store. In doubt, thy tale,
+ Dercetis Babylonian, to relate,
+ Whose form, the Syrians think, with scales is cloth'd;
+ The stagnant pools frequenting: or describe
+ Thy daughter's change, on waving pinions borne;
+ Who lengthen'd age obtain'd, on lofty towers
+ Safe dwelling: or of Nais, who the youths
+ With magic works, and potent witching words
+ To silent fishes turn'd; till she the same
+ Vile transformation suffer'd: or the tree,
+ Which once in clusters white its berries bore,
+ Now blood besprinkled, growing black. This tale
+ Most novel, pleas'd the most: and as she spun
+ Her slender thread, the nymph the tale began.
+
+ "Thisbe, the brightest of the eastern maids;
+ "And Pyramus, the pride of all the youths,
+ "Contiguous dwellings held, in that fam'd town,
+ "Where lofty walls of stone, we learn were rais'd,
+ "By bold Semiramis. Their neighbouring scite,
+ "Acquaintance first encourag'd,--primal step
+ "To further intimacy: love, in time,
+ "Grew from this chance connection; and they long'd
+ "To join by lawful rites: but harsh forbade,
+ "Their rigid sires the union fate had doom'd.
+ "With equal ardor both their minds inflam'd,
+ "Burnt fierce; and absent every watchful spy
+ "By nods and signs they spoke; for close their love
+ "Conceal'd they kept;--conceal'd it burn'd more fierce.
+ "The severing wall a narrow chink contain'd,
+ "Form'd when first rear'd;--what will not love espy?
+ "This chink, by all for ages past unseen,
+ "The lovers first espy'd.--This opening gave
+ "A passage for their voices; safely through,
+ "Their tender words were breath'd in whisperings soft.
+ "Oft punctual at their posts,--on this side she,
+ "And Pyramus on that;--each breathing sighs,--
+ "By turns inhaling, have they mutual cry'd;--
+ "Invidious wall! why lovers thus divide?
+ "Much were it, did thy parts more wide recede,
+ "And suffer us to join? were that too much
+ "A little opening more, and we might meet
+ "With lips at least. Yet grateful still we own
+ "Thy kind indulgence, which a passage gives,
+ "And amorous words conveys to loving ears.
+ "Thus they loquacious, though on sides diverse,
+ "Till night their converse stay'd;--then cry'd, adieu!
+ "And each imprinted kisses, which the stones
+ "Forbade to taste. Soon as Aurora's fires
+ "Remov'd the shades of night, and Phoebus' rays
+ "From the moist earth the dew exhal'd, they meet
+ "As 'custom'd at the wall: lamenting deep,
+ "As wont in murmuring whispers: bold they plan,
+ "Their guards evading in the silent night,
+ "To pass the outer gates. Then, when escap'd
+ "From home, to leave the city's dangerous shade;
+ "But lest, in wandering o'er the spacious plains
+ "They miss to meet, at Ninus' sacred tomb
+ "They fix their assignation,--hid conceal'd
+ "Beneath th' umbrageous leaves. There grew a tree,
+ "Close bordering on a cooling fountain's brink;
+ "A stately mulberry;--snow-white fruit hung thick
+ "On every branch. The plot pleas'd well the pair.
+
+ "And now slow seems the car of Sol to sink;
+ "Slow from the ocean seems the night to rise;
+ "Till Thisbe, cautious, by the darkness veil'd,
+ "Soft turns the hinges, and her guards beguiles.
+ "Her features veil'd, the tomb she reaches,--sits
+ "Beneath th' appointed tree: love makes her bold.
+ "Lo! comes a lioness,--her jaws besmear'd
+ "With gory foam, fresh from the slaughter'd herd,
+ "Deep in th' adjoining fount her thirst to slake.
+ "Far off the Babylonian maid beheld
+ "By Luna's rays the horrid foe,--quick fled
+ "With trembling feet, and gain'd a darksome cave:
+ "Flying, she dropp'd, and left her robe behind.
+
+ "Now had the savage beast her drought allay'd,
+ "And backward to the forest roaming, found
+ "The veiling robe;--its tender texture rent,
+ "And smear'd the spoil with bloody jaws. The youth
+ "(With later fortune his strict watch escap'd)
+ "Spy'd the plain footsteps of a monster huge
+ "Deep in the sand indented!--O'er his face
+ "Pale terror spread: but when the robe he saw,
+ "With blood besmear'd, and mangled; loud he cry'd,--
+ "One night shall close two lovers' eyes in death!
+ "She most deserving of a longer date.
+ "Mine is the fault alone. Dear luckless maid!
+ "I have destroy'd thee;--I, who bade thee keep
+ "Nocturnal meetings in this dangerous place,
+ "And came not first to shield thy steps from harm.
+ "Ye lions, wheresoe'er within those caves
+ "Ye lurk! haste hither,--tear me limb from limb!
+ "Fierce ravaging devour, and make my tomb
+ "Your horrid entrails. But for death to wish
+ "A coward's turn may serve. The robe he takes,
+ "Once Thisbe's, and beneath th' appointed tree
+ "Bearing it, bath'd in tears; with ardent lips
+ "Oft fondly kissing, thus he desperate cries;--
+ "Now with my blood be also bath'd!--drink deep!
+ "And in his body plung'd the sword, that round
+ "His loins hung ready girt: then as he dy'd,
+ "Hasty withdrew, hot reeking from the wound,
+ "The steel; and backwards falling, press'd the earth.
+ "High spouts the sanguine flood! thus forth a pipe,
+ "(The lead decay'd, or damag'd) sends a stream
+ "Contracted from the breach; upspringing high,
+ "And loudly hissing, as the air it breaks
+ "With jets repeated. Sprinkled with the blood,
+ "The tree's white fruit a purple tinge receiv'd;
+ "Deep soak'd with blood the roots convey the stain
+ "Inly, and tinge each bough with Tyrian dye.
+
+ "Now Thisbe comes, with terror trembling still,
+ "Fearful, she Pyramus expecting waits:
+ "Him seek her beating bosom, and her eyes;
+ "Anxious the peril she escap'd to tell.
+ "Well mark'd her eyes the place,--and well the tree;
+ "The berries chang'd in color, long she doubts
+ "The same or no. While hesitating thus,
+ "The panting members quivering she beholds,
+ "Upon the sanguin'd turf; and back recoils!
+ "Paler than box her features grow; her limbs
+ "More tremble than when ocean fretful sounds,
+ "Its surface briskly by the breezes swept.
+ "Nor long the pause, her lover soon is known;
+ "And now her harmless breast with furious blows
+ "She punishes; her tresses wild she rends;
+ "Clasps the lov'd body; and the gaping wound
+ "Fills with her tears,--their droppings with the blood
+ "Immingling. On his clay-cold face she press'd
+ "Her kisses, crying;--Pyramus! what chance
+ "Has torn thee from me thus? My Pyramus!
+ "Answer me,--'tis thy dearest Thisbe speaks!
+ "She calls thee,--hear me,--raise that dying face!
+ "At Thisbe's name, his lids, with death hard weigh'd,
+ "He rais'd--beheld her,--and forever clos'd.
+
+ "Him dying thus,--her lacerated veil;
+ "The ivory scabbard empty'd of its sword;
+ "She saw,--at once the truth upon her mind
+ "Flash'd quick. Alas! thy hand, by love impell'd,
+ "Has wrought thy ruin: but to me the hand,
+ "In this, at least, shall equal force display,
+ "For equal was my love; and love will grant
+ "Sufficient strength the deadly wound to give.
+ "In death I'll follow thee; with justice call'd
+ "Thy ruin's wretched cause,--but comrade too.
+ "Thou whom, but death seem'd capable to part
+ "From me, shalt find ev'n death too weak will prove.
+ "Ye wretched mourning parents, his and mine!
+ "The dying prayers respect of him,--of me:
+ "Grant that, entomb'd together, both may rest;
+ "A pair by faithful love conjoined,--by death
+ "United close. And thou fair tree which shad'st
+ "Of one the miserable corse; and two
+ "Soon with thy boughs wilt cover,--bear the mark
+ "Of the sad deed eternal;--ting'd thy fruit
+ "With mournful coloring: monumental type
+ "Of double slaughter. Speaking thus, she plac'd
+ "The steely point, while yet with blood it smok'd,
+ "Beneath her swelling breast; and forward fell.
+ "Her final prayer reach'd heaven; her parents reach'd:
+ "Purple the berries blush, when ripen'd full;
+ "And in one urn the lovers' ashes rest."
+
+ She ceas'd: a silent interval, but short,
+ Ensu'd; and next Leuconoe thus address'd
+ Her listening sisters:--"Ev'n the sun himself,
+ "Whose heavenly light so universal shines,
+ "To love is subject: his amours I tell.
+ "This deity's keen sight the first espy'd--
+ "(For all things penetrating first he sees)
+ "The crime of Mars and Venus; sore chagrin'd,
+ "To Vulcan he th' adulterous theft display'd,
+ "And told him where they lay. Appall'd he heard,--
+ "And dropp'd the tools his dexterous hand contain'd;
+ "But soon recover'd. Slender chains of brass,
+ "And nets, and traps he form'd; so wonderous fine,
+ "They mock'd the power of sight: for far less fine,
+ "The smallest thread the distaff forms; or line,
+ "Spun by the spider, pendent from the roof.
+ "Curious he form'd it; at the lightest touch
+ "It yielded; each momentum, slight howe'er,
+ "Caus'd its recession: this he artful hung,
+ "The couch enfolding. When the faithless wife,
+ "And paramour upon the bed embrac'd,
+ "Both in the lewd conjunction were ensnar'd;
+ "Caught by the husband's skill, whose art the chains
+ "In novel form had fram'd. The Lemnian god
+ "Instant wide threw the ivory doors, and gave
+ "Admittance free to every curious eye:
+ "In shameful guise together bound they laid.
+ "But some light gods, not blaming much the sight,
+ "Would wish thus sham'd to lie: loud laugh'd the whole,
+ "And long in heaven the tale jocose was told.
+
+ "The well-remember'd deed, the Cyprian queen
+ "Retorting, made the god remember too:
+ "And him who her conceal'd amours disclos'd,
+ "In turn betray'd. What now, Hyperion's son,
+ "Avails thy beauty!--or thy radiant flames?
+ "For thou, whose fires warm all the wide-spread world,
+ "Burn'st with a new-felt heat! Thou, whose wide view,
+ "Should every object grasp, with partial ken
+ "Leucothoe only see'st! that nymph alone,
+ "Attracts those eyes, whose lustre all the world
+ "Expect to view. Oft in the eastern skies,
+ "More early rising, art thou seen; and oft
+ "More tardy 'neath the waves thou sinkest: long
+ "The wintry days thou stretchest, with delay
+ "Thy object lov'd to see. Meantime pale gloom
+ "O'ercasts thy orb; the dullness of thy mind
+ "Obstructs thy brightness; and thy rays obscure,
+ "Terror in mortal breasts inspire. Not pale
+ "Thou fadest, as, when nearer whirl'd to earth,
+ "Faint Luna's shadow o'er thy surface glooms:
+ "But love, and only love the paleness gives.
+ "Her only, now thy amorous soul pursues;
+ "Rhodos, nor Clymene, nor Perse fair,
+ "Of Colchian Circe mother, tempt thee now;
+ "Nor Clytie, whom thy cold neglect still spurns;
+ "Yet still she burns to clasp thee: deep she mourns,
+ "Stung more acutely by this fresh amour.
+ "Now in Leucothoe, every former love
+ "Is lost. Leucothoe, whom the beauteous nymph,
+ "Eurynome, in odoriferous climes
+ "Of Araby brought forth. Full-grown, matur'd,
+ "Leucothoe's beauteous form no less surpass'd
+ "Her mother's, than her mother's all beside.
+ "Her sire, the royal Orchamus (who claim'd
+ "A seventh descent from ancient Belus) rul'd
+ "The Achaemenian towns. The rapid steeds
+ "Of Phoebus pasture 'neath the western sky;
+ "Not grass, ambrosia, eating; heavenly food,
+ "Which nerves their limbs, faint with diurnal toil,
+ "Restoring all their ardor. Whilst the steeds,
+ "This their celestial nourishment enjoy;
+ "And night, as 'custom'd, governs in her turn;
+ "The god the close apartments of his nymph
+ "Beloved, enters;--form'd to outward view,
+ "Eurynome her mother. Her he saw
+ "The slender threads from spindle twirling fine,
+ "Illumin'd by the lamp; and circled round
+ "By twice six female helpers. Warm he gave
+ "As a lov'd daughter, his maternal kiss,
+ "And said;--our converse secrecy demands.--
+ "Th' attendant maids depart,--nor hinderance give,
+ "Loitering, a mother's secret words to hear.
+ "When he, the chamber free from spy or guard,
+ "Exclaims,--no female I! behold the god,
+ "The lengthen'd year who spaces! who beholds
+ "Each object earth contains! the world's great eye
+ "By which it all surveys. My tender words
+ "Believe, I dearly love thee. Pale she look'd,
+ "While thus he spoke;--started, and trembling dropp'd
+ "Her distaff, and her spindle from her hand
+ "Nerveless. But ev'n her terror seem'd to add
+ "Fresh beauty to her features. Longer he
+ "Delay'd not, but his wonted form assum'd;
+ "In heavenly splendor shining. Mild the maid,
+ "Won by his beauteous brightness, (though at first,
+ "His sudden shape surpriz'd her) sunk beneath
+ "The force he urg'd, with unresisting power.
+
+ "The jealous Clytie (who with amorous flame
+ "Burn'd for Apollo) urg'd by harlot's rage,
+ "Straight to the sire, Leucothoe's crime betray'd;
+ "Painting the nymph's misdeed with heighten'd glow.
+ "Fierce rag'd the father,--merciless inhum'd
+ "Her living body deep in earth! Outstretcht
+ "High to the sun her arms, and praying warm
+ "For mercy;--he by force, she cry'd, prevail'd!
+ "O'er her untimely grave a lofty mound
+ "Of sand, her sire uprear'd. Hyperion's son
+ "Through this an opening with his beams quick form'd,
+ "Full wide for her, her head intomb'd to lift,
+ "Once to the light again. Thy bury'd corse
+ "No more thou now couldst raise; the ponderous load
+ "Of earth prevents thee; and a bloodless mass,
+ "Exanimate, thou ly'st! Not deeper grief
+ "'Tis said, the ruler of the swift-wing'd steeds,
+ "Display'd, when o'er the earth the hapless flames
+ "By Phaeton were thrown. Arduous he strives,
+ "Her gelid limbs, with all his powerful rays
+ "To vivid heat recal: stern fate withstands
+ "His utmost urg'd endeavours: bathing then
+ "Her pallid corse, and all the earth around
+ "With odorous nectar, sorrowing sad he cries;--
+ "Yet, shalt thou reach the heavens! And soon began
+ "Her limbs, soft melting in celestial dew,
+ "With moistening drops of strong perfume to flow:
+ "Slowly a frankincense's rooted twigs
+ "Spread in the earth,--its top the hillock burst.
+
+ "Angry the god (though violent love the pain
+ "Of jealousy might well excuse,--the pain
+ "Of jealousy the tale) from Clytie now
+ "Abstains; no more in amorous mood they meet.
+ "Rash now the deed her burning love had caus'd,
+ "Too late she found;--she flies her sister-nymphs;
+ "And pining, on the cold bare turf she sits;
+ "By day,--by night,--sole shelter'd by the sky;
+ "Her dripping tresses matted round her brows:
+ "Food,--drink, abhorring. Nine long days she bore
+ "Sharp famine, bath'd with dew, bath'd with her tears;
+ "Still on the ground prone lying. Yet the god
+ "In circling motion still she ardent view'd;
+ "Turning her face to his. Tradition tells,
+ "Her limbs to earth grew fasten'd: ghastly pale
+ "Her color; chang'd to bloodless leaves she stood,
+ "Streak'd ruddy here and there;--a violet flower
+ "Her face o'erspreading. Still that face she turns,
+ "To meet the sun;--though binding roots retain
+ "Her feet, her love unalter'd still remains."
+
+ She ended; all their listening ears, well pleas'd,
+ The wonderous story heard. Some hard of faith
+ Its truth, its probability deny.
+ To true divinities such power some grant;
+ And power to compass more;--to Bacchus none
+ Such potence own. The sisters, silent now,
+ Alcithoe beg to speak: she shooting swift
+ Her shuttle through th' extended threads, exclaims;--
+ "Of Daphnis' love, so known, on Ida's hill,
+ "His flocks who tended, whom his angry nymph,
+ "To stone transform'd (such fury fires the breast
+ "Of those who desperate love!) I shall not tell:
+ "Nor yet of Scython, of ambiguous form,
+ "Now male, now female; nature's wonted laws
+ "Inconstant proving: thee, O Celmis! too
+ "I pass; once faithful nurse to infant Jove,
+ "Now chang'd to adamant: Curetes! sprung
+ "From showery floods: Crocus, and Smilax, both
+ "To blooming flowers transform'd: unnotic'd these,
+ "My tale from novelty itself shall please:
+ "How Salmacis so infamous became,
+ "Then list; whose potent waves, the luckless limbs
+ "Enerve, of those they bathe. Conceal'd the cause;
+ "Yet far and wide the fountain's power is known.
+
+ "Deep in the sheltering caves of Ida's hill,
+ "The Naiaed nymphs a beauteous infant nurs'd;
+ "Whom Cyprus' goddess unto Hermes bore.
+ "His father's beauty, and his mother's, shone
+ "In every feature; in his name conjoin'd
+ "He bore their appellations. When matur'd
+ "By fifteen summers, from paternal hills
+ "Straying, he wander'd from his nursing Ide:
+ "In lands unknown he joy'd, and joy'd to see
+ "Strange rivers,--pleasure lessening every toil.
+ "Through Lycia's towns he stray'd; and further still,
+ "To bordering Caria, where a pool he spy'd,
+ "Whose lowest depth a gleam transparent shew'd:
+ "No marshy canes,--no filthy barren weeds,
+ "Nor pointed bulrush near the margin grew:
+ "Full on the eye the water shone, yet round
+ "Its brink a border smil'd of verdant turf,
+ "And plants forever green. Here dwelt a nymph,
+ "But one who never join'd the active chace;
+ "The bow who never bent; who never strove
+ "To conquer in the race: of all the nymphs,
+ "Alone no comrade of Diana fleet.
+ "Oft, as 'tis said, her sister-nymphs exclaim'd;--
+ "Come, Salmacis, thy painted quiver take;
+ "Or take thy javelin;--with soft pleasures mix
+ "Laborious sporting: but nor javelin she,
+ "Nor painted quiver took;--with sportive toil,
+ "Soft pleasures mingling: sole intent to bathe,
+ "Her beauteous limbs amidst her own clear waves;
+ "And through her flowing tresses oft to draw
+ "The boxen comb, while o'er the fountain bent,
+ "She studies all her graces: now, her form
+ "Clad in a robe transparent, stretcht she lies,
+ "Or on the yielding leaves, or bending grass;
+ "Now flowers she culls;--and so it chanc'd to fall,
+ "Flowers she was gathering, when she first beheld
+ "The charming youth; no sooner seen than lov'd.
+ "Not forth she rush'd at first, though strongly urg'd,
+ "Forward to spring, but all adjusted fair:
+ "Closely survey'd her robe; her features form'd;
+ "And every part in beauteous shape compos'd.
+ "Then thus address'd him;--O, most godlike youth!
+ "And if a god, the lovely Cupid sure!
+ "But if of mortal mould, blest is thy sire!
+ "Blest is thy brother! and thy sister blest!--
+ "If sister hast thou;--and the fostering breast
+ "Which fed thy infant growth: but far 'bove all
+ "In rapturous bliss, is she who calls thee spouse;
+ "Should nymph exist thou deem'st that bliss deserves!
+ "If wedded, grant a stol'n embrace to me;
+ "If not, let me thy nuptial couch ascend.
+ "The Naiaed ceas'd: a bashful glow suffus'd
+ "His face, for nought of love to him was known:
+ "Yet blushing seem'd he lovely: thus warm glows
+ "The apple, to the ripening sun expos'd;
+ "Or teinted ivory; or the redden'd moon,
+ "Whom brazen cymbals clash to help in vain.
+ "To her, warm praying for at least a kiss,
+ "A chaste, a sister's kiss,--her arms firm claspt
+ "Around his ivory neck;--desist! he cries,
+ "Desist! or sole to thee the place I'll leave.
+ "His flight she dreaded, and reply'd,--I go,
+ "Dear youth, and freely yield the spot to thee.
+ "And seems indeed, her steps from him to turn;
+ "But still in sight she kept him; lurking close
+ "Shelter'd by shadowy shrubs, on bended knees.
+ "Of spy unconscious, he in boyish play
+ "Frisks sportive here and there; dips first his feet,
+ "Then ancles deeper in the wantoning waves;
+ "Pleas'd with the temper of the lucid pool:
+ "Till hasty stript from off his tender limbs
+ "His garments soft he flings. More deeply struck
+ "Stood Salmacis; more fiercely flam'd her love,
+ "His naked beauty seen. Her gloating eyes
+ "Sparkled no less than seem bright Phoebus' rays,
+ "When shining splendid, midst a cloudless sky,
+ "A mirror's face reflecting gives them back.
+ "Delay ill brooking, hardly she contains
+ "Her swelling joy; frantic for his embrace,
+ "She pants, and hard from rushing forth refrains.
+ "His sides he claps, and agile in the steam
+ "Quick plunges, moving with alternate arms.
+ "Bright through the waves he shines; thus white appears
+ "The sculptur'd ivory, or the lily fair,
+ "Seen through a crystal veil. The Naiaed cries;--
+ "Lo! here I come;--he's mine,--the youth's my own!
+ "And instant far was every garment flung.
+ "Midst of the waves she leaps;--the struggling youth
+ "Clasps close; and on his cold reluctant lips,
+ "Forces her kisses; down she girds his arms;
+ "And close to hers hugs his unwilling breast:
+ "Final, around the youth who arduous strives
+ "In opposition, and escape essays,
+ "Her limbs she twines: so twines a serpent huge,
+ "Seiz'd by the bird of Jove, and borne on high,
+ "Twisting his head, the feet close-bracing holds;
+ "The wide-spread wings entangled with his tail:
+ "So twines the ivy round the lengthen'd bough:
+ "So numerous Polypus his foe confines,
+ "Seiz'd in the deep, with claws on every side
+ "Firm graspt. But Hermes' son persisting still,
+ "The Naiaed's wish denies; she presses close,
+ "And as she cleaves, their every limb close join'd
+ "Exclaims;--ungallant boy! but strive thy most,
+ "Thou shalt not fly me. Grant me, O ye gods!
+ "No time may ever sunder him from me,
+ "Or me from him.--Her prayer was granted straight;--
+ "For now, commingling, both their bodies join'd;
+ "And both their faces melted into one.
+ "So, when in growth we boughs ingrafted see,
+ "The bark inclosing both at once, they sprout.
+ "Thus were their limbs, in strong embrace comprest,
+ "Wrapp'd close; no longer two in form, yet two
+ "In feature; nor a nymph-like face remain'd,
+ "Nor yet a boy's: it both and neither seem'd.
+
+ "When Hermes' son beheld the liquid stream,
+ "Where masculine he plung'd, the power possess
+ "To enervate his body, and his limbs
+ "Effeminately soften; high he rais'd
+ "His arms, and pray'd (but not with manly voice)
+ "O, sire! O, mother dear! indulge your son,
+ "Your double appellation bearing, this
+ "Sole-urg'd petition. Whoso in these waves
+ "In strong virility, like me, shall plunge,
+ "Hence let him go, like me enervate made;
+ "Spoilt by the stream his strength. Each parent god
+ "Nodding, confirm'd their alter'd son's request;
+ "And ting'd the fountain with the changing power."
+
+ She ceas'd: the nymphs Minyeian still persist
+ Their toil to urge, despising still the god;
+ His festival prophaning. Sudden heard,
+ The rattling sounds of unseen timbrels burst
+ Full on their ears! the pipe; the crooked horn;
+ And brazen cymbals loudly clash; perfumes
+ Of myrrh and saffron blended smell:--but more,
+ And what belief surpasses, straight their looms
+ Virid to sprout begin; the pendent threads
+ Branch into shoots like ivy: part becomes
+ The vine: what now were threads, curl'd tendrils seem:
+ Shot from the folded web, the branches climb;
+ And the bright red in purpling grapes appears.
+
+ Now was the sun declining, and approach'd
+ The twilight season, when nor day it seems,
+ Nor night confirm'd; but a gray mixture forms;
+ Of each an indetermin'd compound. Deep
+ The roof appear'd to shade; the oily lamps,
+ Ardent to glow; the torches bright to burn,
+ With reddening flames; while round them seem'd to howl,
+ Figures of beast ferocious. Fill'd with smoke
+ The room,--th' affrighted maidens seek to hide;
+ And each in different corners tries to shun
+ The fires and flaming light. But while they seek
+ A lurking shelter, o'er their shorten'd limbs
+ A webby membrane spreading, binds their arms
+ In waving wings. The gloom conceal'd the mode,
+ Of transformation from their former shape.
+ Light plumage bears them not aloft,--yet rais'd
+ On wings transparent, through the air they skim,
+ To speak they strive, but utter forth a sound
+ Feeble and weak; then, screeching shrill, they plain:
+ Men's dwellings they frequent,--nor try the woods;
+ And, cheerful day avoiding, skim by night;
+ Their name from that untimely hour deriv'd.
+
+ Now were the deeds of heaven-born Bacchus fam'd
+ Through every part of Thebes; and all around,
+ His aunt proud boasts the new-made god's great power:
+ She, of the sisters all, from sorrow spar'd,
+ Save what to view her sisters' sorrowing gave.
+ Juno beheld her lofty thus, her breast
+ Elate to view her sons; her nuptial fruits
+ With Athamas; and her great foster child,
+ The mighty Bacchus. More the furious queen
+ Bore not, but thus exclaim'd;--"Has the whore's son
+ "Power to transform the Tyrrhene crew, and plunge
+ "Them headlong in the deep? Can he impel
+ "The mother's hands to seize her bleeding son
+ "And tear his entrails? Dares he then to clothe
+ "The Minyeid sisters with un'custom'd wings?
+ "And is Saturnia's utmost power confin'd
+ "Wrongs unreveng'd to weep? Suffices such
+ "For me? Is this a goddess' utmost might?
+ "But he instructs me;--wisdom may be taught
+ "Ev'n by a foe. The wretched Pentheus' fate,
+ "Shews all-sufficient, what may madness do.
+ "Why should not Ino, stung with frantic rage,
+ "The well-known track her sisters trode pursue?"
+
+ A path declivitous, with baleful yew
+ Dark shaded, leads, a dreary silent road,
+ Down to th' infernal regions: sluggish Styx
+ Dank mists exhales: here travel new-made ghosts,
+ With rites funereal blest: pale winter's gloom
+ Wide rules the squalid place: the stranger shades
+ Wander, unknowing which the path to tread,
+ Straight to the infernal city, where is held
+ Black Pluto's savage court. A thousand gates,
+ Wide ope, surround the town on every side.
+ As boundless ocean every stream receives,
+ From earth pour'd numerous,--so each wandering soul
+ Flocks to this city; whose capacious bounds
+ Full space for all affords; nor ever feels
+ Th' increasing crowd: of flesh depriv'd, and bones,
+ The bloodless shadows wander. Some frequent
+ The forum; some th' infernal monarch's court;
+ Some various arts employ, resembling much
+ Their former daily actions; numbers groan
+ In punishments severe. Here Juno came,
+ Braving the region's horrors, from her throne
+ Celestial,--so did ire and hatred goad
+ Her bosom with their stings! Sacred she press'd
+ The groaning threshold,--instant as she stepp'd,
+ Fierce Cerberus his triple head uprais'd,
+ And howl'd with triple throat. The goddess calls
+ The night-born sisters, fierce, implacable:
+ Before the close-barr'd adamantine gates
+ They sit; their tresses twisting round with snakes.
+ The queen through clouds of midnight gloom they see,
+ And instant rise. Here dwell the suffering damn'd.
+ Here Tityus, stretcht o'er nine wide acres, yields
+ His entrails to be torn. Thou, Tantalus,
+ Art seen, the stream forbid to taste;--the fruit
+ Thy lips o'erhanging, flies! Thou, Sisyphus,
+ Thy stone pursuing downwards; or its weight
+ Straining aloft, with oft exerted power!
+ Ixion whirling, too; with swift pursuit,
+ Thou follow'st, and art follow'd! Belides!
+ Your husband-cousins who in death dar'd steep,
+ And ceaseless draw the unavailing streams!
+ All Juno view'd with unrelenting brow;
+ But, view'd Ixion sterner far than all:
+ And when on Sisyphus again she cast
+ Her eyes, behind Ixion, angry cry'd;--
+ "What justice this?--of all the brethren he
+ "Sharp torture suffers! Shall proud Athamas
+ "A regal dwelling boast,--whose scornful taunts,
+ "And scornful spouse have still my power contemn'd?"
+ Then straight her hatred's cause disclos'd. They see
+ Her journey's object, and revenge's aim.
+ This her desire, that Cadmus' regal house
+ Perish'd should sink; and Athamas, fierce urg'd
+ By madness should some dreadful vengeance claim.
+ Commands, solicitations, prayers,--at once
+ The goddesses besiege: and as she speaks,
+ Angrily mov'd, Tisiphone replies,--
+ (Shaking her hoary locks,--the twining snakes
+ Back from her mouth repelling) hasty thus;--
+ "A tedious tale we need not; what thou wilt
+ "Believe accomplish'd. Fly this hateful gloom;--
+ "Up to the wholesome breeze of heaven repair."
+ Glad, Juno left the spot;--when near approach'd
+ Heaven's entrance, there Thaumantian Iris met,
+ And with her sprinklings purify'd the queen.
+
+ Quick now Tisiphone, the savage fiend,
+ Seizes her torch, with gory droppings wet;
+ Flings round her limbs a garment, deeply dy'd
+ With streaming blood; a twisting snake supplies
+ A girdle:--thus array'd she sallies forth,
+ Follow'd by loud lament, by terror, fear,
+ And quivering-featur'd madness. When she press'd
+ The threshold, fame declares the pillars shook;
+ The maple doors, with terror mov'd, grew pale:
+ Back shrunk the sun! Ino, with trembling dread
+ Beheld these wonders;--Athamas beheld;
+ And both prepar'd the haunted place to fly.
+ Escape the fury hinders: fierce she stands,
+ Blocking the entrance: wide her arms she spreads,
+ With viperous twistings bound; and threatening shakes
+ Her tresses: loud the serpents noise, disturb'd;
+ Sprawl o'er her shoulders some; some, lower fall'n,
+ Twine hissing round her breasts, with brandish'd tongue,
+ Black poison vomiting. With furious gripe,
+ Two from her locks she tore;--her deadly hand
+ Hurl'd them straight on; the breasts of Athamas,
+ And Ino, hungry, with their fangs they seiz'd;
+ Fierce pains infixing, but external wounds
+ Their limbs betray'd not: mental was the blow,
+ So direly struck. Venoms most mortal, too,
+ From Tartarus she bore:--the foam high-churn'd
+ From jaws of Cerberus; the poisonous juice
+ Of Hydra; urgent wish for roaming wide;
+ Oblivion mental-blinded; wicked deeds;
+ Weeping; and furious fierceness, slaughter fond.
+ On these commingled, fresh-drawn gore she pour'd,
+ And warm'd them bubbling in a brazen vase;
+ Stirr'd by a sprouting hemlock. Trembling, they
+ Shudder, while in their breasts the poison fierce
+ She pours: both bosoms feel it deep instill'd;--
+ Their inmost vitals feel it. Then her torch,
+ Whirl'd flaming round and round, in triumph glares,
+ Fires from the circling gathering. Powerful thus;
+ Victorious in her aims, and deeds desir'd,
+ To mighty Pluto's shadowy realm she speeds;
+ And from her loins untwists the girding snakes.
+
+ Mad bounded Athamas amid the hall,
+ "Ho! friends," exclaiming;--"here spread wide your toils,
+ "Here, in this thicket, where ev'n now I saw
+ "With young twin cubs, a lioness!"--and mad,
+ Pursu'd his consort for a savage beast;
+ Snatching Learchus, who with playful smile,
+ Outstretch'd his infant hands to meet him. Torne
+ Rough from his mother's bosom, round in air
+ And round, sling-like he whirl'd; then savage dash'd
+ Upon a rugged rock the tender bones.
+
+ Loud howls the frantic mother; frantic made
+ By grief, or by the scatter'd poison's power:
+ And, raving, with dishevell'd tresses spread
+ Wide o'er her shoulders, flies. Her naked arms
+ Young Melicertes bear; madly she shrieks;--
+ "Evoe, Bacchus!"--Loud at Bacchus' name
+ Revengeful Juno laugh'd, and said;--"Such boon
+ "Thy foster-son upon his nurse confers!"
+ A lofty rock the foaming waves o'erhangs,
+ Whose dashing force deep in its base have scoop'd
+ A cavern, safely sheltering from the showers:
+ The adamantine summit high extends,
+ And o'er the wide main stretches. Swift this height,
+ Active and strong with madness, Ino gain'd
+ And fearless, with the infant in her arms,
+ Sprung from the cliff, and sunk beneath the waves.
+ White foam'd the surge around her!
+
+ Venus, griev'd,
+ Such sufferings, undeserv'd, her race should bear,
+ Thus with bland coaxings Ocean's god address'd:
+ "Lord of the azure deep, whose high command
+ "Sways next to heaven's,--a vast demand I ask;--
+ "But pity my poor offspring, whom thou see'st
+ "Plung'd in th' Ionian billows;--with their forms
+ "Thy deities increase. Some influence sure,
+ "In ocean I should hold, from thence produc'd;
+ "Sprung from the froth that on the deep main swims:
+ "Whence Grecian poets name me." Neptune nods,
+ Assenting to her prayer; and from their limbs
+ Abstracts the mortal portion; on their forms
+ Breathes majesty; and with their alter'd mien,
+ Their names he changes too; Palaemon he,
+ Now stil'd, his mother as Leucothoe known.
+
+ The princess' anxious comrades trac'd her steps
+ With care; the last with arduous search they found,
+ Just on the giddy brink, nor dubious deem'd
+ Her fate a moment. Cadmus' house they wail;
+ With beating hands their tresses tear, and robes;
+ And highly Juno blame, as one unjust:
+ Too ireful for the hapless sister's fault.
+ Juno, fierce flaming, these reproaches stung;--
+ "Ye too," she cry'd, "shall monuments become
+ "Of the fierce ire ye blame!" Deeds words pursu'd.
+ The nymph who most her hapless queen held dear,
+ Exclaim'd;--"deep in the roaring main I'll plunge,
+ "To join her fate,"--and sprung to take the leap;
+ But motionless she stood,--fixt to the rock!
+ Her wounding blows, upon her bosom one
+ Strives to renew, as wont; her striving arms
+ Stiffen'd to stone she sees. This tow'rd the waves
+ Her hands extends; a rocky mass she stands,
+ In the same waves far stretching. Lifted high,
+ The locks to rend, the fingers might be seen
+ Stiffen'd, and rigid with the hair become.
+ In posture whatsoever caught, each nymph,
+ In that same posture stands. Thus part are chang'd:
+ The rest, to birds transform'd, by wings upborne,
+ Skim o'er the surface of the neighbouring sea.
+
+ Cadmus, the wond'rous change which rais'd his child,
+ And his young grandson to the rank of gods,
+ Yet knew not. By his load of grief o'erwhelm'd;
+ A chain of woes; and supernatural scenes,
+ So numerous which he sees; the founder quits
+ His town, suspicious that the city's fate,
+ And not his own, misfortune on him showers.
+ Borne o'er the main, his lengthen'd wanderings end,
+ When with his exil'd consort, safe he gains
+ Illyria's shores. Opprest with grief and age,
+ The primal fortunes of their house, with care
+ They scan, and in their converse all their woes
+ Again recounting, Cadmus thus exclaims;--
+ "Was then that serpent, by my javelin pierc'd,
+ "When driven from Tyre; whose numerous teeth I sow'd,
+ "Sacred to some divinity?--If he
+ "Thus, vengeful for the deed, his anger pours,
+ "May I a serpent stretcht at length become."
+ He said,--and serpent-like extended lies!
+ Scales he perceives, upon his harden'd skin;
+ And sees green spots on his black body form;
+ Prone on his breast he falls; together twin'd,
+ His legs commingling stretch, and gradual end
+ Lessen'd in rounded point; his arms remain
+ Still, and those arms remaining he extends;
+ While down his face yet human tears flow fast.
+ "O, hapless wife! approach," he cries, "approach,
+ "And touch me now, while ought of me remains;
+ "Receive my hand, while yet a hand I bear;
+ "Ere to a serpent wholly turns my form."--
+ More he prepar'd to utter, but his tongue,
+ Cleft sudden, to his wishes words refus'd:
+ And often when his sorrows sad he try'd
+ To wail anew, he hiss'd!--that sound alone,
+ Nature permitted. While her naked breast
+ With blows resounded, loud his wife exclaim'd;--
+ "Stay,--O, my Cadmus! hapless man, shake off
+ "This monstrous figure! Cadmus what is this?
+ "Where are thy feet,--and where thy arms and hands?
+ "Where are thy features,--thy complexion? Where,
+ "Whilst I bewail, art thou? Celestial powers!
+ "Why not this transformation work on me?"
+ She ended; he advancing, lick'd her face,
+ And creep'd, as custom'd, to her bosom dear,
+ And round her wonted neck embracing twin'd.
+ Now draw their servants nigh, and as they come
+ With terror start. The crested serpents play,
+ Smooth on their necks,--now two; and cordial slide,
+ In spires conjoin'd; then in the darksome shades
+ Th' adjoining woods afford them, close they hide.
+ Mankind they fly not, nor deep wounds inflict;
+ Harmless, their pristine form is ne'er forgot.
+
+ Still, though in alter'd shapes, the pair rejoic'd
+ Their grandson's fame to hear; whom vanquish'd Ind'
+ Low bending worshipp'd; Greece adoring prais'd,
+ In lofty temples. Sole Acrisius stands,
+ Like Bacchus sprung from Jove's celestial seed,
+ Opposing; and from Argos' gates propels
+ The god;--his birth deny'd, against him arms.
+ Nor Perseus would he own from heaven deriv'd;
+ Conceiv'd by Danae, from a golden shower:
+ Yet soon,--so mighty is the force of truth,--
+ Acrisius grieves he e'er so rashly brav'd
+ The god; his grandson driving from his court,
+ Disown'd. Now one in heaven is glorious plac'd;
+ The other, laden with the well-known spoil
+ Of the fierce snaky monster, cleaves the air,
+ On sounding pinions. High the victor sails
+ O'er Lybia's desarts, and the gory drops
+ Fall from the gorgon's head; the Ground receives
+ The blood, and warms it into writhing snakes.
+ Hence does the country with the pest still swarm.
+
+ Thence borne by adverse winds, he sweeps along,
+ Through boundless ether driven; now here, now there,
+ As watery clouds are swept. From lofty skies,
+ The earth far distant viewing, round the globe
+ He skimm'd: three times he saw the Arctic pole
+ And thrice the warmer Crab. Oft to the west,
+ Th' adventurous youth was borne; back to the east,
+ As often. Now the day in darkness sank,
+ When he, nocturnal flight mistrusting, lights
+ In Atlas' kingdom 'neath th' Hesperian sky;
+ A short repose requests, till Phosphor' bright,
+ Should call Aurora forth;--she ushering in
+ The chariot of the day. Japetus' son
+ All men in huge corporeal bulk surpass'd.
+ He to th' extremest confines of the land,
+ And o'er the ocean sway'd, whose waves receive
+ Apollo's panting steeds, and weary'd car.
+ A thousand bleating flocks; a thousand herds,
+ Stray'd through the royal pastures. Neighbouring lords
+ Not near him plough'd their lands. Trees grew, whose leaves
+ With splendor glittering, threw a golden shade
+ O'er golden branches, and o'er fruit of gold.
+ Thus Perseus;--"Friendly host, if glorious birth
+ "Thee pleases, here one born of Jove behold.
+ "If deeds of merit more attraction move,
+ "Mine thy applause may claim. At present grant
+ "An hospitable shelter here, and rest."
+ But Atlas, fearing these oraculous words,--
+ (Long since by Themis on Parnassus given)
+ "The time, O king! will come, thy golden tree
+ "Shall lose its fruit. The glory of the spoil
+ "A son of Jove shall boast:" and dreading sore;
+ Around his orchards massy walls he rears;
+ A dragon huge and fierce the guard maintains.
+ "Whatever strangers to his realm approach,
+ Far thence he drives; and thus to Perseus too;--
+ "Haste, quickly haste from hence, lest soon I prove
+ "Thy glorious deeds but feign'd,--feign'd as thy birth."
+ Then force to threats he added,--strove to thrust
+ The hero forth; who struggling, efforts urg'd
+ Resisting, while he begg'd with softening words.
+ Proving in strength inferior (who in strength
+ Could vie with Atlas?) "Since my fame," he cries,
+ "Such small desert obtains, a gift accept."
+ And, back his face averting, holds display'd,
+ On his left side Medusa's ghastly head.
+ A mountain now the mighty Atlas stands!
+ His hair and beard as lofty forests wave;
+ His arms and hands high hilly summits rear;
+ O'er-topp'd above, by what was once his head:
+ His bones are rocks; then, so the gods decree,
+ Enlarg'd to size immense in every part,
+ The weight of heaven, and all the stars he bears.
+
+ His blustering vassals AEolus had pent,
+ In ever-during prisons. Phosphor' bright,
+ Most splendid 'midst the starry host of heaven;
+ Admonitor of labor, now was risen;
+ When Perseus bound again on either foot,
+ His winnowing wings; girt on his crooked sword;
+ And cleft the air, on waving pinions borne.
+ O'er numerous nations, far beneath him spread,
+ He sail'd, till Ethiopia's realms he saw;
+ Where Cepheus rul'd. There Ammon, power unjust,
+ Andromeda had sentenc'd,--guiltless maid,
+ To what her mother's boastful tongue deserv'd.
+ Her soon as Perseus spy'd, fast by the arms
+ Chain'd to the rugged rock;--where but her locks
+ Wav'd lightly to the breeze; and but her eyes
+ Trickled a tepid stream; she might be deem'd
+ A sculptur'd marble: him the unknown sight
+ Astonish'd, dazzled, and enflam'd with love.
+ His senses in the beauteous view sole wrapt,
+ Scarce he remembers on his wings to wave:--
+ Alights, exclaiming;--"O, whom chains like these
+ "Should never bind, nor other chains than such,
+ "As lovers intertwist! declare thy name;
+ "Thy country tell; and why thou bear'st those bonds."
+ Silent awhile the virgin stood; abash'd,
+ Converse with man to hold: her blushing face,
+ Her hands, if free, had long before conceal'd.
+ Quick starting tears, 'twas all she could, her eyes
+ Veil'd swimming: then her name and country told;
+ And all the conscious pride her mother's charms
+ Inspir'd, in full acknowledg'd; lest for crimes
+ Her own, just suffering, Perseus might conceive.
+ All yet untold, when loud the billows roar'd;
+ Upheav'd the monster's bulk: far 'bove the waves
+ He stood uprear'd, and then right onward plung'd;
+ His ample bosom covering half the main.
+
+ Loud shrieks the virgin! Sad her father comes;
+ And sad her raving mother, wretched both,
+ The mother most deserv'dly. Help in vain
+ From them she seeks; with tears, and bosoms torn,
+ Her fetter'd limbs they clasp, they can no more.
+ Then Perseus thus;--"for tears and loud laments,
+ "Long may the time be: but effective aid
+ "To give, the time is short. Suppose the nymph
+ "I ask;--I, Perseus! sprung from mighty Jove,
+ "By her whose prison in a golden shower
+ "Fecundative, he enter'd. Perseus, who
+ "The Gorgon snaky-hair'd o'ercame; who bold
+ "On waving pinions winnows through the air.
+ "Him for a son in preference should ye chuse,
+ "Arduous he'll strive to these high claims to add,
+ "If heaven permits, some merits more his own.
+ "Agree she's mine, if by my arm preserv'd."
+ The parents promise;--(who in such a case
+ Would waver) beg his help; and promise, more,
+ That all their kingdom shall her dower become.
+ Lo! as a vessel's sharpen'd prow quick cleaves
+ The waves, by strenuous sweating arms impell'd,
+ The monster comes! his mighty bosom wide
+ The waters sideway breasting; distant now,
+ Not more than what the Balearic sling
+ Could with the bullet gain, when high in air,
+ The sod repelling, upward springs the youth.
+ Soon as the main reflected Perseus' form,
+ The ocean-savage rag'd: as Jove's swift bird
+ When in the open fields a snake he spies
+ Basking, his livid back to Phoebus' rays
+ Expos'd, behind attacks him; plunges deep,
+ His hungry talons in his scaly neck,
+ To curb the twisting of his sanguine teeth.
+ With rapid flight, thus Perseus shooting cleaves
+ The empty air; lights on the monster's back;
+ Burying his weapon to the crooked hilt,
+ Full in the shoulder of the raging beast.
+ Mad with the deepen'd wound, now rears aloft
+ The savage high in air; now plunges low,
+ Beneath the waters; now he furious turns,
+ As turns the boar ferocious, when the crowd
+ Of barking dogs beset him fiercely round.
+ With rapid waft the venturous hero shuns
+ His greedy jaws: now on his back, thick-arm'd
+ With shells, he strikes where opening space he sees;
+ Now on his sides; now where his tapering tail
+ In fish-like form is finish'd, bites the steel.
+ High spouts the wounded monster from his mouth;
+ The waves with gore deep purpling: drench'd, the wings
+ Droop nagging; and no longer Perseus dares
+ To trust their dripping aid. A rock he spies
+ Whose summit o'er the peaceful waters rose,
+ But deep was hid when tempests mov'd the main.
+ Supported here, his left hand firmly grasps
+ The craggy edge; while through his sides, and through,
+ The dying savage feels the weapon drove.
+
+ Loud shouts and plaudits fill the shore, the noise
+ Resounding echoes to the heavenly thrones.
+ Cassiope and Cepheus joyful greet
+ Their son, and grateful own him chief support,
+ And saviour. From her rugged fetters freed,
+ The virgin walks; the cause, the great reward
+ Of all his toil. His victor hands he laves
+ In the pure stream: then with soft leaves defends
+ A spot, to rest the serpent-bearing head,
+ Lest the bare sand should harm it. Twigs marine
+ He likewise strews, and rests Medusa there.
+ The fresh green twigs as though with life endow'd,
+ Felt the dire Gorgon's power; their spongy pith
+ Hard to the touch became, the stiffness spread
+ Through every twig and leaf. The Nereid nymphs
+ More branches bring, and try the wonderous change
+ On all, and joy to see the change succeed:
+ Spreading the transformation from the seeds,
+ With them throughout the waves. This nature still
+ Retains the coral: hardness still assumes
+ From contact with the air; beneath the waves
+ A bending twig; an harden'd stone above.
+
+ Three turfy altars to three heavenly gods
+ He builds: to Hermes sacred stands the left;
+ The right to warlike Pallas; in the midst
+ The mighty Jove's is rear'd: (To Pallas bleeds
+ An heifer: to the plume-heel'd god a calf:
+ Almighty Jove accepts a lordly bull)
+ Then claims Andromeda, the rich reward,
+ without a dower, of all his valorous toil.
+
+ Now Love and Hymen wave their torches high,
+ Precursive of their joys: each hearth is heap'd
+ With odorous incense: every roof is hung
+ With flowery garlands: pipes, and harps, and lyres,
+ And songs which indicate their festive souls,
+ Resound aloud. Each portal open thrown,
+ Display'd appears the golden palace wide.
+ By every lord of Cepheus' court, array'd
+ In splendid pomp, the nuptial feast is grac'd.
+ The banquet ended, while the generous gift
+ Of Bacchus circles; and each soul dilates,
+ Perseus, the modes and customs of the land
+ Curious enquires. Lyncides full relates
+ The habits, laws, and manners of the clime.
+ His information ended;--"now,"--he cry'd,--
+ "Relate, O Perseus! boldest of mankind,--
+ "By what fierce courage, and what skilful arts,"
+ "The snaky locks in thy possession came."
+ Then Perseus tells, how lies a lonely vale
+ Beneath cold Atlas; every side strong fenc'd
+ By lofty hills, whose only pass is held,
+ By Phorcus' twin-born daughters. Mutual they
+ One eye possess'd, in turns by either us'd.
+ His hand deceiving seiz'd it, as it pass'd
+ 'Twixt them alternate; dexterous was the wile.
+ Through devious paths, and deep-sunk ways he went;
+ And craggy woods, dark-frowning, till he reach'd
+ The Gorgon's dwelling: passing then the fields,
+ And beaten roads, there forms of men he saw,
+ And shapes of savage beasts; but all to stone
+ By dire Medusa's petrifying face
+ Transform'd. He then the horrid countenance mark'd,
+ Bright from the brazen targe his left arm bore,
+ Reflected. While deep slumber safe weigh'd down,
+ The Gorgon and her serpents, he divorc'd
+ Her shoulders from her head. He adds how sprung,
+ Chrysaoer, and wing'd Pegasus the swift,
+ From the prolific Gorgon's streaming gore.
+ Relates the perils of his lengthen'd flight;
+ What seas, what kingdoms from the lofty sky,
+ Beneath him he had view'd; what sparkling stars
+ His waving wings had brush'd;--thus ceas'd his tale:
+ All more desiring. Then uprose a peer,--
+ And why Medusa, of the sisters sole
+ The serpent-twisted tresses wore, enquir'd.
+ The youth:--"The story that you ask, full well
+ "Attention claims;--I what you seek recite.
+ "For matchless beauty fam'd, with envying hope
+ "Her, crowds of suitors follow'd: nought surpass'd
+ "'Mongst all her beauties, her bright lovely hair:
+ "Those who had seen her thus, have this averr'd.
+ "But in Minerva's temple Ocean's god
+ "The maid defil'd. The virgin goddess shock'd,
+ "Her eyes averted, and her forehead chaste
+ "Veil'd with the AEgis. Then with vengeful power
+ "Chang'd the Gorgonian locks to writhing snakes.
+ "The snakes, thus form'd, fixt on her shield she bears;
+ "The horrid sight her trembling foes appals."
+
+
+
+
+*The Fifth Book.*
+
+
+ Attack of Phineus and his friends on Perseus. Defeat of the
+ former, and their change to statues. Atchievements of Perseus in
+ Argos, and Seriphus. Minerva's visit to the Muses. Fate of
+ Pyreneus. Song of the Pierides. Song of the Muses. Rape of
+ Proserpine. Change of Cyane, to a fountain. Search of Ceres.
+ Transformation of a boy to an eft. Of Ascalaphus to an owl.
+ Change of the companions of Proserpine to Sirens. Story of
+ Arethusa. Journey of Triptolemus. Transformation of Lyncus to a
+ lynx. The Pierides transformed to magpies.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Fifth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ These wonders, while the son of Danae tells,
+ Circled around by Cepheus' noble troop;
+ Sudden th' imperial hall with tumults loud
+ Resounds. Not clamor such as oft we hear,
+ The bridal feasts, in songs of joy attend:
+ But what stern war announces. Much the change,
+ (The peaceful feast to instant riot turn'd)
+ Seem'd like the placid main, when the fierce rage
+ Of sudden tempests lash its surges high.
+
+ First Phineus stepp'd, the leader of the crowd;
+ Soul of the riot; and his ashen spear,
+ Arm'd with a brazen point, he brandish'd high;--
+ "Lo, here!" he shouts, "lo, here I vengeful come
+ "On him who claims my spouse! Not thy swift wings;
+ "Nor cheating Jove, chang'd to a golden shower,
+ "Shall save thee from my arm,"--and pois'd to fling,
+ The dart was held, but Cepheus loud exclaim'd,--
+ "Brother! what dost thou? what dire madness sways
+ "To wicked acts thy soul? Is this the meed
+ "His gallant deeds deserve? Is this the dower,
+ "We for the valued life he sav'd bestow?
+ "List but to truth,--not Perseus of thy wife
+ "Bereft thee, but the angry Nereid nymphs,--
+ "The horned Ammon,--and the monster huge!
+ "Prepar'd to glut his hunger with my child.
+ "Then was thy spouse snatch'd from thee, when remain'd
+ "Of help no hope; to all she lost appear'd.
+ "Thy savage heart perhaps had ev'n rejoic'd
+ "To see her perish, that our greater grief
+ "Might lighten part of thine. Couldst thou her see
+ "Fast chain'd before thee? uncle! spouse betroth'd!
+ "And yet no aid afford! And storm'st thou thus?
+ "She to another now her safety owes;
+ "And would'st thou snatch the prize? So high if seems
+ "To thee her precious value, thy bold arm
+ "Should on the rock where chain'd she lay, have sought
+ "And have deserv'd her. Now permit that he
+ "Who sought her there; through whom my failing age
+ "Is not now childless, grant that he enjoy
+ "Peaceful, what through his merits he no less,
+ "Than our firm compact claims: not him to thee,
+ "But him to certain loss I preference gave."
+
+ Nought Phineus answer'd, but his furious eyes
+ Now Perseus, now the king alternate view;
+ Doubtful or this to pierce, or that: his pause
+ Was short; his powerful arm, by fury nerv'd,
+ At Perseus hurl'd the quivering spear,--in vain!
+ Fixt in the couch it stood. Quick bounded up
+ Th' indignant youth, and deep in Phineus' breast,
+ Had plung'd the point returning, but he shrunk
+ Behind an altar; which, O shame! preserv'd
+ The impious villain. Yet not harmless sped
+ The weapon;--full in Rhaetus' front it stuck;
+ Who lifeless dropp'd; broke in the bone the steel;
+ He spurn'd, and sprinkled all the feast with gore.
+ Then rag'd with ire ungovern'd all the crowd,
+ And hurl'd in showers their weapons; some fierce cry'd,
+ Cepheus, no less than Perseus, death deserv'd.
+ But Cepheus left the hall, adjuring loud,
+ The hospitable gods; justice; and faith;
+ That he was guiltless of the sanguine fray.
+
+ Minerva comes; her sheltering AEgis shields
+ Her brother's body; in his breast she breathes
+ Redoubled valor. Atys, Indian bred,
+ Whom fair Limnate, Ganges' daughter, bore,
+ 'Tis told, amid the waters' crystal caves,
+ Scarce sixteen years had seen. His beauteous form,
+ In gorgeous dress more beauteous still appear'd.
+ A purple garment fring'd around with gold,
+ Enwrapp'd him; round his neck were golden beads;
+ And pins and combs of gold his lovely locks,
+ With myrrh sweet-smelling, held. Well skill'd the youth
+ To hurl the javelin to its distant mark;
+ But more to bend the bow. Him Perseus smote,
+ The flexile bow just bending, with a brand
+ Snatch'd flaming from the altar; crush'd, his face
+ A horrid mass of fractur'd bones appears.
+ His beauteous features Lycabas beheld
+ In blood convuls'd: his dearest comrade he,
+ And one who proud his ardent love display'd.
+ Griev'd to behold the last expiring breath,
+ Of Atys parting from the furious wound,
+ He seiz'd the bow the youth had bent, and cry'd;--
+ "The battle try with me!--not long thy boast
+ "Of conquest o'er a boy; a conquest more
+ "By hate than fame attended." Railing thus,
+ The piercing weapon darted from the string.
+
+ Now Phineus, fearful hand to hand to meet
+ The foe, his javelin hurl'd, the point ill-aim'd
+ On Idas glanc'd, who vainly kept aloof
+ With neutral weapon. Phineus, stern he view'd,
+ "With threatening frown, exclaiming;--"though no share
+ "In this mad broil I took, now, Phineus, feel
+ "The power of him whom thou hast forc'd a foe;
+ "And take reciprocally wound for wound."
+ Then from his side the weapon tore to hurl;
+ But fast the life-stream gush'd, he instant fell.
+ Here, by the sword of Clymenus was slain,
+ Odites, noblest lord in Cepheus' court;
+ Protenor fell by Hypseus; Hypseus sunk
+ Beneath Lyncides' arm. Amid the throng
+ Was old Emathion too, friend to the just,
+ And fearer of the gods; though ancient years
+ Forbade his wielding arms, what aid his words
+ Could give, he spar'd not: curs'd the impious war,
+ In loud upbraidings. As with trembling arms,
+ He grasp'd the altar, Chromis' gory sword
+ His neck divided; on the altar dropp'd
+ The head; and there the trembling, dying tongue,
+ Faint imprecations utter'd; 'midst the flames
+ He breath'd his spirit forth. By Phineus' hand,
+ Broteas and Ammon fell: the brother-twins
+ Unconquer'd in the fight, the caestus shower'd;
+ Could but the caestus make the falchion yield:
+ But Perseus felt it not,--its point hung fixt
+ Amidst his garments' folds. On him he turn'd,
+ The falchion, glutted with Medusa's gore,
+ And plung'd it in his breast. Dying, he looks
+ Around, with eyes rolling in endless night,
+ For Atys, and upon him drops: then pleas'd,
+ Thus join'd in death, he seeks the shades below.
+ Methion's son, Syenian Phorbas, now
+ And fierce Amphimedon, in Lybia born,
+ Rush in the fight to mingle; both fall prone,
+ The slippery earth wide spread with smoking blood.
+ The sword attacks them rising; in his throat
+ Phorbas receives it, and the other's side.
+ But Erythis, of Actor born, whd rear'd
+ An axe tremendous, not the waving sword
+ Of Perseus meets: a cup of massive bulk,
+ With both his hands high-heaving, fierce he hurls
+ Full on his foe: he vomits gory floods;
+ Falls back, and strikes with dying head the earth.
+ Then Polydaemon falls, sprung from the blood
+ Of queen Semiramis; Lycetes brave,
+ The son of Spercheus; Abaris, who dwelt
+ On frozen Caucasus; and Helicen
+ With unshorn tresses; Phlegias; Clitus too;
+ Those with the rest beneath his weapon fall;
+ And on the rising heaps of dead he stands.
+ And fell Ampycus; Ceres' sacred priest,
+ His temples with a snow-white fillet bound.
+ Thou, O, Japetides! whose string to sound
+ Such discord knew not; but whose harp still tun'd,
+ The works of peace, in concord with thy voice;
+ Wast bidden here to celebrate the feast:
+ And cheer the nuptial banquet with thy song!
+ Him, when at distance Pettalus beheld,
+ Handling his peaceful instrument, he cry'd
+ In mocking laughter;--"go, and end thy song,
+ "Amid the Stygian ghosts,"--and instant plung'd
+ Through his left temple, his too deadly sword.
+ Sinking, his dying fingers caught the strings,
+ And, chance-directed, gave a mournful sound.
+ Not long the fierce Lycormas saw his fall
+ Without revenge: a massy bar of oak
+ From the right gate he tore, and on the bones
+ Behind the neck, the furious blow was aim'd:
+ Prone on the earth, like a crush'd ox he fell.
+ Pelates of Cinypheus, strove to rend
+ A like strong fastening from th' opposing door;
+ The dart of Corythus his tugging hand
+ Transfix'd, and nail'd him to the wood confin'd:
+ Here Abas, with his spear, deep pierc'd his side:
+ Nor dying fell he;--by the hand retain'd,
+ Firm to the post he hung. Melaneus fell.
+ The arms of Perseus aiding; Dorilas,
+ The wealthiest lord in Nasamonia's land,
+ Fell too beside him: rich was he in fields;
+ In wide extent no lands with his could vie;
+ Nor equal his in hoarded heaps of grain.
+ Obliquely in his groin, the missive spear
+ Stuck deep,--a mortal spot: his Bactrian foe
+ His rolling eyes beheld, and dying breath
+ In sobs convulsive flitting, and exclaim'd;--
+ "This spot thou pressest, now of all thy lands,
+ "Possess,"--and turning left the lifeless corse.
+ Avenging Perseus hurls at him the spear,
+ Torn from the smoking wound; the point, receiv'd
+ Full in the nostrils, pierces through the neck:
+ Before, behind, expos'd the weapon stands.
+
+ Now fortune aids his blows, the brother pair,
+ Clanis, and Clytius fall, by different wounds.
+ Hurl'd by his nervous arm, the ashen spear
+ Transfix'd the thighs of Clytius: Clanis dy'd
+ Biting the steel that pierc'd his mouth. Now fell
+ Mendesian Celadon; and Astreus borne
+ By Hebrew mother, to a doubtful sire.
+ Now dy'd Ethion, once deep skill'd to see
+ The future fates; now by his skill deceiv'd.
+ Thoactes, who the monarch's armor bore;
+ And base Agyrtes, murderer of his sire.
+ Crowds though he conquers, thickening crowds remain;
+ For all united wage on him the war.
+ In every quarter fight the press, conspir'd
+ To aid a cause to worth and faith oppos'd.
+ The sire, with useless piety,--the queen,
+ And new-made bride, the hero's party take;
+ And fill the hall with screams. The clang of arms,
+ And groans of dying men their screamings drown.
+ The houshold deities, polluted once,
+ The fierce Bellona bathes with gore again;
+ With double fury lighting up the war.
+
+ Now Phineus, followed by a furious throng
+ Surrounds him single; thicker fly their darts
+ Than wintry hail, on every side; his sight
+ They cloud, and deafening, whiz his ears around.
+ By crowds opprest, retreating, Perseus leans
+ His shoulders 'gainst a massive pillar's height;
+ And, safe behind, dares all the furious fight.
+ Chaonian Molpeus rushes on his left;
+ Ethemon, Nabathaean, on his right:
+ Thus a fierce tiger, urg'd by famine, hears
+ Combin'd the lowings of two different herds,
+ Far distant in the vale; in doubt he stands,
+ On this, or that to rush; and furious burns
+ On both at once to thunder. Perseus so,
+ To left and right inclin'd at once to bear,
+ Plerc'd first the thigh of Molpeus,--straight he fled
+ Unfollow'd; for Ethemon fiercely press'd.
+ He, furious aiming at the hero's neck,
+ With ill-directed strength, his weapon broke
+ Against a column;--back the shiver'd point
+ Sprung, and his throat transfix'd: slight was the wound;
+ To doom to death unable. Perseus plung'd
+ His mortal falchion, as the trembling wretch
+ His helpless arms extended, in his breast.
+ But now his valor Perseus found oppress'd
+ By crowds unequal, and aloud exclaim'd;--
+ "Since thus you force me, from my very foe
+ "More aid I'll ask;--my friends avert your eyes!"
+ Then shew'd the Gorgon's head. "Go, elsewhere seek,"
+ Said Thescelus,--"for those such sights may move:"--
+ The deadly javelin poising in his hand,
+ In act to throw, a marble form he stands,
+ In the same posture. Near him Ampyx rear'd,
+ Against the brave Lyncides' breast his sword;
+ His uprais'd hand was harden'd; here, or there,
+ To wave unable. Nileus now display'd
+ Seven argent streams upon a shield of gold;
+ False boasting offspring from the seven-mouth'd Nile;
+ And cry'd;--"Lo! Perseus, whence my race deriv'd;
+ "Down to the silent shades this solace bear
+ "By such a hand to die." The final words
+ Were lost; his sounding voice abrupt was stay'd;
+ His open'd mouth still seem'd the words to form,
+ Incapable to utter. Eryx storm'd
+ At these, exclaiming;---"not the Gorgon's hairs
+ "Freeze ye, but your own trembling, dastard souls:
+ "Rush forth with me, and on the earth lay low,
+ "The youth who battles thus with magic arms."
+ Fierce had he rush'd, but firmly fixt his feet
+ Held him to earth, a rigid, fasten'd stone;
+ A statue arm'd. These well their fate deserv'd,
+ But one, Aconteus, while in aid he fought
+ Of Perseus, sudden stood to stone congeal'd;
+ As star'd the Gorgon luckless in his face.
+ Him saw Astyages, but thought he liv'd;
+ And fierce attack'd him with a mighty sword.
+ Shrill tinkling sounds the blow: astonish'd stands
+ Astyages;--astonish'd seems the stone;
+ For while he stares, he too to marble turns.
+ Long were the tale, of each plebeian death
+ To tell; two hundred still unhurt remain;
+ By Gorgon's head two hundred stiffen'd stand:
+ When Phineus seems the strife unjust to mourn.
+ But what to act remains? Around him crowd,
+ The forms of numerous friends: his friends he knows,
+ Their aid intreats, and calls on each by name:
+ Still doubting, seizes those his grasp can reach
+ And finds them stone! Averse he turns his eyes;
+ Raises his conscious arms and hands oblique,
+ And suppliant begs;--"go Perseus,--conqueror, go!
+ "Remove that dreadful monster,--bear away
+ "That stone-creating visage, Gorgon's head!
+ "Whate'er it be, I pray thee bear it hence.
+ "Nor hate, nor lust of empire, rais'd our arms
+ "Against thee;--for my wife alone we warr'd.
+ "Thy cause, by merit best; mine, but by time.
+ "Bravest of men, me much it grieves I e'er,
+ "Thy claim oppos'd: existence only give,
+ "All else be thine." To him, as thus he begg'd,
+ Fearing his eyes, to whom he suppliant spoke
+ To turn;--"thou dastard, Phineus!" Perseus cry'd,--
+ "What I can grant, I will; and what I grant
+ "To souls like thine a mighty boon must seem.
+ "Dispel thy terror; rest from steel secure.
+ "Yet must a during monument remain,
+ "Still in the dwelling of my spouse's sire,
+ "Conspicuous. So my bride may daily see
+ "Her imag'd husband." Speaking thus, he held
+ The Gorgon's head, where pallid, Phineus turn'd;
+ So turning stiffen'd stood the neck; so turn'd
+ Appear'd th' inverted eyes; the humid balls
+ To stone concreted. Still the timid look,
+ And suppliant face, and tame-petitioning arms,
+ And guilty awe-struck look, in stone remain'd.
+
+ Now victor, Abantiades re-seeks
+ His soil paternal, with his well-earn'd bride:
+ And in his undeserving grandsire's aid,
+ Avenging war on Proetus he declares.
+ Proetus then all Acrisius' cities held;
+ From each possession forc'd, his brother fled.
+ But arms, and battled towns, like ill-possess'd,
+ The head snake-curl'd, oblig'd at once to stoop.
+ Yet not the youth's bold valor, amply prov'd,
+ By all his brave atchievements; nor his toils
+ Thee, Polydectes, mov'd; who rul'd the isle,
+ The paltry isle, Seriphus; stubborn still,
+ Inexorable hatred thou maintain'st:
+ Endless against him burns thy rage unjust.
+ Nay, from his true deserts, thou would'st detract;
+ And swear'st Medusa's death a fiction form'd.
+ Then Perseus;--"thus if true I speak, or no,
+ "Experience. Close, my friends, your eyes!"--as forth,
+ He held the Gorgon;--bloodless stood the face
+ Of Polydectes, turn'd a marble form.
+
+ Thus far, Minerva aided side by side,
+ Her brother golden-born; then swiftly flew,
+ Wrapt in a cloud opaque; and distant left
+ Seriphus. On she flies, to right she leaves
+ Cythnos, and Gyaros; and cross the main
+ The shortest route she hastens; speeds to Thebes,
+ And seeks the Heliconian nymphs, whose mount
+ Alighting feels her first: the learned nine,
+ Thus she bespeaks;--"fame tells, a new-made spring,
+ "Burst from a blow the swift-wing'd horse's hoof
+ "Inflicted; lo! the cause I hither come.
+ "That steed I saw spring from his mother's blood:
+ "Fain would I this new prodigy behold."
+ Urania gave reply. "O, maid divine!
+ "What cause soe'er has with thy presence grac'd.
+ "Our dwelling, proves to us a grateful boon.
+ "Fame speaks not false. Our fountain surely sprung
+ "Sole from Pegasus." Speaking thus, she leads
+ The virgin goddess to the sacred streams:
+ Who long the spring admir'd;--the spring produc'd
+ From the hoof's blow:--around surveying views
+ The groves of ancient trees, the grots, the plants
+ Of ever-vary'd tint; and happy calls
+ The learned nymphs, who such a spot possess'd.
+ Then thus a sister;--"O, divinest maid!
+ "Our choir to join most worthy, did not aims
+ "Of loftier import tempt thy warlike soul,
+ "Right hast thou spoke; our habitation well,
+ "And well our arts thy highest praises claim.
+ "Blest were our lot, if still from danger free:
+ "But nought a villain's daring power restrains,
+ "And terror soon our virgin minds appals.
+ "Ev'n now the dread Pyreneus to my eyes
+ "Stands present: to its wonted calm not yet
+ "Restor'd my mind. With furious Thracian bands
+ "Daulis he conquer'd, and the Phocian fields;
+ "And held the sway unjust. Parnassus' fane
+ "We sought; th' usurper there beheld us pass,
+ "And feigning reverence for our power divine
+ "Worshipp'd, and then address'd us, whom he knew.
+ "Here, O! ye Muses, rest, nor dubious stand
+ "But straight beneath my sheltering roof avoid
+ "The cloudy heaven, and rain (for fast it shower'd)
+ "Oft mighty deities have enter'd roofs
+ "Less pompous.--By his invitation urg'd,
+ "And by the tempest, we accede and step
+ "Within the hall. The pelting showers now ceas'd,
+ "Auster by Boreas vanquish'd; fled the clouds
+ "Black lowering, and the face of heaven left clear:
+ "Anxious we wish to go: Pyreneus fast
+ "His dwelling closes, and rough force prepares:
+ "Wings we assume, and from his force escape.
+ "He, standing on the loftiest turret's top,
+ "Like us his flight about to wing, exclaims--
+ "A path you lead, that path will I pursue.
+ "Then madly from the tower's most lofty wall,
+ "Dash'd on his face he fell, and dying strew'd
+ "His shatter'd bones upon the blood-stain'd ground."
+
+ As spoke the muse thus, loud and strong was heard,
+ Of fluttering pinions in the air the sound;
+ And hailing voices from high branches came.
+ Jove's daughter then around enquiring look'd
+ (The sounds she hears, so like the human voice,
+ From human voice she deems them) birds the sound
+ Emitted: magpies were they;--magpies nine:
+ Their doom lamenting, on the boughs they sate,
+ Aping in voice their neighbours all around.
+ Then to the wondering goddess, thus the muse
+ Explain'd: "These vanquish'd in the arduous strife
+ "Of song, to us submitting, swell the crowd
+ "Of feather'd fliers. In Pellenian lands
+ "Most rich was Pierus their sire; to him
+ "Evippe of Paeonia bore the nymphs;
+ "Nine times invoking great Lucina's aid.
+ "Vain of their number, proud the sister-crew,
+ "In folly journey'd through Thessalia's towns,
+ "And through the towns of Greece; when here arriv'd
+ "Thus to the test of power their words provoke:--
+ "At length desist to cheat the senseless crowd
+ "With harmony pretended, Thespian maids!
+ "With us contend, if faith your talents give
+ "For such a trial. Ye in voice and skill
+ "Surpass us not,--our numbers are the same.
+ "If vanquish'd, yield the Medusaean fount,
+ "And Hyantean Aganippe,--we
+ "If conquer'd, all Emanthaea's regions cede,
+ "Far as Paeonia's snows. The nymphs around
+ "The contest shall decide. Deep shame we felt
+ "Thus to contend, but deeper shame appear'd
+ "To yield without contention to their boast.
+ "The nymphs elected to adjudge the prize
+ "Swear by the floods; and on the living rock
+ "Seated, await to hear the rival songs.
+
+ "Then one, impatient who should first commence,
+ "Or we, or they, arises;--sings the war
+ "Of gods and giants; to the rebels gives
+ "False praises; and the high celestials' power
+ "Much under-rating, tells how Typhon, rais'd.
+ "From earth's most deep recesses, struck with fear
+ "All heaven: each god betook him straight to flight
+ "Far distant, till th' Egyptian land receiv'd
+ "Each weary'd foot, where Nile's dissever'd stream
+ "Pours in seven mouths. How earth-born Typhon here,
+ "They tell, pursu'd them; and each god, conceal'd
+ "In feign'd resemblance, cheated there his power.
+ "Jove, (so she sung) a leading ram became;
+ "(Whence still the Lybians form their Ammon horn'd)
+ "The crow Apollo hid: a goat the son
+ "Of Semele became: Diana skulk'd
+ "In shape a cat: a snow-white cow conceal'd
+ "The form of Juno: Venus seem'd a fish:
+ "And 'neath an Ibis Hermes safely crouch'd.
+
+ "Thus far she mov'd her vocal lips; thus far
+ "Her lyre her voice attended: then they call
+ "For our Aoenian song. But that to hear,
+ "Perchance your leisure suits not; pressing deeds
+ "Unlike our songs must more your time demand."
+ Pallas replies;--"be hesitation far,
+ "And all your song from first commence relate."
+ So saying, in the forest's pleasing shade
+ She rested; while the Muse proceeding, spoke.
+
+ "To one the sole contending task we give,
+ "Calliope;--she rises, neatly bound,
+ "Her flowing tresses with an ivy wreath.
+ "With dexterous thumb the trembling strings she tries,
+ "Then to their quivering sounds this song subjoins.
+ "Ceres at first with crooked plough upturn'd
+ "The glebe; she first mild fruits and milder corn
+ "Gave to the earth; and rules to tend them gave:
+ "All gifts from her proceed. To her the song
+ "I raise. Would that my best exerted power,
+ "A song to suit thy least deserts could form,
+ "O, goddess! worthy of our loftiest praise.
+
+ "The vast Sicilian isle, with pressure huge
+ "Thrown o'er them, deep the limbs gigantic weighs
+ "Of huge Typhoeus, who the heavenly throne
+ "Had dar'd to hope for: struggling oft he tries,
+ "His efforts, daily bent to lift his load:
+ "But hard Pelorus on his right hand lies,
+ "Ausonia facing; while Pachyne rests
+ "Heavy to left: wide o'er his giant thighs
+ "Spreads Lilyboeum: Etna presses down
+ "His head; beneath whose crater, laid supine,
+ "From his hot mouth he ashes sends, and flames.
+ "Thus with his body labouring to remove
+ "The ponderous load of earth;--whole towns o'erwhelm;
+ "And lofty hills o'erturn; trembles the ground;
+ "And Hell's dread monarch fears a chasm should gape:
+ "And through the opening wide his realm display:
+ "The trembling ghosts with light un'custom'd scar'd.
+ "The shock to meet expecting, starts the king
+ "Quick from his cloudy throne; and in his car
+ "Borne by his sable steeds, with care surveys
+ "Sicilia's deep foundations; wide around
+ "Exploring all; then with his toils content,
+ "No ruin'd part detected, flings aside
+ "Each apprehension. Strolling now at ease,
+ "Him Venus from the Erycinian hill
+ "Espy'd; and to her feather'd son, who lay
+ "Clasp'd in her arms, exclaim'd;--O, Cupid! son!
+ "My sole assistant! sole defence and aid!
+ "Seize now that weapon which o'er all has sway,
+ "That piercing dart,--and deep within the breast
+ "Of the dark god whose lot was given to rule
+ "The nether regions of the triple realm,
+ "Bury it. All the gods thy might confess;
+ "Ev'n Jove himself. The ocean powers allow
+ "Thy rule, and he whom Ocean's powers obey.
+ "Why then should Tartarus alone evade
+ "Thy thrall? Why not my empire and thine own
+ "With that complete? Of all the world's extent
+ "A third is stak'd. Nay more, our utmost power,
+ "Heaven our own seat contemns;--thy potent sway,
+ "And mine alike impair'd. Behold'st thou not
+ "Minerva, with the quiver-bearing maid
+ "Deserting me? Thus will the blooming child
+ "Of Ceres, if we grant it, still remain
+ "Inviolate a virgin;--thither tend
+ "Her anxious hopes. But thou, if dear thou hold'st
+ "Our mutual realm, the virgin goddess link
+ "In union with her uncle.--Venus spoke:
+ "His quiver he unlooses; from the heap
+ "Of darts, by her directed, one selects,
+ "Than which none bore a keener point; than which,
+ "None flew more certain,--trusty to the string.
+ "Bends to his knee the yielding horn, then sends
+ "Through Pluto's heart the bearded arrow sure.
+ "Not far from Enna's walls, a lake expands
+ "Profound in watery stores, Pergusa nam'd:
+ "Not ev'n Caisters' murmuring stream e'er heard
+ "The songster-swans more frequent. Woods o'ertop
+ "The waters, rising round on every side;
+ "And veil from Phoebus' rays the surface cool.
