Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- When from the eastern waves the light of morn
- began to peer, and from the upper sky
- Aurora flamed away the dark and dew,
- out of the forest sprang a startling shape
- of hunger-wasted misery; a man
- in wretched guise, who shoreward came with hands
- outstretched in supplication. We turned back
- and scanned him well. All grime and foulness he,
- with long and tangled beard, his savage garb
- fastened with thorns; but in all else he seemed
- a Greek, and in his country's league of arms
- sent to the seige of Troy. Then he beheld
- the Dardan habit, and our Trojan steel,
- he somewhat paused, as if in dread dismay
- such sight to see, and falteringly moved;
- but soon with headlong steps he sought the shore,
- ejaculating broken sobs and prayers:
- “By stars above! By gods on high! O, hear!
- By this bright heavenly air we mortals breathe,
- save me, sweet Trojans! Carry me away
- unto what land ye will! I ask no more.
- I came, I know it, in the ships of Greece;
- and I did war, 't is true, with Ilium's gods.
- O, if the crime deserve it, fling my corse
- on yonder waves, and in the boundless brine
- sink me forever! Give me in my death
- the comfort that by human hands I die.”
- He clasped our knees, and writhing on his own
- clung fast. We bid him tell his race and name,
- and by what fate pursued. Anchises gave
- his own right hand in swift and generous aid,
- and by prompt token cheered the exile's heart,
- who, banishing his fears, poured forth this tale :—
- “My home was Ithaca, and I partook
- the fortunes of Ulysses evil-starred.
- My name is Achemenides, my sire
- was Adamastus, and I sailed for Troy,
- being so poor,—O, that I ne'er had change
- the lot I bore! In yon vast Cyclops' cave
- my comrades, flying from its gruesome door,
- left me behind, forgotten. 'T is a house
- of gory feasts of flesh, 't is deep and dark,
- and vaulted high. He looms as high as heaven;
- I pray the blessed gods to rid the earth
- of the vile monster! None can look on him,
- none speak with him. He feeds on clotted gore
- of disembowelled men. These very eyes
- saw him seize two of our own company,
- and, as he lolled back in the cave, he clutched
- and dashed them on the stones, fouling the floor
- with torrent of their blood; myself I saw him
- crunch with his teeth the dripping, bloody limbs
- still hot and pulsing on his hungry jaw.
- But not without reward! For such a sight
- Ulysses would not brook, and Ithaca
- forgot not in such strait the name he bore.
- For soon as, gorged with feasting and o'ercome
- with drunken slumber, the foul giant lay
- sprawled through the cave, his head dropped helpless down,
- disgorging as he slept thick drool of gore
- and gobbets drenched with bloody wine; then we,
- calling on Heaven and taking place by lot,
- drew round him like one man, and with a beam
- sharpened at end bored out that monster eye,
- which, huge and sole, lay under the grim brow,
- round as an Argive shield or Phoebus' star.
- Thus took we joyful vengeance for the shades
- of our lost mates. But, O ill-fated men!
- Fly, I implore, and cut the cables free
- along the beach! For in the land abide,
- like Polyphemus, who in hollow cave
- kept fleecy sheep, and milked his fruitful ewes,
- a hundred other, huge as he, who rove
- wide o'er this winding shore and mountains fair:
- Cyclops accursed, bestial! Thrice the moon
- has filled her horns with light, while here I dwell
- in lonely woods and lairs of creatures wild;
- or from tall cliffs out-peering I discern
- the Cyclops, and shrink shuddering from the sound
- of their vast step and cry. My sorry fare
- is berries and hard corners dropped from trees,
- or herb-roots torn out from the niggard ground.
- Though watching the whole sea, only today
- Have I had sight of ships. To you I fled.
- Whate'er ye be, it was my only prayer
- to 'scape that monster brood. I ask no more.
- O, set me free by any death ye will!”
