Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. That self-same day with aspect terrible
  2. Aeneas girt him in the wondrous arms
  3. his mother gave; made sharp his martial steel,
  4. and roused his heart to ire; though glad was he
  5. to seal such truce and end the general war.
  6. Then he spoke comfort to his friends; and soothed
  7. Iulus' fear, unfolding Heaven's intent;
  8. but on Latinus bade his heralds lay
  9. unyielding terms and laws of peace impose.
  1. Soon as the breaking dawn its glory threw
  2. along the hills, and from the sea's profound
  3. leaped forth the horses of the sun-god's car,
  4. from lifted nostrils breathing light and fire,
  5. then Teucrian and Rutulian measured out
  6. a place for duel, underneath the walls
  7. of the proud city. In the midst were set
  8. altars of turf and hearth-stones burning bright
  9. in honor of their common gods. Some brought
  10. pure waters and the hallowed flame, their thighs
  11. in priestly skirt arrayed, and reverend brows
  12. with vervain bound. Th' Ausonians, spear in hand,
  13. out from the city's crowded portals moved
  14. in ordered column: next the Trojans all,
  15. with Tuscan host in various martial guise,
  16. equipped with arms of steel, as if they heard
  17. stern summons to the fight. Their captains, too,
  18. emerging from the multitude, in pride
  19. of gold and purple, hurried to and fro:
  20. Mnestheus of royal stem, Asilas brave;
  21. and Neptune's offspring, tamer of the steed,
  22. Messapus. Either host, at signal given,
  23. to its own ground retiring, fixed in earth
  24. the long shafts of the spears and stacked the shields.
  25. Then eagerly to tower and rampart fly
  26. the women, the infirm old men, the throng
  27. of the unarmed, and sit them there at gaze,
  28. or on the columned gates expectant stand.
  1. But Juno, peering from that summit proud
  2. which is to-day the Alban (though that time
  3. nor name nor fame the hallowed mountain knew),
  4. surveyed the plain below and fair array
  5. of Trojan and Laurentine, by the walls
  6. of King Latinus. Whereupon straightway
  7. with Turnus' sister she began converse,
  8. goddess with goddess; for that nymph divine
  9. o'er Alba's calm lakes and loud rivers reigns;
  10. Jove, the high monarch of th' ethereal sky,
  11. gave her such glory when he stole away
  12. her virgin zone. “O nymph“, she said, “who art
  13. the pride of flowing streams, and much beloved
  14. of our own heart! thou knowest thou alone
  15. hast been my favorite of those Latin maids
  16. that to proud Jove's unthankful bed have climbed;
  17. and willingly I found thee place and share
  18. in our Olympian realm. So blame not me,
  19. but hear, Juturna, what sore grief is thine:
  20. while chance and destiny conceded aught
  21. of strength to Latium's cause, I shielded well
  22. both Turnus and thy city's wall; but now
  23. I see our youthful champion make his war
  24. with fates adverse. The Parcae's day of doom
  25. implacably impends. My eyes refuse
  26. to Iook upon such fight, such fatal league.
  27. If for thy brother's life thou couldst be bold
  28. to venture some swift blow, go, strike it now!
  29. 'T is fit and fair! Some issue fortunate
  30. may tread on sorrow's heel.” She scarce had said,
  31. when rained the quick tears from Juturna's eyes.
  32. Three times and yet again her desperate hand
  33. smote on her comely breast. But Juno cried,
  34. “No tears to-day! But haste thee, haste and find
  35. what way, if way there be, from clutch of death
  36. to tear thy brother free; arouse the war;
  37. their plighted peace destroy. I grant thee leave
  38. such boldness to essay.” With this command
  39. she left the nymph dismayed and grieving sore.
  1. Meanwhile the kings ride forth: Latinus first,
  2. looming tall-statured from his four-horse car;
  3. twelve rays of gold encircle his bright brow,
  4. sign of the sun-god, his progenitor;
  5. next Turnus, driving snow-white steeds, is seen,—
  6. two bread-tipped javelins in his hand he bears;
  7. Aeneas, of Rome's blood the source and sire,
  8. with star-bright shield and panoply divine,
  9. far-shining comes; Ascanius by his side—
  10. of Roman greatness the next hope is he.