+ "A shade the branches form; the moist earth round,
+ "Produces purple flowers: perpetual spring
+ "Here reigns. While straying sportive in this grove
+ "Here Proserpine the violet cropp'd, and here
+ "The lily fair; with childish ardor warm'd
+ "Her bosom filling, and her basket high:
+ "Proud to surpass her comrades all around
+ "In skilful culling, she herself was seen;
+ "Was chosen, and by Dis was snatch'd away.
+ "Love urg'd him to the deed. Th' affrighted maid,
+ "Loud on her mother, and her comrades call'd;
+ "But chief her mother, with lamenting shrieks.
+ "Then as her robe she rent, the well-cull'd flowers
+ "Slipp'd through the loosen'd folds: e'en this (so great
+ "Her girlish innocence) her tears increas'd.
+ "Swiftly the robber speeds his car along
+ "Urging his steeds' exertions each by name;
+ "'Bove their high manes and necks the rusty reins
+ "Rattling, as o'er the wide Palician lake,
+ "Where the cleft earth with sulphur boils, he whirls:
+ "And where the Bacchiads, from the double sea
+ "Of Corinth wandering, rais'd their lofty walls;
+ "'Twixt two unequal havens. Midst, the stream,
+ "Pisaean Arethusa, and the lake
+ "Of Cyane are seen, close round embrac'd
+ "By narrowing horns. This Cyane was once,
+ "Of all Sicilia's nymphs, the fairest deem'd;
+ "Who gave the lake her name. She to the waist
+ "Uprais'd, amidst the waters stood, and knew
+ "The god, and,--here thy speed must stay,--exclaim'd;
+ "Nor e'er of Ceres hope the son-in-law
+ "'Gainst her consent to be: beseechings bland,
+ "Not rugged rape, thy purpos'd hope might gain.
+ "If lofty things with low I durst compare,
+ "Anapis lov'd me; but the nuptial couch,
+ "I press'd, entreated,--not as thus in dread.
+ "She said;--her arms extended wide, and stopp'd
+ "His course. The angry son of Saturn flames
+ "Swelling with rage; exhorts his furious steeds;
+ "Throws with a forceful arm, and buries deep
+ "His regal sceptre in the lowest gulph:
+ "Wide gapes the stricken earth; an opening gives
+ "To hell, and headlong down, the car descends.
+
+ Now equal Cyane the goddess mourns,
+ "So forc'd; and her own sacred stream despis'd;
+ "A cureless wound her silent breast contains;
+ "And all in tears she wastes: lost in those waves,
+ "Where lately sovereign goddess she had rul'd.
+ "Soft grow her limbs, and flexile seem her bones;
+ "Her nails their hardness lose. The tenderest parts.
+ "Melt into water long before the rest:
+ "Her tresses green; her fingers, legs, and feet.
+ "Quickly this change the smaller limbs perceive,
+ "To cooling rills transform'd. Next after these,
+ "Her back, her shoulders, breasts, and sides dissolve,
+ "And vanish all in streams. A limpid flood
+ "Now fills the veins that once in purple flow'd;
+ "Nought of the nymph to fill the grasp remains.
+
+ "Meantime the trembling mother through the earth,
+ "And o'er the main, the goddess vainly sought.
+ "Aurora rising, with her locks of gold;
+ "Nor Hesper sinking, saw her labors cease.
+ "With either hand at Etna's flaming mouth,
+ "A torch she lighted, restless these she bore
+ "In dewy darkness. Then renew'd again
+ "Her labor, till fair day made blunt the stars;
+ "From Sol's first rising till his evening fall.
+ "Weary'd at length, and parch'd with thirst,--no stream
+ "Her lips to moisten nigh, by chance she spy'd
+ "A straw-thatch'd cot, and knock'd the humble door.
+ "An ancient dame thence stepp'd,--the goddess saw,
+ "And brought her, (who for water simply crav'd)
+ "A pleasing draught where roasted grain had boil'd.
+ "Swallowing the gift presented, rudely came
+ "A brazen-fronted boy, and facing stood:
+ "Then laughing mock'd to see her greedy drink.
+ "Angry grew Ceres, all the offer'd draught,
+ "Yet unconsum'd, she drench'd him as he jeer'd,
+ "With barley mixt with liquid: straight his face
+ "The spots imbib'd; and what but now as arms
+ "He bore, as legs he carries; to his limbs
+ "Thus chang'd, a tail is added; shrunk in size,
+ "Small is his power to harm; shorter he seems
+ "Than the small lizard. Swift away he fled
+ "(As, wondering, weeping, try'd the dame to clasp
+ "His changing form) and gain'd a sheltering hole.
+ "Well suits his star-like skin the name he bears.
+
+ "Long were the tale to tell, what tracts of land
+ "What tracts of sea, the wandering goddess pass'd.
+ "Earth now no spot unsearch'd affording, back
+ "To Sicily she turns; with close research
+ "Each part exploring, till at length she comes
+ "To Cyane; who all the tale had told
+ "If still unchang'd: much as she wish'd to speak
+ "Nor lips, nor tongue can aid her; nought remains
+ "Speech to afford. Yet plain a sign she gives,
+ "The zone of Proserpine upon her waves
+ "Light floating; in the sacred stream it fell;--
+ "Dropt as she pass'd the place. Well Ceres knew
+ "The sight, and then--as then her loss first known,
+ "Tore her dishevell'd tresses, beat her breast
+ "With blows on blows redoubled. Still unknown
+ "The spot that holds her, every part of earth
+ "Blaming, ungrateful, worthless of her fruits.
+ "But chief Trinacria, in whose isle was found
+ "The vestige of her loss. For this she breaks
+ "With furious hand the glebe up-turning plough:
+ "And angry, to an equal death she dooms,
+ "The tiller and his ox: forbids the fields
+ "Back to return th' entrusted grain; the seeds
+ "All rotting. Now that fertile land, renown'd
+ "Through the wide earth, lies useless; all the grain
+ "Dies in the earliest shoots: now scorching rays;
+ "Now floods of rain destroy it: noxious stars
+ "Now harm; now blighting winds: and hungry birds
+ "The scatter'd seed devour: the darnel springs,
+ "The thistle, and the knot-grass thick, which choke
+ "The sprouting wheat, and make the harvest void.
+
+ "Now Arethusa from th' Eleian waves
+ "Exalts her head; her dropping tresses flung
+ "Back from her forehead, parting shade her ears:
+ "And thus;--O goddess! mother of the maid,
+ "So sought through earth, mother of all earth's fruits!
+ "Cease now thy toilsome labor; cease thine ire,
+ "Against the land that prov'd to thee so true:
+ "Thine ire unmerited; unwilling she,
+ "Op'd for the spoil a passage. Hither I
+ "No suppliant for my native isle approach;
+ "An alien here sojourning. Pisa's land
+ "My country; there near Elis first I sprung:
+ "A stranger now in Sicily I dwell.
+ "This soil, more grateful far than is my own;
+ "This soil, where I my houshold gods have plac'd;
+ "I, Arethusa, and have fix'd my seat,
+ "Preserve, mild goddess! Why I chang'd my land,
+ "Why to Ortygia, through the wide waves borne,
+ "I came, a more appropriate hour will ask;
+ "When you, from care reliev'd, can grant your ear
+ "With brow unclouded. Through the opening earth
+ "I flow; and borne through subterraneous depths,
+ "Here lift again my head, again behold
+ "The long-lost stars. Hence was my lot to see,
+ "As pass'd my stream close by the Stygian gulph,
+ "Your Proserpine;--sad still her face appear'd,
+ "Nor fear had wholly left it. Yet she reigns
+ "A queen; the mightiest in the realm of shade,
+ "The powerful consort of th' infernal king.
+
+ "Like marble at the words the mother stands,
+ "Stupid with grief; and long astounded seems:
+ "Sorrow by heavier sorrow now surpass'd.
+ "Then in her chariot mounts th' ethereal sky,
+ "And stands indignant at th' imperial throne;
+ "Her locks wild flowing, and her face in clouds.
+ "Lo! here a suppliant, Jove,--she cry'd,--I come,
+ "To beg for her, my daughter and thine own;
+ "For if no favor may the mother find,
+ "The daughter's claim may move. Let not thy child
+ "Deserve thy care the less, as born of me.
+ "Lo! my lost maid, so long, so vainly sought
+ "At length is found; if finding we may call
+ "A surer loss; if finding we may call
+ "The knowledge where she is. Her ravish'd charms
+ "I'll pardon; let him but my child restore.
+ "What though a robber might my daughter wed,
+ "Thine sure is worthy of a different mate!
+ "Then Jove;--our daughter, our dear mutual pledge,
+ "As yours, so mine, demands our mutual care.
+ "But rightly still affairs if we design,
+ "What you lament will no injustice prove;
+ "Love only. Sure, a son-in-law like him,
+ "Can ne'er degrade, will you consent but yield.
+ "Grant nought beyond,--'tis no such trivial boast,
+ "Jove's brother to be call'd! How then, if more
+ "I claim pre-eminence from chance alone!
+ "Still, if so obstinate your wish remains
+ "For separation, go,--let Proserpine
+ "To heaven return, on this condition strict,
+ "Her lips no food have touch'd. So will the fates.
+ "He ceas'd.--Glad Ceres, certain to regain
+ "Her daughter, knew not what the fates forbade.
+ "Her fast was broken; thoughtless as she stray'd
+ "Around the garden, from a bending tree
+ "She pluck'd a fair pomegranate, and seven seeds
+ "From the pale rind she pick'd, and ate. None saw
+ "Save one, Ascalaphus, the luckless deed;
+ "Whom Orphne, fam'd Avernus' nymphs among,
+ "To Acheron, long since, 'tis said, produc'd
+ "Beneath a dusky cave. He, cruel, told;
+ "And his discovery stay'd the hop'd return.
+
+ "Much wept the queen of Pluto, but she chang'd
+ "The vile informer to an hideous shape:
+ "Sprinkled with streams of Phlegethon, his head
+ "Feather'd appears, with beak, and monstrous eyes;
+ "Spoil'd of his shape, with yellow feathers cloth'd:
+ "Large grows his head; bent are his lengthen'd nails;
+ "Scarcely he moves the pinions which are shot
+ "Light from his lazy arms. A filthy bird
+ "Becoming;--constant presager of woe;
+ "An owl inactive; omen dire to man.
+
+ "Well he by his informing tongue deserv'd,
+ "His doom, but Acheloides, from whence
+ "Your wings, and bird-like feet, whilst still you bear
+ "Your virgin features? Was it that you mix'd,
+ "When Proserpine the vernal flowers would cull,
+ "Amidst her numerous train? The nymph you sought
+ "Through earth's extent in vain; that ocean too
+ "Your anxious search might scape not, straight you pray'd
+ "For waving wings to winnow o'er the deep;
+ "And favouring gods you found. Of golden hue
+ "Quick-shooting wings your arms you saw bespread;
+ "But lest your inbred song, which every ear
+ "Had charm'd; and lest your highly-gifted voice,
+ "Your tongue should fail to use;--a virgin face,
+ "And speech yet human are indulg'd you still.
+
+ "Now Jove as umpire 'twixt the angry pair
+ "His mourning sister, and his brother, bids
+ "The year revolving either side oblige:
+ "Now will the goddess, mutual in each realm,
+ "Six months with Ceres dwell in heaven; and six
+ "Reign with her spouse in hell. Straight were perceiv'd
+ "The goddess' countenance, and demeanour chang'd.
+ "For now her forehead, which had still retain'd,
+ "(To Pluto even) a sad and sorrowing gloom,
+ "Gladden'd: so Phoebus long in cloudy shade
+ "Envelop'd, shines, their umbrous veil dispers'd.
+ "Now Ceres calm, her daughter safe regain'd,
+ "Enquires:--O Arethusa! say the cause,
+ "Which hither brought thee; why a sacred fount?
+ "Hush'd were the waves; and from the lowest depths
+ "The goddess rais'd her head; and as she told,
+ "The old amours the flood of Elis knew,
+ "Press'd out the water from her tresses green.
+
+ "Once with the nymphs, that on Achaia's hills
+ "Rove, was I seen; none closer beat than I
+ "The thickets; none than I more skilful spread
+ "Th' ensnaring net. Yet though no fame I sought
+ "For beauty; though robust, I bore the name
+ "Of beauteous. Whilst the constant theme of praise,
+ "My features fair, to me no pleasure gave;
+ "What other nymphs inspire with joyful pride,
+ "Corporeal charms, did but my blushes raise.
+ "To please I thought a crime. Once tir'd with sport,
+ "The Stymphalidian forest I had left:
+ "Warm was the day; I with redoubled heat,
+ "Glow'd from my toil. A gliding stream I found
+ "By ripplings undisturb'd; silent and smooth
+ "It flow'd; so clear, that every stone was seen
+ "On the deep bottom; gently crept the waves;
+ "To creep scarce seeming; o'er the shelving banks
+ "The stream-fed poplar, and the willow hoar,
+ "A grateful shadow cast. The brink I reach'd
+ "Dipp'd first my feet, then waded to my knee;
+ "Not yet content, I loos'd my zone, and hung
+ "Upon a bending osier my soft robe:
+ "Then naked plung'd amid the stream; the waves
+ "Beating, and sporting in a thousand shapes;
+ "My arms around in every posture flung;
+ "A strange unusual murmur seem'd to sound,
+ "Deep from the bottom; terror-struck I gain'd
+ "The nearest brink;--when,--whither dost thou fly?
+ "O, Arethusa? whither dost thou fly?
+ "Alphaeus, from his waters, hoarse exclaim'd!
+ "Vestless I fled, for on th' opposing bank
+ "My garment hung. Fiercer the god pursu'd;
+ "Fiercer he burn'd, all naked as I ran:
+ "Prepar'd more ready for his force I seem'd.
+ "Such was my flight, and such was his pursuit;
+ "As when on trembling wings, before the hawk
+ "Fly the mild doves: as when the hawk fierce drives
+ "The trembling doves before him. Long the chase
+ "I bore; Orchomenus, and Psophis soon
+ "I pass'd, and pass'd Cyllene, and the caves
+ "Of Maenalus, and Erymanthus' frosts,
+ "To Elis, ere his speed could cope with mine.
+ "In strength unequal, I sustain'd no more
+ "The toilsome race; he stouter flagg'd less soon.
+ "But still o'er plains I ran; o'er mountains thick
+ "With forests clad; o'er stones, and rugged rocks;
+ "And pathless spots. Behind me Phoebus shone.
+ "I saw, if fear deceiv'd me not, far spread
+ "His shade before me. What could less deceive,
+ "I heard his footsteps; and his breath full strong
+ "Blew on my banded tresses. Weary'd, faint
+ "With the long flight, I cry'd;--Dictynna, chaste!
+ "Lost am I,--help a quiver-bearing nymph,
+ "One who thy bow has oft entrusted borne;
+ "And oft thy quiver, loaded full with darts.
+ "Mov'd was the goddess; from the darkest clouds
+ "She one selected, and around me threw.
+ "The river-god, about the misty veil
+ "Pry'd anxious; and unwitting deeply grop'd
+ "Within the hollow cloud! Unconscious, twice
+ "The spot he compass'd, where Diana thought
+ "My safety surest; twice he then aloud
+ "Ho! Arethusa,--Arethusa! call'd:--
+ "What terror seiz'd my soul! not less the dread
+ "Of lambs, when round the sheltering fold they hear
+ "The wolves loud howling: or the trembling hare
+ "Close in a bramble hid, who sees approach
+ "The wide-mouth'd, hostile hounds, and fears to move.
+ "Further he pass'd not, for beyond the place
+ "No footsteps he discern'd, but guarding watch'd
+ "Around the mist. So closely thus besieg'd,
+ "My limbs a cold sweat seiz'd; cerulean drops
+ "Fell from my body; when my feet I mov'd,
+ "A pool remain'd; fast dropp'd my hair in dew;
+ "And speedier than the wonderous tale I tell,
+ "Chang'd to a stream I flow'd. But soon the god,
+ "Knew his lov'd waters; laid the man aside,
+ "And straight assum'd his proper watery form;
+ "With mine to mingle. Dian' cleft the ground;
+ "Sinking, through caverns dark I held my way;
+ "And reach'd Ortygia, from the goddess nam'd;
+ "There first ascending view'd the upper skies.
+
+ "Here Arethusa ceas'd. Then Ceres yokes
+ "The coupled dragons to her car, their mouths
+ "Curb'd by the reins; and through the air is borne,
+ "Midway 'twixt heaven and earth. At Pallas' town
+ "Arriv'd, Triptolemus the car ascends,
+ "By her commission'd;--bade to spread the seed
+ "Entrusted: part on ground untill'd before;
+ "And part on land which long had fallow laid.
+ "O'er Europe now, and Asia's lands, the youth
+ "Sublimely sails, and reaches Scythia's clime,
+ "Where Lyncus rul'd. Beneath the monarch's roof,
+ "Here enter'd; and to him, who curious sought
+ "How there he journey'd; what his journey's cause;
+ "His name, and country; thus the youth reply'd.--
+ "Athens the fam'd, my country; and my name
+ "Triptolemus: but neither o'er the main,
+ "Borne in a ship, nor travelling slow by land,
+ "I hither came; my path was through the air.
+ "I bring the gift of Ceres; scatter'd wide
+ "Through all your spacious fields, quickly restor'd
+ "In fruitful crops the wholesome food will spring.
+ "The barbarous monarch, envious he should bear
+ "So great a blessing, takes him for his guest,
+ "And when with sleep weigh'd down attacks him. Rais'd
+ "To pierce his bosom, was the sword;--just then
+ "The wretch, by Ceres, to a lynx was turn'd.
+ "Then mounts again the youth, and through the air
+ "Bids him once more the sacred dragons steer.
+
+ "Our chosen champion ended here her lays,
+ "And all the nymphs unanimous, exclaim'd;--
+ "The Heliconian goddesses have gain'd.
+ "Vanquish'd, the others rail'd. When she resum'd:--
+ "Is not your punishment enough deserv'd?
+ "Foil'd in the contest, must you swell your crime,
+ "With base revilings? Patient now no more,
+ "To punish we begin; what anger bids,
+ "We now perform.--Loud laugh'd the scornful maids,
+ "Our threatening words despis'd, and strove to speak,
+ "And clapp'd with outcries menacing, their hands.
+ "When from their fingers shooting plumes they spy;
+ "And feathers shade their arms; her sister's face,
+ "Each sees to harden in an horny beak;
+ "To beat their bosoms trying with rais'd arms,
+ "In air suspended, on those arms they move;
+ "The new-shap'd birds the sylvan tribes increase:
+ "Magpies, the scandal of the grove. Thus chang'd,
+ "Their former eloquence they still maintain,
+ "In hoarse garrulity, and empty noise."
+
+
+
+
+*The Sixth Book.*
+
+
+ Trial of skill betwixt Pallas and Arachne. Transformation of
+ Arachne to a spider. Pride of Niobe. Her children slain by Apollo
+ and Diana. Her change to marble. The Lycian peasants changed to
+ frogs. Fate of Marsyas. Pelops. Story of Tereus, Procne, and
+ Philomela. Their change to birds. Boreas and Orithyia. Birth of
+ Zethes and Calais.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Sixth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Minerva pleas'd attention to the muse,
+ While thus she spoke afforded; prais'd the song,
+ And prais'd the just resentment of the maids.
+ Then to herself;--"the vengeance others take,
+ "Merely to praise were mean. I too should claim
+ "Like praise, for like revenge; nor longer bear
+ "My power contemn'd, by who unpunish'd live."
+ And on Arachne, fair Maeoenian maid,
+ She turns her vengeful mind; whose skill she heard
+ Rivall'd her own in labors of the loom.
+ No fame her natal town, no fame her sire
+ On her bestow'd; her skill conferr'd renown.
+ Idmon of Colophon, her humble sire
+ Soak'd in the Phocian dye the spongy wool.
+ Her mother, late deceas'd, from lowest stock,
+ Had sprung; and wedded with an equal mate.
+ Yet had she gain'd through all the Lydian towns
+ For skill a mighty fame. Though born so low,
+ Though small Hypaepe was her sole abode,
+ Oft would the nymphs the vine-clad Tmolus leave
+ To view her wonderous work. Oft would the nymphs
+ In admiration quit Pactolus' waves.
+ Nor pleasure only gave the finish'd robe,
+ When view'd; but while she work'd she gave delight;
+ Such comely grace in every turn appear'd.
+ Whether she rounded into balls the wool;
+ Or with her fingers mollify'd the fleece;
+ And comb'd it floating light in cloudy waves;
+ Or her smooth spindle twirl'd with agile thumb;
+ Or with her needle painted: plain was seen
+ Her skill from Pallas learnt. This to concede
+ Unwilling, she ev'n such a tutor scorn'd
+ Exclaiming:--"come let her the contest try;
+ "If vanquish'd, let her fix my well-earn'd fate."
+
+ Pallas, an ancient matron's form conceals;
+ Grey hairs thin strew her temples, and a staff
+ Supports her tottering limbs; while thus she speaks:--
+ "Old age though little priz'd, much good attends;
+ "Experience always grows with lengthen'd years:
+ "Spurn not my admonition. Great thy fame,
+ "Midst mortals, for the wonders of the loom.
+ "Great may it be, but to immortals yield:
+ "Bold nymph retract, and pardon for thy words,
+ "With suppliant voice require; Pallas will grant."
+ Sternly the damsel views her; quits the threads
+ Unfinish'd; scarce her hand from force restrains:
+ And rage in all her features flushing fierce,
+ Thus to the goddess, well-disguis'd, she speaks:--
+ "Weak dotard, spent with too great gift of years,
+ "Curst with too long existence, hence, begone!
+ "Such admonition to thy daughters give,
+ "If daughters hast thou; or thy sons have wives:
+ "Enough for me my inbred wisdom serves.
+ "Hope not, that ought thy vain advice has sway'd
+ "My purpose; still my challenge holds the same.
+ "Why comes your goddess not? why shuns she still
+ "The trying contest?" Then the goddess,--"Lo!
+ "She comes,"--and flung her aged form aside,
+ Minerva's form displaying. Every nymph,
+ And every dame Mygdonian, lowly bent
+ In veneration. While Arachne sole
+ Stood stedfast, unalarm'd; but yet she blush'd.
+ A sudden flush her angry face deep ting'd,
+ But sudden faded pale. A ruddy glow
+ Thus teints the early sky, when first the morn
+ Arises; quickly from the solar ray
+ Paling to brightness. On her purpos'd boast
+ Still stubborn bent, she obstinately courts
+ Her sure destruction, for the empty hope
+ Of conquest in the strife so madly urg'd.
+ No more Jove's maid refuses, gives no more
+ Her empty admonitions, nor delays
+ The contest: each her station straight assumes,
+ Tighten each web; each slender thread prepare.
+ Firm to the beam the cloth is fix'd; the reed
+ The warp divides, with pointed shuttle, swift
+ Gliding between; which quick their fingers throw,
+ Quick extricate, and with the toothy comb
+ Firm press'd between the warp, the threads unite.
+ Both hasten now; their garments round them girt,
+ Their skilful hands they ply: their toil forgot
+ In anxious wish for conquest. There appear'd,
+ The wool of Tyrian dye, and softening teints
+ Lost imperceptible. So seems the arch
+ Coloring a spacious portion of the sky;
+ Struck by the rays of Phoebus, when the showers
+ Recede, a thousand varying tinges shine;
+ The soft transition mocks the straining eye,
+ So like the shades which join, though far distinct
+ Their distant teints. In slender threads they twist
+ The pliant gold, and in the web display,
+ Each as she works, an ancient story fair.
+ Minerva paints the rock of Mars so fam'd
+ In Cecrops' city, and the well-known strife
+ To name the town. Twice six celestials sate
+ On their high thrones, great Jupiter around
+ In gravity majestic; every god
+ Bore his celestial features. Jove appear'd
+ In royal dignity. The Ocean power
+ Standing she pictur'd, with his trident huge
+ Smiting the rugged rock; from the cleft stone
+ Leap'd forth a steed; and thence the town to name
+ The privilege he claim'd. Herself she paints
+ Shielded, and arm'd with keenly-pointed spear.
+ Helm'd was her head; her breast the AEgis bore.
+ Struck by her spear, the earth a hoary tree
+ She shews producing, loaded thick with fruit.
+ The wondering gods the gift admire; the prize
+ To her awarded, ends the glorious work.
+
+ More, that the daring rival of her art,
+ Should learn experimental, what reward
+ Her mad attempt might hope, four parts she adds;
+ And every part a test of power presents:
+ Bright the small figures in her colors shine.
+ This angle Thracian Rhodope contains,
+ With Haemus; both their mortal bodies now,
+ To frozen mountains chang'd; whose lofty pride
+ Assum'd the titles of celestial powers.
+ Another corner held the wretched fate
+ Felt by Pygmaea's matron; Juno bade
+ Her vanquish'd rival soar aloft a crane;
+ And on her people wage continual war.
+ Antigone, she paints;--audacious she
+ With Jove's imperial consort durst contend;
+ By Jove's imperial queen she flits a bird:
+ Nor aids her Ilium ought; nor aids her sire,
+ Laoemedon;--upborne on snowy wings,
+ A stork she rises; loud with chattering bill
+ She noises. In the sole remaining part,
+ Was childless Cynaras, in close embrace,
+ Grasping the temple's steps, his daughters once;
+ And as he lies extended on the stone,
+ In marble seems to weep. Around the piece
+ She spreads the peaceful olive: all complete
+ Her work is ended with her favorite tree.
+
+ Arachne paints Europa, by a bull
+ Deceiv'd; the god a real bull appears;
+ And real seem the waves. She, backward turn'd,
+ Views the receding shore, and seems to shriek
+ Loud to her lost companions; seems to dread
+ The dashing waves, and timid shrinks her feet.
+ She draws Asteria, by the god o'er-power'd,
+ Cloth'd in an eagle. Leda, fair she lays
+ Beneath his wings, when he a swan appears.
+ She adds how Jove beneath a Satyr's shape
+ Conceal'd, the beauteous child of Nycteus fill'd,
+ With a twin-offspring. In Amphytrion's form
+ Alcmena, thou wert press'd. A golden shower
+ Danae deceiv'd. A flame AEgina caught.
+ A shepherd's shape Mnemosyne beguil'd.
+ And fair Deoeis trusts a speckled snake.
+ Thee, Neptune, too she painted, for the maid
+ AEolian, to a threatening bull transform'd.
+ Thou, as Enipeus, didst the Aloid twins
+ Beget. Beneath the semblance of a ram,
+ Theophane was cheated. Ceres mild,
+ Of grain inventress, with her yellow locks,
+ In shape a courser felt thy ardent love.
+ Medusa, mother of the flying steed,
+ Nymph of the snaky tresses, in a bird
+ Conceal'd, you forc'd. Melantho in a fish.
+ To these the damsel, all well-suiting forms
+ Dispens'd, and all well-suiting scenes attend.
+ And there Apollo in a herdsman's guise
+ Wanders. And now he soars a plumy hawk:
+ Now stalks a lordly lion. As a swain
+ Macarean Isse, felt his amorous guile,
+ Erigone to Bacchus' flame was dup'd
+ Beneath a well-seem'd grape. Saturn produc'd
+ The Centaur doubly-shap'd, in form a steed.
+ Her web's extremes a slender border girt,
+ Where flowery wreathes, and twining ivy blend.
+
+ Not Pallas,--not even envy's rankling soul
+ Could blame the work. The bright immortal griev'd
+ To view her rival's merit, angry tore
+ The picture glowing with celestial crimes.
+ A boxen shuttle, grasping in her hand,
+ Thrice on the forehead of th' Idmonian maid
+ She struck. No more Arachne, hapless bore,
+ But twisted round her neck with desperate pride
+ A cord. The deed Minerva pitying saw
+ And check'd her rash suspension.--"Impious wretch!
+ "Still live," she cry'd, "but still suspended hang;
+ "Curs'd to futurity, for all thy race,
+ "Thy sons and grandsons, to the latest day
+ "Alike shall feel the sentence." Speaking thus,
+ The juice of Hecat's baleful plant she throws:
+ Instant besprinkled by the noxious drops,
+ Her tresses fall; her nose and ears are lost;
+ Her body shrinks; her head is lessen'd more;
+ Her slender fingers root within her sides,
+ Serving as legs; her belly forms the rest;
+ From whence her thread she still derives and spins:
+ Her art pursuing in the spider's shape.
+
+ All Lydia rung; the wonderous rumor spread
+ Through every Phrygian town; the tale employ'd
+ The tongues of all mankind. The nymph was known,
+ Ere yet Amphion's nuptial bed she press'd,
+ To Niobe. She, when a virgin dwelt
+ In Lydian Sipylus. She still unmov'd,
+ Arachne's neighboring fate not heeded, still
+ Proudly refus'd before the gods to bend;
+ And spoke in haughty boasting. Much her pride
+ By favoring gifts was swol'n. Not the fine skill
+ Amphion practis'd; not the lofty birth
+ Each claim'd; not all their mighty kingdom's power,
+ So rais'd her soul (of all though justly proud)
+ As her bright offspring. Justly were she call'd
+ Most blest of mothers; but her bliss too great
+ Seem'd to herself, and caus'd a dread reverse.
+
+ Now Manto, sprung from old Tiresias, skill'd
+ In future fate, impell'd by power divine,
+ In every street with wild prophetic tongue
+ Exclaim'd;--"Ye Theban matrons, haste in crowds,
+ "Your incense offer, and your pious prayers,
+ "To great Latona, and the heavenly twins,
+ "Latona's offspring; all your temples bound
+ "With laurel garlands. This the goddess bids;
+ "Through me commands it." All of Thebes obey,
+ And gird their foreheads with the order'd leaves;
+ The incense burn, and with the sacred flames
+ Their pious prayers ascend. Lo! 'midst a crowd
+ Of nymphs attendant, far conspicuous seen;
+ Comes Niobe, in gorgeous Phrygian robe,
+ Inwrought with gold, attir'd. Beauteous her form,
+ Beauteous, as rage permitted. Angry shook
+ Her graceful head; and angry shook the locks
+ That o'er each shoulder wav'd. Proudly she tower'd.
+ Her haughty eyes, round from her lofty stand
+ Wide darting, cry'd;--"What madness this to place
+ "Reported gods above the gods you see!
+ "Why to Latona's altars bend ye low,
+ "Nor incense burn before my power divine?
+ "My sire, was Tantalus: of mortals sole,
+ "Celestial feasts he shar'd. A Pleiaed nymph
+ "Me bore. My grandsire is the mighty king,
+ "Whose shoulders all the load of heaven sustain.
+ "Jove is my father's parent: him I boast
+ "As sire-in-law too. All the Phrygian towns
+ "Bend to my sway. The hall of Cadmus owns
+ "Me sovereign mistress. Thebes' high towering walls,
+ "Rais'd by my consort's lute; and all the crowd
+ "Who dwell inclos'd, his rule and mine obey.
+ "Where'er within my palace turn mine eyes,
+ "Treasures immense I view. Brightness divine
+ "I boast: to all seven blooming daughters add,
+ "And seven fair sons; through whom I soon expect,
+ "If Hymen favors, seven more sons to see,
+ "And seven more daughters. Need ye further seek
+ "Whence I have cause for boasting. Dare ye still
+ "Latona, from Titanian Caeus sprung,--
+ "The unknown Caeus,--she to whom all earth
+ "In bearing pangs the smallest space deny'd:--
+ "This wretch to my divinity prefer?
+ "Not heaven your goddess would receive; not earth;
+ "Not ocean: exil'd from the world, she weep'd,
+ "Till Delos sorrowing,--wanderer like herself,
+ "Exclaim'd;--thou dreary wanderest o'er the earth,
+ "I, o'er the main;--and sympathizing thus,
+ "A resting spot afforded. There become
+ "Of two the mother, only--can she vie
+ "With one whose womb, has sevenfold hers surpass'd?
+ "Blest am I. Who can slightly e'er arraign
+ "To happiness my claim? Blest will I still
+ "Continue. Who my bliss can ever doubt?
+ "Abundance guards its surety. Far beyond
+ "The power of fortune is my lot uprais'd:
+ "Snatch them in numbers from me, crowds more great
+ "Must still remain. My happy state contemns
+ "Even now, the threats of danger. Grant the power
+ "Of fate this nation of my womb to thin,--
+ "Of part depriv'd, impossible I shrink
+ "To poor Latona's two. How scant remov'd
+ "From mothers childless! Quit your rites;--quick haste
+ "And tear those garlands from your flowing hair."
+
+ Aside the garlands thrown, and incomplete,
+ The rites relinquish'd, what the Thebans could
+ They gave: their whispering prayers the matron dame
+ Address'd. With ire the angry goddess flam'd,
+ And thus on Cynthus' lofty top bespoke
+ Her double offspring:--"O, my children! see,
+ "Your parent, proud your parent to be call'd,--
+ "To no celestial yielding, save the queen
+ "Of Jove supreme. Lo! doubted is my claim
+ "To rites divine; and from the altars, burnt
+ "To me from endless ages, driven, I go;
+ "Save by my children succour'd. Nor this grief
+ "Alone me irks, for Niobe me mocks!--
+ "Her daring crime increasing, proud she sets
+ "Her offspring far 'bove you. Me too she spurns,--
+ "To her in number yielding; childless calls
+ "My bed, and proves the impious stock which gave
+ "Her tongue first utterance." More Latona felt
+ Prepar'd to utter; more beseechings bland
+ For her young offspring, when Apollo, cry'd:
+ "Enough, desist to plain;--delay is long
+ "Till vengeance." Dian' join'd him in his ire.
+ Swift gliding down the sky, and veil'd in clouds,
+ On Cadmus' roof they lighted. Wide was spread,
+ A level plain, by constant hoofs well beat,
+ The city's walls adjoining; crowding wheels,
+ And coursers' feet the rolling dust upturn'd.
+ Here of Amphion's offspring daily some
+ Mount their fleet steeds; their trappings gaily press
+ Of Tyrian dye: heavy with gold, the rens
+ They guide. 'Mid these Ismenos, primal born
+ Of Niobe, as round the circling course,
+ His well-train'd steed he sped, and strenuous curb'd
+ His foaming mouth,--loudly "Ah, me!" exclaim'd,
+ As through his bosom deep the dart was driv'n:
+ Dropp'd from his dying hands the slacken'd reins;
+ Slowly, and sidelong from his courser's back
+ He tumbled. Sipylus, gave uncheck'd scope
+ To his, when through the empty air he heard,
+ The rattling quiver sound: thus speeding clouds
+ Beheld, the guider of the ruling helm,
+ A threatening tempest fearing, looses wide
+ His every sail to catch the lightest breeze.
+ Loose flow'd his reins. Th' inevitable dart
+ The flowing reins quick follow'd. Quivering shook,
+ Fixt in his upper neck, the naked steel,
+ Far through his throat protruding. Prone he fell
+ O'er his high courser's head; his smoking gore,
+ The ground defiling. Hapless Phoedimas,
+ And Tantalus, his grandsire's name who bore,
+ Their 'custom'd sport laborious ended, strove
+ With youthful vigor in the wrestling toil.
+ Now breast to breast they strain'd with nervous grasp,
+ When the swift arrow from the bended horn,
+ Both bodies pierc'd, as close both bodies join'd;
+ At once they groan'd; at once their limbs they threw,
+ With agonies convuls'd, prone on the earth;
+ At once their rolling eyes the light forsook;
+ At once their souls were yielded forth to air.
+ Alphenor saw, and smote his grieving breast;
+ Flew to their pallid limbs, and as he rais'd,
+ Their bodies, in the pious office fell:
+ For Phoebus drove his fate-wing'd arrow deep
+ Through what his heart inclos'd. Sudden withdrawn,
+ On the barb'd head the mangled lungs were stuck;
+ And high in air his soul gush'd forth in blood.
+ But beardless Damasichthon, by a wound
+ Not single fell, as those; struck where the leg
+ To form begins, and where the nervous ham
+ A yielding joint supplies. The deadly dart
+ To draw essaying, in his throat, full driven,
+ Up to the feather'd head, another came:
+ The sanguine flood expell'd it, gushing high,
+ Cutting the distant air. With outstretcht arms
+ Ilioneus, the last, besought in vain;
+ Exclaiming,--"spare me, spare me, all ye gods!"
+ Witless that all not join'd to cause his woe.
+ The god was touch'd with pity, touch'd too late,--
+ Already shot th' irrevocable dart:
+ Yet light the blow was given, and mild the wound
+ That pierc'd his heart, and sent his soul aloft.
+
+ The rumor'd ill; the mourning people's groans;
+ The servant's tears, soon made the mother know,
+ The sudden ruin: wondering first she stands,
+ To see so great heaven's power, then angry flames
+ Indignant, that such power they dare to use.
+ The sire Amphion, in his bosom plung'd
+ His sword, and ended life at once, and woe.
+ Heavens! how remov'd this Niobe, from her
+ Who drove so lately from Latona's fane,
+ The pious crowds; who march'd in lofty state,
+ Through every street of Thebes, an envy'd sight!
+ Now to be wept by even her bitterest foes.
+ Prostrate upon their gelid limbs she lies;
+ Now this, now that, her trembling kisses press;
+ Her livid arms high-stretching unto heaven,
+ Exclaims,--"Enjoy Latona, cruel dame,
+ "My sorrows; feed on all my wretched woes;
+ "Glut with my load of grief thy savage soul;
+ "Feast thy fell heart with seven funereal scenes;
+ "Triumph, victorious foe! conqueror, exult!
+ "Victorious! said I?--How? To wretched me,
+ "Still more are left, than joyful thou canst boast:
+ "Superior I 'midst all this loss remain."
+
+ She spoke;--the twanging bowstring sounded loud!
+ Terrific noise,--save Niobe, to all:
+ She stood audacious, callous in her crime.
+ In mourning vesture clad, with tresses loose,
+ Around the funeral couches of the slain,
+ The weeping sisters stood. One strives to pluck
+ The deep-stuck arrow from her bowels,--falls,
+ And fainting dies; her brother's clay-cold corse,
+ Prest with her lips. Another's soothing words
+ Her hapless parent strive to cheer,--struck dumb,
+ She bends beneath an unseen wound; her words
+ Reach not her parent, till her life is fled.
+ This, vainly flying, falls: that drops in death
+ Upon her sister's body. One to hide
+ Attempts: another pale and trembling dies.
+ Six now lie breathless, each by vary'd wounds;
+ One sole remaining, whom the mother shields,
+ Wrapt in her vest; her body o'er her flung,
+ Exclaiming,--"leave me this, my youngest,--last,
+ "Least of my mighty numbers,--one alone!"
+ But while she prays, the damsel pray'd for dies.
+
+ Of all depriv'd, the solitary dame,
+ Amid the lifeless bodies of her sons,
+ Her daughters, and her spouse, by sorrows steel'd,
+ Sits harden'd: no light gale her tresses moves;
+ No blood her redden'd cheeks contain; her eyes
+ Motionless glare upon her mournful face;
+ Life quits the statue: even her tongue congeals,
+ Within her stony palate; vital floods
+ Cease in her veins to flow; her neck to bow
+ Resists; her arms to move in graceful guise;
+ Her feet to step; and even to stone are turn'd
+ Her inmost bowels. Still to weep she seems.
+ Wrapt in a furious whirlwind, distant far
+ Her natal soil receives her. There fixt high
+ On a hill's utmost summit, still she melts;
+ Still does the rigid marble flow in tears.
+
+ Now every Theban, male and female, all,
+ Dread the fierce anger of the powers of heaven;
+ And with redoubled fervor lowly bend,
+ And own the twin-producing goddess' power.
+ Then, as oft seen, they ancient tales recount,
+ Reminded by events of recent date.
+ Thus one relates.--"Long since some clowns, who till'd
+ "The fertile fields of Lycia, felt the ire
+ "Of this high goddess, whom they durst despise.
+ "Obscure the fact itself, for low the race
+ "Who suffer'd; yet most wonderous was the deed.
+ "Myself have seen the marsh; the lake have seen
+ "Fam'd for the prodigy. My aged sire,
+ "To toil unable on the lengthen'd road,
+ "Me thither sent; an herd of choicest beeves
+ "Thence to conduct; to my unpractis'd steps
+ "A guiding native of the land he gave.
+ "While we the pastures travers'd, lo! we found
+ "An ancient altar, 'midst a spacious lake
+ "Erected; black with sacrificing dust;
+ "With waving reeds surrounded. Here my guide
+ "Halted, and softly whisper'd,--bless me, power!
+ "And I, like softly whispering,--bless me!--cry'd.
+ "Then ask'd, if nymph, or fawn, or native god
+ "The altar own'd?--when thus my guide reply'd.
+ "No mountain god, O, youth! this altar claims,
+ "But her whom once imperial Juno's rage,
+ "Stern interdicted from firm earth's extent:
+ "Whom scarce the wandering Delos would receive,
+ "Ardent beseeching, when the buoyant isle
+ "Light floated. There at length, Latona, laid
+ "Betwixt a palm, and bright Minerva's tree,
+ "Spite of their fierce opposing step-dame's power,
+ "Her twins produc'd. Even hence, in child-bed driven,
+ "She fled from Juno; in her bosom bore,
+ "'Tis said, the twin-celestials. Now the sun
+ "With fervid rays, had scorch'd the arid meads,
+ "When faint with lengthen'd toil, the goddess gain'd
+ "The edge of Lycia's monster-breeding clime;
+ "Parch'd and exhausted, from the solar heat,
+ "And infants milking her exhausted breast.
+ "By chance a lake, far distant she espy'd,
+ "Deep in a vale's recess, of waters pure.
+ "There clowns the bulrush gather'd; there they pluck'd
+ "The shrubby osier, and the marsh-fond grass.
+ "Approach'd the goddess; on her knees low bent,
+ "The earth she press'd, and forward lean'd to drink
+ "The cooling liquid. This the rustic mob
+ "Forbade. When she to those who thus oppos'd,--
+ "Water withhold? Water whose use is free?
+ "Nature to all unsparing gives to take,
+ "Of light, of air, and of the flowing stream.
+ "I claim but public gifts: yet suppliant beg
+ "Those public gifts to share. Not here I come,
+ "My weary'd arms and limbs within the waves
+ "To lave: my thirst alone I wish to slake.
+ "Even now my speaking lips their moisture want;
+ "Scarce my parch'd throat, a passage to my words
+ "Can yield. As nectar were the limpid draught.
+ "Life with the water give me; for to me,
+ "Water is life; with water life I seek.
+ "Let these too move you, who their tender hands
+ "Stretch to your bosoms,--for by chance the babes
+ "Their little hands held forth. The goddess' words,
+ "Thus bland-beseeching, who could e'er withstand?
+ "Yet these persisted;--obstinate refus'd
+ "To grant her wish, and with opprobrious speech
+ "And threats revil'd her, should she there remain.
+ "Nor rested thus,--the lake with hands and feet
+ "Muddy they trouble; with malicious leaps
+ "They agitate the pool, and upward stir
+ "From the deep bottom clouds of slimy ooze.
+ "Anger her thirst diverted. Rage deny'd
+ "More supplication from th' indignant dame.
+ "Their threatening words, no more the goddess brook'd;
+ "But raising high to heaven her hands, she cry'd,--
+ "Be this your home for ever!--Gracious heard,
+ "Her prayer was granted. Now they joy to plunge,
+ "Beneath the waters; now they deep immerge
+ "Their bodies in the hollow fen; now raise
+ "Their heads, and skim the surface of the pool,
+ "Often they rest upon the margin's brink,
+ "And oft light-springing, in the cool lake plunge.
+ "Now still their rude contentious tongues they use,
+ "Still squabbling, lost to shame beneath the waves:
+ "Beneath the waves they still abusings strive
+ "To utter. Hoarsely still their voice is heard,
+ "Through their wide-bloated throats. Their railing words,
+ "Their jaws more wide dilate. Depriv'd of neck,
+ "Their head and back in junction seem to meet;
+ "Green shine their backs; their bellies, hugely swol'n
+ "Are white; and frogs they plunge within the pool."
+
+ Thus as the man, the fate destructive told
+ Of Lycia's clowns, to mind another call'd
+ The satyr's fate, who vanquish'd in the strife
+ Of skill, on Pallas' pipe, Latona's son
+ Severely punish'd.--"Wherefore thus,"--he cries,
+ "Rent from myself? O, penitent I bow.
+ "The pipe," he shrieks, "should not such rage provoke."
+ Exclaiming thus, o'er his extremest limbs
+ Stript was his skin; he one continuous wound!
+ Blood flow'd from every part; the naked nerves
+ Bare started; and the trembling veins full throbb'd,
+ By skin uncover'd. Every beating part
+ Inward, the breast's translucent fibres plain
+ Display'd to sight. Him every forest fawn;
+ Each brother satyr; and each sylvan god;
+ And every nymph, with fam'd Olympus wept:
+ And every swain, the woolly flock who fed;
+ Or on the mountain watch'd the horned herd.
+ Wash'd by their falling tears, the fertile earth
+ Is soak'd,--absorbs them in her inmost veins;
+ Then form'd to water, spouts them high in air.
+ Rapid 'twixt banks declivitous, they seek
+ The ocean. Marsya, is the river call'd;
+ The clearest stream through Phrygia's land which flows.
+
+ Thus far the crowd;--and then lamenting turn
+ To present griefs:--Amphion's race extinct,
+ Unanimous they wail; but hated still
+ Remains the mother's pride. For her alone
+ Weep'd Pelops;--rent his garments, bare expos'd
+ His breast and shoulders lay, and fair display'd
+ The ivory joint. This shoulder at his birth
+ In fleshy substance, and carnation tinge,
+ Equall'd the right. When by his sire his limbs
+ Disjointed lay, the gods, 'tis said, quick join'd
+ The sever'd members: every fragment found,
+ Save what combin'd the neck and upper arm;
+ The part destroy'd, with ivory they replace;
+ And Pelops perfect from the gift became.
+
+ The neighbouring lords assemble;--every town
+ Their kings intreat condolence to bestow,
+ And all to Thebes repair. First Argos sends;
+ Sparta; Mycene; Calydon, not yet
+ By stern Diana hated; Corinth, fam'd
+ For beauteous brass; Orchomenus the fierce;
+ Messene fertile; Patrae; Pylos, rul'd
+ By Neleus; Troezen, yet unus'd to own
+ The sway of Pittheus; Cleona the low;
+ And all those towns the two-sea'd isthmus holds;
+ And all those towns the isthmus views without.
+ Athens, incredible! was absent sole.
+ War all her energy demanded. Borne
+ O'er ocean, fierce barbarian troops, the walls
+ Mopsopian threaten'd. Thracian Tereus, these
+ With arms auxiliar routed; bright his name
+ Shone from the conquest. Him in riches great,
+ Mighty in power, and from the god-like Mars,
+ His lineage tracing, Procne's nuptial hand
+ Close to Pandion bound. Their marriage bed
+ Nor Grace, nor Hymen, nor the nuptial queen
+ Attended. Furies held the torches, snatch'd
+ From biers funereal. Furies spread the couch:
+ And all night long an owl, ill-omen'd bird,
+ Perch'd on the roof that crown'd the marriage dome.
+ Join'd with such omens, with such omens bore
+ Procne a son to Tereus. Wide through Thrace
+ Congratulations sound: glad thanks to heaven
+ The parents give, and hail the happy day
+ Which gave Pandion's daughter to the king;
+ And gave the pair a son. So ignorant still
+ Mankind of real happiness remain!
+
+ Now through five autumns had the cheerful sun
+ The whirling year renew'd. When Procne, bland
+ Her spouse besought.--"If grace within thy sight
+ "Claim my deserts,--or suffer me to see
+ "In her own clime my sister, or to ours
+ "My sister bring: a quick return thou well
+ "Our sire may'st promise. This high boon obtain'd,
+ "My sister's presence,--to my sight thou'lt seem,
+ "A deity in goodness."--On the main
+ He bids them launch the vessel; in the port
+ Cecropian enters, urg'd by oar and sail;
+ And treads Piraeus' shore. Soon as he gain'd
+ His audience; soon as hand with hand was clasp'd,
+ His ill-presaging speech he open'd. First
+ The journey's cause narrating; fond desire
+ Of Procne; and the promis'd quick return
+ Of Philomela, should the sire comply.
+ Lo! Philomela enters, splendid robes
+ Attire her; still more splendid shine her charms:
+ Such they describe within the forests rove
+ Dryad, and Naiaed nymphs; such would they seem
+ Their shape like hers adorn'd, like hers attir'd.
+ Instant was Tereus at the sight inflam'd;
+ So instant would the hoary harvest burn,
+ The torch apply'd: so burn the wither'd leaves;
+ Or hoarded hay. Well might her charms inspire
+ Such love in any;--him his inbred lust
+ More goaded, more his country's warmth which burns
+ Intense; he flames from nature, and from clime.
+ First to corrupt th' attendants he designs,
+ And faithful nurse; and Philomel' to tempt
+ With gifts immense,--his kingdom's mighty price.
+ Or forceful snatch her, and the rape defend,
+ With all the powers of war. Nought but he dares.
+ Impell'd by love's unbridled power; his breast
+ The raging fire contains not. Irksome seems
+ Delay:--and eager to the anxious wish
+ Of Procne, turns his converse; her desires
+ His wishes aiding. Eloquent he spoke;
+ For love inspir'd him. Often as he press'd
+ More close than prudent, all his earnest speech,
+ Procne, he said, dictated. Heavens! how dark
+ The gloom that blinds the view of human souls.
+ Tereus for tenderest piety esteem'd,
+ More as for vice he labors: praise he gains,
+ for every crime. Now Philomela begs,
+ His prayer assisting; flings her winning arms
+ Around Pandion's neck, and suppliant sues
+ A sight of Procne; for her woe she begs,
+ But deems she begs delight. Her Tereus views;--
+ Anticipates his joys; her every kiss,
+ Her arms around her parent's neck entwin'd,
+ But goad his passion: fuel fresh they add;
+ Food for his flame. And when her sire she clasps,
+ He longs that sire to be. Parent, not more
+ His impious purpose would the wretch delay!
+ The king by both their warm beseechings won,
+ Consents;--she joyful to her father gives
+ Glad thanks;--and hapless, deems completely blest,
+ Herself and sister, both most deeply curst;
+
+ Now Phoebus' toil nigh spent, his coursers' feet
+ Sweep'd down the slope of heaven. The royal feast,
+ And golden goblets, fill'd with Bacchus' gift,
+ The board bespread. From hence in slumbers soft,
+ Each sought repose. All but the Thracian king,
+ Though far remov'd, still burning; all her face,
+ Her hands and gesture he recals, and paints
+ At pleasure all her beauties yet unseen:
+ Feeding his flame, and sleep repelling far.
+
+ 'Twas morn;--Pandion, pressing warm the hand
+ Of Tereus, as they parted, while the tears
+ Gush'd sudden, thus bespeaks his friendly care.
+ "Dear son, to thee I give her, pious claims
+ "Compel me: suppliant let me thee adjure
+ "By faith, by kindred, and by all the gods,
+ "Thy care paternal, shall protect the maid;
+ "And the soft solace of my anxious years,
+ "Speedy restore, for each delay is long.
+ "Quick, Philomela, quick my child, rejoin
+ "Thy sire, if filial duty sways thee. Much
+ "Thy sister's absence pains me."--Speaking thus
+ He press'd with kisses soft, the maiden's lips,
+ And dripping tears with each behest let fall.
+ Their hands he asks as pledge of faith, and joins
+ Their hands in his presented; tender begs
+ His salutations to his daughter dear;
+ And his young grandson. Scarce the last adieu,
+ Chok'd with deep sighs, he breathes: his boding mind
+ Foreseeing future woes.
+
+ Now Philomel'
+ Safely on board the painted vessel plac'd,
+ The land far left, as with their laboring oars
+ The surges move;--exulting Tereus, cry'd,
+ "Victorious,--lo! my utmost wishes borne
+ Safe with me."--Scarce his burning soul defers
+ His hop'd-for joys. His eyes are never turn'd
+ From the lov'd face. Thus Jove's protected bird
+ Rapacious bears, with his sharp talons pierc'd,
+ An hare defenceless to his lofty nest:
+ No flight remains, the spoiler calmly views
+ His prey. Now ended is their voyage, now
+ Weary'd they quit their ship, and joyful touch
+ Their native beach; and now the Thracian king
+ Pandion's daughter to a lofty stall
+ Conducts; by ancient trees the spot well screen'd.
+ There he inclos'd the pale, the trembling maid,
+ Of all things fearful, as with tears she press'd
+ Her sister's face to see: his purpose dire
+ Disclosing,--force the helpless maid o'ercame,
+ Loudly exclaiming to her sire; and loud
+ Her sister's help invoking, equal vain:
+ But chief she begs celestial powers to aid.
+ Trembling she lies; so seems a shuddering lamb
+ Wounded, and from the hoary wolf's fierce jaws
+ Just 'scap'd, not sure his safety yet he deems:
+ So seems a dove, her plumes in blood deep-drench'd,
+ With fear still shivering; still the hungry claws
+ Dreading, that lately pierc'd her. Soon restor'd
+ Her mental powers, while scatter'd hung the locks
+ Rent in her anguish, high her arms she rais'd,
+ Livid with blows, as those that mourn the dead;
+ Exclaiming,--"O, barbarian! wretch supreme!
+ "In cruelty and vice; whom not the charge
+ "Parental, seal'd with pious tears could move;
+ "A sister's charge entrusted: not her state,
+ "Virgin defenceless; not the sacred vows,
+ "Conjugal plighted. In confusion all
+ "Commixt, by thee, adulteress here I lie,
+ "Against my sister. Thou a double spouse,
+ "To both. This scourge is sure to me not due.
+ "Why, villain, not my hated life destroy?
+ "Perfect in deeds atrocious; would my breath
+ "Before the horrid act supprest had been:
+ "Then had I guiltless sought the shades. But still
+ "If powers celestial view this act; if sway
+ "On earth they hold; if all not sinks with me,
+ "Thy fate hence-forward from me dread; myself
+ "Shall unabash'd, thy acts proclaim. If power
+ "Is granted, when in public walks I roam:
+ "If here in woods imprison'd, all the woods
+ "Shall with my plaints resound; the conscious rocks
+ "I'll move. May heaven me hear! and if in heaven
+ "A god abides, me hear!"--Rous'd by her words,
+ The fierce king's anger burns; no less his fear
+ Than anger moves him: strongly spurr'd by each,
+ His weapon from the pendent sheath he drew:
+ Dragg'd by the hair, her limbs he forc'd to yield
+ To fetters; twisting rough her arms behind.
+ Glad Philomel' to him her throat presents,
+ Death from the glittering sword expecting. Grasp'd
+ In pincers, fierce her tongue he tore away;
+ Griev'd, and indignant, as her father's name
+ She strove to utter: trembling still appear'd
+ The bloody root; trembling the tongue itself
+ Murmur'd as on the gore-stain'd earth it lay:
+ As leaps the serpent's sever'd tail, the tongue,
+ Quivering in death, still to her feet advanc'd.
+ This deed of horror done, 'tis said that oft
+ (Incredible the fact) repeated force
+ Upon her mangled form the wretch employ'd.
+
+ Now dares he, all those acts atrocious done,
+ Return to Procne. Eager as he comes,
+ For Philomel' she asks. False tears and groans
+ He gives: the hapless nymph he feigns deceas'd:
+ His tears convince. Now from her shoulders torn,
+ Her robes with gold bright-glittering, sable vests
+ Her limbs enfolded. High an empty tomb
+ She rais'd, and pious obsequies perform'd
+ To manes pretended: for her sister's fate
+ She mourn'd, whose fate such mourning ill deserv'd.
+
+ Through twice six signs had Phoebus journey'd on,
+ The year completing. What, alas! remains
+ For Philomela? Guards prevent her flight.
+ Of stone erected, high the massive walls
+ Circle her round. Her lips so mute, refuse
+ The deed to blazon. Keen the sense of grief
+ Sharpens the soul:--in misery the mind
+ Ingenious sparkles. Skillful she extends
+ The Thracian web, and on the snow-white threads,
+ In purple letters, weaves the dreadful tale.
+ Complete, a servant with expressive signs,
+ The present to the queen she bids to bear.
+ To Procne was it borne, witless the slave
+ Of what he carry'd. Savage Tereus' spouse
+ The web unfolded; read the mournful tale
+ Her hapless sister told, and wonderous! sate
+ In silence; grief her rising words repress'd:
+ Indignant, chok'd, her throat refus'd to breathe,
+ The angry accents to her plaining tongue.
+ To weep she waits not, in turmoil confus'd,
+ Justice and flagrance undistinguished lie;
+ Her mind sole bent for vengeance on her spouse.
+
+ Now was the time Sithonia's matrons wont,
+ The rites triennial of the jovial god
+ To tend. Those rites to conscious shade alone
+ Confided. Rhodope, the brazen sound
+ Shrill tinkling, hears by night;--by night the queen
+ The palace quits, attir'd as Bacchus' rites
+ Demand; and weapon'd with the Bacchant arms.
+ A vine her forehead girds; the nimble deer
+ Clothes with his skin her sides; her shoulder bears
+ A slender spear. Thus maddening, Procne seeks
+ The woods in ire terrific, crowded round
+ By all her followers: rack'd by inward pangs,
+ The furious rant of Bacchus veils her woes.
+ The lonely stable seen at length, she howls
+ Aloud,--"Evoe, ho!"--and bursts the door;
+ Drags thence her sister;--her thence dragg'd, invests I
+ In Bacchanalian robes; her face inshrouds
+ In ivy foliage; and astonish'd leads
+ The trembling damsel o'er the palace steps.
+ The horrid dome when Philomela saw,
+ Perforce she enter'd; through her frame she shook;
+ The blood her face deserted. Procne sought
+ A spot retir'd, and from her features flung
+ The sacred trappings, and her sister's face,
+ Sorrowing and blushing, to the light unveil'd;
+ Then ran to clasp her. She the sight not bore;
+ Her eyes she rais'd not; her dejected brows
+ Bent to the ground; thus by her sister seen,
+ Encroacher on her bed. Her hands still spoke,
+ When oaths she wish'd to utter, and to call
+ Th' attesting gods, her foul disgrace by force
+ To prove accomplish'd. Furious, Procne burns,
+ Nor curbs her ire; her sister's streaming tears
+ Reproving checks, and cries;--"no period now
+ "For tears, we ask the sword! But if than sword
+ "Vengeance more keen thou hop'st for, sister dear,
+ "Behold me for most horrid deeds prepar'd.
+ "Shall I with flaming torches blaze on high
+ "His hall imperial, and the villain king
+ "Heave in the conflagration? Shall I rend
+ "As thine his tongue? or from his sockets tear,
+ "His eye-balls? or what other member maim?
+ "Or this, or instant send his guilty soul
+ "Thro' thousand wounds to judgment? What thou speak'st
+ "Be mighty. I for mightiest acts prepare.
+ "To fix I hesitate." As Procne speaks,
+ Lo! infant Itys to his mother runs;
+ His sight her mind determines; cruel turn
+ Her eyes, exclaiming;--"See, how like his sire's
+ "Appear his features!"--More she spoke not, fixt
+ Was straight her dread resolve: now fiercer burn'd
+ Within her smother'd rage;--yet when the boy
+ Approach'd, and round her neck his infant arms
+ Threw, and his kisses printed on her lips,
+ With bland caresses mingled, even the soul
+ Of Procne melted. Mollify'd her rage,
+ Tears hard constrain'd flow'd from unwilling eyes.
+ Soon as the mother's feelings softening seem
+ To melt in extreme fondness; Procne quits
+ The sight, and to her sister's face reverts
+ Again her visage; then on each in turn
+ Full bent her view, she cries;--"Must one me melt
+ "With blandish'd soothings? Must the other mute,
+ "With tongue dismember'd stand? Must he exclaim
+ "O, mother!--she, O, sister! never more?
+ "To what a spouse, Pandion's daughter, see
+ "Art thou, degenerate wife, conjoin'd! Thy sin
+ "A spouse like Tereus to have us'd too well."
+ More she delays not, infant Itys drags,
+ Swift as the Indian tiger sweeps the fawn
+ Through shady forests. Then the lofty dome,
+ For rooms remote well search'd, in one arrives,
+ Where she the infant pierces; 'twixt the breast
+ And side the weapon enters, while his hands,
+ Suppliant, his fate foreseeing, he extends,
+ And,--"mother! O, my mother!"--loudly cries.
+ Nor mov'd her countenance fell;--the single wound
+ Was deadly. Philomela, with her steel
+ The throat divided, and the quivering limbs
+ Dissever'd, whilst of animation still
+ Some glimmering sparks remain'd. Of these, they part
+ In brazen cauldrons boil: part on the spit
+ Crackling they turn: with gore the secret rooms
+ Offensive float. Her unsuspecting spouse
+ Procne to feast invites; delusive feigns
+ Her country's customs,--where 'twas given, but one
+ The husband should be nigh; all menial slaves
+ Far distant. On his ancestorial seat
+ High-lifted, Tereus sate, and feasted there:
+ And in his bowels deep he there entomb'd
+ Bowels his own. So blind are human souls,--
+ "Call Itys to the feast,"--he cries. No more
+ Could Procne veil her savage joy;--full bent
+ The slaughter to announce, she loud proclaim'd
+ "Thou seek'st who with thee rests!"--Around he looks.
+ Wondering where rests he. Philomela rush'd,
+ Her tresses sprinkled with the ireful blood,
+ As griev'd he, Itys calling loud, and flung,
+ With savage fury Itys' gory head
+ Full in his father's face; nor ever mourn'd
+ Lost speech so much; her well-earn'd joy to show,
+ More griev'd lost power. With outcry loud the king
+ O'er-turn'd the table; from the Stygian vale,
+ Invok'd the viper'd sisters: hard he strove
+ To tear his bosom, and from thence disgorge
+ The dire repast, the half-digested mass
+ Of Itys' limbs. Now weeping, wild he mourns,
+ Himself his offspring's tomb. Now fierce pursues
+ Pandion's daughters with his unsheath'd sword.
+ From him escaping, on light wings upborne
+ Th' Athenians seem'd; light wings their limbs upbore!
+ One sheltering in the woods: protecting roofs
+ The other seeking; still the murderous deed,
+ Mark'd on her breast remains; still on her plumes
+ The teint of blood is seen. Rapid in rage
+ And hope of vengeance, Tereus too is chang'd,
+ And flits a bird; a plumy crest he bears,
+ High on his head: the lengthen'd sword he bore,
+ A beak enormous grows. A lapwing now
+ With fierce-arm'd face he flies.
+
+ Untimely sought
+ Pandion, when the mournful tale he heard,
+ The Stygian shades, ere yet the lengthen'd date
+ Of years commanded. Next th' Athenian realm
+ Erechtheus rul'd, the sceptre dubious held
+ By right or forceful arms. Proud could he boast
+ Four sons;--and daughters four to him were given.
+ Beauteous the maids; in beauty equal two:
+ Of these AEoelian Cephalus was bless'd
+ With thee as spouse, O, Procris!--Tereus long,
+ Boreas withstanding, with the power of Thrace,
+ Long Orithyia, by the god belov'd,
+ Was lov'd in vain; while soft beseechings more
+ And prayers, the power to strenuous force preferr'd.
+ But now those soothings bland so vainly try'd,
+ Fierce swol'n with rage, his most accustom'd feel
+ (Too much that passion knows this wind) he cries;--
+ "Well I deserve it, all my proper arms
+ "Relinquish'd: savage fierceness, strength, stern rage,
+ "And threatening force. With humble softening prayers
+ "Fool have I su'd; in each attempt have fail'd.
+ "More apt to me is force! by force I drive
+ "The lowering clouds before me: Ocean's waves
+ "Forceful I turn; forceful the knotted oak
+ "Root from its deep foundation; hard the frost
+ "I bind; and beat the sounding earth with hail:
+ "I when in open sky, for there our field
+ "Lies in display, my blustering brethren meet,
+ "Oppose such might, that midmost sky resounds
+ "Echoing our forceful conflict; flashing flames
+ "From the cleft bodies of the hollow clouds,
+ "Elicited: I too, earth's secret womb
+ "Fierce entering, in her deepest caverns strain
+ "My strength, 'till trembling wide through all her frame,
+ "The ghosts below are troubled. These the aid
+ "My nuptial wish should seek; no longer pray
+ "Erechtheus for my sire;--my sire by force,
+ "The monarch shall be made."--So spoke the god,
+ Or thus, or more in fury, as he shook
+ His plumes, whose motion sweep'd through earth's extent,
+ And made the wide main tremble. Lofty hills
+ His dusty mantle covers; as the plains
+ Rapid he brushes; shrouded deep in mist,
+ In his dark wings the furious lover clasps
+ His Orithyia, trembling, pale with fear:
+ Flying his flames were fann'd, and fiercer blaz'd.
+ Nor check'd the ravisher his lofty flight,
+ Till seen the town of Cicones, whose walls
+ Receiv'd him. There th' Athenian nymph became
+ The freezing monarch's bride: a mother there,
+ A double birth she brought, whose shoulders bear
+ The father's pinions; all their semblance else
+ Their mother's. Not at first, 'tis said, appear'd
+ The feathers: Calais and Zethes, boys
+ Were yet unplum'd; when yet with ruddy hair,
+ Their beards appear'd not. From each shoulder shot
+ The feathers bird-like, at the self-same time,
+ Their manly cheeks were thick with yellow down.
+ Now when their youth matur'd to man appear'd,
+ Through seas unplough'd before, they sought the fleece
+ Splendid with glittering wool; with all the train
+ Of Minyae, in the first-built vessel borne.
+
+
+
+
+*The Seventh Book.*
+
+
+ Expedition of the Argonauts. Jason obtains the golden fleece, by
+ the assistance of Medea. AEson restored to youth by her magic
+ powers. Murder of Pelias by his daughters. Medea's flight to
+ Corinth. Murder of her rival and infants. Marriage with AEgeus.
+ Adventures of Theseus. War with Minos. Plague in AEgina. Change of
+ ants into Myrmidons. Cephalus and Procris.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Seventh Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Now in the Pagasaean vessel borne,
+ Plough'd the wide sea the Argonauts, and saw
+ The fate of Phineus; whose old age the curse
+ Of hunger felt, and felt perpetual night.
+ The youths from Boreas sprung, quick sped to flight
+ The virgin-featur'd birds, his hapless face,
+ Far distant. 'Neath great Jason's rule much toil
+ They bore ere on the oozy banks they stay'd
+ Of rapid Phasis. Here the king they seek;
+ And here demand the golden fleece; and here
+ An answer big with fearful labors learn
+ The Grecian crew. Meantime the royal maid
+ Burns with fierce fires: with reason struggling long,
+ Still her hot flame to quench unable, cries
+ Aloud Medea;--"vainly I oppose!
+ "Some unknown god controls. Perhaps 'tis love!
+ "If love 'tis not, no sentiment more near
+ "To love can come. Why else my sire's commands
+ "So harsh appear? But harsh in truth they are.
+ "But why his failing dread? Why dread his death,
+ "But barely seen? What cause such fear can give?
+ "O, hapless maid! would from my virgin breast
+ "Those flames to fling were given. If mine the power
+ "More wisdom would I use. But me this force,
+ "Before unknown, unwilling drags; this love
+ "Persuades, oppos'd to reason: plain I see
+ "The better track,--approve it most, yet swerv'd,
+ "I tread the worse. Why, royal virgin, burn
+ "Thus for a stranger guest? Why long'st thou thus,
+ "A foreign partner in the marriage bed
+ "To clasp? Thy country well can thee supply
+ "What e'er thou lovest. In the gods' decree
+ "His death or safety rests. Yet may he live!
+ "Pray may'st thou for him sure,--love unconcern'd.
+ "But what has Jason done? Savage, indeed!
+ "Were those his youth, his birth, and brilliant deeds
+ "Not touch'd: how savage too the soul must be
+ "His beauty touch'd not, were there nought beside;
+ "My bosom sure it moves. But were my aid
+ "Deny'd, the furious bulls with flaming breath
+ "His fate would compass; or the foes that spring
+ "From earth, his harvest, slay him in the fight;
+ "Or last, he'd fall the ravenous dragon's prey.
+ "If this I suffer, from the tiger sprung
+ "Believe me; steel and marble in my breast,
+ "Deem me to wear. Why not his death behold?
+ "Why not mine eyes with the dread sight pollute!
+ "Why not the bulls, the earth-born foes incite,
+ "And sleepless dragon, with redoubled ire?
+ "Heaven wills it better. But let deeds, not prayers
+ "My time employ. How! shall I then betray
+ "My parent's realm? an unknown stranger aid
+ "With all my power? who by my power preserv'd,
+ "Loos'd to the wind his sails, another's spouse
+ "Becomes,--me left for punishment behind?
+ "If this to do,--another nymph to me
+ "Born to prefer, let him, ingrate! be slain.
+ "But no! his face denies it; his great soul,
+ "And graceful form forbid the fear of fraud;
+ "Or benefits forgot. Yet shall he plight
+ "His solemn faith first, call th' attesting gods
+ "To witness what he vows. What fear I more?
+ "All's safe. Medea, hasten, spurn delay,--
+ "Jason, remaining life to thee shall owe;
+ "Join'd to his state, the annual torch shall flame
+ "To thee, preserver! through the Grecian towns
+ "By crowds of mothers hail'd. Shall I for this
+ "My sister leave, my brother, and my sire;
+ "My gods, and natal land? Yes,--fierce my sire;
+ "My country barbarous; and my brother young:
+ "With all my wishes, warm my sister joins;
+ "And dwells within my breast the mightiest god.
+ "Much I relinquish not, but much I seek.
+ "The glorious title of the Grecian youth
+ "Deliverer! gain'd; the sight of lands and towns
+ "Whose fame even here has journey'd; manners mild,
+ "And cultur'd arts; and Jason for my spouse,
+ "For whom all earth's possessions were too small
+ "To change. His spouse become, supremely blest,
+ "Dear to the gods, the loftiest stars I'll reach.
+ "What are those rocks, they tell, which 'mid the waves
+ "Meet in encounter? Fell Charybdis what,--
+ "Hostile to ships, now sucking in the tide,
+ "Now fierce discharging? What the savage bounds,
+ "Which compass greedy Scylla 'mid the main
+ "Sicilian? O'er the wide-spread ocean borne,
+ "Him whom I love embracing; sheltering close
+ "In Jason's bosom; clasp'd by him, no fear
+ "My soul could harbor. Or if fear I felt,
+ "For him alone I'd tremble; for my spouse.
+ "Spouse, dost thou say, Medea? hid'st thou thus,
+ "With specious names thy crime? Behold the load
+ "Of guilt thou goest to bear! While power remains
+ "The sin avoid."--She said, and duty, shame,
+ And rectitude, before her eyes appear'd;
+ And vanquish'd love address'd his wings to flight.
+ Now to an ancient altar Hecat' own'd,
+ By shady trees dark veil'd from day, she came:
+ Her flames abated, and her eager pulse
+ Subsided. Here AEsonides she saw,
+ And bright her love reblaz'd. Warm flush'd her cheeks,
+ Deep all her visage glow'd. The smallest spark
+ Thus low in embers hid, its vigor shews;
+ Help'd by the feeding blast, increasing burns,
+ And stirr'd in all its wonted fury glows.
+ Just so the languid passion which but now
+ All but extinct appear'd, the hero seen
+ Fresh at his beauteous presence flam'd. By chance
+ More beauteous Jason on that morn appear'd;
+ Well might a lover all her love excuse.
+ She looks, his countenance with her eyes devours
+ As then first seen; and madly fond, she deems
+ His features more than mortal: bashful turn'd
+ Her forehead not from his. But when her guest
+ Address'd her: when he gently took her hands;
+ And crav'd assistance in an humble tone,
+ The nuptial promise giving. Plenteous flow'd
+ Her tears, exclaiming;--"What I should perform
+ "Plainly I see: not ignorance me misleads
+ "But love. My gifts shall aid you, you but keep
+ "The promise pledg'd."--Sacred the hero swears
+ By her, the tri-form'd goddess, whom that grove
+ Acknowledges divine; and by the god,
+ Whence sprung the sire-in-law he hopes to claim;
+ The god who all beholds; by all his deeds
+ Atchiev'd; and by his perils all he swears.
+ His words believ'd, immediate he receives
+ The magic plants, their use well taught, and seeks
+ The roof rejoicing. Now the morn had driven
+ The glimmering stars far distant, crowding press'd
+ The people in the sacred field of Mars,
+ The king himself amidst them, seated high,
+ In purple clad, with ivory sceptre grac'd.
+ Lo! come the brazen-footed bulls, who breathe
+ Through nostrils fenc'd with adamant hot flames:
+ Parch'd by their breath, the herbage blacken'd burns.
+ Loud as the blazing forge's chimney roars;
+ Or loud as lime in earthy furnace laid,
+ Bursts into heat by watery sprinklings touch'd:
+ So loud, within their flaming chests contain'd,
+ The struggling fires loud bellow'd. Scorch'd their throats
+ The sound transmitted. Boldly AEson's son
+ March'd onward; fiercely as the youth approach'd,
+ His foes dark lower'd, and bent their steel-tipt horns,
+ Paw'd with their clefted hoofs the dusty ground,
+ And fill'd with smoky bellowings all the air.
+ Pale grew each Grecian face; advancing on
+ The fiery blasts he feels not, such the power
+ The mighty charms possess, but boldly strokes
+ Their dewlaps pendulous, and to the yoke
+ Subjected, makes them drag the ponderous plough;
+ And with the iron cut th' uncustom'd soil.
+ The Colchians wondering gaze; the Grecians loud
+ Applaud, and with fresh courage fill his soul.
+ Then from his brazen helmet pluck'd, he sows
+ The serpent's teeth, deep in the furrow'd ground:
+ The ground, the teeth with powerful venom ting'd,
+ Soften'd and swell'd them, and a novel shape
+ Imparted. Thus within the parent's womb,
+ An human shape the infant mass receives,
+ Completed perfect in the dark recess;
+ Nor till mature, to air external given.
+ So when the manly forms were perfect made
+ Within earth's pregnant bowels, up they sprung
+ Thick in the fruitful field; more wonderous still
+ Their arms they clash'd when born. Then when the Greeks
+ Their keenly-pointed spears preparing saw
+ To hurl at Jason's head, low sunk their souls,
+ And pallid grew their cheeks; Medea ev'n,
+ Whose art insur'd his safety, trembling fear'd,
+ When single she the youth beheld assail'd
+ By foes in hosts; bloodless her face became,
+ And tremor seiz'd her limbs: then lest the herbs
+ Presented first, should fail in power, she sings
+ An helping magic song, and all her arts
+ Latent, calls forth. Amidst the hostile crowd
+ A mighty rock he flings; their martial rage
+ From him diverted, on each other turns.
+ By mutual wounds the earth-born brothers fall;
+ In civil discord perish. Joy'd again
+ The Grecians clasp the conqueror in their arms.
+ Thou too, Medea, wish'd thine arms to fill
+ With him victorious. (Shame at first repress'd
+ Thy open fondness, though thou wast embrac'd)
+ Now reputation awes thee, now prevents
+ That bliss. What honor gives,--silent to joy,
+ And pour glad thanks to all thy magic arts,
+ And gods their authors, those thou dar'st indulge.
+ Now sole remains by powerful herbs to lull
+ The wakeful dragon, whose high-crested head
+ A triple tongue contains, whose crooked fangs
+ Dreadful the golden fleece protecting guards.
+ Him when be sprinkled with the juices prest
+ From plants Lethean; and repeated thrice,
+ The words which placid sleep inspire; which still
+ The ruffled ocean; and arrest the course
+ Of rapid torrents; sleep before unknown
+ Stole o'er his eyelids, and th' AEsonian youth
+ Seiz'd on the golden prize. Proud with the spoil,
+ (A second spoil possessing) she who gave
+ The power to conquer, as his wife he bears,
+ And lands triumphant on Thessalia's shores.
+
+ Mothers of Thessaly, and aged sires
+ For sons restor'd, glad offerings bring: bright flames
+ The high-heap'd incense; votive victims deck'd
+ With gilded horns are slain: but AEson, far
+ The grateful crowd avoids, now near his fate,
+ Bent by a weight of years. Hence Jason spoke;--
+ "O, spouse! to thee my life and safety ow'd;
+ "To me, thou all hast given; the high swol'n sum
+ "Of all thy favors might belief surpass:
+ "This more attempt, if this thou can'st,--and what
+ "Thy magic power defies? My years curtail,
+ "And to my sire's existence add the term."
+ Fast flow'd his tears while speaking;--while he spoke,
+ His pious duty mov'd Medea; quick
+ Her sire AEeta, so deserted, sprung
+ To thought, and shew'd the two contrasting souls.
