Aeneid

Virgil

Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.

  1. Soon as the envoys ceased, an answering sound
  2. of troubled voices through the council flowed
  3. of various note, as when its rocky bed
  4. impedes an arrowy stream, and murmurs break
  5. from the strait-channelled flood; the fringing shores
  6. repeat the tumult of the clamorous wave.
  7. But when their hearts and troublous tongues were still,
  8. the King, invoking first the gods in heaven,
  9. thus from a Iofty throne his sentence gave:
  1. “Less evil were our case, if long ago
  2. ye had provided for your country's weal,
  3. O Latins, as I urged. It is no time
  4. to hold dispute, while, compassing our walls,
  5. the foeman waits. Ill-omened war is ours
  6. against a race of gods, my countrymen,
  7. invincible, unwearied in the fray,
  8. and who, though lost and fallen, clutch the sword.
  9. If hope ye cherished of Aetolia's power,
  10. dismiss it! For what hope ye have is found
  11. in your own bosoms only. But ye know
  12. how slight it is and small. What ruin wide
  13. has fallen, is now palpable and clear.
  14. No blame I cast. What valor's uttermost
  15. may do was done; our kingdom in this war
  16. strained its last thews. Now therefore I will tell
  17. such project as my doubtful mind may frame,
  18. and briefly, if ye give good heed, unfold:
  19. an ancient tract have I, close-bordering
  20. the river Tiber; it runs westward far
  21. beyond Sicania's bound, and filth it bears
  22. to Rutule and Auruncan husbandmen,
  23. who furrow its hard hills or feed their flocks
  24. along the stonier slopes. Let this demesne,
  25. together with its pine-clad mountain tall,
  26. be given the Teucrian for our pledge of peace,
  27. confirmed by free and equitable league,
  28. and full alliance with our kingly power.
  29. Let them abide there, if it please them so,
  30. and build their city's wall. But if their hearts
  31. for other land or people yearn, and fate
  32. permits them hence to go, then let us build
  33. twice ten good galleys of Italian oak,
  34. or more, if they can man them. All the wood
  35. lies yonder on the shore. Let them but say
  36. how numerous and large the ships they crave,
  37. and we will give the brass, the artisans,
  38. and ship-supplies. Let us for envoys choose
  39. a hundred of the Latins noblest born
  40. to tell our message and arrange the peace,
  41. bearing mild olive-boughs and weighty gifts
  42. of ivory and gold, with chair of state
  43. and purple robe, our emblems as a king.
  44. But freely let this council speak; give aid
  45. to our exhausted cause.” Then Drances rose,
  46. that foe inveterate, whom Turnus' fame
  47. to stinging hate and envy double-tongued
  48. ever pricked on. Of liberal wealth was he
  49. and flowing speech, but slack of hand in war
  50. at council board accounted no weak voice,
  51. in quarrels stronger still; of lofty birth
  52. in the maternal line, but by his sire's
  53. uncertain and obscure. He, claiming place,
  54. thus multiplies with words the people's ire:
  55. “A course most clear, nor needing voice of mine,
  56. thy council is, good King; for all men see
  57. the way of public weal, but smother close
  58. the telling of it. Turnus must concede
  59. freedom to speak, and his own arrogance
  60. diminish! Under his ill-boding star
  61. and fatal conduct—yea, I speak it plain,
  62. though with his naked steel my death he swear—
  63. yon host of princes fell, and we behold
  64. the whole land bowed with grief; while he assails
  65. the Trojan camp (beating such bold retreats!)
  66. and troubles Heaven with war. One gift the more,
  67. among the many to the Trojans given,
  68. one chiefly, best of kings, thy choice should be.
  69. Let not wild violence thy will restrain
  70. from granting, sire, thy virgin daughter's hand
  71. to son-in-law illustrious, in a match
  72. worthy of both,—and thus the lasting bond
  73. of peace establish. But if verily
  74. our hearts and souls be weak with craven fear,
  75. let us on Turnus call, and grace implore
  76. even of him. Let him no more oppose;
  77. but to his country and his King concede
  78. their natural right. Why wilt thou o'er and o'er
  79. fling thy poor countrymen in danger's way,
  80. O chief and fountain of all Latium's pain?
  81. War will not save us. Not a voice but sues
  82. for peace, O Turnus! and, not less than peace,
  83. its one inviolable pledge. Behold,
  84. I lead in this petition! even I
  85. whom thou dost feign thy foe—(I waste no words
  86. denying)—look! I supplicate of thee,
  87. take pity on thy kindred; drop thy pride,
  88. and get thee home defeated. We have seen
  89. slaughter enough, enough of funeral flames,
  90. and many a wide field waste and desolate.
  91. If glory move thee, if thy martial breast
  92. so swell with strength, and if a royal dower
  93. be thy dear dream, go, pluck thy courage up,
  94. and front thy own brave bosom to the foe.
  95. for, lo, that Turnus on his wedding day
  96. may win a princess, our cheap, common lives—
  97. we the mere mob, unwept, unsepulchred—
  98. must be spilled forth in battle! Thou, I say,
  99. if there be mettle in thee and some drops
  100. of thy undaunted sires, Iook yonder where
  101. the Trojan chieftain waits thee in the field.”