  11. To camp they rode, where, garbed in blameless white,
  12. with youngling swine and two-year sheep unshorn,
  13. the priest before the flaming altars drove
  14. his flock and offering: to the rising sun
  15. all eyes are lifted, as with careful hand
  16. the salted meal is scattered, while with knives
  17. they mark each victim's brow, outpouring wine
  18. from shallow bowls, the sacrifice to bless.
  1. Then good Aeneas, his sword drawn, put forth
  2. this votive prayer: “O Sun in heaven; and thou,
  3. Italia, for whom such toils I bear,
  4. be witness of my orison. On thee,
  5. Father omnipotent, I call; on thee,
  6. his Queen Saturnia,—now may she be
  7. more gracious to my prayer! O glorious Mars,
  8. beneath whose godhead and paternity
  9. all wars begin and end, on thee I call;
  10. hail, all ye river-gods and haunted springs;
  11. hail, whatsoever gods have seat of awe
  12. in yonder distant sky, and ye whose power
  13. is in the keeping of the deep, blue sea:
  14. if victory to Ausonian Turnus fall,
  15. then let my vanquished people take its way
  16. unto Evander's city! From these plains
  17. Iulus shall retire—so stands the bond;
  18. nor shall the Trojans with rebellious sword
  19. bring after-trouble on this land and King.
  20. But if on arms of ours success shall shine,
  21. as I doubt not it shall (may gods on high
  22. their will confirm!), I purpose not to chain
  23. Italian captive unto Teucrian lord,
  24. nor seek I kingly power. Let equal laws
  25. unite in federation without end
  26. the two unconquered nations; both shall share
  27. my worshipped gods. Latinus, as my sire,
  28. shall keep his sword, and as my sire receive
  29. inviolable power. The Teucrians
  30. shall build my stronghold, but our citadel
  31. shall bear forevermore Lavinia's name.”
  1. Aeneas thus: then with uplifted eyes
  2. Latinus swore, his right hand raised to heaven:
  3. “I too, Aeneas, take the sacred vow.
  4. By earth and sea and stars in heaven I swear,
  5. by fair Latona's radiant children twain,
  6. and two-browed Janus; by the shadowy powers
  7. of Hades and th' inexorable shrines
  8. of the Infernal King; and may Jove hear,
  9. who by his lightnings hallows what is sworn!
  10. I touch these altars, and my lips invoke
  11. the sacred altar-fires that 'twixt us burn:
  12. we men of Italy will make this peace
  13. inviolate, and its bond forever keep,
  14. let come what will; there is no power can change
  15. my purpose, not if ocean's waves o'erwhelm
  16. the world in billowy deluge and obscure
  17. the bounds of heaven and hell. We shall remain
  18. immutable as my smooth sceptre is“
  19. (By chance a sceptre in his hand he bore),
  20. “which wears no more light leaf or branching shade;
  21. for long since in the grove 't was plucked away
  22. from parent stem, and yielded to sharp steel
  23. its leaves and limbs; erewhile 't was but a tree,
  24. till the wise craftsman with fair sheath of bronze
  25. encircled it and laid it in the hands
  26. of Latium's royal sires.” With words like these
  27. they swore the bond, in the beholding eyes
  28. of gathered princes. Then they slit the throats
  29. of hallowed victims o'er the altar's blaze,
  30. drew forth the quivering vitals, and with flesh
  31. on loaded chargers heaped the sacrifice.
  1. But to Rutulian eyes th' approaching joust
  2. seemed all ill-matched; and shifting hopes and fears
  3. disturbed their hearts the closer they surveyed
  4. th' unequal risks: still worse it was to see
  5. how Turnus, silent and with downcast eyes,
  6. dejectedly drew near the place of prayer,
  7. worn, pale, and wasted in his youthful bloom.
