Carmina
Catullus
Catullus, Gaius Valerius. The Carmina of Caius Valerius Catullus. Burton, Sir Richard Francis, translator. London, Printed for the Translators, 1894.
- Such was the hapless chance, most beautiful Laodamia,
- Tare fro' thee dearer than life, dearer than spirit itself,
- Him, that husband, whose love in so mighty a whirlpool of passion
- Whelmed thee absorbed and plunged deep in its gulfy abyss,
- E'en as the Grecians tell hard by Phenéus of Cylléne
- Drained was the marish and dried, forming the fattest of soils,
- Whenas in days long done to delve through marrow of mountains
- Daréd, falsing his sire, Amphtryóniades;
- What time sure of his shafts he smote Stymphalian monsters
- Slaying their host at the hest dealt by a lord of less worth,
- So might the gateway of Heaven be trodden by more of the godheads,
- Nor might Hébé abide longer to maidenhood doomed.
- Yet was the depth of thy love far deeper than deepest of marish
- Which the hard mistress's yoke taught him so tamely to bear;
- Never was head so dear to a grandsire wasted by life-tide
- Whenas one daughter alone a grandson so tardy had reared,
- Who being found against hope to inherit riches of forbears
- In the well-witnessed Will haply by name did appear,
- And 'spite impious hopes of baffled claimant to kinship
- Startles the Vulturine grip clutching the frost-bitten poll.