+ But, veil'd her secret thoughts, she thus replies;--
+ "What impious accents hear I from thy tongue,
+ "O, spouse religious? Can I then transfer
+ "Of thy existence part? Not Hecat's power
+ "Fateful, would sanction this; nor stands thy wish
+ "In equity. Yet, Jason, will I try
+ "More than thou seek'st to give. With all my skill
+ "Thy sire's existence to prolong, thy years
+ "Unshorten'd; should the tri-form'd goddess aid
+ "Propitious my designs."--Three nights were now
+ Deficient, ere the full-form'd horns could meet
+ The lunar orb to fill. Complete her round;
+ A solid sphere of light from earth beheld,
+ Medea wanders forth; loose all her robes;
+ Naked her feet; bare-headed; while her hair
+ Wild o'er her shoulders floats; and thus array'd,
+ Untended, while deep midnight silence reigns
+ She bends her devious way. Men, beasts, and birds,
+ In bonds of sleep were chain'd; the hedges still,
+ No murmur breath'd; nor wav'd the silent trees;
+ Hush'd was the humid sky; the stars alone
+ Twinkled: to them her arms extending, thrice
+ She turn'd around; thrice from the flowing stream
+ Her tresses sprinkled; thrice with yelling noise
+ The silence broke; then with her bended knee
+ The hard earth pressing, cry'd;--"O, night! thou friend
+ "Of secret deeds; ye glittering stars! whose rays
+ "With Luna's, Sol's diurnal light succeed;
+ "And thou, O, Hecat'! tripleform'd, who know'st
+ "My undertaking, and approaching aid'st
+ "With incantations, and with magic powers:
+ "And thou, O, earth! whose bosom witching plants
+ "Affords: ye winds; ye skies; ye mountains; lakes;
+ "And flowing streams: O, all ye gods! who dwell
+ "In shady woods; and all ye gods of night,
+ "Hither approach! by whose high power, at will,
+ "Rivers I cause between their wondering banks,
+ "Back to their springs to flow; the stormy deep
+ "Hush by my song, or lash it into rage;
+ "Clouds form, or clouds dispel; raise furious blasts,
+ "Or furious blasts allay; smite with my song
+ "The dragon's furious jaws: the living rocks
+ "I shake;--uproot the oak; the earth upturn;
+ "Move forests; bid the trembling mountains leap;
+ "Loud roar the ground; and from the tombs the ghosts
+ "Affrighted walk. Thee, Luna, too I draw
+ "From heaven, by all the threatening clash of brass
+ "Deterr'd not: pale the brighter car becomes,
+ "My spells once utterr'd: by my poisons charm'd,
+ "Pallid Aurora seems. You, plants! for me,
+ "Blunted the ardor of the flaming bulls;
+ "Press'd with the yoke, their necks impatient bent,
+ "And dragg'd the crooked plough. You bade the race
+ "Snake-born, upon themselves their warring rage
+ "To turn. In sleep the roaring dragon's eyes
+ "You steep'd; the guard eluded, sent the prize
+ "To glad the towns of Greece. Now have I need
+ "Of renovating herbs, to make old age
+ "Glow once again in all its youthful bloom.
+ "This will you grant, for sure those stars in vain
+ "Not sparkle; nor in vain the chariot comes
+ "Drawn by the dragons wing'd." The chariot comes
+ Swift sweeping through the air. Active she mounts,
+ Strokes the rein'd dragons' manes, and shakes the thongs.
+ On high they soar:--Thessalian Tempe far
+ Beneath she views; then tow'rd the chalky land
+ Her snakes directs. On Ossa's top explores
+ For plants, and seeks what lofty Pelion bears;
+ Othrys, and Pindus, and Olympus huge.
+ What please her, part she with their root updrags;
+ Part with her crooked brazen sickle mows;
+ Apidanus; Amphrysos, on their banks
+ Many afforded: nor Enipeus scap'd.
+ Peneus, and Spercheus, and the rushy shores
+ Of Baebe some contributed. She pluck'd
+ In Anthedon the living grass whose power,
+ Then Glaucus' form unchang'd, was yet unknown.
+
+ Now had nine days, now had nine nights elaps'd,
+ Borne on her dragon wings, and in her car
+ Wandering the fields among, ere back she turn'd:
+ Unfed her dragons, save by odorous smells;
+ Yet had they shed their scales, with youth renew'd.
+ Arriv'd, without the palace gate she stays,
+ And there sole shelter'd by the sky, all touch
+ Of man denying; altars two she rears
+ Of turf; sacred to Hecate stood the right,
+ To Youth the left: when these with vervain bound.
+ And forest boughs, here sacrifice she makes.
+ Hard by, two trenches scoops from out the ground;
+ Smites with her weapon in the sable throat,
+ A sheep presented; in the open ditch
+ Empties the blood; then bowls of wine she pours,
+ And bowls of smoking milk; with mystic words
+ Invokes the powers terrestrial; begs the king
+ Of shades, and begs his ravish'd spouse to aid,
+ Nor of his soul the aged king defraud.
+ These when with lengthen'd prayers, and murmurings long,
+ Appeas'd; she bids them tow'rd the altars bring
+ The feeble AEson; his exhausted limbs
+ Bound in deep slumber, by her magic power,
+ Corse-like, she lays extended on the grass.
+ Then Jason bids, and his attendant crew,
+ Far thence depart, nor with their view prophane
+ Her acts mysterious. As she bids they go.
+ Medea then the flaming altars round,
+ In Bacchanalian guise her flowing locks,
+ Circles; and in the ditch's blackening gore
+ Her splinter'd torches dips; with blood imbu'd,
+ Burns them upon her altars; thrice with fire,
+ With sulphur thrice, and thrice with flowing streams,
+ The sire she lustrates. Heated now in brass,
+ Her powerful medicines bubble, high and white
+ The swelling froth appears. There boils she all
+ The roots in vales AEmonian dug; and seeds,
+ And flowers, and juices dark: gems unto these,
+ Sought in the distant East, she adds; and adds
+ What on the sand the refluent ocean leaves:
+ More still, the night-long moon collected dew
+ She brings; the dismal screech-owl's flesh and wings;
+ The entrails of the wolf ambiguous, wont
+ His savage face in human guise to wear:
+ Nor wanted there, the scaly skin which clothes
+ Th' amphibious snake Cyniphian, long and small:
+ The beak and head a crow nine ages bore,
+ She adds. Now was the foreign dame prepar'd,
+ By help of these, and nameless thousands more,
+ The promis'd boon to give, the whole she stirs
+ Deep from the bottom, with a bough long rent,
+ From the mild olive. Lo! the wither'd branch,
+ The boiling caldron stirring, sudden shoots
+ In virid freshness! shortly leaves bud forth;
+ And soon it bends beneath a load of fruit!
+ Where'er the fire above the hollow brass,
+ The bubbling foam high-rais'd, and boiling drops
+ Sprinkled the ground,--the ground with verdure smil'd;
+ Flowers and soft herbage sprung. Medea sees,
+ And with her weapon ope's the senior's throat;
+ His aged blood exhausted sees, and pours
+ Her juices copious: part his mouth receives;
+ And part the wound. When AEson these had drank,
+ Their hoary whiteness lost, his beard and hair,
+ An ebon tinge receiv'd; his leanness fled;
+ His pallid ghastly face no more was seen;
+ His hollow veins with added blood were fill'd;
+ And all his limbs in lusty plumpness swell'd.
+ The wondering AEson, such himself beheld,
+ As the last forty years he ne'er had past.
+
+ Bacchus, from heaven survey'd the mighty change
+ Wonderous, and hence that power was given he found;
+ His nurses to restore to youthful years:
+ The boon from Tethys asking, he obtain'd.
+
+ Nor cease the frauds yet of the Phasian dame:
+ Fierce hatred 'gainst her by her spouse she feigns,
+ And flies to Pelias' court; a suppliant there,
+ His daughters hail her guest:--the sire bent down
+ With age. The crafty Colchian these beguiles
+ Soon, with her well-dissembled friendship's form.
+ Amid her mighty benefits, she tells
+ AEson's old age remov'd; relating all,
+ On this she chiefly dwells. Hope sudden springs
+ Within their virgin breasts: Pelias their sire,
+ Such art they trust may yet revivify.
+ That art they sue for,--highest claim'd reward
+ To her they promise: mute at first she stands,
+ And feigning doubt, in hesitation holds,
+ And anxious poise their eager minds. At last,
+ She says, when promising,--"That in the deed,
+ "More faith ye may confide, a leading ram,
+ "The oldest in your fleecy flocks, a lamb
+ "My medicine shall transform!"--Instant was dragg'd
+ The woolly beast, whose wreathing horns around
+ His hollow temples curl'd; whose wither'd throat
+ The steel Thessalian stabb'd; the scanty blood
+ The steel scarce spotting: then th' enchantress steeps
+ His mangled body in the caldron deep,
+ With juices powerful: smaller grow his limbs;
+ Shed are his horns; and vanish'd are his years;
+ And from the caldron tender bleatings sound:
+ Instant leaps forth to all the wondering crowd
+ The bleating lamb, which, frisking, flies and seeks
+ The swelling teats. With admiration struck,
+ Now Pelias' daughters faith unshaken give;
+ More urgent press their wish. Thrice had the sun,
+ 'Merg'd in th' Iberian sea, unyok'd his steeds;
+ And the fourth night the glittering stars had shone;
+ When o'er the fire, pure water from the stream,
+ And powerless plants, the false Medea plac'd.
+
+ Now all in sleep relax'd, a death-like sleep,
+ The monarch's limbs were stretch'd; and with their king,
+ His guards lay dormant; so her magic words,
+ And magic tongue had doom'd. Medea leads
+ Across the steps the daughters; bidd'n by her,
+ His couch they compass.--"Why, O, feeble souls!
+ "Thus hesitate?"--she said,--"your swords unsheathe!
+ "Pour out his far-spent gore, that I may fill
+ "With youthful, vigorous blood his empty'd veins.
+ "Your father's life, and years, are in your hands:
+ "If sways you piety; if empty hopes
+ "Wavering deceive you not; then well deserve,
+ "By duty to your sire: quickly expel
+ "With weapons his old age: let issue forth
+ "His now congealing blood with brandish'd steel."
+ Exhorted thus, most pious she who feels,
+ First impious acts;--a wicked deed performs,
+ Lest wicked she were call'd: yet on the blow
+ Not one would bend her sight; with eyes averse
+ Their savage hands the unseen wounds inflict.
+ Flowing with gore, he from the bed uprais'd
+ His limbs; and from his posture strove half-torn
+ To rise; and stretching forth his pallid arms
+ 'Mid all their threatening swords;--"Daughters!"--he cries,
+ "What do ye? Why against your parent's life
+ "Thus arm ye?"--Sink their spirits! drop their hands!
+ His throat Medea severing, stay'd the words
+ He more had utter'd,--and the mangled corse,
+ Deep in the boiling brazen caldron flung.
+
+ She now,--but through the air on dragon wings
+ High borne,--their furious vengeance had not scap'd.
+ O'er shady Pelion high she flew, and o'er
+ The cave of Chiron; Othrys; and the spot
+ For old Cerambus' strange adventure known:
+ Upborne on wings by kindly-aiding nymphs,
+ Here, when the solid earth th' incroaching main
+ Wide delug'd, flying, safe Deucalion's flood
+ He 'scap'd. AEoelian Pitane to left
+ She quits; and sees the dragon huge, to stone
+ An image turn'd. And Ida's grove where chang'd
+ By Bacchus' power, the steer a stag became,
+ To screen the theft. And where beneath the sand,
+ A little sand, Corythus' father lies;
+ And fields which Maera's new-heard howlings fill.
+ Euripylus' fam'd town, where Coaen dames,
+ What time the troops of Hercules them left,
+ With horns were crown'd: and Phoebus' favor'd Rhodes;
+ Jalysian Telchines, whose hateful eyes
+ All vitiating, Jove detesting 'whelm'd
+ Beneath his brother's waves. She passes next
+ Carthaeia' walls in ancient Caeae's isle,
+ Where wondering saw Alcidamas the sire,
+ A placid dove his daughter's body bear.
+ And Hyrie's lake she sees, and Tempe's pool
+ Cycneiaen, which the swan so sudden form'd
+ Frequented: Phyllius there, a willing slave,
+ Birds and fierce beasts, to his capricious boy
+ Oft brought--e'en lions tam'd; a furious bull
+ He bade him bring, a furious bull he brought;
+ But now in choler at his craving soul,
+ The bull refus'd, though as the last gift claim'd:
+ Indignant, cry'd he,--"soon you'll wish him given!"--
+ And from the high rock plung'd: all thought he fell:
+ But form'd a swan, lightly he pois'd in air
+ On snowy wings. Hyrie, her son thus sav'd,
+ Knew not, by constant weeping soon dissolv'd;
+ The lake becoming that still bears her name.
+ Near this is Pleuron:--Ophian Combe, here
+ Wafted on wings, her murderous sons escap'd.
+ Thence she beholds Latona's favorite isle;
+ Calaurea, where to birds the royal pair
+ Were chang'd: Cyllene, on the right is plac'd
+ Where like the savage herd, Menephron sought
+ His mother's bed. Far hence she spies in tears
+ Cephisus, for his nephew's fate who mourn'd,
+ Chang'd by Apollo to a sea-calf huge;
+ And saw Eumelus' dome, who wept his child,
+ A bird become. At length on dragon wings,
+ Pirenian Corinth she regain'd; where tell
+ The ancient tales, in primal ages, men
+ From shower-fed mushrooms sprung. Here first was flam'd
+ In Colchian venoms fierce, the new-made bride;
+ Then either sea in blazing spires beheld
+ The royal dome; and with her children's gore
+ Her impious sword was stain'd. Thus on herself
+ Reveng'd; from royal Jason's wrath she fled.
+
+ Borne hence, her snakes Titanian reach the walls
+ Of Pallas' city, where most just of men
+ O, Phineus! thou, and Periphas the old,
+ With Polyphemon's niece, as birds are seen,
+ Soaring aloft in air on new-form'd wings.
+ Here AEgeus' roof receiv'd her, for this deed
+ Alone to blame: not satisfy'd as host,
+ In marriage bonds he makes her more his own.
+ Now Theseus comes, son to his sire unknown,
+ Whose brave atchievements, all the two-sea'd land
+ In peace had settled. For his death she mix'd
+ The baneful aconite, long since from shores
+ Of Scythia brought; which thus old tales relate,
+ From Cerberus' venom'd jaws was first produc'd,
+ Through a dark den, with gloomy opening, lies
+ A path steep shelving, where Alcides dragg'd
+ Fierce Cerberus to light, resisting strong,
+ Glancing askaunce his eyes from day, whose rays
+ Sparkled too bright, in adamantine chains.
+ With rabid anger swol'n, a triple yell
+ Fill'd all the air; he o'er the virid plain
+ Sprinkled white foam; increasing fast this shoots;
+ The fruitful soil fresh virulence imparts,
+ And ranker grows its power: from hardest rocks
+ It lively springs, and Aconite hence nam'd.
+ This did old AEgeus, by his crafty spouse
+ Deceiv'd, to Theseus, as a foe, present.
+ Unwitting Theseus, in his hand receiv'd
+ The cup presented; when the sire espy'd
+ Upon his ivory-hilted sword a mark,
+ Which prov'd his offspring; from his lips he dash'd
+ The poison. Wrapp'd in clouds by magic rais'd,
+ The sorceress from their furious vengeance fled.
+
+ The sire, though joy'd, his son in safety found,
+ Trembles astonish'd at the narrow 'scape;
+ And horrid crime premeditated: burns
+ On every altar fires;--to every god
+ Piles costly gifts: full on the brawny neck
+ Of oxen falls, their horns with garlands bound,
+ The sacrificing axe. Ne'er till that day
+ Had Athens' town, such joyous feasting seen;
+ Nobles and commons crowd around the board,
+ And thus, by wine inspir'd, sublime they sing.
+
+ "Thee, mighty Theseus! Marathon admires,
+ "Stain'd by the vanquish'd Cretan bull's black gore.
+ "Thy aid the swains of Cromyon own; thou gav'st
+ "That now secure they till their fields. The land
+ "Of Epidaurus saw the club-arm'd son
+ "Of Vulcan slain by thee. By thee, beheld
+ "Cephisus' shores, the fierce Procrustes die,
+ "Ceres' Eleusis hail'd Cercyon's fall.
+ "Sinis thou slew'st, gifted with strength ill-us'd;
+ "His strength high trees could bend, and oft he dragg'd
+ "Close down to earth the loftiest tops of pines,
+ "Thus rent the bodies of his victims wide.
+ "Safe now extends the road to Lelex' walls,
+ "Scyron low laid: earth to the robber's limbs,
+ "Wide scatter'd, rest refuses; to his bones
+ "Ocean a tomb denies; long widely tost,
+ "Age hardens into rock his last remains;
+ "His name the rock still bears. Should we thy age
+ "And actions count, thy famous deeds by far
+ "Thy years outnumber. O, most brave of men!
+ "For thee the public vows ascend; to thee,
+ "In Bacchus' bowl we drink. The royal hall
+ "Resounds with all the grateful people's praise;
+ "Nor through the city glooms one sorrowing spot."
+
+ And yet (so seldom pleasure comes unmix'd,
+ But still some cares with joy will intervene)
+ While AEgeus, gladden'd that his son secure
+ Arriv'd; Minos, for furious war prepares.
+ Strong though his troops, and though his navy strong
+ His utmost strength was in paternal rage;
+ And with just arms Androgeus' death t' avenge
+ He wars: yet first auxiliar strength he gains;
+ And powerful sweeps the seas with flying ships.
+ First Anaphe joins him, and Astypalaea; urg'd
+ By promise this, and that by threats constrain'd,
+ Low Mycone; Cymolus' chalky fields;
+ Bright Cythnos; Scyros; flat Seriphus' isle;
+ The marble Paros; and the fort betray'd
+ For gold, demanded by the impious nymph
+ Sithonian: still for gold she anxious seeks
+ Though chang'd a bird; on sable pinions borne,
+ With sable feet, she flutters as a daw.
+
+ But Oliaros, and Didymae, unite;
+ And Gyaros, Andros, Tenos, all refuse,
+ With Peparethos, in bright olives rich,
+ To aid the Gnossian fleet. Thence to the left
+ Steering, OEnopia's regions Minos sought;
+ OEnopia call'd of old, AEgina now,
+ By AEaecus, his mother's honor'd name.
+ In crowds the people rush, and pant to view
+ So highly fam'd a prince: to meet him go
+ First Telamon, then Peleus next in age,
+ And Phocas third and last, Ev'n AEaecus
+ With years opprest, steps tardy forth, and asks
+ The visit's cause. The hundred-city'd king
+ Deep sighs, his grief paternal all renew'd,
+ And thus replies;--"My arms, O, king! assist
+ "Assum'd, just vengeance for a son to claim.
+ "Partake this pious war. Peace to his manes
+ "I seek."--But Asopiades replies;--
+ "In vain you ask;--my city cannot aid:
+ "No lands by neighbouring scite more closely bound,
+ "Than ours and Athens'; hence our league."--The king
+ Angry departs, exclaiming.--"Much your league
+ "May cost you!"--But to threaten war more safe
+ He deems, than wage it there, and waste his force.
+ Still from OEnopia's walls the fleet was seen,
+ Not distant far; when sped by swelling sail,
+ An Attic ship arriv'd; the friendly port
+ Enter'd. On board was Cephalus who bore
+ His country's message. Well the royal youths
+ The hero knew, though long time past beheld;
+ And gave the friendly hand, and welcome led
+ To their paternal dome. The graceful chief
+ Enters, retaining still evincing marks
+ Of pristine beauty; in his hand he bears
+ A branch of native olive: in the midst
+ Senior he stands; and younger on each side,
+ Clytus, and Butes, Pallas' sons. Complete
+ Their friendly salutations; next the words
+ Th' Athenians bade him, Cephalus reports:
+ Their aid demands; their ancient league recounts;
+ The oaths their fathers swore; and adds, all Greece
+ Might perish in their ruin. When their cause
+ With eloquence the messenger thus urg'd;
+ On his bright sceptre as his left hand lean'd,
+ "Take, O Athenians,"--AEaecus exclaim'd,--
+ "Not ask, our aid! Unhesitating draw
+ "What force this isle possesses, and with yours
+ "Employ it: with you shall my strongest power
+ "March forth: strength want we not; our numerous troops
+ "Abundant, for ourselves and friends suffice:
+ "Prais'd be the gods! such is our happy state
+ "Your wish defies evasion."--"Still may grow,"
+ Said Cephalus,--"your prosperous city's state,
+ "And yours!--What transport seiz'd me as I walk'd,
+ "To see each youth so fair, so equal ag'd,
+ "Of all who met me. Yet in vain I look'd
+ "For many features, known when last your walls
+ "Receiv'd me."--AEaecus, with deep-drawn sighs,
+ And sorrowing voice, thus answers.--"Better fate
+ "Completed, what a mournful sight began.
+ "Would I in full could all the facts relate!
+ "Now unconnected must I speak, or tire
+ "Your ear with words superfluous. Whom you seek,
+ "Whom you remember, bones and ashes rest.
+ "But small their numbers:--Heavens! how small to those,
+ "My people, who have sunk in death beside.
+
+ "A dreadful plague, the angry Juno shed
+ "Unjust, upon the natives of the land,
+ "Detested, that her rival's name it bore.
+ "While human seem'd the scourge, the noxious cause
+ "Of slaughter yet conceal'd, with physic's skill
+ "We strove; in vain! death mock'd the power of art.
+ "At first thick darkness heavy press'd the earth;
+ "Pregnant with heat roll'd on the lazy clouds.
+ "Four times the full-orb'd moon had join'd her horns,
+ "Four times diminish'd, had she disappear'd;
+ "Still the hot south-wind blew his deadly blasts.
+ "Our lakes and fountains, from th' infected air
+ "Contagion suck'd; millions of vipers swarm'd
+ "In our uncultur'd fields, our running streams
+ "Tainting with poison. First the sudden plague
+ "Its power display'd, on sheep, on dogs, on fowls,
+ "Cattle, and forest beasts with deadly power.
+ "The hapless ploughman, wondering, at his work
+ "Sees his strong oxen in the furrow sink.
+ "The woolly flocks with sickly bleatings waste
+ "In body, while their wool spontaneous falls.
+ "The steed so fiery, on the dusty plain
+ "So fam'd, the palm contemns; and all despis'd
+ "His ancient honors, at his manger groans,
+ "Prey to disease inglorious. His fierce rage
+ "The boar forgets. The stag neglects his speed.
+ "Not rush the bears upon the stronger herds.
+ "A general languor reigns. In woods, in fields,
+ "In ways, the filthy carcases are seen;
+ "The stench pollutes the air: and, wonderous! dogs,
+ "Nor birds rapacious, nor the grizzly wolves,
+ "Touch the dead spoil. Rotting they melt away,
+ "Poisoning the gale; and spreading wide the pest.
+ "Now the disease, a heavier scourge, attacks
+ "The hapless swains, and in the lofty walls
+ "Of cities rules. First the scorch'd vitals burn;
+ "The hidden fire the blushing skin betrays,
+ "And breath laborious drawn; the furr'd tongue swells;
+ "The parch'd mouth widely gapes, th' infectious air
+ "Inhaling copious. On the couch none lie;
+ "None bear their covering robes; their bodies swol'n,
+ "On the bare earth they fling; nor coolness find
+ "Their bodies from the ground;--the ground from them
+ "Burns hot. Nor aids them now physicians' skill;
+ "E'en them the dire pest seizes, and their art
+ "Fails to assist themselves. Who boldly comes,
+ "With kindly hand his dying friend to aid,
+ "Sinks straight in death beside him. Fled all hope
+ "Of health, and in the grave alone an end
+ "Beheld of their disease,--some wild indulge
+ "Their fondest passions, void of every care;
+ "For every care is vain. Of modest shame
+ "Regardless, in promiscuous throngs they crowd
+ "To rivers, fountains, and capacious wells,
+ "Their hot thirst unextinguish'd, but with life.
+ "To rise unable, many in the stream
+ "Sink, and there perish: still their followers drink.
+ "So irksome to the wretched sufferers seem
+ "Their couches, thence they spring;--and some too weak
+ "To lift their limbs, roll desperate to the ground.
+ "Each quits his home,--to each his home appears,
+ "The fatal spot; and while obscure the cause,
+ "Each deems the house contagious. Oft were seen
+ "Beings half-dead, slow crawling o'er the ways,
+ "Till power to crawl was lost. Others with moans
+ "Stretch'd on the ground, rolling their half-clos'd eyes,
+ "In final motion: raising high their arms
+ "To heaven's o'erhanging stars, breathe out their last,
+ "Caught here by death, and there. Ah! me, what then
+ "My mind employ'd? What but to loathe my life,
+ "And pray with my dear countrymen to die?
+ "Whatever side mine eyes were bent, I saw
+ "My people strewn;--thick as the mellow fruit,
+ "Shook from the branches, or the acorns lie.
+ "Observe that temple, lofty where it towers;
+ "To Jove 'tis sacred. Who to that high fane
+ "Their useless incense brought not? There how oft
+ "Wife for her husband, parent for her child,
+ "Before th' inexorable altar, breath'd
+ "Their dying gasp, 'mid deprecating prayers;
+ "And half their incense unconsum'd remain'd.
+ "How oft the oxen to the temple dragg'd,
+ "While now the priest his voice address'd, and pour'd
+ "The goblet o'er their foreheads, have they dropp'd
+ "By stroke unlook'd for. When myself, to Jove
+ "Wish'd sacrifice to offer up; for me,
+ "My country, and my sons,--the victim loud
+ "Dire lowings utter'd, and without a blow
+ "Fell sudden,--scarce with blood the wounding knife
+ "Was stain'd. The morbid inwards mock'd our wish,
+ "To learn the truth, and pleasure of the gods:
+ "The deep-fixt plague had to the bowels pierc'd.
+ "Before the sacred portals have I seen,
+ "The corses spread; before the altars too,
+ "As death would come in his most hideous form.
+ "Some with the cord life's passage choke, and seek
+ "Death, lest they death should meet. Madly they rush
+ "And voluntary meet approaching fate.
+ "The bodies plung'd in death, funereal rites
+ "Custom'd, receiv'd not; nor the numerous dead
+ "Could all the gates receive: or un-inhum'd
+ "Above the earth they lie, or on the pyre
+ "Unhonor'd by due rites, the bodies flame.
+ "All sense of reverence lost, for piles they fight;
+ "And burn their dead in fires which others own.
+ "To mourn are none; unwept the shadows roam,
+ "Of young and old alike, of sons and sires.
+ "The ground for graves too small, for fires the woods.
+ "Aghast this whirlwind of distress to view,
+ "O, Jove!--I cry'd--if false they not report,
+ "That once you in AEgina's arms were clasp'd;--
+ "If not, O, mighty sire! asham'd to own
+ "Yourself my parent, give my people back,
+ "Or give me death with them. A rattling sign
+ "He gave, and prosperous thunders roll'd. I spoke;--
+ "These omens I accept; and pray these signs
+ "May indicate your happy will:--as pledge
+ "I take them.--Nigh by chance an oak there stood,
+ "Thick-set with spreading boughs, Jove's sacred tree,
+ "Sprung from Dodona's stock: here I beheld
+ "Grain-gathering ants, each burthen'd with his load,
+ "In his small mouth, as o'er the rugged bark
+ "In lengthen'd file they march'd. The numerous crowds
+ "Admiring;--Best of fathers, I exclaim'd,
+ "So many subjects grant me, to refill
+ "My desert walls.--Trembled the lofty oak,
+ "Of wind no breath, yet mov'd the sounding boughs;
+ "With terror shook my limbs, and upright rear'd
+ "My hair; then kisses to the ground I gave,
+ "And kiss'd the oak; scarce hope I dar'd to feel:
+ "Yet still I nourish'd hope within my soul.
+ "Night comes; my body worn with cares, to sleep
+ "Obedience yielded. Still before mine eyes
+ "The oak appear'd; branches the same it bore,
+ "And on its branches seem'd the swarms the same;
+ "So mov'd the boughs, and on the grass below,
+ "Shook the corn-carrying crowd. Sudden they grew;
+ "Large, and more large they seem'd, as from the ground
+ "Themselves they rais'd, and stood in form erect.
+ "Their slender make, their numerous feet, their hue
+ "Of sable, disappear'd, and all their limbs
+ "An human shape confess'd. Sleep fled mine eyes;
+ "And fled my vision:--As by heaven not mark'd,
+ "Complaining;--far without the hall I heard
+ "A murmuring loud, and human seem'd the sounds,--
+ "Though stranger to mine ears: musing if still
+ "I slept not,--Lo! quick, Telamon approach'd,
+ "Wide threw the doors; and cry'd,--O, sire! behold;
+ "What hope, what faith surpasses!--Forth I come;
+ "Such men as in my dream my fancy saw,
+ "I see;--I know them, man by man, again:
+ "They come, and king salute me: unto Jove
+ "My votive thanks I pay; my city share
+ "Amongst my subjects new; and all my lands,
+ "(Of those who till'd them, empty.) Myrmidons,
+ "From whence they sprung, I call them. You have seen
+ "Their bodies,--still their habits are the same:
+ "A frugal race as wont, patient of toil;
+ "On gain still bent; tenacious of that gain.
+ "These equal all, in courage and in years,
+ "Shall follow you to battle; when the east
+ "Which blew you here so prosperous, (for the east
+ "Had brought him) to the southern gales shall yield."
+ With these and such like speeches, all the day
+ They sit conversing; evening they devote
+ To banquets; and the night to soft repose.
+ Sol rais'd his golden head, but Eurus still
+ Prevail'd, and bound their sails. Now Pallas' sons
+ To Cephalus, their chief in years, repair,
+ And to the king with Pallas' sons he goes;
+ But still deep-wrapt in sleep the king was laid.
+ Phocus receiv'd them at the gates; employ'd
+ Were Telamon and Peleus, troops to chuse
+ For the new war. Th' Athenian chief he leads
+ Within the palace, to the fairest rooms.
+ When all were seated, Phocus mark'd the dart
+ The hero bore, shap'd from a wood unknown,
+ Pointed with gold; and said, with prefac'd words:
+ "To range the forests, and fierce beasts to slay
+ "Is all my joy; yet long in doubt I've stood
+ "What tree this dart has form'd; for ash too pale,
+ "Too smooth for cornel; though from whence it comes
+ "So ignorant, ne'er before mine eyes beheld
+ "A fairer weapon."--Pallas' son address'd
+ The youth:--"The javelin's use you'll more admire
+ "Than beauty;--thrown where'er, its mark it gains,
+ "Unrul'd by erring chance, and bloody, back
+ "Instant returns."--Then Phocus curious asks
+ More full its story, how, and whence it came,
+ And who the author of so priz'd a gift.
+ Him Cephalus informs, but shame denies
+ To tell the whole, and what the present's price.
+ Full to his mind his consort's loss recall'd,
+ Tears sudden gush'd:--"O, goddess-born!--he cries,
+ "This dart (improbable howe'er) my tears
+ "Has often caus'd,--and long will make them flow;--
+ "If fate long life should grant. My dear-lov'd spouse
+ "This dart destroy'd:--O, that this fatal gift
+ "Had still been unpossess'd! Procris, ally'd
+ "To stol'n Orithyiae (if Orithyiae's fame
+ "Your ears has reach'd) was as her sister fair:
+ "Nay, match'd in form and manners, she might more
+ "The robber tempt. Her sire Erechthens join'd
+ "To me the maid; us love more firmly bound:
+ "Blest was I call'd, and blest I was indeed,
+ "And still were blest, but heaven else will'd my fate.
+ "Now had the second month connubial joys
+ "Beheld; when chasing dusky darkness far,
+ "Aurora ruddy, saw me on the heights
+ "Hymettus flowery rears, as there my toils
+ "For antler'd stags I spread: and there by force
+ "She clasp'd me. Truth I wish to guide my tongue
+ "Nor yet displease the goddess, when I swear
+ "Though bright her roseate cheeks; though wide she sways
+ "Of night and day the confines; though she quaffs
+ "Nectarean liquid, still I Procris lov'd:
+ "Still in my bosom Procris reign'd, and still
+ "Procris, my tongue repeated. Oft I urg'd
+ "The sacred couch, the new-felt joys, the rites
+ "So recent, and the plighted faith just given,
+ "To her deserted: when the goddess flam'd,
+ "Exclaiming;--Ingrate! cease thy doleful plaints,
+ "Enjoy thy Procris,--if I right foresee
+ "Thou'lt rue that wish'd enjoyment:--Angry thus
+ "She fled me. Slow returning, much I mus'd,
+ "The goddess' words recalling: fear me thrill'd,
+ "Lest Procris had her nuptial oaths profaned.
+ "Her age, her beauty, much suspicion mov'd;
+ "Her virtue bade me chase my fears as vain.
+ "Yet was I absent, and from whence I came,
+ "Prov'd how adulterous females might indulge,
+ "Suspicious love fears all. Studious I seek,
+ "What found would rack with torture; and I burn
+ "To bribe with gifts, and try her modest faith.
+ "Aurora aids my fears, my shape transforms:
+ "(Conscious I felt it.) To Minerva's town,
+ "To all unknown, I hastened, and my house
+ "Enter'd: the house in faultless guise I found;
+ "Chaste all appear'd, and anxious all were seen
+ "For their lost master. By a thousand arts
+ "Erechtheus' daughter I at length beheld,
+ "And seen was stagger'd: near my purpos'd proof
+ "Relinquish'd of fidelity; most hard
+ "The cheat to tell not; to refrain most hard
+ "From conjugal salutes. Sad she appear'd.
+ "But nought more lovely could in sadness seem:
+ "Burning in wishes for her absent spouse.
+ "Image, O, Phocus! what her beauteous face
+ "Could boast; a face that woe itself became.
+ "Why should I tell how oft her virtuous soul,
+ "Repuls'd my tempting offers? Why repeat
+ "How oft she cry'd;--For one myself I keep,
+ "For one, where'er he stays, my joys preserve.
+ "Whose mad suspicion would not this allay?
+ "This proof of faith? But I, not so content,
+ "Strive for my own confusion. Lavish gifts
+ "I proffer for the joys of one short night:
+ "More and more rich I heap them, till her breast
+ "Wavers, then loud exclaim,--Lo! here behold,
+ "Adulteress! one unluckily disguis'd,
+ "Unluckily betroth'd, thy lawful spouse!
+ "Perfidious! by those eyes convinc'd I stand.
+ "Nought she:--with silent shame o'ercome, she fled
+ "The house deceitful, and her hated spouse.
+ "With me offended, all the race of men
+ "Detesting, on the mountain tops she rov'd;
+ "Diana's sports close following. Fiercer love
+ "Flam'd in my bosom, thus deserted left.
+ "I su'd for pardon, and my fault I own'd;
+ "Swore that myself so tempted, so had err'd,
+ "By such high offers brib'd. Confessing thus,
+ "Her wounded modest pride grew more compos'd;
+ "And shortly I regain'd her. Long in peace
+ "We liv'd, and cordial spent the smiling years.
+ "Herself a gift she priz'd not: more she gave,
+ "An hound, she from Diana's hand receiv'd,
+ "Who said,--accept the fleetest of his race--
+ "And gave this javelin which you see me bear.
+ "If of the first the fate you seek to know,
+ "Attend, th' adventure will your wonder move.
+
+ "The son of Laius had the words explain'd,
+ "Before his time to every mind obscure;
+ "And the dark prophetess, down headlong flung,
+ "Laid lifeless, all her riddling tales forgot.
+ "Her, fostering Themis saw, and unreveng'd
+ "To lie not suffer'd. Straight another plague
+ "On Thebes was loos'd; and all the country swains
+ "Fear'd by the savage beast their flocks to lose,
+ "And fear'd their own destruction. With the youths
+ "Adjacent, I assembled; round the fields
+ "Our toils we fix; the toils the rapid beast
+ "O'erleaps high-bounding; 'bove the loftiest ropes,
+ "Stretch'd o'er the nets, with active spring he flies.
+ "The hounds uncoupled, in the chace he mocks,
+ "And like an agile bird before them plays;
+ "With outcries loud, for Laelaps' aid they call.
+ "(My Procris' gift, so nam'd.) Long had he tugg'd,
+ "To extricate him from the chain; to free
+ "His captive neck: scarce was he loos'd, so swift
+ "He shot, in vain our eyes his progress mark'd:
+ "In the light dust his feet were printed, he,
+ "Rapt from the view, was vanish'd. Swifter flies
+ "The darted spear not: nor the leaden ball
+ "Hurl'd from the whirling sling;--nor reedy dart
+ "Shot from the Cretan bow. A central hill
+ "High-towering, all the subject plains o'erlooks;
+ "Thither I climb, and there behold the chase;
+ "A novel scene. Now seems the beast safe caught;
+ "Now from the grasp light-springing. Flight right on
+ "Crafty he shuns, and doubles round the field,
+ "Cheating his chaser's mouth; and circling turns
+ "His foe's quick speed eluding. Swift he flies,--
+ "With equal swiftness follow'd. Now to grasp
+ "His prey seems Laelaps,--in his grasp deceiv'd,
+ "His empty jaws seize air. Now to my aid
+ "I call my javelin,--poize it for the blow,
+ "And bend mine eyes the thongs to fix secure:
+ "Again I lift them to behold the chase,
+ "And see astonish'd in the spacious plain
+ "Two marble statues! this to fly appears,--
+ "That barking seems to follow. So decreed
+ "Doubtless the gods, that in the arduous course
+ "Unconquer'd, each his glory might retain."
+
+ Thus far he spoke, then silent sate.--"What crime,"
+ Said Phocus--"has the javelin then perform'd?"--
+ And thus the javelin's fault the hero tells,
+ "Since joys supreme my sorrows first forewent,
+ "Let me, O, Phocus! first those joys recount.
+ "O, youth! how it delights me to retrace
+ "Those happy moments, when supremely blest
+ "In her, the primal years were joyous spent.
+ "She, equal happy in her darling spouse;
+ "Each mind of mutual care a portion bore;
+ "And love's connubial joys each equal shar'd.
+ "Jove's proffer'd couch, with my embrace compar'd,
+ "Procris had spurn'd; nor could the loveliest nymph
+ "Me tempt, though Venus' self had deign'd to sue:
+ "In either breast an equal ardor flam'd.
+ "In youthful guise I wont the woods to scour,
+ "For sport betimes, ere yet the sun had ting'd
+ "With early beams the lofty mountains' tops:
+ "Nor took I servants, nor the courser fleet,
+ "Nor hounds sharp-scented, nor the knotted snares;
+ "This dart my sole dependence: when my arm
+ "With slaughtered spoil was satiate, tir'd I sought
+ "The cooling shade, and sought where Aura breath'd
+ "In frigid vales her breezes. 'Midst the heat
+ "Refreshing air I sought, and Aura call'd,
+ "My labour's recreation; thus I sung,
+ "I well the words remember;--Aura, come!
+ "Come, my delight,--within my bosom creep,
+ "Most grateful friend; come, and as wont remove
+ "My inward flames.--By chance more tender words
+ "(So sway'd my destiny) to these I join'd:
+ "And thus I spoke--O, thou! my greatest joy
+ "Refreshing, cherishing my strength and power!
+ "For thee, these woods and lonely spots I love:
+ "Here does my wishing mouth thy breath inhale.--
+ "These words ambiguous, busy ears receiv'd,
+ "And Aura! Aura! oft invok'd, they deem
+ "A favor'd nymph,--a nymph by me belov'd.
+ "The rash informer with the imag'd wrong,
+ "My Procris seeks his whispering tongue relates,
+ "The words o'erheard. Love credulous believes.
+ "O'erpress'd with grief, she sudden sunk, when heard
+ "The tale,--and long she unrecover'd laid.
+ "Then--hapless wife!--O, wayward fate! she cries:--
+ "My broken faith bewails, and with my crime
+ "Imagin'd, troubled, fears what not exists,--
+ "A name without a being: much she grieves,
+ "As real were her rival: yet full oft
+ "Stagger'd, she doubts, and hopes herself deceiv'd:
+ "Trusts not th' informer; and her husband's fault,
+ "Unless beheld, refuses to believe.
+ "When next Aurora bade the darkness fly
+ "I sally'd forth, and sought th' accustomed wood:
+ "Then tir'd with conquest, on the grass I stretch'd,
+ "And,--come, dear Aura, ease my pain,--I cry'd
+ "Sudden a mournful sigh betwixt my words
+ "I heard, but still proceeded,--dearest, come!--
+ "Again the falling leaves a rustling sound
+ "Causing, a savage beast I thought lay hid,
+ "And hurl'd my faithful dart. Procris was there!
+ "And as her tender breast the blow receiv'd
+ "Alas! she cry'd.--My faithful spouse's voice
+ "I knew, and with distracted speed I ran;
+ "Half-dead I found her, all her robes distain'd
+ "With flowing blood,--and dragging from the wound,
+ "Ah, me!--her fatal gift. My guilty arms,
+ "Her body, dearer far than mine, support;
+ "My vest I rend, the cruel gash to bind,
+ "And check the gushing blood; I fearful pray,
+ "She will not leave me guilty of her fate.
+ "She now, her strength fast wasting, dying fast,
+ "These words to utter try'd:--Suppliant I beg,
+ "By all the oaths that form'd our nuptial ties;
+ "By all the gods and goddesses above;
+ "By all my actions which have given you joy;
+ "By that strong love which thus my fate has caus'd,
+ "Which now in death my bosom still retains,
+ "Let not this Aura to my bed succeed.--
+ "She said,--too late I learn'd, too late I told
+ "The error of the name; for what avail'd!
+ "She sinks, her small remaining strength is fled,
+ "Her last blood flows. While ought she seems to view,
+ "On me she bends her eyes; her hapless soul
+ "My lips inhale, yet pleas'd her brow appears
+ "In death, more calm from what I just explain'd."
+ Thus grieving, Cephalus concludes, and all
+ His audience with him weep. When, lo! appear
+ King AEaecus, his sons, and troops new-rais'd;
+ Whom Cephalus, in warlike strength, receives.
+
+ END OF THE FIRST VOLUME.
+
+ _Macdonald & Bailey, Printers, Harris's Place,
+ Oxford-Street._
+
+
+
+
+ THE
+ METAMORPHOSES
+ OF
+ PUBLIUS OVIDIUS NASO
+ IN
+ *English Blank Verse*
+
+
+ Translated by
+ J. J. HOWARD
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+*The Eighth Book.*
+
+
+ Nisus betrayed to Minos by his daughter Scylla; changed to a
+ falcon, and Scylla to a lark. Return of Minos to Crete. The
+ Minotaur and labyrinth. Flight of Daedalus and Icarus. Change of
+ Perdix to a partridge. Chase and death of the Calydonian boar, by
+ Meleager and Atalanta. Murder of Meleager's uncles. Vengeance of
+ his mother. Death of Meleager, and transformation of his sisters
+ to birds. Acheloues. Nymphs transformed into the isles Echinades.
+ Perimele into an island. Story of Baucis and Philemon. Changes of
+ Proteus. Story of Erisichthon, and transformations of his
+ daughter.
+
+ *Printed by G. HAYDEN,
+ Brydges Street, Covent Garden.*
+
+
+
+
+THE *Eighth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Now leading Phosphor' shining day disclos'd,
+ The darkness flying; and the eastern gales
+ Lull'd into calm, the vapoury clouds arose:
+ The placid south befriending, rapid borne,
+ The hero Cephalus, and aiding troops,
+ Ride unexpected in their wish'd-for port.
+
+ Minos, meanwhile, the Lelegeian coast
+ Lays waste, and on Alcathoe's town his power
+ Essays. Here Nisus rul'd, whose reverend locks
+ Of silvery brightness, in the midst contain'd
+ One with rich purple splendid, sacred pledge
+ Of fortune to his kingdom. Six times seen
+ Were Luna's horns arising fresh renew'd;
+ Still hover'd conquest doubtful o'er the war,
+ On wavering pinions, 'twixt opposing hosts.
+ A regal tower its vocal walls high-rear'd,
+ Where once Latona's son his golden lyre
+ Rested; the music still the stones retain'd.
+ Oft here the beauteous daughter of the king
+ Ascended, and the latent music drew
+ Forth to the ear, by smallest pebbles struck.
+ Thus she in peaceful times, and here she oft
+ When war was raging, ventur'd: hence she saw
+ The rough encounters of the furious field.
+ So long the tedious warfare, well she knew
+ The leaders' names, their arms, their prancing steeds:
+ And knew their garments, and their Cretan bows.
+ Far beyond all Europa's son she knew,
+ More than became her state: this Minos well
+ Could prove; whose head in crested helmet hid,
+ Most beauteous helm'd appear'd: whose arm, adorn'd
+ With brazen shield refulgent, well became
+ The brazen shield: whose hand the tough lance whirl'd,
+ And back withdrawn, the virgin wondering prais'd
+ Such strength and skill combin'd: to fit the dart
+ When to the spreading bow his strength he bent,
+ She vow'd that Phoebus in such posture stood
+ His arrows fitting: when, his brazen casque
+ Relinquish'd, all his features shone display'd,
+ As purple-rob'd his snow-white steed he press'd,
+ In painted housings gay, and curb'd his jaws
+ White foaming,--then the lost Nisean maid,
+ Scarcely herself, in frantic rapture spoke:--
+ Blest call'd the javelin, that his hands it touch'd;
+ Blest call'd the reins he curb'd. Arduous she burns,
+ (Could she) through hostile ranks her virgin steps
+ To bend: arduous she burns, from loftiest towers
+ To fling her body in the Cretan camp.
+ The brazen portals of the city's walls
+ Wide to the foe she'd ope: what could she not?
+ That Minos will'd? As resting here she view'd,
+ The white pavilion of the Gnossian king
+ Dubious, she cry'd;--"Or should I grieve or joy,
+ "This mournful war to witness? Grieve I must
+ "That Minos so belov'd should be my foe.
+ "But had the war not been, his lovely face
+ "Had ne'er to me been known. Now war may cease
+ "Should I become the hostage:--I retain'd,
+ "As Minos' comrade, and the pledge of peace.
+ "Fairest of forms! if she who brought thee forth
+ "Resembled thee, well might an amorous god
+ "Burn for her beauty. O! thrice blest were I,
+ "If borne through air on lightly-waving wings,
+ "The Cretan monarch's camp I might explore,
+ "And there, my rank and love disclos'd, demand
+ "What dowry he would ask to be my spouse.
+ "My country's towers alone, he should not seek.
+ "Perish the joys of his expected bed,
+ "Ere I through treason gain them! Yet full oft
+ "A moderate victor's clemency affords
+ "Great blessings to the vanquish'd. Doubtless, he
+ "Just warfare wages for his murder'd son.
+ "Strong in his cause, and in his armies strong,
+ "Which aid that cause, he must the conquest gain.
+ "Why, if this fate my country waits, should war,
+ "And not my love unbar to him the gates?
+ "So may he conquer; slaughter, toil, and blood,--
+ "His own dear blood, avoided. How I dread,
+ "Lest some rash hand might that lov'd bosom wound!
+ "None but the ignorant sure, the savage spear
+ "At him would hurl. The scheme delights my soul:
+ "Fixt my resolve; my country as my dower
+ "Will I deliver, finish so the war!
+ "But what are resolutions? Watchful guards
+ "The passes keep; of every gate, the keys
+ "My father careful holds. Hapless! I dread
+ "My father only; he alone withstands
+ "My wishes; would that so the gods had doom'd,
+ "I had no parent! But to each himself
+ "A god may surely be; and fortune spurns
+ "Lazy beseechers. With such love inflam'd,
+ "Another maid had long ere now destroy'd
+ "All barriers to her bliss; and why than I,
+ "Should any dare more boldly? Fearless, I
+ "Thro' swords and flames would pass, but swords and flames
+ "Oppose me not in this: my sole desire
+ "Compris'd in one small lock of Nisus' hair:
+ "Than gold that prize more dear. That purple lock
+ "Most blest would make me, and my sole desires
+ "Encompass."--Speaking thus, the gloomy night,
+ Imperial nurse of cares, approach'd; more bold
+ Her daring project with the darkness grew.
+
+ Now primal slumbers rul'd o'er weary breasts,
+ Tir'd with their toil diurnal. Silent, she
+ Her father's chamber enters, and (O, dire!)
+ The daughter from her parent's head divides
+ The fateful lock! Her wicked prize possess'd,
+ Forth from the gate she issues; and the spoil,
+ So cursed, with her bears; as through the hosts,
+ (Such boldness gave the deed,) she seeks the king,
+ Whom thus, astonish'd and aghast, she hails:--
+ "To wicked deeds love sways; behold me here,
+ "Scylla, from royal Nisus sprung; to thee
+ "My household gods and country I betray:
+ "Thee, sole reward I seek. Pledge of my faith,
+ "This purple lock receive, and with this lock
+ "Receive my parent's head."--Then in her hand
+ The impious gift presented. Minos spurn'd
+ The parricidal present; deeply shock'd
+ A deed so base to witness, and exclaim'd;--
+ "May all the gods, from every part of earth
+ "Thee banish, scandal of our age! may land
+ "And sea alike reject thee; such a soul
+ "So monstrous! ne'er with me shall touch the shores
+ "Of Crete, my land, and cradle of high Jove."
+ He said, and on his captive foes impos'd
+ Most just his equal laws; his men bade loose
+ Their cables from the beach, and with their oars
+ His vessels bright with brass, urge on the deep.
+
+ Launch'd on the main, when Scylla sees the fleet,
+ Nor from its leader gain'd the hop'd reward,
+ Her wicked deed had sought, tir'd of her prayers,
+ In desperate rage she storms; wild throws her hair;
+ Stretches her hands, exclaiming;--"Where! O, where!
+ "Fly'st thou, the author of thy fortune left?
+ "O, priz'd above my country! 'bove my sire!
+ "O cruel, whither fly'st thou, whose success
+ "At once my merit, and my fault displays?
+ "Will not the gifted conquest move thy soul?
+ "Will not my love thee move? Will not the thought
+ "That all my hopes centre in thee alone?
+ "By thee deserted, whither shall I fly?
+ "Back to my natal town? Ruin'd it lies;
+ "Or if still standing, fast the gates are barr'd
+ "Against my treason. To my father's arms,
+ "Whom I betray'd? Each citizen me hates
+ "Deserv'dly; neighbours my example dread.
+ "Banish'd, an exile from each spot of earth,--
+ "Crete only open lies. Thence dost thou drive
+ "Me also? Ingrate! dost thou fly me so?
+ "Europa never bore thee, but some Syrt'
+ "Inhospitable; or some tigress fell
+ "Bred in Armenia; or Charybdis vext
+ "With tempests: Jove was ne'er thy sire, nor feign'd
+ "A bull's resemblance to delude her, false
+ "That fable of thy origin. A bull,
+ "Real and savage thee begot, whose love
+ "No heifer mov'd. O father Nisus! now
+ "Exact thy vengeance. Joy, O town! betray'd
+ "By my transgression; for the woes I feel
+ "Most merited I grant; guilty I die:
+ "Yet should the deadly blow be given by one
+ "My impious fault has injur'd; not by thee,
+ "Victor through crimes thou with avenging hate
+ "Now persecutest. This flagitious deed
+ "Against my country, and against my sire,
+ "Was all for thee. Th' adultress who beguil'd
+ "In wooden cavity the furious bull;
+ "Whose womb an ill-assorted birth produc'd;
+ "Well for a spouse befits thee. Do my words
+ "Reach to thine ears, or no? Do the brisk winds,
+ "Thou ingrate! waft my bootless plainings on,
+ "And waft thy vessels? Wondrous now no more,
+ "Pasiphae, to thy embrace a bull
+ "Preferr'd; for more unpitying is thy soul.
+ "Joyful, ah! hapless me,--away thou fly'st;
+ "Thy cleaving oars dash on the sounding waves:
+ "Me, and my country far from thee recede.
+ "O wretch! forgetful of my favoring aid,
+ "Thou striv'st in vain to fly me. 'Gainst thy wish
+ "Thee will I follow; on thy crooked ship
+ "Hanging, embracing, dragg'd through drenching seas.'
+ Scarce ending, in the waves she furious leaped,
+ Vigorous by love, and gain'd the flying fleet;
+ And clasp'd, unwelcome guest, the Gnossian poop.
+ Here soon her father spy'd her (in the air
+ He wing'd his way, now cloth'd with yellow plumes
+ A falcon) and down darted; with his beak
+ So curv'd, to wound her as she clung. In dread
+ Her grasp she loos'd, and as she seem'd to fall,
+ The light air bore her from the waves below:
+ Plum'd she became, and form'd a feather'd bird,
+ Ciris they call'd her from the ravish'd lock.
+
+ To Jove now Minos all his vows performs,
+ An hecatomb of bulls; as from the fleet
+ He lands on Gnossus' shores: his royal hall
+ With all his spoils, on high uphung, adorn'd.
+
+ Meantime th' opprobrium of his bed increas'd:
+ The two-formed monster in a novel birth,
+ At length the mother's beastly crime proclaim'd.
+ Minos, the shameful witness from his couch,
+ Far to remove determines; in a dome
+ Intricate winding, he resolves to lodge,
+ From every eye conceal'd, the birth. Intrusts
+ The work to Daedalus, in cunning arts
+ Most fam'd, to build. He all the various marks,
+ Confuses, puzzles; bent on either side,
+ The various paths confound the searching eye.
+ So in the fields the soft Maeander plays,
+ Here refluent, flowing there with dubious course;
+ Meeting himself, his wandering stream he sees:
+ And urges now to whence he first arose;
+ Now to the open outlet of the main.
+ Thus Daedalus the numerous paths perplex'd
+ With puzzlings intricate, so much entwin'd,
+ Himself could scarce the outer threshold gain.
+ Here was the double monster, man and bull
+ Inclos'd; till by the third allotted tribe,
+ The ninth year, vanquish'd; with Athenian blood
+ Twice gorg'd before. Then was the secret gate,
+ So often sought in vain, found by the aid
+ A virgin lent to trace the winding clue.
+ Instant for Dias, Theseus loos'd his sails,
+ With Minos' ravish'd daughter: on that shore
+ Cruel! he left her. The deserted nymph
+ Wildly lamenting, Bacchus soon embrac'd,
+ And gave her needful aid; her fame to fix
+ Immortal in the skies, her sparkling crown,
+ Mov'd from her forehead, 'mid the stars he plac'd:
+ Through the thin air it flies, and as it mounts
+ To blazing stars, the glittering jewels change.
+ Still as a crown it shines, its station 'midst
+ Where stout Alcides Ophiuchus grasps.
+
+ Meantime long exile, and the land of Crete
+ Detesting; burning with a patriot's wish
+ His native soil to visit, Daedalus,
+ By sea escape prevented, thus exclaim'd;--
+ "Let earth and ocean both my flight obstruct,
+ "Still open lies the air; through air we'll go.
+ "Minos controlling all, controls not air."--
+ He speaks, and bends to unknown arts his skill,
+ Improving Nature's gift. Quills fixt in rows
+ He places; small at first in length and size,
+ Gradual enlarg'd, as if a hill's steep side
+ Growing, produc'd them: So time past the pipe,
+ Of rustic origin, by small degrees
+ Increasing reeds compos'd. Firm fixt with thread
+ Their middle part he binds, and close with wax
+ Cements their bottom. All complete he bends
+ The composition in a gentle curve,
+ Resembling real wings. Young Icarus
+ Alone was present; ignorant that the work
+ Would his destruction cause; with playful tricks
+ He fingers now the feathers, now his hands
+ Soften the yellow wax. His sportive wiles
+ His father's wond'rous essay oft delay.
+
+ Now was the last completing stroke impos'd
+ Upon his undertaking: First the sire
+ On artificial wings his body pois'd,
+ And in the beaten air suspended hung:
+ Then his young offspring, Icarus, he taught.--
+ "This I my son advise, a middle course,
+ "To keep be cautious; low if thou should'st skim,
+ "Heavy with ocean's spray thy wings would droop:
+ "If high, the sun would scorch them. Steer thy course
+ "'Twixt each extreme. Nor would I wish thine eyes
+ "To view Booetes, or the northern bear;
+ "Nor yet Orion's naked sword. My track
+ "Cautious pursue."--With anxious care he gives
+ Rules thus for flight; and to his shoulders fits
+ The new-form'd pinions. Tears his ancient cheeks
+ Bedew'd, as thus his admonitions flow'd:
+ And his paternal hands as thus employ'd,
+ Beneath the office trembled. Warm salutes
+ He gave the boy, nor knew he gave the last;
+ Then on his feathers borne, explores the way,
+ Timid for him who follows. So the bird,
+ Tempts from her lofty nest her new-fledg'd brood,
+ In the thin air. He bids him close pursue,
+ Tries in each shape to teach the fatal skill;
+ Shakes his own pinions, bending back to view
+ His son's. The angler as with quivering reed,
+ He drew his prey to land; the shepherd-swain,
+ As o'er his staff he lean'd; the ploughman-clown,
+ Their flight astonish'd saw, and deem'd them gods,
+ That so at will could cleave the liquid sky.
+
+ Now Samos, Juno's favor'd isle they pass'd,
+ Delos, and Paros, all to left;--to right
+ Labyrithos lay, and rich in honey'd sweets
+ Calymne: when the heedless boy o'erjoy'd
+ In his bold flight, the precepts of his guide
+ Contemning, soar'd to heaven a loftier range.
+ The neighbouring sun's fierce heat the fragrant wax
+ Which bound, his pinions, soften'd. Soon the wax
+ Dissolves; and now his naked arms he waves;
+ But destitute of power his course to steer,
+ No air his arms can gather; loud he calls
+ His father's name, as in the azure deep
+ He drops,--the deep which still his name retains.
+
+ The hapless parent, not a parent now,
+ Loud calls on Icarus;--"Where art thou, son?
+ "Where shall I seek thee, Icarus?"--He said,
+ And spy'd his feathers floating on the waves:
+ Then curs'd his hapless art, as in the earth,
+ He deep intomb'd him; all the land around
+ Bears from the youth intomb'd its present name.
+
+ The whirring partridge, from a branchy holm
+ Beheld him, as beneath the turf he plac'd
+ His son's lamented body, and with joy
+ Flutter'd his feathers; while his chirping song
+ Proclaim'd his gladness: then the only bird
+ Known of his kind, in elder days unseen;
+ But lately cloth'd with feathers, through the crime
+ Flagitious, Daedalus, of thee! To thee,
+ Thy sister, witless how his fate was doom'd,
+ Her son committed for instructing art,
+ When twice six annual suns the youth had seen;
+ His docile mind best fitted then to learn.
+ He well th' indented bones remark'd, which form
+ The fish's spiny back, and in like mode,
+ Sharp steel indenting, first the saw produc'd
+ For public service. Two steel arms he join'd
+ Fixt to one orb above; each widely stretch'd,
+ One steady rests, the other circling turns.
+ Him Daedalus with envy viewing, forc'd
+ Headlong, from sacred Pallas' lofty tower,
+ His death feign'd accidental: but the maid
+ Divine, to all ingenious minds a friend,
+ Receiv'd him in his fall; chang'd to a bird,
+ On pinions bore him through the middle air.
+ His vigorous powers in force remain the same,
+ But change their seat; rapid he flies, and quick
+ He races on the ground; his name remains
+ Unalter'd: still the cautious bird declines
+ To trust his weight aloft, nor forms his nest
+ On lofty boughs, or summits of high trees:
+ Nigh to the earth he skims; beneath the hedge
+ His shelly brood deposits; of his fall
+ Still mindful, towering heights he always shuns.
+
+ Now Daedalus, with lengthen'd flight fatigu'd,
+ Sicilia's realm receiv'd; whose king humane,
+ Great Cocalus, mov'd with his suppliant pray'r,
+ Arm'd to assist him. Now by Theseus freed,
+ Athens no more the mournful tribute paid.
+ With garlands every temple gay they hang,
+ Invoke the warlike maid, the mighty Jove,
+ And every deity: their altars all
+ With promis'd blood they honor; with rich gifts,
+ And fragrant incense. Now had wandering fame
+ Through all the Grecian towns, spread the renown
+ Of Theseus: and the rich Achaia's tribes
+ His aid implor'd, when mighty perils press'd.
+ Ev'n Calydon, though Meleager brave
+ Possessing, sought his help with suppliant words.
+ The cause, a furious boar by Dian' sent,
+ Avenging instrument of slighted power.
+
+ OEneus, from plenteous harvests' full success
+ Rejoicing, primal fruits to Ceres gave;
+ To Bacchus pour'd libations of his wine;
+ To yellow-hair'd Minerva offer'd oil:
+ The rites invidious, from the rural gods
+ Commencing, all the bright celestials shar'd.
+ Latona's daughter only, in her fane,
+ Nor flames nor offerings on her altar saw.
+ Rage fires ev'n heavenly breasts.--"Not unreveng'd,"--
+ She cry'd,--shall this be suffer'd; honor'd not!
+ "Not unappeas'd by vengeance will I rest."--
+ Then through th' OEneian fields the maid, despis'd,
+ Sends the fierce boar to ravage. Such his size,
+ The bulls that in Epirus' pastures graze
+ More huge appear not: in Sicilia's meads
+ Far less are seen. Red are his sparkling eyes,
+ Fire mixt with blood; high rears his fearful neck,
+ Thick clustering spears the threatening bristles seem:
+ Hoarse as he grunts, down his wide shoulders spreads
+ The boiling foam: his tusks the tusks outvie
+ Of India's hugest beast: the lightening's blast,
+ Driven from his mouth, burns all the verdant leaves.
+ Now o'er the corn, but yet in budding ears,
+ He tramples, immature he reaps the crop;
+ The loud-lamenting tiller's hopes destroy'd:
+ The harvest intercepting in the shoot.
+ In vain the barns, the granaries in vain,
+ Their promis'd loads expect. Prostrate alike
+ Are thrown the fruitful clusters of the vine,
+ With shooting tendrils; and the olive's fruit
+ With branches ever-blooming. On the flocks
+ He rages: these not shepherds, not their dogs
+ Could save; nor could the furious bull his herd.
+ Wide fled the people; safety none durst hope
+ Save in their cities' walls; till thirst of fame
+ Fir'd Meleager, with his chosen band
+ Of valiant youths. And first were seen the twins
+ Of Tyndarus, for wond'rous skill renown'd,
+ This at the caestus, that to curb the steed:
+ Jason, whose art the primal ship design'd:
+ Theseus, in happy concord with his friend
+ Pirithous, join'd: Thestius' two valiant sons:
+ Lynceus, Aphareus' offspring: Idas swift:
+ Leucippus fierce: Acastus unexcell'd
+ To dart the javelin: Caeneus, now no more
+ Cloth'd in a female figure: Phoenix, sprung
+ From old Amyntor: Actor's equal sons:
+ Hippothooes: Dryas: and from Elis' town
+ Dispatch'd, came Phileus. Nor was absent there,
+ Brave Telamon, nor great Achilles' sire:
+ Nor stout Eurytion; with Pheretus' son:
+ Nor Hyantean Ioelaues brave:
+ Echion in speed unconquer'd: Nestor then
+ In primal youth: Lelex, Narycian born:
+ Panopeus: Hyleus: Hippasus the fierce:
+ Nor those whom Hippocooen sent in aid,
+ From old Amyclae: nor Ulysses' sire:
+ Ancaeus of Parrhasia: Mopsus sage:
+ Amphiareus, then by his false spouse's guile
+ Betray'd not. With them Atalanta came,
+ The grace and glory of Arcadia's woods.
+ A shining buckle from the ground confin'd
+ Her garment's border: simply bound, her hair
+ One knot confin'd: her ivory quiver, slung
+ O'er her left shoulder, sounded as she stepp'd:
+ Her hand sustain'd a bow: and thus array'd
+ Appear'd her form. Her lineaments disclos'd,
+ What scarce might feminine in boys appear;
+ Or hardly boyish in a virgin's face.
+ The chief of Calydon the maid beheld,--
+ Beheld, and lov'd: while heaven his love oppos'd.
+ The secret flames inhaling deep, he cry'd,--
+ "O, blessed youth! if youth to gain thy hand
+ "Worthy were deem'd!"--Nor bashful shame, nor time
+ Would more allow; a mightier deed now claim'd
+ Their utmost efforts for the furious war.
+
+ Darken'd with trees thick-growing, rose a wood;
+ From earliest ages there the biting axe
+ Had never sounded; in the plain it rear'd
+ Facing the sloping fields. The youths arriv'd;
+ Some spread the knotted toils; some loose the hounds;
+ Some strive the foot-prints of the boar to trace,
+ Their danger anxious seeking. Low beneath
+ A hollow vale extended, where the floods
+ Fresh showery torrents gather'd, lazy laid.
+ The flexile willow, and the waving reed;
+ The fenny bulrush, osier, and the cane
+ Diminutive, the stagnant depth conceal'd.
+ Arous'd from hence, the boar impetuous rush'd
+ Amidst his host of foes; so lightenings dart
+ When clouds concussive clash. His rapid force
+ Levels the grove, the crackling trees resound
+ Where'er he pushes: loud the joyful youth
+ Exclaim, each grasping with a nervous hand
+ His weapon brandish'd, while its broad head shakes.
+ Forward he darts, the dogs he scatters wide,
+ And each opposing power; his strokes oblique
+ Their baying drives to distance. Echion's arm
+ Hurl'd the first dart, but hurl'd the dart in vain;
+ Lightly a maple's trunk the weapon graz'd.
+ The next, but over-urg'd the force that sent,
+ Had pierc'd the rough back of the wish'd-for prey;
+ Jason's the steel,--it whizz'd beyond him far.
+ Then Mopsus pray'd,--"O Phoebus! if thy rites
+ "I e'er perform'd, if still I thee adore,
+ "Grant my sure weapon what I wish to touch."
+ The god consented, what he could he gave,--
+ The boar was struck, but struck without a wound:
+ Diana from the flying weapon snatch'd
+ The steely head, and pointless fell the wood.
+ More chafes the beast, like lightening fierce he burns,
+ Fire from his eyeballs flashes, from his chest
+ Clouds of hot smoke through his wide nostrils roll.
+ Forc'd from the close-drawn string as flies a stone,
+ Hurl'd at embattl'd walls, or hostile towers
+ With foes thick crowded: so the deadly beast
+ Rush'd on the heroes with unerring shock.
+ Eupalamus and Pelagon, who stood
+ The right wing guarding, on the earth he threw:
+ Their fellows snatch'd them from impending fate.
+ Not so Onesimus, of Hippocooen
+ The offspring, 'scap'd the death-inflicting blow;
+ Torn through the ham, just as for flight he turn'd;
+ His slacken'd nerves could bear his weight no more.
+ Then Nestor too, long e'er the Trojan times,
+ Perchance had perish'd, but beside him stood
+ A tree, whose branches nimbly he attain'd;
+ A mighty effort, aided by his spear:
+ Safe in his seat, he view'd the foe he fled,
+ Beneath him. Fiercely threatening death below,
+ He whets his tushes on a stumpy oak,
+ And bold in sharpen'd arms, ranches the thigh,
+ With crooked fangs, of Othrys' mighty son.
+ Now the twin-brothers, ere in heaven display'd
+ Bright constellations, both fair dazzling shone,
+ Mounted on steeds, whose lily'd hue surpass'd
+ Th' unsully'd snow; both shook their brandish'd spears,
+ The trembling motion sounded high in air;
+ Deep both had pierc'd, but 'mid the darkening trees,
+ Their bristly foe sought refuge, where nor steed,
+ Nor dart could reach him. Telamon pursues;
+ Ardent, and heedless of his steps, a root
+ Checks his quick feet, and prone the hero falls.
+ While Peleus aids his brother chief to rise,
+ The beauteous Atalanta to the string
+ Fits the swift dart, and from the bended bow
+ Speeds it; the arrow, fixt beneath his ear,
+ Razes the monster's skin, and drops of blood
+ His bristly neck ensanguine. Joys the maid
+ To see the blow;--but Meleager far
+ In joy surpass'd her. He the first beheld
+ The trickling blood; he to his comrades first
+ The wound display'd, exclaiming,--"Yon fair nymph
+ "The honors so deserv'dly won shall bear."--
+ The warriors blush with shame, and each exhorts
+ His fellow; shouts their souls more valiant swell;
+ In heaps confus'd their numerous javelins fly;
+ Clashing in crowds, each javelin fails to wound.
+ Lo! now Ancaeus furious, to his fate
+ Blind rushing, rears his double axe, and cries,--
+ "Behold, O youths! how much a manly arm
+ "Outstrikes a female's, to my prowess yield
+ "The palm of conquest. Let Latona's maid
+ "With all her power protect him, yet my force,
+ "Spite of Diana, shall the monster slay."--
+ Proud his big-boasting tongue thus speaks, then grasps
+ His two-edg'd weapon firmly in his hands,
+ And rais'd on tiptoe meditates the blow.
+ The watchful beast prevents him, through his groin,
+ To death sure passage, drives his double tusks:
+ Ancaeus drops; his bowels gushing fall,
+ Roll on the earth, and soak the ground in gore.
+ Ixion's son, Pirithous, on the foe
+ Rush'd, in his nervous hand a powerful spear
+ Brandishing; Theseus loudly to his friend
+ Exclaim'd,--"O, dearer far than is myself,--
+ "Half of my soul, at distance wait; the brave
+ "At distance may engage; valor too rash
+ "Destroy'd Ancaeus."--As he spoke he hurl'd
+ His massive cornel spear; its brazen head
+ Well pois'd, its sender's anxious wish appear'd
+ Fair to accomplish, when a leafy arm
+ Branch'd from a beech, oppos'd it in its flight.
+ Next AEson's son, his javelin threw, but chance
+ Glanc'd from its mark the weapon, and transpierc'd
+ An undeserving hound; the dart was drove
+ Through all his belly, and deep fixt in earth.
+ But different fortune on the arms awaits
+ Of Meleager, javelins two he sent;
+ Deep in the ground the foremost pierc'd, the next
+ Firm in the monster's back quivering stood fixt.
+ Nor stays he, whilst he raging furious whirl'd
+ In giddy circles round, and pour'd his foam,
+ Mad with the new-felt torture, close at hand
+ The hero plies his work, provokes his foe
+ To fiercer ire, and in his furious breast
+ Buries the glittering spear. A second shout
+ Loudly proclaims his thronging comrades' joy;
+ Each to the victor crowding, hand in hand
+ Congratulating grasps him; each amaz'd
+ Views the dire savage, as his mighty bulk
+ O'erspreads a space of land. Scarce think they yet
+ Their safety sure, him touching; each his spear
+ Extends, and dips it in the flowing gore.
+ His foot upon the head destructive fixt,
+ The conquering youth thus speaks:--"Nonacria fair!
+ "Receive the spoil my fortune well might claim:
+ "Fresh glory shall I gain, with thee to share
+ "The honors of the day."--Then gives the spoils;--
+ The chine with horrid bristles rising stiff,
+ And head, fierce threatening still with mighty tusks.
+ She takes the welcome gift, for much she joys
+ From him to take it. Envy seiz'd the rest,
+ And sullen murmurs through the comrades ran:
+ Above the rest, were Thestius' sons,--their arms
+ Out-stretching, clamor'd thus with a mighty noise;--
+ "Let not thy beauteous form thy mind deceive,
+ "When from thy eyes the donor of the spoil,
+ "Besotted with thy love, shall far be mov'd.
+ "Woman! restore the prize, nor hope to hold
+ "Our intercepted claims."--Speaking they rob
+ Her of the gift, him of the right to give.
+ Nor passive stood the warlike youth, his teeth
+ He gnash'd with swelling rage, as fierce he cry'd;--
+ "Learn, ye base robbers of another's rights,
+ "What difference threats and valiant actions shew.--"
+ Then in Plexippus' unsuspecting breast
+ He plung'd his impious sword: nor suffer'd long
+ Toxeus to doubt, who hesitating stood,
+ Now vengeance brooding for his brother's fate,
+ Now dreading for himself a like swift blow;
+ Again he warms the weapon, reeking still
+ Hot from Plexippus' bosom, in his blood.
+
+ To every temple of the favoring gods
+ Althaea bore donations for her son,
+ Victorious: When the breathless bodies came
+ Of both her brethren, loud the sounding blows
+ Of grief were heard, and all the city rung
+ With lamentable cries: her golden robes
+ Were straight to sable chang'd. But when the hand
+ Which struck the blow was known, her every tear
+ Was dry'd, and vengeance only fill'd her soul.
+ A log there lay when Thestius' daughter groan'd
+ In child-bed pangs; which on the greedy flames
+ The triple sisters flung; and while their thumbs
+ Twirl'd round the fatal thread, this was their song;--
+ "O newly born! to thee and to this bough
+ "Like date of life we give."--Then ceas'd their words,
+ And from her presence vanish'd: sudden snatch'd
+ The mother from the fire the burning brand,
+ And quench'd it instant in unsparing streams.
+ Long in most secret darkness had she hid
+ This fatal wood; and, thus preserv'd, her son
+ Had safely years mature attain'd; but now
+ Forth she produc'd it from its close recess.
+ Fragments of torches on the hearth she heap'd,
+ And blew the sparklings into deadly flames;
+ And thrice she rais'd her hands the branch to heave
+ On the fierce fire; and thrice her hands withdrew.
+ Sister and mother in one bosom fought,
+ To adverse acts impelling. Oft her face,
+ Dread of her meditated crime, bleach'd pale;
+ Oft to her eyes her furious rage supply'd
+ A fiery redness; now her countenance glow'd
+ With threatenings cruel; now her softening looks
+ To pity seemed to melt; and when fierce ire
+ Had fill'd her soul, and parch'd up every tear,
+ Fresh tears would gush. Thus rocks a vessel, driven
+ By winds and adverse currents, both their force
+ At once obeys, and can to neither yield.
+ Thus waver'd Thestius' daughter, dubious thus
+ Affection sway'd her; now her rage is calm,
+ Now her calm'd rage with fourfold fury burns.
+ At length the sister's o'er the parent's tie
+ The prevalence obtains; impiously good,
+ With blood her own, she soothes the brethren's shades.
+ Now, when the fires destructive fiercely glar'd,
+ She cry'd:--"Here, funeral pile, my bowels burn!--"
+ And as the fatal wood her direful hand
+ Held forth, the hapless mother, at the pyre
+ Sepulchral, stood, exclaiming;--"Furies three!
+ "Avenging sisters! hither turn your eyes;
+ "Behold the furious sacred rites I pay:
+ "For retribution I commit this crime.
+ "By death their death must be aveng'd; his fault
+ "By mine be punish'd; on their funeral biers
+ "His must be laid; one sinning house must fall,
+ "In woes accumulated. Blest shall still
+ "OEneus enjoy his proud victorious son,
+ "And Thestius childless mourn? Better that both
+ "Should weep in concert. Dear fraternal ghosts,
+ "Recent from upper air, my work behold!
+ "Take to th' infernal realms my offering bought
+ "So dear! the hapless pledge my womb produc'd.
+
+ "Ah! whither am I swept? Brothers forgive
+ "The parent. Lo! my faltering hands refuse
+ "To second my intents. Well he deserves
+ "To perish; yet by other hands than mine.
+ "Unpunish'd shall he 'scape then? Victor live,
+ "Proud of his high success, and rule the realm
+ "Of Calydon, while ye are prostrate thrown
+ "A trivial heap of ashes, and cold shades?
+ "Patience no more will bear. Perish the wretch!
+ "Perish his father's hopes! perish the realm!
+ "And all the country perish! Where? O, where?
+ "Is then the mother's soul, the pious prayers
+ "A parent should prefer? Where the strong pains
+ "Which twice five moons I bore? O, that the flames
+ "First kindled, had thy infant limbs consum'd!
+ "Would I had not then snatch'd thee from thy fate!
+ "Thy gift of life is mine; now that thou dy'st
+ "Thy own demerits ask: take the reward
+ "Thy deeds deserve: yield up thy twice-given life,
+ "First in thy birth, then by the brand I sav'd;
+ "Or lay me with my brethren in their tomb.
+ "I wish, yet what I would my hands refuse.
+ "What will my soul determine? Now mine eyes
+ "The mangled corses of my brethren fill:
+ "Now filial fondness, and a mother's name
+ "Distract my soul. O, wretched, wretched me!
+ "Brothers you gain the conquest, yet you gain
+ "Dearly for me; but on your shades I'll wait,
+ "Blest in what gives you once to me again."
+ She said; with face averse and trembling hand,
+ The fateful brand amid the fires was dropt.
+ The brand a groan deep utter'd, or a groan
+ To utter seem'd: the flames half backward caught
+ At length their prey, which gradually consum'd.
