Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. The skies rolled on; and o'er the ocean fell
  2. the veil of night, till utmost earth and heaven
  3. and all their Myrmidonian stratagems
  4. were mantled darkly o'er. In silent sleep
  5. the Trojan city lay; dull slumber chained
  6. its weary life. But now the Greek array
  7. of ordered ships moved on from Tenedos,
  8. their only light the silent, favoring moon,
  9. on to the well-known strand. The King displayed
  10. torch from his own ship, and Sinon then,
  11. whom wrathful Heaven defended in that hour,
  12. let the imprisoned band of Greeks go free
  13. from that huge womb of wood; the open horse
  14. restored them to the light; and joyfully
  15. emerging from the darkness, one by one,
  16. princely Thessander, Sthenelus, and dire
  17. Ulysses glided down the swinging cord.
  18. Closely upon them Neoptolemus,
  19. the son of Peleus, came, and Acamas,
  20. King Menelaus, Thoas and Machaon,
  21. and last, Epeus, who the fabric wrought.
  22. Upon the town they fell, for deep in sleep
  23. and drowsed with wine it lay; the sentinels
  24. they slaughtered, and through gates now opened wide
  25. let in their fellows, and arrayed for war
  26. th' auxiliar legions of the dark design.
  1. That hour it was when heaven's first gift of sleep
  2. on weary hearts of men most sweetly steals.
  3. O, then my slumbering senses seemed to see
  4. Hector, with woeful face and streaming eyes;
  5. I seemed to see him from the chariot trailing,
  6. foul with dark dust and gore, his swollen feet
  7. pierced with a cruel thong. Ah me! what change
  8. from glorious Hector when he homeward bore
  9. the spoils of fierce Achilles; or hurled far
  10. that shower of torches on the ships of Greece!
  11. Unkempt his beard, his tresses thick with blood,
  12. and all those wounds in sight which he did take
  13. defending Troy. Then, weeping as I spoke,
  14. I seemed on that heroic shape to call
  15. with mournful utterance: “O star of Troy!
  16. O surest hope and stay of all her sons!
  17. Why tarriest thou so Iong? What region sends
  18. the long-expected Hector home once more?
  19. These weary eyes that look on thee have seen
  20. hosts of thy kindred die, and fateful change
  21. upon thy people and thy city fall.
  22. O, say what dire occasion has defiled
  23. thy tranquil brows? What mean those bleeding wounds?”
  24. Silent he stood, nor anywise would stay
  25. my vain lament; but groaned, and answered thus:
  26. “Haste, goddess-born, and out of yonder flames
  27. achieve thy flight. Our foes have scaled the wall;
  28. exalted Troy is falling. Fatherland
  29. and Priam ask no more. If human arm
  30. could profit Troy, my own had kept her free.
  31. Her Lares and her people to thy hands
  32. Troy here commends. Companions let them be
  33. of all thy fortunes. Let them share thy quest
  34. of that wide realm, which, after wandering far,
  35. thou shalt achieve, at last, beyond the sea.”
  36. He spoke: and from our holy hearth brought forth
  37. the solemn fillet, the ancestral shrines,
  38. and Vesta's ever-bright, inviolate fire.
  1. Now shrieks and loud confusion swept the town;
  2. and though my father's dwelling stood apart
  3. embowered deep in trees, th' increasing din
  4. drew nearer, and the battle-thunder swelled.
  5. I woke on sudden, and up-starting scaled
  6. the roof, the tower, then stood with listening ear:
  7. 't was like an harvest burning, when wild winds
  8. uprouse the flames; 't was like a mountain stream
  9. that bursts in flood and ruinously whelms
  10. sweet fields and farms and all the ploughman's toil,
  11. whirling whole groves along; while dumb with fear,
  12. from some far cliff the shepherd hears the sound.
  13. Now their Greek plot was plain, the stratagem
  14. at last laid bare. Deiphobus' great house
  15. sank vanquished in the fire. Ucalegon's
  16. hard by was blazing, while the waters wide
  17. around Sigeum gave an answering glow.
  18. Shrill trumpets rang; Ioud shouting voices roared;
  19. wildly I armed me (when the battle calls,
  20. how dimly reason shines!); I burned to join
  21. the rally of my peers, and to the heights
  22. defensive gather. Frenzy and vast rage
  23. seized on my soul. I only sought what way
  24. with sword in hand some noble death to die.
  1. When Panthus met me, who had scarce escaped
  2. the Grecian spears,—Panthus of Othrys' line,
  3. Apollo's priest within our citadel;
  4. his holy emblems, his defeated gods,
  5. and his small grandson in his arms he bore,
  6. while toward the gates with wild, swift steps he flew.
  7. “How fares the kingdom, Panthus? What strong place
  8. is still our own?” But scarcely could I ask
  9. when thus, with many a groan, he made reply:—
  10. “Dardania's death and doom are come to-day,
  11. implacable. There is no Ilium now;
  12. our Trojan name is gone, the Teucrian throne
  13. Quite fallen. For the wrathful power of Jove
  14. has given to Argos all our boast and pride.
  15. The Greek is Iord of all yon blazing towers.
  16. yon horse uplifted on our city's heart
  17. disgorges men-at-arms. False Sinon now,
  18. with scorn exultant, heaps up flame on flame.
  19. Others throw wide the gates. The whole vast horde
  20. that out of proud Mycenae hither sailed
  21. is at us. With confronting spears they throng
  22. each narrow passage. Every steel-bright blade
  23. is flashing naked, making haste for blood.
  24. Our sentries helpless meet the invading shock
  25. and give back blind and unavailing war.”
  26. By Panthus' word and by some god impelled,
  27. I flew to battle, where the flames leaped high,
  28. where grim Bellona called, and all the air
  29. resounded high as heaven with shouts of war.
  30. Rhipeus and Epytus of doughty arm
  31. were at my side, Dymas and Hypanis,
  32. seen by a pale moon, join our little band;
  33. and young Coroebus, Mygdon's princely son,
  34. who was in Troy that hour because he loved
  35. Cassandra madly, and had made a league
  36. as Priam's kinsman with our Phrygian arms:
  37. ill-starred, to heed not what the virgin raved!
  1. When these I saw close-gathered for the fight,
  2. I thus addressed them: “Warriors, vainly brave,
  3. if ye indeed desire to follow one
  4. who dares the uttermost brave men may do,
  5. our evil plight ye see: the gods are fled
  6. from every altar and protecting fire,
  7. which were the kingdom's stay. Ye offer aid
  8. unto your country's ashes. Let us fight
  9. unto the death! To arms, my men, to arms!
  10. The single hope and stay of desperate men
  11. is their despair.” Thus did I rouse their souls.
  12. Then like the ravening wolves, some night of cloud,
  13. when cruel hunger in an empty maw
  14. drives them forth furious, and their whelps behind
  15. wait famine-throated; so through foemen's steel
  16. we flew to surest death, and kept our way
  17. straight through the midmost town . The wings of night
  18. brooded above us in vast vault of shade.
  19. But who the bloodshed of that night can tell?
  20. What tongue its deaths shall number, or what eyes
  21. find meed of tears to equal all its woe?
  22. The ancient City fell, whose throne had stood
  23. age after age. Along her streets were strewn
  24. the unresisting dead; at household shrines
  25. and by the temples of the gods they lay.
  26. Yet not alone was Teucrian blood required:
  27. oft out of vanquished hearts fresh valor flamed,
  28. and the Greek victor fell. Anguish and woe
  29. were everywhere; pale terrors ranged abroad,
  30. and multitudinous death met every eye.