  8. The nymph Juturna, with a sister's fear,
  9. noted the growing murmur, and perceived
  10. how all the people's will did shift and change;
  11. she went from rank to rank, feigning the shape
  12. of Camers, scion of illustrious line,
  13. with heritage of valor, and himself
  14. dauntless in war; unceasingly she ran
  15. from rank to rank, spreading with skilful tongue
  16. opinions manifold, and thus she spoke:
  17. “Will ye not blush, Rutulians, so to stake
  18. one life for many heroes? Are we not
  19. their match in might and numbers? O, behold
  20. those Trojan sons of Heaven making league
  21. with exiled Arcady; see Tuscan hordes
  22. storming at Turnus. Yet we scarce could find
  23. one foe apiece, forsooth, if we should dare
  24. fight them with half our warriors. Of a truth
  25. your champion brave shall to those gods ascend
  26. before whose altars his great heart he vows;
  27. and lips of men while yet on earth he stays
  28. will spread his glory far. Ourselves, instead,
  29. must crouch to haughty masters, and resign
  30. this fatherland upon whose fruitful fields
  31. we dwell at ease.” So speaking, she inflamed
  32. the warriors' minds, and through the legions ran
  33. increasing whisper; the Laurentine host
  34. and even Latium wavered. Those who late
  35. prayed but for rest and safety, clamored loud
  36. for arms, desired annulment of the league,
  37. and pitied Turnus' miserable doom.
  38. Whereon Juturna tried a mightier stroke,
  39. a sign from heaven, which more than all beside
  40. confused the Latins and deceived their hearts
  41. with prodigy. For through the flaming skies
  42. Jove's golden eagle swooped, and scattered far
  43. a clamorous tribe of river-haunting birds;
  44. then, swiftly to the waters falling, seized
  45. one noble swan, which with keen, curving claws
  46. he ruthless bore away: th' Italians all
  47. watched eagerly, while the loud-screaming flock
  48. wheeled upward (wondrous sight!), with host of wings
  49. shadowed the sky, and in a legion-cloud
  50. chased through the air the foe; till, overborne
  51. by heavier odds, the eagle from his claws
  52. flung back his victim to the waves, and fled
  53. to the dim, distant heaven. The Rutules then
  54. hailed the good omen with consenting cry,
  55. and grasped the sword and shield. Tolumnius
  56. the augur spake first: “Lo, the sign I sought
  57. with many a prayer! I welcome and obey
  58. the powers divine. Take me for captain, me!
  59. And draw your swords, ye wretches, whom th' assault
  60. of yonder foreign scoundrel puts in fear
  61. like feeble birds, and with his violence
  62. lays waste your shore. He too shall fly away,
  63. spreading his ships' wings on the distant seas.
  64. Close up your ranks—one soul in all our breasts!
  65. Defend in open war your stolen King.”
  66. So saying, he hurled upon th' opposing foe
  67. his javelin, running forward. The strong shaft
  68. of corner whistled shrill, and clove the air
  69. unerring. Instantly vast clamor rose,
  70. and all th' onlookers at the spectacle
  71. leaped up amazed, and every heart beat high.
  72. The spear sped flying to the foeman's line,
  73. where stood nine goodly brethren, pledges all
  74. of one true Tuscan mother to her lord,
  75. Gylippus of Arcadia; it struck full
  76. on one of these at his gold-belted waist,
  77. and where the clasp clung, pierced the rib clean through.
  78. And stretched the fair youth in his glittering arms
  79. full length and lifeless on the yellow sand.
  80. His brothers then, bold band to wrath aroused
  81. by sorrow, seize the sword or snatch the spear
  82. and blindly charge. Opposing them, the host
  83. Laurentine makes advance, and close-arrayed
  84. the Trojans like a torrent pour, enforced
  85. by Tuscans and the gay-accoutred clans
  86. of Arcady. One passion moved in all
  87. to try the judgment of the sword. They tore
  88. the altars down: a very storm of spears
  89. rose angrily to heaven, in iron rain
  90. down-pouring: while the priests bore far away
  91. the sacrificial bowls and sacred fires.
