Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- There, too, the helmsman Palinurus strayed :
- Who, as he whilom watched the Libyan stars,
- Had fallen, plunging from his lofty seat
- Into the billowy deep. Aeneas now
- Discerned his sad face through the blinding gloom,
- And hailed him thus : “0 Palinurus, tell
- What god was he who ravished thee away
- From me and mine, beneath the o'crwhelming wave?
- Speak on! for he who ne'er had spoke untrue,
- Apollo's self, did mock my listening mind,
- And chanted me a faithful oracle
- That thou shouldst ride the seas unharmed, and touch
- Ausonian shores. Is this the pledge divine?”
- Then he, “0 chieftain of Anchises' race,
- Apollo's tripod told thee not untrue.
- No god did thrust me down beneath the wave,
- For that strong rudder unto which I clung,
- My charge and duty, and my ship's sole guide,
- Wrenched from its place, dropped with me as I fell.
- Not for myself—by the rude seas I swear—
- Did I have terror, but lest thy good ship,
- Stripped of her gear, and her poor pilot lost,
- Should fail and founder in that rising flood.
- Three wintry nights across the boundless main
- The south wind buffeted and bore me on;
- At the fourth daybreak, lifted from the surge,
- I looked at last on Italy, and swam
- With weary stroke on stroke unto the land.
- Safe was I then. Alas! but as I climbed
- With garments wet and heavy, my clenched hand
- Grasping the steep rock, came a cruel horde
- Upon me with drawn blades, accounting me—
- So blind they were!—a wrecker's prize and spoil.
- Now are the waves my tomb; and wandering winds
- Toss me along the coast. 0, I implore,
- By heaven's sweet light, by yonder upper air,
- By thy lost father, by Iulus dear,
- Thy rising hope and joy, that from these woes,
- Unconquered chieftain, thou wilt set me free!
- Give me a grave where Velia's haven lies,
- For thou hast power! Or if some path there be,
- If thy celestial mother guide thee here
- (For not, I ween, without the grace of gods
- Wilt cross yon rivers vast, you Stygian pool)
- Reach me a hand! and bear with thee along!
- Until (least gift!) death bring me peace and calm.”
- Such words he spoke: the priestess thus replied:
- “Why, Palinurus, these unblest desires?
- Wouldst thou, unsepulchred, behold the wave
- Of Styx, stern river of th' Eumenides?
- Wouldst thou, unbidden, tread its fearful strand?
- Hope not by prayer to change the laws of Heaven!
- But heed my words, and in thy memory
- Cherish and keep, to cheer this evil time.
- Lo, far and wide, led on by signs from Heaven,
- Thy countrymen from many a templed town
- Shall consecrate thy dust, and build thy tomb,
- A tomb with annual feasts and votive flowers,
- To Palinurus a perpetual fame!”
- Thus was his anguish stayed, from his sad heart
- Grief ebbed awhile, and even to this day,
- Our land is glad such noble name to wear.
- The twain continue now their destined way
- Unto the river's edge. The Ferryman,
- Who watched them through still groves approach his shore,
- Hailed them, at distance, from the Stygian wave,
- And with reproachful summons thus began:
- “Whoe'er thou art that in this warrior guise
- Unto my river comest,—quickly tell
- Thine errand! Stay thee where thou standest now!
- This is ghosts' land, for sleep and slumbrous dark.
- That flesh and blood my Stygian ship should bear
- Were lawless wrong. Unwillingly I took
- Alcides, Theseus, and Pirithous,
- Though sons of gods, too mighty to be quelled.
- One bound in chains yon warder of Hell's door,
- And dragged him trembling from our monarch's throne:
- The others, impious, would steal away
- Out of her bride-bed Pluto's ravished Queen.”
- Briefly th' Amphrysian priestess made reply:
- “Not ours, such guile: Fear not! This warrior's arms
- Are innocent. Let Cerberus from his cave
- Bay ceaselessly, the bloodless shades to scare;
- Let Proserpine immaculately keep
- The house and honor of her kinsman King.
- Trojan Aeneas, famed for faithful prayer
- And victory in arms, descends to seek
- His father in this gloomy deep of death.