- He scarce had said, when moving o'er the crest
- of a high hill a giant shape we saw:
- that shepherd Polyphemus, with his flocks
- down-wending to the well-known water-side;
- huge, shapeless, horrible, with blinded eye,
- bearing a lopped pine for a staff, he made
- his footing sure, while the white, fleecy sheep,
- sole pleasure now, and solace of his woes,
- ran huddling at his side.
- Soon to the vast flood of the level brine
- he came, and washed the flowing gore away
- from that out-hollowed eye; he gnashed his teeth,
- groaning, and deep into the watery way
- stalked on, his tall bulk wet by scarce a wave.
- We fled in haste, though far, and with us bore
- the truthful suppliant; cut silently
- the anchor-ropes, and, bending to the oar,
- swept on with eager strokes clean out to sea.
- Aware he was, and toward our loud halloo
- whirled sudden round; but when no power had he
- to seize or harm, nor could his fierce pursuit
- o'ertake the Ionian surges as they rolled,
- he raised a cry incredible; the sea
- with all its billows trembled; the wide shore
- of Italy from glens and gorges moaned,
- and Aetna roared from every vaulted cave.
- Then rallied from the grove-clad, Iofty isle
- the Cyclops' clan, and lined the beach and bay.
- We saw each lonely eyeball glare in vain,
- as side by side those brothers Aetna-born
- stood towering high, a conclave dark and dire:
- as when, far up some mountain's famous crest,
- wind-fronting oaks or cone-clad cypresses
- have made assembling in the solemn hills,
- Jove's giant wood or Dian's sacred grove.
- We, terror-struck, would fly we knew not where,
- with loosened sheet and canvas swelling strong
- before a welcome wind; but Helenus
- bade us both Scylla and Charybdis fear,
- where 'twixt the twain death straitly hems the way;
- and so the counsel was to veer our bark
- the course it came. But lo! a northern gale
- burst o'er us from Pelorus' narrowed side,
- and on we rode far past Pantagia's bay
- of unhewn rock, and past the haven strong
- of Megara, and Thapsus Iying low.
- Such were the names retold, and such the shores
- shown us by Achemenides, whose fate
- made him familiar there, for he had sailed
- with evil-starred Ulysses o'er that sea.
- Off the Sicilian shore an island lies,
- wave-washed Plemmyrium, called in olden days
- Ortygia; here Alpheus, river-god,
- from Elis flowed by secret sluice, they say,
- beneath the sea, and mingles at thy mouth,
- fair Arethusa! with Sicilian waves.
- Our voices hailed the great gods of the land
- with reverent prayer; then skirted we the shore,
- where smooth Helorus floods the fruitful plain.
- Under Pachynus' beetling precipice
- we kept our course; then Camarina rose
- in distant view, firm-seated evermore
- by Fate's decree; and that far-spreading vale
- of Gela, with the name of power it takes
- from its wide river; and, uptowering far,
- the ramparts of proud Acragas appeared,
- where fiery steeds were bred in days of old.
- Borne by the winds, along thy coast I fled,
- Selinus, green with palm! and past the shore
- of Lilybaeum with its treacherous reef;
- till at the last the port of Drepanum
- received me to its melancholy strand.
- Here, woe is me I outworn by stormful seas,
- my sire, sole comfort of my grievous doom,
- Anchises ceased to be. O best of sires!
- Here didst thou leave me in the weary way;
- through all our perils—O the bitter loss! —
- borne safely, but in vain. King Helenus,
- whose prophet-tongue of dark events foretold,
- spoke not this woe; nor did Celeno's curse
- of this forebode. Such my last loss and pain;
- such, of my weary way, the destined goal.
- From thence departing, the divine behest
- impelled me to thy shores, O listening queen!
- Such was, while all gave ear, the tale sublime
- father Aeneas, none but he, set forth
- of wanderings and of dark decrees divine:
- silent at last, he ceased, and took repose.
- Now felt the Queen the sharp, slow-gathering pangs
- of love; and out of every pulsing vein
- nourished the wound and fed its viewless fire.
