Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- Elsewhere Eumedes through a throng of foes
- to battle rode, the high-born Dolon's child,
- famous in war, who bore his grandsire's name,
- but seemed in might and courage like his sire:
- that prince, who reconnoitring crept so near
- the Argive camp, he dared to claim for spoil
- the chariot of Achilles; but that day
- great Diomed for such audacious deed
- paid wages otherwise,—and he no more
- dreamed to possess the steeds of Peleus' son.
- When Turnus recognized in open field
- this warrior, though far, he aimed and flung
- his javelin through the spacious air; then stayed
- his coursers twain, and, leaping from his car,
- found the wretch helpless fallen; so planted he
- his foot upon his neck, and from his hand
- wrested the sword and thrust it glittering
- deep in the throat, thus taunting as he slew:
- “There's land for thee, thou Trojan! Measure there
- th' Hesperian provinces thy sword would find.
- Such reward will I give to all who dare
- draw steel on me; such cities they shall build.”
- To bear him company his spear laid low
- Asbutes, Sybaris, Thersilochus,
- Chloreus and Dares, and Thymoetes thrown
- sheer off the shoulders of his balking steed.
- As when from Thrace the north wind thunders down
- the vast Aegean, flinging the swift flood
- against the shore, and where his blasts assail
- the cloudy cohorts vanish out of heaven:
- so before Turnus, where his path he clove,
- the lines fell back, the wheeling legions fled.
- The warrior's own wild impulse swept him on,
- and every wind that o'er his chariot blew
- shook out his plume in air. But such advance
- so bold, so furious, Phegeus could not brook,
- but, fronting the swift chariot's path, he seized
- the foam-flecked bridles of its coursers wild,
- while from the yoke his body trailed and swung;
- the broad lance found his naked side, and tore
- his double corselet, pricking lightly through
- the outer flesh; but he with lifted shield
- still fought his foe and thrust with falchion bare;
- but the fierce pace of whirling wheel and pole
- flung him down prone, and stretched him on the plain.
- Then Turnus, aiming with relentless sword
- between the corselet's edge and helmet's rim
- struck off his whole head, leaving on the sands
- the mutilated corpse. While thus afield
- victorious Turnus dealt out death and doom,
- Mnestheus, Achates true, and by their side
- Ascanius, have carried to the camp
- Aeneas, gashed and bleeding, whose long lance
- sustained his limping step. With fruitless rage
- he struggled with the spear-head's splintered barb,
- and bade them help him by the swiftest way
- to carve the wound out with a sword, to rip
- the clinging weapon forth, and send him back
- to meet the battle. Quickly to his side
- came Iapyx, dear favorite and friend
- of Phoebus, upon whom the god bestowed
- his own wise craft and power, Iove-impelled.
- The gifts of augury were given, and song,
- with arrows of swift wing: he when his sire
- was carried forth to die, deferred the doom
- for many a day, by herbs of virtue known
- to leechcraft; and without reward or praise
- his silent art he plied. Aeneas stood,
- bitterly grieving, propped upon his spear;
- a throng of warriors were near him, and
- Iulus, sorrowing. The aged man
- gathered his garments up as leeches do,
- and with skilled hand and Phoebus' herbs of power
- bustled in vain; in vain his surgery
- pried at the shaft, and with a forceps strong
- seized on the buried barb. But Fortune gave
- no remedy, nor did Apollo aid
- his votary. So more and more grim fear
- stalks o'er the field of war, and nearer hies
- the fatal hour; the very heavens are dust;
- the horsemen charge, and in the midmost camp
- a rain of javelins pours. The dismal cry
- of men in fierce fight, and of men who fall
- beneath relentless Mars, rends all the air.