Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- But now in dwellings of the gods on high,
- Diana to fleet-footed Opis called,
- a virgin from her consecrated train,
- and thus in sorrow spoke: “O maiden mine!
- Camilla now to cruel conflict flies;
- with weapons like my own she girds her side,
- in vain, though dearest of all nymphs to me.
- Nor is it some new Iove that stirs to-day
- with sudden sweetness in Diana's breast:
- for long ago, when from his kingdom driven,
- for insolent and envied power, her sire
- King Metabus, from old Privernum's wall
- was taking flight amidst opposing foes,
- he bore a little daughter in his arms
- to share his exile; and he called the child
- (Changing Casmilla, her queen-mother's name)
- Camilla. Bearing on his breast the babe,
- he fled to solitary upland groves.
- But hovering round him with keen lances, pressed
- the Volscian soldiery. Across his path,
- lo, Amasenus with full-foaming wave
- o'erflowed its banks—so huge a rain had burst
- but lately from the clouds. There would he fain
- swim over, but the love of that sweet babe
- restrained him, trembling for his burden dear.
- In his perplexed heart suddenly arose
- firm resolve. It chanced the warrior bore
- huge spear in his brawny hand, strong shaft
- of knotted, seasoned oak; to this he lashed
- his little daughter with a withe of bark
- pulled from a cork-tree, and with skilful bonds
- fast bound her to the spear; then, poising it
- high in his right hand, thus he called on Heaven:
- ‘Latona's daughter, whose benignant grace
- protects this grove, behold, her father now
- gives thee this babe for handmaid! Lo, thy spear
- her infant fingers hold, as from her foes
- she flies a suppliant to thee! Receive,
- O goddess, I implore, what now I cast
- upon the perilous air.’—He spoke, and hurled
- with lifted arm the whirling shaft. The waves
- roared loud, as on the whistling javelin
- hapless Camilla crossed th' impetuous flood.
- But Metabus, his foes in hot pursuit,
- dared plunge him in mid-stream, and, triumphing,
- soon plucked from grass-grown river-bank the spear,
- the child upon it,—now to Trivia vowed,
- a virgin offering. Him nevermore
- could cities hold, nor would his wild heart yield
- its sylvan freedom, but his days were passed
- with shepherds on the solitary hills.
- His daughter too in tangled woods he bred:
- a brood-mare from the milk of her fierce breast
- suckled the child, and to its tender lips
- .Her udders moved; and when the infant feet
- their first firm steps had taken, the small palms
- were armed with a keen javelin; her sire
- a bow and quiver from her shoulder slung.
- Instead of golden combs and flowing pall,
- she wore, from her girl-forehead backward thrown,
- the whole skin of a tigress; with soft hands
- she made her plaything of a whirling spear,
- or, swinging round her head the polished thong
- of her good sling, she fetched from distant sky
- Strymonian cranes or swans of spotless wing.
- From Tuscan towns proud matrons oft in vain
- sought her in marriage for their sons; but she
- to Dian only turned her stainless heart,
- her virgin freedom and her huntress' arms
- with faithful passion serving. Would that now
- this Iove of war had ne'er seduced her mind
- the Teucrians to provoke! So might she be
- one of our wood-nymphs still. But haste, I pray,
- for bitter is her now impending doom.
- Descend, dear nymph, from heaven, and explore
- the country of the Latins, where the fight
- with unpropitious omens now begins.
- These weapons take, and from this quiver draw
- a vengeful arrow, wherewith he who dares
- to wound her sacred body, though he be
- a Trojan or Italian, shall receive
- bloody and swift reward at my command.
- Then, in a cloud concealed, I will consign
- her corpse, ill-fated but inviolate
- unto the sepulchre, restoring so
- the virgin to her native land.” Thus spake
- the goddess; but her handmaid, gliding down,
- took her loud pathway on the moving winds,
- and mantled in dark storm her shape divine.