- Her hero's virtues and his lordly line
- keep calling to her soul; his words, his glance,
- cling to her heart like lingering, barbed steel,
- and rest and peace from her vexed body fly.
- A new day's dawn with Phoebus' lamp divine
- lit up all lands, and from the vaulted heaven
- Aurora had dispelled the dark and dew;
- when thus unto the ever-answering heart
- of her dear sister spoke the stricken Queen:
- “Anna, my sister, what disturbing dreams
- perplex me and alarm? What guest is this
- new-welcomed to our house? How proud his mien!
- What dauntless courage and exploits of war!
- Sooth, I receive it for no idle tale
- that of the gods he sprang. 'T is cowardice
- betrays the base-born soul. Ah me! How fate
- has smitten him with storms! What dire extremes
- of war and horror in his tale he told!
- O, were it not immutably resolved
- in my fixed heart, that to no shape of man
- I would be wed again (since my first love
- left me by death abandoned and betrayed);
- loathed I not so the marriage torch and train,
- I could—who knows?—to this one weakness yield.
- Anna, I hide it not! But since the doom
- of my ill-starred Sichaeus, when our shrines
- were by a brother's murder dabbled o'er,
- this man alone has moved me; he alone
- has shaken my weak will. I seem to feel
- the motions of love's lost, familiar fire.
- But may the earth gape open where I tread,
- and may almighty Jove with thunder-scourge
- hurl me to Erebus' abysmal shade,
- to pallid ghosts and midnight fathomless,
- before, O Chastity! I shall offend
- thy holy power, or cast thy bonds away!
- He who first mingled his dear life with mine
- took with him all my heart. 'T is his alone —
- o, let it rest beside him in the grave!”
- She spoke: the bursting tears her breast o'erflowed.
- “O dearer to thy sister than her life,”
- Anna replied, “wouldst thou in sorrow's weed
- waste thy long youth alone, nor ever know
- sweet babes at thine own breast, nor gifts of love?
- Will dust and ashes, or a buried ghost
- reck what we do? 'T is true thy grieving heart
- was cold to earlier wooers, Libya's now,
- and long ago in Tyre. Iarbas knew
- thy scorn, and many a prince and captain bred
- in Afric's land of glory. Why resist
- a love that makes thee glad? Hast thou no care
- what alien lands are these where thou dost reign?
- Here are Gaetulia's cities and her tribes
- unconquered ever; on thy borders rove
- Numidia's uncurbed cavalry; here too
- lies Syrtis' cruel shore, and regions wide
- of thirsty desert, menaced everywhere
- by the wild hordes of Barca. Shall I tell
- of Tyre's hostilities, the threats and rage
- of our own brother? Friendly gods, I bow,
- wafted the Teucrian ships, with Juno's aid,
- to these our shores. O sister, what a throne,
- and what imperial city shall be thine,
- if thus espoused! With Trojan arms allied
- how far may not our Punic fame extend
- in deeds of power? Call therefore on the gods
- to favor thee; and, after omens fair,
- give queenly welcome, and contrive excuse
- to make him tarry, while yon wintry seas
- are loud beneath Orion's stormful star,
- and on his battered ships the season frowns.”
- So saying, she stirred a passion-burning breast
- to Iove more madly still; her words infused
- a doubting mind with hope, and bade the blush
- of shame begone. First to the shrines they went
- and sued for grace; performing sacrifice,
- choosing an offering of unblemished ewes,
- to law-bestowing Ceres, to the god
- of light, to sire Lyeus, Iord of wine;
- but chiefly unto Juno, patroness
- of nuptial vows. There Dido, beauteous Queen
- held forth in her right hand the sacred bowl
- and poured it full between the lifted horns
- of the white heifer; or on temple floors
- she strode among the richly laden shrines,
- the eyes of gods upon her, worshipping
- with many a votive gift; or, peering deep
- into the victims' cloven sides, she read
- the fate-revealing tokens trembling there.
- How blind the hearts of prophets be! Alas!