+
+ Witless of this sad deed, and absent far,
+ Fierce Meleager, with the self-same fire
+ Burn'd inward; all his vitals felt the flame
+ Scorching conceal'd: th' excruciating pangs
+ Magnanimous he bore. Yet deep he mourn'd
+ By such a slothful bloodless fate to fall;
+ And happy call'd Ancaeus in his wounds.
+ With deep-drawn groans he calls his aged sire,
+ His brother, sisters, and the nymph belov'd,
+ Who shar'd his nuptial couch; with final breath,
+ His mother too perchance. Now glows the fire,
+ And now the pains increase; now both are faint;
+ Now both together die. The soul flies forth,
+ And gently dissipates in empty air.
+
+ Low now lies lofty Calydon,--the youths,
+ And aged seniors weep; the vulgar crowd
+ And nobles mourn alike; the matrons rend
+ Their garments, beat their breasts, and tear their hair.
+ Stretch'd on the earth the wretched sire defiles
+ His hoary locks, and aged face with dust,
+ Cursing his lengthen'd years: the conscious hand
+ Which caus'd the direful end, the mother's fate
+ Accomplish'd; through her vitals pierc'd the steel.
+
+ Had heaven on me an hundred tongues bestow'd,
+ With sounding voice, and such capacious wit
+ As all might fill; and all the Muses' power,
+ Still should I fail the grieving sisters' woe
+ Justly to paint. Heedless of beauteous forms
+ They beat their bosoms livid; while the corse
+ Remains, they clasp and cherish in their arms
+ The senseless mass; the corse they kiss, and kiss
+ The couch on which it rests: to ashes burn'd,
+ Careful collected in the urn, they hug
+ Those ashes to their breasts; and prostrate thrown
+ His tomb they cover; on the graven stone
+ Embrace his name; and on the letters pour
+ Their tears in torrents. Dian' satiate now
+ The house of OEneus levell'd with the dust,
+ Rais'd them by wings in air, which sudden shot
+ From each their bodies. Gorge sole, and she
+ The spouse of valiant Hercules, unchang'd
+ Were left. Long pinions for their arms were seen;
+ Their mouths to horny bills were turn'd; through air
+ Thus alter'd, ample range the goddess gives.
+
+ Theseus meantime, the toil confederate done,
+ Homeward to Pallas' towers his journey bent;
+ But Acheloues, swol'n by showery floods,
+ Delay'd his progress. "Fam'd Cecropia's chief,"--
+ He cry'd,--"here shelter, enter 'neath my roof,
+ "Nor through the furious torrents trust thy steps.
+ "Whole forests oft they root, and whirl along
+ "Vast rocks with thundering sound. High stalls I've seen,
+ "Near to the banks erected, swept away:
+ "Nor aught avail'd the lusty bull's strong limbs,
+ "Nor aught the courser's speed: the torrents oft
+ "Of melted snows, which from the mountains rush,
+ "Whelm the strong youths beneath the whirling pool.
+ "To rest is safer, till their wonted banks
+ "Again the streams confine; the lessen'd waves
+ "Within their channels pent."--Theseus complies,
+ And answers:--"Acheloues, we approve
+ "Thy prudent counsel, and thy cave will use,"
+ The grot they enter; hollow pumice, mixt
+ With rugged tophus, form'd it; tender moss
+ The moist floor cover'd; fretwork on the roof
+ The purple murex and the scallop white
+ Alternate form'd. Now Phoebus' steeds had run
+ Two thirds their race, when Theseus on his couch
+ Reclin'd, the comrades of his toil close by;
+ Pirithous here, Troezenian Lelex there,
+ Whose temples now some silvery hairs display'd.
+ With these were such as Acheloues, joy'd
+ At such a noble guest, the honor deem'd
+ Worthy to share. The barefoot Naiaed nymphs
+ Heap'd on the board the banquet: food remov'd,
+ They brought the wine, in cups with jewels deck'd.
+
+ The mighty hero then, the distant main
+ Surveying, asks:--"What land is that I see?--"
+ And shews the spot,--"tell me what name denotes
+ "That isle? and yet methinks not one it seems."
+ The river-god replies:--"What we behold
+ "A single isle is not, but five; the eye
+ "Is mock'd by distance. That Diana's wrath
+ "May less your wonder move, these once were nymphs.
+ "Ten bullocks had they sacrific'd, and call'd
+ "Each rural god to taste the sacred feast,
+ "And join the festal chorus, me alone,
+ "Forgetful, they invited not. Sore vext,
+ "I swell'd with rage, and as my anger rose,
+ "My flood increas'd; till at my greatest height,
+ "Woods I divorc'd from woods; from meadows tore
+ "The neighbouring meadows; and the Naiaeds roll'd,
+ "Now well-remembering what my godhead claim'd,
+ "Down with their habitations to the main.
+ "My waves then, with the ocean's waters join'd,
+ "The land divided, and those isles you view,
+ "Echinades, amid the sea were form'd.
+
+ "More distant may your vision reach;--behold
+ "An isle beyond them to my soul most dear;
+ "By sailors nam'd Perimele. I snatch'd
+ "Her virgin-treasure from the much-lov'd maid.
+ "Hippodamas her sire in fury rav'd;
+ "And, from a precipice, the pregnant nymph
+ "Plung'd in the deep. My waves receiv'd the load;
+ "And whilst I bore her floating, thus I said;--
+ "O, trident-bearer, thou whom lot decreed
+ "Lord, next to heaven, o'er all the wandering waves,
+ "Where all the sacred rivers end their course;
+ "To which all rivers tend, O, Neptune, aid!
+ "Propitious, hear my prayer! Much have I wrong'd
+ "The nymph I now support: if lenient he,
+ "And equitable, sure Hippodamas,
+ "Her sire, had pity granted, and myself
+ "Had pardon'd. Gracious Neptune, grant thy help
+ "To her a parent's fury from the earth
+ "Wide banishes. O, I beseech thee! grant
+ "A place to her, paternal rage would drown:
+ "Or to a place transform her, where my waves
+ "May clasp her still. The ocean-god consents,
+ "And all his waters shake as nods his head.
+ "Still floats th' affrighted nymph; and as she swims,
+ "I feel her heart with trepid motion beat:
+ "While pressing fond her bosom, all her form
+ "Rigidly firm becomes, and round her chest
+ "Rough earth heaps high; and, whilst I wondring speak,
+ "A new-form'd land her floating limbs enclasps:
+ "Her shape transform'd, a solid isle becomes."
+
+ Thus far the watery deity, and ceas'd.
+ The wondrous tale all mov'd, save one, the son
+ Of bold Ixion; fierce of soul, he laugh'd
+ To scorn their minds so credulous, the gods
+ Impious contemning, as he thus exclaim'd;--
+ "What tales, O, Acheloues, you relate!
+ "Too much of potence to the gods you grant,
+ "To give and change our figures."--All struck dumb,
+ Discourage this bold speech, and Lelex first,
+ Mature in age, and in experience old
+ Beyond the rest, thus spoke:--"Celestial power,
+ "In range is infinite, in sway immense;
+ "What the gods will, completion instant finds.
+ "To clear your doubts, upon the Phrygian hills
+ "An ancient oak, and neighbouring linden stand,
+ "Girt by a low inclosure; I the spot
+ "Survey'd, when into Phrygia's realms dispatch'd
+ "By Pittheus, when those realms his father rul'd.
+ "Not far a lake extends, a space once fill'd
+ "With human 'habitants, whose waves now swarm
+ "With fenny coots, and cormorants alone.
+ "Here Jove in human shape, and with his sire,
+ "The son of Maiae, came; the last his rod
+ "Shorn of its wings, still bore. A thousand doors,
+ "Seeking repose, they knock'd at; every door
+ "Firm barr'd repuls'd them: one at length flew wide;
+ "A lowly cot, whose humble roof long reeds,
+ "And straw firm-matted, cover'd. Baucis there,
+ "A pious dame, and old Philemon match'd
+ "In age, had dwelt, since join'd in springtide youth;
+ "And there grew old together: Full content,
+ "Their poverty they hid not, and more light
+ "Their poverty on souls unmurmuring weigh'd.
+ "Here nor for lord, nor servant, was there need
+ "To seek; beneath the roof these only dwelt;
+ "Each order'd, each obey'd. The heaven-born guests
+ "The humble threshold crossing, lowly stoop'd,
+ "And entrance gain'd: the ancient host bade sit
+ "And rest their weary'd limbs: the bench was plac'd,
+ "Which Baucis anxious for their comfort, spread
+ "With home-made coverings: then with careful hand
+ "The scarce warm embers on the hearth upturn'd;
+ "And rous'd the sleeping fires of yestern's eve,
+ "With food of leaves and bark dry-parch'd, and fann'd
+ "To flame the fuel with her aged breath:
+ "Then threw the small-slit faggots, and the boughs
+ "Long-wither'd, on the top, divided small:
+ "And plac'd her brazen vase of scanty size,
+ "O'er all. Last stripp'd the coleworts' outer leaves,
+ "Cull'd by her husband from the water'd ground,
+ "Which serv'd as garden. He meantime reach'd down,
+ "With two-fork'd prong, where high on blacken'd beam
+ "It hung, a paltry portion of an hog,
+ "Long harden'd there; and from the back he slic'd
+ "A morsel thin, which soon he soften'd down
+ "In boiling steam. The intermediate hours
+ "With pleasing chat they cheat; the short delay
+ "To feel avoiding. On a nail high hung
+ "A beechen pail for bathing, by its hand
+ "Deep-curv'd: with tepid water this he fill'd,
+ "And plac'd before his guests their feet to lave.
+ "A couch there stood, whose feet and frame were form'd
+ "Of willow; tender reeds the centre fill'd,
+ "With coverings this they spread, coverings which saw
+ "The light not, but when festal days them claim'd:
+ "Yet coarse and old were these, and such as well
+ "With willow couch agreed. The gods laid down.
+ "The dame close-girt, with tremulous hand prepar'd
+ "The board; two feet were perfect, 'neath the third
+ "She thrust a broken sherd, and all stood firm.
+ "This sloping mended, all the surface clean
+ "With fragrant mint she rubb'd: and plac'd in heaps
+ "The double-teinted fruit of Pallas, maid
+ "Of unsoil'd purity; autumnal fruits,
+ "Cornels, in liquid lees of wine preserv'd;
+ "Endive, and radish, and the milky curd;
+ "With eggs turn'd lightly o'er a gentle heat:
+ "All serv'd in earthen dishes. After these
+ "A clay-carv'd jug was set, and beechen cups,
+ "Varnish'd all bright with yellow wax within.
+ "Short the delay, when from the ready fire
+ "The steaming dish is brought; and wine not long
+ "Press'd from the grape, again went round, again
+ "Gave place to see the third remove produc'd.
+ "Now comes the nut, the fig, the wrinkled date,
+ "The plumb, the fragrant apple, and the grape
+ "Pluck'd from the purple vine; all plac'd around
+ "In spreading baskets: snow-white honey fill'd
+ "The central space. The prime of all the feast,
+ "Was looks that hearty welcome gave, and prov'd
+ "No indigence nor poverty of soul.
+ "Meantime the empty'd bowls full oft they see
+ "Spontaneously replenish'd; still the wine
+ "Springs to the brim. Astonish'd, struck with dread,
+ "To view the novel scene, the timid pair
+ "Their hands upraise devoutly, and with prayers
+ "Excuses utter for their homely treat,
+ "At unawares requir'd. A lonely goose
+ "They own'd, the watchman of their puny farm;
+ "Him would the hosts, to their celestial guests
+ "A sacred offering make, but swift of wing,
+ "Their toiling chace with age retarded, long
+ "He mock'd; at length the gods themselves he seeks
+ "For sheltering care. The gods his death forbid,
+ "And speak:--Celestials are we both; a fate
+ "Well-earn'd, your impious neighbouring roofs shall feel.
+ "To you, and unto you alone is given
+ "Exemption from their lot. Your cottage leave
+ "And tread our footsteps, while of yonder mount
+ "We seek the loftiest summit. Each obeys;
+ "The gods precede them, while their tottering limbs
+ "A trusty staff supports; tardy from years,
+ "Slowly they labor up the long ascent.
+ "Now from the summit wanted they not more
+ "Than what an arrow, shot with strenuous arm,
+ "At once could gain; when back their view they bent:
+ "Their house alone they saw,--that singly stood:
+ "All else were buried in a wide-spread lake.
+ "Wondring at this, and weeping at the doom
+ "Their hapless neighbours suffer'd; lo! they see
+ "Their mouldering cot, e'en for the pair too small,
+ "Change to a temple; pillars rear on high,
+ "In place of crotchets; yellow turns the straw,
+ "The roof seems gilded; sculptur'd shine the gates;
+ "And marble pavement covers all the floor.
+ "Then Saturn's son, in these benignant words
+ "The pair address'd;--O, ancient man, most just!
+ "And thou, O woman! worthy of thy spouse,
+ "Declare your wishes.--Baucis spoke awhile
+ "With old Philemon; then their joint desire
+ "The latter to the deities declar'd.--
+ "To be your ministers, your sacred fane
+ "To keep we ask: and as our equal years
+ "In concord we have pass'd, let the same hour
+ "Remove us hence: may I her tomb not see,
+ "Nor be by her interr'd.--The gods comply;
+ "These guard the temple through succeeding life.
+ "Fill'd now with years, as on the temple's steps
+ "They stood, conversing on the wondrous change,
+ "Baucis beheld Philemon shoot in leaves,
+ "And leaves Philemon saw from Baucis sprout;
+ "And from their heads o'er either's face they grew.
+ "Still while they could with mutual words they spoke;
+ "At once exclaim'd,--O, dearest spouse, farewell!--
+ "At once the bark, their lips thus speaking, clos'd.
+ "Ev'n yet a Tyanaean shews two trees
+ "Of neighbouring growth, form'd from the alter'd pair.
+ "Nor dotard credulous, nor lying tongue
+ "The fact to me related. On the boughs
+ "Myself have seen the votive garlands hung;
+ "And whilst I offered fresher, have I said--
+ "Heaven guards the good with care; and those who give
+ "The gods due honors, honors claim themselves."
+
+ He ceas'd: the deed and author all admire,
+ But Theseus most; whom anxious still to hear
+ More wondrous actions of the mighty gods,
+ The stream of Calydon, as on his arm
+ Reclin'd, he rested, in these words address'd:--
+ "There are, O, valiant youth! of those once chang'd,
+ "Still in the new-form'd figures who remain:
+ "Others there are whose power more wide extends
+ "To many shapes to alter.--Proteus, thou
+ "Art one; thou 'habitant of those wide waves
+ "Which earth begird: now thou a youth appear'st;
+ "And now a lion; then a furious boar;
+ "A serpent next we tremble to approach;
+ "And then with threatening horns thou seem'st a bull.
+ "Oft as a stone thou ly'st; oft stand'st a tree:
+ "Sometimes thy countenance veil'd in fluid streams,
+ "Thou flow'st a river; sometimes mount'st in flames.
+ "Nor less of power had Erisichthon's maid,
+ "Spouse of Autolycus. Her impious sire
+ "All the divinities of heaven despis'd,
+ "Nor on their slighted altars offerings burn'd.
+ "He too, 'tis said, the Cerealean grove
+ "With axe prophan'd: his violating steel
+ "The ancient trees attacking. 'Mid the rest,
+ "A huge-grown oak, in yearly strength robust,
+ "Itself a wood, uprose: garlands hung round,
+ "And wreaths, and grateful tablets, proofs of vows
+ "For prospering favors paid. The Dryad nymphs
+ "Oft in its shade their festal dances held;
+ "Oft would they, clasping hand in hand, surround
+ "The mighty trunk: its girth around to mete,
+ "Full thrice five cubits ask'd. To every tree
+ "Lofty it seem'd; as every tree appear'd
+ "Lofty, when measur'd with the plants below.
+ "Yet not for that, did Erisichthon hold
+ "The biting steel; but bade his servants fell
+ "The sacred oak; lingering he saw them stand,
+ "His orders unobey'd; impious he snatch'd
+ "From one his weapon, and in rage, exclaim'd;--
+ "What though it be the goddess' favorite care!
+ "Were it the goddess' self, down should it fall,
+ "And bow its leafy summit to the ground.
+ "He said;--and pois'd his axe, and aim'd oblique.
+ "Deep shudderings shook the Cerealian tree,
+ "And groans were utter'd; all the leaves grew pale,
+ "And pale the acorns; while the wide-spread boughs
+ "Cold sweats bedew'd. When in the solid trunk
+ "His blow ungodly pierc'd, blood flow'd in streams
+ "From out the shatter'd bark: not flows more full,
+ "From the deep wound in the divided throat,
+ "The gore, when at the sacred altar's foot
+ "A mighty bull, an offer'd victim drops.
+ "Dread seizes all; and one most bold attempts
+ "To check his horrid wickedness, and check
+ "The murderous weapon: him the villain saw,
+ "And,--take,--he cries,--the boon thy pious soul
+ "Merits so well.--And from the trunk the steel
+ "Turns on the man, and strikes his head away:
+ "Then with redoubled blows the tree assails.
+ "Deep from the oak, these words were heard to sound:--
+ "A nymph am I, within this trunk enclos'd,
+ "Most dear to Ceres; in my dying hours,
+ "Prophetic I foresee the keen revenge
+ "Which will thy deed pursue; and this solace
+ "Grants comfort ev'n in death.--He, undismay'd,
+ "His fierce design still follows: now the tree,
+ "Tottering with numerous blows, by straining cords,
+ "He drags to earth; and half the wood below,
+ "Crush'd by its weight, lies prostrate. All astound,
+ "Of her depriv'd, and at their own sad loss,
+ "The sister Dryads, clad in sable robes,
+ "To Ceres hasten; and for vengeance call,
+ "On Erisichthon. To their urgent prayers
+ "The beauteous goddess gave assent, and shook
+ "Her locks; the motion shook the yellow ears,
+ "Which fill'd the loaded fields; and straight conceiv'd
+ "A torture piteous, if for pity he
+ "For acts like these might look:--to tear his form
+ "By Famine's power pestiferous. There, herself
+ "Approach forbidden (fate long since had doom'd
+ "Ceres and Famine far remov'd should dwell)
+ "A mountain-nymph she calls, and thus directs;--
+ "A region stretches on th' extremest bounds
+ "Of icy Scythia; dreary seems the place;
+ "Sterile the soil; nor trees, nor fruits are seen;
+ "But sluggish cold, and pale affright, and fear:
+ "Still-craving Famine, there her dwelling holds.
+ "Bid her within the inmost vitals hide
+ "Of this most daring, and most impious wretch.
+ "The proudest plenty shall not make her yield:
+ "For in the contest, all the power I boast
+ "To her shall stoop: nor let the lengthen'd way
+ "Appal thy mind; my car receive; receive
+ "My dragons; through the air their course direct
+ "By these long reins.--Speaking, the reins she gave.
+ "She, borne through ether in the granted car,
+ "To Scythia's realm is carried: on the ridge
+ "A rugged mountain offer'd, first she eas'd
+ "The dragons' necks; as Caucasus 'twas known.
+ "There she the sought-for Famine soon espy'd,
+ "Eagerly searching on the stony fields,
+ "At once with teeth and fangs, for thin-sown herbs.
+ "Rough matted were her locks; deep sunk her eyes;
+ "Pale bleach'd her face; her lips with whiten'd slime
+ "O'erspread; with furry crust her mouth was rough:
+ "Hard was her skin; and through it might be seen
+ "Her inwards: 'bove her hollow loins, upstood
+ "The arid bones: a belly's place supply'd
+ "A belly's form: her breasts to hang appear'd
+ "Held only by the chine: her fleshless shape
+ "Each joint in bulk increas'd: rigidly large
+ "The knees were swol'n, and each protruding part
+ "Immod'rately was big. Then as the nymph
+ "From far beheld her,--for a nigh approach
+ "She dreaded, what the goddess bade she told.
+ "Though brief her stay; though distant far she stood;
+ "Though instant there arriv'd; she felt the power
+ "Of Famine at the sight, and turning quick
+ "Her reins, she urg'd her dragons to their speed
+ "In retrogade direction; still on high,
+ "Till Thessaly they gain'd. Famine performs
+ "The wish of Ceres (though her anxious aim
+ "Is still to thwart her power) and borne on winds
+ "Swift through the air, the fated house she finds
+ "And instant enters, where the inmost walls
+ "The sacrilegious wretch inclose; in sleep
+ "Deep bury'd, for night reign'd; and with her wings
+ "Him clasping close, in all the man she breath'd
+ "Her inspiration: in his throat, his mouth,
+ "His chest, and in his unreplenish'd veins,
+ "Her hunger she infus'd. The bidden deed
+ "Complete, she vanish'd from those verdant fields,
+ "And turn'd her to the needy roofs again,
+ "And well-accustom'd caverns. Gentle sleep
+ "Fann'd Erisichthon still with soothing wings.
+ "Ev'n in his sleep imagin'd food he craves,
+ "And vainly moves his mouth; tires jaw on jaw
+ "With grinding; his deluded throat with stores
+ "Impalpable he crams; the empty air
+ "Greedy devouring, for more solid food.
+ "But soon his slumbers vanish'd, then fierce rag'd
+ "Insatiate hunger; ruling through his throat,
+ "And ever-craving stomach. Instant he
+ "Demands what produce, ocean, earth, and air
+ "Can furnish: still of hunger he complains,
+ "Before the full-spread tables: still he seeks
+ "Victuals to heap on victuals. What might serve
+ "A city's population, seems for him
+ "Too scant; whose stomach when it loads had gorg'd,
+ "For loads still crav'd. The ocean thus receives
+ "From all earth's regions every stream; all streams
+ "United, still requiring; greedy fire
+ "On every offer'd aliment thus feeds,
+ "Countless supplies of wood consuming;--more
+ "Nutrition craving, still the more it gains;
+ "More greedy growing from its large increase.
+ "So Erisichthon's jaws prophane, rich feasts
+ "At once devour, at once still more demand.
+ "All food but stimulates his gust for food
+ "In added heaps; and eating only seems
+ "To leave his maw more empty. Lessen'd now,
+ "In the deep abyss of his stomach huge,
+ "Were all the riches which his sire's bequest
+ "Had given: the direful torment still remain'd
+ "In undiminish'd strength; his belly's fire
+ "Implacable still rag'd. Exhausted now
+ "On the curst craving all his wealth was spent.
+ "One daughter sole remaining; of a sire
+ "Less impious, worthy: her the pauper sold.
+ "Her free-born soul, a master's sway disclaim'd.
+ "Her hands extending, to the neighbouring main,
+ "O thou!--she cry'd--who gain'd my virgin spoil
+ "Snatch me from bondage.--Neptune had the maid
+ "Previous enjoy'd: nor spurn'd her earnest prayer.
+ "She whom her master following close, had seen
+ "In her own shape but now, in manly guise
+ "Appears,--in garments such as fishers clothe.
+ "The master sees, and speaks:--O, thou! who rul'st
+ "The trembling reed; whose bending wire thy baits
+ "Conceal; so may thy wiles the water aid;
+ "So may the fish deceiv'd, beneath the waves,
+ "Thy hooks detect not, till too firmly fixt.
+ "Say thou but where she is, who stood but now
+ "Upon this beach, in humble robes array'd,
+ "With locks disorder'd; on this shore she stood;
+ "I saw her,--but no further mark her feet.--
+ "The aid of Neptune well the maid perceiv'd,
+ "And joys that of herself herself is sought,
+ "Thus his enquiries answering;--Whom thou art
+ "I know not; studious bent, the deep alone,
+ "And care to drag my prey, my eyes employ.
+ "More to remove thy doubts, so may the god
+ "Who rules the ocean, aid my toiling art,
+ "As here I swear, no man upon this shore,
+ "Nor female, I excepted, has appear'd.
+ "These words the owner credits, and the sand
+ "Treads with returning steps; deluded goes,
+ "And as he goes, her former shape returns.
+ "Soon as this changing power the sire perceiv'd,
+ "The damsel oft he sold. Now she escapes
+ "Beneath a mare's resemblance: now a bird,
+ "An heifer now, and now a deer she seem'd.
+ "Her greedy parent's maw with food ill-gain'd
+ "Supplying. When at last his forceful plague
+ "Had every aid consum'd, and every aid
+ "Fresh food afforded to his fierce disease,
+ "Then he commenc'd with furious fangs to tear
+ "For nurture his own limbs; life to support,
+ "By what his body and his life destroy'd.
+
+ "But why on others' transformations dwell?
+ "Myself, O youths! enjoy a power, my form
+ "To alter; not unlimited my range.
+ "Now in the shape at present I assume;
+ "Anon I writhe beneath a serpent's form;
+ "Or take the figure of a lordly bull,
+ "And wear my strength in horns, while horns I had:
+ "Disfigur'd now, my forehead's side laments
+ "One weapon ravish'd, as you well may see."--
+ He spoke, and heavy sighs his words pursu'd.
+
+
+
+
+*The Ninth Book.*
+
+
+ Combat of Acheloues and Hercules for Dejanira. Death of Nessus.
+ Torments and death of Hercules. His deification. Story of the
+ change of Galanthis to a weasel. Of Dryope to a Lotus-tree.
+ Ioelaues restored to youth. Murmuring of the Gods. The incestuous
+ love of Byblis. Her transformation to a fountain. Story of Iphis
+ and Iaenthe.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Ninth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ The son of AEgeus begs the cause to know
+ Whence spring those groans, and whence that wounded front?
+ And thus the stream of Calydon replies;--
+ (His uncomb'd locks with marshy reeds entwin'd).
+ "A mournful task, O, warrior! you impose;--
+ "For who, when vanquish'd, joys to tell the fight
+ "Where he was worsted? yet will I relate
+ "In order all: vanquish'd, the shame was small;
+ "The honor great, for such a prize to strive:
+ "And such a conqueror more the mind relieves.
+ "Has e'er the beauteous Dejanira's name
+ "Reach'd to your ears? her charms the envy'd hope
+ "Of numerous wooers form'd; mine with the rest.
+ "As o'er the threshold of my wish'd-for sire
+ "I stepp'd, I hail'd him.--O, Parthaoen's son,
+ "For thine accept me.--So Alcides spoke,
+ "And all the rest to our pretensions bow'd.
+ "Of Jove, his sire, he boasts; and all the fame
+ "His acts deserv'd; and stepdame's cruel laws
+ "Final completed. I (who shameful thought
+ "That gods should yield to mortals; then a god
+ "Alcides was not) thus his claim oppos'd:--
+ "A king of floods behold me; floods which roll
+ "With winding current through the land you sway;
+ "A son in me accept, no stranger sent
+ "From distant regions; of your country one,
+ "Part of your rule. Let it not hurt my claim,
+ "That Juno hates me not; that all the toil
+ "Of slavish orders I have ne'er perform'd.
+ "Alcmena was his mother, let him boast!
+ "Jove is a sire but feign'd, or if one true,
+ "Is criminally so. He claims a sire
+ "To prove his mother's infamy: then chuse--
+ "Say feign'd thy origin from Jove, or fruit
+ "Of intercourse adulterous, own thou art.--
+ "Me, speaking thus, with furious eyes he view'd,
+ "Nor rul'd his swelling rage, replying fierce;--
+ "More than my tongue I on my arm depend:
+ "Whilst I in fighting gain the palm, be thou
+ "Victor in talking.--Furious on he rush'd.
+ "So proudly boasting, to submit I scorn'd;
+ "But stript my sea-green robe, my arms oppos'd,
+ "And held my firm-clench'd hands before my breast;
+ "For stout resistance every limb prepar'd,
+ "To meet the fight. He in his hollow palms
+ "The dust collecting, sprinkled me all o'er,
+ "And then the yellow sand upon me threw.
+ "Now on my neck he seizes; now he grasps
+ "My slippery thighs: but only thinks to hold,
+ "In every part assailing. Still secure
+ "In bulk I stand, and he assails in vain.
+ "Thus stands a rock, which waves with thundering roar
+ "Surround; it stands unhurt in all its strength.
+ "A little we recede, then rush again
+ "To join the war: stoutly our ground we hold,
+ "Steady resolv'd to yield not. Foot to foot
+ "Fixt firm: I prone press with my ample breast,
+ "And hand with hand, with forehead forehead joins.
+ "So have I seen two mighty bulls contend,
+ "When each the fairest heifer of the grove
+ "Expects the arduous struggle to reward:
+ "The herds behold and tremble, witless which
+ "The powerful contest shall successful gain.
+ "Thrice while I clasp'd him close, Alcides strove
+ "To throw me from his breast, in vain,--the fourth
+ "He shook me from him, and my clasping arms
+ "Unloosing, instant turn'd me with his hand;
+ "(Truth must I speak,) and heavy on my back
+ "He hung. If credence may my words demand,
+ "Nor seek I fame through tales of false deceit,
+ "A mighty mountain on me seem'd to weigh:
+ "Scarce were my arms, with trickling sweat bedew'd,
+ "Loos'd from his grasp; scarce was my body freed
+ "From his hard gripe, when panting hard for breath,
+ "Ere I could strength regain, my throat he seiz'd.
+ "Then on the earth my knee was press'd; my mouth
+ "Then bit the sand. Inferior prov'd in strength,
+ "To arts I next betook me. Slipp'd his hands
+ "In form a long round serpent; while I roll'd
+ "In winding spires my body; while I shook
+ "My forked tongue with hisses dire, he laugh'd,
+ "And mock'd my arts; exclaiming,--snakes to kill
+ "I in my cradle knew; grant thou excel'st,
+ "O, Acheloues! others far in size,
+ "What art thou mated with the Hydra's bulk?
+ "He fertile from his wounds, his hundred heads
+ "Ne'er felt diminish'd, for straightway his neck,
+ "With two successors, brav'd the stroke again:
+ "Yet him I vanquish'd with his branching heads
+ "From blood produc'd: from every loss more stout,
+ "Him prostrate I o'erthrew. What hope hast thou,
+ "In form fallacious, who with borrow'd arms
+ "Now threaten'st? whom a form precarious hides?
+ "He said, and fast about my throat he squeez'd
+ "His nervous fingers; choaking, hard I strove,
+ "As pincer-like he press'd me, to unloose
+ "From his tight grasp my neck. Conquer'd in this,
+ "Still a third shape, the furious bull remain'd:
+ "Chang'd to a bull, again I wag'd the war.
+ "Around my brawny neck his arms he threw
+ "To left, and spite of every effort try'd
+ "To 'scape, he dragg'd me down; the solid earth
+ "Deep with my horn he pierc'd, and stretch'd me prone
+ "On the wide sand. Unsated yet his rage,
+ "His fierce hand seiz'd my stubborn horn, and broke
+ "From my maim'd front the weapon. Naiaed nymphs
+ "This consecrated, fill'd with fruits, and flowers
+ "Of odorous fragrance, and the horn is priz'd
+ "By Plenty's goddess as her favorite care."
+
+ He spoke, a nymph close-girt like Dian's train,
+ Her ample tresses o'er each shoulder spread,
+ Enter'd, supporting all of Autumn's fruit
+ In the rich horn, and mellowest apples came
+ The second course to grace. Now day appear'd:
+ The youths when light the loftiest summits touch'd
+ Of the high hills, departed; waiting not
+ Till the rough floods in peaceful channels flow'd;
+ The troubled currents smooth'd. Profound his head
+ Of rustic semblance, Acheloues hides
+ 'Reft of his horn, beneath his deepest waves.
+ His forehead's honor lost sore gall'd him: all
+ Save that was perfect. Ev'n his forehead's loss
+ With willow boughs and marshy reeds was hid.
+
+ Thou too, rash Nessus, through thy furious love,
+ Of the same virgin, thy destruction met;
+ Pierc'd through thy body with the feather'd dart!
+ Jove's son returning to his natal soil,
+ Companion'd by his new-made bride, approach'd
+ Evenus' rapid flood. Swol'n was the stream
+ With wintry showers as wont, and raging whirls
+ Unfordable proclaim'd it; him, himself
+ Fearless, yet anxious for his spouse's care,
+ Nessus approach'd, in strength of limbs secure,
+ And knowledge of the fords, and thus he spoke;
+ "Her, O Alcides! will I safely bear
+ "To yonder bank; thou all thy efforts use
+ "In swimming." Straight the Theban hero gives
+ The pallid Calydonian to his care,
+ Shivering with dread; no less the centaur frights
+ Than the rough flood. The mighty warrior, prest
+ With his large quiver, and the lion's hide,
+ For on the bank opposing had he flung
+ His club and curved bow, exclaim'd--"the stream
+ "My arms will vanquish, soon as I essay."--
+ Nor dubious waits, but in the torrent leaps,
+ Not heeding where most tranquil flows the stream,
+ But stemming furious all its utmost rage.
+ Now had he reach'd the bank, now held again
+ The bow flung o'er, when loud his spouse's shrieks
+ Assail'd his ear. To Nessus, whom he saw
+ His trust about betraying, loud he cry'd;--
+ "What vain reliance on thy rapid speed
+ "Tempts thee to violence? O, double-shap'd!
+ "I speak, regard me,--to respect my rights,
+ "Should deference to me not move thee, think
+ "How whirls thy sire, and that thy rage may check
+ "For wishes unallow'd. Yet hope thou not
+ "With courser's speed to 'scape me: with my dart,
+ "Not feet, will I pursue thee."--His last words
+ With deeds he guarantees, and through and through
+ The flying culprit felt the javelin driv'n;
+ Out through his breast the forked weapon stood:
+ Withdrawn, from either wound gush'd forth the gore,
+ Mixt with the venom of Lernaea's pest.
+ This be preserv'd.--"Nor will I unreveng'd
+ "Expire,"--he murmur'd faintly to himself;
+ And gave his raiment, in the warm blood dipt,
+ A present to the nymph whose spoil he sought;
+ To wake again her husband's dormant love.
+
+ Long was the intermediate time, the deeds,
+ Of great Alcides, and his step-dame's hate,
+ Fill'd all the world meanwhile. Victor return'd
+ From out OEchalia, when the promis'd rites,
+ To Jove Caenean, he prepar'd to pay,
+ Tattling report, who joys in falshood mixt
+ With circumstantial truth, and still the least
+ Swells with her lies, had in thine ears instill'd,
+ O Dejanira! that Alcmena's son,
+ With Ioele was smitten. Ardent love
+ Sway'd her belief, and terror-struck to hear
+ Of this new flame, she melted into tears;
+ With them her weeping grief first flow'd away:
+ But soon she bursted forth.--"Why weep I so?
+ "The harlot will but gladden in my tears!
+ "But ere she here arrives, it me behoves
+ "Each effort to employ, while time now serves,
+ "To hinder what he seeks; whilst yet my couch
+ "Another presses not. Shall I complain,
+ "Or rest in silence? Shall I Calydon
+ "Re-seek, or here remain? Shall I abscond
+ "His habitation, or, if nought else serves,
+ "Strenuous oppose him? Or if truly bent,
+ "O, Meleager! with a sister's pride,
+ "Thy wicked deeds t' outvie, a witness leave,
+ "The harlot's throat divided, what the rage
+ "Of woman may accomplish, when so wrong'd."--
+ In whirls her agitated mind is toss'd;
+ Determining last to send to him the robe,
+ In Nessus' blood imbu'd, and so restore
+ His waning love. Witless of what she sends,
+ Herself to Lychas' unsuspecting hands
+ The cause of future grief delivers. Wretch
+ Most pitiable! she, with warm-coaxing words,
+ Instructs the boy to bear her spouse the gift.
+ Th' unwitting warrior takes it, and straight clothes
+ His shoulders with Echidna's poisonous gore.
+ Incense he sprinkles in the primal flames
+ He kindles,--with the flames his prayers ascend.
+ As from the goblet he the vintage pours
+ On marble altars; hapless by the heat
+ The poison more was quicken'd; by the flame
+ Melted, it grew more potent; wide diffus'd,
+ Through all the limbs of Hercules it spread.
+ Still while he could, his fortitude, as wont
+ His groans suppress'd; at last his patience spent,
+ Fierce from the altar flinging, OEte's mount
+ So woody, with his plaintive shrieks he fills,
+ And instant from his limbs the deadly robe
+ Essays to tear: that, where he strips, the skin,
+ Stript also, follows; dreadful to describe!
+ Or to his limbs, his utmost struggling vain,
+ It clings: or bare his lacerated joints
+ And huge bones stand. With hissing noise his blood
+ Burns, as when glowing iron in a pool
+ Is dipp'd, so boils it with the venom fierce.
+ Nor hope of help remain'd, the greedy fires,
+ His utmost vitals waste; and purple sweat
+ Bedews his every limb; his scorch'd nerves crack;
+ And whilst his marrow, with the latent pest,
+ Runs fluid, high tow'rd heaven his arms he holds,
+ Exclaiming;--"now Saturnia, feast thy soul
+ "With my destruction; joy, O savage!--view
+ "From lofty heaven my tortures; satiate now
+ "Thy rancorous soul:--but if a foe may move
+ "Commiseration, (for thy foe I am)
+ "Take hence this life, grievous, through direful pains:
+ "Hateful to thee, and destin'd first for toils.
+ "Death now would be a boon; and such a boon
+ "A step-dame might confer. Have I for this,
+ "Busiris slain, who drench'd the temples deep
+ "With travellers' blood? For this Antaeus robb'd
+ "Of nutriment parental? Did thy bulk,
+ "Of triple-form, swain of Iberia, fright?
+ "Or thou, three-headed Cerberus, me move?
+ "Wrought I for this in Elis? at the lake
+ "Of Stymphalis? and in Parthenian woods?
+ "Did not my valor seize the golden belt
+ "Of Thermodon's brave queen? the apples gain,
+ "Ill-guarded by th' unsleeping dragon's care?
+ "Could the fierce Centaur me resist? or could
+ "The mighty boar that laid Arcadia waste?
+ "And what avail'd the Hydra, that he grew
+ "From every loss, in double strength reviv'd?
+ "How? Saw I not the Thracian coursers gorg'd
+ "With human gore! whose stalls with mangled limbs
+ "Crowded, I overthrew, and slew their lord
+ "On his slain coursers? Strangled by these hands
+ "Nemaea's monster lies. Heaven I upbore
+ "Upon these shoulders. The fierce wife of Jove
+ "Weary'd at length with bidding, I untir'd
+ "Still was of acting. But at length behold
+ "A new-found plague, which not the bravest soul,
+ "Nor arms, nor darts can aught resist. Fierce fire,
+ "Darts through my deepest inwards; all my limbs
+ "Greedy devouring. Yet Eurystheus lives!
+ "Still are there who the deities believe?"--
+ He said, and o'er high OEte tortur'd rov'd
+ Like a mad tiger, when the hunter's dart
+ Stands in his body, and the wounder flies.
+ Oft would you see him groaning; storming oft;
+ Oft straining from his limbs again to fling
+ The vest; trees rooting up; against the hills
+ Fierce railing; next up to his father's skies
+ His arms extending. Lo! he Lychas spies,
+ Where trembling in a hollow rock he hides!
+ Then, all his fury in its utmost strength,
+ Raging, he cry'd;--"Thou, Lychas, thou supply'd
+ "This deadly gift. Thou art the author then
+ "Of my destruction."--Shuddering he, and pale,
+ In timid accents strove excuse to plead:
+ Speaking, and round his knees prepar'd to cling,
+ Alcides seiz'd him, with an engine's force
+ Whirl'd round and round, and hurl'd him in the waves,
+ Which by Eubaea roll. He, as he shot
+ Through air, was harden'd. As the falling showers
+ Concrete by freezing winds, whence snow is form'd:
+ As snows by rolling, their soft bodies join,
+ Conglomerating into solid hail:
+ So ancient times believ'd, the boy thus flung,
+ Through empty air, by strong Alcides' arm,
+ Bloodless through fear, and all his moisture drain'd,
+ Chang'd to a flinty rock. A rock e'en now
+ High in Eubaea's gulph exalts its head,
+ Which still of human form the marks retains.
+ Which, as though still of consciousness possess'd,
+ The sailors fear to tread, and Lychas call.
+
+ Thou, Jove's renowned offspring, fell'd the trees
+ Which lofty OEte bore, and built a pile:
+ Then bade the son of Paean bear thy bow,
+ Thy mighty quiver, and thy darts, to view
+ Once more the realm of Troy; and through his aid
+ The flames were plac'd below, whose greedy spires
+ Seiz'd on the structure. On the woody top
+ Thou laid'st the hide Nemaean, and thy head,
+ Supported with thy club, with brow serene
+ As though with garlands circled, at a feast
+ Thou laid'st, 'mid goblets fill'd with sparkling wine.
+
+ Now the strong fires spread wide o'er every part,
+ Crackling, and seizing his regardless limbs,
+ Who them despis'd. The gods beheld with fear
+ The earth's avenger. Jove, who saw their care
+ With joyous countenance, thus the powers address'd:
+ "This fear, O deities! makes glad my heart;
+ "And lively pleasure swells in all my breast,
+ "That sire and sovereign o'er such grateful minds
+ "I hold my sway; since to my offspring too
+ "Your favoring care extends. No less, 'tis true,
+ "His deeds stupendous claim. Still I'm oblig'd.
+ "But from your anxious breasts banish vain fear;
+ "Despise those flames of OEte; he who all
+ "O'ercame, shall conquer even the flames you see:
+ "Nor shall the power of Vulcan ought consume,
+ "Save his maternal part: what he deriv'd
+ "From me, is ever-during; safe from death;
+ "And never vanquish'd by the force of fire.
+ "That we'll receive, his earthly race compleat,
+ "Amidst the heavenly host; and all I trust
+ "My actions gladly will approve. Should one
+ "Haply, with grief see Hercules a god,
+ "And grudge the high reward; ev'n he shall grant
+ "His great deserts demand it; and allow
+ "Unwilling approbation." All assent;
+ Not even his royal spouse's forehead wore,
+ A frown at ought he said; his final words
+ Irk'd her at length, to be so plainly mark'd.
+ Vulcan meantime each corruptible part
+ Bore off in flames, nor could Alcides' form
+ Remaining, now be known; nought he retain'd
+ Of what his mother gave; Jove's share alone.
+ A serpent revels thus in glittering scales,
+ His age and former skin thrown off at once.
+ So when Tirynthius from his mortal limbs
+ Departed, in his better part he shone,
+ Increas'd in stature; and majestic grace
+ Augustly deck'd his venerable brow.
+ Veil'd in a hollow cloud, and borne along
+ By four swift steeds, in a high car, the sire
+ Him plac'd in glory 'mid the radiant stars.
+ Atlas perceiv'd his load increas'd. Nor yet
+ Eurystheus 'bated in his rancorous hate,
+ But cruel exercis'd his savage rage,
+ Against the offspring of the sire abhorr'd.
+
+ But now Alcmena, worn with constant cares,
+ In Argolis, to Ioele confides
+ Her aged plaints, to her the labors tells
+ Her son atchiev'd, o'er all the wide world known;
+ And her own griefs beside. Alcides' words
+ Caus'd Hyllus to his couch to take, and take
+ Ioele, cordial to his inmost heart:
+ And now with generous fruit, the nymph was large.
+ Alcmena, thus to her commenc'd her tale.--
+
+ "May thee, at least, the favoring gods indulge;
+ "And all delay diminish, when matur'd,
+ "Thou to Ilithyiae shalt have need to call,
+ "Who o'er travailing mothers bears the rule;
+ "Whom Juno's influence made so hard to me.
+ "Of Hercules toil-bearing, now the birth,
+ "Approach'd, and in the tenth sign rul'd the sun.
+ "A mighty bulk swell'd out my womb, so huge,
+ "Well might you know that Jove the load had caus'd:
+ "Nor could I longer bear my throes (my limbs
+ "Cold rigors seize, while now I speak; my pains
+ "Part ev'n in memory now I seem to feel)
+ "Through seven long nights, and seven long days with pangs
+ "Incessant was I rack'd: my arms to heaven
+ "Stretching, I call'd Lucina, and the powers,
+ "With outcries mighty. True Lucina came,
+ "But came by Juno prepossest, and bent
+ "My life to sacrifice to Juno's rage.
+ "Soon as my groans she hearken'd, down she sate
+ "Upon the altar, plac'd without the gates:
+ "'Neath her right ham, her left knee pressing; join'd
+ "Fingers with fingers cross'd upon her breast
+ "My labor stay'd; and spellful words she spoke
+ "In whispering tone; the spellful words delay'd
+ "Th' approaching birth. I strain, and madly rave
+ "With vain upbraidings to ungrateful Jove,
+ "And crave for death; in such expressions 'plain
+ "As hardest flints might move. The Theban dames
+ "Around me throng; assist me with their prayers;
+ "And me my trying pains exhort to bear.
+ "Galanthis, one who tended me, of race
+ "Plebeian; yellow-hair'd; and sedulous
+ "What order'd to perform; and much esteem'd
+ "For courteous deeds;--she first suspected, (what,
+ "I know not) somewhat, form'd by Juno's pique:
+ "And while she constant pass'd; now to, now fro,
+ "She saw the goddess on the altar sit,
+ "Girding her arms, with close-knit fingers o'er
+ "Her knees, and said;--O dame, whoe'er thou art,
+ "Our mistress gratulate. Alcmena now
+ "Argolican, is lighten'd. Now the prayers
+ "Of the child-bearer meet her hopes.--The dame
+ "Who rules the womb, straight from her station leap'd,
+ "And all astounded, her clench'd fingers loos'd:
+ "I in that moment felt my bonds undone.
+ "Galanthis, they report, the goddess mock'd
+ "Thus cheated, by her laughter. Savage, she
+ "Dragg'd her so laughing, by the tresses seiz'd,
+ "And forc'd her down to earth, as up she strove
+ "Erect to rise; and to forefeet her arms
+ "Transform'd. The same agility remains;
+ "Her back its colour keeps; her form alone
+ "Is diverse. She, 'cause then her lying mouth
+ "My birth assisted, by her mouth still bears:
+ "And round my house she harbors as before."--
+
+ She said, and by the memory mov'd, she mourn'd
+ For her lost servant, whom, lamenting, thus
+ Her child-in-law address'd.--"If then the form
+ "Alter'd, of one an alien to your blood,
+ "O mother! thus affects you, let me tell
+ "The wond'rous fortune which my sister met:
+ "Though grief and tears will frequent choke my words.
+
+ "Her mother, Dryope alone could boast,
+ "(Me to my sire another bore) her charms
+ "OEthalia all confess'd; whom (rifled first
+ "Of virgin charms, when passively she felt
+ "His force, who Delphos, and who Delos rules)
+ "Andraemon took, and held a happy spouse.
+ "A lake expands with steep and shelving shores
+ "Encompass'd; myrtles crown the rising bank.
+ "Here Dryope, of fate unconscious came,
+ "And what must more commiseration move,
+ "Came to weave chaplets for the Naiad nymphs;
+ "Her arms sustain'd her boy, a pleasing load,
+ "His first year scarce complete, as with warm milk
+ "She nourish'd him. The watery Lotus there,
+ "For promis'd fruit in Tyrian splendor bright,
+ "Grew flowering near. The flowers my sister cropp'd,
+ "And held them to delight her boy; and I,
+ "(For there I stood,) the same prepar'd to do;
+ "But from the flowers red flowing drops I saw,
+ "And all the boughs with tremulous shuddering shook.
+ "Doubtless it is, (but far too late we learn'd
+ "By the rough swains,) nymph Lotis, when she fled
+ "From Priapus obscene, her shape transform'd
+ "Into this tree which still retains her name.
+ "My sister witless of this change, in fright
+ "Would back retreat, and leave the nymphs ador'd,
+ "But roots her feet retain: these from the ground
+ "She strains to rend; but save her upper limbs
+ "Nought can she move; a tender bark grows o'er
+ "The lower parts, and her mid limbs invades.
+ "This seeing, and her locks to rend away
+ "Attempting; her rais'd hand with leaves was fill'd.
+ "Leaves cover'd all her head. Amphyssus found,
+ "(His grandsire had the child Amphyssus nam'd)
+ "His mother's breasts grow hard; nor when he suck'd
+ "Lacteal fluid gain'd he. I there stood,
+ "Of her sad fate spectator: loud I cry'd--
+ "But, O my sister! aid I could not bring;
+ "Yet what I could I urg'd; the growing trunk,
+ "And growing boughs, my close embraces staid:
+ "In the same bark I glad had been enclos'd.
+ "Lo! come her spouse Andraemon, and her sire
+ "So wretched; and for Dryope they seek:
+ "A Lotus, as for Dryope they ask,
+ "I shew them; to the yet warm wood salutes
+ "Ardent they give; and prostrate spread, the roots
+ "They clasp of their own tree. Now, sister dear!
+ "Nought save thy face but what a tree becomes.
+ "Thy tears, the leaves thy body form'd, bedew.
+ "And now, whilst able, while her mouth yet gives
+ "To words a passage, such like plaints as these
+ "She breathes;--If faith th' unhappy e'er can claim,
+ "I swear by all the deities, this deed
+ "I never merited: without a crime
+ "My punishment I suffer. Innocent
+ "My life has been. If I deceive, may drought
+ "Parch those new leaves; and, by the hatchet fell'd,
+ "May fire consume me. Yet this infant bear
+ "From those maternal branches; to a nurse
+ "Transfer him; but contrive that oft he comes
+ "And 'neath my boughs let him his milk imbibe;
+ "And 'neath my boughs sport playful. When with words
+ "Able to hail me, let him me salute,
+ "And sorrowing say;--Within that trunk lies hid
+ "My mother--But the lakes, O! let him dread,
+ "Nor dare from any tree to snatch a flower;
+ "But think each shrub he sees a god contains.
+ "Adieu! dear husband; sister dear, adieu!
+ "Father, farewel! if pious cares you feel,
+ "From the sharp axe defend my boughs, and from
+ "The browsing flocks. And now, as fate denies
+ "To lean my arms to yours,--your arms advance;
+ "Approach my lips, whilst you my lips may touch:
+ "And to them lift my infant boy. More words
+ "I may not;--now the tender bark my neck,
+ "So white, invades; my utmost summit hid.
+ "Move from my lids your fingers, for the bark,
+ "So rapid growing, will my dying eyes
+ "Without assistance close.--Her lips to speak
+ "Cease, and existence ceases: the fresh boughs
+ "Long in the alter'd body warm were felt."
+
+ While Ioele the mournful fact relates;
+ And while Alcmena, from Eurytus' maid,
+ With ready fingers dry'd the tears; herself
+ Still weeping, lo! a novel deed assuag'd
+ Their grief--for Ioelaues, scarcely youth,
+ His cheeks with tender down just cover'd, stands
+ Within the porch; to early years restor'd.
+
+ Junonian Hebe, by her husband's prayers
+ O'ercome, to Ioelaues gave the boon.
+ Who, when to vow she went, that future times
+ Should none such gift enjoying, e'er perceive,
+ Was check'd by Themis. "Now all Thebes,"--she said,
+ "Discordant warfare moves. Through Jove alone
+ "Capaneus can be conquer'd. Mutual wounds
+ "Shall slay the brothers. In the yawning earth
+ "A living prophet his own tomb shall see.
+ "A son avenger of his parent's death
+ "Upon his parent: impious for the deed,
+ "At once, and pious: at the action stunn'd,
+ "Exil'd from home, and from his senses driv'n,
+ "The furies' faces, and his mother's shade
+ "Shall haunt him; till his wife the fatal gold
+ "Shall ask: and till the Phegian sword shall pierce
+ "Their kinsman's side. Callirhoe then, the nymph
+ "From Acheloues sprung, suppliant shall seek
+ "From Jove, her infants years mature may gain.
+ "Mov'd by her prayers, Jove will from thee demand,
+ "Son's spouse, and daughter of his wife, the boon
+ "And unripe men thou'lt make the youths become."
+
+ While Themis thus, with fate-foretelling lips,
+ This spoke; the gods in murmuring grudgings mourn'd,
+ Angry why others might not grant the gift.
+ Aurora mourn'd her husband's aged years:
+ Mild Ceres 'plain'd that Jason's hairs were white:
+ Vulcan, for Erichthonius pray'd an age
+ Renew'd. E'en Venus future cares employ'd,
+ Anxious for promise that Anchises' years
+ Replenishment might find: And every god
+ Had whom he lov'd; and dark sedition grew
+ From special favor; till the mighty sire
+ The silence broke.--"If reverence I may claim,
+ "Where rashly rush ye? Which of you the power,
+ "Fate to control, possesses? Fate it was
+ "Gave Ioelaues youth restor'd again:
+ "By Fate Callirhoe's sons ere long shall spring
+ "To manhood, prematurely; nor can arms
+ "Nor yet ambition gain this gift. With souls
+ "More tranquil bear this; since you see the fates
+ "Me also rule. Could I the fates once change,
+ "Old age should never bend AEaecus down;
+ "And Rhadamanthus had perpetual spring
+ "Of youth enjoy'd, with Minos, now despis'd
+ "Through load of bitter years, nor reigns as wont."
+
+ Jove's words the deities all mov'd; not one
+ Longer complain'd, when heavy press'd with years
+ They AEaecus, and Rhadamanthus saw;
+ And Minos: who, when in his prime of age,
+ Made mightiest nations tremble at his name.
+ He, feeble then, at Deione's son
+ Miletus, trembled, who with youthful strength,
+ And Phoebus' origin proud swol'n, and known
+ About to rise against his rule:--yet him
+ He dar'd not from his household roof to drive.
+ But thou, Miletus, fled'st spontaneous, thou
+ Th' AEgean waves in thy swift ship didst pass,
+ And on the Asian land the walls didst found
+ Which bear the builder's name. Cyance here,
+ Maeander's daughter, whose recurving banks
+ She often trode: (whose stream itself reseeks
+ So oft) in beauteous form, by thee was known,
+ And, claspt by thee, a double offspring came,
+ Byblis and Caunus, from the warm embrace.
+
+ Let Byblis warn, that nymphs should ne'er indulge
+ Illicit warmth. Her brother Byblis lov'd;
+ Not as she ought; not with a sister's soul.
+ No fires at first the maid suspected; nought
+ Of sin: the thought that oft her lips to his
+ She wish'd to join, and clasp her arms around
+ His neck fraternal, long herself deceiv'd,
+ Beneath the semblance of a duteous love.
+ Love gradual bends to him her soul; she comes
+ Fully adorn'd to see him, anxious pants
+ Beauteous to seem; if one more beauteous there
+ She sees, invidious she that face beholds.
+ Still to herself unconscious was her love:
+ No wish she form'd beneath that burning flame,
+ Yet all within was fire. She call'd him lord,
+ Now kindred's name detesting; anxious more,
+ Byblis, than sister he should call her still.
+ Yet waking, ne'er her soul durst entertain
+ Lascivious wishes. When relax'd in sleep,
+ Then the lov'd object oft her fancy saw;
+ Oft seem'd her bosom to his bosom join'd:
+ Yet blush'd she, tranc'd in sleep. Her slumbers fly,
+ She lies awhile in silence, and revolves
+ Her dream: and thus in doubting accents speaks;
+ "Ah, wretch! what means this dream of silent night,
+ "Which yet I oft would wish? Why have I known
+ "This vision? Envy's eyes must own him fair,
+ "And but his sister am I, all my love
+ "He might possess; worthy of all my love.
+ "A sister's claim then hurts me! O! at least
+ "(While tempted thus I wakeful nought commit)
+ "Let sleep oft visit with such luscious dreams:
+ "No witness sees my sleeping joys; my joys,
+ "Though sleeping, yet are sweet. O, Venus! O,
+ "Thou feather'd Cupid, with thy tender dame!
+ "What transports I enjoy'd! what true delight
+ "Me thrill'd! how lay I, all my soul dissolv'd!
+ "How joys it me to trace in mind again
+ "The pleasure though so brief: for flying night
+ "Invidious check'd enjoyment in the bud.
+ "O Caunus! that an alter'd name might join
+ "Us closely; that thy sire a sire-in-law
+ "To me might be: O, Caunus, how I'd joy
+ "Wert thou not son, but son-in-law to mine.
+ "Would that the gods had all in common given,
+ "Save parents only. Thou in lofty birth
+ "I would should me excel. O beauteous youth!
+ "A mother whom thou'lt make I know not; I
+ "Ne'er can thee know but with a sister's love:
+ "Parents the same as thine my hapless lot.
+ "All that I have, me only pains the more.
+ "What are to me my visions? Weight have dreams?
+ "How much more happy are th' immortal gods!
+ "The gods embrace their sisters. Saturn clasps
+ "Ops, join'd to him by blood; Ocean enjoys
+ "His sister Tethys; and Olympus' king
+ "His Juno. Gods peculiar laws possess.
+ "Why seek I then celestial rites to bring
+ "Diverse, with human ord'nance to compare?
+ "Forbidden love shall from my breast be driv'n,
+ "Or that impossible, may death me seize
+ "Instant, and cold upon my couch outstretch'd,
+ "My brother then may kiss me as I lie.
+ "Yet still my wish double consent requires.
+ "Grant I should yield, still might the deed to him
+ "Seem execrable. Yet th' AEolian youth
+ "A sister's nuptial couch ne'er dreaded. Why,
+ "O, why! on this so dwell? Why thus recal
+ "Examples to my view? Where am I borne?
+ "Hence, flames obscene! hence far! a sister's love,
+ "And that alone my brother shall enjoy.
+ "But had his soul first burn'd for me, perchance
+ "I had indulg'd his passion. Surely then
+ "I may demand, who would not, ask'd, refuse.
+ "What couldst thou speak? Couldst thou confess thy flame?
+ "Love forces, and I can. If shame my lips
+ "Close binds; yet secret letters may disclose
+ "The hidden flame."--With this idea pleas'd,
+ These words her hesitating mind resolv'd,
+ Rais'd on her side, supported by her arm.--
+ "He shall"--she said--"now know it; all my love
+ "Preposterous confess'd. Alas! what depth
+ "Now rush I to? What fire has seiz'd my soul?"--
+ And then with tremulous hand the words compos'd.
+ Her right hand grasps the style, the left sustains
+ The waxen tablet smooth; and then begins.
+ She doubts; she writes; condemns what now she wrote;
+ Corrects; erases; alters; now dislikes;
+ And now approves. Now throws the tablet by,
+ Then seizes it again. Irres'lute what
+ She would; whate'er is done displeases, all.
+ Shame and audacious boldness in her face
+ Are mingled. Sister, once her hand had wrote,
+ But sister, soon as seen, her hand eras'd;
+ And her fair tablet bore such words as these.--
+ "To thee, a lover salutation sends,
+ "And health, which only thou to her canst give:
+ "Asham'd, she blushes to disclose her name.
+ "For should I press to gain my wish'd desire,
+ "Without my name, my cause I trust would find
+ "Successful aid. Let Byblis not be known
+ "Till certain hopes of bliss her mind shall cheer.
+ "Yet faded color, leanness, and pale face,
+ "With constant dripping eye, and rising sobs
+ "Shew my unhidden grief. Well might these prove
+ "To thee an index of a wounded heart.
+ "My constant clasping, numerous fond salutes,
+ "If e'er thou'st mark'd, thou well might have perceiv'd
+ "Not sister-like embracings. In my soul
+ "Though this deep wound I bear; though in my breast
+ "This fire consuming burns, yet strive I all,
+ "(Witness, ye gods! my truth) all to suppress,
+ "And act with wiser conduct: hapless war
+ "Long have I wag'd 'gainst Cupid's furious rule
+ "More pressure have I borne, than what a maid
+ "Could e'er be thought to bear. At length o'ercome,
+ "And forc'd to yield, thy help I must implore
+ "With trembling voice: thou only canst preserve,
+ "Thou only canst the loving nymph destroy.
+ "With thee the choice remains. No foe thus sues,
+ "But one by nearest ties to thee conjoin'd,
+ "Pants to be join'd more nearly; link'd to thee
+ "With closest bands. Let aged seniors learn
+ "Our laws, and seek what moral codes permit.
+ "What is permitted, and what is deny'd,
+ "Let them enquire, and closely search the laws:
+ "A bolder love more suits our growing years.
+ "As yet we know not what the laws allow;
+ "And judge for all things we free leave enjoy;
+ "Th' example following of the mighty gods.
+ "Nor parent stern, nor strict regard for fame,
+ "Nor timid thoughts should check us; absent all
+ "Should be each cause of fear. The dear sweet theft
+ "Beneath fraternal love may be conceal'd;
+ "With thee in secret converse I may speak,
+ "Embrace thee, kiss thee in the open crowd;
+ "How little then remains! Pity, forgive,
+ "The declaration of this love, ne'er told
+ "Had raging fire not urg'd it, nor allow
+ "Upon my tomb this cause of death to stand.--"
+
+ Here the fill'd tablet check'd her hand, in vain
+ Thus writing, at the utmost edge the lines,
+ But stay'd. Her crime straightway she firmly press'd,
+ With her carv'd gem, and moisten'd it with tears:
+ Her tears of utterance robb'd her. Bashful then
+ She call'd a page, and blandishing in fear
+ Exclaim'd.--"Thou faithful boy, this billet bear--"
+ And hesitated long ere more she said,
+ Ere--"to my brother, bear it."--As she gave
+ The tablet, from her trembling hand it fell;
+ The omen deep disturb'd her. Yet she sent.
+
+ A chosen hour the servant sought, went forth
+ And gave the secret message. Sudden rage
+ me youth Maeandrian petrify'd; and down
+ The half-read lines upon the ground he flung.
+ His hand scarce holding from the trembling face
+ Of the pale messenger. "Quick, fly!" he cry'd,
+ "Thou wicked pander of forbidden lust!
+ "Fly while thou may'st; and know, had not thy fate
+ "Involv'd our modest name, death hadst thou found.--"
+ He terrify'd escapes, and backward bears,
+ To his young mistress all fierce Caunus spoke.
+
+ Pale, thou, O Byblis! heardst the rough repulse;
+ Thy breast with frigid chills beset. But soon
+ Her spirits rally, and her furious love
+ Returns: scarce to the trembling air her tongue
+ Can utterance give in these indignant words;--
+ "Deserv'dly mourn I, who so rashly gave
+ "Him of my wounds the conscious tale to learn.
+ "Why trust so soon to words, what still might hid
+ "Remain, on tablets hastily compos'd?
+ "Why were not first the wishes of my soul
+ "Try'd in ambiguous hints? First, sure I ought
+ "Whence the wind blew have mark'd; nor loos'd my sails,
+ "Him flying, to pursue, and the wide main
+ "In all directions plough: now bellies out
+ "My canvas; not a single course explor'd.
+ "Hence am I borne against the rocks; hence 'whelm'd
+ "In the wide depth of ocean; nor my sails
+ "Know I to tack returning. Did not heaven
+ "Check the indulgence of my love, by marks
+ "Obvious to all? when from my hand down dropp'd
+ "The tablet, which the boy was bade to bear.
+ "Mark'd that my falling hopes not? More deferr'd
+ "Thy wishes, or the day should sure have been;
+ "Surely the day. For heaven itself me warn'd,
+ "And certain signs me gave; but those my mind
+ "Stupid neglected. Personal my words
+ "Should I have urg'd, nor trusted to the wax.
+ "In person should my love have been display'd.
+ "Then had my tears been seen; then had he view'd
+ "My raptur'd countenance; then had I spoke
+ "Far more than power of letters can convey.
+ "My arms around his neck I then had thrown
+ "Howe'er unwilling; and, had he been coy,
+ "In dying posture I his feet had clasp'd;
+ "And stretch'd before him life demanding, all
+ "Had I achiev'd. Perchance though, by the boy,
+ "My messenger commission'd, I have fail'd:
+ "Aptly perhaps he enter'd not; perhaps,
+ "And much I fear, improper hours he chose;
+ "Nor sought a vacant time, when nought his mind
+ "Disturb'd. This has, alas! my hopes destroy'd:
+ "For from a tiger Caunus sprung not; round
+ "His heart not solid steel, nor rigid flint,
+ "Nor adamant is girt; nor has he suck'd
+ "The lioness's milk. He shall be bent,
+ "And gain'd his heart shall be; nor will I brook
+ "The smallest bar to what I undertake,
+ "While now this spirit holds. My primal wish
+ "(If it were given I might revoke my deeds)
+ "Is, I had ne'er commenc'd: my second now
+ "Is, that I persevere in what's begun.
+ "For should I now my wishes not pursue,
+ "Still must he of those daring wishes think;
+ "And should I now desist, well might he judge
+ "Form'd lightly my desires: or plann'd to try
+ "His virtue, and involve in snares his fame:
+ "Or, (dreadful!) think me not by love o'ercome,
+ "(Who burns and rages fiercely in my breast)
+ "But by hot lust. For now conceal'd no more
+ "My guilty act can be; I've written once,
+ "Once have I ask'd; corrupted all my soul.
+ "Should further no depravity ensue,
+ "Guilty I must be call'd. What more remains,
+ "In crime is little, but in hope immense."--
+
+ She said, and such the wavering of her breast,
+ That, whilst the trial grieves her which she made,
+ Farther to try she wishes; every bound
+ O'erpassing; and, with luckless fate, her suit
+ Still meets repulsion. He, when endless seem'd
+ Her pressing, fled his country, and the crime;
+ And in a foreign region rais'd new walls.
+
+ Then, daughter of Miletus, they report,
+ Forsook thee all thy senses; then in truth
+ Thou rent thy garments from thy breast; thy breast
+ Thy furious hands hard smote. Now to the world
+ Madly she raves; now to the world displays
+ Her wish'd-for love, deny'd: all hope--despair!
+ She too forsook her country, and the roof
+ So hated; and the vagrant steps pursu'd
+ Her flying brother trode. As Thracia's dames
+ O, son of Semele! thy Thyrsus shake
+ When celebrating thy triennial rites,
+ So did the Carian matrons, Byblis see
+ Fly o'er the wide-spread fields, with shrieks and howls:
+ These left behind, o'er Caria's plains she runs,
+ And through the warlike Leleges, and through
+ The Lycian realms. Now Cragos had she left,
+ And Lymire, and Xanthus' waves behind;
+ With the high ridge Chimaera lifts, who burns
+ Central with flames; his breast and front fierce arm'd
+ A lion--tow'rd his tail a serpent form'd.
+ Now all the forests past; thou Byblis, faint
+ With long pursuit, fall'st flat; on the hard ground
+ Thy locks are spread; dumb now thou ly'st; thy face
+ Presses the fallen leaves. Oft in their arms
+ So delicate, the Lelegeian nymphs
+ To raise thee up attempted. Oft they strove
+ To give advice that might thy love control,
+ And offer solace to thy deafen'd ear.
+ Still silent Byblis lies; and with her nails
+ Rends the green herbage; moistens all the grass
+ With rivulets of tears. And here, they say,
+ The Naiaed nymphs their bubbling art supply'd.
+ Ne'er drought to know: more to afford, their power
+ Sure could not. Straightway, as the pitchy drops
+ Flow from the fir's cleft bark; from solid earth
+ As stiff bitumen oozes; or as streams,
+ By cold congeal'd, thaw with the southern wind
+ And warming sun: Phoebean Byblis so
+ By her own tears exhausted, was transform'd,
+ A fount becoming; which still in that vale,
+ 'Neath a dark ilex springing, keeps her name.
+
+ Now had the rumor of this wond'rous change
+ Spread rapid through the hundred towns of Crete,
+ But Crete had lately seen a wond'rous change
+ In her own clime, in Iphis' alter'd form.
+ There in the Phestian land, near Gnossus' realm
+ Was Lygdus born: a man of unknown fame,
+ But a plebeian of unblemish'd worth:
+ Nor had he, more than noble stock, estate;
+ Yet unimpeach'd for honesty his life.
+ He thus the ears of his then pregnant spouse
+ Address'd, when near her bearing time approach'd:--
+ "Two things my wishes bound; first that thy pains
+ "May lightly press, next that a male thou bring'st:
+ "More burdensome are females; strength to them
+ "Nature denies. Then if by fate ordain'd
+ "To give a female birth, which I detest,
+ "Unwilling I command,--O piety!
+ "Excuse it,--let the babe to death be given."--
+ He said, and tears profuse the cheeks bedew
+ Of him who bade, and her who heard his words.
+ Still Telethusa to the latest hour,
+ With vain petitions strives her spouse to move,
+ That thus he should not straighten so his hopes.
+ Firm to his purpose Lygdus stood. And now
+ Scarce could the heavy weight her womb sustain;
+ When in the silent space of night, in sleep
+ Entranc'd; or Isis stood before her bed,
+ Or seem'd to stand; surrounded by the pomp
+ To her belonging. On her forehead shone
+ The lunar horns, and yellow wheat them bound
+ In golden radiance, with a regal crown.
+ With her Anubis, barker came; and came
+ Bubastis holy; Apis various-mark'd;
+ He who the voice suppresses, and directs
+ To silence with his finger; timbrels loud;
+ Osiris never sought enough; and snakes
+ Of foreign lands full of somniferous gall.
+ To her the goddess thus, as rais'd from sleep
+ She seem'd, and manifest each object stood:--
+ "O vot'ry, Telethusa! fling aside
+ "Thy weighty cares; thy husband's mandates cheat;
+ "Nor waver, when Lucina helps thy pains:
+ "Save it whate'er it be. A goddess I,
+ "Assisting, still give aid when rightly claim'd:
+ "Nor will it e'er thee grieve to have ador'd
+ "An ingrate goddess."--Thus as she advis'd,
+ She vanish'd from the bed. The Cretan dame
+ Rose from the couch o'erjoy'd; and raising high
+ To heaven her guiltless hands, pray'd that her dream
+ On truth was founded. Now her pains increas'd;
+ And now her burthen forc'd itself to air:
+ A daughter came, but to the sire unknown.
+ The mother bade them rear it as a boy,
+ And all a boy believ'd it; none the truth,
+ The nurse excepted, knew. Glad prayers the sire
+ Offers, and from its grandsire is it nam'd:
+ (Iphis, the grandsire's appellation.) Joy'd
+ The mother hears the name, which either sex
+ May claim; and none, in that at least, deceiv'd;
+ The lie lay hid beneath a pious fraud.
+ The robes were masculine, the face was such
+ As beauteous boy, or beauteous girl might own.
+
+ And now three annual suns the tenth had pass'd,
+ Thy father, Iphis, had to thee betroth'd
+ Iaenthe, yellow-hair'd; nymph most admir'd
+ 'Mongst all the Phestians, for her beauteous charms:
+ Telestes of Dictaea was her sire.
+ Equal in age, and equal in fair form;
+ The self-same masters taught the early arts,
+ Suiting their years. Their unsuspecting minds
+ Were both by love thus touch'd, in both was fix'd
+ An equal wound: but far unlike their hopes.
+ Iaenthe, for a spouse impatient looks,
+ With nuptial torches. Whom a man she thinks,
+ That spouse she hopes will be. Iphis too loves,
+ Despairing what she loves e'er to enjoy:
+ This still the more her love augments, and burns
+ A virgin for a virgin. Scarce from tears
+ Refraining;--"What,"--she cries,--"for me remains?
+ "What will the issue be? What cure for this
+ "New love, unknown to all, who prodigies
+ "Possess in this desire? If the high gods
+ "Me wish to spare, straight should they me destroy.
+ "Yet would they me destroy, they should have given
+ "A curse more natural; a more usual fate.
+ "Love for an heifer ne'er an heifer moves;
+ "Nor burns the mare for mares: rams follow ewes;
+ "The stag pursues his female; birds thus join:
+ "Nor animal creation female shews
+ "With love of female seiz'd. Would none were I!
+ "But lest all monstrous loves Crete might not shew;
+ "Sol's daughter chose a bull; even that was male
+ "With female. Yet, if candidly I speak,
+ "My passion wilder far than hers appears.
+ "She hop'd-for love pursu'd; by fraud enjoy'd;
+ "Beneath an heifer's form, th' adulterous spark
+ "Deceiving. Be from every part of earth
+ "Assembled here the skill: let Daedalus
+ "Hither, on waxen wings rebend his flight,
+ "What could all aid? Could all their learned art
+ "Change me from maid to youth? or alter thee
+ "Iaenthe? But why resolute, thy mind
+ "Not fix? Why Iphis thus thyself forget,
+ "These stupid wishes driving hence, and thoughts
+ "So unavailing? Lo! what thou wast born,
+ "(Save thou would'st also thine own breast deceive)
+ "What is allow'd behold, and as a maid
+ "May love, love only. Hope, first snatch'd by love,
+ "Love feeds on still. From thee all hope is borne.
+ "No guardians thee debar the dear embrace;
+ "Nor watchful husband's care; no sire severe;
+ "Nor she herself denies thy pressing prayers,
+ "Yet art thou still forbid, though all agree;
+ "To reap the bliss, though gods and men unite.
+ "Behold, too, all my votive prayers succeed:
+ "The favoring gods whate'er I pray'd have given.
+ "My sire and hers, and even herself comply,
+ "But nature far more strong denies, alone
+ "Me irking with refusal. Lo! arrives
+ "The wish'd-for hour; the matrimonial light
+ "Approaches; when Iaenthe will be mine;
+ "And yet far from me. In the midst of waves
+ "For thirst I perish. Nuptial Juno, why
+ "Com'st thou, or Hymen to these rites; where none
+ "Leads to the altar, but where both are led?"--
+
+ Here staid her speech; nor less the other nymph
+ Burn'd; and O, Hymen, pray'd thy quick approach.
+ But what she wishes Telethusa dreads,
+ And searches for delays; feign'd sickness oft
+ Prolongs the time; oft omens dire, and dreams.
+ Now all her artful fictions are consum'd;
+ And now the long protracted period came,
+ For nuptial rites; and, but one day remain'd.
+ She from her own and daughter's head unbinds
+ The fillets; and with locks dishevell'd, clasps
+ The altar, crying;--"Isis, thou who dwell'st
+ "In Paraetonium; Mareotis' fields;
+ "In Pharos; and the sev'nfold mouths of Nile.
+ "Help me I pray! relieve my trembling dread.
+ "Thee, goddess, once I saw; and with thee all
+ "Those images beheld; them all I know:
+ "Thy train, thy torches, and thy timbrels loud.
+ "And with a mindful soul thy words I mark'd.
+ "That she enjoys the light, that I myself,
+ "Not sinful suffer, to thy counsels, we,
+ "And admonitions owe. Pity us both;
+ "Grant us thy helping aid."--Tears follow'd words.
+ Straight seem'd the goddess' altars all to shake;
+ (And shake they did) trembled the temple's doors;
+ The lunar horns blaz'd bright; the timbrels rung.
+
+ Forth goes the mother, of the omen glad,
+ Yet not in faith secure. Iphis pursues
+ His mother with a step more large than wont:
+ The snow-like whiteness quits his face; his strength
+ Increases; fiercer frowns his forehead wears:
+ Shorten'd his uncomb'd locks: more vigor now
+ Than as a nymph he felt. For thou, a boy
+ Now art--so late a female! Bear thy gifts
+ Straight to the temple; and in faith rejoice.
+ Straight to the temple they their offerings bore,
+ And on them this short poem was inscrib'd.--
+ "Iphis a boy, the offerings pays, which maid,
+ "Iphis had vow'd."--The following sun illum'd
+ The wide world with his rays; when Venus came,
+ Juno, and Hymen, to the genial fires;
+ And the boy Iphis his Iaenthe clasp'd.
+
+
+
+
+*The Tenth Book.*
+
+
+ Marriage of Orpheus and Eurydice. Her death. Descent of Orpheus
+ to Hell, to recover her. Her second loss. His mournful music on
+ mount Haemus draws the trees, birds, and beasts around him. Change
+ of Cyparissus to a cypress-tree. Song of Orpheus. Ganymede.
+ Hyacinth changed to a flower. The Amanthians to oxen. The
+ Propaetides to flints. Pygmalion's statue to a woman. Myrrha's
+ incestuous love, and transformation to a tree. Venus' love for
+ Adonis. Story of Atalanta and Hippomenes. Adonis changed to an
+ anemone.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Tenth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Thence Hymen, in his saffron vesture clad,
+ Through the vast air departs; and seeks the land
+ Ciconian; by the voice of Orpheus call'd
+ Vainly. He came indeed, but with him brought
+ No wonted gratulations, no glad face,
+ Nor happy omen. And the torch he bore
+ Crackled in hissing smoke; nor gather'd flame
+ From whirling motion. Still more dire th' event
+ Prov'd, than the presage. As the new-made bride,
+ Attended by a train of Naiad nymphs,
+ Rov'd through the grass, a serpent's fangs her heel
+ Pierc'd, and she instant dy'd. Her, when long-mourn'd
+ In upper air, the Rhodopeian bard
+ Ventur'd to seek in shades, and dar'd descend
+ Through the Taenarian cave to Stygia's realms.
