Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- No doubtful rumor to Aeneas breaks
- the direful news, but a sure messenger
- tells him his followers' peril, and implores
- prompt help for routed Troy. His ready sword
- reaped down the nearest foes, and through their line
- clove furious path and broad; the valiant blade
- through oft-repeated bloodshed groped its way,
- proud Turnus, unto thee! His heart beholds
- Pallas and Sire Evander, their kind board
- in welcome spread, their friendly league of peace
- proffered and sealed with him, the stranger-guest.
- So Sulmo's sons, four warriors, and four
- of Ufens sprung, he took alive—to slay
- as victims to the shades, and pour a stream
- of captives' blood upon a flaming pyre.
- Next from afar his hostile shaft he threw
- at Mago, who with wary motion bowed
- beneath the quivering weapon, as it sped
- clean over him; then at Aeneas' knees
- he crouched and clung with supplicating cry:
- “O, by thy father's spirit, by thy hope
- in young Iulus, I implore thee, spare
- for son and father's sake this life of mine.
- A lofty house have I, where safely hid
- are stores of graven silver and good weight
- of wrought and unwrought gold. The fate of war
- hangs not on me; nor can one little life
- thy victory decide.” In answer spoke
- Aeneas: “Hoard the silver and the gold
- for thy own sons. Such bartering in war
- finished with Turnus, when fair Pallas fell.
- Thus bids Anchises' shade, Iulus—thus!”
- He spoke: and, grasping with his mighty left
- the helmet of the vainly suppliant foe,
- bent back the throat and drove hilt-deep his sword.
- A little space removed, Haemonides,
- priest of Phoebus and pale Trivia, stood,
- whose ribboned brows a sacred fillet bound:
- in shining vesture he, and glittering arms.
- Him too the Trojan met, repelled, and towered
- above the fallen form, o'ermantling it
- in mortal shade; Serestus bore away
- those famous arms a trophy vowed to thee,
- Gradivus, Iord of war! Soon to fresh fight
- came Caeculus, a child of Vulcan's line,
- and Umbro on the Marsic mountains bred:
- these met the Trojan's wrath. His sword shore off
- Anxur's left hand, and the whole orbed shield
- dropped earthward at the stroke: though Anxur's tongue
- had boasted mighty things, as if great words
- would make him strong, and lifting his proud heart
- as high as heaven, had hoped perchance to see
- gray hairs and length of days. Then Tarquitus
- strode forth, exulting in his burnished arms
- (Him Dryope, the nymph, to Faunus bore),
- and dared oppose Aeneas' rage. But he
- drew back his lance and, charging, crushed at once
- corselet and ponderous shield; then off he struck
- the supplicating head, which seemed in vain
- preparing speech; while o'er the reeking corpse
- the victor stood, and thrusting it away
- spoke thus with wrathful soul: “Now lie thou there,
- thou fearsome sight! No noble mother's hand
- shall hide thee in the ground, or give those limbs
- to their ancestral tomb. Thou shalt be left
- to birds of ravin; or go drifting far
- along yon river to engulfing seas,
- where starving fishes on those wounds shall feed.”
- Antceus next and Lucas he pursues,
- though all in Turnus' van; and Numa bold
- and Camers tawny-tressed, the son and heir
- of Volscens the stout-hearted, whose domain
- surpassed the richest of Ausonia's lords,
- when over hushed Amyclae he was king.
- Like old Aegaeon of the hundred arms,
- the hundred-handed, from whose mouths and breasts
- blazed fifty fiery blasts, as he made war
- with fifty sounding shields and fifty swords
- against Jove's thunder;—so Aeneas raged
- victorious o'er the field, when once his steel
- warmed to its work. But lo, he turns him now
- where come Niphaeus' bold-advancing wheels
- and coursers four, who, when at furious speed
- they faced his giant stride and dreadful cry,
- upreared in panic, and reversing spilled
- their captain to the ground, and bore away
- the chariot to the river's distant shore.
- Meanwhile, with two white coursers to their car,
- the brothers Lucagus and Liger drove
- into the heart of battle: Liger kept
- with skilful hand the manage of the steeds;
- bold Lucagus swung wide his naked sword.
- Aeneas, by their wrathful brows defied,
- brooked not the sight, but to the onset flew,
- huge-looming, with adverse and threatening spear.
- Cried Liger, “Not Achilles' chariot, ours!
- Nor team of Diomed on Phrygia's plain!
- The last of life and strife shall be thy meed
- upon this very ground.” Such raving word
- flowed loud from Liger's lip: not with a word
- the Trojan hero answered him, but flung
- his whirling spear; and even as Lucagus
- leaned o'er the horses, goading them with steel,
- and, left foot forward, gathered all his strength
- to strike—the spear crashed through the under rim
- of his resplendent shield and entered deep
- in the left groin; then from the chariot fallen,
- the youth rolled dying on the field, while thus
- pious Aeneas paid him taunting words:
- “O Lucagus, thy chariot did not yield
- because of horses slow to fly, or scared
- by shadows of a foe. It was thyself
- leaped o'er the wheel and fled.” So saying, he grasped
- the horses by the rein. The brother then,
- spilled also from the car, reached wildly forth
- his helpless hands: “O, by thy sacred head,
- and by the parents who such greatness gave,
- good Trojan, let me live! Some pity show
- to prostrate me!” But ere he longer sued,
- Aeneas cried, “Not so thy language ran
- a moment gone! Die thou! Nor let this day
- brother from brother part!” Then where the life
- hides in the bosom, he thrust deep his sword.
- Thus o'er the field of war the Dardan King
- moved on, death-dealing: like a breaking flood
- or cloudy whirlwind seemed his wrath. Straightway
- the boy Ascanius from the ramparts came,
- his warriors with him; for the siege had failed.