  92. Even Latinus fled; his stricken gods
  93. far from his violated oath he bore.
  1. Some leaped to horse or chariot and rode
  2. with naked swords in air. Messapus, wild
  3. to break the truce, assailed the Tuscan King,
  4. Aulestes, dressed in kingly blazon fair,
  5. with fearful shock of steeds; the Tuscan dropped
  6. helplessly backward, striking as he fell
  7. his head and shoulders on the altar-stone
  8. that lay behind him. But Messapus flew,
  9. infuriate, a javelin in his hand,
  10. and, towering o'er the suppliant, smote him strong
  11. with the great beam-like spear, and loudly cried:
  12. “Down with him! Ah! no common victim he
  13. to give the mighty gods!” Italia's men
  14. despoiled the dead man ere his limbs were cold.
  15. Then Corynaeus snatched a burning brand
  16. out of the altar, and as Ebysus
  17. came toward him for to strike, he hurled the flame
  18. full in his face: the big beard quickly blazed
  19. with smell of singeing; while the warrior bold
  20. strode over him, and seized with firm left hand
  21. his quailing foe's Iong hair; then with one knee
  22. he pushed and strained, compelled him to the `ground—
  23. and struck straight at his heart with naked steel.
  24. The shepherd Alsus in the foremost line
  25. came leaping through the spears; when o'er him towered
  26. huge Podalirius with a flashing sword
  27. in close pursuit; the mighty battle-axe
  28. clove him with swinging stroke from brow to chin,
  29. and spilt along his mail the streaming gore:
  30. so stern repose and iron slumber fell
  31. upon that shepherd's eyes, and sealed their gaze
  32. in endless night. But good Aeneas now
  33. stretched forth his unarmed hand, and all unhelmed
  34. thus Ioudly to his people called: “What means
  35. this frantic stir, this quarrel rashly bold?
  36. Recall your martial rage! The pledge is given
  37. and all its terms agreed. 'T is only I
  38. do lawful battle here. So let me forth,
  39. and tremble not. My own hand shall confirm
  40. the solemn treaty. For these rites consign
  41. Turnus to none but me.” Yet while he spoke,
  42. behold, a winged arrow, hissing loud,
  43. the hero pierced; but what bold hand impelled
  44. its whirling speed, none knew; nor if it were
  45. chance or some power divine that brought this fame
  46. upon Rutulia; for the glorious deed
  47. was covered o'er with silence: none would boast
  48. an arrow guilty of Aeneas' wound.
  49. When Turnus saw Aeneas from the line
  50. retreating, and the captains in dismay,
  51. with sudden hope he burned: he called for steeds,
  52. for arms, and, leaping to his chariot,
  53. rode insolently forth, the reins in hand.
  54. Many strong heroes he dispatched to die,
  55. as on he flew, and many stretched half-dead,
  56. or from his chariot striking, or from far
  57. raining his javelins on the recreant foe.
  58. As Mars, forth-speeding by the wintry stream
  59. of Hebrus, smites his sanguinary shield
  60. and whips the swift steeds to the front of war,
  61. who, flying past the winds of eve and morn,
  62. scour the wide champaign; the bounds of Thrace
  63. beneath their hoof-beats thunder; the dark shapes
  64. of Terror, Wrath, and Treachery move on
  65. in escort of the god: in such grim guise
  66. bold Turnus lashed into the fiercest fray
  67. his streaming steeds, that pitiful to see
  68. trod down the slaughtered foe; each flying hoof
  69. scattered a bloody dew; their path was laid
  70. in mingled blood and sand. To death he flung
  71. Pholus and Sthenelus and Thamyris:
  72. two smitten in close fight and one from far:
  73. also from far he smote with fatal spear
  74. Glaucus and Lades, the Imbrasidae,
  75. whom Imbrasus himself in Lycia bred,
  76. and honored them with arms of equal skill
  77. when grappling with a foe, or o'er the field
  78. speeding a war-horse faster than the wind.