+ 'Mid shadowy crowds, and bury'd ghosts he goes,
+ To Proserpine, and him who rules the shades
+ With sway ungrateful. There he strikes the strings
+ Responsive to his words, and this his song.--
+ "Gods of this subterraneous world, where all
+ "Of mortal origin must come, permit
+ "That I the truth declare; no tedious tales
+ "Of falshood will I tell. Here came I not
+ "Your dusky Hell to view: nor to o'ercome
+ "The triple-throated Medusaean beast
+ "Snake-hair'd;--my wife alone my journey caus'd,
+ "Whose heel a trampled serpent venom'd stung:
+ "Snatch'd in her bloom of years. Much did I wish,
+ "My loss to bear; nor ought forbore to strive;
+ "But love o'ercame. Well do the upper gods
+ "That deity confess. In doubt I stand
+ "If here too he is known; but here I judge
+ "His power is felt: the ancient rape, if true,
+ "Proves love ev'n you first join'd. You I implore,
+ "By all those regions fill'd with dread; by this
+ "Chaos immense; your ample realm, all fill'd
+ "With silence; once again the thread renew
+ "Eurydice too hasty lost. To you
+ "We all belong; a little while we stay,
+ "Then soon or late to one repose we haste:
+ "All hither tend; this is our final home.
+ "You hold o'er human kind a lengthen'd reign.
+ "She too, when once her years mature are fill'd,
+ "To you again, must by just right belong.
+ "I then request her only as a loan:
+ "But should the fates this favor me refuse,
+ "Certain I'll ne'er return. Two deaths enjoy."--
+ The bloodless shadows wept as thus he sung,
+ And struck the strings in concord with his words.
+ Nor Tantalus at flying waters caught;
+ Nor roll'd Ixion's wheel: the liver gnaw'd
+ The birds not: rested on their empty urns
+ The Belides: and Sisyphus, thou sat'st
+ Upon thy stone. Nay fame declares, then first,
+ Vanquish'd by song, the furies felt their cheeks
+ Wetted with tears. Nor could the royal spouse,
+ Nor he who rules deep darkness, him withstand
+ Thus praying; and Eurydice is call'd.
+ Amid the recent dead she walk'd, and still
+ Halted with tardy steps from her late wound.
+ Her, when the bard of Thrace receiv'd, this law
+ Receiv'd he also: that his eyes reverse
+ He should not bend, till past Avernus' realms;
+ Else he'd the granted favor useless find.
+ In silence mute, through the steep path they climb
+ Dark, difficult, and thick with pitchy mist;
+ Nor far earth's surface wanted they to gain:
+ The lover here, in dread lest she should stray,
+ And anxious to behold, bent back his sight,
+ And instant back she sunk. As forth his arms
+ He stretch'd, to clasp expecting, and be clasp'd:
+ Unhappy! nought but fleeting air he held.
+ Twice dying, she can nought her spouse condemn;
+ For how blame him because too much he lov'd?
+ She gives her last farewel; which scarce his ears
+ Receive, then sinks again to shades below.
+
+ Orpheus, thus doubly of his spouse despoil'd,
+ All stunn'd appear'd: not less than he who saw
+ In wild affright the triple-headed dog,
+ Chain'd by the midmost: fear him never fled,
+ Till fled his former nature: sudden stone
+ On all his body seizing. Or than he,
+ Olenus, when the crime upon himself
+ He took, and guilty wish'd to seem; with thee
+ Hapless Lethaea, confident in charms.
+ Once breast to breast you join'd, now join as stones,
+ Which watery Ida bears. Beseeching vain,
+ And wishing once again the stream to pass,
+ The ferryman denies. Then on the bank
+ In squalid guise he sate, nor tasted food
+ For seven long days; his cares, and grieving soul,
+ And tears were all the sustenance he knew.
+ Cruel he call'd the gods of Erebus,
+ And to high Rhodope himself betook,
+ And lofty Haemus by the north-wind beat.
+
+ Thrice had the sun the year completed, each
+ By watery Pisces ended. Orpheus still
+ Fled every female's love: or his deep woe
+ Made him so cold; or faithful promise giv'n.
+ Yet crowds there were, who wish'd the bard's embrace:
+ And crowds with sorrow saw their love repuls'd.
+ A hill there rose, and on its summit spread
+ A wide extended plain, with herbage green:
+ Shade to the place was wanting; hither came
+ The heaven-born poet; seated him, and touch'd
+ His sounding strings, and straight a shade approach'd.
+ Nor wanted there Chaoenian trees; nor groves
+ Of poplars; nor the acorn's spacious leaves:
+ The linden soft, the beech, the virgin bay,
+ The brittle hazle, and spear-forming ash;
+ The knotless fir; ilex with fruit low-bow'd;
+ The genial plane; the maple various stain'd;
+ Stream-loving willow; and the watery lote;
+ Box of perpetual green; slight tamarisk;
+ Two-teinted myrtle; and the laurustine
+ With purple berries. Thou too, ivy, cam'st
+ Hither with flexile feet: together flock'd
+ Grape-bearing vines; and elms with vines entwin'd:
+ Wild ash, and pitch tree; and arbutus, bent
+ With loads of ruddy fruit; the pliant palm,
+ Meed of the conqueror; the pine close bound
+ About its boughs, but at its summit shagg'd:
+ Dear to the mother of celestial powers,
+ Since Atys Cybeleian was transform'd,
+ And in the trunk a rigid tree became.
+
+ In form pyramidal, amid the crowd,
+ The cypress came; now tree, but once a boy;
+ Dear to the god who rules the lyre's fine chords,
+ And rules the bowstring. Once was known a stag
+ Sacred to nymphs that own Carthaea's fields,
+ Who bore upon his head a lofty shade
+ From his wide-spreading horns; his horns bright shone
+ With gold; his collar, with bright gems bedeck'd,
+ Fell o'er his shoulders from his round neck hung;
+ A silver boss, by slender reins control'd
+ Mov'd o'er his brow; a brazen pair the same,
+ Shone o'er his temples hanging from his ears:
+ Devoid of fear, his nature's timid dread
+ Relinquish'd, oft the houses would he seek;
+ And oft would gently fondling stoop his neck,
+ Heedless who strok'd him. Cyparissus, thou
+ Beyond all others priz'd the sacred beast:
+ Thou, fairest far amongst the Caean youths.
+ Thou to fresh pastures led'st the stag; to streams
+ Of cooling fountains: oft his horns entwin'd
+ With variegated garlands. Horseman-like
+ Now on his back thou pressest; and now here,
+ Now there, thou rul'st his soft jaws with the reins
+ Of purple tinge. 'Twas once in mid-day heat,
+ When burnt the bent claws of the sea-shore crab,
+ In Sol's fierce vapor; on the grassy earth
+ The weary stag repos'd his limbs, and drew
+ Cool breezes from the trees umbrageous shades.
+ Here the boy Cyparissus careless flung
+ His painted dart, and fix'd it in his side.
+ Who, when he from the cruel wound beheld
+ Him dying, instant bent his mind to die.
+ What consolation did not Phoebus speak?
+ Urging the loss far slighter grief deserv'd:
+ Yet mourn'd he still, and from the gods supreme
+ Begg'd this last gift, to latest times to mourn.
+ His blood in constant tears exhausted, now
+ His limbs a green hue take; his locks which late
+ Hung o'er his snowy forehead, rough become
+ In frightful bushiness; and hardening quick,
+ Shoot up to heaven in form a slender spire.
+ The mourning god, in grief exclaim'd--"By me
+ "Bemoan'd, thou shalt with others always grieve;
+ "And henceforth mourners shalt thou still attend."--
+ Thus did the bard a wood collect around;
+ And in the midst he sate of thronging beasts,
+ And crowding birds. The chords he amply try'd
+ With his impulsive thumb, and vary'd much
+ In sound, he found their notes concordant still;
+ Then to this song rais'd his melodious voice.--
+
+ "O parent muse! from Jove derive my song:
+ "All yield to Jove's dominion. Oft my verse
+ "Before the mightiness of Jove has sung.
+ "I sung the giants, in a strain sublime,
+ "And vengeful thunders, o'er Phlegraea's plain
+ "Scatter'd; a tender theme now claims my lyre:
+ "I sing of youths by deities belov'd;
+ "And nymphs who with forbidden wishes burn'd,
+ "And met the doom their sensual lusts deserv'd.
+ "The king of gods made Phrygian Ganymede
+ "His favorite, but some other form possess'd.
+ "Jove must in shape be something else than Jove.
+ "He deems no form becomes him, save the bird
+ "That bears his thunder. Instant all is done;
+ "The Phrygian borne away: the air he beats
+ "With his feign'd wing. And now this youth the cup
+ "Of nectar hands, in Juno's spite, to Jove.
+
+ "Son of Amycla, thee had Phoebus plac'd
+ "Also the skies amidst, had fate allow'd
+ "For such position place; yet still thou hold'st
+ "Eternal, what fate grants: oft as the spring
+ "Winter repulses, and the ram succeeds
+ "The watery fishes, thou spring'st forth in flower
+ "'Mid the green sward. Beyond all else my sire
+ "Thee lov'd, and Delphos, plac'd in midmost earth,
+ "Wanted its ruling power, whilst now the god
+ "Eurotas lov'd, and Sparta un-intrench'd.
+ "Nor lyre, nor darts attention claim'd as wont;
+ "Of dignity unmindful, he not spurns
+ "To bear the nets; to curb the hounds; to climb
+ "With the full train the steepest mountain's ridge:
+ "And every toil augments his pleasure more.
+ "Now had the sun the midmost point near gain'd
+ "'Twixt flying night, and night approaching, each
+ "Distant in equal space; when from their limbs
+ "They flung their robes; with the fat olive's juice
+ "Their bodies shone; they enter'd in the lists
+ "Of the broad disk, which Phoebus first well pois'd,
+ "Then flung through lofty air; opposing clouds
+ "Flying it cleft; at length on solid earth
+ "It pitch'd, displaying skill with strength combin'd.
+ "Instant the rash Taenarian boy, impell'd
+ "By love of sport, sprung on to snatch the orb,
+ "But the hard ground repulsive in thy face,
+ "O, Hyacinth! it flung. Pale as the boy
+ "The god appear'd: he rais'd his fainting limbs,
+ "And in his arms now cherishes, now wipes
+ "The fatal wound, now stays his fleeting breath,
+ "With herbs apply'd; but all his arts are vain;
+ "Incurable the hurt. Just so, when broke,
+ "The violet, poppy, or the lily hang,
+ "Whose dark stems in a water'd garden spring;
+ "Flaccid they instant droop; the weighty head
+ "No longer upright rais'd, but bent to earth.
+ "So bent his dying face; his neck, bereft
+ "Of vigor, heavy on his shoulder laid.
+ "Phoebus exclaim'd;--Fall'st thou, OEbalian youth,
+ "Depriv'd of life in prime? and must I see
+ "Thy death my fault? thou art my grief, my crime;
+ "My hand the charge of thy destruction bears:
+ "I am the cause of thy untimely fate!
+ "But what my crime? unless with him to sport;
+ "Unless a fault it were too much to love.
+ "Would I could life for thee, or with thee quit;
+ "But fatal laws restrain me: yet shalt thou
+ "Be with me still; dwell ever on my lips;
+ "My hand shall sound thee on the lyre I touch;
+ "My songs of thee shall tell: a new-found flower
+ "Shall bear the letters which my griefs resound:
+ "And time shall come, when a most valiant chief
+ "Shall join him to thy flower; in the same leaf
+ "His name too shall be read.--As words like these
+ "The truth-predicting lips of Phoebus spoke,
+ "Behold! the blood which flow'd along the ground,
+ "And all the herbage ting'd, is blood no more;
+ "But springs a flower than Tyrian red more bright,
+ "A form assuming such as lilies wear:
+ "Like it, save purple this, that silvery white.
+ "Nor yet content was Phoebus; for from him
+ "The honor was deriv'd. Upon its leaves
+ "He trac'd his groans: _ai, ai_, on every flower
+ "In mournful characters is fair inscrib'd.
+ "Nor blush the Spartans, Hyacinth to own:
+ "His honors still the present age attend;
+ "And annual are the Hyacinthian feasts,
+ "In pomp surpassing aught of ancient days.
+
+ "Should you by chance of Amathus enquire,
+ "If williang the Propoetides it bore,
+ "Denying nods would equally disclaim
+ "Them, and the race whose foreheads once were rough
+ "With double horns; Cerastae, hence their name.
+ "Jove's hospitable altar at their gates
+ "Of mournful wickedness was rear'd: who saw
+ "This stain'd with gore, if stranger, might conceive
+ "That sucking calves, or two-year's sheep there bled.
+ "There bled the guest! Mild Venus griev'd
+ "At these most impious rites, at first prepar'd
+ "To quit her cities, and her Cyprian fields:--
+ "But how,--she said,--can my beloved clime?
+ "How can my towns have given offence? what fault
+ "Abides in them? Rather the impious race,
+ "Shall vengeance feel in exile, or in death;
+ "Save death and exile medium may allow:
+ "How may that be, unless their shape is chang'd?--
+ "Then while she doubts what shape they shall assume,
+ "Their horns attract her eyes; struck by the hint,
+ "Their mighty horns she leaves them, and transforms
+ "To savage oxen all their lusty limbs.
+
+ "Still dar'd th' obscene Propoetides deny
+ "Venus a goddess' power; for which, fame says
+ "They first, so forc'd the deity's revenge,
+ "Their bodies prostituted, and their charms.
+ "As shame them left, the blood which ting'd their cheeks
+ "Harden'd, and soon they rigid stone became.
+
+ "These saw Pygmalion, and the age beheld
+ "With crimes o'er-run; the shameful vice abhorr'd
+ "Which lavish nature gave their female souls.
+ "Single, and spouseless liv'd he; long a mate
+ "Press'd not his couch. Meantime the ivory white
+ "With happy skill, and wond'rous art he carv'd;
+ "And form'd a beauteous figure; never maid
+ "So perfect yet was born, and his own work
+ "With love inspir'd him. Of a nymph her face
+ "Was such, you must believe the form to live,
+ "And move, if not by bashfulness restrain'd.
+ "Thus art his art conceal'd. Pygmalion stares
+ "In admiration; and his breast draws flames
+ "From the feign'd body: oft his hands his work
+ "Approach, if ivory or if flesh to judge;
+ "Nor ivory then will he confess the form.
+ "Kisses he gives, and thinks each kiss return'd:
+ "He speaks, he grasps her; where he grasps, he thinks
+ "His hands impression leave; and fears to see
+ "On the prest limbs some marks of livid blue.
+ "Now blandish'd words he uses; now he bears
+ "Those gifts so grateful to a girlish mind;
+ "Pearls, and smooth-polish'd gems, and smallest birds,
+ "With variegated flowers, and lilies fair,
+ "And painted figures, and the Heliads' tears,
+ "Dropt from the weeping tree: with garments gay
+ "Her limbs too he adorns, and jewels gives
+ "To deck her fingers; while a necklace large
+ "Hangs round her neck: her ears light pearls suspend;
+ "And a bright zone is circled round her waist.
+ "All well became her, yet most beauteous far
+ "She unattir'd appear'd. Her on a couch,
+ "Ting'd with the shell Sidonian, then he laid,
+ "And call'd her partner of his bed; and plac'd
+ "Her head reclin'd, as if with sense endu'd,
+ "On the soft pillow. Now the feast approach'd
+ "Of Venus, through all Cyprus' isle so fam'd,
+ "And snowy-chested heifers, whose bent horns
+ "With gold were gay, receiv'd the deadly blow;
+ "And incense burnt in clouds. Pygmalion stood
+ "Before the altar, with his offer'd gifts:
+ "Timid he spoke,--O ye all-potent gods!
+ "Give me a spouse just like my ivory nymph,--
+ "Give me my ivory nymph--he blush'd to say.
+ "Bright Venus then, as present at her feast,
+ "Perceiv'd the inmost wishes of his soul;
+ "And gave the omen of a friendly power.
+ "Thrice blaz'd the fire, and thrice the flame leap'd high.
+
+ "Returning, he the darling statue seeks
+ "Of his fair nymph; extends him on the couch;
+ "Kisses, and thinks he feels her lips grow warm:
+ "Applies his lips again, and with his hand
+ "Presses her bosom: prest the ivory yields,
+ "Softening beneath his fingers; nor remains
+ "Its rigid harshness. So Hymettus' wax
+ "Yields to the heat, when tempering thumbs it mould
+ "In various forms; and fit for future use.
+ "Astonish'd now he joys with trembling soul,
+ "But fears deception; then he loves again,
+ "And with his hands again his wishes proves:
+ "'Twas flesh, the prest pulse leap'd beneath his thumb.
+ "Then did the Cyprian youth, in words most full
+ "Of gratitude and love, to Venus pray.
+ "Then to her living lips his lips he join'd,
+ "And then the damsel felt his warm salute:
+ "Blushing she felt it, and her timid eyes
+ "Op'd to the light, and with the light beheld
+ "Her lover. Venus bless'd the match she made;
+ "And when nine times the moon's full orb was seen
+ "Sharpen'd to horns, the damsel Paphos bore;
+ "Whose appellation oft the isle receives.
+
+ "She Cinyras too bore; if childless he
+ "A place amongst the happiest might he claim.
+ "A direful song I sing! be distant far
+ "Ye daughters; distant far, O, parents be!
+ "Or if of pleasure to your minds my verse
+ "Aught gives, in this at least my truth suspect.
+ "Believe the deed not: if you must believe,
+ "Mark well the punishment the crime deserv'd.
+ "Since nature could such heinous deeds permit;
+ "The Thracian realms, my land, I 'gratulate;
+ "And joy this clime at such a distance lies,
+ "From that which could such monstrous acts produce.
+ "Let Araby be in amomum rich;
+ "And cinnamon, and zedoary produce;
+ "Incense which through the wood exudes; and flowers
+ "Of vary'd teints,--while Myrrha too it bears:
+ "Too great the price which this new tree procur'd.
+ "Cupid denies, O Myrrha! that his darts
+ "Thee wounded; vindicating from that crime
+ "His weapons. Thee, with Stygian torch most fierce,
+ "And viperous venom furies did enflame.
+ "Wicked to hate thy parent sure had been,
+ "But thus to love is worse than bitterest hate.
+ "The choicest nobles come from every part
+ "To gain thee; youths from all the East arrive,
+ "To struggle for thy hand. Chuse, Myrrha, chuse
+ "One from the crowd: one only in the world
+ "Whom chuse thou may'st not. She herself perceiv'd,
+ "And curb'd the baneful passion in her mind;
+ "Communing thus:--Ah! whither rove my thoughts?
+ "What meditate I? O, ye gods! I pray,
+ "O piety, O parents' sacred laws,
+ "Forbid this wicked act; oppose a deed
+ "So full of horrid guilt,--if guilt it be!
+ "But pious nature ne'er such love condemns.
+ "All animals in undistinguish'd form
+ "Cohabit: shame the heifer never feels
+ "Join'd with her sire; the steed his daughter takes
+ "As partner; with the female flock, who ow'd
+ "To him their being, couples oft the goat;
+ "And birds bring forth to birds who them produc'd.
+ "Blest those who thus enjoy; but human race
+ "Perversest laws invents: vexatious rules
+ "Forbid what nature grants. Yet am I told,
+ "Nations exist, where mother joins with son,
+ "And daughter with her sire; their pious love
+ "Increas'd more strongly by the double bond.
+ "Ah, me! unhappy, in such glorious climes
+ "Begotten not; I suffer but from place.
+ "But why on these ideas dwell? hence far
+ "Forbidden hopes. Well he deserves thy love,
+ "But as a father love him. Wert thou not
+ "Of mighty Cinyras the daughter, then
+ "Thou might'st the couch of Cinyras ascend.
+ "Now mine he is so much, he is not mine;
+ "Our very nearness is my greatest curse:
+ "More close, a perfect stranger had I been.
+ "Far hence I would depart; my country leave,
+ "This mischief flying; but curs'd love restrains.
+ "For, present, Cinyras I may behold;
+ "Touch, speak, my kisses to his face apply,
+ "If nought he'll grant beyond. How! impious maid,
+ "Dar'st thou hope ought beyond? perceiv'st thou not
+ "What laws, what names thou would'st confound? would'st thou
+ "The mother's rival be?--thy father's whore?
+ "Thy offspring's sister would'st thou then be call'd?
+ "Thy brother's parent? Fear'st thou not the three,
+ "Whose locks with sable serpents horrid curl?
+ "Who conscious bosoms pierce with searching eyes,
+ "And hurl their furious torches in the face?
+ "While yet thy body can resist, no more
+ "Cherish the heinous guilt thus in thy mind;
+ "Nor violate great Nature's sacred law
+ "With lust forbidden. Grant I should consent,
+ "The king would me deny: too pious he,
+ "Too dear to him the law. O, that in him
+ "Such furious passion rag'd as burns in me!--
+
+ "She ended; Cinyras, the worthy crowd
+ "Of suitors held in doubt; herself he ask'd,
+ "As name by name he counted, which as spouse
+ "She most would wish. Silent at first she stood,
+ "Then burning gaz'd on his paternal face,
+ "As the warm tears gush'd in her shining eyes.
+ "These, Cinyras effects of virgin fear
+ "Believing, chid her and forbade to weep.
+ "Drying her cheeks, he on them press'd a kiss;
+ "With too much pleasure she the kiss receiv'd:
+ "And when consulted what the spouse must be
+ "She would prefer, she answer'd,--one like you.--
+ "He witless of her meaning, prais'd her words,
+ "And said,--be such thy pious duty still--
+ "The sound of piety the virgin's eyes,
+ "With sense of guilt, cast conscious to the ground.
+
+ "'Twas now deep night when sleep sooth'd all the cares
+ "Of mortal breasts. But Myrrha wakeful laid
+ "Consum'd with raging fires; and rolling deep
+ "Her frantic wishes in her wandering mind.
+ "Despairing now, and now resolv'd to try;
+ "Now shame o'ercomes her, and anon desire:
+ "And undetermin'd how to act she rests.
+ "A mighty tree thus, wounded by the axe,
+ "Ere yet it feels the final blow, in doubt
+ "Seems where to fall; they fear on every side:
+ "Thus did her stagger'd mind from vary'd force
+ "Waver now here, now there; press'd hard by each,
+ "No ease for love, no rest but death appears.
+ "Death pleas'd. She rose, and round her throat prepar'd
+ "The cord to fasten; from the topmost beam
+ "She ty'd her girdle, and--farewel!--exclaim'd--
+ "Dear Cinyras! guess whence my fatal end.--
+ "Then drew the noose around her pallid neck.
+ "'Tis said, th' imperfect murmuring of her words,
+ "Reach'd to the faithful nurse's ears, who laid
+ "Before the threshold of her foster-child.
+ "The matron rose, threw wide the door, and saw
+ "Prepar'd the instrument of death. At once
+ "She scream'd aloud, her bosom tore, deep blows
+ "Gave her own limbs, and from the rescu'd neck
+ "Tore the tight noose. Then had she time to weep,
+ "Then to embrace, then to inquire the cause
+ "Of the dread cord. But dumb the virgin sate
+ "And motionless, her eyes to earth were fix'd;
+ "Griev'd that so check'd her efforts were for death.
+ "More the nurse presses, bares her silver'd hairs
+ "And wither'd bosom; by the cradle begs,
+ "And the first food she tasted, to confess
+ "To her the cause of sorrow. Myrrha sighs,
+ "But turns her eyes aside as thus she begs.
+ "Determin'd still to know, the nurse persists
+ "And not content her secrecy alone
+ "To promise, says--yet tell me, and my aid
+ "Allow me to afford thee. Not yet slow,
+ "Though aged. Is it love? with charms and plants
+ "I know thy love to cure. Have envious eyes
+ "Thee harm'd? with magic rites their charm I'll spoil.
+ "Are the gods angry? with appeasing rites
+ "Their anger we will soothe. What ill beside
+ "Can be conjectur'd? Lo! thy house secure,
+ "And safe thy fortune; both in prosperous train.
+ "Yet lives thy mother, and thy father lives.--
+ "Her father's name when Myrrha heard she drew
+ "Deep from her breast a mournful sigh; nor yet
+ "The nurse suspected guilt was in her soul:
+ "But saw that love disturb'd her. In her aim
+ "Inflexible; again she urg'd to know
+ "The grief whate'er it prov'd; and lull'd her head
+ "Upon her aged lap, and clasp'd her form
+ "In her own feeble arms, as thus she spoke;--
+ "I see thou lovest; banish far thy fear,
+ "My diligence in this shall aid thee; nay
+ "Not e'en thy father shall the secret know.--
+ "Madly she bounded from the lap, and cry'd,
+ "While press'd the couch her face,--I beg thee go!
+ "And spare my grievous shame.--More pressing still--
+ "Or go--she said--or ask not why I mourn:
+ "What thou so seek'st to know is shameful guilt.--
+ "With horror struck, the ancient dame holds forth
+ "Her hands, which equal shook with fear and age;
+ "Then suppliant at her foster-daughter's feet
+ "Fell. Now she coaxes; now she threatens loud;
+ "If not made privy, threatens to declare
+ "The cord's adventure, and half-finish'd death:
+ "And offers aid once more her love to gain.
+ "She rais'd her head, and fill'd her nurse's breast
+ "With sudden gushing tears. And oft she strove
+ "All to confess; as oft her tongue was mute;
+ "And in her garments hid her blushing face.--
+ "Then,--happy mother in thy spouse!--she said;
+ "No more, but groan'd. Through her cold limbs and bones,
+ "The ancient nurse a shivering tremor felt,
+ "And her white hairs all o'er her head, erect
+ "Like bristles stood; for all the truth she saw.
+ "Much did she urge the direful flame to drive
+ "Far from her soul, if that could be. The maid
+ "Knows all is just she argues, yet is fix'd
+ "For death, unless her lover is obtain'd.
+ "Then she;--O live, enjoy thy--silent there,
+ "Enjoy thy parent--she not dar'd to say:
+ "Yet by a sacred oath her promise bound.
+
+ "Now Ceres' annual feast, the pious dames
+ "All solemniz'd: in snowy robes enwrapt,
+ "They offer'd wheaten wreaths, and primal fruits.
+ "The rites of Venus, and the touch of man,
+ "For thrice three nights forbidden things they held.
+ "The monarch's spouse Cenchreis, 'mid the crowd
+ "Forth went to celebrate the secret feast:
+ "And while the couch its legal partner lack'd,
+ "The ill-officious nurse the king espy'd
+ "Oppress'd with wine, and told the tale of love,
+ "Beneath a fictious name, and prais'd her charms.
+ "The virgin's years he asks.--Equal her age
+ "To Myrrha's--she replies.--Desir'd to bring
+ "The damsel, she returns:--Rejoice!--she cries,
+ "Rejoice! our point is gain'd.--The hapless nymph
+ "Felt not a general joy; presaging pangs
+ "Shot through her bosom; still she joy'd: her mind
+ "Such discord tore. Now was the silent hour;
+ "Booetes 'mid the Trioenes had bent
+ "His wain with sloping pole; when Myrrha came
+ "To her flagitious crime. Bright Luna fled
+ "The skies; black clouds the lurking stars o'erspread;
+ "The night saw not its fires. Thou, Icarus,
+ "Thy face first hidst; and thou, Erigone
+ "Hallow'd for thy parental love so pure.
+ "Thrice was she warn'd by stumbling feet, and thrice
+ "The owl funereal utter'd her death-note.
+ "Yet on she went; darkness and sable night
+ "Her shame diminish'd. Fast her left hand grasps
+ "Her nurse, the other waves t'explore the way.
+ "The threshold of the nuptial chamber now
+ "She touches; now she gently opes the door;
+ "Now enters. Then her trembling knees loose shook
+ "Beneath her bending hams; her color fled:
+ "Her blood flow'd back; and all her wishes sunk.
+ "The nearer was her crime approach'd, the more
+ "With horror she beheld it, and sore mourn'd
+ "Her daring; anxious to return unknown.
+ "The hoary dame, her, lingering thus, dragg'd on,
+ "And when presented at the lofty couch,
+ "Said--Cinyras receive her, she's thine own!--
+ "And the devoted bodies gave to join.
+ "The sire his proper bowels, on the bed
+ "Obscene, receiv'd; her virgin terrors calm'd,
+ "And sooth'd her trembling. Haply too, he said--
+ "My daughter,--from her age; and haply she--
+ "My sire,--lest names were wanting to their crime.
+ "Fill'd with her father from the bed she rose,
+ "Bearing in her dire womb the impious fruit;
+ "Carrying her crime conceiv'd. Th' ensuing night
+ "Her incest she repeats, nor ends she here.
+ "But Cinyras eager at length to know,
+ "After such frequent converse, who him lov'd;
+ "At once his daughter and his sin beheld,
+ "By lamps brought sudden. Grief repress'd all words;
+ "But from the sheath he snatch'd his glittering sword.
+ "Quick Myrrha fled; darkness and favoring night
+ "Sav'd her from death. O'er wide-spread fields she roam'd;
+ "Through Araby palm-bearing, and the lands
+ "Panchaea holds. Nine times returning light
+ "Had fill'd the horns of Luna, still she stray'd:
+ "Then weary rested in Sabaea's fields;
+ "While scarce she bore the burden of her womb.
+ "Then what to ask uncertain, 'twixt the fear
+ "Of death and weariness of hated life;
+ "In words like these she utter'd forth her prayers,--
+ "Ye powers, if those who guilt confess are heard,
+ "A punishment exemplar I deserve;
+ "I shrink not from it. Yet the living race
+ "Lest I contaminate, if left to live;
+ "Or lest I mix prophane with shades below,
+ "Drive me from either realm; from life and death
+ "Debar me, into some new shape transform'd.--
+ "The penitent some god propitious heard;
+ "Her final prayer at least success obtain'd:
+ "For as she spoke rose round her legs the earth;
+ "The lofty tree's foundation, crooked roots
+ "Shot from her spreading toes; hard wood her bones
+ "Became; the marrow in the midst remain'd
+ "As pith; as sappy juice still flow'd her blood:
+ "Her arms large boughs were spread; her fingers chang'd
+ "To slender twigs; rough bark her skin became.
+ "The growing tree press'd hard the gravid womb;
+ "Invested next her breast, and o'er her neck
+ "Threaten'd to spread. Impatient of delay
+ "She shrunk below to meet th' approaching wood,
+ "And hid beneath the rising bark her face.
+ "Human sensation with her change of shape
+ "She lost, yet still she weeps; and from the tree
+ "Warm drops yet fall, and much the tears are priz'd.
+ "The myrrh which oozes from the bark still holds
+ "Its mistress' name, well known in every age.
+
+ "Meantime the misbegotten infant grew
+ "Within the trunk, and press'd to find a way
+ "To push to light, and leave the parent womb.
+ "Within the tree the gravid womb swell'd large,
+ "Stretch'd was the mother with the load, but mute
+ "Were all her woes; nor in travailing voice
+ "Lucina could she call. Yet hard to strain
+ "She seem'd; thick groans oft gave the bending bole,
+ "And tears flow'd copious. Mild Lucina came,
+ "And stood before the groaning boughs, and gave
+ "Assisting help, and spoke the spellful words.
+ "Cleft is the tree, and through the fissur'd bark
+ "A living burthen comes: the infant cries,
+ "Who on soft grass plac'd. The Naiad nymphs
+ "Him bathe in tears maternal: such a face
+ "Ev'n Envy could not blame. As painters form
+ "The naked Cupid's beauty, such had he;
+ "And that their dress no help to guess may give,
+ "This the light quiver take, or that resign.
+ "Quick passing time unheeded glides along
+ "Deceiving: nought than years more quickly flies.
+ "The child, of sister and of grandsire born,
+ "Late in the tree confin'd, late thence reliev'd;
+ "Just seen most beauteous of the infant tribe,
+ "Now youth, now man appears, more beauteous still:
+ "Now Venus charm'd, his mother's pangs aveng'd.
+
+ "As kisses sweet the quiver-bearing boy
+ "Press'd on his mother's lips, he witless raz'd
+ "Slightly her bosom, with a dart that stood
+ "Protruding. Venus, wounded, angry push'd
+ "Her son far from her; light the wound appear'd;
+ "At first even her deceiving. With the blaze
+ "Of manly beauty caught, she now contemns
+ "The Cythereian shores; nor Paphos seeks,
+ "Girt by profoundest seas; Cnidos, so fam'd
+ "For fish; nor Amathus with metals rich.
+ "Heaven too, she quits, to heaven she now prefers
+ "Adonis: him she follows, him attends;
+ "Whose sole employ was loitering in the shade,
+ "In anxious study to increase her charms.
+ "Bare to the knee, her robe, like Dian's train
+ "High-girt, o'er hills, through woods, and brambly rocks
+ "She roves: exhorts the dogs, and drives such game
+ "As threaten not with danger; fearful hares,
+ "High-antler'd stags, and rapid-flying deer.
+ "Fierce boars she shuns, and shuns the robber-wolf,
+ "Strong-talon'd bears, and lions slaughter-gorg'd.
+
+ "Thou too, Adonis, admonition heardst
+ "These to avoid, if admonition ought
+ "With thee could weigh:--Be brave,--the goddess said--
+ "To those who fly thee; courage 'gainst the bold
+ "To danger drags. Dear youth, thy heart is brave;
+ "Indulge not to my hazard, nor provoke
+ "Fierce beasts by nature arm'd, nor seek for fame.
+ "Nor youth nor beauty, such as Venus move,
+ "Will move the lion, or the bristly boar:
+ "Their eyes and breasts untouch'd by brightest charms.
+ "Thunder and lightning in his bended tusks
+ "The fierce boar carries; rapid is the force
+ "The tawny lion, (hated race!) exerts:
+ "My cause of hatred when to thee disclos'd,
+ "Will raise thy wonder at the monstrous crime,
+ "In days of yore committed. Now hard toil
+ "Unwonted tires me. Lo! the poplar's shade
+ "So opportune invites; and the green turf
+ "A couch presents. Upon the ground with thee
+ "I'll rest:--she spoke, and as she stretch'd along,
+ "She press'd the grass, and press'd the lovely youth:
+ "Smiling, her head upon his breast reclin'd,
+ "'Midst intermingling kisses, thus she spoke.--
+
+ "Perhaps thou'st heard of that renowned maid,
+ "Whose fleetness in the race the swiftest man's
+ "Surpass'd. Not fabulous the tale you heard:
+ "She vanquish'd all. And hard it was to say,
+ "If praise for swiftness, or for beauteous form,
+ "She most deserv'd. To her, who once enquir'd
+ "Of marriage, fate-predicting Phoebus said--
+ "A spouse would, Atalanta, be thy bane;
+ "Avoid an husband's couch. Yet wilt thou not
+ "An husband's couch avoid; but lose thyself,
+ "Thyself yet living.--Terror-struck to hear
+ "The sentence of the god, maiden she lives
+ "Amid the thickest woods; driving severe
+ "The throngs of pressing suitors from her far,
+ "By hard conditions.--Ne'er can I be gain'd--
+ "She said--till vanquish'd in the race. With me
+ "Your swiftness try: the conqueror in the strife,
+ "Shall gain me spouse, and gain a genial couch;
+ "But death must him who lags behind reward.
+ "Such be the laws of trial.--Pitiless
+ "The law appear'd; but (such is beauty's power)
+ "Crowds of rash lovers to the law agreed.
+ "There sat Hippomenes to view the race
+ "Unequal; and exclaim'd,--are there so mad,
+ "As seek a wife through peril so immense?--
+ "And the blind love of all the youths condemn'd.
+ "But when her face he saw, and saw her limbs
+ "Bar'd for the contest, (limbs like mine, or thine,
+ "Were thine of female mould,) amaz'd he look'd
+ "With uprais'd hands, and cry'd;--forgive my fault,
+ "Ye whom but now I blam'd; the great reward
+ "For which you labor, then to me unknown!--
+ "Thus praising, fire he feels, and hopes no youth
+ "More swift will run, and envious fears their speed--
+ "But why the fortune of this contest leave,
+ "Untry'd--he said,--myself? Heaven helps the bold.--
+ "While musing thus Hippomenes remarks
+ "The virgin's flying pace. Though not less swift
+ "Th' Aoenian youth beheld her, than the dart
+ "Shot from the Scythian bow; her beauty more
+ "Ravish'd his eyes, and speed her charms increas'd.
+ "Th' opposing breeze, which met her rapid feet,
+ "Blew back the ribbons which her sandals bound;
+ "Her tresses floated down her ivory back;
+ "And loosely flow'd her garment o'er her knees,
+ "With painted border gay: a purple bloom
+ "With virgin whiteness mixt, her body shew'd;
+ "As when the snow-white hall a deepen'd tinge
+ "From purple curtains shews. While this the guest
+ "Intently notes, the utmost goal is pass'd:
+ "Victorious Atalanta with the wreath
+ "Is crown'd: the vanquish'd sigh, and meet the doom
+ "Agreed. He, by the youths' untimely fate
+ "Deterr'd not, forward stood, and on the nymph
+ "Fix'd full his eyes, and said;--Why seek you thus
+ "An easy conquest, vanquishing the weak?
+ "With me contend. So potent am I born
+ "You need not blush to such high rank to yield.
+ "Megareus was my sire, Onchestius his,
+ "Grandson to Neptune; thus the fourth I boast
+ "From Ocean's sovereign. Nor beneath my race
+ "Stoops aught my valor; should success me crown,
+ "A lofty and an everlasting fame,
+ "Hippomenes your conqueror, would you gain.--
+ "As thus he spoke, with softening eyes the maid
+ "Beheld him, doubtful which 'twere best to wish,
+ "To vanquish or be vanquish'd. While she thus
+ "Utter'd her thoughts--What god, an envious foe
+ "To beauty would destroy him: urg'd to seek
+ "My bed, by risking thus his own dear life?
+ "I cannot sure so great a prize be thought!
+ "His beauty melts me not; though yet I own
+ "Such beauty well might melt. But such a youth
+ "He seems, he moves me not but from his years.
+ "What courage in him reigns! his soul unaw'd
+ "By death. He springs the fourth from Ocean's king!
+ "Then how he loves! and prizes so my hand,
+ "That should hard fortune keep me from his arms,
+ "He'd perish. Stranger, while thou may'st, depart;
+ "Avoid the bloody nuptials. Marriage, I
+ "Too cruel make. No maid would thee refuse;
+ "And soon may'st thou a wiser nymph select.
+ "But why for him this care? from me who see
+ "So many die, whom he too has beheld?
+ "Then let him perish; since the numerous train
+ "Of slaughter'd lovers warns him not: he spurns
+ "An hated life. How! should he then be slain
+ "Because with me to live he wishes? Death
+ "Inglorious must he gain, reward of love?
+ "Hatred would such a conquest still attend.
+ "Still is not mine the fault. Do thou desist;
+ "Or if thy madness holds, O, that thy feet
+ "More swift may be! See in his youthful face
+ "What virgin beauties! Ah! Hippomenes,
+ "Would Atalanta thou had'st never seen.
+ "Well worthy thou of life. Were I more blest;
+ "Had rugged fate not me a spouse forbade,
+ "Thou, sole art he, by whom to Hymen's couch
+ "With joy I would be led.--Thus spoke the nymph,
+ "In fond simplicity, first touch'd by love,
+ "Unknowing what she felt: ardent she lov'd,
+ "Yet knew the passion not which rul'd her soul.
+
+ "Now loud the people, and the king demand,
+ "The wonted race. To me with anxious words
+ "Hippomenes, great Neptune's offspring pray'd--
+ "O Cytherea! I adjure thee, aid
+ "My bold attempt; from thee those flames I felt,
+ "Grant them thy succour.--Gales auspicious waft
+ "To me the tender prayers, my soul is mov'd:
+ "Nor long the aid so needful I delay.
+ "A tract there lies in Cyprus' richest lands,
+ "Nam'd Tamasene by those who dwell around,
+ "This ancient times made sacred unto me:
+ "And with this gift my temples were endow'd.
+ "'Midst of the field appears a shining tree;
+ "Yellow its leaves, its crackling branches gold.
+ "By chance there straying, from the boughs I pluck'd
+ "Three golden apples, bore them in my hand,
+ "And seen by none, except the favor'd youth,
+ "Approach'd Hippomenes, and taught their use.
+ "The trumpets gave the sign, each ready sprung--
+ "Shot from the barrier, and with rapid feet
+ "Skimm'd lightly o'er the sand. O'er the wide main
+ "With feet unwetted, they might seem to fly;
+ "Or sweep th' unbending ears of hoary grain.
+ "Loud shouts encouraging, and cheering words,
+ "On every side a stimulus afford,
+ "To urge the youth's exertions.--Now,--they cry,--
+ "Now, now, Hippomenes, the time to press!
+ "On, on! exert thy vigor--flag not now,--
+ "The race is thine.--The grateful sounds both heard,
+ "Megareus' son, and Schoeneus' daughter; hard
+ "Which joy'd the most to judge. How oft her pace
+ "She slacken'd, when with ease she might have pass'd,
+ "And ceas'd unwilling on his face to gaze.
+ "Tir'd now, parch'd breathings from the mouth ascends
+ "Of Neptune's son, and far remote the goal.
+ "Then, as his last resource, he distant flung
+ "One of the tree's bright produce. In amaze
+ "The virgin saw it roll; and from the course
+ "Swerv'd, tempted to obtain the glittering fruit.
+ "Hippomenes o'ershoots her; all around
+ "Applauses ring. She soon corrects delay,
+ "And wasted moments, with more rapid speed,
+ "And leaves again the youth behind. Again,
+ "Delay'd to catch the second flying fruit,
+ "The youth is follow'd, and again o'erpass'd.
+ "Now near the goal they come,--O, goddess! now
+ "Who gave the boon assist; he said, and flung
+ "With youthful force obliquely o'er the plain,
+ "More to detain, the last bright glittering gold.
+ "In doubt the virgin saw it fly: I urg'd
+ "That she should follow; and fresh weight I gave
+ "The apple when obtain'd; thus by the load
+ "Her course impeding, and obtain'd delay.
+ "But lest my tale, in length surpass the race,
+ "The vanquish'd virgin was the victor's prize.
+
+ "Think'st thou Adonis, did I not deserve
+ "Most grateful thanks in smoking incense paid?
+ "Mindless, nor thanks, nor incense yielded he;
+ "And sudden anger in my bosom rag'd.
+ "Irk'd at the slight, I instantly provide
+ "That future times with less contempt behave:
+ "And 'gainst them both my raging bosom burns.
+ "Now pass'd they near a temple, long since rais'd
+ "By fam'd Echion, in a shady wood,
+ "To the great mother of the heavenly gods,
+ "When the long journey tempted to repose;
+ "And there, inspir'd by me, ill-tim'd desire
+ "Hippomenes excited. Near the fane
+ "A cave-like close recess dim-lighted stood,
+ "With native pumice roof'd, hallow'd of old;
+ "Where priests the numerous images had plac'd,
+ "Of ancient deities. They enter'd here,
+ "And with forbidden lust the place defil'd.
+ "The wooden images their eyes avert:
+ "The tower-crown'd goddess dubious stands to plunge,
+ "The guilty couple in the Stygian wave.
+ "Too light that sentence seems: straight yellow manes
+ "Cover their soft smooth necks; their fingers curve
+ "To mighty claws; their arms to fore-legs turn;
+ "And new-form'd tails sweep lightly o'er the sand:
+ "Angry their countenance glares; for speech they roar;
+ "They haunt the forests for their nuptial dome.
+ "Transform'd to lions, and by others fear'd,
+ "Their tam'd mouths champ the Cybeleian reins.
+ "Do thou, O dearest boy! their rage avoid;
+ "Not theirs alone, but all the savage tribe,
+ "That stubborn meet with breasts the furious war;
+ "Not turn their backs for flight: lest bold too much,
+ "Thou and myself, have cause too much too mourn.--
+
+ "Thus she admonish'd; and by coupled swans
+ "Upborne, she cleft the air; but his brave soul
+ "Her cautious admonitions rash contemn'd.
+
+ "By chance his dogs the well-mark'd footprints trac'd,
+ "And from his lurking covert rous'd a boar;
+ "Whom with a stroke oblique, as from the brake
+ "To spring he went, the gallant youth transpierc'd.
+ "Instant, with crooked tusks, the gore-stain'd spear
+ "Wrench'd the fierce boar away, and at him rush'd,
+ "Trembling, and safety seeking: every fang
+ "Deep in his groin he plung'd, and on the sand
+ "Stretch'd him expiring. Cytherea, borne
+ "Through midmost ether in her chariot light,
+ "Had not at Cyprus with her swans arriv'd,
+ "When, known from far, she heard his dying groans;
+ "And thither turn'd her snowy birds. From high
+ "When lifeless she beheld him, in his blood
+ "Convulsive struggling, quick she darted down,
+ "She tore her garments, and she tore her hair;
+ "And with unpitying hands her breast she smote.
+ "Then, fate upbraiding first, she said;--Not all
+ "Shall bend to your decision; still shalt thou
+ "Remain, Adonis, monument of woe,
+ "Suffer'd by me! The image of thy death,
+ "Annual repeated, annual shall renew
+ "Remembrance of my mourning. But thy blood
+ "A flower shall form. Shalt thou, O Proserpine,
+ "A female body to a scented herb
+ "Transform; and I the Cinyreian youth
+ "Forbidden be to change?--She said, and flung
+ "Nectar most odorous on the ebbing gore;
+ "Which instant swelling rose. So bubbles rise
+ "On the smooth stream when showery floods descend.
+ "Nor long the term, an hour's short space elaps'd,
+ "When the same teinted flower the blood produc'd:
+ "Such flowers the deep pomegranate bears, which hides
+ "Its purple grains beneath a flexile rind.
+ "But short its boast, for the same winds afford
+ "Its name, and shake them where they light adhere:
+ "Ripe for their fall in fragile beauty gay."
+
+
+
+
+*The Eleventh Book.*
+
+
+ Rage of the Thracian women. Massacre of Orpheus. The women
+ transformed to trees by Bacchus. Midas' foolish wish to change
+ all things he touched into gold. Contest of skill between Pan and
+ Apollo. The ears of Midas transformed to asses ears. Troy built
+ by Apollo and Neptune. Laoemedon's perfidy. Hesione freed by
+ Hercules, and married to Telamon. Peleus and Thetis. Birth of
+ Achilles. Chione ravished by Mercury, and by Apollo. Slain by
+ Diana. Her sire Daedalion changed into an hawk. A wolf changed by
+ Thetis to marble. Voyage of Ceyx to Delphos. Lost in a storm.
+ Grief of Alcyone. Morpheus acquaints her with her husband's
+ death. Change of both to kingfishers. AEsacus into a cormorant.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Eleventh Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ While thus the Thracian bard the forests drew,
+ And rocks, and furious beasts with strains divine;--
+ Behold the Thracian dames! their madden'd breasts
+ Clad with the shaggy spoil of furious beasts,
+ Espy'd him from an hillock's rising swell,
+ As to his sounding strings he shap'd the song.
+ When one, her tresses in the ruffling air
+ Wild streaming, cry'd--"Lo! him who spurns our ties!"--
+ And full her dart 'gainst the harmonious mouth
+ Of Phoebus' son she flung: entwisted round
+ With leaves, a bruise without a wound appear'd.
+ A stone another for a weapon seiz'd;
+ The flying stone was even in air subdu'd
+ By harmony and song; and at his feet
+ Low fell, as suppliant for its daring fault.
+ But now the tumult swells more furious,--bounds
+ It knows not! mad Erinnys reigns around.
+ Yet all their weapons had his music's power
+ Soften'd; but clamor, Berecynthian horns,
+ Drums, clappings, bacchanalian shouts, and howls,
+ Drown'd the soft lyre. Then were the stones distain'd
+ With silenc'd Orpheus' blood. The Bacchae first
+ Drove wide the crowding birds, the snakes, the beasts,
+ In throngs collected by his tuneful voice;
+ Glory of Orpheus' stage. From thence they turn'd
+ Their gory hands on Orpheus, and around
+ Cluster'd like fowls that in the day espy
+ The bird of darkness. Then as in the morn
+ The high-rais'd amphitheatre beholds
+ The stag a prey to hounds; so they the bard
+ Attack'd, and flung their Thyrsi twin'd with leaves;
+ For different use first form'd. Those hurl huge clods:
+ These branches torn from trees; and others stones.
+ Lest to their fury arms were wanting, lo!
+ A yoke of oxen with the ploughshare broke
+ The ground, not distant far; with sinews there
+ Of nervous strength, the husbandmen upturn'd
+ The stubborn soil; with sweat producing fruit.
+ These, when the troop they saw, affrighted fled,
+ Quitting their instruments of toil. Their rakes,
+ Their ponderous harrows, and their huge long spades,
+ Were scatter'd left on the deserted field.
+ These when their furious hands had seiz'd, and tore
+ From the strong oxen's heads the threatening horns,
+ Back they return'd to end the poet's fate;
+ And sacrilegious, as he stretch'd his hands,
+ They slaughter'd him! Then first in vain his words
+ Were utter'd; nought could then his speech avail.
+ Then, heavenly powers! his spirit was expell'd
+ And breath'd in air, even through that mouth whose sound
+ Hard rocks had heard, and wildest beasts had own'd.
+ For thee, O Orpheus! mourn'd the feather'd tribe,
+ And crowds of savage monsters; flinty rocks
+ Bewail'd thee; forests, which thy tempting song
+ So oft had caus'd to follow, wept; the trees,
+ Shorn of their pride, bewail'd with falling leaves.
+ Each stream, 'tis said, with flowing tears increas'd
+ Its current. Naiad nymphs and Dryads wore
+ Garments of sable tinge, with streaming hair.
+ Wide scatter'd lie his limbs. His head and lyre
+ Thou, Hebrus, dost receive; and while they glide,
+ Wond'rous occurrence! down the floating stream,
+ The lyre a mournful moan sends forth; the lips,
+ Now lifeless, murmur plaintive; and the bank
+ Echoes the lamentations. Borne along
+ To ocean, now his native stream they leave,
+ And reach Methymna on the Lesbian shore.
+
+ The head, expos'd thus on the foreign sand,
+ And locks still dropping with the watery wave,
+ A snake approach'd. But Phoebus gave his aid,
+ And check'd the greedy bite; with open jaws
+ The serpent rears in stone congeal'd, as then
+ Widely he gap'd. The ghost from earth descends,
+ And views the regions he had view'd before.
+ Exploring through th' Elysian fields he meets
+ His dear Eurydice; with longing arms
+ He clasps her. Here they walk, now side by side,
+ With equal pace; now follows he, and now
+ A little space precedes her: Orpheus there
+ Back on Eurydice in safety looks.
+
+ But Bacchus suffer'd not the heinous deed
+ Unpunish'd to remain; griev'd that the bard
+ Who sung his praises, thus was snatch'd away,
+ He bound the Thracian matrons, who the crime
+ Had perpetrated, fast by twisted roots
+ To earth as trees. He stretch'd their feet and toes,
+ Which follow'd him so swift, and struck their points
+ Deep in the solid earth: A bird ensnar'd
+ Thus finds his leg imprison'd by the wires
+ Hid by the crafty fowler, and his wings
+ Beats, while his fluttering draws more tight the noose.
+ So each, as firmly fixt to earth she stood,
+ Affrighted strove to fly, but strove in vain:
+ The flexile roots detain'd them; and fast ty'd,
+ Spite of their struggling bounds, while they explore
+ For toes and nails, and while they seek for feet,
+ They see the wood their taper legs conceal;
+ Their grieving hands to beat their thighs are rais'd;
+ Their hands strike solid wood: their shoulders, breasts,
+ Are also wood become. Their outstretch'd arms
+ Extended boughs appear'd, and boughs they were.
+
+ Nor sated yet was Bacchus; all their fields
+ He quits; attended by a worthier troop.
+ To Tmolus' vineyards and Pactolus' stream
+ He hies: the stream not yet for gold was fam'd;
+ Not yet so precious were its envy'd sands.
+ Satyrs and Bacchant' nymphs, his 'custom'd choir
+ Attend him, but Silenus was not found.
+ Him drunken had the rustic Phrygians seiz'd,
+ Reeling with wine, and tottering 'neath his years;
+ With ivy crown'd; and fetter'd to their king,
+ The royal Midas, brought him. Midas once
+ The Thracian Orpheus Bacchus' orgies taught,
+ With sage Eumolpus; and at once he knew
+ His old associate in the sacred rites;
+ And joyful feasted with voluptuous fare,
+ For twice five days, and twice five nights his guest.
+ Th' eleventh time Phosphor' now the lofty host
+ Of stars had chas'd from heaven; the jovial king
+ Went forth to Lydia's fields, and there restor'd
+ Silenus to the youth his foster-child.
+ He, joy'd again his nursing sire to see,
+ On him bestow'd his anxious sought desire,
+ Though useless was the gift. Greedy he crav'd
+ What only harm'd him,--saying--"Grant, O, power!
+ "Whate'er I touch may straight to gold be chang'd"--
+ Bacchus consents to what he wishes;--gives
+ The hurtful gift; but grieves to see his mind
+ No better wish demand. Joyful departs
+ The Berecynthian monarch, with ill-fate
+ Delighted; and, each object touching, tries
+ The promis'd faith. Scarcely himself believ'd,
+ When from a growing ilex down he tore
+ A sprouting bough, straight gold the bough became:
+ A stone from earth he lifted, pale the stone
+ In gold appear'd: he touch'd a turfy clod,
+ The clod quick harden'd with the potent touch:
+ He pluck'd the ripen'd hoary ears of wheat,
+ And golden shone the grain: he from the tree
+ An apple snatch'd, the fam'd Hesperian fruit
+ He seem'd to hold: where'er his fingers touch'd
+ The lofty pillars, all the pillars shone:
+ Nay, where his hands he in the waters lav'd,
+ The waters flowing from his hands seem'd such
+ As Danae might deceive. Scarce can his breast
+ His towering projects hold; all fancy'd gold.
+ Th' attendant slaves before their master, joy'd
+ At this great fortune, heap'd the table high
+ With dainties; nor was bread deficient there:
+ But when his hands the Cerealian boon
+ Had touch'd, the Cerealian boon grew hard:
+ And when the dainty food with greedy tooth
+ He strove to eat, the dainty food grew bright,
+ In glittering plates, where'er his teeth had touch'd.
+ He mixt pure water with his patron's wine,
+ And fluid gold adown his cheeks straight flow'd.
+ With panic seiz'd, the new-found plague to view,
+ Rich, yet most wretched; from his wealthy hoard
+ Fain would he fly; and from his soul detests
+ What late he anxious pray'd. The plenteous gold
+ Abates his hunger nought, and parching thirst
+ Burns in his throat. He well deserves the curse
+ Caus'd by now-hated gold. Lifting his hands
+ And splendid arms to heaven, he cries,--"O sire
+ "Lenaean! pardon my offence: my fault
+ "Is evident; but pity me, I pray,
+ "And from me move this fair deceitful curse."
+ Bacchus, the gentlest of celestial powers,
+ Reliev'd him, as he thus his error own'd:
+ The compact first agreed dissolv'd, and void
+ The grant became:--"Lest still thou shouldst remain
+ "With gold"--he said,--"so madly wish'd, imbu'd,
+ "Haste to the stream by mighty Sardis' town
+ "Which flows; thy path along the mountain's ridge
+ "Explore, opposing still the gliding waves,
+ "Till thou the spring espy'st. Then deeply plunge
+ "Beneath the foaming gush thy head, where full
+ "It spouts its waters; and thy error cleanse,
+ "As clean thy limbs thou washest."--To the stream
+ The king as bidden hastes. The golden charm
+ Tinges the river; from the monarch's limbs
+ It passes to the stream. And now the banks
+ Harden in veins of gold to sight disclos'd;
+ And the pale sands in glittering splendor shine.
+
+ Detesting riches, now in woods he lives,
+ And rural dales; with Pan, who still resorts
+ To mountain caverns. Still his soul remains
+ Stupidly dull; the folly of his breast
+ Was doom'd to harm its owner as before.
+
+ High Tmolus rears with steep ascent his head,
+ O'erlooking distant ocean; wide he spreads
+ His bounds abrupt; confin'd by Sardis here,
+ By small Hypaepe there. Upon his top,
+ While Pan in boastful strain the tender nymphs
+ Pleas'd with his notes, and on his wax-join'd reeds
+ A paltry ditty play'd; boldly he dar'd
+ To place his own above Apollo's song.
+ The god to try th' unequal strife descends;
+ Tmolus the umpire. On his mountain plac'd,
+ The ancient judge from his attentive ears
+ The branches clear'd; save that his azure head
+ With oak was crown'd, and acorns dangling down
+ His hollow temples grac'd. The shepherd's god
+ Beholding,--"no delay, your judge,"--he said--
+ "Shall cause,"--and straight Pan sounds the rural reeds.
+ His barbarous music much the judgment pleas'd
+ Of Midas, who amidst the crowd approach'd.
+ Now venerable Tmolus on the face
+ Of Phoebus turn'd his eyes; and with him turn'd
+ Th' attentive woods. Parnassian laurel bound
+ His golden locks; deep dipt in Tyrian dye,
+ His garment swept the ground; his left hand held
+ The instrument with gems and ivory rich;
+ The other grasp'd the bow: his posture shew'd
+ The skilful master's art: lightly he touch'd
+ The chords with thumb experienc'd. Justly charm'd
+ With melody so sweet, Tmolus decreed
+ The pipe of Pan to Phoebus' lute should yield.
+
+ Much did the judgment of the sacred hill,
+ And much his sentence all delight, save one:
+ For Midas blames him, and unjust declares
+ The arbitration. Human shape no more
+ The god permits his foolish ears to wear;
+ But long extends them, and with hoary hairs
+ Fills them within; and grants them power to move,
+ From their foundation flexile. All beside
+ Was man, one part felt his revenge alone;
+ A slowly pacing asses ears he bears.
+ His head, weigh'd heavy with his load of shame,
+ He strove in purple turban to enfold;
+ Thus his disgrace to hide. But when as wont
+ His slave his hairs, unseemly lengthen'd, cropp'd,
+ He saw the change; the tale he fear'd to tell,
+ Of what he witness'd, though he anxious wish'd
+ In public to proclaim it: yet to hold
+ Sacred the trust surpass'd his power. He went
+ Forth, and digg'd up the earth; with whispering voice
+ There he imparted of his master's ears
+ What he had seen; and murmur'd to the sod:
+ But bury'd close the confidential words
+ Beneath the turf again: then, all fill'd up,
+ Silently he departed. From the spot
+ Began a thick-grown tuft of trembling reeds
+ To spring, which ripening with the year's full round,
+ Betray'd their planter. By the light south wind
+ When agitated, they the bury'd words
+ Disclos'd, betraying what the monarch's ears.
+ Latona's son, aveng'd, high Tmolus leaves,
+ And cleaving liquid air, lights in the realm
+ Laoemedon commands: on the strait sea,
+ Nephelian Helle names, an altar stands
+ Sacred to Panomphaean Jove, where seen
+ Lofty Rhaetaeum rises to the left,
+ Sigaeum to the right. From thence he saw
+ Laoemedon, as first he toil'd to build
+ The walls of infant Troy; with toil immense
+ The undertaking in progression grew,
+ And mighty sums he saw the work would ask.
+ A mortal shape he takes; a mortal shape
+ Clothes too the trident-bearing sire, who rules
+ The swelling deep. The Phrygian monarch's walls
+ They raise, a certain treasure for their toil
+ Agreed on first. The work is finished. Base,
+ The king disowns the compact, and his lies
+ Perfidious, backs with perjury.--"Boast not
+ "This treatment calmly borne," the ocean's god
+ Exclaim'd; and o'er the sordid Trojan's shores
+ Pour'd all his flood of billows; and transform'd
+ The land to sheets of water; swept away
+ The tiller's treasure; bury'd all the meads.
+ Nor sated with this ruin, he demands
+ The monarch's daughter should be given a prey
+ To an huge monster of the main; whom, chain'd
+ To the hard rock, Alcides' arm set free,
+ And claim'd the boon his due; the promis'd steeds.
+ Refus'd the prize his valorous deed deserv'd,
+ He sack'd the walls of doubly-perjur'd Troy,
+ Nor thence did Telamon, whose powerful arm
+ The hero aided, unrewarded go;
+ Hesione was by Alcides given.
+
+ Peleus was famous for his goddess-spouse:
+ Proud not more justly of his grandsire's fame,
+ Than of his consort's father; numbers more
+ Might boast them grandsons of imperial Jove;
+ To him alone a goddess-bride belong'd.
+ For aged Proteus had to Thetis said,--
+ "O, goddess of the waves, a child conceive!
+ "Thou shalt be mother of a youth, whose deeds
+ "Will far the bravest of his sire's transcend:
+ "And mightier than his sire's shall be his name."
+ Hence, lest the world than Jove a mightier god
+ Should know, though Jove with amorous flames fierce burn'd,
+ He shunn'd th' embraces of the watery dame:
+ And bade his grandson Peleus to his hopes
+ Succeed, and clasp the virgin in his arms.
+
+ Haemonia's coast a bay possesses, curv'd
+ Like a bent bow; whose arms enclosing stretch
+ Far in the sea; where if more deep the waves
+ An haven would be form'd: the waters spread
+ Just o'er the sand. Firm is the level shore;
+ Such as would ne'er the race retard, nor hold
+ The print of feet; no seaweed there was spread.
+ Nigh sprung a grove of myrtle, cover'd thick
+ With double-teinted berries: in the midst
+ A cave appear'd, by art or nature form'd;
+ But art most plain was seen. Here, Thetis! oft,
+ Plac'd unattir'd on thy rein'd dolphin's back,
+ Thou didst delight to come. There, as thou laid'st
+ In slumbers bound, did Peleus on thee seize.
+ And when his most endearing prayers were spurn'd,
+ Force he prepar'd; both arms around thy neck
+ Close clasp'd. And then to thy accustom'd arts,
+ Of often-varied-form, hadst thou not fled,
+ He might have prosper'd in his daring hope.
+ But now a bird thou wert; the bird he held:
+ Now an huge tree; Peleus the tree grasp'd firm:
+ A spotted tiger then thy third-chang'd shape;
+ Frighted at that, AEaecides his hold
+ Quit from her body. Then the ocean powers
+ He worshipp'd, pouring wine upon the waves,
+ And bleating victims slew, and incense burn'd:
+ Till from the gulf profound the prophet spoke
+ Of Carpathus. "O, Peleus! gain thou shalt
+ "The wish'd-for nuptials; only when she rests
+ "In the cool cavern sleeping, thou with cords
+ "And fetters strong her, unsuspecting, bind;
+ "Nor let an hundred shapes thy soul deceive;
+ "Still hold her fast whatever form she wears,
+ "Till in her pristine looks she shines again."
+ This Proteus said, and plung'd his head beneath
+ The waves, while scarce his final words were heard.
+
+ Prone down the west was Titan speeding now;
+ And to th' Hesperian waves his car inclin'd,
+ When the fair Nereid from the wide deep came,
+ And sought her 'custom'd couch. Scarce Peleus seiz'd
+ Her virgin limbs, when straight a thousand forms
+ She try'd, till fast she saw her members ty'd;
+ And her arms fetter'd close in every part:
+ Then sigh'd, and said; "thou conquerest by some god:"
+ And the fair form of Thetis was display'd.
+ The hero clasp'd her, and his wishes gain'd;
+ And great Achilles straight the nymph conceiv'd.
+
+ Now blest was Peleus in his son and bride;
+ And blest in all which can to man belong;
+ Save in the crime of murder'd Phocus. Driven
+ From his paternal home, of brother's blood
+ Guilty, Trachinia's soil receiv'd him first.
+ Here Ceyx, Phosphor's offspring, who retain'd
+ His father's splendor on his forehead, rul'd
+ The land; which knew not bloodshed, knew not force.
+ At that time gloomy, sad, himself unlike,
+ He mourn'd a brother's loss. To him, fatigu'd
+ With travel, and with care worn out, the son
+ Of AEaecus arriv'd; and in the town
+ Enter'd with followers few: the flocks and herds
+ That journey'd with him, just without the walls,
+ In a dark vale were left. When the first grant
+ T'approach the monarch was obtain'd, he rais'd
+ The olive in his suppliant hand; then told
+ His name, and lineage, but his crime conceal'd.
+ His cause of flight dissembling, next he beg'd,
+ For him and his, some pastures and a town.
+ Then thus Trachinia's king with friendly brow:
+ "To all, the very meanest of mankind,
+ "Are our possessions free; nor do I rule
+ "A realm inhospitable: add to these
+ "Inducements strong, thine own illustrious name,
+ "And grandsire Jove. In praying lose not time.
+ "Whate'er thou wouldst, thou shalt receive; and all,
+ "Such as it is, with me most freely share;
+ "Would it were better." Speaking thus, he wept:
+ His cause of grief to Peleus and his friends,
+ Anxious enquiring, then the monarch told.
+
+ "Perchance this bird, which by fierce rapine lives,
+ "Dread of the feather'd tribe, you think still wings
+ "Possess'd. Once man, he bore a noble soul;
+ "Though stern, and rough in war, and fond of blood.
+ "His name Daedalion: from the sire produc'd
+ "Who calls Aurora forth, and last of stars
+ "Relinquishes the sky. Peace my delight;
+ "Peace to preserve was still my care: my joys
+ "I shar'd in Hymen's bonds. Fierce wars alone,
+ "My brother pleas'd. His valor then o'erthrew
+ "Monarchs and nations, who, in alter'd form,
+ "Drives now Thisbaean pigeons through the air.
+ "His daughter Chione, in beauty rich,
+ "For marriage ripe, now fourteen years had seen;
+ "And numerous suitors with her charms were fir'd.
+ "It chanc'd that Phoebus once, and Maiae's son,
+ "Returning from his favorite Delphos this,
+ "That from Cyllene's top, together saw
+ "The nymph,--together felt the amorous flame.
+ "Apollo his warm hopes till night defers;
+ "But Hermes brooks delay not: with his rod,
+ "Compelling sleep, he strokes the virgin's face;
+ "Beneath the potent touch she sinks, and yields
+ "Without resistance to his amorous force.
+ "Night spread o'er heaven the stars, when Phoebus took
+ "A matron's form, and seiz'd fore-tasted joys.
+ "When its full time the womb matur'd had seen,
+ "Autolycus was born; the crafty seed
+ "Of the wing'd-footed god; acute of thought
+ "To every shade of theft; from his sire's art
+ "Degenerate nought; white he was wont to make
+ "Appear as black; and black from white produce.
+ "Philammon, famous with the lyre and song,
+ "Was born to Phoebus (twins the nymph brought forth).
+ "But where the benefit that two she bears?
+ "Where that the favorite of two gods she boasts?
+ "What that a valiant sire she claims? and claims
+ "As ancestor the mighty thundering god?
+ "Is it that glory such as this still harms?
+ "Certain it hurtful prov'd to her, who dar'd
+ "Herself prefer to Dian', and despise
+ "The goddess' beauty; fierce in ire she cry'd,--
+ "At least I'll try to make my actions please.--
+ "Nor stay'd; the bow she bent, and from the cord
+ "Impell'd the dart; through her deserving tongue
+ "The reed was sent. Mute straight that tongue became;
+ "Nor sound, nor what she try'd to utter, heard:
+ "Striving to speak, life flow'd with flowing blood.
+ "What woe (O hapless piety!) oppress'd
+ "My heart! What solace to her tender sire
+ "I spoke; my solace just the same he heard,
+ "As rocks hear murmuring waves. But still he moan'd
+ "For his lost child; but when the flames he saw
+ "Ascending, four times 'mid the funeral fires
+ "He strove to plunge; four times from thence repuls'd,
+ "His rapid limbs address'd for flight, and rush'd
+ "Like a young bullock, when the hornet's sting
+ "Deep in his neck he bears, in pathless ways.
+ "Ev'n now more swift than man he seem'd to run:
+ "His feet seem'd wings to wear, for all behind
+ "He left far distant. Through desire of death,
+ "Rapid he gain'd Parnassus' loftiest ridge.
+ "Apollo, pitying, when Daedalion flung
+ "From the high rock his body, to a bird
+ "Transform'd him, and on sudden pinions bore
+ "Him floating: bended hooks he gave his claws,
+ "And gave a crooked beak; valor as wont;
+ "And strength more great than such a body shews.
+ "Now as an hawk, to every bird a foe,
+ "He wages war on all; and griev'd himself,
+ "He constant cause for others grief affords."
+
+ While these miraculous deeds bright Phosphor's sob
+ Tells of his brother, Peleus' herdsman comes,
+ Phocian Anetor, flying, and, with speed
+ Breathless, "O Peleus! Peleus!" he exclaims,
+ "Of horrid slaughter messenger I come!"
+ Him Peleus bids, whate'er he brings, to speak;
+ Trachinia's monarch even with friendly dread
+ Trembles the news to hear. When thus the man:
+ "The weary cattle to the curving shore
+ "I'd driv'n, when Sol from loftiest heaven might view
+ "His journey half perform'd, while half remain'd.
+ "Part of the oxen on the yellow sand,
+ "On their knees bending view'd the spacious plain
+ "Of wide-spread waters; part with loitering pace
+ "Stray'd here, and thither; others swam and rear'd
+ "Their lofty necks above the waves. There stood
+ "Close to the sea a temple, where nor gold,
+ "Nor polish'd marble shone; but rear'd with trees
+ "Thick-pil'd, it gloom'd within an ancient grove.
+ "This, Nereus and the Nereid nymphs possess.
+ "A fisherman, as on the shore he dry'd
+ "His nets, inform'd us these the temple own'd.
+ "A marsh joins near the fane, with willows thick
+ "Beset, which waves o'erflowing first has form'd.
+ "A wolf from thence, a beast of monstrous bulk,
+ "Thundering with mighty clash, with terror struck
+ "The neighbouring spots: then from the marshy woods
+ "Sprung out; his jaws terrific, smear'd with foam
+ "And clotted gore; his eyes with red flames glar'd.
+ "Mad though he rag'd with ire and famine both,
+ "Famine less strong appear'd; for his dire maw
+ "And craving hunger, he not car'd to fill
+ "With the slain oxen; wounding all the herd:
+ "All hostile overthrowing. Some of us,
+ "Ranch'd by his deadly tooth, to death were sent
+ "Defence attempting. The shore and marsh
+ "With bellowings echoing, and the ocean's edge
+ "Redden with blood. But ruinous, delay!
+ "For hesitation leisure is not now.
+ "While ought remains, let all together join;
+ "Arm! arm! and on him hurl united spears."
+ The herdsman ceas'd, Peleus the loss not mov'd;
+ But conscious of his fault, infers the plague
+ Sent by the childless Nereid to avenge
+ Her slaughter'd Phocus' loss. Yet Ceyx bids
+ His warriors arm, and take their forceful darts;
+ With them prepar'd to issue: but his spouse
+ Alcyoene, rous'd by the tumult, sprung
+ Forth from her chamber; unadorn'd her locks,
+ Which scatter'd hung around her. Ceyx' neck
+ Clasping, she begg'd with moving words and tears,
+ Aid he would send, but go not; thus preserve
+ Two lives in one. Then Peleus to the queen;
+ "Banish your laudable and duteous fears.
+ "For what the king intended, thanks are due.
+ "Arms 'gainst this novel plague I will not take:
+ "Prayers must the goddess of the deep appease."
+
+ A lofty tower there stood, whose summit bore
+ A beacon; grateful object to the sight
+ Of weary mariners. Thither they mount,
+ And see with sighs the herd strew'd o'er the beach;
+ The monster ravaging with gory jaw,
+ And his long shaggy hairs in blood bedy'd.
+ Thence Peleus, stretching to the wide sea shore
+ His arms, to Psamathe cerulean pray'd,
+ To finish there her rage, and grant relief.
+ Unmov'd she heard AEaecides implore:
+ But Thetis, suppliant, from the goddess gain'd
+ The favor for her spouse. Uncheck'd, the wolf
+ The furious slaughter quits not, fierce the more
+ From the sweet taste of blood, till to a stone
+ Transform'd, as on a bull's torn neck he hung.
+ His form remains; and, save his color, all;
+ The color only shews him wolf no more:
+ And shews no terror he shall now inspire.
+
+ Still in this realm the angry fates deny'd
+ Peleus to stay; exil'd, he wander'd on,
+ And reach'd Magnesia: from Acastus there
+ Thessalian, expiation he receiv'd.
+
+ Ceyx meantime, with anxious doubts disturb'd;
+ First with the prodigy, his brother's change,
+ Then those which follow'd; to the Clarian god
+ Prepar'd to go, the oracles to seek,
+ Which sweetly solace men's uneasy minds.
+ Delphos was inaccessible; the road
+ Phorbas prophane, with all his Phlegians barr'd.
+ Yet first Alcyoene, most faithful spouse!
+ He tells thee of his purpose. Instant seiz'd
+ A death-like coldness on her inmost heart:
+ A boxen paleness o'er her features spread;
+ And down her cheeks the tears in torrents roll'd.
+ Thrice she attempted words, but thrice her tears
+ Her words prevented; then her pious plaints,
+ Broken by interrupted sobs, she spoke.
+ "My dearest lord! what hapless fault of mine
+ "Thy soul has alter'd? Where that love for me
+ "Thou wont'st to shew? Canst thou now unconcern'd
+ "Depart, and leave Alcyoene behind?
+ "Glads thee this tedious journey? Am I lov'd
+ "Most dearly farthest absent? Yet by land
+ "Was all thy journey, then I should but grieve,
+ "Not tremble: sighs would then of fears take place.
+ "The sea, the dread appearance of the main,
+ "Me terrifies. But lately I beheld
+ "Torn planks bestrew the shore: and oft I've read
+ "On empty tombs, the names of dead inscrib'd.
+ "Let not fallacious confidence thy mind
+ "Mislead, that AEoelus I call my sire;
+ "Who binds the furious winds in caves, and smoothes
+ "At will the ocean. No! when issu'd once,
+ "They sweep the main, no power of his can rule:
+ "And uncontroll'd they ravage all the land:
+ "Nor checks them aught on ocean. Clouds of heaven,
+ "They clash; and ruddy lightnings hurl along
+ "In fierce encounter. More their force I know,
+ "(For well I knew, and oft have mark'd their power,
+ "While yet an infant at my sire's abode,)
+ "The more I deem them such as should be fear'd.
+ "Yet dearest spouse, if thy firm-fixt resolve
+ "No prayers can change, and obstinate thou stand'st
+ "For sailing, let me also with thee go:
+ "Together then the buffeting we'll bear.
+ "Then shall I fear but what I suffer; then
+ "Whate'er we suffer we'll together feel:
+ "Together sailing o'er the boundless main."
+
+ Her words and tears the star-born husband mov'd;
+ For less of love he felt not. Yet his scheme
+ To voyage o'er the deep he could not change;
+ Nor yet consent Alcyoene should share
+ His peril: and with soothing soft replies,
+ He try'd to calm her timid breast. Nor yet
+ Himself approv'd the arguments he try'd,
+ His consort to persuade consent to yield
+ To his departure. This at length he adds
+ As solace, which alone her bosom mov'd.
+ "All absence tedious seems; but by the fires
+ "My father bears, I swear, if fates permit,
+ "Returning, thou shalt see me, ere the moon
+ "Shall twice have fill'd her orb." Hope in her breast
+ Thus rais'd by promise of a quick return,
+ Instant the vessel, from the dock drawn forth,
+ He bids them launch in ocean, and complete
+ In all her stores and tackling. This beheld
+ Alcyoene; and, presaging again
+ Woes of the future, trembled, and a flood
+ Of tears again gush'd forth; again she clasp'd
+ His neck; at length, as, wretched wife, she cry'd,--
+ "Farewell" she, swooning, lifeless sunk to earth.
+
+ The rowers now, while Ceyx sought delays,
+ To their strong breasts the double-ranking oars
+ Drew back, and cleft with equal stroke the surge.
+ Her humid eyes she rais'd, and first beheld
+ Her husband standing on the crooked poop,
+ Waving his hand as signal; she his sign
+ Return'd. When farther from the land they shot,
+ Her straining eyes no more indulg'd to know
+ His features; still, while yet they could, her eyes
+ Pursu'd the flying vessel. This at length
+ Increasing distance her forbade to see;
+ Still she perceiv'd the floating sails, which spread
+ From the mast's loftiest summit. Sails at length
+ Were also lost in distance: then she sought
+ Anxious her widow'd chamber; and her limbs
+ Threw on the couch. The bed, the vacant space,
+ Renew'd her tears, reminding of her loss.
+
+ Now far from port they'd sail'd, when the strong ropes
+ The breeze began to strain; the rowers turn
+ Their oars, and lash them to the vessel's side;
+ Hoist to the mast's extremest height their yards;
+ And loose their sails to catch the coming breeze.