- Of what avail be temples and fond prayers
- to change a frenzied mind? Devouring ever,
- love's fire burns inward to her bones; she feels
- quick in her breast the viewless, voiceless wound.
- Ill-fated Dido ranges up and down
- the spaces of her city, desperate
- her life one flame—like arrow-stricken doe
- through Cretan forest rashly wandering,
- pierced by a far-off shepherd, who pursues
- with shafts, and leaves behind his light-winged steed,
- not knowing; while she scours the dark ravines
- of Dicte and its woodlands; at her heart
- the mortal barb irrevocably clings.
- around her city's battlements she guides
- aeneas, to make show of Sidon's gold,
- and what her realm can boast; full oft her voice
- essays to speak and frembling dies away:
- or, when the daylight fades, she spreads anew
- a royal banquet, and once more will plead
- mad that she is, to hear the Trojan sorrow;
- and with oblivious ravishment once more
- hangs on his lips who tells; or when her guests
- are scattered, and the wan moon's fading horn
- bedims its ray, while many a sinking star
- invites to slumber, there she weeps alone
- in the deserted hall, and casts her down
- on the cold couch he pressed. Her love from far
- beholds her vanished hero and receives
- his voice upon her ears; or to her breast,
- moved by a father's image in his child,
- she clasps Ascanius, seeking to deceive
- her unblest passion so. Her enterprise
- of tower and rampart stops: her martial host
- no Ionger she reviews, nor fashions now
- defensive haven and defiant wall;
- but idly all her half-built bastions frown,
- and enginery of sieges, high as heaven.
- But soon the chosen spouse of Jove perceived
- the Queen's infection; and because the voice
- of honor to such frenzy spoke not, she,
- daughter of Saturn, unto Venus turned
- and counselled thus: “How noble is the praise,
- how glorious the spoils of victory,
- for thee and for thy boy! Your names should be
- in lasting, vast renown—that by the snare
- of two great gods in league one woman fell!
- it 'scapes me not that my protected realms
- have ever been thy fear, and the proud halls
- of Carthage thy vexation and annoy.
- Why further go? Prithee, what useful end
- has our long war? Why not from this day forth
- perpetual peace and nuptial amity?
- Hast thou not worked thy will? Behold and see
- how Iove-sick Dido burns, and all her flesh
- 'The madness feels! So let our common grace
- smile on a mingled people! Let her serve
- a Phrygian husband, while thy hands receive
- her Tyrian subjects for the bridal dower!”
- In answer (reading the dissembler's mind
- which unto Libyan shores were fain to shift
- italia's future throne) thus Venus spoke:
- “'T were mad to spurn such favor, or by choice
- be numbered with thy foes. But can it be
- that fortune on thy noble counsel smiles?
- To me Fate shows but dimly whether Jove
- unto the Trojan wanderers ordains
- a common city with the sons of Tyre,
- with mingling blood and sworn, perpetual peace.
- His wife thou art; it is thy rightful due
- to plead to know his mind. Go, ask him, then!
- For humbly I obey!” With instant word
- Juno the Queen replied: “Leave that to me!
- But in what wise our urgent task and grave
- may soon be sped, I will in brief unfold
- to thine attending ear. A royal hunt
- in sylvan shades unhappy Dido gives
- for her Aeneas, when to-morrow's dawn
- uplifts its earliest ray and Titan's beam
- shall first unveil the world. But I will pour
- black storm-clouds with a burst of heavy hail
- along their way; and as the huntsmen speed
- to hem the wood with snares, I will arouse
- all heaven with thunder. The attending train
- shall scatter and be veiled in blinding dark,
- while Dido and her hero out of Troy
- to the same cavern fly. My auspices
- I will declare—if thou alike wilt bless;
- and yield her in true wedlock for his bride.
- Such shall their spousal be!” To Juno's will
- Cythera's Queen inclined assenting brow,
- and laughed such guile to see. Aurora rose,
- and left the ocean's rim. The city's gates
- pour forth to greet the morn a gallant train
- of huntsmen, bearing many a woven snare
- and steel-tipped javelin; while to and fro
- run the keen-scented dogs and Libyan squires.
