Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- Meanwhile Mezentius by the Tiber's wave
- with water staunched his wound, and propped his weight
- against a tree; upon its limbs above
- his brazen helmet hung, and on the sward
- his ponderous arms lay resting. Round him watched
- his chosen braves. He, gasping and in pain,
- clutched at his neck and let his flowing beard
- loose on his bosom fall; he questions oft
- of Lausus, and sends many a messenger
- to bid him back, and bear him the command
- of his sore-grieving sire. But lo! his peers
- bore the dead Lausus back upon his shield,
- and wept to see so strong a hero quelled
- by stroke so strong. From long way off the sire,
- with soul prophetic of its woe, perceived
- what meant their wail and cry. On his gray hairs
- the dust he flung, and, stretching both his hands
- to heaven, he cast himself the corpse along.
- “O son,” he cried, “was life to me so sweet,
- that I to save myself surrendered o'er
- my own begotten to a foeman's steel?
- Saved by these gashes shall thy father be,
- and living by thy death? O wretched me,
- how foul an end have I! Now is my wound
- deep! deep! 't was I, dear son, have stained
- thy name with infamy—to exile driven
- from sceptre and hereditary throne
- by general curse. Would that myself had borne
- my country's vengeance and my nation's hate!
- Would my own guilty life my debt had paid—
- yea, by a thousand deaths! But, see, I live!
- Not yet from human kind and light of day
- have I departed. But depart I will.”
- So saying, he raised him on his crippled thigh,
- and though by reason of the grievous wound
- his forces ebbed, yet with unshaken mien
- he bade them lead his war-horse forth, his pride,
- his solace, which from every war
- victorious bore him home. The master then
- to the brave beast, which seemed to know his pain,
- spoke thus: “My Rhoebus, we have passed our days
- long time together, if long time there be
- for mortal creatures. Either on this day
- thou shalt his bloody spoils in triumph bear
- and that Aeneas' head,—and so shalt be
- avenger of my Lausus' woe; or else,
- if I be vanquished, thou shalt sink and fall
- beside me. For, my bravest, thou wouldst spurn
- a stranger's will, and Teucrian lords to bear.”
- He spoke and, mounting to his back, disposed
- his limbs the wonted way and filled both hands
- with pointed javelins; a helm of brass
- with shaggy horse-hair crest gleamed o'er his brow.
- Swift to the front he rode: a mingled flood
- surged in his heart of sorrow, wrath, and shame;
- and thrice with loud voice on his foe he called.
- Aeneas heard and made exulting vow:
- “Now may the Father of the gods on high,
- and great Apollo hear! Begin the fray!”
- He said, and moved forth with a threatening spear.
- The other cried: “Hast robbed me of my son,
- and now, implacable, wouldst fright me more?
- That way, that only, was it in thy power
- to cast me down. No fear of death I feel.
- Nor from thy gods themselves would I refrain.
- Give o'er! For fated and resolved to die
- I come thy way: but; bring thee as I pass
- these offerings.” With this he whirled a spear
- against his foe, and after it drove deep
- another and another, riding swift
- in wide gyration round him. But the shield,
- the golden boss, broke not. Three times he rode
- in leftward circles, hurling spear on spear
- against th' unmoved Aeneas: and three times
- the Trojan hero in his brazen shield
- the sheaf of spears upbore. But such slow fight,
- such plucking of spent shafts from out his shield,
- the Trojan liked not, vexed and sorely tried
- in duel so ill-matched. With wrathful soul
- at length he strode forth, and between the brows
- of the wild war-horse planted his Iong spear.
- Up reared the creature, beating at the air
- with quivering feet, then o'er his fallen lord
- entangling dropped, and prone above him lay,
- pinning with ponderous shoulder to the ground.
- The Trojans and the Latins rouse the skies
- with clamor Ioud. Aeneas hastening forth
- unsheathes his sword, and looming o'er him cries:
- “Where now is fierce Mezentius, and his soul's
- wild pulse of rage?” The Tuscan in reply
- with eyes uprolled, and gasping as he gave
- long looks at heaven, recalled his fading mind:
- “Why frown at me and fume, O bitterest foe?
- Why threaten death? To slay me is no sin.
- Not to take quarter came I to this war,
- not truce with thee did my lost Lausus crave,
- yet this one boon I pray,—if mercy be
- for fallen foes: O, suffer me when dead
- in covering earth to hide! Full well I know
- what curses of my people ring me round.
- Defend me from that rage! I pray to be
- my son's companion in our common tomb.”
- He spoke: then offered with unshrinking eye
- his veined throat to the sword. O'er the bright mail
- his vital breath gushed forth in streaming gore.