+ Scarce half, not more than half, the sea's extent
+ The vessel now had plough'd; and either land
+ Was distant far; when, as dim night approach'd,
+ The sea seem'd foaming white with rising waves;
+ And the strong East more furious 'gan to blow.
+ Long had the master cry'd,--"Lower down your yards,
+ "And close furl every sail!"--he bids; the storm
+ Adverse, impedes the sound; the roaring waves
+ Drown every voice in noise. Yet some, untold,
+ Haste to secure the oars; part bind the sails;
+ Part fortify the sides: this water laves,
+ Ejecting seas on seas; that lowers the yards.
+ While thus they toil unguided, rough the storm
+ Increases; from each quarter furious winds
+ Wage warfare, and with mounting billows join.
+ Trembles the ruler of the bark, and owns
+ His state; he knows not what he should command,
+ Nor what forbid; so swift the sudden storm;
+ So much more strong the tempest than his skill.
+ Men clamorous shout; cords rattle; mighty waves
+ Roar, on waves rushing; thunders roll through air;
+ In billows mounts the ocean, and appears
+ To meet the sky, and o'er the hanging clouds
+ Sprinkles its foam. Now from the lowest depths,
+ As yellow sands they turn, the billows shine;
+ Now blacker seem they than the Stygian waves;
+ Now flatten'd, all with spumy froth is spread.
+ The ship Trachinian too, each rapid change
+ In agitation heaves; now rais'd sublime
+ The deepen'd vale she views as from a ridge
+ So lofty: down to Acheron's low depths,
+ Now in the hollow of the wave she falls,
+ And views th' o'erhanging heaven from hell's deep gulf.
+ Oft bursting on her side with loud report
+ The billows sound; nor with less fury beat
+ Than the balista, or huge battering ram,
+ Driv'n on the tottering fort: or lions fierce,
+ Whose strength and rage increasing with their speed,
+ Rush on the armour'd breast and outstretch'd spear.
+ So rush'd the waves with wind-propelling power
+ High o'er the decks; and 'bove the rigging rose.
+
+ Now shook the wedges; open rents appear'd,
+ The pitchy covering gone, and wide-display'd,
+ A passage opens to the deadly flood.
+ Then from the breaking clouds fell torrent showers;
+ All heaven seem'd sweeping down to swell the main;
+ And the swol'n main, ascending to invade
+ Celestial regions, soak'd with floods each sail:
+ And ocean's briny waters mix'd with rain.
+ No light the firmament possess'd, and night
+ Frown'd blacker through the tempest. Lightning oft
+ Reft the thick gloom, and gave a brilliant blaze;
+ And while the lightnings flame the waters burn.
+
+ Now o'er the vessel's cover'd deck the waves
+ High tower; and as a soldier, braver far
+ Than all his fellows, urg'd by thirst of fame,
+ (The well-defended walls to scale oft try'd,)
+ At length his hope obtains, and singly keeps
+ His post, by foes on every side assail'd:
+ So when the furious billows raging beat
+ The lofty side, the tenth impetuous rears
+ Above the rest, and forceful rushes on;
+ The battery ceasing not on the spent bark,
+ Till o'er the wall, as of a captur'd town,
+ Downward it rushes. Part without invade,
+ And part are lodg'd within. In terror all
+ In trembling panic stand: not more the crowd
+ Which fill a city's walls, when foes without
+ Mine their foundations; while an entrance gain'd
+ Within, part rage already. Art no more
+ Can aid; all courage droops; as many deaths
+ Seem rapid rushing as the billows break.
+ This wails in tears his fate; that stupid stands;
+ This calls those blest whom funeral rites await:
+ One to his deity rich offerings vows,
+ And vainly stretching forth to heaven his arms,
+ The heaven he sees not, begs for aid: his friends,
+ Brethren and parents, fill of this the mind;
+ Of that his children, or whate'er he leaves.
+
+ Alcyoene, alone in Ceyx' soul
+ Found place; and but Alcyoene, his lips
+ Nought utter'd. Her alone he wish'd to see;
+ Yet joy'd she far was absent. Much he long'd
+ To view once more his dear paternal shores;
+ And turn his last looks tow'rd his regal dome:
+ But where to turn he knows not; in a whirl
+ So boils the sea; and all the heaven is hid
+ In shade, by more than pitchy clouds produc'd:
+ Night doubly darken'd. Now the whirlwind's force
+ Shivers the mast, and tears the helm away:
+ And like a victor, proud to view his spoils,
+ Mounts an high wave, and scornfully beholds
+ The lower billows; thundering down it sweeps,
+ Impell'd by force that Athos might o'erturn,
+ Or Pindus, from their roots; and plunge in sea.
+ Down in the lowest depths, the weight and blow
+ Bury'd the vessel; with her most the crew
+ Sunk in the raging gulf: some met their fate,
+ Ne'er to return to air: some floated still;
+ To splinter'd fragments of the bark they clung.
+ Ceyx himself, grasp'd only in that hand
+ A shatter'd plank, which once a sceptre held;
+ And AEoelus and Phosphor' call'd in vain:
+ But chiefly from his lips was, as he swam,
+ Alcyoene resounded; that lov'd name
+ Remember'd constant, and repeated most.
+ He prays the billows may his body bear
+ To meet her eyes; and prays her friendly hands
+ His burial may perform. While thus he swims,
+ Alcyoene he names, whene'er the waves
+ To gasp for breath permit him; and beneath
+ The billows, tries Alcyoene to sound.
+ Lo! a black towering arch of waters broke
+ Midst of the surges; in the boiling foam
+ Involv'd, o'erwhelm'd he sunk. That mournful night
+ Was Phosphor' dark, impalpable to view:
+ And since stern fate to heaven his post fast bound,
+ He veil'd in densest clouds his grieving face.
+
+ Meantime Alcyoene her height of woe
+ Unknown, counts each sad night, and now with haste
+ The garments he should wear prepares; and now
+ Those to adorn herself when him she meets;
+ Cherishing emptiest hopes of his return.
+ Devoutest offerings to the heavenly powers
+ She bore; but incense far before the rest
+ On Juno's altar burn'd; and oft she pray'd
+ For him who was not. For his safety pray'd;
+ For his return; and that his love might still
+ Without a rival hers remain: the last
+ Of all her ardent prayers indulgence found.
+ But longer bore the goddess not to hear
+ Such vain petitions for the dead; these hands
+ Polluted, from her altars to remove,
+ To Iris thus she spoke:--"O, faithful maid!
+ "Most trusty messenger, with speed repair
+ "To Somnus' drowsy hall; him bid to send
+ "A vision form'd in lifeless Ceyx' shape
+ "To tell Alcyoene her woes' extent."
+ She ended: in her various-teinted robe
+ Attir'd, and spreading o'er the spacious heaven
+ Her sweeping arch, Iris the dwelling sought
+ The goddess order'd. Hid beneath a steep
+ Near the Cimmerians, in a deep dug cave,
+ Form'd in a hollow mountain, stands the hall
+ And secret dwelling of inactive sleep;
+ Where Phoebus rising, or in mid-day height,
+ Or setting-radiance, ne'er can dart his beams.
+ Clouds with dim darkness mingled, from the ground
+ Exhale, and twilight makes a doubtful day.
+ The watchful bird, with crested head, ne'er calls
+ Aurora with his song; no wakeful dog,
+ Nor goose more wakeful, e'er the silence breaks;
+ No savage beasts, no pastur'd flocks, no boughs
+ Shook by the breeze; no brawl of human voice
+ There sounds: but death-like silence reigns around.
+ Yet from the rock's foundation, gently flows
+ A stream of Lethe's water, whose dull waves
+ In gentle murmuring o'er the pebbles purl,
+ Tempting to slumber. At the cavern door
+ The fruitful poppy, and ten thousand plants,
+ From which moist night the drowsy juices drains,
+ Then scatters o'er the shady earth, grew thick.
+ Round all the house no gate was seen, which, turn'd
+ On the dry hinge should creak; no centry strict
+ The threshold to protect. But in the midst
+ The lofty bed of ebon form'd, was plac'd.
+ Black were the feathers; all the coverings black,
+ And stretch'd at length the god was seen; his limbs
+ With lassitude relax'd. Around him throng'd
+ In every part, vain dreams, in various forms,
+ In number more than what the harvest bears
+ Of bearded grains; the woods of verdant leaves;
+ Or shore of yellow sands. Here came the nymph;
+ Th' opposing dreams push'd sideways with her hands,
+ And through the sacred mansion from her robe
+ Scatter'd refulgent light. With pain the god,
+ His eyelids weigh'd with slothful torpor, rais'd;
+ But at each effort down they sunk again:
+ And on his breast his nodding chin still smote.
+ At length he rous'd him from his drowsy state;
+ And, on his elbow resting, ask'd the nymph,
+ For well he knew her, why she thither came.
+ Then she--"O Somnus! peaceful rest of all!
+ "Somnus! most placid of immortal powers;
+ "Calm of the soul; whom care for ever flies;
+ "Who soothest bosoms, with diurnal toil
+ "Fatigu'd; and renovat'st for toil again;
+ "Dispatch a vision to Trachinia's town,
+ "(By great Alcides founded,) in the form
+ "Its hapless monarch bore: let it display
+ "The lively image of her husband's wreck,
+ "To sad Alcyoene. This Juno bids."--
+ Iris, her message thus deliver'd, turn'd:
+ For more the soporific mist, which rose
+ Around, she bore not; soon as sleep she felt
+ Stealing upon her limbs, abrupt she fled,
+ Mounting the bow by which she glided down.
+
+ The drowsy sire, from 'midst a thousand sons,
+ Calls Morpheus forth, an artful god, who well
+ All shapes can feign. None copies else so close
+ The bidden gait, the features, and the mode
+ Of converse; vesture too the same he wears,
+ And language such as most they wont to speak.
+ Mankind alone he imitates. To seem
+ Fierce beasts, and birds, and long-extended snakes
+ Another claims: this Icelos the gods
+ Have nam'd; by mortals as Photebor known.
+ A third is Phantasus of different skill;
+ His change is happiest when he earth becomes,
+ Or rocks, or waves, or trees, or substance aught
+ That animation lacks. These shew their forms
+ By night to mighty heroes and to kings;
+ The rest before th' ignobler crowd perform.
+ All these the ancient Somnus pass'd, and chose
+ Morpheus alone from all his brethren crowd,
+ The deed Thaumantian Iris bade, to do;
+ Then, weigh'd with slumber, dropp'd again his head,
+ And shrunk once more within the sable couch.
+
+ He flies through darkness on unrustling wings,
+ And short the space, ere in Trachinia's town
+ He lights; and from his shoulders lays aside
+ His pinions; when he Ceyx' form assumes.
+ In Ceyx' ghastly shape pallid he stood,
+ Despoil'd of garments, at the widow'd bed
+ Of the sad queen: soak'd was his beard, and streams
+ Seem'd from his heavy dripping locks to flow.
+ Then leaning o'er the couch, while gushing tears
+ O'erspread his cheeks, he thus his wife bespoke;--
+ "Know'st thou thy Ceyx, wretched, wretched wife?
+ "Or are my features chang'd by death? Again
+ "View me, and here behold thy husband's shade,
+ "Instead of husband: all thy pious prayers
+ "For me, Alcyoene, were vain. I'm lost!
+ "No more false hopes encourage, me to see.
+ "The showery southwind, on th' AEgean main,
+ "Seiz'd on our vessel, and with mighty blast
+ "Shiver'd it wide in fragments; and the waves
+ "Rush'd in my throat as loud thy name I call'd;
+ "But call'd in vain. No doubtful author brings
+ "To thee these tidings; no vague rumor this,
+ "In person I relate it. Shipwreck'd I,
+ "My fate to thee detail. Rise, and assist!
+ "Pour forth thy tears; in sable garments clothe;
+ "Nor send my ghost to wander undeplor'd,
+ "In shady Tartarus." Thus Morpheus spoke;
+ And in such accents, that the queen, deceiv'd,
+ Believ'd her husband spoke. Adown his cheeks
+ Seem'd real tears to flow; and even his hand
+ With Ceyx' motion mov'd. Deeply she groan'd,
+ Ev'n in her sleep, and rais'd her longing arms
+ To clasp his body; empty air she clasp'd:
+ Exclaiming;--"stay; O whither dost thou fly?
+ "Together let us hence!"--Rous'd with the noise,
+ And spectre of her spouse; sleep fled her eyes,
+ And round she cast her gaze for that to seek
+ Which she but now beheld. Wak'd by her voice,
+ Her slaves approach'd with lights; but when in vain
+ She search'd for what she lack'd, her face she struck;
+ Rent from her breasts her garments; beat her breasts
+ Themselves: nor stay'd her twisted hair to loose,
+ But tore the bands away; then to her nurse
+ Anxious the subject of her grief to learn--
+ "Alcyoene,"--she cries--"is now no more!
+ "She with her Ceyx in one moment fell.
+ "Hence with your soothing words; shipwreck'd he dy'd.
+ "I saw; I knew him; as he fled me, stretch'd
+ "My arms to hold the fugitive.--Ah! no!
+ "The shadow fled, 'twas but his ghost; but shade
+ "My husband mere resembling ne'er was form'd.
+ "Yet had he not his wonted looks, nor shone
+ "In former brightness his beloved face.
+ "I saw him, hapless stand with pallid cheek,
+ "Naked, with tresses dropping still. Lo! here
+ "Wretched he stood, just on the spot I point:"--
+ Then anxious try'd his footmarks there to trace.--
+ "This did my mind foreboding fear; I pray'd
+ "When me thou fled'st, the winds thou would'st not trust:
+ "But since to sure destruction forth thou went'st,
+ "Would that by me companion'd thou had'st gone.
+ "With thee my bliss had been;--with thee to go.
+ "Unwasted then one moment of the space
+ "For life allow'd; not ev'n in death disjoin'd.
+ "But now I perish, and upon the waves,
+ "Though absent, float; the main me overwhelms,
+ "Though from the main far distant. Mental storms
+ "To me more cruel were than ocean's waves,
+ "Should I but longer seek to spin out life,
+ "And combat such deep grief? I will not strive
+ "Nor wretched thee desert; but now, though late,
+ "Now will I join thee; and the funeral verse
+ "Shall us unite; not in the self-same urn,
+ "Yet in the self-same tomb; bones join'd with bones,
+ "Allow'd not, yet shall name with name be seen."--
+ The rest by grief was chok'd, and sounding blows
+ Each sentence interrupted; while deep groans
+ Burst from her raving bosom. Morning shone,
+ And forth she issu'd to the shore, and sought
+ In grief the spot, where last his face she view'd
+ Departing. "Here,"--she said,--"as slow he went,
+ "As slow he loos'd his cables; on this beach
+ "The parting kiss he gave." While her mind's eye
+ Retraces every circumstance, she looks,
+ And something sees far floating on the waves,
+ Not much unlike a man: dubious at first
+ What it may be, she views it: nearer now
+ The billows drive it; and though distant still,
+ Plain to the eye a body was descry'd.
+ Whose body, witless, still a shipwreck'd wretch
+ With boding omen mov'd her; and in tears
+ She wail'd him as a stranger in these plaints.--
+ "Unhappy wretch! whoe'er thou art; and she
+ "Thy wife, if wife thou had'st"--but now the surge
+ More near the body bore. The more she views
+ Nearer the corps; the more her senses fly.
+ And now close driven to shore it floats, and now
+ Well she discern'd it was, it was--her spouse!
+ "'Tis he!"--she loudly shriek'd, and tore her face,
+ Her hair, her garments. Then her trembling arms
+ To Ceyx stretching; "Dearest husband!"--cry'd.
+ "Art thou restor'd thus to my wretched breast?"
+
+ High-rais'd by art, adjoining to the beach
+ A mole was form'd, which broke the primal strength
+ Of ocean's fury, and the fierce waves tir'd.
+ Hither she sprung, and, wond'rous that she could!
+ She flew; the light air winnowing with her wings
+ New-sprung; a mournful bird she skimm'd along
+ The water's surface. As she flies, her beak
+ Slender and small, a creaking noise sends forth,
+ Of mournful sound, and full of sad complaint.
+ Soon as the silent bloodless corse she reach'd,
+ Around his dear-lov'd limbs her wings she clasp'd,
+ And gave cold kisses with her horny bill.
+ If Ceyx felt them, or his head was rais'd
+ To meet her by the waves, th' unlearned doubt.
+ But sure he felt them. Both at length, the gods
+ Commisserating, chang'd to feather'd birds.
+ The same their love remains, and subject still
+ To the same fates; and in the plumag'd pair
+ The nuptial bond is sacred; join'd in one
+ Parents they soon become; and Halcyon sits
+ Sev'n peaceful days 'mid winter's keenest rule
+ Upon her floating nest. Safe then the main:
+ For AEoelus with watchful care the winds
+ Guards, and prevents their egress; and the seas
+ Smooths for the offspring, with a grandsire's care.
+
+ These, as they skimm'd the surface of the main,
+ An ancient sire beheld, and prais'd their love:
+ Constant in death: his neighbour or himself
+ Also repeats;--the bird which there you see,
+ Brushing the ocean with his slender legs,
+ (And shews a corm'rant with his spacious maw)
+ A monarch's offspring was; would you descend
+ Through the long series, 'till to him you reach;
+ Ilus; Assaracus; and Ganymede,
+ Borne up to heaven by Jove, supply'd the stock
+ From whence he sprung; Laoemedon the old;
+ And Priam doom'd to end his days with Troy.
+ Hector his brother; but in spring of youth
+ He felt this strange adventure, he perchance
+ As Hector's might have left a towering name:
+ Though from old Dymas' daughter Hector sprung.
+ Fair Alixirrhoe, so fame reports,
+ Daughter of two-horn'd Granicus, brought forth,
+ By stealth, AEsacus 'neath thick Ida's shade.
+ Wall'd cities he detested; and remote
+ From glittering palaces, secluded hills
+ Inhabited, and unambitious plains;
+ And scarce at Troy's assemblies e'er was seen.
+ Yet had he not a clownish heart, nor breast
+ To love impregnable. By chance he saw
+ Cebrenus' daughter, fair Hesperie--oft
+ By him through every shady wood pursu'd--
+ As on her father's banks her tresses, spread
+ Adown her back, in Phoebus' rays she dry'd.
+ The nymph, discover'd, fled. So rapid flies
+ Th' affrighted stag to 'scape the tawny Wolf;
+ Or duck, stream-loving, from the hawk, when caught,
+ Far from her wonted lakes. The Trojan youth
+ Quick follows, swift through hope; she swift through fear.
+ Lo! in the herbage hid, her flying foot
+ With crooked fang a serpent bit, and pour'd
+ O'er all her limbs the poison: with her flight
+ Her life was stopp'd. Frantic, he clasps her form
+ Now lifeless, and exclaims--"how grieve I now,
+ "That e'er I thee pursu'd; not this I fear'd!
+ "How mean my conquest, bought at such a price!
+ "Both, hapless nymph! in thy destruction join'd:
+ "I gave the cause, the serpent but the wound.
+ "I guiltier far than he, unless my death
+ "Shall thine avenge."--He said, and in the main,
+ From an high rock, by hoarsely-roaring waves
+ Deep-worn beneath, prepar'd to plunge. Receiv'd
+ By pitying Tethys softly in his fall,
+ She clothes him, as he swims the main, with wings;
+ And death, so much desir'd, denies him still.
+ The lover, furious at th' unwelcome gift
+ Of life upon him forc'd, and his pent soul,
+ Bent on escaping from its hated seat
+ Confin'd, soon as the new-shot plumes he felt
+ Spring from his shoulders, up he flew, and plunged
+ Again his body in the depths below:
+ His feathers broke his fall. AEsacus rav'd,
+ And deeply div'd; with headlong fury still,
+ And endless perseverance death he sought.
+ Love keeps him meagre still; from joint to joint
+ His legs still longer grow; his outstretch'd neck
+ Is long; and distant far his head is plac'd.
+ He loves the ocean, and the name he bears,
+ From constant diving, seems correctly giv'n.
+
+
+
+
+*The Twelfth Book.*
+
+
+ Rape of Helen. Expedition of the Greeks against Troy. House of
+ Fame. The Trojan war. Combat of Achilles and Cygnus. The latter
+ slain and transformed to a swan. Story of Caeneus. Fight of the
+ Lapithae and Centaurs. Change of Caeneus to a bird. Contest of
+ Hercules with Periclymenos. Death of Achilles. Dispute for his
+ arms.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Twelfth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Priam the sire, much mourn'd, to him unknown
+ That still his son, on pinions borne, surviv'd:
+ While Hector and his brethren round the tomb,
+ A name alone possessing, empty rites
+ Perform'd. Save Paris, from the solemn scene
+ None absent were; he with the ravish'd wife
+ Brought to his shores a long protracted war.
+ Quick was he follow'd by confederate ships
+ Ten hundred, and the whole Pelasgian race.
+ Nor had their vengeance borne so long delay,
+ But adverse raging tempests made the main
+ Impassable; and on Boeotia's shores,
+ In Aulis' port th' impatient vessels bound.
+
+ Here, while the Greeks the rites of Jove prepare,
+ Their country's custom, as the altar blaz'd,
+ They saw an azure serpent writhe around
+ A plane, which near the altar rear'd its boughs.
+ Its lofty summit held a nest; within
+ Eight callow birds were lodg'd; on these he seiz'd,
+ And seiz'd the mother, who, with trembling wings,
+ Hover'd around her loss, all burying deep
+ Within his greedy maw. All stare with dread.
+ But Thestor's son, prophetic truths who still
+ Beheld, exclaim'd--"Rejoice! O Greeks, rejoice!
+ "Conquest is ours, and lofty Troy must fall.
+ "But great our toil, and tedious our delay."
+ Then shew'd the birds a nine years' war foretold.
+ The snake, entwining 'mid the virid boughs,
+ Hard stone becomes, but keeps his serpent's form.
+
+ But still th' Aoenian waves in violent swell
+ Were lash'd by Neptune, nor their vessels bore;
+ And many deem'd that Troy he wish'd to spare,
+ Whose walls his labor rais'd. Not so the son
+ Of Thestor thought: neither he knew hot so,
+ Nor what he knew conceal'd:--a victim dire
+ The virgin-goddess claim'd; a virgin's blood!
+ When o'er affection public weal prevail'd,
+ The king o'ercame the father; and before
+ The altar Iphigenia stood, prepar'd
+ Her spotless blood to shed, as tears gush'd forth
+ Even from the sacrificial 'tendants. Then
+ "Was Dian' mov'd, and threw before their sight
+ A cloud opaque, and (so tradition tells)
+ The maid Thycenian to an hind was chang'd,
+ Amid the priests, the pious crowd and all
+ Who deprecating heard her doom. This done,
+ Dian' by such a sacrifice appeas'd
+ As Dian' best became; and sooth'd her ire,
+ The angry aspect of the seas was smooth'd;
+ And all the thousand vessels felt the breeze
+ Abaft, and bore the long impatient crowd
+ To Phrygia's shores. A spot there lies, whose seat
+ Midst of created space, 'twixt earth, and sea,
+ And heavenly regions, on the confines rests
+ Of the three-sever'd world; whence are beheld
+ All objects and all actions though remote,
+ And every sound by tending ears is heard.
+ Here Fame resides; and in the loftiest towers
+ Her dwelling chuses; and some thousand ways,
+ And thousand portals to the dwelling makes:
+ No portal clos'd with gates. By day, by night,
+ Open they stand; of sounding brass all form'd;
+ All echoing sound; all back the voice rebound:
+ And all reit'rate every word they hear.
+ No rest within, no silence there is found,
+ Yet clamor is not, but a murmur low;
+ Such as the billows wont to make when heard
+ From far, or such as distant thunder sends,
+ When Jove the dark clouds rends and drives aloof.
+ Crowds fill the halls: the trifling vulgar come
+ And issue forth. Ten thousand rumors vague
+ With truth commingled to and fro are heard.
+ Words in confusion fly. Amid the throng
+ These preach their words to vacant air, and those
+ To others tales narrate; the measure still
+ Of every fiction in narration grows;
+ And every author adds to what he hears.
+ Here lives credulity; and here abides
+ Rash error; transports vain; astonied fear;
+ Sedition sudden; and, uncertain whence,
+ Dark whisperings. Fame herself sits high aloft,
+ And views what deeds in heaven, and earth, and sea
+ Are done, and searches all creation round.
+ The news she spreads, that now the Grecian barks
+ Approach with valiant force; nor did the foe
+ Unlook'd-for threat the realm. All Troy impedes
+ Their landing, and the shores defends. Thou first,
+ Protesilaues! by great Hector's spear
+ Unluckily wast slain. The war begun,
+ Their valiant souls, ere yet they Hector knew,
+ Dear cost the Greeks. Nor small the blood which flow'd
+ From Phrygia's sons, by Grecia's valor spill'd.
+
+ Now blush'd Sigaeum's shores with spouting blood,
+ Where Cygnus, Neptune's offspring, gave to death
+ Whole crowds. Achilles in his chariot stood,
+ And with his forceful Pelian spear o'erthrew
+ Thick ranks of Trojans; and as through the fights
+ Cygnus or Hector to engage he sought,
+ Cygnus he met: delay'd was Hector's fate
+ To the tenth year. Then to his white-neck'd steeds,
+ Press'd by the yoke, with cheering shouts he spoke;
+ And full against the foe his chariot drove.
+ His quivering lance well-pois'd he shook, and call'd,
+ "Whoe'er thou art, O youth! this comfort learn
+ "In death, that by Achilles' arm thou dy'st."
+ Thus far Pelides; and his massive spear
+ Close follow'd on his words. With truth it fled;
+ Yet did the steely point, unerring hurl'd,
+ Fall harmless: with a deaden'd point his breast
+ Was struck. Then he;--"O goddess-born! (for fame
+ "Thy race to me has long before made known)
+ "Why wonder'st thou that I unwounded stand?"
+ (For wondering stood Pelides.) "Not this helm,
+ "Which thou behold'st, gay with the courser's mane.
+ "Nor the curv'd buckler by my arm sustain'd,
+ "For aid are worn. For comely grace alone
+ "They deck me. Thus is Mars himself adorn'd.
+ "Thrown every guard far from my limbs, my limbs
+ "Unwounded would remain. Sure I may boast!
+ "Sprung not from Nereus' daughter, but from him
+ "Who rules o'er Nereus; o'er his daughter rules;
+ "And all th' extent of ocean." Cygnus spoke:
+ And at Pelides launch'd his spear to pierce
+ His orbed shield; its brazen front it pierc'd,
+ And nine bull-hides beneath; stay'd at the tenth,
+ The warrior shook it forth; with strenuous arm
+ The quivering weapon hostile back return'd:
+ Cygnus again unwounded felt the blow.
+ Nor felt his naked bosom, to the force
+ Of the third weapon vauntingly expos'd,
+ Aught harm'd. Less fiercely in the Circus wide
+ Rages the bull not, when the scarlet vests
+ To urge his fury fixt, with furious horn
+ To gore attempting, finds elusion still,
+ The unhurt limbs invading. Seeks he now
+ If fall'n the metal from his weapon's point:
+ Fast to the wood the metal still appears;
+ And cries he;--"Weak is then my hand? and spent
+ "On one, is all the strength I once could boast?
+ "For surely strength that arm could boast, which erst
+ "Lyrnessus' wall o'erthrew, and when with gore
+ "It Tenedos, and Thebes made stream; or when
+ "Caycus purple flow'd, stain'd with their blood
+ "Who on its banks had dwelt; and when twice prov'd
+ "By Telephus, the virtue of my spear.
+ "This nervous arm has here too shewn its force
+ "In hills of slain by me up-heap'd; these shores
+ "Attest it." Speaking so, his spear he sent
+ Against Menoetes 'mid the Lycian crowd,
+ As doubting faintly deeds perform'd before:
+ And pierc'd at once his corslet and his breast.
+ From the hot smoking wound as forth he drew
+ The dart,--as with his dying head was struck
+ The solid ground, he spoke:--"This is the hand,
+ "And this the spear which conquest knew before:
+ "This will I 'gainst him use. May it, when sent,
+ "The same success attend."--Ere ceas'd his words
+ Cygnus again with aim he sought, nor swerv'd
+ His ashen weapon whence he aim'd, but rung,
+ Unshrunk from, on the shoulder: thence repell'd,
+ As from a wall or rugged rock it fell:
+ Yet where the blow was felt, did Cygnus seem
+ With blood distain'd. Achilles' joy was vain,
+ For wound was not. Menoetes' blood was there.
+ Then furious from his lofty car he sprung,
+ And close at hand his braving foe assail'd
+ With glittering falchion; by the falchion broke,
+ The helm and shield he saw, but the keen edge
+ His stubborn body blunted. More the son
+ Of Peleus bore not, but the warrior's face
+ With furious buffets from his shield, unclaspt
+ First from his arm, he smote, and with his hilt
+ Heavy his temples; and with headstrong rage
+ Bore on him: nor to his astounded soul
+ Respite allow'd. Dread through his bosom spread;
+ Before his eyes swam darkness: when amidst
+ The plain, a stone his retrogressive feet
+ Oppos'd. Pelides, with his mightiest strength,
+ Struck Cygnus against it, and to earth
+ Hard forc'd him, thrown supine. Pent with his shield,
+ And nervous knees upon his bosom prest
+ Tight, he the lacing of the helmet drew,
+ Which 'neath his chin was ty'd; close press'd his throat,
+ His breathing passage and his life at once
+ Destroy'd he. When his conquer'd foe to spoil
+ Of all his arms he went, the arms he found
+ Vacant. The ocean-god had to a bird
+ Of snowy plumage chang'd his offspring's form:
+ A bird which still the name of Cygnus bears.
+
+ Here stay'd the toil, here did the battle gain
+ Of numerous days a respite, either power
+ Resting on arms unhostile. Then, while guards,
+ Watchful, the Trojan walls protective kept;
+ And sentries equal wakeful o'er the trench
+ Form'd by the Argives watch'd, a feast was held,
+ Where Cygnus' victor, stout Achilles, gave
+ An heifer ribbon-bound to Athen's maid.
+ The sever'd flesh was on the altar plac'd,
+ Whose smoking fragrance, grateful to the gods,
+ High to th' ethereal regions mounted. Part,
+ Their due, th' official sacrificers took;
+ To swell the feast the rest was given. Outstretch'd
+ On couches, laid the noble guests, and fill'd
+ With the drest meat their hunger; and with wine
+ At once their thirst and all their cares assuag'd.
+ No lyre them sooth'd; no sound of vocal song;
+ Nor long extended boxen pipe with holes
+ Multiferous pierc'd: but all night long, discourse
+ Protracted; valiant deeds alone the theme.
+ Alike the valiant acts their foes perform'd,
+ And those their own they speak. Much they enjoy
+ To tell by turns what hazards they o'ercame;
+ And what they oft successless try'd. What else
+ Could e'er Achilles' speech employ? What else
+ By great Achilles could with joy be heard?
+ Chief in the converse, was the conquest late
+ O'er Cygnus gain'd, the topic. Strange to all
+ Seem'd it; the youth, from every weapon safe
+ By wound unconquerable, and with skin
+ Blunting the keenest steel. Wonder the Greeks,
+ And wonders ev'n Pelides: when in words
+ Like these, old Nestor hail'd them. "Cygnus, proof
+ "'Gainst steel,--unpierceable by furious blows
+ "Your age alone has known. These eyes have seen
+ "Perrhaebian Caeneus bear ten thousand strokes
+ "Unhurt. He, fam'd for warlike actions, dwelt
+ "On Othrys, and more strange those warlike deeds,
+ "Since female was he born." The wondering crowd,
+ Mov'd with the novel prodigy, beseech
+ (Their spokesman was Achilles) that the tale
+ Nestor would give them. "Eloquent old man!
+ "Of all our age most prudent, tell, for all
+ "The same desire prevails o'er, who was he,
+ "This Caeneus? why was chang'd his sex? what wars
+ "Of fierce encounter made him known to thee?
+ "And if by any conquer'd, tell the name."
+
+ Then thus the senior: "Though decrepid age
+ "Weighs heavy on me, and the deeds beheld
+ "In prime of youth, in numbers 'scape my mind;
+ "Yet than those facts, 'mid all of peace and war,
+ "Nought on my bosom made a deeper print.
+ "Yet may extended age of all beheld
+ "Part of the numerous acts and objects seen
+ "Relate,--I twice one hundred years have pass'd;
+ "Now in the third I breathe. Caenis, a nymph
+ "Sprung from Elateus, fam'd was all around
+ "For brightest beauty; fairest of the maids
+ "Who Thessaly adorn; theme of vain hopes
+ "To crowds of wooers through the neighbouring towns;
+ "And ev'n through thine, Achilles; for the land
+ "Thou claim'st produc'd her. Nay, her nuptial couch,
+ "Peleus perchance had sought, save that the rites
+ "Already with thy mother were compleat,
+ "Or were in promise ready. Nuptial couch
+ "She never press'd, for on the lonely shore
+ "Strolling, so fame declares, the vigorous clasp
+ "Of Ocean's god she felt. The charms possest
+ "Of his new object, Neptune said--whate'er
+ "Thou wishest, chuse, secure of no repulse.--
+ "This too does fame report, that Caenis cry'd--
+ "Wrongs such as mine no trivial gift deserve,
+ "That ne'er such shame again I suffer, grant
+ "I woman be no longer; that will all
+ "Favors comprize.--Her closing words betray'd
+ "A graver sound; manly appear'd her voice:
+ "And masculine it was. Deep ocean's god
+ "Acceded to her wish, and granted, more,
+ "That wounds should never harm her, nor by steel
+ "Should she e'er fall. Joy'd at the gift, the god
+ "Atracia's hero leaves--employs his age
+ "In studies warlike; and among the fields,
+ "Where fertilizing Peneus wanders, roams.
+
+ "Now bold Ixion's son had gain'd the hand
+ "Of Hippodamia; and the fierce-soul'd crowd
+ "Cloud-born, had bidden to attend the boards,
+ "In order rang'd within a cavern's mouth,
+ "By trees thick-shaded. All the princes round
+ "Of Thessaly attended: I, myself
+ "Amongst them went. Loud rung the regal feast
+ "With the mixt concourse; all most joyful sung
+ "O Hymen! Ioe Hymen! and each hall
+ "Blaz'd bright with fires. The virgin then approach'd
+ "Pre-excellent in fairness, with a band
+ "Of matrons and unwedded nymphs begirt.
+ "Most blest, we all exclaim'd, in such a spouse
+ "Must be Pirithoues--but such boding hopes
+ "Well nigh deceiv'd us. For when drunken lust
+ "O'er thee, Eurytus! govern'd, of the blood
+ "Of savage Centaurs, far most savage, fir'd
+ "Whether by wine, or by the virgin's charms
+ "Thou saw'st, thy breast. Instant, the board o'erturn'd,
+ "Routed the guests convivial, and the bride
+ "Caught by her locks, was forceful dragg'd away.
+ "Eurytus Hippodamia seiz'd; the rest
+ "Grasp'd such as pleas'd them, or whoe'er they met.
+ "It show'd the image of a captur'd town.
+
+ "With female shrieks the place resounded; swift
+ "We start, and Theseus foremost thus exclaims:--
+ "What frenzy, O Eurytus! thee impels
+ "Pirithoues thus to wrong me still in life!
+ "Ign'rant that two thou wound'st in one?--Nor vain
+ "The chief magnanimous his threat'nings spoke:
+ "Th' aggressors back repell'd; and, while they rag'd,
+ "The ravish'd bride recover'd. Nought he said,
+ "Nor could such acts defence by words allow;
+ "But with rude inconsiderate hands he press'd
+ "Full on her champion's face; his valiant breast
+ "Assaulting. Near by chance a cup there stood,
+ "Of mould antique, and rough with rising forms:
+ "Mighty it was, but Theseus, mightier still,
+ "Seiz'd it, and full against his hostile face
+ "It dash'd; he vomits forth, with clots of gore,
+ "His brains, and wine; these issuing from the wound;
+ "That from his mouth; and on the soaking sand
+ "Supine he sprawls. With rage the two-form'd race
+ "Burn for their brother's slaughter; all with voice
+ "United, eager call--to arms! to arms!
+ "Wine gave them courage, and the primal fight
+ "Was goblets, fragile casks, and hollow jars,
+ "Dash'd on: once instruments to feasts alone
+ "Pertaining; now for slaughter us'd and blood.
+
+ "First Amycus, of Ophion son, not fear'd
+ "To rob the sacred chambers of their spoils;
+ "And from its cord suspensive, tore away,
+ "As from the roof it hung, a glittering lamp;
+ "And hurl'd it, lofty-pois'd, full in the front
+ "Of Lapithaean Celadon. So falls
+ "On the white neck the victim bull presents,
+ "The sacrificial axe, and all his bones
+ "Were shatter'd left; one all confounded wound.
+ "His eyes sprang forth; his palate bones displac'd,
+ "His nose driv'n back within his palate falls.
+ "Him Belates Pellaean with a foot
+ "Torn from a maple table, on the ground
+ "Stretch'd prone; his chin forc'd downward on his breast;
+ "And sputtering teeth, with blackest gore commixt,
+ "Sent by a second blow to Stygia's shades.
+
+ "As next he stood, and with tremendous brow
+ "The flaming altar view'd, Gryneus exclaim'd--
+ "Why use we this not? and the ponderous load
+ "With all its fires he seiz'd, and 'mid the crowd
+ "Of Lapithaeans flung: two low it press'd;
+ "Broteas and bold Orion. From her sphere
+ "Orion's mother Mycale, by charms
+ "The moon to drag to earth has oft been known.
+
+ "Loud cry'd Exodius:--Were but weapons found
+ "That death impunity would boast not. Horns
+ "An ancient stag once brandish'd, on a pine
+ "Hung lofty, serv'd for arms; the forky branch
+ "Hurl'd in his face deep dug out either eye.
+ "Part to the horns adhere; part flowing down
+ "His beard, thence hang in ropes of clotted gore.
+ "Lo! Rhaetus snatches from the altar's height
+ "A burning torch of size immense, and through
+ "Charaxus' dexter temple, with bright hair
+ "Shaded, he drives it. Like the arid corn
+ "Caught by the rapid flame, the tresses burn;
+ "And the scorch'd blood the wound sent forth, a sound
+ "Of horrid crackling gave. Oft whizzes steel
+ "So, drawn forth glowing from the fire, with tongs
+ "Bent, and in cooling waters frequent plung'd;
+ "And crackling sounds, immers'd in tepid waves.
+ "The wounded hero from his tresses shook
+ "The greedy flames, and in his arms upheav'd,
+ "Tom from the earth, a mighty threshold stone,
+ "A waggon's burthen; but the ponderous load
+ "Forbade his strength to hurl it on the foe:
+ "And on Cometes, who beside him stood,
+ "Dropp'd the huge bulk. Nor Rhaetus then his joy
+ "Disguis'd, exclaiming:--Such may be the aid
+ "That all your friends receive!--Then with his brand
+ "Half burnt, his blows redoubling, burst the skull
+ "With the strong force; and on the pulpy brain
+ "By frequent strokes the bones beat down. From thence
+ "Victor, Evagrus, Corythus, he met
+ "And Dryas. Corythus o'erthrown, whose cheeks
+ "The first down shaded; loud Evagrus cry'd:--
+ "What glory thine, thus a weak boy to slay?--
+ "No more to utter Rhaetus gave, but fierce
+ "Plung'd the red-flaming weapon in his mouth,
+ "Thus speaking; and deep forc'd it down his throat.
+ "Thee also, furious Dryas! with the brand,
+ "Whirl'd round and round his head, he next assails.
+ "But thee the same sad fortune not befel:
+ "Him, proud triumphing from increas'd success
+ "In blood, thou piercest with an harden'd stake,
+ "Where the neck meets the shoulder. Rhaetus groan'd:
+ "And from the hard bone scarce the wood could draw;
+ "As drench'd in blood his own, by flight he scap'd.
+ "With him fled Lycabas; and Orneus fled;
+ "Thaumas; Pisenor; Medon, who was struck
+ "'Neath the right shoulder; Mermeros, who late
+ "In rapid race all else surpass'd, but now
+ "Mov'd halting with his wound; Abas, of boars
+ "The spoiler; Pholus, and Melaneus too;
+ "With Astylos the seer, who from the war
+ "Dissuaded, but in vain, his brethren crowd.
+ "Nay more, to Nessus, fearing wounds, he cry'd--
+ "Fly not!--thou'lt for Alcides' bow be sav'd.
+
+ "Euronymus, nor Lycidas, their fate,
+ "Areos, nor Imbreos fled; whom face to face
+ "Confronting, Dryas' hand smote down. Thou too,
+ "Crenaeus! felt thy death in front, though turn'd
+ "For flight thy feet; for looking back thou caught'st
+ "Betwixt thine eyes the massy steel; where joins
+ "The nose's basement to the forehead bones.
+
+ "With endless draughts of stupefactive wine
+ "Aphidas lay, 'mid all the raging noise
+ "Unrous'd; and grasping in his languid hand
+ "A ready-mingled bowl: stretch'd was he seen,
+ "On a rough bear-skin, brought from Ossa's hill.
+ "Him from afar, as Phorbas saw, no arms
+ "Dreading, he fix'd his fingers in the thongs,
+ "And said--with Stygian waters mixt, thy wine
+ "Now drink;--and instant round his javelin twin'd
+ "The youth: for as supinely stietch'd he lay
+ "The ash-form'd javelin through his throat was driv'n.
+ "No sense of death he felt; his dark brown gore
+ "Flow'd in full stream upon the couch, and flow'd
+ "In his grasp'd goblet. I, Petraeus saw,
+ "An acorn-loaded oak from earth to rend
+ "Endeavoring; which while compass'd with both arms
+ "He strains, now this way, now the other, shook
+ "Appear'd the tottering tree. Pirithous' dart
+ "Driv'n through the ribs, Petraeus' straining breast
+ "Nail'd to the rigid wood. Pirithous' arm
+ "Lycus o'erthrew; and 'neath Pirithous' force
+ "Fell Chromis,--so they tell. But less of fame
+ "The conqueror gain'd from these, than from the death
+ "Of Helops, and of Dictys. Helops felt
+ "The dart through both his temples; swift it whizz'd
+ "His right ear enter'd, shewing at his left.
+ "But Dictys, from a dangerous mountain's brow
+ "As flying, trembling from Ixion's son
+ "Close following, he descended, headlong down
+ "He tumbled; with his ponderous fall he broke
+ "A mighty ash; within his riven side
+ "The stumps his bowels tore. Aphareus fierce,
+ "Came on for vengeance; and a massive rock,
+ "Torn from the hill, upheav'd to throw--to throw
+ "Attempted. Theseus with an oaken club
+ "Prevented, and his mighty elbow broke:
+ "Nor now his leisure suits, nor cares he now
+ "A foe disabled to dispatch to hell:
+ "But on Biamor's lofty back he springs,
+ "Unwont to bear, except himself, before:
+ "Press'd with his knees his ribs, and grasping firm,
+ "With his left hand his locks, he bruis'd his face,
+ "His frowning forehead, and his harden'd skull,
+ "With the rough club. With the same club he lays
+ "Nidymnus prostrate; and Lycotas, skill'd
+ "To fling the javelin; Hippasus, whose beard
+ "Immense, his breast o'ershaded; Ripheus sprung
+ "From lofty woods; and Tereus wont to drag
+ "Home furious bears still living, on the hills
+ "Thessalian, caught. Nor longer in the fight
+ "Raging with such success, Demoleon bore
+ "Theseus to see, but from a crowded wood,
+ "With giant efforts strove a pine to rend,
+ "Of ancient growth, up by the roots, but foil'd
+ "He flung the broken fragment 'mid the foe.
+ "Warn'd by Minerva, from the flying wood
+ "Theseus withdrew; so would he we believe.
+ "Yet harmless fell the tree not; from the breast
+ "And shoulder of great Crantor, was the neck
+ "Sever'd. The faithful follower of thy sire
+ "Was he, Achilles. Him, Amyntor, king
+ "Of all Dolopia, in the warlike strife
+ "O'ercome, as pledge of peace and faithful words
+ "Gave to AEaecides. Him mangled so
+ "With cruel wound, Peleus far distant saw;
+ "And thus exclaim'd,--O, Crantor! dearest youth!
+ "Thy funeral obsequies behold.--He said,
+ "And hurl'd his ashen spear with vigorous arm,
+ "And with a spirit not less vigorous, forth,
+ "Full on Demoleon: tearing through the fence
+ "Of his strong chest, it quiver'd in the bones.
+ "The pointless wood his hand dragg'd out; the wood
+ "With difficulty dragg'd he: in his lungs
+ "Deep was the steel retain'd. To his fierce soul
+ "Fresh vigor gave the smart. Hurt as he was
+ "He rear'd against the foe, and with his hoofs
+ "Trampled thy sire. He, with his helm and shield,
+ "Wards off the sounding blows; his shoulders guards;
+ "Holds his protended steel, and his foe's chest
+ "Full 'twixt the shoulders; one strong blow transpierc'd.
+ "Yet had he slain by distant darts before
+ "Both Hylis and Phlegraeus; and in fight
+ "More close, had Clanis and Hipponous fall'n.
+ "To these must Dorilas be added, he
+ "A wolf skin round his forehead wore; and, bent,
+ "A double wound presenting, o'er his brows
+ "He bore the weapons of a savage bull;
+ "With streaming gore deep blushing. Loud I cry'd,
+ "While courage gave me strength--see how my steel
+ "Thy horns surpasses--and my dart I flung.
+ "My dart to 'scape unable, o'er his brow
+ "To ward the blow, his hand he held; his hand
+ "Was to his forehead nail'd. Loud shouts were heard,
+ "And Peleus at him, wounded thus, rush'd on,
+ "(He nearer stood) and with a furious blow
+ "Mid belly plac'd, dispatch'd him. High he sprung
+ "On earth his entrails dragging;--as they dragg'd
+ "Madly he trampled;--what he trampled tore:
+ "These round his legs entwining, down he falls;
+ "And with an empty'd body sinks to death.
+
+ "Nor could thy beauty, Cyllarus, avail
+ "Aught in the contest! if to forms like thine
+ "Beauty we grant. His beard to sprout began,
+ "His beard of golden hue; golden the locks
+ "That down his neck, and o'er his shoulders flow'd.
+ "Cheerful his face; his shoulders, neck, and arms,
+ "Approach'd the models which the artists praise.
+ "Thus all that man resembled. Nor fell short
+ "The horse's portion: beauteous for a beast.
+ "A neck and head supply'd, a steed were form'd,
+ "Of Castor worthy: so was for the seat
+ "Fitted his back; so full outstood his chest:
+ "His coat all blacker than the darkest pitch;
+ "Save his white legs, and ample flowing tail.
+ "Crowds of his race him lov'd; but one alone,
+ "Hylonome, could charm him; fairest nymph
+ "Of all the two-form'd race that roam'd the groves.
+ "She sole enraptur'd Cyllarus, with words
+ "Of blandishment; beloved, and her love
+ "For him confessing. Grace in all her limbs
+ "And dress, for him was studied; smooth her hair
+ "For him was comb'd; with rosemary now bound;
+ "Now with the violet; with fresh roses now;
+ "And oft the snow-white lily wore she; twice
+ "Daily she bath'd her features in the stream,
+ "That from Pagasis' woody summit falls;
+ "Twice daily in the current lav'd her limbs.
+ "Nor cloth'd she e'er her shoulders, or her side,
+ "Save with the chosen spoils of beasts which best
+ "Her form became. Most equal was their love:
+ "As one they o'er the mountains stray'd; as one
+ "The caves they sought; and both together then
+ "The Lapithaean roof had enter'd; both
+ "Now wag'd the furious war. By whom unknown,
+ "From the left side a javelin came, and pierc'd
+ "Thee deep, O Cyllarus! 'neath where thy chest
+ "Joins to thy neck. Drawn from the small-form'd wound,
+ "The weapon,--with the mangled heart, the limbs
+ "Grew rigid all. Hylonome supports
+ "His dying body, and her aiding hand
+ "Presses against the wound; leans face to face,
+ "And tries his fleeting life awhile to stay.
+ "When fled she saw it, with laments which noise
+ "Drown'd ere my ears they reach'd, full on the dart
+ "Which through him stuck she fell; and clasp'd in death
+ "Her dear-lov'd husband's form. Before my eyes
+ "Still stands Phaeoecomes, whom, closely-join'd,
+ "Six lions' hides protected; man and horse
+ "Equal the covering shar'd. Phonoleus' son
+ "Fierce on the skull he smote, with stump immense,
+ "Huge as four oxen might with labor move.
+ "Crush'd was the rounding broadness of the head;
+ "And the soft brain gush'd forth at both his ears;
+ "His mouth, his hollow nostrils, and his eyes.
+ "So through the straining oaken twigs appears,
+ "Coagulated milk: so liquid flows
+ "Through the fine sieve, by supercumbent weights
+ "Prest down, the thick curd at the small-form'd holes.
+ "Deep in his lowest flank the foe I pierc'd,
+ "As from our fallen friend the arms to strip
+ "Prepar'd, he stoop'd. Thy father saw the deed.
+ "Chthonius too fell beneath my sword, and fell
+ "Teleboas. Chthonius bore a forky bough;
+ "A javelin arm'd the other; with its steel
+ "He pierc'd me. Lo! the mark the wound has left:--
+ "Still the old scar appears. Then was the time
+ "They should have sent me to the siege of Troy:
+ "Then had I power great Hector's arm to stay;
+ "To check, if not to conquer. Hector then
+ "Was born not, or a boy. Now age me robs
+ "Of all my force. Why should I say how fell
+ "Two-form'd Pyretus, by the strength o'erthrown
+ "Of Periphantes? Why of Amphyx tell,
+ "Who in Oeclus' hostile front deep sunk,
+ "(Oeclus centaur-born) a pointless spear?
+ "Macareus, Erigdupus, (near the hill
+ "Of Pelethronus born, against his chest
+ "Full-bearing,) prostrate laid. Nor should I pass,
+ "How I the spear beheld, by Nessus' hands
+ "Launch'd forth, and bury'd in Cymelus' groin.
+ "Nor think you Mopsus, Amphyx' son, excell'd
+ "Alone to teach the future. By the dart
+ "Of Mopsus, fell Odites double-form'd.
+ "To speak in vain he strove, for tongue to chin,
+ "And chin to throat were by the javelin nail'd.
+
+ "Caeneus ere this had five to death dispatch'd
+ "Bromius, Antimachus with hatchet arm'd;
+ "Pyracmon, Stiphelus, and Helimus.
+ "What wounds them slew I know not; well their names,
+ "And numbers I remember. Latreus big
+ "In body and in limbs, sprung forth adorn'd
+ "In the gay arms Halesus once had own'd;
+ "Halesus of Thessalia by him slain:
+ "'Twixt strong virility and age his years,
+ "Still strong virility his arm could boast;
+ "Gray hairs his temples sprinkled. Lofty seen
+ "In helm and shield, and Macedonian spear,
+ "Proudly between the adverse ranks he rode;
+ "And clash'd his arms, and circling scower'd along.
+ "These boasting words to the resounding air
+ "Brave issuing--Caenis, shall I bear thee so?
+ "Still will I think thee Caenis;--female still
+ "By me thou'lt be consider'd. 'Bates it nought
+ "Thy valor, when thy origin thy soul
+ "Reflects on? When thy mind allows to own
+ "What deed the grant obtained? What price was paid
+ "To gain the false resemblance of a man?
+ "What thou was born, remember: mark as well
+ "Who has embrac'd thee. Go, the distaff take,
+ "And carding basket. With thy fingers twirl
+ "The flax, and martial contests leave to men.
+ "The spear which Caeneus hurl'd, deep in his side
+ "Bare as he cours'd, expos'd the blow to meet,
+ "Pierc'd him when boasting thus, just where the man
+ "Join'd the four-footed form. With smart he rag'd,
+ "And to the Phyllian warrior's face his spear
+ "Presented. Back the spear rebounded: so
+ "Bound the hard hailstones from the roof; so leap
+ "The paltry pebbles on the hollow drum.
+ "Now hand to hand he rushes to engage,
+ "And in his harden'd sides attempts to plunge
+ "His weapon deep. Pervious his weapon finds
+ "No spot. Then cry'd he,--still thou shalt not 'scape:
+ "Though blunted is my point my edge shall slay;--
+ "And aim'd a blow oblique, to ope his side,
+ "While round his flank was grasp'd his forceful arm.
+ "Sounded the stroke as marble struck would sound;
+ "The shiver'd steel rebounding from his neck.
+ "His limbs unwounded, to the wondering foe
+ "Thus long expos'd, loud Caeneus call'd;--Now try
+ "Our arms thy limbs to pierce!--Up to the hilt
+ "His deadly weapon 'twixt his shoulders plung'd;
+ "Then thrust and dug with blows unseeing 'mid
+ "His entrails deep; thus forming wounds on wounds.
+
+ "Now all the furious crowd of double forms
+ "Rush raging round him; all their weapons hurl;
+ "And all assail with blows this single foe.
+ "Blunted their weapons fall, and Caeneus stands
+ "Unpierc'd, unbleeding, from ten thousand strokes:
+ "Astonish'd at the miracle they gaze;
+ "But Monychus exclaims;--What blasting shame
+ "A race o'erthrown by one; that one a man,
+ "But dubious. Grant him man, our coward deeds
+ "Prove us but what he has been. What avail
+ "Our giant limbs? What boots our double strength;
+ "Strength of created forms the mightiest two,
+ "In us conjoin'd? A goddess-mother we
+ "Assur'dly should not boast; nor boast for sire
+ "Ixion, whose great daring soul him mov'd
+ "To clasp the lofty Juno in his arms.
+ "Now vanquish'd by a foe half-male. Him whelm
+ "With trees, with rocks: whole mountains heap'd on high,
+ "Whole falling forests, let that stubborn soul
+ "Crush out. The woods upon his throat shall press,
+ "And weight for wounds shall serve.--The centaur spoke,
+ "Seizing a tree which lay by chance uptorn
+ "By raging Auster; on his valiant foe
+ "The bulk he hurl'd. All in like efforts join'd:
+ "And quickly Othrys of his woods was stript:
+ "Nor Pelion shade retain'd. Caeneus opprest
+ "Beneath the pile immense--the woody load,--
+ "Hot pants, and with his forceful shoulders bears,
+ "To heave th' unwieldy weight: but soon the heap
+ "Reaches his face, and then o'ertops his head:
+ "Nor breath is left his spirit can inhale.
+ "Now faint he sinks, and struggles now in vain
+ "To lift his head to air, and from him heave
+ "The heap'd-up forests: then the pile but shakes,
+ "As shakes the lofty Ida you behold,
+ "When by an earthquake stirr'd. Doubtful his end.
+ "His body, by the sylvan load down prest,
+ "Some thought that shadowy Tartarus receiv'd.
+ "But Mopsus this deny'd, who spy'd a bird
+ "From 'mid the pile ascend, and mount the skies
+ "On yellow pinions. I the bird beheld,
+ "Then first, then last. As wide on buoyant wing
+ "Our force surveying, Mopsus saw him fly,
+ "And rustling round with mighty noise, his eyes
+ "And soul close mark'd him, and he loud exclaim'd,--
+ "Hail, Caeneus! of the Lapithaean race
+ "The glory! once of men the first, and now
+ "Bird of thy kind unique!--The seer's belief
+ "Made credible the fact. Grief spurr'd our rage.
+ "Nor bore we calmly that a single youth
+ "By hosts of foes should fall. Nor ceas'd our swords
+ "In gore to rage 'till most to death were given:
+ "The rest by favoring darkness say'd in flight."
+
+ While thus the Pylian sage, the wars narrates
+ Wag'd by the Lapithaean race, and foe
+ Centaurs half-human; his splenetic ire
+ Tlepolemus could hide not, when he found
+ Alcides' deeds past o'er; but angry spoke.--
+ "Old sire, astonish'd, I perceive the praise
+ "The deeds of Hercules demand, has 'scap'd
+ "Your mind. My father has been wont to tell
+ "Whom, he of cloud-begotten race o'erthrew:
+ "Oft have I heard him." Nestor sad reply'd;
+ "Why force me thus my miseries to recal
+ "To recollection; freshening up the woes
+ "Long years have blunted; and confess the hate
+ "I bear thy sire for injuries receiv'd.
+ "He, (O, ye gods!) has deeds atchiev'd which far
+ "All faith surpass; and has the wide world fill'd
+ "With his high fame. Would I could this deny!
+ "For praise we e'er Deiphobus? or praise
+ "Give we Polydamas, or Hector's self?
+ "Who can a foe applaud? This sire of thine
+ "Messenia's walls laid prostrate, and destroy'd
+ "Elis and Pylos, unoffending towns;
+ "Rushing with fire and sword in our abode.
+ "To pass the rest who 'neath his fury fell,--
+ "Twice six of Neleus' sons were we beheld;
+ "Twice six save me beneath Alcides' arm,
+ "There dy'd. With ease were conquer'd all but one;
+ "Strange was of Periclymenos the death;
+ "Whom Neptune, founder of our line, had given,
+ "What form he will'd to take; that form thrown off.
+ "His own again resume. When vainly chang'd
+ "To multifarious shapes; he to the bird
+ "Most dear to heaven's high sovereign, whose curv'd claws
+ "The thunders bear, himself transform'd; the strength
+ "That bird possesses, using, with bow'd wings,
+ "His crooked beak and talons pounc'd his face.
+ "'Gainst him Tyrinthius his unerring bow
+ "Bent, and as high amid the clouds he tower'd,
+ "And poising hung, pierc'd where his side and wing
+ "Just met: nor deep the hurt; the sinew torn
+ "Still him disabled, and deny'd the power
+ "To move his wing, or strength to urge his flight.
+ "To earth he fell; his pinions unendow'd
+ "With power to gather air: and the light dart
+ "Fixt superficial in the wing, his fall
+ "Deep in his body pierc'd; out his left side,
+ "Close by his throat the pointed mischief stood.
+
+ "Now, valiant leader of the Rhodian fleet,
+ "Judge what from me the great Alcides' deeds
+ "Of blazonry can claim? Yet the revenge
+ "I give my brethren, is on his brave acts
+ "Silent to rest: to thee still firm ally'd
+ "In friendship." Thus his eloquent discourse
+ The son of Neleus ended, and the gift
+ Of Bacchus, oft repeated, circled round
+ To the old senior's words; then from the board
+ They rose, and night's remainder gave to sleep.
+
+ But now the deity, whose trident rules
+ The ocean waters, with a father's grief
+ Mourns for his offspring to a bird transform'd.
+ Savage 'gainst fierce Achilles, he pursues
+ His well-remember'd ire with hostile rage.
+ And now the war near twice ten years had seen,
+ When long-hair'd Phoebus, thus the god address'd;
+ "O power! to me most dear, of all the sons
+ "My brother boasts! whose hands with mine uprear'd
+ "In vain the walls of Troy! griev'st thou not now
+ "Those towers beholding as they ruin'd fall?
+ "Griev'st thou not now such thousands to behold
+ "Slain, those high towers attempting to defend?
+ "Griev'st thou not (more I need not speak) to think
+ "Of Hector's body round his own Troy dragg'd,
+ "When still the fierce Achilles, ev'n than war
+ "More ruthless, of our works destroyer, lives?
+ "Would it to me were given--my trident's power,
+ "Well know I, he should prove; but since deny'd
+ "To rush, and hand to hand this foe engage,
+ "Slay him with unsuspected secret dart."
+ The Delian god consented, and at once
+ His uncle's vengeance and his own indulg'd.
+ Veil'd in a cloud amid the Ilian host
+ He darts, and 'mid a slaughter'd crowd beholds
+ Where Paris, on plebeian foes his shafts
+ Unerring hurls: to him confess'd, the god
+ Exclaims;--"Why wast'st thou in ignoble blood
+ "Thy weapons? If thy friends employ thy care,
+ "Turn on Pelides every dart, revenge
+ "Thy murder'd brothers."--Phoebus spoke, and shew'd
+ Where with his steel Achilles ranks on ranks
+ Of Troy o'erthrew. On him the bow he turns;
+ To him he guides the sure, the deadly dart.
+
+ Now may old Priam joy for Hector slain;
+ For thou, Achilles, victor o'er such hosts,
+ Fall'st by the coward's hand, who stole from Greece
+ The ravish'd wife. O! if foredoom'd thy lot
+ By woman-warrior to be slain, to fall
+ By Amazonian weapon had'st thou chos'n.
+ Now burns AEaecides, the Phrygians' dread;
+ The pride, the guardian of the Grecian name;
+ The chief in war unconquer'd: and the god
+ Who arm'd him once, consumes him. Ashes now;
+ Nought of the great Pelides can be found,
+ Save what with ease a little urn contains.
+ But still his glory lives, and fills all earth:
+ Such bounds alone the hero suit; his fame
+ Equals himself, nor sinks he to the shades.
+
+ His shield itself, as conscious whose the shield,
+ Fomented wars; and quarrels for his arms
+ Arose. Tydides fear'd to urge his claim;
+ Ajax, Oileus' son; Atrides' each,
+ Him youngest, and the monarch who surpass'd
+ In age and warlike skill; and all the crowd.
+ Laertes' son, and Telamon's alone
+ Try'd the bold glorious contest. From himself
+ All blame invidious Agamemnon mov'd:
+ The Grecian chiefs amid the camp he plac'd,
+ And bade the host around the cause decide.
+
+
+
+
+*The Thirteenth Book.*
+
+
+ Contest of Ajax and Ulysses for the arms of Achilles. Success of
+ Ulysses and death of Ajax. Sack of Troy. Sacrifice of Polyxena to
+ the ghost of Achilles. Lamentation of Hecuba. She tears out the
+ eyes of Polymnestor, and is changed into a bitch. Birds arise
+ from the funeral pile of Memnon, and kill each other. Escape of
+ AEneas from Troy, and voyage to Delos. The daughters of Anius
+ transformed to doves. Voyage to Crete and Italy. Story of Acis
+ and Galatea. Love of Glaucus for Scylla.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Thirteenth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ The princes sate; the common troops in crowds
+ Circled them round; when Ajax in the midst,
+ Lord of the seven-fold shield, arose, with rage
+ Uncurb'd. Sigaeum's shores he fiercely view'd;
+ And ship-clad beach, while with extended arms,
+ "O, Jupiter!" he cry'd, "before this fleet
+ "Must then our cause be try'd? With me contends
+ "Ulysses? He who yielded all a prey
+ "To Hector's fires; whom I alone repell'd?
+ "Fires which I from that fleet drove far? More safe
+ "'Tis sure with artful language to contend,
+ "Than battle hand to hand. Hard 'tis for me
+ "To speak; for him 'tis no less hard to fight.
+ "And much as I in keen-urg'd blows excel,
+ "And arduous contest, such in words is he.
+ "My deeds, O Grecians! to rehearse what need?
+ "Have you not seen them? Let Ulysses tell
+ "His actions, feats without a witness done;
+ "Night only privy. Mighty is the prize,
+ "I own; but Ajax' glory suffers much,
+ "Striving with such a rival. Granted, great
+ "Its value; where the boast to have obtain'd
+ "What this Ulysses hop'd for? He ev'n now
+ "Enjoys th' advantage of the contest. Foil'd,
+ "His pride will be to boast with me he strove.
+ "But I, if doubtful is my valor deem'd,
+ "Have claims most potent in my noble race:
+ "Sprung from great Telamon, who Troy's proud town,
+ "'Neath brave Alcides captur'd; and explor'd
+ "The shores of Colchis in th' Haemonian bark.
+ "His sire was AEaecus, who equal law
+ "Dispenses 'mid the silent shades; where toils
+ "AEoelian Sisyphus beneath his stone.
+ "Well mighty Jove knows AEaecus, and owns
+ "Him son. Thus Ajax ranks but third from Jove.
+ "Nor yet, O, Greeks! should this descent my cause
+ "Assist, save that Achilles claim'd the same.
+ "Of brothers born, a kinsman's right I ask.
+ "Why should one sprung of Sisyphaean blood,
+ "Like his progenitor in theft and fraud,
+ "Ingraft an alien name upon the stock
+ "Of AEaecus? Am I the arms refus'd
+ "That first I join'd the warriors? join'd your host
+ "Betray'd not by informers? Worthier he,
+ "That last his arms he took? with madness feign'd
+ "Shunning the warfare; till more crafty came
+ "Naupliades, though luckless for himself;--
+ "Who shew'd his coward soul's devices plain;
+ "And hither dragg'd him to the hated wars?
+ "Now let him arms most glorious take, who arms
+ "To wear refus'd. Let me unhonor'd go,
+ "Robb'd of my kindred right, who first arriv'd
+ "To face the perils. Would, ye gods! that true,
+ "Or thought so, his insanity had been.
+ "Then, counsellor of cruel deeds, he ne'er
+ "Had join'd our camp before the Phrygian walls.
+ "Then thou, O Paeaen's son! had Lemnos ne'er
+ "Known--to our shame abandon'd on the shore.
+ "Thou now, so fame reports, in woody caves
+ "Shelter'd, ev'n rocks mov'st with thy rending groans;
+ "Pray'st that Laertes' son his justest meeds
+ "May gain. Ye gods! ye gods! grant ye his prayers
+ "A favoring ear! Now he, by oath combin'd
+ "With us in war;--O, heavens! a leader too!
+ "Heir to employ Alcides' faithful darts,
+ "Sinks both by famine and disease opprest:
+ "By birds sustain'd, and cloth'd by birds, he spends
+ "Upon his feather'd prey, the darts design'd
+ "To end the fate of Troy. Yet still he lives:
+ "For here he never with Ulysses came.
+ "Content had hapless Palamedes been
+ "Deserted so. Life might he have enjoy'd
+ "Perchance; and blameless sure to death had sunk.
+ "He whom this wretch, too mindful of the time
+ "His counterfeited madness was expos'd,
+ "Feign'd had betray'd the Greeks; and prov'd the crime
+ "By forg'd assistance: shewing forth the gold
+ "First bury'd by himself. Thus he destroys
+ "The strength of Greece, by exile or by death.
+ "Thus fights Ulysses; thus must he be fear'd
+ "Who, though old faithful Nestor he surpass'd
+ "In eloquence, not all would e'er avail,
+ "To prove deserting Nestor was no shame:
+ "Who press'd with age, and with a wounded horse
+ "Delay'd, Ulysses' aid besought: behind
+ "His coward comrade left him. Well, this deed
+ "Tydides can declare, by me not feign'd,
+ "Who oft him reprimanded by his name,
+ "And curs'd the flying of his trembling friend.
+ "Gods with just eyes all mortal actions view.
+ "Lo! he who aid would give not, aid requires!
+ "Who Nestor left, deserted was himself:
+ "Himself prescrib'd the treatment which he found.
+ "Loud call'd he to his friends. I come, I see,
+ "Pale trembling, where he lies, with dread to view
+ "Impending death. My mighty shield I fling;
+ "Beneath it shade him, and his coward breast
+ "(My smallest claim to glory) I protect.
+ "If still persisting, thou the strife wilt urge,
+ "Thither again return. Recal the foe;
+ "Thy wound; thy wonted terror; and lie hid
+ "Beneath my shield. 'Neath that with me contend.
+ "Lo! him I snatch'd from death, whose wounds refus'd
+ "Ev'n power to stand; retarded not by wounds,
+ "In agile flight sped on. Now Hector comes,
+ "Whom in the fight the deities attend.
+ "Where'er he swept, not thou Ulysses sole
+ "Wast struck with dread; the bravest of our host
+ "Shrunk, such the terror which then fill'd the field.
+ "When hand to hand engag'd, him prone I laid,
+ "Proud of his slaughter, on th' ensanguin'd plain,
+ "With a huge stone. I singly him oppos'd,
+ "All single challeng'd; all the Greeks to me
+ "Pray'd for the lot: nor vain your prayers were found.
+ "Enquire ye, what the fortune of the fight?
+ "I stood, by him unconquer'd, when all Troy
+ "Rush'd on the fleet of Greece, with fire, with sword,
+ "And aiding Jove: Where was Ulysses then?
+ "The eloquent Ulysses? I alone,
+ "A thousand ships, the hopes of your return,
+ "Defended with my breast: this crowd of ships
+ "Deserves those arms. Nay, if with truth to speak
+ "You grant, those arms more glory gain from me
+ "Than I from them; our honor is conjoin'd.
+ "Ajax the arms demand, not Ajax arms.
+ "Let Ithacus compare his Rhaesus slain;
+ "And slain unwarlike Dolon; and trepann'd
+ "Helenus, Priam's son; and Pallas' form.
+ "In open day nought done, and nought perform'd,
+ "Save Diomed' assisted. Grant for once,
+ "Such paltry service could the armour claim;
+ "Divide the prize, and lo! the largest share
+ "Tydides must demand. But why this prize
+ "Seeks Ithacus? who all his deeds performs
+ "In private; traversing unarm'd; the foe,
+ "While unsuspecting, conquering by deceit.
+ "This helmet's radiance from the glittering gold
+ "Darting, would shew his plots, and open lay
+ "The latent spy. But his Dulichian head,
+ "Cas'd in Achilles' casque, the weight would 'whelm,
+ "And for his languid arms, the Pelian spear
+ "Too weighty would be found. That shield engrav'd,
+ "With all earth's various scenes, but ill would grace
+ "His arm, for stealthy deeds alone design'd.
+ "Presumptuous fool! to seek a prize, which gain'd
+ "Would only mar thy power. By erring votes
+ "Of Grecians giv'n to thee, cause would it be
+ "The foe would strip thee; not thy prowess fear.
+ "And flight, in which, O trembler! erst alone
+ "Thou all surpass'd, slow would'st thou then pursue;
+ "Such ponderous armor dragging. Those, thy shield
+ "Which bears so rare the brunt of battle, shines
+ "Yet whole: a new successor mine demands,
+ "Which gash'd by weapons, shews a thousand rents.
+ "To end, what need of words? let actions shew
+ "Each one's deserts. Amid the foe be thrown
+ "The valiant warrior's arms. Thence bid us bring
+ "The prize;--who brings it, let him wear the spoil."
+
+ So spake the Telamonian warrior; round
+ A murmur follow'd from the circling crowd.
+ Till up the chief of Ithaca arose;
+ His eyes (awhile cast down) rais'd from the earth;
+ The chiefs with anxious look'd-for sounds address'd:
+ Nor grace was wanting to persuasive words.
+ "O Grecians! had your prayers and mine been heard,
+ "Owner of what such cause of strife affords
+ "Were now not dubious: thou, Pelides, still
+ "These arms possessing, we possessing thee.
+ "But since unpitying fate, to you, to me,
+ "Denies him"--(here as weeping, o'er his eyes
+ His hand he draws)--"who with so just a right
+ "Can great Achilles now succeed, as he
+ "Who great Achilles brought the Greeks to join?
+ "Let it not aid his cause, that fool he seems,
+ "Or stupid is indeed; nor aught let harm
+ "The ingenuity I claim, to mine:
+ "Which, O, ye Argives! still has aided you.
+ "Let not my eloquence, if such I boast,
+ "And words, whose 'vantage often you have prov'd,
+ "Now for their author, move invidious thoughts:
+ "Nor what each claims his proper gift, refuse.
+ "Scarce can we call our ancestry, our race,
+ "Or deeds by them perform'd, merits our own:
+ "Yet since of grandsire Jove this Ajax boasts,
+ "I too, can boast him author of my line:
+ "Nor more degrees remov'd. My sire was nam'd
+ "Laertes; his Arcesius; and from Jove
+ "Arcesius came direct: nor in this line,
+ "E'er any exil'd or condemn'd appear'd.
+ "Cyllenius too, his noble lineage adds
+ "Through my maternal stock. Each parent boasts
+ "A god-descended race. Yet claim I not
+ "The arms contested, merely that I spring
+ "Maternally more noble; nor them claim
+ "That from a brother's blood my sire is free:
+ "By merits solely you the cause adjudge.
+ "These only none to Ajax, that his sire,
+ "And Peleus brethren were, e'er grant. The prize
+ "Desert, and not propinquity of blood,
+ "Should gain. If kindred, then the hero's heir
+ "Demands it: Peleus still survives, his sire;
+ "And Pyrrhus is his son. Where Ajax' right?
+ "To Phthia, or to Scyros be it borne.
+ "Nor less is Teucer cousin than himself;
+ "Yet does he ask, or does he hope the arms?
+ "But since the obvious contest is by deeds
+ "Perform'd, though mine outnumber far what words
+ "Can easy compass; yet will I relate
+ "In order some:--
+
+ "The Nereid mother knew
+ "His future fate; her offspring's dress disguis'd;
+ "And all, ev'n Ajax, the fallacious robes
+ "Deceiv'd. With female wares I mingled arms,
+ "Which stir the martial soul. Nor had the youth
+ "Disrob'd him of his virgin dress, when grasp'd
+ "As in his hand the shield and lance he held,
+ "I cry'd'--O, goddess-born! reserv'd for thee
+ "Is Ilium's fate. The mighty Trojan walls
+ "Why to o'erthrow demur'st thou?--Him I seiz'd.
+ "Sent the brave youth, brave actions to atchieve:
+ "And all his actions as my own I claim.
+ "My spear then conquer'd Telephus in fight;
+ "And after heal'd the suppliant vanquish'd foe.
+ "Thebes low by me was laid. I, you must own,
+ "Lesbos, and Tenedos, and Scyros took;
+ "Chrysa, and Cylla, bright Apollo's towns.
+ "My arm Lyrnessus' walls shook, and laid low.
+ "But other deeds I well may pass: since I
+ "Gave to the host what dreadful Hector slew;
+ "By me renowned Hector fell. Those arms
+ "I claim, who gave those arms, which to the Greeks
+ "Achilles found. Living, those arms I gave;
+ "Him dead, those arms I gave, again demand.
+
+ "The wrongs of one through every Grecian breast
+ "Spread wide; a thousand ships th' Euboean port
+ "Of Aulis fill'd. The long-expected gales
+ "Or came not, or blew adverse to the fleet.
+ "The rigid oracle Atrides bade
+ "His guiltless daughter sacrifice to calm
+ "Ruthless Diana. Stern the sire deny'd,
+ "And rag'd against the gods: the sovereign all
+ "Lost in the father. I with soothing words
+ "The parent's bosom mollify'd, and turn'd
+ "To thoughts of public good. Still, I confess,
+ "(And such confession will the king excuse;)
+ "An arduous cause I pleaded, where my judge
+ "Was by affection warp'd. The people's weal,
+ "His brother, and the lofty rank he held
+ "Mov'd him at length; and glory with his blood
+ "He bought. Then to the mother was I sent,
+ "Where reasoning had no force, but subtle craft.
+ "There had you sent the son of Telamon,
+ "Still had jour sails the needful breezes lack'd.
+ "Sent was I also to the Ilian towers,
+ "A daring envoy. Troy's fam'd court I saw;
+ "Troy's court I enter'd, then with heroes fill'd.
+ "There undismay'd, I pleaded all that Greece
+ "Bade for their common cause; Paris accus'd;
+ "Helen demanded, and the stolen spoil;
+ "And Priam and Antenor both convinc'd.
+ "But Paris, Paris' brethren, and the crowd
+ "Who aided in the rape, their impious hands
+ "Could scarce withhold. (Thou, Menelaues, know'st,
+ "Who then with me the dawning of the war
+ "Didst prove in danger.) Long the tale, to speak
+ "Of all my deeds have done, the public cause
+ "To aid; since first the lengthen'd war began:
+ "By counsel or by valor. Wag'd the first
+ "Rough skirmish, long our foes within their walls
+ "Protected lay; no scope for open war:
+ "But in the tenth year now we fight again.
+ "In all that period what hast thou, who know'st
+ "But fighting, done? Where was thy service then?
+ "I, if my deeds thou seek'st, the foe betray'd
+ "By subtilty; girt us with trenches round;
+ "Inspirited our soldiers; made them bear,
+ "With mind unmurmuring, all the tedious war;
+ "Taught where to find the means to gain supplies
+ "Of food and arms; wherever need me call'd,
+ "There always was I sent. Lo! when the king,
+ "From Jove's deceptive dream, gave word to quit
+ "Th' unfinish'd war, he might the deed defend
+ "Through him who bade. But Ajax disapproves
+ "The flight; insists Troy shall in ruins lie,
+ "Asserts our power may do it! No! our troops
+ "Embarking, he not stay'd. Why seiz'd he not
+ "His arms? Why somewhat to the wavering crowd
+ "Said not, to fix? no weighty task to him
+ "Who ne'er harangues, except on mighty themes.
+ "Why? but that Ajax fled himself! I saw,
+ "But blush'd to see thee, when thy back thou turn'dst
+ "Hasting, thy coward sails to hoist; I spoke
+ "Instant--O fellow soldiers! whither now?