- Meanwhile the Teucrian legions to the wall
- draw near, with Tuscan lords and cavalry
- in numbered troops arrayed. Loud-footed steeds
- prance o'er the field, to manage of the rein
- rebellious, but turned deftly here or there.
- The iron harvest of keen spears spreads far,
- and all the plain burns bright with lifted steel.
- Messapus and swift Latin cavalry,
- Coras his brother, and th' attending train
- of the fair maid Camilla, form their lines
- in the opposing field. Their poised right hands
- point the long lances forward, and light shafts
- are brandished in the air; the warrior hosts
- on steeds of fire come kindling as they ride.
- One instant, at a spear-throw's space, each line
- its motion stays; then with one sudden cry
- they rush forth, spurring on each frenzied steed.
- From-every side the multitudinous spears
- pour down like snowflakes, mantling heaven in shade.
- Now with contending spears and straining thews,
- Tyrrhenus, and Aconteus, champion bold,
- ride forward; with the onset terrible
- loudly their armor rings; their chargers twain
- crash breast to breast, and like a thunderbolt
- Aconteus drops, or like a ponderous stone
- hurled from a catapult; full length he falls,
- surrend'ring to the winds his fleeting soul.
- Now all is panic: holding their light shields
- behind their backs, the Latin horse wheel round,
- retreating to the wall, the Trojan foe
- in close pursuit. Asilas, chieftain proud,
- led on th' assault. Hard by the city gates
- the Latins wheeled once more and pressed the rein
- strong on the yielding neck; the charging foe
- took flight and hurried far with loose-flung rein.
- 'T was like the shock and onset of the sea
- that landward hurls the alternating flood
- and hides high cliffs in foam,—the tawny sands
- upflinging as it rolls; then, suddenly
- whirled backward on the reingulfing waves,
- it quits the ledges, and with ebbing flow
- far from the shore retires. The Tuscans twice
- drive back the flying Rutules to the town;
- and twice repulsed, with shields to rearward thrown,
- glare back at the pursuer; but conjoined
- in the third battle-charge, both armies merge
- confusedly together in grim fight
- of man to man; then follow dying groans,
- armor blood-bathed and corpses, and strong steeds
- inextricably with their masters slain,
- so fierce the fray. Orsilochus—afraid
- to front the warrior's arms—launched forth a spear
- at Remulus' horse, and left the fatal steel
- clinging below its ear; the charger plunged
- madly, and tossed its trembling hoofs in air,
- sustaining not the wound; the rider fell,
- flung headlong to the ground. Catillus slew
- Iollas; and then struck Herminius down,
- great-bodied and great-hearted, who could wield
- a monster weapon, and whose yellow hair
- from naked head to naked shoulder flowed.
- By wounds unterrified he dared oppose
- his huge bulk to the foe: the quivering spear
- pierced to his broad back, and with throes of pain
- bowed the man double and clean clove him through.
- Wide o'er the field th' ensanguined horror flowed,
- where fatal swords were crossed and cut their way
- through many a wound to famous death and fair.
- Swift through the midmost slaughter proudly strides
- the quiver-girt Camilla, with one breast
- thrust naked to the fight, like Amazon.
- Oft from her hand her pliant shafts she rains,
- or whirls with indefatigable arm
- a doughty battle-axe; her shoulder bears
- Diana's sounding arms and golden bow.
- Sometimes retreating and to flight compelled,
- the maiden with a rearward-pointing bow
- shoots arrows as she flies. Around her move
- her chosen peers, Larina, virgin brave,
- Tarpeia, brandishing an axe of bronze,
- and Tulla, virgins out of Italy
- whom the divine Camilla chose to be
- her glory, each a faithful servitress
- in days of peace or war. The maids of Thrace
- ride thus along Thermodon's frozen flood,
- and fight with blazoned Amazonian arms
- around Hippolyta; or when returns
- Penthesilea in triumphal car
- 'mid acclamations shrill, and all her host
- of women clash in air the moon-shaped shield.