Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. Much moved Aeneas was by this wise word
  2. of his gray friend, though still his anxious soul
  3. was vexed by doubt and care. But when dark night
  4. had brought her chariot to the middle sky,
  5. the sacred shade of Sire Anchises seemed,
  6. from heaven descending, thus to speak aloud:
  7. “My son, than life more dear, when life was mine!
  8. O son, upon whose heart the Trojan doom
  9. has weighed so Iong! Beside thy couch I stand,
  10. at pleasure of great Jove, whose hand dispelled
  11. the mad fire from thy ships; and now he looks
  12. from heaven with pitying brow. I bid thee heed
  13. the noble counsels aged Nautes gave.
  14. Only with warriors of dauntless breast
  15. to Italy repair; of hardy breed,
  16. of wild, rough life, thy Latin foes will be.
  17. But first the shores of Pluto and the Shades
  18. thy feet must tread, and through the deep abyss
  19. of dark Avernus come to me, thy sire:
  20. for I inhabit not the guilty gloom
  21. of Tartarus, but bright Elysian day,
  22. where all the just their sweet assemblies hold.
  23. Hither the virgin Sibyl, if thou give
  24. full offerings of the blood of sable kine,
  25. shall lead thee down; and visions I will show
  26. of cities proud and nations sprung from thee.
  27. Farewell, for dewy Night has wheeled her way
  28. far past her middle course; the panting steeds
  29. of orient Morn breathe pitiless upon me.”
  30. He spoke, and passed, like fleeting clouds of smoke,
  31. to empty air. “O, whither haste away?”
  32. Aeneas cried. “Whom dost thou fly? What god
  33. from my fond yearning and embrace removes?”
  34. Then on the altar of the gods of Troy
  35. he woke the smouldering embers, at the shrine
  36. of venerable Vesta, worshipping
  37. with hallowed bread and incense burning free.