+ "What voice insane now urges you to leave
+ "Already-captur'd Troy? What will you bear
+ "Homeward, a lengthen'd ten years' shame besides?--
+ "With words like these back from the flying fleet
+ "I brought them; eloquence had sorrow's aid.
+
+ "Atrides call'd the council, all with dread
+ "Trembling were dumb; nor there dar'd Ajax gape:
+ "But there Thersites durst with galling words
+ "The king provoke; vengeance he met from me.
+ "I rose, our panic-stricken friends, once more
+ "Rous'd 'gainst the foe: I, by my words recall'd
+ "Departed valor. Hence, whoever boasts
+ "Since then of valiant deeds, those deeds are mine,
+ "Who back recall'd him, as he turn'd for flight.
+ "Last, tell me which of all the Greeks applauds,
+ "Or as a comrade seeks thee. All his acts
+ "With me Tydides shares, allows me praise:
+ "Ulysses still his confidential friend.
+ "Sure from such thousands of the Argive ranks
+ "By Diomed' selected, I may boast.
+ "Nor lot me bade to go, when void of fear,
+ "Through double danger of the foe and night,
+ "I went; and Phrygian Dolon slew, who dar'd
+ "On our adventure come; but slew him not
+ "Till made to utter all; the wiles betray
+ "Perfidious Troy intended. All I learnt;
+ "Nor ought for further search remain'd. Now I,
+ "The camp with fame sufficient might have gain'd;
+ "But not content, for Rhesus' tents I push;
+ "Him, and his guard surrounding, in his camp
+ "I slay. Victorious so, possess'd of all
+ "My hopes design'd, the car I mount, and proud
+ "A glad triumpher ride. Now me deny
+ "The arms of him, whose steeds the spy had hop'd
+ "Meed of his bold excursion. Ajax say
+ "More worthy. Why Sarpedon's Lycian troop
+ "Vanquish'd, should I with boastful tongue relate?
+ "I vanquish'd Ceranos, Iphitus' son;
+ "Alastor, Chromius, and Alcander stout;
+ "Halius, Noemon, Prytanis, with crowds
+ "Slaughter'd beside. Thooen to hell I sent,
+ "Chersidamas, and Charops; and to fates
+ "Unpitying, Ennomus dispatch'd: with these
+ "Beneath yon' walls whole heaps of meaner rank
+ "This hand has slain. And, fellow soldiers, lo!
+ "My wounds are honorable all in place:
+ "Believe not empty words, yourselves behold."--
+ Then stript his robe, exclaiming--"Here the breast
+ "Still for your good employ'd. No drop of blood
+ "Has Ajax shed since first our host he join'd:
+ "In all these years, his body still remains
+ "Unwounded. Yet on this why should I dwell,
+ "If he must boast, that for the Argive fleet
+ "He fought alone 'gainst Jupiter and Troy?
+ "He fought, I grant it; no malignant spite
+ "Shall move detraction from his valiant deeds.
+ "But let him not the common rites of more
+ "Monopolize; let him to each allow
+ "The honor which they claim. Patroclus, fear'd
+ "In great Pelides' semblance, backward drove
+ "All Troy and Troy's protector from the ships,
+ "Then burning. Next his vanity would boast
+ "He only in the field of Mars durst strive
+ "With Hector; of the king, the chiefs, and me
+ "Forgetful; in the list the ninth alone,
+ "Solely by lot preferr'd. Yet, warrior brave,
+ "What was the issue of this daring fight?
+ "Hector unwounded left you. Mournful theme!
+ "With what deep sorrow I the time recal,
+ "When, bulwark of the Greeks, Achilles fell!
+ "Nor tears, vain lamentations, nor pale fear
+ "Me check'd; the prostrate body from the ground
+ "I rais'd. Upon those shoulders--yes, I swear,
+ "These very shoulders, I Pelides bore,
+ "With all his arms. The arms I now require.
+ "Strength I must have to bear with such a load:
+ "As sure your votes will meet a grateful mind.
+ "Was it because the bright celestial gift
+ "Might clothe the limbs of one without a soul,
+ "Stupidly dull, that all her anxious care
+ "The green-hair'd mother on her son employ'd;
+ "Arms wrought with art so great? Knows he the least
+ "The shield's engravings? Ocean, or the land:
+ "The lofty sky; the planets; Pleiaeds bright;
+ "Hyaeds; the bear, ne'er plung'd beneath the main;
+ "Orion's glittering sword, or various towns?
+ "Arms he demands he cannot understand.
+ "But how asserts he I the toils of war
+ "Evaded; joining late the fighting host,
+ "Nor sees he scandalizes too the fame
+ "Of great Pelides? If indeed a crime
+ "Dissembling must be call'd,--dissembled both.
+ "If faulty all delay, the first I came.
+ "A tender wife me kept; a tender tie,
+ "A mother, kept Achilles. Our life's spring
+ "To them was given, the rest reserv'd for you.
+ "Nor should I fear, even were this crime, I share
+ "With such a man, of all defence deny'd.
+ "Yet his disguise Ulysses' cunning found:
+ "Ajax ne'er found Ulysses. Needs surprize
+ "To hear th' abusing of his booby tongue,
+ "When with like guilt he stigmatizes you?
+ "Shames most that I this Palamedes brought,
+ "Falsely accus'd your sentence to receive,
+ "Or that you doom'd him so accus'd to die?
+ "But Nauplius' son not ev'n defence could urge,
+ "So plain his crime appear'd; nor did you trust
+ "The accusation heard: obvious you saw
+ "The bribe for which you doom'd him. Nor of blame
+ "Deserve I ought, that Philoctetes stays
+ "In Vulcan's Lemnos. You the deed excuse:
+ "All to the deed assented. Yet my voice,
+ "Persuasive, will I not deny, I us'd;
+ "That spar'd from travel, and from war's fatigue,
+ "In rest he might his cruel pains assuage:
+ "He lik'd my words, and lives. My counsel here
+ "Not merely faithful (though our faith the whole
+ "Our promise can insure) but happy prov'd.
+ "His presence since the seers prophetic ask
+ "T' atchieve the fall of Troy, dispatch not me;
+ "Ajax will better go, will better soothe
+ "With eloquence of tongue, a man who burns
+ "With raging choler, and with smarting pains:
+ "Or with some stratagem him thence allure.
+ "But Simois' stream shall sooner backward flow;
+ "Ida unwooded stand: Achaia aid
+ "The Trojan power, than Ajax' stupid soul
+ "Shall help the Greeks, when first my anxious mind
+ "Striving to aid you, has been found to fail.
+ "O, stubborn Philoctetes! though enrag'd
+ "Against thy comrades, 'gainst the king, and me;
+ "Though thou may'st curse me, and my head devote
+ "Through endless days; though in thy grief thou ask'st
+ "To meet me, and to glut thee with my blood,
+ "Still will I try thee, and if fortune smiles,
+ "So will I gain thy arrows, as I gain'd
+ "The Trojan prophet, whom I captive made;
+ "As I the oracles of heaven laid ope;
+ "And all the fate of Troy: as from its room
+ "Close-hidden, I the form of Pallas brought,
+ "The charm of Troy, through ranks of hostile foes.
+ "Mates Ajax here with me? Fate had deny'd
+ "Of Troy the capture till that prize obtain'd.
+ "Where then the mighty Ajax? Where the boasts
+ "Of this brave hero? Why this risk evade?
+ "Why dar'd Ulysses through the watchful guards
+ "Steal 'mid the darkling night? and find his way,
+ "Not merely past the Trojan walls, but high
+ "Through raging swords their loftiest turrets scale;
+ "Bear off the goddess from her sacred fane,
+ "And with the prize again repass the foe?
+ "This deed not done, Ajax had bore in vain
+ "On his huge arm the sevenfold oxen hide.
+ "From that night's deeds I Ilium's conquest share.
+ "Then Troy I conquer'd, when the fact was done,
+ "Which made Troy vincible. Cease thou to mark
+ "With looks and mutterings Diomed' my friend;
+ "His share in all was glorious. Nor wast thou
+ "Single, when with thy buckler thou didst guard
+ "The general fleet; crowds aided, I was one.
+ "He, but he knows too well that less esteem
+ "Valor demands than wisdom; that the prize,
+ "A mere unconquer'd arm not justly claims,
+ "Had also sought: thy milder namesake too;
+ "Or fierce Eurypilus; or Thoas, son
+ "Of bold Andraemon. Equal right to hope,
+ "Idomeneus, Meriones, might boast,
+ "Each Cretan born; and who the sovereign king
+ "His brother claims; but all their valorous breasts
+ "(Nor does their martial prowess stoop to thine)
+ "Yield to my wisdom. In the fight thy arm
+ "Is mighty; prudence boast I, which that arm
+ "Directs. To thee a force immense is given,
+ "Without a brain; foresight is given to me.
+ "Well, thou canst wage the war; the time that war
+ "To wage, Atrides oft with me resolves.
+ "Thou aidest with thy body, I with mind:
+ "And as the guider of the ship transcends
+ "Him who but plies the oar: as soars above
+ "The soldier, he who leads him, so must I
+ "Thee far surpass; for far the mental powers
+ "In me surpass the merits of my arm:
+ "In mind my vigor lies. Ye nobles, speak;
+ "Give to your watchful guardian this reward,
+ "For the long annual care with anxious mind
+ "He gave you. This reward at length bestow,
+ "To his deserts but due: his labor done.
+ "Th' obstructing destinies by me remov'd,
+ "High Troy by me is captur'd; since by me
+ "The means high Troy to overthrow are given.
+ "Now beg I by our hopes conjoin'd; the walls
+ "Of Troy already tottering; by the gods
+ "Gain'd from the foe so lately; by what more
+ "Through wisdom may be done, if aught remains;
+ "Or aught of boldness, which through peril sought,
+ "Wanting, you still may deem to fill Troy's fate.
+ "If mindful of my merits you would rest,
+ "The arms award to this, if not to me:"
+ And pointed to Minerva's fateful form.
+
+ Mov'd were the band of nobles. Plainly shewn
+ What eloquence could do:--persuasion gain'd
+ The valiant warrior's arms. Then he who stood
+ 'Gainst steel, and fire, and the whole force of Jove,
+ So oft, his own vexation now o'ercame:
+ Grief conquer'd his unconquerable soul.
+ He seiz'd his sword,--"And surely this"--he cry'd--
+ "Still is my own! or claims Ulysses this?
+ "Against myself this steel must now be us'd:
+ "This stain'd so oft with Phrygian blood, be stain'd
+ "With his who owns it; lest another hand
+ "Than Ajax' own should Ajax overcome."--
+ No more; but where his breast unguarded lay,
+ Pervious at length to wounds, his deadly blade
+ He plung'd, nor could his hand the blade withdraw;
+ The gushing blood expell'd it. Straight there sprung
+ Through the green turf, form'd by the blood-soak'd earth,
+ A purple flower, like that which sprung before
+ From Hyaecinthus' wound. Amid the leaves
+ Of each the self-same letters are inscrib'd;
+ The boy's complainings, and the hero's name.
+
+ Victorious Ithacus his sails unfurls,
+ To seek the land Hypsipyle once rul'd,
+ And Thoaes fam'd. An isle of old disgrac'd
+ By slaughter of its males, to bring the darts,
+ The weapons of Tyrinthius. These obtain'd
+ To Greece, and with their owner brought, at length
+ The furious war was finish'd. Priam falls
+ With Troy; and Priam's more unhappy spouse,
+ To crown her losses, loses human shape;
+ With new-heard barkings shaking foreign climes.
+ Where the long Hellespont's contracted bounds
+ Are seen, Troy blaz'd: nor yet the fires were quench'd.
+ The scanty drops of blood Jove's altar soak'd,
+ Which flow'd from aged Priam. By her locks
+ Dragg'd on, Apollo's priestess vainly stretch'd
+ To lofty heaven her arms. The victor Greeks
+ Tear off the Trojan mothers as they clasp
+ Their country's imag'd gods; and as they cling
+ To flaming temples--an invidious prey.
+ Astyaenax is from those turrets flung,
+ Whence erst he wont to view his sire, whose arm
+ Him guarding, and his ancestorial realm
+ In fight, his mother shew'd. And Boreas now
+ Departure urg'd. Swol'n by a favoring breeze
+ The rattling canvas warn'd the sailor crew.
+ "O, Troy! farewel!"--The Trojan matrons cry--
+ "Hence are we borne."--They kiss their natal soil;
+ And leave the smoking ruins of their domes.
+ Last--mournful object! Hecuba, descry'd
+ Amid her children's graves, the bark ascends.
+ Ulysses' hand her dragg'd, as close she grasp'd
+ Their tombs, and kiss'd their bones which still remain'd.
+ Yet snatch'd she hastily, and bore away
+ Of Hector's ashes some, and in her breast
+ Hugg'd them; and on the top of Hector's tomb
+ Left her grey hairs; her hairs, and flowing tears.
+ Oblation fruitless to his last remains.
+
+ Oppos'd to Phrygia, where Troy once was seen,
+ A country stands, where live Bistonia's race:
+ Where Polymnestor, wealthy monarch, rul'd,
+ To whom, O, Polydore! thy cautious sire
+ Thee sent; from Iliuem's battles far remov'd,
+ For safe protection. Wisdom sway'd the king;
+ Save that he sent him store of treasure too,
+ Reward of wickedness; and tempting much
+ His greedy soul. Soon as Troy's fortune sank,
+ Impious the Thracian monarch plung'd his sword
+ In his young charge's throat: as if his crime
+ And body from his sight at once 'twere given
+ To move, he flung him in the dashing main.
+
+ Now on the Thracian coast, Atrides moor'd
+ His fleet, till placid were the waves again,
+ And favoring more, the winds. Achilles here,
+ Out from the earth, by sudden rupture rent,
+ Appear'd in 'semblance of his living form:
+ Threatening his brow appear'd, as when so fierce
+ He Agamemnon with rebellious sword
+ Sought to assail.--"Depart ye then, O, Greeks!"
+ He cry'd--"of me unmindful? Is the fame
+ "Of all my yaliant acts with me interr'd?
+ "Treat me not thus. That honors due my tomb
+ "May want not, let Polyxena be given
+ "In sacrifice to soothe Achilles' ghost."
+ He said; his fellows with the ruthless shade
+ Complying, from the mother's bosom tore
+ Her whom she sole had left to cherish. Brave
+ Than female more, the hapless maid was led
+ To the dire tomb in sacrificial pomp.
+ She, of her state still mindful, when before
+ The cruel altar brought; when all prepar'd
+ The savage-urg'd oblation of herself
+ She saw; and Neoptolemus beheld
+ There stand, the steel there grasping; on his face
+ Her eyes firm-fixing, spoke.--"My noble blood
+ "This instant spill. Delay not--plunge thy blade
+ "Or in my throat, or bosom;"--and her throat
+ And bosom, as she spoke she bar'd--"for ne'er
+ "Polyxena, a slavish life had borne.
+ "Yet grateful is this victim to no god!
+ "My only wish, that from my mother dear
+ "May be my death conceal'd: my mother clogs
+ "My final passage; damps the joys of death.
+ "Yet should she wail my death not, but my life.
+ "But distant stand ye all, that to the shades
+ "Inviolate I sink; if what I ask
+ "Be just, let every hand of man avoid
+ "A virgin's touch. Whoe'er your steel prepares
+ "To move propitiatory with my blood,
+ "A victim quite untainted best must please.
+ "And should the final accents that I speak,
+ "(King Priam's daughter, not a captive sues)
+ "My corse unransom'd to my mother give.
+ "Let her not buy the sad sepulchral rites
+ "With gold, but tears. Yet time has been, with gold
+ "I might have been redeem'd."--The princess ceas'd,
+ And save her own no cheek unwet was seen.
+ And ev'n the priest reluctant, and in tears,
+ Op'd by a sudden plunge the offer'd breast.
+ She, to earth sinking, 'neath her tottering limbs,
+ Wore to the last a face unmov'd; ev'n then
+ Her final care was in her fall to veil
+ Limbs that a veil demanded, as she sank;
+ And decent pride of modesty preserve.
+
+ The Trojan dames receive her, and recount
+ The woes of Priam's house, the streams of blood
+ That single stock has spent. Thee too, O, maid!
+ They weep; and thee, a royal spouse so late,
+ And royal parent stil'd; pride of the realm
+ Of glorious Asia; now a mournful lot
+ Amid the spoil; whom Ithacus would scorn
+ To own, great Hector hadst thou not brought forth:
+ The name of Hector scarce a master finds,
+ To claim his mother. She, the lifeless trunk
+ Embracing, which had held a soul so brave,
+ Tears pour'd; tears often had she pour'd before,
+ For country, husband, children--now for her
+ Those tears gush'd in the wound; lips press'd to lips;
+ And beat that breast which oft with grievous blows
+ Was punish'd. Sweeping 'mid the clotted blood
+ Her silver'd tresses; all these plaints, and more
+ She utter'd, as she still her bosom rent.
+
+ "My child, thy mother's last afflicting grief
+ "(For who is spar'd me?) low, my child, thou ly'st;
+ "And in thy wound, I all my wounds behold.
+ "Yes, lest a single remnant of my race
+ "Unslaughter'd should expire, thou too must bleed.
+ "A female, thee, safe from the sword I thought:
+ "A female, thee the sword has stretch'd in death.
+ "The same Achilles, ruiner of Troy,
+ "Bereaver of my offspring, all destroy'd,--
+ "Yes, all thy brethren, he, now murders thee!
+ "Yet when by Paris' and Apollo's darts
+ "He fell,--now, surely,--said I,--now no more
+ "Pelides need be dreaded! Yet ev'n now,
+ "Dreadful to me he proves. Inurned, rage
+ "His ashes 'gainst our hapless race; we feel
+ "Ev'n in his grave the anger of this foe.
+ "I fruitful only for Pelides prov'd.
+ "Low lies proud Iliuem, and the public woe,
+ "The heavy ruin ends: if ended yet:
+ "For Troy to me still stands; my sufferings still
+ "Roll endless on. I, late in power so high,
+ "Great in my children, in my husband great,
+ "Am now dragg'd forth in poverty; exil'd
+ "From all my children's tombs; a gift to please
+ "Penelope; who, while my daily task
+ "She gives to Ithaca's proud dames, will taunt,
+ "And cry;--of Hector, the fam'd mother see!
+ "Lo! Priam's spouse!--And thou who sole wast spar'd
+ "To soothe maternal pangs, so many lost,
+ "Now bleed'st, atonement to an hostile shade:
+ "And funeral victims has my womb produc'd
+ "T' appease a foe. Why holds this stubborn heart?
+ "Why still delay I? What to me avails
+ "This loath'd, this long-protracted life? Why spin,
+ "O, cruel deities! the lengthen'd thread
+ "Of an old wretch, save that she yet may see
+ "More deaths? Who e'er could Priam happy deem,
+ "Iliuem o'erthrown? Yet happy was his death,
+ "Thy sacrifice, my daughter! not to see;
+ "At once of life and realm bereft. Yet sure
+ "O, royal maid! funereal rites await
+ "Thy last remains; thy corse will be inhum'd
+ "In ancestorial sepulchres. Ah, no!
+ "Such fortune smiles not on our house; the tears
+ "A mother can bestow, are all thy gifts;
+ "Sprinkled with foreign dust. All have I lost.
+ "Of the whole stock I could as parent boast,
+ "To tempt me now still longer to sustain
+ "This life, my Polydore alone is left;
+ "Once least of all my manly sons, erst given
+ "To Thracia's monarch's care, upon these shores.
+ "But why delay to cleanse that ghastly wound
+ "With water, and that face, with spouting blood
+ "Besmear'd."--She ceas'd, and bent her tottering steps,
+ With torn and scatter'd locks down to the shore.
+ And as the hapless wretch--"O, Trojans!"--cry'd,
+ "An urn supply to draw the liquid waves;"--
+ The corse of Polydore, flung on the beach
+ She saw, pierc'd deep with wounds of Thracian steel.
+ Loud shriek'd the Trojan matrons; she by grief
+ Dumb-stricken stood. Affliction keen suppress'd
+ Her rising moans, and ready-springing tears:
+ Stupid, and like a rigid stone she stood.
+ Now on the earth her eyes are fixt; and now
+ To heaven her furious countenance she lifts:
+ Now dwells she on his face, now on the wounds
+ Her son receiv'd, and on the wounds the most:
+ And now her bosom with collected rage
+ Furiously burning, all on vengeance fierce
+ Her soul is bent, as still in power a queen.
+ As storms a lioness robb'd of her cub,
+ The track pursuing of her flying foe,
+ Whom yet she sees not: rage and grief were mixt
+ Just so in Hecuba; of her old years
+ Regardless, mindful of her ire alone.
+ She Polymnestor seeks, of the dire deed
+ The perpetrator, and his ear demands--
+ That more of gold, intended for her boy,
+ Her wish was to disclose. The Thracian king
+ Heard credulous; lur'd by his wonted love
+ Of gain, with her withdrew, and wily thus;
+ With coaxing words;--"quick, Hecuba!"--exclaim'd,
+ "Give for thy son the treasure. By the gods!
+ "I swear, all shall be his; what more thou giv'st,
+ "And what thou gav'st before."--Him, speaking so,
+ And falsely swearing, savagely she view'd,
+ And her fierce bosom swell'd with double rage.
+ Then instant on him, by the captive dames
+ Fast held, she flies; in his perfidious face
+ Digs deep; her fingers (rage all strength supply'd)
+ Tear from their orbs his eyes; bury'd her hands,
+ Streaming with blood, where once the eyes had been;
+ Widening the wounds, for eyes no more remain'd.
+
+ Fir'd at their monarch's fate the Thracian crowd
+ With stones and darts t'attack the queen began.
+ The queen with harsher voice, as they pursue,
+ Bites at th' assailing stones, and, trying words,
+ Barkings her jaws produce. The place remains
+ Nam'd from the change. She, of her ancient woes
+ Long mindful, grieving still, Sithonia's fields
+ With howlings fill'd. Her fate with pity mov'd
+ Her fellow Trojans; and the hostile Greeks;
+ Nay, all the gods above; and all deny,
+ (Ev'n she, the sister-wife of mighty Jove)
+ That Hecuba so harsh a lot deserv'd.
+
+ Nor leisure now Aurora had to mourn
+ (Though strong their cause she favor'd) the sad fall,
+ And mournful fate of Hecuba, and Troy.
+ A nearer case, a more domestic woe,
+ The loss of Memnon, wrung the goddess' breast:
+ Whom on the Phrygian plains the mother saw
+ Beneath the weapon of Achilles sink.
+ She saw--that color which the blushing morn
+ Displays, grew pale, and heaven with clouds was hid.
+ Still could the parent not support the sight,
+ Plac'd on the funeral pyre his limbs, but straight
+ With locks dishevell'd, not disdain'd to sue
+ Prostrate before the knees of mighty Jove.
+ These words her tears assisting.--"Meanest I,
+ "Of those the golden heaven supports; to me
+ "The fewest temples through earth's space are rais'd:
+ "Yet still a goddess sues. Not to demand
+ "Temples, nor festal days, nor altars warm'd
+ "With blazing fires; yet if you but behold
+ "What I, a female, for you all atchieve,
+ "Bounding night's confines with new-springing light,
+ "Such boons you might consider but my due.
+ "But these are not my care. Aurora's mind
+ "Not now e'en honors merited demands.
+ "I come, my Memnon lost, who bravely fought,
+ "But vainly, in his uncle Priam's cause:
+ "And in his prime of youth (so will'd your fates)
+ "Fell by the stout Achilles. Lord supreme!
+ "Of all the deities, grant, I beseech
+ "To him some honor, solace of his death;
+ "Allay the smarting of a mother's wounds."
+
+ Jove nodded, round the lofty funeral pile
+ Of Memnon, rose th' aspiring flames; black clouds
+ Of smoke the day obscur'd. So streams exhale
+ The rising mists which Phoebus' rays conceal.
+ Mount the black ashes, and conglob'd in one
+ They thicken in a body, and a shape
+ That body takes, and heat and light receives
+ From the bright flames. Its lightness gave it wings:
+ Much like a bird at first, and soon indeed
+ A bird, its pinions sounded. And a crowd
+ Of sister birds, their pinions sounded too;
+ Their origin the same. Thrice they surround
+ The pile, and thrice with noisy clang the air
+ Resounds; the fourth time all the troop divide:
+ Then two and two, they furious wage the war
+ On either side; fierce with their crooked claws
+ And beaks, they pounce their adversary's breast,
+ And tire his wings. Each kindred body falls
+ An offering to the ashes of the dead,
+ And prove their offspring from a valiant man.
+ These birds of sudden origin receive
+ Their name, Memnonides, from him whose limbs
+ Produc'd them. Oft as Sol through all his signs
+ Has run, the battle they renew again,
+ To perish at their parent-warrior's tomb.
+ Thus, while all others Dymas' daughter weep
+ In howling shape, Aurora still on griefs
+ Her own sad brooding, her maternal tears
+ Sprinkles in dew o'er all th' extent of earth.
+
+ Yet fate doom'd not with Iliuem's towers the fall
+ Of Iliuem's hopes. The Cythereaen prince
+ Bore off his gods; and on his shoulders bore
+ A no less sacred, venerable load,
+ His sire. Of all his riches these preferr'd.
+ The pious hero, with his youthful son
+ Ascanius, from Antandros, o'er the main
+ Borne in the flying fleet, leaves far the shore
+ Of savage Thrace, still moisten'd with the blood
+ Of Polydore, and enters Phoebus' port;
+ Aided by currents, and by gentle gales,
+ With all his social crew. Anius receives
+ The exile, in his temple,--in his dome;
+ Where o'er the land he monarch rul'd; and where,
+ As Phoebus' priest, he tended due his rites:
+ The city, and the votive temples shew'd,
+ And shew'd two trees, once by Latona grasp'd
+ In bearing throes. The incense in the flames
+ Distributed, wine o'er the incense thrown,
+ The entrails of the offer'd bulls consum'd
+ As wont; the regal roof approach they all;
+ And high on tapestry reclin'd, partake
+ Of Ceres' gift, and Bacchus' flowing boon.
+ Then good Anchises, thus--"O chosen priest
+ "Of Phoebus! was I then deceiv'd? methought,
+ "As far as memory aids me to recal,
+ "When first mine eyes these lofty walls beheld,
+ "That twice two daughters, and a son were thine."
+ Old Anius shook his head, begirt around
+ With snowy fillets, as in grief, he said:--
+ "No, mighty hero! not deceiv'd art thou,
+ "Me hast thou seen of five the parent; now
+ "Thou well-nigh childless see'st me: (such to man
+ "The varying change of sublunary things)
+ "For, ah! what can an absent son bestow
+ "To aid me, who, in Andros' isle now dwells,
+ "Where for his sire the realm and state he holds?
+ "Delius on him prophetic art bestow'd;
+ "And Bacchus, to my female offspring, gave
+ "A boon beyond all credit, and their hopes.
+ "For all whate'er, which felt my daughters' touch
+ "To corn, and wine, and olives, was transformed:
+ "A mighty treasure in themselves they held.
+ "But Agamemnon, Troy's destroyer learn'd
+ "This gift (think not but that your overthrow
+ "In some respect we shar'd,) by ruthless force,
+ "Tore them unwilling from their parent's arms;
+ "And stern commanded that the heavenly gift
+ "Should feed the Grecian fleet. Each as she can
+ "Escapes. Euboeae two attain, and two
+ "Fraternal Andros seek. The troops pursue
+ "And threaten warfare, if withheld the maids.
+ "Fraternal love was vanquish'd in his breast
+ "By fear, (that thou this terror mayst excuse,
+ "Reflect, AEneaes was not there, nor there
+ "Was Hector, Andros to defend, whose arms
+ "To the tenth year made Iliuem stand.) And now
+ "Chains were prepar'd their captive arms to bind.
+ "While yet unchain'd, those arms to heaven they rais'd,
+ "O father Bacchus!--crying--grant thy aid.--
+ "And aid the author of the gift bestow'd:
+ "If them to lose by an unheard-of mode
+ "Be aid bestowing. Then could I not know,
+ "Nor now relate the order of the change
+ "Which lost their shapes; the summit of my grief
+ "I know; with plumage were they cloth'd; transform'd
+ "To snowy doves, thy spouse's favor'd bird."
+
+ With these, and tales like these, the feast was clos'd:
+ The board remov'd, all sought repose. With day
+ Arising, all Apollo's shrine attend;
+ Who bids that they their ancient mother seek,
+ And kindred shores. The king attends them, gives
+ His presents as they go. Anchises holds
+ A sceptre, while a quiver and a robe
+ Ascanius boasts; AEneaes holds a cup,
+ Erst from Boeoetia's shores to Anius sent,
+ By Theban Therses. Therses sent the gift;
+ Sicilian Alcon form'd it, and engrav'd
+ A copious tale around. A town was there,
+ And seven wide gates appear'd: for name were these,
+ What town it was displaying. All without
+ Its walls were funeral trains, and tombs beheld;
+ And fires; and piles; and matrons, whose bare breasts,
+ And locks dishevell'd, shew'd their mournful woe.
+ Weeping the nymphs appear'd, and seem'd to wail
+ Their arid streams; the leafless trees were hard;
+ The goats were browsing on the naked rocks:
+ And, lo! amid the Theban town was seen
+ Orion's daughters: this her naked throat
+ Offering, with more than female courage; that
+ On the sharp weapon's point forth leaning, dy'd,
+ To save the people: round the town are borne
+ Their pompous funerals, they in splendor burn.
+ Then, lest the race should perish, spring two youths
+ From out their virgin ashes; which by fame
+ Are call'd Coronae, and the pomp attend,
+ When their maternal ashes are interr'd.
+
+ Thus far the images on ancient brass
+ Were grav'n; the bordering summit of the cup
+ In gold acanthus rough appear'd. Nor gave
+ The Trojans gifts less worthy than they took.
+ To hold his incense, they a vase present
+ The royal priest; a goblet, and a crown,
+ Shining with gold, and bright with sparkling gems.
+
+ Thence, mindful that the Trojan race first sprung
+ From Teucer's blood, tow'rd Crete their course they bend:
+ But long Jove's native clime they could not bear.
+ The hundred-city'd isle now left behind,
+ Ausonia's port they hope to gain. Rough swell
+ The wintry storms, and toss them on the main;
+ And in the port of faithless Strophades
+ Receiv'd, the wing'd Aello scares them far.
+ Now had they sail'd beyond Dulichium's bay;
+ Samos; and Ithaca, Neritus' soil;
+ The realms Ulysses, so perfidious, sway'd:
+ And saw Ambracia, for the strife of gods
+ Renown'd, and stone to which the judge was chang'd;
+ Now as Apollo's Actium far more fam'd:
+ And saw Dodona's land with vocal groves;
+ And deep Chaonia's bay, where vain-urg'd flames
+ Molossus' sons, on new-sprung pinions 'scap'd.
+ Phaeaecia's neighbouring country, planted thick
+ With grateful apples, now they reach; from thence
+ Epirus and Buthrotus, by the seer
+ Of Iliuem govern'd, image true of Troy.
+ Thence of the future certain, full of faith,
+ In all that Helenus of fate them told,
+ Sicilia's isle they enter, which extends
+ Midst of the waves its promontories three.
+ Pachymos, tow'rd the showery south is plac'd;
+ And Zephyr soft on Lilybaeum blows:
+ But 'gainst the Arctic bear that shuns the sea,
+ And Boreas' rugged storms, Pelorus looks.
+ By this the Trojans steer; urg'd by their oars,
+ And favoring tide, by night on Zancle's beach
+ The fleet is moor'd. Here Scylla on the right;
+ Charybdis, restless, on the left alarms.
+ This sucks the destin'd ships beneath the waves,
+ And whirls them up again: fierce dogs surround
+ The other's sable belly, while she bears
+ A virgin's face; and, if what poets tell
+ Be feign'd not all, she had a virgin been.
+
+ Her many wooers sought; these all repuls'd,
+ She join'd the ocean nymphs; by ocean's nymphs
+ Much favor'd was the maid; and told the loves
+ Of all the baffled youths. Her, while she gave
+ Her locks to comb, thus Galatea fair,
+ Bespoke, but first suppress'd a rising sigh.
+ "'Tis true, O maid! a gentle race thee seeks,
+ "Whom safely, as thou dost, thou may'st deny:
+ "But I, whose sire is Nereus; who was born
+ "Of blue-hair'd Doris; who am potent too
+ "In crowds of sisters, refuge only found
+ "From the fierce Cyclops' love, in my own waves."
+ Tears chok'd her utterance here; which when the maid
+ Had wip'd with marble fingers, and had sooth'd
+ The goddess.--"Dearest Galatea! speak;
+ "Nor from thy friend this cause of grief conceal:
+ "Faithful am I to thee." The goddess yields,
+ And to Crataeis' daughter, thus replies.
+
+ "From Faunus and the nymph Symethis sprung
+ "Acis, his sire's delight, his mother's pride;
+ "But far to me more dear. For me the youth,
+ "And me alone, lov'd warmly; twice eight years
+ "Had o'er him pass'd; when on his tender cheek
+ "A doubtful down appear'd. Him I desir'd,
+ "As ceaseless as the Cyclops sought for me.
+ "Nor should you ask, if in my bosom dwelt
+ "For him most hate, or most for Acis love,
+ "Could I inform you: equal both in force.
+ "O, gentle Venus! with what mighty power
+ "Thou sway'st; lo! he, the merciless, the dread
+ "Of his own woods; whom hapless guest ne'er saw
+ "With safety; spurner of the power of Jove,
+ "And all the host of heaven, what love is, feels!
+ "Seiz'd with desire of me he flames, forgets
+ "His flocks, and caverns. All thy anxious care
+ "Thy beauty, Polyphemus! to improve,
+ "And all thy anxious care is now to please.
+ "And now with rakes thou comb'st thy rugged hair;
+ "Now with a scythe thou mow'st thy bushy beard:
+ "Thy features to behold in the clear brook,
+ "And calm their fire employs thee. All his love
+ "Of slaughter; all his fierceness; all his thirst
+ "Cruel of blood, him leaves; and on the coast,
+ "Ships safely moor, and safe again depart.
+ "Meantime at Etna Telemus arriv'd,
+ "Of Eurymus the son, whom never bird
+ "Deceiv'd; he to dread Polyphemus came,
+ "And spoke:--Thee, of the single light thou bear'st
+ "Mid front, Ulysses will deprive.--Loud laugh'd
+ "The monster, saying;--Stupidest of seers,
+ "How much thou err'st!--already is it gone.--
+ "So spurns the truth the prophet told in vain.
+ "Then moving on along the shore, he sinks
+ "The sand with heavy steps, or tir'd returns
+ "To his dark caves. Far stretching in the main
+ "A wedge-like promontory rears its ridge
+ "Aloft; on either side the surging waves
+ "Foam on it. To its loftiest height ascends
+ "The Cyclops fierce; his station in the midst
+ "Assumes; his woolly flocks his steps pursue
+ "Unshepherded. He when the pine immense,
+ "Which serv'd him for a staff, though fit to serve
+ "For sailyard, low beneath his feet had thrown;
+ "And grasp'd the pipe, an hundred 'pacted reeds
+ "Compos'd; the pastoral whistling all around
+ "The hills confess'd, and all the waters nigh.
+ "I, hid beneath a rock, my head reclin'd
+ "On my dear Acis' bosom, heard these words--,
+ "And still the words are noted in my breast.--
+
+ "O, Galatea! brighter than the leaves
+ "Of snow-white lilies; fresher than the meads;
+ "More lofty far than towering alder trees;
+ "Than chrystal clearer; than the wanton kid
+ "More gay; than shells, by ocean's constant waves
+ "Smooth polish'd, smoother; dearer than the shade
+ "In summer's heat; than winter's sun more dear;
+ "More than the apple bright; and fairer far
+ "Than lofty planetrees; clearer than the frost;
+ "More beauteous than the ripen'd grape; more soft
+ "Than the swan's plumage; or the new-prest milk:
+ "And, but thou fly'st, more than the garden fine
+ "With water'd streamlets. Yet the same art thou,
+ "Wild Galatea, than the untam'd steer
+ "More fierce; more stubborn than the ancient oak;
+ "Than water more deceitful; slippery more
+ "Than bending willows, or the greenest vines;
+ "More stubborn than these rocks; than seas more rough;
+ "Than the prais'd peacock prouder; sharper far
+ "Than fire; and piercing more than thistles keen.
+ "More savage than a nursing bear; more deaf
+ "Than raging billows; than the trodden snake
+ "More pitiless; and, what I more than all
+ "Would wish thou wast not, fleeter than the deer,
+ "Chas'd by shrill hunters; fleeter than wing'd air,
+ "Or winds. If well thou knew'st me, much thou'dst grieve
+ "That e'er thou fled'st; thou'dst blame thy dull delay,
+ "And sue and labor to retain my love.
+ "Caverns I have, scoop'd in the living rock
+ "Beneath the mountain's side, where never sun
+ "In mid-day heat, nor winter's cold can come.
+ "My apples bend the branches; grapes are mine
+ "On the long vine-trees clustering; some like gold;
+ "Some of a purple teint; and these and those
+ "Will I preserve for thee. Thy own fair hands
+ "Shall gather strawberries soft, beneath the shade;
+ "Autumnal cornels; and the purple plumb,
+ "Dark with its juice, and that still nobler kind
+ "Like new-made wax in hue. Nor shalt thou lack
+ "The chesnut; nor the red arbutus' fruit:
+ "Be but my spouse. All trees shall thee supply.
+ "Mine are these flocks, and thousands more besides
+ "Which roam the vallies; thousands like the woods;
+ "And thousands shelter in the shady caves:
+ "Nor could I, should'st thou ask, their numbers tell.
+ "Poor he who counts his store. Believe not me
+ "When these I praise; before thine eyes behold
+ "How scarce their legs the swelling udder bear.
+ "Mine are the tender lambs, in the warm fold
+ "Secure; and mine are kids of equal age
+ "In folds apart. The whitest milk have I;
+ "But still for drink shall serve, and thicken'd, part
+ "Shall harden into cheese. Nor wilt thou find
+ "But cheap delights, and common vulgar gifts:
+ "For deer, and hares, and goats, thou shalt possess;
+ "Pigeons in pairs, and nests from mountains gain'd.
+ "Upon the hills, a shaggy bear's twin cubs
+ "I found; so like, no difference could be seen,
+ "With thee to play I found them: these, I said,
+ "These will I force my mistress to obey.
+ "O Galatea! raise thy lovely head
+ "Above the azure deep; come! only come;
+ "Nor scorn my gifts. Right well myself I know:
+ "I view'd me lately in the liquid stream;
+ "And much my image satisfy'd my view.
+ "Behold, how vast my bulk! Jove, in his heaven,
+ "(For of some Jove ye oft are wont to tell
+ "Who rules there) towers not in a mightier size.
+ "Thick bushy locks o'er my stern forehead hang,
+ "And like a forest down my shoulders spread.
+ "Nor deem my body, with hard bristles rough,
+ "Unseemly; most unsightly is the tree,
+ "Without a leaf; unsightly is the steed,
+ "Save on his neck the flowing mane is spread:
+ "Plumes clothe the feather'd race; and their own wool
+ "Becomes the sheep; so beards become mankind,
+ "And bushy bristles, o'er their limbs bespread.
+ "True in my forehead but one light is plac'd;
+ "But huge that light, and like a mighty shield
+ "In size. Yet does not Sol from heaven's high round
+ "All view? and Sol possesses lights no more.
+ "Remember too, my father o'er your realm
+ "Rules sovereign; I in him a sire-in-law
+ "Would give thee. Only pity me, I pray,
+ "And hear my suppliant vows. To thee alone
+ "I bend: and while I scorn your mighty Jove,
+ "His heaven, and piercing thunder, thee, O nymph!
+ "I fear: than fiercest lightnings dreading more
+ "Thy anger. Far more patient should I rest
+ "With this contempt, all didst thou thus contemn.
+ "But how, the Cyclops first repuls'd, dar'st thou
+ "This Acis love? this Acis dare prefer
+ "To my embraces? Yet may he himself
+ "Delight; nay let him Galatea please,
+ "If so it must be, though what most I'd spurn:
+ "Let but the scope be given, soon should he prove
+ "My strength is equal to my mighty bulk.
+ "Living his entrails would I tear, and spread
+ "His mangled members o'er the fields, and o'er
+ "Thy waters: let him mingle with thee so.
+ "For oh! I burn; more fierce my injur'd love
+ "Now rages: in ray breast I seem to bear
+ "All Etna and its fires. But all my pains
+ "Can nought, O Galatea! thee affect.--
+
+ "Thus with vain 'plainings (for the whole I saw)
+ "He rises, raging like a furious bull
+ "Robb'd of his heifer; paces restless round,
+ "And bounds along the forests and the coasts.
+ "When me and Acis, heedless of such fate,
+ "And unsuspecting, he beheld, and roar'd:--
+ "I see ye! but the period of your love
+ "Will I accomplish.--Loud his threats were heard,
+ "As all the Cyclops' power of voice could raise.
+ "All Etna trembled at the sound. In fright
+ "I plung'd for safety in the neighbouring waves;
+ "While fair Symethis' son for flight prepar'd;
+ "And--help me, Galatea!--he exclaim'd--
+ "Help me, O help! and ye, my parents, aid;
+ "And, perishing, receive me in your realm.--
+ "Close at his heels the Cyclops comes, and hurls
+ "A mighty fragment from a mountain rent;
+ "A corner only of the mighty rock
+ "Him reach'd: that corner Acis all o'erwhelm'd.
+ "But I, what fate alone would grant, perform'd,
+ "That Acis still his ancestorial race
+ "Should join: his purple gore flow'd from the rock;
+ "And soon the redness pal'd; it seem'd a stream
+ "Disturb'd by drenching showers; and soon this stream
+ "Was clear'd to limpid purity. The rock
+ "Gap'd wide, and living reeds sprung up erect,
+ "On either brink. Loud roars the pressing flood
+ "In the rock's hollow womb, and (wond'rous sight!)
+ "A youth, his new-form'd horns with reeds begirt,
+ "Sudden appear'd, 'mid waist above the waves;
+ "Who but in stature larger, and his skin
+ "Of azure teint, might Acis well be deem'd.
+ "Acis indeed it was, Acis transform'd
+ "To a clear stream which still his name retains."
+
+ Here Galatea ceas'd, the listening choir
+ Dividing, all depart. The Nereid train
+ Swim o'er the placid waves. Scylla returns;
+ Fearful to venture 'mid the boundless main,
+ And vestless roams along the soaking sand;
+ Or weary'd; finding some sequester'd pool,
+ Cools in the shelter'd waters her fair limbs.
+ Lo! Glaucus, lately of the mighty deep
+ An 'habitant receiv'd, his shape transform'd
+ Upon Boeoetia's shores, cleaves through the waves;
+ And feels desire as he the nymph beholds.
+ All he can urge to stay her flight he tries;
+ Yet still she flies him, swifter from her fear.
+ She gains a mountain's summit, which the shore
+ O'erhung. High to the main the lofty ridge
+ An undivided sbrubless top presents,
+ Down shelving to the sea. In safety here
+ She stood; and, dubious monster he, or god,
+ Admir'd his color, and the locks which spread
+ Adown his shoulders, and his back below:
+ And that a wreathing fish's form should end
+ His figure from his groin. He saw her gaze;
+ And on a neighbouring rock his elbow lean'd,
+ As thus he spoke.--"No monstrous thing am I,
+ "Fair virgin! nor a savage of the sea;
+ "A watery god I am; nor on the main
+ "Has Proteus; Triton; or Palaemon, son
+ "Of Athamas, more power. Yet time has been
+ "When I was mortal, yet even then attach'd
+ "To the deep water, on the ocean I,
+ "Still joy'd to labor. Now the following shoal
+ "Of fishes in my net I dragg'd; and now,
+ "Plac'd on a rock, I with my flexile rod
+ "Guided the line. Bordering a verdant mead
+ "A bank there lies, the waves its circuit bound
+ "In part; in part the virid grass surrounds;
+ "A mead which ne'er the horned herd had cropp'd:
+ "Where ne'er the placid flock, nor hairy goats
+ "Had brows'd; nor bees industrious cull'd the flowers
+ "For sweets: no genial chaplets there were pluck'd
+ "To grace the head; nor had the mower's arm
+ "E'er spoil'd the crop. The first of mortals, I
+ "On the turf rested. As my nets I dry'd;
+ "And as my captur'd scaly prey to count,
+ "Upon the grass I spread,--whatever the net
+ "Escape prevented, and the hook had snar'd
+ "Through their own folly. (Like a fiction sounds
+ "The fact, but what avails to me to feign?)
+ "Soon as the grass they touch, my captiv'd prey
+ "Begin to move, and on their sides to turn;
+ "And ply their fins on earth as in the main.
+ "Then, while with wonder struck I pause, all fly
+ "The shore in heaps, and their new master quit,
+ "Their native waves regaining. I, surpriz'd,
+ "Long doubtful stand to guess the wond'rous cause.
+ "Whether some god, or but the grasses' juice
+ "Accomplish'd this. What herb--at last, I said--
+ "Can power like this possess?--and with my hand
+ "Pluck'd up, and with my teeth the herbage chew'd.
+ "Scarce had my throat th' untasted juice first try'd,
+ "When all my entrails sudden tremblings shook,
+ "And with a love of something yet unknown
+ "My breast was mov'd; nor could I longer keep
+ "My place.--O earth! where I shall ne'er return--
+ "Farewel! I cry'd,--and plung'd below the waves.
+ "Worthy the ocean deities me deem'd
+ "To join their social troop, and anxious pray'd
+ "To Tethys, and old Ocean, Tethys' spouse,
+ "To purge whate'er of mortal I retain'd.
+ "By them lustrated, and the potent song
+ "Nine times repeated, earthly taints to cleanse,
+ "They bade me 'neath an hundred gushing streams
+ "To place my bosom. No delay I seek;
+ "The floods from numerous fountains pour'd, the main
+ "O'erwhelm'd my head. Thus far what deeds were done
+ "My memory helps me to relate; thus far
+ "Alone can I remember; all the rest
+ "Dark to my memory seems. My sense restor'd,
+ "I found my body chang'd in every part;
+ "Nor was my mind the same. Then first I saw
+ "This beard of dingy green, and these long locks
+ "Which through the seas I sweep; these shoulders huge;
+ "Those azure arms and thighs in fish-like form
+ "Furnish'd with fins. But what avails this shape?
+ "What that by all the deities marine
+ "I dear am held? a deity myself?
+ "If all these honors cannot touch thy breast."
+ These words he spoke, and more to speak prepar'd,
+ When Scylla left the god. Repuls'd, he griev'd
+ And sought Titanian Circe's monstrous court.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fourteenth Book.*
+
+
+ Scylla transformed to a monster by Circe through jealousy; and
+ ultimately to a rock. Continuation of AEneas' voyage. Dido.
+ Cercopians changed to apes. Descent of AEneas to hell. The Cumaean
+ Sybil. Adventures of Achaemenides with Polyphemus: and of Macareus
+ amongst the Lestrigonians. Enchantments of Circe. Story of the
+ transformation of Picus to a woodpecker; and of the nymph Canens
+ to air. The Latian wars. Misfortunes of Diomede. Agmon and others
+ changed to herons. Appulus to a wild olive. The Trojan ships
+ changed to sea-nymphs. The city Ardea to a bird. Deification of
+ AEneas. Latin kings. Vertumnus and Pomona. Story of Iphis and
+ Anaxarete. Wars with the Sabines. Apotheoesis of Romulus; and of
+ his wife Hersilia.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Fourteenth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Now had Euboean Glaucus, who could cleave
+ The surging sea, left Etna, o'er the breasts
+ Of giants thrown, and left the Cyclops' fields,
+ Unconscious of the plough's or harrow's use;
+ And unindebted to the oxen yok'd.
+ Zancle he left, and its opposing shore
+ Where Rhegium's turrets tower; and the strait sea
+ For shipwreck fam'd, which by incroaching shores
+ Press'd narrow, forms the separating bound
+ Betwixt Ausonia's and Sicilia's land.
+ Thence glides he swift along the Tyrrhene coast,
+ By powerful arms impell'd, and gains the dome,
+ And herbag'd hills of Circe Phoebus sprung:
+ (The dome with forms of wildest beasts full cramm'd)
+ Whom, soon as greeting salutations pass'd,
+ He thus address'd:--"O powerful goddess! grant
+ "Thy pity to a god; and thou alone,
+ "If worth that aid thou deem'st me, canst afford
+ "Aid to my love. For, O Titanian maid!
+ "To none the power of plants is better known
+ "Than me, who by the power of plants was chang'd.
+ "But lest the object of my lore, to thee
+ "Unknown, be hid; I Scylla late beheld
+ "Upon th' Italian shore: Messenia's walls
+ "Opposing. Shame me hinders to relate
+ "What promises, what prayers, what coaxing words
+ "I us'd: my words all heard with proud contempt.
+ "Do thou with magic lips thy charms repeat,
+ "If power in charms abides: or if in herbs
+ "More force is found, then use the well-try'd strength
+ "Of herbs of power. I wish thee not to soothe
+ "My heart; I wish thee not these wounds to cure;
+ "Still may they last, let her such flames but feel."
+
+ Then Circe spoke, (and she a mind possess'd
+ Most apt to flame with love, or in her frame
+ The stimulus was plac'd; or Venus, irk'd
+ At what her sire discover'd, caus'd the heat.)
+ "O, better far the willing nymph pursue
+ "Who would in wishes meet thee; wh'o is seiz'd
+ "With equal love: well worthy of the maid
+ "Thou wast; nay shouldst have been the first besought;
+ "And if but hope thou wilt afford, believe
+ "My words, thou shalt spontaneously be lov'd.
+ "Fear not, but on thy beauteous form depend;
+ "Lo! I, a goddess! of the splendid sun
+ "A daughter, who with powerful spells so much
+ "And herbs can do, to be thy consort sue.
+ "Spurn her who spurns thee; her who thee desires
+ "Desiring meet; and both at once avenge."
+ But to her tempting speeches Glaucus thus
+ Reply'd--"The trees shall sooner in the waves
+ "Spring up, and sea-weed on the mountain's top,
+ "Than I, while Scylla lives, my love transfer."
+ The goddess swol'n with anger, since his form
+ To harm 'twas given her not, and love deny'd,
+ Turn'd on her happier rival all her rage.
+ Irk'd at her slighted passion, straight she grinds
+ Herbs infamous, to gain their horrid juice;
+ And mixes all with Hecatean spells.
+ Then clothes her in a sable robe, and forth
+ Through crouds of fawning savage beasts she goes,
+ From her gay palace. Rhegium's coast she seeks
+ O'erlooking Zancle's rocks; and on the waves
+ With fury boiling, steps; o'er them she walks
+ As on a solid shore, and skims along
+ The ridgy billows with unwetted feet.
+
+ A little pool, bent in a gentle curve,
+ With peaceful surface oft did Scylla tempt;
+ And often thither she herself betook
+ To 'scape from ocean's, and from Phoebus' heat,
+ When high in noon-tide fierceness short the shade
+ Was from the head describ'd. Before she came
+ The goddess poison'd all the pool; she pour'd
+ Her potent juice, of monster-breeding power,
+ Prest from pernicious roots, within the waves;
+ And mutter'd thrice nine times with magic lips,
+ In sounds scarce audible, her well-known spells.
+ Here Scylla came, and waded to the waist;
+ And straight, with barking monsters she espies
+ Her womb deform'd: at first, of her own limbs
+ Not dreaming they are part, she from them flies;
+ And chides them thence, and fears their savage mouths.
+ But what she flies she with her drags; she looks
+ To find her thighs, and find her legs, and feet;
+ But for those limbs Cerberean jaws are found.
+ Furious the dogs still howl; on their fierce backs
+ Her shorten'd groin, and swelling belly rest.
+
+ The amorous Glaucus griev'd, and spurn'd the love
+ Of Circe, who so rancorously had us'd
+ The power of plants. Her station Scylla kept;
+ And soon as scope for vengeance she perceiv'd,
+ In hate to Circe, of his comrade crew
+ Depriv'd Ulysses. Next the Trojan fleet
+ Had she o'erwhelm'd; but ere they pass'd, transform'd
+ To stone, she tower'd aloft a flinty rock,
+ And still do mariners that rock avoid.
+
+ The Phrygian ships that danger 'scap'd, and 'scap'd
+ Charybdis fell, by oars propell'd; but now
+ Ausonia's shore well nigh attain'd, were driv'n
+ By adverse tempests to the Libyan coast.
+ AEneaes then the queen Sidonian took
+ Most welcome to her bosom, and her dome;
+ Nor bore her Phrygian spouse's sudden flight,
+ With calm indifference: on a lofty pile
+ Rear'd for pretended sacred rites, she stood,
+ And on the sword's point fell; herself deceiv'd,
+ She all around outwitted. Flying far
+ The new-rais'd city of the sandy plains
+ To Eryx' country was he borne; where liv'd
+ Acestes faithful: here he sacrific'd,
+ And gave due honors to his father's tomb.
+ Then loos'd his ships for sea, well nigh in flames
+ By Juno's Iris: all th' AEoliaen realm;
+ The islands blazing with sulphuric fire;
+ And rocks of Acheloues' siren nymphs,
+ He left. The vessel now, of him who rul'd
+ The helm, bereft, along AEnaria's shore;
+ And Prochytas; and Pithecusa, plac'd
+ Upon a sterile hill, its name deriv'd
+ From those who dwelt there, coasted. Erst the sire
+ Of gods, detesting perjuries and fraud,
+ Which that deceitful race so much employ'd,
+ Chang'd to an animal deform'd their shapes;
+ Where still a likeness and unlikeness seems
+ To man. Their every limb contracted small;
+ Their turn'd-up noses flatten'd from the brow;
+ And ancient furrows plough'd adown their cheeks.
+ Then sent them, all their bodies cover'd o'er
+ With yellow hairs, this district to possess.
+ Yet sent them not till of the power of speech
+ Depriv'd; and tongue for direst falsehoods us'd:
+ But left their chattering jaws the power to 'plain.
+ These past, and left Parthenope's high towers
+ To right; and musical Misenus' tomb,
+ And Cuma's shores to left; spots cover'd thick
+ With marshy reeds, he enters in the cave
+ Where dwelt the ancient Sybil; and in treats
+ That through Avernus' darkness he may pass,
+ His father's shade to seek. Then she, her eyes,
+ Long firmly fixt on earth, uprais'd; and next,
+ Fill'd with the god, in furious raving spoke.
+
+ "Much dost thou ask, O man of mighty deeds!
+ "Whose valor by the sword is amply prov'd,
+ "And piety through flames. Yet, Trojan chief,
+ "Fear not; thou shalt what thou desir'st attain:
+ "By me conducted, thou th' Elysian field,
+ "The lowest portion of the tri-form realm,
+ "And thy beloved parent's shade shalt see:
+ "No path to genuine virtue e'er is clos'd."
+ She spoke, and pointed to th' Avernian grove,
+ Sacred to Proserpine; and shew'd a bough
+ With gold refulgent; this she bade him tear
+ From off its trunk. AEneaes her obeys,
+ And sees the treasures of hell's awful king;
+ His ancestors', and great Anchises' shades:
+ Is taught the laws and customs of the dead;
+ And what deep perils he in future wars
+ Must face. As then the backward path he trode
+ With weary'd step; the labor he beguil'd
+ By grateful speech with his Cumaean guide.
+ And, while through darkling twilight he pursu'd
+ His fearful way, he thus:--"Or, goddess, thou,
+ "Or of the gods high-favor'd, unto me
+ "Still shalt thou as a deity appear.
+ "My life I own thy gift, who hast me given
+ "To view the realms of death: who hast me brought,
+ "The realms of death beheld, to life again.
+ "For these high favors, when to air restor'd
+ "Statues to thee I'll raise, and incense burn."
+ Backward the prophetess, to him her eyes
+ Directs, and heaves a sigh; as thus she speaks:
+ "No goddess I; deem not my mortal frame
+ "The sacred incense' honors can deserve:
+ "Err not through ignorance. Eternal youth
+ "Had I possess'd, if on Apollo's love
+ "My virgin purity had been bestow'd.
+ "This while he hop'd, and while he strove to tempt
+ "With gifts,--O, chuse--he said,--Cumaean maid!
+ "Whate'er thou would'st--whate'er thou would'st is thine.
+ "I, pointing to an heap of gather'd dust,
+ "With thoughtless mind, besought so many years
+ "I might exist, as grains of sand were there:
+ "Mindless to ask for years of constant youth.
+ "The years he granted, and had granted too
+ "Eternal youth, had I his passion quench'd.
+ "A virgin I remain; Apollo's gift
+ "Despis'd: but now the age of joy is fled;
+ "Decrepitude with trembling steps has come,
+ "Which long I must endure. Seven ages now
+ "I have existed; ere the number'd grains
+ "Are equall'd, thrice an hundred harvests I,
+ "And thrice an hundred vintages must see.
+ "The time will come, my body, shrunk with age,
+ "And wither'd limbs, shall to small substance waste;
+ "Nor shall it seem that e'er an amorous god
+ "With me was smitten. Phoebus then himself
+ "Or me will know not, or deny that e'er
+ "He sought my love. Till quite complete my change,
+ "To all invisible, by words alone
+ "I shall be known. Fate still my voice will leave."
+
+ On the steep journey thus the Sybil spoke:
+ And from the Stygian shades AEneaes rose,
+ At Cuma's town; there sacrific'd as wont,
+ And to the shores proceeded, which as yet
+ His nurse's name not bore. Here rested too,
+ After long toil, Macareus, the constant friend
+ Of wise Ulysses: Achaemenides,
+ Erst left amid Etnaean rocks, he knows:
+ Astonish'd there, his former friend to find,
+ In life unhop'd, he cry'd; "What chance? What god
+ "O Achaemenides! has thee preserv'd?
+ "How does a Greek a foreign vessel bear?
+ "And to what shores is now this vessel bound?"
+
+ Then Achaemenides, not ragged now,
+ In robes with thorns united, but all free,
+ Thus answer'd his enquiries. "May I view
+ "Once more that Polyphemus, and those jaws
+ "With human gore o'erflowing; if I deem
+ "This ship to me than Ithaca less dear;
+ "And less AEneaes than my sire esteem.
+ "For how too grateful can I be to him,
+ "Though all to him I give? Can I e'er be
+ "Unthankful or forgetful? That I speak,
+ "And breathe, and view the heavens and glorious sun
+ "He gave: that in the Cyclops' jaws my life
+ "Was clos'd not; that when now the vital spark
+ "Me quits, I may be properly intomb'd,
+ "Not in the monster's entrails. Heavens! what thoughts
+ "Possess'd my mind, (unless by pallid dread
+ "Of sense and thought bereft) when, left behind,
+ "I saw you push to sea. Loud had I call'd,
+ "But fear'd my cries would guide to me the foe.
+ "Ulysses' clamor near your ship destroy'd.
+ "I saw the monster, when a mighty rock,
+ "Torn from a mountain's summit, in the waves
+ "He flung: I saw him when with giant arm
+ "Huge stones he hurl'd, with such impetuous force,
+ "As though an engine sent them. Fear'd I long,
+ "Lest or the stones or waves the bark would sink;
+ "Forgetful then that not on board was I.
+ "But when you 'scap'd from cruel death, by flight,
+ "Then did he madly rave indeed; and roam'd
+ "All Etna o'er; and grop'd amid the woods;
+ "Depriv'd of sight he stumbles on the rocks;
+ "And stretching to the sea his horrid arms,
+ "Blacken'd with gore, he execrates the Greeks;
+ "And thus exclaims;--O! would some lucky chance
+ "Restore Ulysses to me, or restore
+ "One of his comrades, who might glut my rage;
+ "Whose entrails I might gorge; whose living limbs
+ "My hand might rend; whose blood might sluice my throat;
+ "And mangled members tremble in my teeth.
+ "O! then how light, and next to none the curse
+ "Of sight bereft.--Raging, he this and more
+ "Fierce utter'd. I, with pallid dread o'ercome,
+ "Beheld his face still flowing down with blood;
+ "The orb of light depriv'd; his ruthless hands;
+ "His giant members; and his shaggy beard,
+ "Clotted with human gore. Death to my eyes
+ "Was obvious, yet was death my smallest dread.
+ "Now seiz'd I thought me; thought him now prepar'd
+ "T'inclose my mangled bowels in his own:
+ "And to my mind recurr'd the time I saw
+ "Two of my comrades' bodies furious dash'd
+ "Repeated on the earth: he, o'er them stretcht
+ "Prone, like a shaggy lion, in his maw
+ "Their flesh, their entrails, their yet-quivering limbs,
+ "Their marrow, and cranch'd bones, greedy ingulf'd.
+ "Horror me seiz'd. Bloodless and sad I stood,
+ "To see him champ, and from his mouth disgorge
+ "The bloody banquet; morsels mixt with wine
+ "Forth vomiting: and such a fate appear'd
+ "For wretched me prepar'd. Some tedious days
+ "Skulk'd I, and shudder'd at the smallest sound:
+ "Fearful of death, yet praying much to die;
+ "Repelling hunger by green herbs, and leaves,
+ "With acorns mixt; a solitary wretch,
+ "Poor, and to sufferings and to death decreed.
+ "Long was the time, ere I, not distant far,
+ "A ship beheld; I by my gestures shew'd
+ "My wish for flight, and hasten'd to the shore.
+ "Their hearts were mov'd, and thus a Trojan bark
+ "Receiv'd a Greek.--And now, my friend most dear,
+ "Tell thy adventures, and the chief's, and crew's,
+ "Who with thee launch'd upon th' extended main."
+
+ He tells how AEoelus his kingdom holds
+ On the deep Tuscan main, who curbs the winds
+ In cavern'd prisons; which, a noble boon!
+ Close pent within an ox's stubborn hide,
+ Dulichium's chief, from AEoelus receiv'd.
+ How for nine days with prosperous breeze they sail'd;
+ And saw the long-sought land. How on the tenth,
+ Aurora rising bright, his comrades, urg'd
+ By envy, and by thirst of glittering spoil,
+ Gold deeming there inclos'd, the winds unloos'd.
+ How, driven by them, the ship was backward sped
+ Through the same waves she had so lately plough'd;
+ And reach'd the port of AEoelus again.
+ "Thence,"--he continued--"to the ancient town
+ "Of Lestrygonian Lamus we arrive,
+ "Where rules Antiphates; to him dispatch'd
+ "I go, by two attended. I with one
+ "Scarce find in flight our safety: with his gore
+ "The hapless third, the Lestrigonians' jaws
+ "Besmears: our flying footsteps they pursue,
+ "While fierce Antiphates speeds on the crowd.
+ "Around they press, and unremitting hurl
+ "Huge rocks, and trunks of trees; our men o'erwhelm,
+ "And sink our fleet; one ship alone escapes,
+ "Which great Ulysses and myself contains.
+ "Most of our band thus lost, and angry much,
+ "Lamenting more, we floated to these isles,
+ "Which hence, though distant far, you may descry.
+ "Those isles, by me too near beheld, do thou
+ "At distance only view! O, goddess-born!
+ "Most righteous of all Troy, (for now no more,
+ "AEneaes, must thou enemy be stil'd
+ "To us, war ended) fly, I warn thee, fly
+ "The shore of Circe. We, our vessel moor'd
+ "Fast to that beach, not mindless of the deeds
+ "Antiphates perform'd, nor Cyclops, wretch
+ "Inhuman, now to tempt this unknown land
+ "Refuse. The choice by lot is fix'd. The lot
+ "Me sends, and with me sends Polites true;
+ "Eurylochus; and poor Elphenor, fond
+ "Too much of wine; with twice nine comrades mote,
+ "To seek the dome Circean. Thither come;
+ "We at the entrance stand: a thousand wolves,
+ "And bears, and lionesses, with wolves mixt,
+ "Meet us, and terror in our bosoms strike.
+ "But ground for terror none: of all the crew
+ "None try our limbs to wound, but friendly wave
+ "Their arching tails, and fawningly attend
+ "Our steps; till by the menial train receiv'd,
+ "Through marbled halls to where their mistress sate,
+ "Our troop is led. She, in a bright recess,
+ "Upon a lofty throne of state, was plac'd,
+ "Cloth'd in a splendid robe; a golden veil
+ "Around her head, and o'er her shoulders thrown.
+ "Nereids, and nymphs around (whose fingers quick
+ "The wool ne'er drew, nor form'd the following thread)
+ "Were plants arranging, and selecting flowers,
+ "And various teinted herbs, confus'dly mixt
+ "In baskets. She compleats the work they do;
+ "And well she knows the latent power each leaf
+ "Possesses; well their force combin'd she knows:
+ "And all the nice-weigh'd herbs inspects with care.
+ "When us she spy'd, and salutations pass'd
+ "Mutual; her forehead brighten'd, and she gave
+ "Our every wish. Nor waited more, but bade
+ "The beverage of the roasted grain be mix'd;
+ "And added honey, all the strength of wine,
+ "And curdy milk, and juices, which beneath
+ "Such powerful sweetness undetected lay.
+ "The cup from her accursed hand, I take,
+ "And, soon as thirsty I, with parch'd mouth drink,
+ "And the dire goddess with her wand had strok'd
+ "My head (I blush while I the rest relate)
+ "Roughen'd with bristles, I begin to grow;
+ "Nor now can speak; hoarse grunting comes for words;
+ "And all my face bends downwards to the ground;
+ "Callous I feel my mouth become, in form
+ "A crooked snout; and feel my brawny neck
+ "Swell o'er my chest; and what but now the cup
+ "Had grasp'd, that part does marks of feet imprint;
+ "With all my fellows treated thus, so great
+ "The medicine's potency, close was I shut
+ "Within a sty: there I, Eurylochus
+ "Alone unalter'd to a hog, beheld!
+ "He only had the offer'd cup refus'd.
+ "Which had he not avoided, he as one
+ "The bristly herd had join'd; nor had our chief,
+ "The great Ulysses, by his tale inform'd
+ "To Circe come, avenger of our woe.
+ "To him Cyllenius, messenger of peace
+ "A milk-white flower presented; by the gods
+ "Call'd Moly: from a sable root it-springs.
+ "Safe in the gift, and in th' advice of heaven,
+ "He enters Circe's dome; and her repels,
+ "Coaxing to taste th' invidious cup; his head
+ "To stroke attempting with her potent wand;
+ "And awes her trembling with his unsheath'd steel.
+ "Then, faith exchang'd, hands join'd, he to her bed
+ "Receiv'd, he makes the dowry of himself
+ "That all his comrades' bodies be restor'd.
+
+ "Now are we sprinkled with innocuous juice
+ "Of better herbs; with the inverted wand
+ "Our heads are touch'd; the charms, already spoke,
+ "Strong charms of import opposite destroy.
+ "The more she sings her incantations, we
+ "Rise more from earth erect; the bristles fall;
+ "And the wide fissure leaves our cloven feet;
+ "Our shoulders form again; and arms beneath
+ "Are shap'd. Him, weeping too, weeping we clasp,
+ "And round our leader's neck embracing hang.
+ "No words at first to utter have we power,
+ "But such as testify our grateful joy.
+
+ "A year's delay there kept us. There, mine eyes
+ "In that long period much beheld; mine ears
+ "Much heard. This with the rest, in private told
+ "To me, by one of four most-favor'd nymphs
+ "Who aided in her spells: while Circe toy'd
+ "In private with our leader, she me shew'd
+ "A youthful statue carv'd in whitest stone,
+ "Bearing a feather'd pecker upon his head;
+ "Plac'd in a sacred shrine, with numerous wreaths
+ "Encircled. Unto my enquiring words,
+ "And wish to know who this could be, and why
+ "There worshipp'd in the shrine, and why that bird
+ "He bore,--then, Macareus,--she said--receive
+ "Thy wish; and also learn what mighty power
+ "My mistress boasts; attentive hear my words.
+
+ "Saturnian Picus in Ausonia's climes
+ "Was king; delighted still was he to train
+ "Steeds for the fight. The beauty you behold
+ "As man was his. So strong the 'semblance strikes,
+ "His real form in the feign'd stone appears.
+ "His mind his beauty equall'd. Nor as yet,
+ "The games quinquennial Grecian Elis gives,
+ "Four times could he have seen. He, by his face
+ "The Dryad nymphs who on the Latian hills
+ "Were born, attracted. Naiaeds, river-nymphs,
+ "Him sought, whom Albula, and Anio bear;
+ "Almo's short course; the rapid stream of Nar;
+ "And Numicus; and Farfar's lovely shades;
+ "With all that Scythian Dian's woody realm
+ "Traverse; and all who haunt the sedgy lakes.
+ "But he, all these despis'd, lov'd one fair nymph,
+ "Whom erst Venilia, fame reports, brought forth
+ "To Janus on Palatiura's mount. When reach'd
+ "The nuptial age, preferr'd before the rest,
+ "Laurentian Picus gain'd the lovely maid.
+ "Wond'rous was she for beauty, wond'rous more
+ "Her art in song, and hence was Canens nam'd.
+ "Wont was her voice forests and rocks to move;
+ "Soothe savage beasts; arrest the course of streams;
+ "And stay the flying birds. While warbling thus
+ "With voice mature her song, Picus went forth
+ "To pierce amid Laurentium's fields the boars,
+ "Their native dwelling; on a fiery steed
+ "He rode; two quivering spears his left hand bore;
+ "His purple vestment golden clasps confin'd.
+ "In the same woods Apollo's daughter came,
+ "And from the fertile hills as herbs she cull'd,
+ "She left the fields, from her Circaean nam'd.
+ "When, veil'd by twigs herself, the youth she saw,
+ "Amaz'd she stood. Down from her bosom dropp'd
+ "The gather'd plants, and quickly through her frame
+ "The fire was felt to shoot. Soon as her mind
+ "Collected strength to curb the furious flame,
+ "She would have told him instant what she wish'd,
+ "But his impetuous steed, and circling crowd
+ "Of followers, kept her far.--Yet shalt thou not,
+ "If I but know my power, me fly; not should
+ "The winds thee bear away; else is the force
+ "Of plants all vanished, and my spells deceive.
+ "She said; and form'd an incorporeal shape
+ "Like to a boar; and bade it glance across
+ "The monarch's sight; and seem itself to hide
+ "In the dense thicket, where the trees grew thick:
+ "A spot impervious to the courser's foot.
+ "'Tis done; unwitting Picus eager seeks
+ "His shadowy prey; leaps from his smoking steed;
+ "And, vain-hop'd spoil pursuing, wanders deep
+ "In the thick woods. She baneful words repeats,
+ "And cursing charms collects. With new-fram'd verse
+ "Invokes strange deities: verse which erst while
+ "Has dull'd the splendid circle of the moon;
+ "And hid with rain-charg'd clouds her father's face.
+ "This verse repeated, instant heaven grew dark,
+ "And mists from earth arose: his comrades roam
+ "Through the dark paths; the king without a guard
+ "Is left. This spot, and time so suiting gain'd,
+ "Thus Circe cry'd--O fairest thou of forms!
+ "By those bright eyes which me enslav'd, by all
+ "Thy beauteous charms which make a goddess sue,
+ "Indulge my flame; accept th' all-seeing sun,
+ "My sire, for thine; nor, rigidly austere,
+ "Titanian Circe spurn.--She ceas'd; he stern
+ "Repuls'd the goddess, and her praying suit;
+ "Exclaiming,--be thou whom thou may'st, yet thine
+ "I am not; captive me another holds;
+ "And fervently, I pray, to lengthen'd years
+ "She still may hold me. Never will I wrong
+ "The nuptial bond with stranger's lawless love,
+ "While Janus' daughter, my lov'd Canens lives.--
+ "Sol's daughter then (re-iterated prayers
+ "In vain oft try'd) exclaim'd:--Nor shalt thou boast
+ "Impunity; nor e'er returning see
+ "Thy Canens; but learn well what may be done
+ "By slighted, loving woman: Circe loves,
+ "Is woman, and is slighted.--To the west
+ "She turn'd her twice, and turn'd her twice to east;
+ "Thrice with her wand she struck the youth, and thrice
+ "Her charm-fraught song repeated. Swift he fled,
+ "And wondering that more swift he ran than wont,
+ "Plumes on his limbs beheld. Constrain'd to add
+ "A new-form'd 'habitant to Latium's groves,
+ "Angry he wounds the spreading boughs, and digs
+ "The stubborn oak-tree with his rigid beak.
+ "A purple tinge his feathers take, the hue
+ "His garment shew'd; the gold, a buckle once,
+ "Which clasp'd his robe, to feathers too is chang'd;
+ "The shining gold circles his neck around:
+ "Nor aught remains of Picus save the name.
+
+ "Meantime his comrades vainly Picus call,
+ "Through all the groves; but Picus no where find.
+ "Circe they meet, for now the air was clear'd,
+ "The clouds dispers'd, or by the winds or sun;
+ "Charge her with crimes committed, and demand
+ "Their king; force threaten, and prepare to lift
+ "Their savage spears. The goddess sprinkles round
+ "Her noxious poisons and envenom'd juice;
+ "Invokes old night, and the nocturnal gods,
+ "Chaos, and Erebus; and Hecat's help,
+ "With magic howlings, prays. Woods (wond'rous sight!)
+ "Leap from their seats; earth groans; the neighbouring trees
+ "Grow pale; the grass with sprinkled blood is wet;
+ "Stones hoarsely seem to roar, and dogs to howl;
+ "Earth with black serpents swarms; unmatter'd forms
+ "Of bodies long defunct, flit through the air.
+ "Tremble the crowd, struck with th' appalling scene:
+ "Appall'd, and trembling, on their heads she strikes
+ "Th' envenom'd rod. From the rod's potent touch,
+ "For men a various crowd of furious beasts
+ "Appear'd: his form no single youth retain'd.
+
+ "Descending Phoebus had Hesperia's shores
+ "Now touch'd; and Canens with her heart and looks
+ "Sought for her spouse in vain: her servants all,
+ "And all the people roam through every wood,
+ "Bearing bright torches. Not content the nymph
+ "To weep, to tear her tresses, and to beat
+ "Her bosom, though not one of these was spar'd,
+ "She sally'd forth herself; and frantic stray'd
+ "Through Latium's plains. Six times the night beheld,
+ "And six returning suns, her, wandering o'er
+ "The mountain tops, or through the vallies deep,
+ "As chance directed: foodless, sleepless, still.
+ "Tiber at length beheld her; with her toil,
+ "And woe, worn out, upon his chilling banks
+ "Her limbs extending. There her very griefs,
+ "Pour'd with her tears, still musically sound.
+ "Mourning, her words in a soft dying tone
+ "Are heard, as when of old th' expiring swan
+ "Sung his own elegy. Wasted at length
+ "Her finest marrow, fast she pin'd away;
+ "And vanish'd quite to unsubstantial air.
+ "Yet still tradition marks the spot, the muse
+ "Of ancient days, still Canens call'd the place,
+ "In honor of the nymph, and justly too.
+
+ "Many the tales like these I heard; and much
+ "Like this I saw in that long tedious year.
+ "Sluggish and indolent for lack of toil,
+ "Thence are we bid to plough the deep again;
+ "Again to hoist the sail. But Circe told
+ "So much of doubtful ways, of voyage vast,
+ "And all the perils of the raging deep
+ "We must encounter; that my soul I own
+ "Trembled. I gain'd this shore, and here remain'd."
+
+ Here Macareus finish'd; to AEneaes' nurse
+ Inurn'd in marble, this short verse was given:
+ "Cajeta here, sav'd from the flames of Greece,
+ "Her foster-son, for piety renown'd,
+ "With fires more fitting burn'd." Loos'd are the ropes
+ That bound them to the grassy beach, and far
+ They leave the dwelling of the guileful power;
+ And seek the groves, beneath whose cloudy shade
+ The yellow-sanded Tiber in the main
+ Fierce rushes. Here AEneaes gains the realm,
+ And daughter of Latinus, Faunus' son:
+ But not without a war. Battles ensue
+ With the fierce people. For his promis'd bride
+ Turnus loud rages. All the Tuscans join
+ With Latium, and with doubtful warfare long
+ Is sought the conquest. Either side augment
+ With foreign aid their strength. Rutilians crowds
+ Defend, and crowds the Trojan trenches guard.
+
+ Not bootless, suppliant to Evander's roof
+ AEneaes went; though Venulus in vain,
+ To exil'd Diomed's great town was sent.