- The Queen still keeps her chamber; at her doors
- the Punic lords await; her palfrey, brave
- in gold and purple housing, paws the ground
- and fiercely champs the foam-flecked bridle-rein.
- At last, with numerous escort, forth she shines:
- her Tyrian pall is bordered in bright hues,
- her quiver, gold; her tresses are confined
- only with gold; her robes of purple rare
- meet in a golden clasp. To greet her come
- the noble Phrygian guests; among them smiles
- the boy Iulus; and in fair array
- Aeneas, goodliest of all his train.
- In such a guise Apollo (when he leaves
- cold Lycian hills and Xanthus' frosty stream
- to visit Delos to Latona dear)
- ordains the song, while round his altars cry
- the choirs of many islands, with the pied,
- fantastic Agathyrsi; soon the god
- moves o'er the Cynthian steep; his flowing hair
- he binds with laurel garland and bright gold;
- upon his shining shoulder as he goes
- the arrows ring:—not less uplifted mien
- aeneas wore; from his illustrious brow
- such beauty shone. Soon to the mountains tall
- the cavalcade comes nigh, to pathless haunts
- of woodland creatures; the wild goats are seen,
- from pointed crag descending leap by leap
- down the steep ridges; in the vales below
- are routed deer, that scour the spreading plain,
- and mass their dust-blown squadrons in wild flight,
- far from the mountain's bound. Ascanius
- flushed with the sport, spurs on a mettled steed
- from vale to vale, and many a flying herd
- his chase outspeeds; but in his heart he prays
- among these tame things suddenly to see
- a tusky boar, or, leaping from the hills,
- a growling mountain-lion, golden-maned.
- Meanwhile low thunders in the distant sky
- mutter confusedly; soon bursts in full
- the storm-cloud and the hail. The Tyrian troop
- is scattered wide; the chivalry of Troy,
- with the young heir of Dardan's kingly line,
- of Venus sprung, seek shelter where they may,
- with sudden terror; down the deep ravines
- the swollen torrents roar. In that same hour
- Queen Dido and her hero out of Troy
- to the same cavern fly. Old Mother-Earth
- and wedlock-keeping Juno gave the sign;
- the flash of lightnings on the conscious air
- were torches to the bridal; from the hills
- the wailing wood-nymphs sobbed a wedding song.
- Such was that day of death, the source and spring
- of many a woe. For Dido took no heed
- of honor and good-name; nor did she mean
- her loves to hide; but called the lawlessness
- a marriage, and with phrases veiled her shame.
- Swift through the Libyan cities Rumor sped.
- Rumor! What evil can surpass her speed?
- In movement she grows mighty, and achieves
- strength and dominion as she swifter flies.
- small first, because afraid, she soon exalts
- her stature skyward, stalking through the lands
- and mantling in the clouds her baleful brow.
- The womb of Earth, in anger at high Heaven,
- bore her, they say, last of the Titan spawn,
- sister to Coeus and Enceladus.
- Feet swift to run and pinions like the wind
- the dreadful monster wears; her carcase huge
- is feathered, and at root of every plume
- a peering eye abides; and, strange to tell,
- an equal number of vociferous tongues,
- foul, whispering lips, and ears, that catch at all.
- At night she spreads midway 'twixt earth and heaven
- her pinions in the darkness, hissing loud,
- nor e'er to happy slumber gives her eyes:
- but with the morn she takes her watchful throne
- high on the housetops or on lofty towers,
- to terrify the nations. She can cling
- to vile invention and malignant wrong,
- or mingle with her word some tidings true.
- She now with changeful story filled men's ears,
- exultant, whether false or true she sung:
- how, Trojan-born Aeneas having come,
- Dido, the lovely widow, Iooked his way,
- deigning to wed; how all the winter long
- they passed in revel and voluptuous ease,
- to dalliance given o'er; naught heeding now
- of crown or kingdom—shameless! lust-enslaved!
