Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- What voice divine
- such horror can make known? What song declare
- the bloodshed manifold, the princes slain,
- or flying o'er the field from Turnus' blade,
- or from the Trojan King? Did Jove ordain
- so vast a shock of arms should interpose
- 'twixt nations destined to perpetual bond?
- Aeneas met the Rutule Sucro—thus
- staying the Trojan charge—and with swift blow
- struck at him sidewise, where the way of death
- is quickest, cleaving ribs and rounded side
- with reeking sword. Turnus met Amycus,
- unhorsed him, though himself afoot, and slew
- Diores, his fair brother (one was pierced
- fronting the spear, the other felled to earth
- by strike of sword), and both their severed heads
- he hung all dripping to his chariot's rim.
- But Talon, Tanais, and Cethegus brave,
- three in one onset, unto death went down
- at great Aeneas' hand; and he dispatched
- ill-starred Onites of Echion's line,
- fair Peridia's child. Then Turnus slew
- two Lycian brothers unto Phoebus dear,
- and young Menoetes, an Arcadian,
- who hated war (though vainly) when he plied
- his native fisher-craft in Lerna's streams,
- where from his mean abode he ne'er went forth
- to wait at great men's doors, but with his sire
- reaped the scant harvest of a rented glebe.
- as from two sides two conflagrations sweep
- dry woodlands or full copse of crackling bay,
- or as, swift-leaping from the mountain-vales,
- two flooded, foaming rivers seaward roar,
- each on its path of death, not less uproused,
- speed Turnus and Aeneas o'er the field;
- now storms their martial rage; now fiercely swells
- either indomitable heart; and now
- each hero's full strength to the slaughter moves.
- Behold Murranus, boasting his high birth
- from far-descended sires of storied name,
- the line of Latium's kings! Aeneas now
- with mountain-boulder lays him low in dust,
- smitten with whirlwind of the monster stone;
- and o'er him fallen under yoke and rein
- roll his own chariot wheels, while with swift tread
- the mad hoofs of his horses stamp him down,
- not knowing him their lord. But Turnus found
- proud Hyllus fronting him with frantic rage,
- and at his golden helmet launched the shaft
- that pierced it; in his cloven brain it clung.
- Nor could thy sword, O Cretheus, save thee then
- from Turnus, though of bravest Greeks the peer;
- nor did Cupencus' gods their priest defend
- against Aeneas, but his breast he gave
- unto the hostile blade; his brazen shield
- delayed no whit his miserable doom.
- Thee also, Aeolus, Laurentum saw
- spread thy huge body dying on the ground;
- yea, dying, thou whom Greeks in serried arms
- subdued not, nor Achilles' hand that hurled
- the throne of Priam down: here didst thou touch
- thy goal of death; one stately house was thine
- on Ida's mountain, at Lyrnessus, one;
- Laurentum's hallowed earth was but thy grave.
- Now the whole host contends; all Latium meets
- all Ilium; Mnestheus and Serestus bold;
- Messapus, the steed-breaker, and high-soured
- Asilas; Tuscans in a phalanx proud;
- Arcadian riders of Evander's train:
- each warrior lifts him to his height supreme
- of might and skill; no sloth nor lingering now,
- but in one far-spread conflict all contend.
- His goddess-mother in Aeneas' mind
- now stirred the purpose to make sudden way
- against the city-wall, in swift advance
- of all his line, confounding Latium so
- with slaughter and surprise. His roving glance,
- seeking for Turnus through the scattered lines
- this way and that, beholds in distant view
- the city yet unscathed and calmly free
- from the wide-raging fight. Then on his soul
- rushed the swift vision of a mightier war.
- Mnestheus, Sergestus, and Serestus brave,
- his chosen chiefs, he summons to his side,
- and stands upon a hillock, whither throng
- the Teucrian legions, each man holding fast
- his shield and spear. He, towering high,
- thus from the rampart to his people calls:
- “Perform my bidding swiftly: Jove's own hand
- sustains our power. Be ye not slack, because
- the thing I do is sudden. For this day
- I will pluck out th' offending root of war,—
- yon city where Latinus reigns. Unless
- it bear our yoke and heed a conqueror's will,
- will lay low in dust its blazing towers.
- Must I wait Turnus' pleasure, till he deign
- to meet my stroke, and have a mind once more,
- though vanquished, to show fight? My countrymen,
- see yonder stronghold of their impious war!
- Bring flames; avenge the broken oath with fire!”
- Scarce had he said, when with consenting souls,
- they speed them to the walls in dense array,
- forming a wedge. Ladders now leap in air,
- and sudden-blazing fires. In various war
- some troops run charging at the city-gates,
- and slay the guards; some fling the whirling spear
- and darken heaven with arrows. In their van,
- his right hand lifted to the wails and towers,
- Aeneas, calling on the gods to hear,
- loudly upbraids Latinus that once more
- conflict is thrust upon him; that once more
- Italians are his foes and violate
- their second pledge of peace. So blazes forth
- dissension 'twixt the frighted citizens:
- some would give o'er the city and fling wide
- its portals to the Trojan, or drag forth
- the King himself to parley; others fly
- to arms, and at the rampart make a stand.
- 'T is thus some shepherd from a caverned crag
- stirs up the nested bees with plenteous fume
- of bitter smoke; they, posting to and fro,
- fly desperate round the waxen citadel,
- and whet their buzzing fury; through their halls
- the stench and blackness rolls; within the caves
- noise and confusion ring; the fatal cloud
- pours forth incessant on the vacant air.