+ A mighty city Diomed' had rear'd
+ Beneath Apulian Daunus, and possess'd
+ His lands by marriage dower. But when made known
+ By Venulus, the message Turnus sent,
+ Beseeching aid, th' Etolian hero aid
+ Deny'd. For neither was his wish to send
+ His father's troops to fight, nor of his own
+ Had he, which might the strenuous warfare wage.--
+ "Lest this but feign'd you think," he said, "though grief
+ "The sad relation will once more renew,
+ "Yet will I now th'afflicting tale repeat.
+
+ "When lofty Ilium was consum'd,--the towers
+ "Of Pergamus a prey to Grecian flames,
+ "The Locrian Ajax, for the ravish'd maid,
+ "Drew vengeance on us all; which he alone
+ "Deserv'd from angry Pallas. Scatter'd wide,
+ "And swept by tempests through the foaming deep,
+ "The Grecians, thunders, rains, and darkness bore,
+ "All heaven's and ocean's rage; and all to crown,
+ "On the Capharean rocks the fleet was dash'd.
+ "But not to tire you with each mournful scene
+ "In order; Greece might then the tears have drawn
+ "Ev'n from old Priam. Yet Minerva's care
+ "Snatch'd me in safety from the surge. Again
+ "From Argos, my paternal land, I'm driven;
+ "Bright Venus bearing still in mind the wound
+ "Of former days. Upon th'expanded deep
+ "Such toils I bore excessive; on the land
+ "So in stern combat strove, that oft those seem'd
+ "To me most blest, who in the common wreck,
+ "Caphareus sunk beneath the boisterous waves;
+ "A fate I anxious wish'd I'd with them shar'd.
+ "Now all my comrades, of the toilsome main,
+ "And constant warfare weary; respite crav'd
+ "From their long wanderings. Not was Agmon so,
+ "Fierce still his bosom burn'd; and now he rag'd
+ "From his misfortunes fiercer, as he cry'd--
+ "What, fellows! can remain which now to bear
+ "Your patience should refuse? What, though she would,
+ "Possesses Cythereae to inflict?
+ "When worse is to be dreaded, is the time
+ "For prayers: but when our state the worst has seen
+ "Fear should be spurn'd at; in our depth of woe
+ "Secure. Let she herself hear all my words;
+ "And let her hate, as hate she does, each man
+ "Who follows Diomed'! Yet will we all
+ "Her hatred mock, and stand against her power
+ "So mighty, with a no less mighty breast.--
+ "With words like these Etolian Agmon goads
+ "Th' already raging goddess, and revives
+ "Her ancient hate. Few with his boldness pleas'd;
+ "Far most my friends his daring speech condemn.
+ "Aiming at words respondent, straight his voice
+ "And throat are narrow'd; into plumes his hair
+ "Is alter'd; plumes o'er his new neck are spread;
+ "And o'er his chest, and back; his arms receive
+ "Long pinions, bending into light-form'd wings;
+ "Most of his feet is cleft in claws; his mouth
+ "Hardens to horn, and in a sharp beak ends.
+ "Lycus, Rhetenor, Nycteus, Abas, stare
+ With wonder, and while wondering there they stand
+ "The same appearance take; and far the most
+ "Of all my troop on wings up fly: and round
+ "The ship the air resounds with clapping wings.
+ "If what new shape those birds so sudden form'd
+ "Distinguish'd, you would know: swans not to be,
+ "Nought could the snowy swan resemble more.
+ "Son now to Daunus, my diminish'd host
+ "Scarce guards this kingdom, and those barren fields."
+
+ Thus far Diomedes; and Venulus
+ Th' Apulian kingdom left, Calabria's gulf
+ Pass'd, and Messapia's plains, where he beheld
+ Caverns with woods deep shaded, with light rills
+ Cool water'd: here the goatish Pan now dwelt;
+ Once tenanted by wood-nymphs. From the spot
+ Them, Appulus, a shepherd drove to flight;
+ Alarm'd at first by sudden dread, but soon,
+ Resum'd their courage, his pursuit despis'd,
+ They to the measur'd notes their agile feet
+ Mov'd in the dance. The clown insults them more,
+ Mimics their motions in his boorish steps,
+ To coarse abusing adding speech obscene:
+ Nor ceas'd his tongue 'till bury'd in a tree.
+ Well may his manner from the fruit be known;
+ For the wild olive marks his tongue's reproach,
+ In berries most austere: to them transferr'd
+ The rough ungrateful sharpness of his words.
+
+ Return'd the legates, and the message told,
+ Th' Etolians' aid deny'd; without their help
+ Wage the Rutilians now the ready war:
+ And streams of blood from either army flow.
+ Lo! Turnus comes, and greedy torches brings
+ To fire the cover'd ships; the flames they fear
+ Whom tempests spar'd. And now the fire consum'd
+ The pitch, the wax, with all that flame could feed;
+ Then, mounting up the lofty mast, assail'd
+ The canvas; and the rowers' benches smok'd.
+ This saw the sacred mother of the gods,
+ And mindful that from Ida's lofty top
+ The pines were hew'd, with clash of tinkling brass,
+ And sounds of hollow box, fill'd all the air.
+ Then borne through ether by her lions tam'd,
+ She said; "Those flames with sacrilegious hand
+ "Thou hurl'st in vain: I will them snatch away.
+ "Ne'er will I calmly view the greedy fire
+ "Aught of the forests, which are mine consume."
+ Loud thunders rattled as the goddess spoke;
+ And showery floods with hard rebounding hail,
+ The thunder follow'd. In the troubled air
+ The blustering brethren rag'd, and swell'd the main:
+ The billows furious clash'd. The mother us'd
+ One blast's exerted force; the cables burst,
+ Which bound the Phrygian vessels to the shore;
+ Them swiftly swept along, and in the deep
+ Low plung'd them. Straight the rigid wood grows soft
+ The timber turns to flesh; the crooked prows
+ To heads are chang'd: the oars to floating legs,
+ And toes; while what were ribs, as ribs remain;
+ The keels, deep in the vessels sunk, become
+ The spinal bones; in soft long tresses flows
+ The cordage; into arms the sailyards change:
+ The hue of all cerulean as before.
+ And now the Naiaeds of the ocean sport
+ With girlish play, amid those very waves
+ Ere while so dreaded: sprung from rugged hills
+ They love the gentle main; nor aught their birth
+ Their bosoms irks. Yet mindful still what risks
+ Themselves encounter'd on the raging main,
+ Oft with assisting hand the high-tost bark
+ They aid; save Greeks the hapless bark contains.
+ Mindful of Iliuem's fall, they still detest
+ The Argives; and with joyful looks behold
+ The shatter'd fragments of Ulysses' ship:
+ With joy behold the bark Alcinous gave
+ Harden to rock, stone growing from the wood.
+
+ 'Twas hop'd, the fleet transform'd to nymphs marine,
+ The fierce Rutilians, struck with awe, might cease
+ The war; but stubborn either side persists.
+ Each have their gods, and each have godlike souls.
+ Nor seek they now, so much the kingdom dower,
+ Latinus' sceptre, or Lavinia! thee,
+ As conquest: waging war through shame to cease.
+ Venus at last beholds, brave Turnus slain,
+ Her son's victorious arms; and Ardea falls,
+ A mighty town when Turnus yet was safe:
+ It cruel flames destroy'd; and every roof
+ The smoking embers hid; up from the heap
+ Of ruins, sprung a bird unknown before,
+ And beat the ashes with its sounding wings:
+ Its voice, its leanness, pallid hue, and all,
+ Suit well a captur'd city; and the name
+ Retaining still, with beating wings it wails.
+
+ Now had AEneaes' virtues, all the gods,
+ Ev'n Juno, forc'd to cease their ancient hate.
+ The young Iuelus' growing empire fixt
+ On firm foundations, ripe was then for heaven
+ The Cytherean prince. Venus besought
+ That favor of the gods; round her sire's neck
+ Her arms she clasp'd--"O, father!"--she exclaim'd--
+ "Indulgent still, be more than ever kind:
+ "Grant that a deity, though e'er so low,
+ "AEneaes may become! who through my blood
+ "Claims thee as grandsire; something let him gain.
+ "Let it suffice, that he has once beheld
+ "The dreary realm; and once already past
+ "The Stygian stream."--The deities consent:
+ Nor does the heavenly queen, her forehead stern
+ Retain, consenting with a cheerful mien.
+ Then spoke the sire. "Both, daughter, merit well
+ "The boon celestial: what thou ask'st receive,
+ "Since thou desir'st it, and since he deserves."
+ He ceas'd. O'erjoy'd, she grateful thanks returns;
+ And by yok'd turtles borne through yielding air,
+ She seeks Laurentum's shore, where gently creep
+ Numicius' waters 'midst a reedy shade
+ Into the neighbouring main. She bids him cleanse
+ All of AEneaes that to death was given;
+ And bear him silent floating to the sea.
+ The horned god, what Venus bade perform'd:
+ All that AEneaes had of mortal mould
+ He purg'd away, and wash'd him with his waves.
+ His better part remain'd. Odours divine,
+ O'er his lustrated limbs, the mother pour'd;
+ And with ambrosia and sweet nectar touch'd
+ His lips, and perfect is the new-made god:
+ Whom Indiges, the Roman people call,
+ Worship with altars, and in temples place.
+
+ Alba, and Latium then beneath the rule
+ Of young Iuelus, call'd Ascanius, came.
+ Him Sylvius follow'd. Then Latinus held
+ The ancient sceptre, with his grandsire's name.
+ Alba to fam'd Latinus was the next.
+ Then Epitus; Capetus; Capys reign'd:
+ Capys before Capetus. After these
+ The realm was sway'd by Tiberinus; sunk
+ Beneath the billows of the Tuscan stream,
+ The waters took his name. His sons were two,
+ Fierce Remulus, and Acrota; the first
+ Pre-eminent in years, the thunder mock'd;
+ And by the thunder dy'd. Of meeker mind
+ His brother, to brave Aventinus left
+ The throne; who bury'd 'neath the self-same hill
+ Where once he reign'd, gave to the hill a name;
+ And Procas now the Latian people rul'd.
+
+ Beneath this monarch fair Pomona liv'd,
+ Than whom amongst the Hamadryad train
+ None tended closer to her garden's care;
+ None o'er the trees' young fruit more anxious watch'd;
+ And thence her name. In rivers, she, and woods,
+ Delighted not, for fields were all her joy;
+ And branches bending with delicious loads.
+ Nor grasps her hand a javelin, but a hook,
+ With which she now luxurious boughs restrains,
+ And prunes the stragglers, when too wide they spread:
+ Now she divides the rind, and in the cleft
+ Inserts a scion, and supporting juice
+ Affords th' adopted stranger. Ne'er she bears
+ That drought they feel, but oft with flowing streams
+ Waters the crooked fibres of their roots:
+ This all her love, this all her care, for man
+ She heeded not. Yet of the lawless force
+ Of rustics fearful, she her orchard round
+ Well fenc'd, and every part from access barr'd,
+ And fled from all mankind. What was there left
+ Untry'd, by satyrs, by the wanton fawns,
+ Or pine-crown'd Pan; Sylvanus, ever youth;
+ Or him whose sickle frights nocturnal thieves
+ To gain her? These Vertumnus all excell'd
+ In passion; but not happier he than they.
+ How oft a basket of ripe grain he bore,
+ Clad like a hardy reaper, and in form
+ A real reaper seem'd! Oft with new hay
+ His temples bound, who turns the fresh cut grass
+ He might be thought. Oft in his horny hand
+ He bears a goad; then might you swear, that now
+ The weary oxen he had just unyok'd.
+ Arm'd with a pruning hook, he one appears
+ Who lops the vines. When he the ladder lifts,
+ Apples about to pluck he seems. His sword
+ Shews him a soldier; and his trembling reed
+ An angler. Thus a thousand shapes he tries,
+ T' enjoy the pleasure of her beauteous sight.
+ Now leaning on a staff, his temples clad
+ In painted bonnet, he an ancient dame,
+ With silver locks thin scatter'd o'er her head,
+ Would seem; and in the well-trimm'd orchard walks;
+ Admires the fruit--"But, O! how far beyond
+ "Are these;"--he said, and kiss'd the lips he prais'd:
+ No ancient dame such kisses e'er bestow'd.
+ Then rested on the swelling turf, and view'd
+ The branches bending with th' autumnal load.
+
+ An elm there stood right opposite, full spread
+ With swelling grapes, which, with its social vine,
+ He prais'd;--"Yet should that trunk there single stand"--
+ Said he,--"without its vine, nought but the leaves
+ "Desirable would seem. As well the vine
+ "Which rests now safe upon its wedded elm,
+ "If not so join'd, were prostrate on the ground.
+ "Yet does the tree's example move not thee.
+ "Thou fly'st from marriage; fly'st from nuptial joys;
+ "Would they could charm thy soul. Not Helen e'er
+ "Such crowds of wooers sought; not her who mov'd
+ "The Lapithaean war; nor the bright queen
+ "Of Ithacus, still 'gainst the coward brave,
+ "As would pursue thee. Now, though all thou fly'st,
+ "Thy suitors scorning, thousands seek thy hand,
+ "Both demi-gods and gods, whoever dwell
+ "Of deities on Alba's lofty hills.
+ "Yet wisely would'st thou act, and happy wed,
+ "Attend my aged counsel (thee I love
+ "More than all these, and more than thou'dst believe)
+ "Reject such vulgar offers, and select
+ "Vertumnus for the consort of thy bed:
+ "And for his worth accept of me as pledge.
+ "For to himself not better is he known
+ "Than me. No truant through the earth he roves;
+ "These spots he dwells in, and in these alone,
+ "Nor loves he, like thy wooer's greatest share,
+ "Instant whate'er he sees. Thou his first flame
+ "Shalt be, and be his last. He will devote
+ "His every year to thee, and thee alone.
+ "Add too his youth, and nature's bounteous gifts
+ "Which decorate him; and that changed with ease,
+ "He every form can take, and those the best
+ "That thou may'st like, for all thou may'st command.
+ "Are not your pleasures both the same? the fruits
+ "Thou gatherest first, are they not given to him?
+ "Who takes thy offerings with a grateful hand.
+ "But now he seeks not fruits pluck'd from thy trees,
+ "Nor herbs thy garden feeds with mellow juice,
+ "Nor aught, save thee. Have pity on his flame:
+ "Think 'tis himself that sues; think that he prays
+ "Through me. O fear the vengeance of the gods!
+ "Affronted Venus' unrelenting rage;
+ "And fear Rhamnusia's still vindictive mind.
+ "That these you more may dread, I will relate
+ "(For age has much to me made known) a fact
+ "Notorious through all Cyprus which may urge
+ "Your soul more quickly to relent and love.
+
+ "Iphis of humble origin beheld
+ "The noble Anaxarete--the blood
+ "Of ancient Teucer: he beheld, and felt
+ "Love burn through all his frame; he struggled long
+ "By reason to o'ercome the flame, in vain.
+ "He came a humble suppliant to her gate.
+ "To her old nurse, he now his hapless love
+ "Confess'd, and pray'd her by her nurseling's hopes,
+ "She would not be severe. Now he assails
+ "All her attendants with his flattering speech,
+ "And anxious begs of each to intercede.
+ "Oft, grav'n on tablets, were his amorous words
+ "Borne to her. Oft against her door he hung
+ "Garlands, wet dropping with the dew of tears.
+ "Plac'd on the threshold hard his tender side,
+ "Venting reproaches on the cruel bar.
+ "But she more deaf than surges which arise
+ "With setting stars; and harder than the steel
+ "Numician fires have temper'd; or the rock
+ "Still living in its bed, spurn'd him, and laugh'd:
+ "And cruel, added lofty words to deeds
+ "Unmerciful, and robb'd him ev'n of hope.
+ "Impatient Iphis, now no longer bore
+ "The pangs of endless grief, but at her gate
+ "Thus utter'd his last 'plaints--Thou hast o'ercome
+ "O Anaxarete! for never more
+ "Will I molest thy quiet. Now prepare
+ "Glad triumphs; Paean call; and bind thy brows
+ "With laurel bright, for thou victorious art,
+ "And joyfully I die. O heart of steel!
+ "Enjoy thy bliss. Now will I force thy praise
+ "In something;--somehow find a way to please,
+ "And thee constrain to grant I have desert.
+ "Yet still remember, that my love for thee
+ "Leaves me not but with life! at once I lose
+ "A double light. But fame shall not announce
+ "To thee my death, for I myself will come.
+ "Lest thou should'st doubt, thou shalt thyself behold
+ "My death, and on my lifeless body glut
+ "Thy cruel eyes. But, O ye gods above!
+ "If mortal deeds ye view, remember me:
+ "No more my tongue can dare to ask, than this,
+ "That distant ages may my fortune know;
+ "Grant fame to him, whom ye of life deprive.--
+ "He spoke, and to the porch so oft adorn'd
+ "With flowing chaplets, rais'd his humid eyes,
+ "And stretch'd his pallid arms; then to the post,
+ "The cord with noose well-fitted, fastening, cry'd:--
+ "Nymph, pitiless and cruel! pleas'd the best
+ "With garlands such as these!--Then in the cord,
+ "His head inserted; tow'rd the maid still turn'd,
+ "As, hapless load! with strangled throat he hung.
+ "Struck by his dangling feet, the portals seem'd
+ "A sound to give, which mighty seem'd to mourn;
+ "And open thrown, the horrid deed display'd:
+ "Loudly the servants shriek, and vainly bear
+ "His breathless body to his mother's dome.
+ "(Defunct his sire) She clasp'd him to her breast,
+ "Embrac'd his clay-cold limbs; and all she said
+ "That wretched parents say; and all she did
+ "That hapless mothers do: then through the town
+ "The melancholy funeral pomp she led,
+ "The lurid members following, on a bier
+ "For burning. In the road the dwelling stood
+ "Through which the sad procession took its way,
+ "And sound of lamentation struck the ears
+ "Of Anaxarete, whom now the power
+ "Of vengeance follow'd. Mov'd, she now exclaim'd--
+ "I will this melancholy prospect view.--
+ "And to the open casement mounted high.
+ "Scarce had she Iphis on the bier beheld,
+ "When harden'd grew her eyes; a pallid hue
+ "O'erspread her body as the warm blood fled.
+ "Her feet to move for flight she try'd, her feet
+ "Stuck fast; her face she try'd to turn away;
+ "She could not turn it; and by small degrees
+ "The stony hardness of her breast was spread
+ "O'er all her limbs. Believe not that I feign,
+ "For Salamis the figure of the nymph
+ "Still keeps; and there a temple is high rear'd
+ "Where Venus, the beholder, they adore.
+ "Mindful of this, O dearest nymph! lay by
+ "That cold disdain, and join thee to a spouse.
+ "So may no vernal frosts thy budding fruits
+ "Destroy, nor sweeping storms despoil thy flowers."
+ When this the god, to various shapes in vain
+ Transform'd, had utter'd; he assum'd again
+ The youth, and flung the garb of age aside:
+ And so appear'd, as seems the radiant sun,
+ Freed from opposing clouds, and darting bright
+ His glory round. Force he prepar'd, but force
+ He needed not. The nymph his beauty mov'd,
+ And straight her bosom felt a mutual flame.
+
+ Th' Ausonian realm Amulius' force unjust
+ Commanded next; and ancient Numitor
+ By his young grandsons the lost realm regain'd.
+ The city's walls on Pales' feast were laid.
+ Now Tatius and the Sabine sires wage war
+ Against it; and the fortress' gate unclos'd,
+ Tarpeia, well-deserving of her fate,
+ Breathes out her soul beneath a pile of shields.
+ Thence Cures' sons, each sound of voice repress'd,
+ Silent as wolves, steal on them drown'd in sleep,
+ And gain the gates, which Ilia's son had clos'd
+ With massive bars. But Juno one threw ope,
+ Nor creak'd the portal on its turning hinge.
+ Venus alone the fastening of the gate
+ Withdrawn, perceiv'd, and had it clos'd again,
+ Save that the acts a deity performs,
+ No deity can e'er undo. A spot
+ Near Janus' temple, cool with flowing streams,
+ Ausonia's Naiaeds own'd; and aid from these
+ She sought. Nor could the nymphs deny a boon
+ So just; and instant all their rills and floods
+ Burst forth. But still to Janus' open gate
+ The way was passable, nor could the waves
+ Oppose their way. They to the fruitful springs
+ Apply blue sulphur, and the hollow caves
+ Fire with bitumen; to the lowest depth
+ They forceful penetrate, both this, and that.
+ And streams that late might vie with Alpine cold,
+ To flames themselves, not now in heat would yield.
+ The porches of the deity two-fac'd
+ Smok'd with the fiery sprinkling; and the gate,
+ Op'd to the hardy Sabine troops in vain,
+ Was by the new-sprung fountain guarded, 'till
+ The sons of Mars had girt them in their arms.
+ Soon Romulus attack'd them, and Rome's soil
+ Was strew'd with Sabine bodies and her own:
+ And impious weapons mingled blood of sires
+ With blood of sons-in-law; yet so it pleas'd,
+ War settled into peace, nor rag'd the steel
+ To ultimate destruction; in the realm
+ Tatius as equal sovereign was receiv'd.
+
+ Tatius deceas'd, thou, Romulus, dispens'd,
+ To the joint nations, equitable laws.
+ When Mars, his helmet thrown aside, the sire
+ Of gods and men, in words like these, address'd.--
+ "O parent! (since the Roman realm has gain'd
+ "A strong and wide foundation, nor should look
+ "To one protector only) lo! the time
+ "To grant the favor, promis'd me so long,
+ "To thy deserving grandson. Snatch'd from earth
+ "Let him in heaven he plac'd. Time was, long since,
+ "In a full council of the gods thou said'st,
+ "Well I remember, well my mindful breast
+ "The tender words remark'd; a son of mine
+ "By thee should in the azure sky be plac'd:
+ "Now be the fulness of thy words complete."
+ Th' Omnipotent consented; with black clouds
+ Darken'd the air; and frighten'd all the town
+ With flaming thunders. When the martial god
+ Perceiv'd this fiat of the promis'd change,
+ Propp'd on his spear he fearless mounts the steeds,
+ Press'd by the bloody yoke; loud sounds the lash,
+ And prone the air he cleaves, lights on the top
+ Of shady Palatine. There Ilia's son
+ Delivering regal laws to Romans round,
+ He saw, and swept him thence: his mortal limbs
+ Waste in the empty air, as balls of lead
+ Hurl'd from a sling, melt in the midmost sky:
+ More fair his face appears, and worthy more
+ Of the high shrines: such now appears the form
+ Of great Quirinus, clad in purple robe.
+
+ His spouse him wept as lost, when heaven's high queen
+ Bade Iris on her sweeping bow descend,
+ And thus her orders to Hersilia speak:--
+ "O matron! glory of the Latian land;
+ "Pride of the Sabine race; most worthy spouse
+ "Of such an hero once; spouse worthy now
+ "Of god Quirinus, cease thy tears: if wish
+ "To see thy husband warms thee, led by me,
+ "To yonder grove upon Quirinus' hill
+ "Which flourishes, and overshades the fane
+ "Of Rome's great monarch, haste."--Iris obeys;
+ Upon her painted bow to earth slides down,
+ And hails Hersilia in the bidden words.
+ Her eyes scarce lifting, she with blushing face
+ Replies--"O goddess! whom thou art, to me
+ "Unknown; that thou a goddess art is plain.
+ "Lead me, O lead! shew me my spouse's face:
+ "Which if fate grant I may once more behold,
+ "Heaven I'll allow I've seen." Nor waits she more,
+ But with Thaumantian Iris, to the hill
+ Of Romulus proceeds. There, shot from heaven,
+ A star tow'rd earth descended; from its rays
+ Bright flam'd Hersilia's hair, and with the star
+ Mounted aloft. Rome's founder's well-known arms
+ Receive her. Now her former name is chang'd,
+ As chang'd her body: known as Ora, now,
+ A goddess, with her great Quirinus join'd.
+
+
+
+
+*The Fifteenth Book.*
+
+
+ Numa's journey to Crotona. The Pythagorean philosophy of
+ transmigration of the soul, and relation of various
+ transformations. Death of Numa, and grief of Egeria. Story of
+ Hippolytus. Change of Egeria to a fountain. Cippus. Visit of
+ Esculapius to Rome, in the form of a snake. Assassination and
+ apotheoesis of Julius Caesar. Praise of Augustus. Prophetic
+ conclusion.
+
+
+
+
+THE *Fifteenth Book* OF THE METAMORPHOSES OF OVID.
+
+
+ Meantime they seek who may the mighty load
+ Sustain; who may succeed so great a king.
+ Fame, harbinger of truth, the realm decreed
+ To noble Numa. Not content to know
+ The laws and customs of the Sabine race,
+ His mind capacious grasp'd a larger field.
+ He sought for nature's laws. Fir'd by this wish,
+ His country left, he journey'd to the town
+ Of him, who erst was great Alcides' host:
+ And as he sought to learn what founder first
+ These Grecian walls rear'd on Italia's shore,
+ Thus an old 'habitant, well vers'd in tales
+ Of yore, reply'd.--"Jove's son, rich in the herds
+ "Iberia bred, his prosperous journey bent
+ "By ocean unto fair Lacinia's shores:
+ "Enter'd himself the hospitable roof
+ "Of mighty Croto, while his cattle' stray'd
+ "Amid the tender grass; and his long toil
+ "Reliev'd by rest. Departing, thus he spoke--
+ "Here in thy grandson's age a town shall rise.--
+ "And true the promis'd words; for Myscelos,
+ "Argive Alemon's son, dear to the gods,
+ "Beyond all mortals of that time, now liv'd.
+ "The club-arm'd god, as press'd with heavy sleep,
+ "He lay, hung o'er him, and directed thus.--
+ "Haste leave thy native land;--where distant flows
+ "The rocky stream of AEsaris, go seek.--
+ "And threaten'd much if disobedient found:
+ "Then disappear'd the god and sleep at once.
+ "Alemon's son arose; with silent care
+ "Revolv'd the new-seen vision in his soul,
+ "And undetermin'd waver'd long his mind.
+ "The god commands,--the laws forbid to go:
+ "Death is the punishment to him decreed
+ "Who would his country quit. Now glorious Sol
+ "Had in the ocean hid his glittering face,
+ "And densest night shew'd her star-studded head;
+ "Again the god was seen to come; again
+ "Admonish, and with threats more stern demand
+ "Obedience. Terror-struck he now prepar'd
+ "His property and household gods to move
+ "To this new seat. Quick through the city flies
+ "The rumor; as a slighter of the laws
+ "Is he denounc'd. The trial ends at once;
+ "Th' acknowledg'd crime without a witness prov'd.
+ "The wretched culprit lifts his eyes and hands
+ "To heaven, exclaiming;--Thou whose toils twice six
+ "Have given thee claim to glory, lend thy aid;
+ "Thou art the cause that I offence have given.--
+ "Sentence in old, by stones of white and black
+ "Was shewn: by these th' accus'd was clear'd, by those
+ "Condemn'd. Thus is the heavy doom now pass'd,
+ "And in the fatal urn each flings a stone
+ "Of sable hue. Inverted then to count
+ "The pebbles, lo! their color all is chang'd
+ "From black to white; and thus, the doom revers'd,
+ "Alemon's son by Hercules is freed.
+ "Thanks to Alcmena's son, his kinsman, given,
+ "He o'er th' Ionian sea with favoring winds
+ "Sail'd, and Tarentum, Sparta's city, pass'd,
+ "And Sybaris, Neaethus Salentine,
+ "The gulph of Thurium, and Japygia's fields,
+ "With Temeses; which shores at distance seen
+ "By him, were scarcely pass'd, when he beheld
+ "The mouth of AEsaris, the destin'd flood:
+ "And thence not far a lofty heap of earth,
+ "Where Croto's hallow'd bones were safe inhum'd.
+ "There he as bidden rais'd the walls, which took
+ "From the high sepulchre their lasting name.
+ "Plain then the city's origin appears
+ "By fame, thus built upon Italia's shores."
+
+ Here dwelt a sage whom Samos claim'd by birth,
+ But Samos and its masters he had fled;
+ A willing exile from tyrannic rule.
+ Though from celestial regions far remov'd
+ His mind to heaven could soar; with mental eyes
+ He things explor'd which to the human ken
+ Nature deny'd. When all with watchful care
+ Was learnt in secret, to the listening crowd
+ He public spoke. Told to their wondering ears
+ The primal origin of this great world;
+ The cause of things; what nature is; what god;
+ Whence snow; and whence tremendous thunder springs,--
+ From Jove, or from the rattling of rent clouds;
+ What shakes earth's pillars; by what law the stars
+ Wander; and what besides lies hid from man.
+ And first that animals should heap the board
+ For food, he strict forbade; and first in words
+ Thus eloquent, but unbeliev'd he spoke.
+
+ "Cease, mortals, cease your bodies to pollute
+ "With food unhallow'd: plentiful is grain;
+ "The apples bend the branches with their load;
+ "The vines bear swelling heaps of clustering grapes;
+ "Bland herbs you have; and such as heat require
+ "To mollify for use. Nor do you lack
+ "The milky fluid, or the honey sweet,
+ "Fragrant of thyme. The lavish earth supplies
+ "Mild aliments, her riches and affords
+ "Dainties, with nought of slaughter or of blood.
+ "Their hunger beasts alone with flesh allay,
+ "And beasts not all; the generous steed, the flock,
+ "The herd, on grass subsist. But lions grim,
+ "Armenian tigers, bears, and wolves, delight
+ "In bloody feasts. How impious to behold
+ "Bowels in bowels bury'd! greedy limbs
+ "Fatten on limbs digested, and prolong'd
+ "One's animation by another's death.
+ "In vain the earth, benignant mother, gives
+ "Her copious stores, if nought can thee delight,
+ "Save with a savage tooth this living food
+ "To chew, and Cyclopean feasts renew.
+ "Can'st thou not cloy the appetite's keen rage,
+ "Deprav'd desire! unless another die?
+ "That early age, to which we give the name
+ "Of golden, happy was in mellow fruits,
+ "And plants, by earth produc'd; nor e'er did gore
+ "The mouth defile. In safety through the air
+ "Fowls way'd their feathers: fearless through the fields
+ "Wander'd the hare: nor, on the barb'd hook hung
+ "By his credulity, was snar'd the fish.
+ "Fraud was not, none suspicious of deceit;
+ "And all was fill'd with harmony and peace.
+ "But soon some wretch (whatever wretch was he)
+ "Such food disliking, in his greedy maw
+ "Bury'd what animation once possess'd.
+ "He led the way to wickedness. And first
+ "The weapon smok'd with blood of ravenous beasts:
+ "And there it should have stay'd. Just is the plea
+ "To take their lives that follow us for prey;
+ "But not devour them when destroy'd. From thence
+ "Wide spread the horrid practice, and the sow,
+ "Doom'd the first victim, is decreed to die,
+ "For digging up with crooked snout the seed;
+ "And blasting all the prospect of the year.
+ "The goat had gnaw'd the vine;--the culprit bled
+ "On Bacchus' altars to appease his ire.
+ "These two their fate deserv'd. But how, O sheep!
+ "Ye harmless flocks, have ye this merited,
+ "Form'd to receive protection from mankind?
+ "Who in your swelling dugs bland liquors bear,
+ "Who give your fleecy coverings, garments soft
+ "For us to form; and more in life than death
+ "Assist our wants. What has the ox deserved?
+ "A simple harmless beast, and born for toil,
+ "Of guile and fraud devoid? Forgetful man!
+ "And undeserving of the harvest's boon,
+ "Who could, the crooked joke just from his neck
+ "Remov'd, his faithful tiller sacrifice;
+ "Smite with the axe that neck with labor worn,
+ "With which so oft he had the soil renew'd;
+ "Which had so many crops on him bestow'd.
+ "Nor is this all, the savage deed perform'd,
+ "They implicate the heavenly gods themselves,
+ "Pretend th' almighty deities delight
+ "To see the slaughter of laborious steers.
+ "Spotless must be the victim; in his form
+ "Perfection: (fatal thus too much to please!)
+ "With gold and fillets gay, the beast is led
+ "Before the altar, hears the unknown prayers,
+ "And sees the meal, the product of his toil,
+ "Betwixt his horns full in his forehead flung:
+ "Then struck, he stains the weapon with his blood,
+ "The weapon in reflecting waves beneath
+ "Haply beheld before. Next they inspect
+ "His torn-out living entrails, and from thence
+ "Learn what the bosoms of the gods intend.
+ "Whence, man, such passion for forbidden food?
+ "How dar'st thou, mortal man! in flesh indulge?
+ "O! I conjure you, do it not; my words
+ "Deep in your minds revolve, when to your mouth
+ "The mangled members of the ox you raise,
+ "Know, and reflect, your laborer you devour.
+
+ "And now the god inspires my tongue, my tongue
+ "Shall follow what th' inspiring god directs,
+ "My truths I will disclose, display all heaven,
+ "And oracles of mind divine reveal.
+ "I sing of mighty things, by none before
+ "Investigated; what has long lain hid.
+ "It glads me through the lofty heavens to go;
+ "To sail amid the clouds, the sluggish earth
+ "Left far below; and on the shoulders mount
+ "Of mighty Atlas; thence from far look down,
+ "On wandering souls of reasoning aid depriv'd,
+ "Shivering and trembling at the thoughts of death.
+ "I thus exhort, and scenes of fate unfold.
+
+ "O race! whom terror of cold death affrights,
+ "Why fear ye Styx? why darkness? why vain names,
+ "The dreams of poets? why in fancy'd worlds
+ "Severe atonements? Whether slow disease,
+ "Or on the pile the body flames consume,
+ "Think not that any suffering it can feel.
+ "The soul from death is free, and one seat left,
+ "Another habitation finds and lives.
+ "Well I remember I was Pantheus' son,
+ "Euphorbus, in the fatal war of Troy,
+ "Whose breast the young Atrides' massive spear
+ "Transpierc'd in fight. I lately knew the shield
+ "My left arm bore, in Juno's temple hung,
+ "In Abantean Argos. All is chang'd,
+ "But nothing dies. The spirit roams about
+ "From that to this, from this to that again;
+ "And enters vacant bodies at its will.
+ "Now from a beast's to human frame it goes,
+ "Now from the man it passes to a beast;
+ "And never perishes. As yielding wax
+ "Is with new figures printed, nor remains
+ "Long in one form, nor holds its pristine shape;
+ "And yet is still the same: so do I teach,
+ "The soul the same, though vary'd are its seats.
+ "Hence, lest thy belly's keen desire o'ercome
+ "All piety, (and prophet-like I speak)
+ "Forbear by impious slaughter to disturb
+ "The souls of kindred friends; and let not blood
+ "With blood be fed. Now on the boundless sea
+ "Since I am borne, and to the breeze have loos'd
+ "My swelling sail, this more:--Nought that the world
+ "Contains, is in appearance still the same
+ "All moving alters; changeable is form'd
+ "Each image. And with constant motion flows
+ "Ev'n time itself, just like a passing stream;
+ "For nor the river, nor the flying hour
+ "Can be detain'd. As wave by wave impell'd,
+ "The foremost prest by that behind; itself
+ "Urging its predecessor; so time flies,
+ "And so is follow'd, ever seeming new.
+ "For what has been, is lost; what is, no more
+ "Shall be, and every moment is renew'd.
+ "You see the night emerge to glorious day,
+ "And the bright sun in shady darkness sink.
+ "Nor shews the sky one hue when nature all
+ "Worn out, in midnight quiet rests; and when
+ "Bright Lucifer dismounts his snowy steed:
+ "Varying again when fair Aurora comes
+ "Of light fore-runner, and the world, to Sol
+ "About to yield, dyes deep. The orbed god,
+ "When from earth's margin rising, in the morn
+ "Blushing appears, and blushing seems at eve
+ "Descending to the main, but at heaven's height
+ "Shines in white splendor; there th' ethereal air
+ "Is purest, earth's contagion distant far.
+ "Nor can nocturnal Phoebe always shew
+ "Her form the same, nor equal: less to-day,
+ "If waxing, than to-morrow she'll appear;
+ "If waning, greater. Note you not the year
+ "In four succeeding seasons passing on?
+ "A lively image of our mortal life.
+ "Tender and milky, like young infancy
+ "Is the new spring: then gaily shine the plants,
+ "Tumid with juice, but helpless; and delight
+ "With hope the planter: blooming all appears,
+ "And smiles in varied flowers the feeding earth;
+ "But delicate and pow'rless are the leaves.
+ "Robuster now the year, to spring succeeds
+ "The summer, and a sturdy youth becomes:
+ "No age is stronger, none more fertile yields
+ "Its stores, and none with heat more fervid glows.
+ "Next autumn follows, all the fire of youth
+ "Allay'd, mature in mildness, just between
+ "Old age and youth a medium temper holds;
+ "Some silvery tresses o'er his temples strew'd.
+ "Then aged winter, frightful object! comes
+ "With tottering step, and bald appears his head;
+ "Or snowy white the few remaining hairs.
+ "Our bodies too themselves submit to change
+ "Without remission. Nor what we have been,
+ "Nor what we are, to-morrow shall we be.
+ "The day has been when we were but as seed,
+ "And in his mother's womb the future man
+ "Dwelt. Nature with her aiding power appear'd,
+ "Bade that the embryo bury'd deep within
+ "The pregnant mother, should not rack her more:
+ "And from its dwelling to the free drawn air
+ "Produc'd it. To the day the infant brought,
+ "Lies sinewless; then quadruped he crawls
+ "In beast-like guise; then trembling, by degrees
+ "He stands erect, but with a leg unfirm,
+ "His knees assisting with some strong support.
+ "Now is he strong and swift, and youth's brisk stage
+ "Quick passes; then, the flower of years o'ergone,
+ "He slides down gradual to descending age:
+ "This undermines, demolishes the strength
+ "Of former years. And ancient Milo weeps,
+ "When he beholds those aged feeble arms
+ "Hang dangling by his side, once like the limbs
+ "Of Hercules; so muscular, so large.
+ "And Helen weeps when in her glass she views
+ "Her aged wrinkles, wondering to herself
+ "Why she was ravish'd twice. Consuming time!
+ "And envious age! all substance ye destroy;
+ "All things your teeth decay; and you consume
+ "By gradual progress, but by certain death.
+ "These also, which the elements we call,
+ "Their varying changes know: lo! I explain
+ "Their regular vicissitudes,--attend.
+
+ "Four elements th' eternal world contains;
+ "Two, earth and water, which their ponderous weight
+ "Sinks low; and two, the air and purer fire,
+ "Void of dense gravity, soar up on high,
+ "Free, unconfin'd. Though distant far in space,
+ "Yet from these four are all things form'd, and all
+ "To them resolve again. The earth dissolv'd
+ "Melts into liquid dew; more subtile grown
+ "It passes to the breezes and the air;
+ "And air again, when in its thinest form,
+ "Depriv'd of weight, springs to the fires on high.
+ "Thence retrogade they come, inverting all
+ "This order: fire is thicken'd to dense air;
+ "Air into water; water to hard earth;
+ "Nor aught retains its form. Nature, of things
+ "Renewer, figures from old figures makes.
+ "Nought that the world contains (doubt not my truth)
+ "E'er perishes, but changes; and receives
+ "An alter'd shape. What to be born we call,
+ "Is to begin in different guise to seem
+ "Than what we were; and what we call to die,
+ "Is but to cease to wear our wonted form.
+ "Though haply some part hither may be mov'd,
+ "Some thither, still the aggregate's the same.
+ "Nor can I think that aught can long endure
+ "Unalter'd. Soon the primal ages came
+ "From gold to iron. Quite transform'd is oft
+ "The state of places. I have seen what once
+ "Was earth most solid, chang'd to fluid waves.
+ "Land have I seen from ocean form'd; and shells
+ "Marine, lie scatter'd distant from all shore:
+ "Old anchors bury'd in the mountain tops.
+ "The rush of waters hollow vallies forms
+ "Where once were plains; and level lie the hills
+ "Beneath the deluge: dry the marshy ground
+ "With barren sand becomes; and what was parch'd
+ "Is soak'd, a marshy fen. Here nature opes
+ "New fountains; there she closes up the old.
+ "Rivers have bursted forth, when earthquakes shook
+ "The globe; some chok'd have disappear'd below.
+ "Thus Lycus, swallow'd by the yawning earth,
+ "Bursts far from thence again, another stream:
+ "The mighty Erasinus, now absorb'd,
+ "Now flows, to Argive fields again restor'd.
+ "And Myssus, they relate, who both his stream
+ "And banks disliking, as Caicus now
+ "'Twixt others flows. With Amenane who rolls
+ "O'er sands Sicilian, flowing oft, and oft
+ "With clos'd-up fountains dry. Anigros, once
+ "Sweet to the thirsty, now his waters pours
+ "Untouch'd by lips, since (save we must deny
+ "To poets faith) the double-body'd race
+ "There bath'd the wounds Alcides' arrows gave.
+ "And is not Hypanis, the flood that springs
+ "From Scythia's hills, once sweet, with bitter salts
+ "Now tainted? By the waves begirt were once
+ "Antissa, Pharos, and Phoenician Tyre;
+ "And not a spot an island now remains.
+ "The ancient clowns, Leucadia to the land
+ "Saw join'd; now surges beat around its base;
+ "And Zancle, they relate, was once conjoin'd
+ "To Italy, 'till ocean burst his bounds,
+ "And rent the land, and girt it with his waves.
+ "For Helice or Buris should you seek,
+ "Achaian towns, o'erwhelm'd beneath the waves
+ "You'll find them: boatmen oft are wont to shew
+ "The tottering cities, and their walls immers'd.
+ "Near Pitthean Troezen is a lofty hill
+ "By trees unshaded; now indeed an hill
+ "But once a level plain. Wond'rous to tell
+ "The wind's resistless force, in caverns deep
+ "Inclos'd, for exit somewhere as it strain'd,
+ "And struggled long in vain, a freer range
+ "Of air to sweep; when all the prison round
+ "Was found no fissure pervious to the blast,
+ "It swell'd the high-rais'd ground: just so the breath
+ "Puffs out the bladder, or the horn'd goat's skin.
+ "The tumor still remains, and now appears,
+ "Grown hard by lapse of time, a lofty hill.
+ "Though numbers to my mind occur, or seen
+ "Or heard, but few beside I will relate.
+ "Do not streams too receive and lose new powers?
+ "Thy fountain, horned Ammon, at mid-day
+ "Is icy cold, but hot at morn and eve.
+ "The waters of Athamanis, are said,
+ "Sprinkled on wood, when Luna's lessening orb
+ "Shines in the heavens, to warm it into flame.
+ "A river have the Cicones, which turns
+ "To marble what it touches: whoso drinks
+ "Instant his inwards harden into stone.
+ "Cathis and Sybaris, which border near
+ "Our pastures, make the hair resemble gold.
+ "More wond'rous still, waters there are, with power
+ "The mind to change as well as change the limbs.
+ "Who has not heard of Salmacis obscene?
+ "And Ethiopa's lake, which whoso drinks
+ "Or furious raves, or sinks in sleep profound?
+ "Whoe'er his thirst at the Clitorian fount
+ "Quenches, he loathes all wine: abstemious, joys
+ "To drink pure water: whether power the waves
+ "Possess to thwart the heating vinous juice,
+ "Or, as the natives tell, with herbs and charms
+ "When the mad Praetides Melampus cur'd,
+ "He in the stream the mental medicine flung;
+ "And hate of wine the fountain still retains.
+ "Lyncestius' river flows with different power;
+ "Of this who swallows but the smallest draught
+ "Staggers, as charg'd with plenteous cups of wine.
+ "A dangerous place Arcadia holds (of yore
+ "Call'd Pheneos) for its waters' two-fold force:
+ "Dreaded by night: for drank by night they harm,
+ "But guiltless of all mischief drank by day.
+ "Thus lakes and rivers now these powers possess;
+ "Now those. Time was Ortygia on the waves
+ "Floated, now firm she rests. Argo, first ship
+ "Dreaded the isles Cyanean scatter'd round
+ "And clashing oft amid the roaring waves;
+ "Which rest unmov'd now, and the winds despise.
+ "Nor Etna whose sulphureous furnace flames
+ "Will always burn; time was it burn'd not yet:
+ "For let earth be an animated mass,
+ "Which lives, and breathing holes in various parts
+ "Exhaling flame, possesses, she may change,
+ "Each time she moves, those passages of air;
+ "These caverns close, and others open throw.
+ "Or whether wind, confin'd in those deep caves,
+ "Hurls rocks on rocks, and what the seeds of fire
+ "Contain; and flames from the concussion burst;
+ "The winds appeas'd, cold will the caves be left.
+ "Or if the flame be by bitumen caught,
+ "Or by pale sulphur, fiercely will it burn
+ "To the last particle; but when the earth
+ "Fuel and oily nutriment no more
+ "The flame shall give; a tedious length of years
+ "Its force exhausting, and its nutriment
+ "By nature's tooth consum'd, the famish'd flames
+ "Will this desert, deserted by their food.
+ "Fame says, the men who in Pallene live,
+ "A northern clime, when nine times in the lake
+ "Tritonian plung'd, in plumage light are clad.
+ "This scarce can I believe. They also tell
+ "That Scythia's females, sprinkling on their limbs
+ "Rank poisons, such like transformation gain.
+ "Yet when well-try'd experience us instructs,
+ "Faith may be given. Do we not bodies see
+ "Decaying slow with moisture and with heat,
+ "To animalcules chang'd? Nay, go, inter
+ "A chosen slaughter'd steer, (well known the fact,
+ "And much in use;) lo! from the putrid paunch
+ "Swarms of the flower-collecting bee will rise,
+ "Which rove the meadows as their parent rov'd:
+ "And urge their toil and labor still in hope.
+ "The warlike courser, prostrate on the ground,
+ "Becomes the source whence angry hornets rise.
+ "Cut from the sea-shore crab his crooked claws,
+ "And place the rest in earth, a scorpion thence,
+ "Will come, and threaten with his hooked tail.
+ "The meadow worms too, which with silky threads
+ "(Well noted is the fact,) are wont to weave
+ "The foliage, change the figures which they wear,
+ "Like the gay butterfly of funeral fame.
+ "The life-producing seeds of grass-green frogs
+ "Mud holds; and forms them first devoid of feet,
+ "Then gives them legs for swimming well contriv'd;
+ "And, apt that they for lengthen'd leaps may suit,
+ "Behind these far surpass the first in length.
+ "The cub the bear brings forth, at its first birth
+ "Is but a lump of barely living flesh:
+ "Licking, the mother forms the limbs, and gives
+ "As much of shape as she herself enjoys.
+ "See we the young not of the honey'd bee,
+ "Clos'd in the wax hexagonally shap'd,
+ "First form'd a body limbless, gaining late
+ "Their feet and wings? And who could e'er suppose,
+ "Except the fact he knew, that Juno's bird
+ "Which bears the starry tail; that Venus' doves;
+ "The thunder-bearer of almighty Jove;
+ "And all the race of birds, their being owe
+ "To a small egg's still smaller central part?
+ "There are, who think the human marrow chang'd,
+ "A snake becomes, when putrid turns the spine
+ "In a close sepulchre. These, each and all,
+ "Their origin from other things derive.
+ "One bird there is, which from herself alone
+ "Springs, and regenerates without foreign aid:
+ "Assyrians call her Phoenix. Not on grain,
+ "Nor herbs she lives, but on strong frankincense,
+ "And rich amomums' juice: when she has pass'd
+ "Five ages of her life, with her broad bill
+ "And talons, she upon the ilex' boughs,
+ "Or on the summit of the trembling palm,
+ "A nest constructs: on this she cassia strews,
+ "Spikes of sweet-smelling nard, the dark brown myrrh,
+ "And cinnamon well bruis'd: then lays herself
+ "Above, and on the odorous pile expires.
+ "Then, they report, an infant Phoenix springs
+ "From the parental corse, to which is given
+ "Five ages too, to live. When years afford
+ "Due strength to lift, and bear the ponderous load,
+ "She lightens of the weighty nest the boughs;
+ "With pious duty her own cradle takes,
+ "And parent's sepulchre; then, having gain'd
+ "Hyperion's city through the yielding air,
+ "Before the sacred portal lays it down.
+ "If of stupendous wonder aught ye find
+ "In this, hyaenas must your wonder move;
+ "Alternate changing, females now they bear;
+ "And annual alter unto males again:
+ "That reptile too, which feeds on wind and air;
+ "And what it touches, straight its hue assumes.
+ "India by cluster-bearing Bacchus gain'd,
+ "Lynxes upon the conquering god bestow'd:
+ "And, (so they tell) whate'er their bladders void,
+ "Concretes to gems, and hardens in the air.
+ "Thus too, the coral hardens to a stone;
+ "A plant so flexible beneath the waves.
+ "Day would desert us; Phoebus' panting steeds
+ "Would in the mighty deep be plung'd, ere I
+ "Could finish, should I every substance tell
+ "Chang'd to new form. This we perceive, that time
+ "All turns. These nations mighty strength attain:
+ "Those sink in power. Thus Troy in wealth and strength
+ "Was mighty; and for ten long years could shed
+ "Her blood in torrents. Low she lies, and shews
+ "Her ancient ruins, and her numerous tombs
+ "For all her riches. Sparta once was great;
+ "And fam'd Mycene once in power was strong;
+ "With Athens; and the town Amphion rais'd.
+ "Now a mean spot is Sparta; low now lies
+ "Lofty Mycene; what of Thebes remains,
+ "The town of OEdipus, except his tale?
+ "What of Pandion's Athens, but the name?
+ "And now begins the fame of Dardan Rome
+ "To rise; the waves of Tiber from the hills
+ "Of Appenine descending, bathe her walls:
+ "Plac'd on a huge foundation shall she fix
+ "Her empire's base. By increase shall she change;
+ "And shall hereafter of the mighty world
+ "Be head. This prophets, they assert, have said,
+ "And fate-predicting oracles. Myself
+ "Remember Helenus, old Priam's son,
+ "Address'd AEneas, when the Trojan towers
+ "Were tottering, weeping,--and of future fate
+ "Doubtful, in words like these--O goddess born!
+ "If the prognostics of my soul I read
+ "Rightly, Troy ne'er, while thou art safe, will fall.
+ "Flames and the sword shall ope to thee a path
+ "Thou shalt depart, and with thyself convey
+ "An Iliuem, till a foreign land thou find'st;
+ "A land more friendly both to thee and Troy.
+ "Now, to the Phrygians' offspring due, I see
+ "A city rais'd; such former ages ne'er
+ "Beheld; such is not; such will never be.
+ "Thousands of worthies in a length of years,
+ "Its power shall spread; but lord of all the globe
+ "Shall he, descended of Iuelus, reign;
+ "Who, when by earth awhile enjoy'd, shall gain--
+ "A seat celestial; and the heavens shall be
+ "The bound of his career.--Well does my mind
+ "Retain, that Helenus in such like words
+ "Address'd the chief who bore his country's gods.
+ "Joy'd I behold my kindred walls increase;
+ "And Grecia's conquest happy prove for Troy.
+ "But lest too wide I wander, and my steeds
+ "Forget the goal; know, heaven, and all beneath;
+ "Earth, and all earth's contents their shapes must change.
+ "Let us then, members of the world (not form'd
+ "Of body only, but with winged souls
+ "Which to the bodies of wild beasts may pass,
+ "Or dwell within the breasts of grazing herds)
+ "Permit those forms which may the souls contain
+ "Of parents, brethren, or of those once join'd
+ "To us by other bonds, certain of men,
+ "To rest secure and safe from savage wounds;
+ "Nor load our bowels at Thyestes' board.
+ "Soon, by ill custom warp'd, does he prepare
+ "To bathe his impious hands in human gore,
+ "Who severs with his knife the lowing throat
+ "Of the young calf, and turns a deafen'd ear
+ "To all its cries: or who the kid can slay,
+ "Moaning in plaintive tone like children's cries:
+ "Or who the fowl he fed before, can eat.
+ "What more is wanting, that may now complete
+ "The measure of iniquity? From thence
+ "Where the next step? Then let thine oxen plough,
+ "And let their death be due alone to age.
+ "Let from dread Boreas' piercing cold the sheep
+ "Defend thee with her wool. Let the full goat
+ "Present her udder to thy hand to press.
+ "Throw far thy nets, thy nooses, and thy snares,
+ "And all thy treacherous skill; nor with lim'd twig
+ "Deceive the bird; nor with strong toils the deer;
+ "Nor hide the barbed hook with treacherous bait.
+ "If animals annoy ye, them destroy:
+ "But slay them only. From the taste of flesh
+ "Free be your mouths, while food more fit ye eat."
+
+ His breast with these, and such like doctrines fill'd,
+ Numa, 'tis said, back to his country came;
+ And held, unsought for, the supreme command
+ O'er Latium's realm. Blest with the nymph his spouse,
+ And by the muses guided, all the rites
+ Of sacrifice he taught: the people train'd,
+ Fond of fierce war, to arts of gentle peace.
+ When late he finish'd reign at once, and life,
+ The Latian females, nobles, commons, all
+ In streaming tears, bewail'd their Numa dead.
+ His consort Rome deserted, and lay hid
+ In the deep forests of Aricia's vale;
+ And with her wailings and her mournful sighs,
+ The rites impeded in Diana's fane.
+ How oft the nymphs who dwelt in lakes and groves,
+ Kind admonitions gave her not to mourn,
+ And sooth'd her with consolatory words!
+ How oft the son of Theseus weeping, said;
+ "Cease thus to grieve, nor think your fate alone
+ "Is hard. Look round awhile on others' woes;
+ "More mild your own you'll bear. Would that not mine
+ "Were such as might assuage your woe; but mine,
+ "When heard, to calm your grief may something yield.
+
+ "Haply report has sounded in your ears
+ "Of one Hippolytus the fate, destroy'd
+ "Through his most impious step-dame's treacherous fraud,
+ "And sire's credulity. With much surprize
+ "You'll hear,--nay scarcely will you trust my words,
+ "But he am I! Pasiphae's daughter me
+ "Accus'd, that I with vain endeavour try'd
+ "To violate my parent's nuptial couch:
+ "Me feigning guilty of the crime she wish'd;
+ "On me th' offence retorting, or through fear
+ "I might accuse, or rage at her repulse.
+ "My sire, me guiltless from the city drove,
+ "And curs'd me going with most hostile prayers.
+ "To Pitthean Traezen I my exil'd flight
+ "Directed: and now drove along the shore
+ "Of Corinth's sea; when ocean sudden heav'd;
+ "A mighty heap of waters bent appear'd,
+ "Like an huge hill, and increase seem'd to gain;
+ "Then roaring loud was at its summit cleft.
+ "Thence, from the bursting waves a horned bull
+ "Rush'd forth, breast-high uprearing in the air;
+ "Spouting the waves through his capacious mouth
+ "And nostrils. Terror seiz'd my comrades' breasts:
+ "Fill'd with the thoughts of exile, mine alone
+ "Unmov'd remain'd. While my impatient steeds,
+ "Turn'd to the main their heads; with ears erect
+ "Affrighted stood; then by the beast appall'd,
+ "Rush'd rapid with the car o'er lofty rocks.
+ "With a vain hand I strive to gird the curb,
+ "Besmear'd with foaming whiteness; bending back
+ "With all my might I pull the pliant reins.
+ "Nor had my horses' furious madness mock'd
+ "My strength, save that the fast-revolving wheel
+ "A tree opposing struck, and shatter'd: wide
+ "The fragments flew. I from the car was thrown,
+ "Entangled in the harness: plain to view
+ "Were seen my living bowels dragg'd along;
+ "My sinews twisted round the stump; my limbs
+ "Part swept away, and part entangled left:
+ "Loud crash'd my fractur'd bones; my weary'd soul
+ "At length exhal'd; my body nought retain'd
+ "That could be known, one all-continued wound.
+ "Can you, O nymph! or dare you, now compare
+ "Your woe with mine? Since then I have beheld
+ "The realm of darkness, and my mangled limbs
+ "Bath'd in the waves of Phlegethon. Nor life
+ "Had been restor'd, but through the forceful help,
+ "Of medicine that Apollo's offspring gave.
+ "From him Paeonian aid when I had gain'd
+ "By plants of power, though much in Pluto's spite,
+ "Cynthia me cover'd with her densest clouds:
+ "And lest my sight their hatred should increase,
+ "That safe I might remain, and without risk
+ "Be seen, she gave to my appearance age,
+ "Nor left me features to be known again:
+ "And long deliberated, whether Crete
+ "Or Delos, for my dwelling she would chuse.
+ "But, Crete and Delos both abandon'd, here
+ "She plac'd me, and my name she bade renounce
+ "Which still reminded me of my wild steeds;
+ "Saying--O thou, Hippolytus who wast!
+ "Be Virbius now! Thenceforth within these groves
+ "I dwell,--a minor deity, I tend
+ "My heavenly mistress, and increase her train."
+
+ But foreign griefs possess'd not power to chase
+ Egeria's woe; who at a mountain's foot
+ Thrown prostrate, melted in a flood of tears;
+ 'Till Phoebus' sister by her sorrow mov'd,
+ Transform'd her body to a cooling fount;
+ And her limbs melted to still-during streams.
+
+ The miracle the wondering nymphs beheld;
+ Nor stood the son of Amazonia's queen
+ With less surprize than on the bosom seiz'd
+ Of the Tyrrhenian ploughman, when he view'd
+ The fate-foretelling clod, amidst the fields.
+ At first spontaneous and untouch'd it mov'd;
+ Then took a human figure; shook off earth,
+ And op'd its new-form'd prophesying mouth:
+ Tages the natives call'd him, who first taught
+ Th' Etruscan race the future to explain:
+ Or Romulus, when he his spear beheld
+ Stuck on Palatium's hill, and sudden sprout:
+ By a new root, not by its steely point,
+ Fixt fast: no more a weapon, but a tree,
+ With pliant branches, which afford a shade
+ Unlook'd for to the wondering people round:
+ Or Cippus, when he in the flowing stream
+ Beheld his new-form'd horns (for them he saw)
+ But thought th' appearance false; and what he view'd,
+ Oft rais'd his fingers to his head to touch:
+ No more his eyes distrusting, then he stood,
+ (As victor from a conquer'd foe he came,)
+ And raising up to heaven his hands and eyes,
+ "Ye gods!" he said, "whatever this portends,
+ "If happy, to my country, to the state,
+ "Be it;--if ominous of ill, to me."
+ And then with odorous fires the gods ador'd,
+ On grassy altars of the green sward form'd;
+ And from the goblets pour'd the wine; and search'd,
+ The panting entrails of the slaughter'd sheep,
+ For what was meant. Th' Etruscan seer beheld
+ That mighty revolutions they foretold;
+ But yet obscurely: till his piercing eye
+ He from the entrails turn'd to Cippus' horns.
+ Then cry'd;--"Save thee, O king! for lo! the place
+ "For thee, O Cippus! and thy horns, the towers
+ "Of Latium will obey. Thou only haste;
+ "Delay not, but within the open gates
+ "Enter; so fate commands. In them receiv'd
+ "King wilt thou be; in safety wilt enjoy
+ "An ever-during kingdom." Back he drew
+ His feet, and from the city's walls he turn'd
+ Sternly his looks; exclaiming; "far, ye gods!
+ "O, far avert these omens! Better I
+ "An exile roam for life, than monarch rule
+ "The Capitol." Then he assembled straight
+ The reverend senate, and the people round:
+ But first with peaceful laurel veil'd his horns:
+ Then on a mound, there by the soldiers rais'd,
+ He stood; and pray'd in ancient mode to heaven.
+ "Lo! here," he cry'd, "is one, whom save ye drive
+ "Far from your city, will your monarch be;
+ "By marks, but not by name I him describe:
+ "Two horns his forehead bears. He is the man,
+ "Once in the town receiv'd, the augur tells,
+ "With servile laws will rule ye. Nay, he might
+ "Your open gates have enter'd, but myself
+ "Oppos'd him; though more near to me is none.
+ "Expel him, Romans! from your city far;
+ "Or, if he merit them, with massive chains
+ "Load him: or rid yourself at once of fear
+ "By the proud tyrant's death." Such murmurs sound
+ 'Mid lofty pines, when Eurus whistles fierce;
+ Such is the roaring of the ocean waves
+ Rolling far distant, as the crowd sent forth:
+ Till from amidst the all-confounding noise
+ One spoke more loud, and--"which is he?" exclaim'd.
+ Then all the brows they search'd, the horns to find.
+ Cippus again address'd them. "What you seek
+ "Behold!" and from his head the garland tore,
+ Spite of their efforts, and his forehead shew'd,
+ With double horns distinguish'd. All their eyes
+ Depress'd, and sighs from every bosom burst:
+ Unwillingly, (incredible!) they view
+ That head so bright with merit. Then, no more
+ Bearing that honors due he should not gain,
+ They bind his temples with a festal crown.
+ Thee, Cippus! since within the walls forbid
+ To enter, now the senators present
+ A grateful gift; a tract of land so large
+ As with a plough, by two yok'd oxen drawn,
+ Thou canst from morn till close of day surround.
+ The horns, the type of this stupendous fact,
+ Long shall remain on brazen pillars grav'd.
+
+ Ye muses, patrons of the poet's song,
+ Explain (for all complete your knowledge, age
+ Most distant ne'er deceives you) why the isle
+ In Tiber's bosom, by his billows wash'd,
+ The rites of Esculapius introduc'd
+ Into the town of Romulus! A plague
+ Of direst form infected Latium's air,
+ And the pale bloodless bodies wasted thin
+ Squalid in poison. When the numerous deaths
+ Prov'd every effort of mankind was vain,
+ And vain the art of medicine, they beseech
+ Celestial aid, and unto Delphos go,
+ Apollo's oracle, 'mid place of earth;
+ Pray him to help their miserable state
+ With health-affording words; and end at once
+ The dreadful pest which scourg'd their mighty town.
+ The fane, the laurel, and the quiver, slung
+ Upon his shoulder, shook; and this reply
+ The tripod from its secret depth return'd;
+ Thrilling their fear-struck bosoms: "What you seek,
+ "O Romans! here, you should have nearer sought:
+ "And nearer now ev'n seek it. Phoebus' aid
+ "Your woe can lessen not; but Phoebus' son
+ "Can help ye: therefore with good omens go,
+ "And call my offspring to afford relief."
+ Soon as the prudent senators receiv'd
+ The god's commands, with diligence they seek
+ What city's walls Apollo's son contain;
+ Depute a band, whom favoring breezes waft
+ To Epidaurus' shores. Soon as their keels
+ Touch'd on the strand, they to th' assembled crowd
+ Of Grecian elders haste; and earnest beg
+ To grant their deity, to check the rage
+ Of death amongst the hapless Latian race,
+ By his mere presence. So unerring fate
+ Had said. Divided is the council's voice:
+ Some would the aid besought, be granted; some,
+ And many, these oppose; refuse to send
+ To foreign lands their patron, and their god.
+ While dubious they deliberated, eve
+ Chas'd the remains of light, and the earth's shade
+ Threw darkness round; when, lo! the helping god
+ Appear'd in sleep before the Roman's bed
+ To stand, in form like what his temples grace.
+ His left hand bore a rugged staff; his right
+ Strok'd down the hairs of his expanded beard;
+ As thus with words of import mild he spoke;
+ "Fear not, for I will come; my temple leave.
+ "View but this snake which with his circling folds
+ "My staff entwines; remark him, that again
+ "You well may know him; chang'd to such a form
+ "Will I be; but more huge I will appear;
+ "Mighty in bulk as heavenly beings ought."
+ The vision ceas'd, and vanish'd with the words:
+ And with the god fled sleep; and cheerful light
+ Follow'd the flight of Somnus. Now the morn
+ Had chas'd the starry fires; the Grecian chiefs,
+ Still dubious, in the splendid temple meet
+ Of the intreated deity, and pray
+ That some celestial sign he should display,
+ To prove which country for his seat he chose.
+ Scarce had they ended, when the shining god
+ Fore-running hisses sent; and as a snake
+ With lofty crest appear'd: at his approach
+ His statue, altars, portals, gilded roofs,
+ And marble pavement shook. He rear'd his chest
+ Sublime amid the temple; and around
+ Darted his eyes, which shone with living fire.
+ Trembled the fear-struck crowd. The sacred priest,
+ His hair encircled with a snowy band,
+ Straight knew him; and, "the God! the God!" exclaim'd:
+ "All present, him with hearts and tongues adore!
+ "O glorious deity! may thou, thus seen,
+ "Propitious be; thy worshippers protect,
+ "Who keep thy rites." All present to the god
+ Adoring bend, and all his words repeat;
+ And Rome's embassadors with fervor join
+ In mind and voice. To these the god consents,
+ And his crest moving, certain signs affords:
+ Thrice hissing, thrice he shakes his forked tongue,
+ Then down the shining steps he glides, his head
+ Retorted; as he thence departs he views
+ His ancient altars, and a last salute,
+ His wonted seat, his long-own'd temple, gives.
+ Thence rolls he huge along the ground bestrew'd
+ With scatter'd flowers, in curving folds entwin'd;
+ And through the city's centre takes his way,
+ To where the bending mole the port defends.
+ Here rested he; and to dismiss appear'd
+ His followers, and the kind attending crowd,
+ With gracious looks; then in th' Ausonian ship
+ He plac'd his length. A deity's huge weight
+ The ship confess'd; the keel beneath the load
+ Bent. Glad AEneaes' offspring felt, and loos'd
+ (A bull first sacrific'd upon the shore,)
+ The cables which their crowded galley bound.
+ Light airs impell'd the vessel. High aloft
+ The god appear'd; upon the curving poop
+ Rested his neck, and view'd the azure waves.
+ By zephyrs wafted o'er th' Ioenian sea,
+ They reach'd Italia when the sixth time rose
+ Aurora. Pass'd Scylacea, and the fane
+ Of Juno, on Lacinia's noted shore;
+ Japygia left, and shunn'd Amphissia's rocks
+ With larboard oars; and, coasting on the right,
+ Ceraunia, and Romechium pass'd, and pass'd
+ Narycia and Caulonia; they, (the risks
+ Of sea, and of Pelorus' narrow straits
+ Surmounted) pass th' AEolian monarch's isles;
+ Metallic Themesis; Leucasia's land;
+ And warm and rosy Paestus. Thence they coast
+ Along Capraea; and Minerva's cape;
+ And pass Surrentum, rich in generous wine,
+ The town of Hercules; Parthenope,
+ Built for soft ease; with Stabia; and from thence
+ Pass the Cumaean Sybil's sacred dome.
+ Hence by Linternum, with the mastich rich;
+ And boiling fountains are they borne; and past
+ Vulturnus sucking sand within the gulf;
+ And Sinuessa, fill'd with milk-white doves:
+ Marshy Minturnae; with Cajeta, rais'd
+ By him she nurs'd; Antiphates' abode;
+ Trachas, by fens encompass'd; Circe's land;
+ And Antium's solid shore. Here when the crew
+ Had with toe flying vessel reach'd, (for now
+ Rough was the main) the god his folds untwines,
+ Glides on in frequent coils, and spires immense;
+ Entering a temple of his sire that stood
+ Close by the yellow beach. The ocean calm'd,
+ The Epidaurian god his father's fane
+ Now leaves; a deity to him close join'd
+ Thus hospitable found: the sandy shore
+ Ploughs in a furrow with his rattling scales:
+ Then, in the steersman confident, he rests
+ On the high poop his head, till they approach
+ Lavinium's city, and her sacred seat,
+ And Tiber's mouth. The people rush in heaps,
+ And crowds of matrons and of fathers rush,
+ Confus'dly hither; even the vestal maids
+ Who guard the sacred fire: and all salute
+ The god with joyful clamor. Then where'er
+ The rapid vessel cleaves th' opposing stream,
+ The incense crackles on the banks, and rais'd
+ Are lines of altars, thick on either shore;
+ The smoke perfumes the air; the victims bleed
+ In heaps, and warm the sacrificial knife.
+ The Roman city now, the world's great head,
+ They enter'd, up erect the serpent rose;
+ From the mast's loftiest summit tower'd his neck,
+ And round he look'd to chuse a fit abode.
+ The waves circumfluent in two equal streams
+ Divide; the isle has thence its name, the arms
+ On either side are stretch'd, land in the midst.
+ Hither the AEsculapian snake himself
+ Betook, departing from the Latian ship;
+ Resum'd his form celestial, and their griefs
+ Dispersing, came health-bearer to the land.
+
+ A foreign power he in our temples stands,
+ But Caesar, in his native town a god
+ Is worshipp'd. In the forum, and the field
+ Fam'd equal: yet not his well-finish'd wars,
+ His triumphs, nor the deeds in peace perform'd
+ So justly chang'd him to an heavenly shape,
+ A blazing star, as did the son he left.
+ For no atchievement Caesar e'er perform'd
+ Can with the boast to be Augustus' sire
+ Compare. Far greater this than to subdue
+ The sea-girt Britons:--his victorious fleets
+ To seven-mouth'd Nile to lead;--to bring the realms
+ Cinyphian Juba rul'd, 'neath Rome's control,
+ Rebel Numidia; and, puff'd high in pride
+ With Mithridates' glory, Pontus' land;
+ Rich triumphs to have gain'd, and triumphs more
+ To merit, as a man so great produce;
+ To whose presiding care, O bounteous gods!
+ Mankind ye gave, and them completely blest.
+ And lest he seem from mortal seed to spring
+ His sire must mount to heaven, in form a god.
+ This the bright mother of AEneaes saw,
+ And for the priest beheld a mournful fate
+ Prepar'd, and moving saw the arms conspir'd.
+ She trembled, and to every god she met
+ Address'd her: "Lo! what deep and potent plots
+ "Against me they prepare. See, with what art
+ "His life is sought, who sole to me is left
+ "Of my Iuelus. Why must I alone
+ "Be harrass'd still with never-ceasing cares?
+ "Whom now Tydides' Calydonian spear
+ "Wounds; now the walls of ill-protected Troy
+ "Lie prostrate. Who my darling son behold
+ "Driv'n to long wanderings; on the ocean toss'd;
+ "Entering the silent mansions of the dead;
+ "Waging fierce war with Turnus; or, if truth
+ "I speak, with Juno rather. Yet why now
+ "Record I former sufferings in my sons?
+ "Terror prevents all memory of the past;
+ "See, where at me their impious swords they point!
+ "O, I conjure you! stay them; and prevent
+ "The horrid deed; lest, spilt the high-priest's blood,
+ "The fires of Vesta be for ever dark."
+ With words like these did troubled Venus move
+ Each power of heaven, in vain; yet all were touch'd,
+ And, though the stern decrees of rigid fate
+ To break unable, tokens plain they gave,
+ That some immense calamity was nigh.
+ They tell, that clashing arms 'mid the black clouds,
+ And dreadful horns and trumpets in the heavens
+ Sounded, to warn us of the impious deed.
+ Full of solicitude the earth beheld
+ The pale wan image of sad Phoebus' face.
+ Torches were often seen 'mid heaven to glare;
+ And from the clouds oft gory drops were shed.
+ Blue Lucifer a dusky hue o'ercast;
+ And Luna's car was sprinkled o'er with blood.
+ Th' infernal owl in numerous places shriek'd,
+ A direful omen! In a thousand fanes
+ The ivory statues wept; the sacred groves
+ Re-echo'd all with songs and threatening sounds.
+ No victim seem'd appeasing; tumults vast
+ Approaching shew'd the entrails; and appear'd
+ The liver always with a wounded head.
+ Around the domes, and temples of the gods
+ Loud howl'd the midnight dogs; the silent shades
+ Flitted along; and tremblings shook the town.
+ Yet could not these forebodings of the heavens
+ Crush the conspiracy, or ward his fate;
+ And in the temple were the weapons drawn:
+ For, but the senate-house, no spot could please
+ The vile assassins for the bloody deed.
+ Then Cytherea smote her lovely breast
+ In anguish; and beneath an heavenly cloud
+ Sought to conceal him: such a cloud as once
+ From furious Menelaues Paris sav'd;
+ And snatch'd AEneaes from Tydides' sword.
+ Then thus her sire: "O daughter! hast thou power
+ "Th' immutable decrees of fate to change?
+ "To thee 'tis granted to inspect the dome
+ "Of the three sisters; there thou wilt behold
+ "Th' eternal tablets of events engrav'd
+ "On steel and brass, a work of mighty toil.
+ "Safe, they nor fear the clashing of the sky,
+ "Nor rage of thunder, nor of ruin aught.
+ "There wilt thou written find thy offspring's fate
+ "On ever-during adamant. Myself
+ "Have read it, and record it in my mind;
+ "And lest thou should'st be to the future blind,
+ "I will relate it. He for whom thou toil'st,
+ "O Cytherea! has his time fulfill'd;
+ "The sum of years which to the earth he ow'd.
+ "That he a deity in heaven may rise,
+ "And be in temples worshipp'd is thy care,
+ "And his successor's; who his name will take,
+ "And on his shoulders bear the wide world's rule;
+ "On him impos'd. He, of his murder'd sire
+ "Valiant avenger, shall in all his wars
+ "Our favoring influence feel. Mutina's walls,
+ "By him besieg'd, in conquest shall confess
+ "His power, and sue for peace. Pharsalia, him
+ "Shall feel; and, drench'd in Macedonian blood
+ "Again, Philippi. On Sicilia's seas
+ "His mighty name shall conquer. Egypt's queen,
+ "Falsely relying on the nuptial bond
+ "With Rome's triumvir, falls: all vain her threats,
+ "That Tiber should subservient bend to Nile.
+ "Why should I speak to thee of barbarous hordes,
+ "Nations which dwell at either seas' extreme?
+ "Whatever habitable earth contains
+ "Will to his empire bend. Ocean will own
+ "His sway. Peace on th'extended earth bestow'd,
+ "To civil studies will his breast be turn'd;
+ "And laws most equitable will he frame.
+ "By his example curb licentious souls;
+ "And, stretching forward to a future age
+ "His anxious care, which their sons' sons may feel,
+ "His offspring, nurtur'd in a pious womb,
+ "At once his name and station will assume.
+ "Nor shall he touch th' ethereal seats, nor join
+ "His kindred stars till full like him in years.
+ "Meantime his soul, snatch'd from the mangled corse,
+ "Form to a brilliant star, a god divine:
+ "That Julius from his lofty seat may still
+ "Our forum, and our Capitol behold."
+ Scarcely the sire had ceas'd, when Venus, bright,
+ But unperceiv'd by all, stood in the midst
+ Of Rome's assembled senate; from the breast
+ Of her lov'd Caesar took the recent soul,
+ Nor let it waste in air. Up to the stars
+ She bore it. Rapid as she swept along,
+ She saw it shine with light, she saw it burn;
+ Then from her bosom spring above the moon:
+ Lofty it flies, it shines a glittering star,
+ Dragging a flaming tail's stupendous length.
+ Viewing the glorious actions of his son,
+ Candid he grants them mightier than his own,
+ And thus surpast rejoices. Let him frown,
+ If to his parent's deeds we his prefer;
+ Yet fame quite free will such commands despise,
+ Give him unwish'd-for precedence; and here,
+ And here alone he'll disobedience find.
+ So Atreus yielded to the mighty fame
+ Of Agamemnon; Theseus so surpass'd
+ AEgeus; and Achilles Peleus so.
+ Nay more, examples nearer to themselves
+ If I should use, Saturn submits to Jove.
+ Jove rules th' ethereal sky, the triform world;
+ And all the earth beneath Augustus lies:
+ Each is the sire and ruler of his realm.
+
+ O, I implore, ye gods! who did attend
+ AEneaes,--who made fire and sword retreat!
+ Ye native deities of Latium's soil!
+ Quirinus, founder of the walls of Rome!
+ Mars, of Quirinus never-conquer'd, sire!
+ Vesta, held sacred midst the Caesars' gods!
+ Domestic Phoebus, with chaste Vesta plac'd!
+ And Jove, who guards the high Tarpeiaen walls!
+ With all whom pious poets may invoke;
+ Slow may that day arrive, and older far
+ Than what our age may see, when to the clouds
+ His glorious head shall mount, quitting this globe
+ He rules so well, and our beseeching prayers
+ Bending with condescending ear to grant.
+
+ Now is my work complete, which not Jove's ire,
+ Nor flame, nor steel, nor gnawing tooth of age,
+ Shall e'er destroy. Come when it will, that day
+ Which nothing, save my mortal frame, can touch.
+ Which ends the being of a dubious life,
+ My better part unperishing shall mount
+ Above the loftiest stars. Eternal still
+ Shall be my name. Where'er Rome's power extends
+ O'er conquer'd earth, my verses shall be read;
+ And, if the presages by poets given
+ Be true, to endless years my fame shall live.
+
+ FINIS.
+
+Hayden, Printer, Brydges Street, Covent Garden.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Metamorphoses of Publius Ovidus
+Naso in English blank verse Vols. I & II, by Ovid
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK METAMORPHOSES ***
+
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