Aeneid

Virgil

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

  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.