- Such tidings broadcast on the lips of men
- the filthy goddess spread; and soon she hied
- to King Iarbas, where her hateful song
- to newly-swollen wrath his heart inflamed.
- Him the god Ammon got by forced embrace
- upon a Libyan nymph; his kingdoms wide
- possessed a hundred ample shrines to Jove,
- a hundred altars whence ascended ever
- the fires of sacrifice, perpetual seats
- for a great god's abode, where flowing blood
- enriched the ground, and on the portals hung
- garlands of every flower. The angered King,
- half-maddened by malignant Rumor's voice,
- unto his favored altars came, and there,
- surrounded by the effluence divine,
- upraised in prayer to Jove his suppliant hands.
- “Almighty Jupiter, to whom each day,
- at banquet on the painted couch reclined,
- Numidia pours libation! Do thine eyes
- behold us? Or when out of yonder heaven,
- o sire, thou launchest the swift thunderbolt,
- is it for naught we fear thee? Do the clouds
- shoot forth blind fire to terrify the soul
- with wild, unmeaning roar? O, Iook upon
- that woman, who was homeless in our realm,
- and bargained where to build her paltry town,
- receiving fertile coastland for her farms,
- by hospitable grant! She dares disdain
- our proffered nuptial vow. She has proclaimed
- Aeneas partner of her bed and throne.
- And now that Paris, with his eunuch crew,
- beneath his chin and fragrant, oozy hair
- ties the soft Lydian bonnet, boasting well
- his stolen prize. But we to all these fanes,
- though they be thine, a fruitless offering bring,
- and feed on empty tales our trust in thee.”
- As thus he prayed and to the altars clung,
- th' Omnipotent gave ear, and turned his gaze
- upon the royal dwelling, where for love
- the amorous pair forgot their place and name.
- Then thus to Mercury he gave command:
- “Haste thee, my son, upon the Zephyrs call,
- and take thy winged way! My mandate bear
- unto that prince of Troy who tarries now
- in Tyrian Carthage, heedless utterly
- of empire Heaven-bestowed. On winged winds
- hasten with my decrees. Not such the man
- his beauteous mother promised; not for this
- twice did she shield him from the Greeks in arms:
- but that he might rule Italy, a land
- pregnant with thrones and echoing with war;
- that he of Teucer's seed a race should sire,
- and bring beneath its law the whole wide world.
- If such a glory and event supreme
- enkindle not his bosom; if such task
- to his own honor speak not; can the sire
- begrudge Ascanius the heritage
- of the proud name of Rome? What plans he now?
- What mad hope bids him linger in the lap
- of enemies, considering no more
- the land Lavinian and Ausonia's sons.
- Let him to sea! Be this our final word:
- this message let our herald faithful bear.”
- He spoke. The god a prompt obedience gave
- to his great sire's command. He fastened first
- those sandals of bright gold, which carry him
- aloft o'er land or sea, with airy wings
- that race the fleeting wind; then lifted he
- his wand, wherewith he summons from the grave
- pale-featured ghosts, or, if he will, consigns
- to doleful Tartarus; or by its power
- gives slumber or dispels; or quite unseals
- the eyelids of the dead: on this relying,
- he routs the winds or cleaves th' obscurity
- of stormful clouds. Soon from his flight he spied
- the summit and the sides precipitous
- of stubborn Atlas, whose star-pointing peak
- props heaven; of Atlas, whose pine-wreathed brow
- is girdled evermore with misty gloom
- and lashed of wind and rain; a cloak of snow
- melts on his shoulder; from his aged chin
- drop rivers, and ensheathed in stiffening ice
- glitters his great grim beard. Here first was stayed
- the speed of Mercury's well-poising wing;
- here making pause, from hence he headlong flung
- his body to the sea; in motion like
- some sea-bird's, which along the levelled shore
- or round tall crags where rove the swarming fish,
- flies Iow along the waves: o'er-hovering so
- between the earth and skies, Cyllene's god
- flew downward from his mother's mountain-sire,
- parted the winds and skimmed the sandy merge
- of Libya. When first his winged feet
- came nigh the clay-built Punic huts, he saw
- Aeneas building at a citadel,
- and founding walls and towers; at his side
- was girt a blade with yellow jaspers starred,
- his mantle with the stain of Tyrian shell
- flowed purple from his shoulder, broidered fair
- by opulent Dido with fine threads of gold,
- her gift of love; straightway the god began:
- “Dost thou for lofty Carthage toil, to build
- foundations strong? Dost thou, a wife's weak thrall,
- build her proud city? Hast thou, shameful loss!