- If loyal goodness move not such as thee,
- This branch at least” (she drew it from her breast)
- “Thou knowest well.”
- Then cooled his wrathful heart;
- With silent lips he looked and wondering eyes
- Upon that fateful, venerable wand,
- Seen only once an age. Shoreward he turned,
- And pushed their way his boat of leaden hue.
- The rows of crouching ghosts along the thwarts
- He scattered, cleared a passage, and gave room
- To great Aeneas. The light shallop groaned
- Beneath his weight, and, straining at each seam,
- Took in the foul flood with unstinted flow.
- At last the hero and his priestess-guide
- Came safe across the river, and were moored
- 'mid sea-green sedges in the formless mire.
- Here Cerberus, with triple-throated roar,
- Made all the region ring, as there he lay
- At vast length in his cave. The Sibyl then,
- Seeing the serpents writhe around his neck,
- Threw down a loaf with honeyed herbs imbued
- And drowsy essences: he, ravenous,
- Gaped wide his three fierce mouths and snatched the bait,
- Crouched with his large backs loose upon the ground,
- And filled his cavern floor from end to end.
- Aeneas through hell's portal moved, while sleep
- Its warder buried; then he fled that shore
- Of Stygian stream, whence travellers ne'er return.
- Now hears he sobs, and piteous, lisping cries
- Of souls of babes upon the threshold plaining;
- Whom, ere they took their portion of sweet life,
- Dark Fate from nursing bosoms tore, and plunged
- In bitterness of death. Nor far from these,
- The throng of dead by unjust judgment slain.
- Not without judge or law these realms abide:
- Wise Minos there the urn of justice moves,
- And holds assembly of the silent shades,
- Hearing the stories of their lives and deeds.
- Close on this place those doleful ghosts abide,
- Who, not for crime, but loathing life and light
- With their own hands took death, and cast away
- The vital essence. Willingly, alas!
- They now would suffer need, or burdens bear,
- If only life were given! But Fate forbids.
- Around them winds the sad, unlovely wave
- Of Styx: nine times it coils and interflows.
- Not far from hence, on every side outspread,
- The Fields of Sorrow lie,—such name they bear;
- Here all whom ruthless love did waste away
- Wander in paths unseen, or in the gloom
- Of dark myrtle grove: not even in death
- Have they forgot their griefs of long ago.
- Here impious Phaedra and poor Procris bide;
- Lorn Eriphyle bares the vengeful wounds
- Her own son's dagger made; Evadne here,
- And foul are seen; hard by,
- Laodamia, nobly fond and fair;
- And Caeneus, not a boy, but maiden now,
- By Fate remoulded to her native seeming.
- Here Tyrian Dido, too, her wound unhealed,
- Roamed through a mighty wood. The Trojan's eyes
- Beheld her near him through the murky gloom,
- As when, in her young month and crescent pale,
- One sees th' o'er-clouded moon, or thinks he sees.
- Down dropped his tears, and thus he fondly spoke:
- “0 suffering Dido! Were those tidings true
- That thou didst fling thee on the fatal steel?
- Thy death, ah me! I dealt it. But I swear
- By stars above us, by the powers in Heaven,
- Or whatsoever oath ye dead believe,
- That not by choice I fled thy shores, 0 Queen!
- Divine decrees compelled me, even as now
- Among these ghosts I pass, and thread my way
- Along this gulf of night and loathsome land.
- How could I deem my cruel taking leave
- Would bring thee at the last to all this woe?
- 0, stay! Why shun me? Wherefore haste away?
- Our last farewell! Our doom! I speak it now!”
- Thus, though she glared with fierce, relentless gaze,
- Aaeneas, with fond words and tearful plea,
- Would soothe her angry soul. But on the ground
- She fixed averted eyes. For all he spoke
- Moved her no more than if her frowning brow
- Were changeless flint or carved in Parian stone.
- Then, after pause, away in wrath she fled,
- And refuge took within the cool, dark grove,
- Where her first spouse, Sichaeus, with her tears
- Mingled his own in mutual love and true.
- Aeneas, none the less, her guiltless woe
- With anguish knew, watched with dimmed eyes her way,
- And pitied from afar the fallen Queen.