  1. Elsewhere Eumedes through a throng of foes
  2. to battle rode, the high-born Dolon's child,
  3. famous in war, who bore his grandsire's name,
  4. but seemed in might and courage like his sire:
  5. that prince, who reconnoitring crept so near
  6. the Argive camp, he dared to claim for spoil
  7. the chariot of Achilles; but that day
  8. great Diomed for such audacious deed
  9. paid wages otherwise,—and he no more
  10. dreamed to possess the steeds of Peleus' son.
  11. When Turnus recognized in open field
  12. this warrior, though far, he aimed and flung
  13. his javelin through the spacious air; then stayed
  14. his coursers twain, and, leaping from his car,
  15. found the wretch helpless fallen; so planted he
  16. his foot upon his neck, and from his hand
  17. wrested the sword and thrust it glittering
  18. deep in the throat, thus taunting as he slew:
  19. “There's land for thee, thou Trojan! Measure there
  20. th' Hesperian provinces thy sword would find.
  21. Such reward will I give to all who dare
  22. draw steel on me; such cities they shall build.”
  23. To bear him company his spear laid low
  24. Asbutes, Sybaris, Thersilochus,
  25. Chloreus and Dares, and Thymoetes thrown
  26. sheer off the shoulders of his balking steed.
  27. As when from Thrace the north wind thunders down
  28. the vast Aegean, flinging the swift flood
  29. against the shore, and where his blasts assail
  30. the cloudy cohorts vanish out of heaven:
  31. so before Turnus, where his path he clove,
  32. the lines fell back, the wheeling legions fled.
  33. The warrior's own wild impulse swept him on,
  34. and every wind that o'er his chariot blew
  35. shook out his plume in air. But such advance
  36. so bold, so furious, Phegeus could not brook,
  37. but, fronting the swift chariot's path, he seized
  38. the foam-flecked bridles of its coursers wild,
  39. while from the yoke his body trailed and swung;
  40. the broad lance found his naked side, and tore
  41. his double corselet, pricking lightly through
  42. the outer flesh; but he with lifted shield
  43. still fought his foe and thrust with falchion bare;
  44. but the fierce pace of whirling wheel and pole
  45. flung him down prone, and stretched him on the plain.
  46. Then Turnus, aiming with relentless sword
  47. between the corselet's edge and helmet's rim
  48. struck off his whole head, leaving on the sands
  49. the mutilated corpse. While thus afield
  50. victorious Turnus dealt out death and doom,
  51. Mnestheus, Achates true, and by their side
  52. Ascanius, have carried to the camp
  53. Aeneas, gashed and bleeding, whose long lance
  54. sustained his limping step. With fruitless rage
  55. he struggled with the spear-head's splintered barb,
  56. and bade them help him by the swiftest way
  57. to carve the wound out with a sword, to rip
  58. the clinging weapon forth, and send him back
  59. to meet the battle. Quickly to his side
  60. came Iapyx, dear favorite and friend
  61. of Phoebus, upon whom the god bestowed
  62. his own wise craft and power, Iove-impelled.
  63. The gifts of augury were given, and song,
  64. with arrows of swift wing: he when his sire
  65. was carried forth to die, deferred the doom
  66. for many a day, by herbs of virtue known
  67. to leechcraft; and without reward or praise
  68. his silent art he plied. Aeneas stood,
  69. bitterly grieving, propped upon his spear;
  70. a throng of warriors were near him, and
  71. Iulus, sorrowing. The aged man
  72. gathered his garments up as leeches do,
  73. and with skilled hand and Phoebus' herbs of power
  74. bustled in vain; in vain his surgery
  75. pried at the shaft, and with a forceps strong
  76. seized on the buried barb. But Fortune gave
  77. no remedy, nor did Apollo aid
  78. his votary. So more and more grim fear
  79. stalks o'er the field of war, and nearer hies
  80. the fatal hour; the very heavens are dust;
  81. the horsemen charge, and in the midmost camp
  82. a rain of javelins pours. The dismal cry
  83. of men in fierce fight, and of men who fall
  84. beneath relentless Mars, rends all the air.