- Forgot thy kingdom and thy task sublime?
- From bright Olympus, I. He who commands
- all gods, and by his sovran deity
- moves earth and heaven—he it was who bade
- me bear on winged winds his high decree.
- What plan is thine? By what mad hope dost thou
- linger so Iong in lap of Libyan land?
- If the proud reward of thy destined way
- move not thy heart, if all the arduous toil
- to thine own honor speak not, Iook upon
- Iulus in his bloom, thy hope and heir
- Ascanius. It is his rightful due
- in Italy o'er Roman lands to reign.”
- After such word Cyllene's winged god
- vanished, and e'er his accents died away,
- dissolved in air before the mortal's eyes.
- Aeneas at the sight stood terror-dumb
- with choking voice and horror-rising hair.
- He fain would fly at once and get him gone
- from that voluptuous land, much wondering
- at Heaven's wrathful word. Alas! how stir?
- What cunning argument can plead his cause
- before th' infuriate Queen? How break such news?
- Flashing this way and that, his startled mind
- makes many a project and surveys them all.
- But, pondering well, his final counsel stopped
- at this resolve: he summoned to his side
- Mnestheus, Sergestus, and Serestus bold,
- and bade them fit the fleet, all silently
- gathering the sailors and collecting gear,
- but carefully dissembling what emprise
- such novel stir intends: himself the while
- (Since high-born Dido dreamed not love so fond
- could have an end) would seek an audience,
- at some indulgent time, and try what shift
- such matters may require. With joy they heard,
- and wrought, assiduous, at their prince's plan.
- But what can cheat true love? The Queen foreknew
- his stratagem, and all the coming change
- perceived ere it began. Her jealous fear
- counted no hour secure. That unclean tongue
- of Rumor told her fevered heart the fleet
- was fitting forth, and hastening to be gone.
- Distractedly she raved, and passion-tossed
- roamed through her city, like a Maenad roused
- by the wild rout of Bacchus, when are heard
- the third year's orgies, and the midnight scream
- to cold Cithaeron calls the frenzied crew.
- Finding Aeneas, thus her plaint she poured:
- “Didst hope to hide it, false one, that such crime
- was in thy heart,—to steal without farewell
- out of my kingdom? Did our mutual joy
- not move thee; nor thine own true promise given
- once on a time? Nor Dido, who will die
- a death of sorrow? Why compel thy ships
- to brave the winter stars? Why off to sea
- so fast through stormy skies? O, cruelty!
- If Troy still stood, and if thou wert not bound
- for alien shore unknown, wouldst steer for Troy
- through yonder waste of waves? Is it from me
- thou takest flight? O, by these flowing tears,
- by thine own plighted word (for nothing more
- my weakness left to miserable me),
- by our poor marriage of imperfect vow,
- if aught to me thou owest, if aught in me
- ever have pleased thee—O, be merciful
- to my low-fallen fortunes! I implore,
- if place be left for prayer, thy purpose change!
- Because of thee yon Libyan savages
- and nomad chiefs are grown implacable,
- and my own Tyrians hate me. Yes, for thee
- my chastity was slain and honor fair,
- by which alone to glory I aspired,
- in former days. To whom dost thou in death
- abandon me? my guest!—since but this name
- is left me of a husband! Shall I wait
- till fell Pygmalion, my brother, raze
- my city walls? Or the Gaetulian king,
- Iarbas, chain me captive to his car? .