- But now his destined way he must be gone;
- Now the last regions round the travellers lie,
- Where famous warriors in the darkness dwell:
- Here Tydeus comes in view, with far-renowned
- Parthenopaeus and Adrastus pale;
- Here mourned in upper air with many a moan,
- In battle fallen, the Dardanidae,
- Whose long defile Aeneas groans to see:
- Glaucus and Medon and Thersilochus,
- Antenor's children three, and Ceres' priest,
- That Polypoetes, and Idaeus still.
- Keeping the kingly chariot and spear.
- Around him left and right the crowding shades
- Not only once would see, but clutch and cling
- Obstructive, asking on what quest he goes.
- Soon as the princes of Argolic blood,
- With line on line of Agamemnon's men,
- Beheld the hero and his glittering arms
- Flash through the dark, they trembled with amaze,
- Or turned in flight, as if once more they fled
- To shelter of the ships; some raised aloft
- A feeble shout, or vainly opened wide
- Their gaping lips in mockery of sound.
- Here Priam's son, with body rent and torn,
- is seen,—his mangled face,
- His face and bloody hands, his wounded head
- Of ears and nostrils infamously shorn.
- Scarce could Aeneas know the shuddering shade
- That strove to hide its face and shameful scar;
- But, speaking first, he said, in their own tongue:
- “Deiphobus, strong warrior, nobly born
- Of Teucer's royal stem, what ruthless foe
- Could wish to wreak on thee this dire revenge?
- Who ventured, unopposed, so vast a wrong?
- The rumor reached me how, that deadly night,
- Wearied with slaying Greeks, thyself didst fall
- Prone on a mingled heap of friends and foes.
- Then my own hands did for thy honor build
- An empty tomb upon the Trojan shore,
- And thrice with echoing voice I called thy shade.
- Thy name and arms are there. But, 0 my friend,
- Thee could I nowhere find, but launched away,
- Nor o'er thy bones their native earth could fling.”
- To him the son of Priam thus replied:
- “Nay, friend, no hallowed rite was left undone,
- But every debt to death and pity due
- The shades of thy Deiphobus received.
- My fate it was, and Helen's murderous wrong,
- Wrought me this woe; of her these tokens tell.
- For how that last night in false hope we passed,
- Thou knowest,—ah, too well we both recall!
- When up the steep of Troy the fateful horse
- Came climbing, pregnant with fierce men-at-arms,
- 't was she, accurst, who led the Phrygian dames
- In choric dance and false bacchantic song,
- And, waving from the midst a lofty brand,
- Signalled the Greeks from Ilium's central tower
- In that same hour on my sad couch I lay,
- Exhausted by long care and sunk in sleep,
- That sweet, deep sleep, so close to tranquil death.
- But my illustrious bride from all the house
- Had stolen all arms; from 'neath my pillowed head
- She stealthily bore off my trusty sword;
- Then loud on Menelaus did she call,
- And with her own false hand unbarred the door;
- Such gift to her fond lord she fain would send
- To blot the memory of his ancient wrong!
- Why tell the tale, how on my couch they broke,
- While their accomplice, vile Aeolides,
- Counselled to many a crime. 0 heavenly Powers!
- Reward these Greeks their deeds of wickedness,
- If with clean lips upon your wrath I call!
- But, friend, what fortunes have thy life befallen?
- Tell point by point. Did waves of wandering seas
- Drive thee this way, or some divine command?
- What chastisement of fortune thrusts thee on
- Toward this forlorn abode of night and cloud?”
- While thus they talked, the crimsoned car of Morn
- Had wheeled beyond the midmost point of heaven,
- On her ethereal road. The princely pair
- Had wasted thus the whole brief gift of hours;
- But Sibyl spoke the warning: “Night speeds by,
- And we, Aeneas, lose it in lamenting.
- Here comes the place where cleaves our way in twain.
- Thy road, the right, toward Pluto's dwelling goes,
- And leads us to Elysium. But the left
- Speeds sinful souls to doom, and is their path
- To Tartarus th' accurst.”
- Cried out: “0 priestess, be not wroth with us!
- Back to the ranks with yonder ghosts I go.
- 0 glory of my race, pass on! Thy lot
- Be happier than mine!” He spoke, and fled.