- O, if, ere thou hadst fled, I might but bear
- some pledge of love to thee, and in these halls
- watch some sweet babe Aeneas at his play,
- whose face should be the memory of thine own —
- I were not so forsaken, Iost, undone!”
- She said. But he, obeying Jove's decree,
- gazed steadfastly away; and in his heart
- with strong repression crushed his cruel pain;
- then thus the silence broke: “O Queen, not one
- of my unnumbered debts so strongly urged
- would I gainsay. Elissa's memory
- will be my treasure Iong as memory holds,
- or breath of life is mine. Hear my brief plea!
- 'T was not my hope to hide this flight I take,
- as thou hast dreamed. Nay, I did never light
- a bridegroom's torch, nor gave I thee the vow
- of marriage. Had my destiny decreed,
- that I should shape life to my heart's desire,
- and at my own will put away the weight
- of foil and pain, my place would now be found
- in Troy, among the cherished sepulchres
- of my own kin, and Priam's mansion proud
- were standing still; or these my loyal hands
- had rebuilt Ilium for her vanquished sons.
- But now to Italy Apollo's power
- commands me forth; his Lycian oracles
- are loud for Italy. My heart is there,
- and there my fatherland. If now the towers
- of Carthage and thy Libyan colony
- delight thy Tyrian eyes; wilt thou refuse
- to Trojan exiles their Ausonian shore?
- I too by Fate was driven, not less than thou,
- to wander far a foreign throne to find.
- Oft when in dewy dark night hides the world,
- and flaming stars arise, Anchises' shade
- looks on me in my dreams with angered brow.
- I think of my Ascanius, and the wrong
- to that dear heart, from whom I steal away
- Hesperia, his destined home and throne.
- But now the winged messenger of Heaven,
- sent down by Jove (I swear by thee and me!),
- has brought on winged winds his sire's command.
- My own eyes with unclouded vision saw
- the god within these walls; I have received
- with my own ears his word. No more inflame
- with lamentation fond thy heart and mine.
- 'T is not my own free act seeks Italy.”
- She with averted eyes and glance that rolled
- speechless this way and that, had listened long
- to his reply, till thus her rage broke forth:
- “No goddess gave thee birth. No Dardanus
- begot thy sires. But on its breast of stone
- Caucasus bore thee, and the tigresses
- of fell Hyrcania to thy baby lip
- their udders gave. Why should I longer show
- a lying smile? What worse can I endure?
- Did my tears draw one sigh? Did he once drop
- his stony stare? or did he yield a tear
- to my lament, or pity this fond heart?
- Why set my wrongs in order? Juno, now,
- and Jove, the son of Saturn, heed no more
- where justice lies. No trusting heart is safe
- in all this world. That waif and castaway
- I found in beggary and gave him share—
- fool that I was!—in my own royal glory.
- His Iost fleet and his sorry crews I steered
- from death away. O, how my fevered soul
- unceasing raves! Forsooth Apollo speaks!
- His Lycian oracles! and sent by Jove
- the messenger of Heaven on fleeting air
- the ruthless bidding brings! Proud business
- for gods, I trow, that such a task disturbs
- their still abodes! I hold thee back no more,
- nor to thy cunning speeches give the lie.
- Begone! Sail on to Italy, thy throne,
- through wind and wave! I pray that, if there be
- any just gods of power, thou mayest drink down
- death on the mid-sea rocks, and often call
- with dying gasps on Dido's name—while I
- pursue with vengeful fire. When cold death rends
- the body from the breath, my ghost shall sit
- forever in thy path. Full penalties
- thy stubborn heart shall pay. They'll bring me never
- in yon deep gulf of death of all thy woe.”
- Abrupt her utterance ceased; and sick at heart
- she fled the light of day, as if to shrink
- from human eyes, and left Aeneas there
- irresolute with horror, while his soul
- framed many a vain reply. Her swooning shape
- her maidens to a marble chamber bore
- and on her couch the helpless limbs reposed.