Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- One more immortal name thy death bequeathed,
- Nurse of Aeneas, to Italian shores,
- Caieta; there thy honor hath a home;
- Thy bones a name: and on Hesperia's breast
- Their proper glory.When Aeneas now
- The tribute of sepulchral vows had paid
- Beside the funeral mound, and o'er the seas
- Stillness had fallen, he flung forth his sails,
- And leaving port pursued his destined way.
- Freshly the night-winds breathe; the cloudless moon
- Outpours upon his path unstinted beam,
- And with far-trembling glory smites the sea.
- Close to the lands of Circe soon they fare,
- Where the Sun's golden daughter in far groves
- Sounds forth her ceaseless song; her lofty hall
- Is fragrant every night with flaring brands
- Of cedar, giving light the while she weaves
- With shrill-voiced shuttle at her linens fine.
- From hence are heard the loud lament and wrath
- Of lions, rebels to their linked chains
- And roaring all night long; great bristly boars
- And herded bears, in pinfold closely kept,
- Rage horribly, and monster-wolves make moan;
- Whom the dread goddess with foul juices strong
- From forms of men drove forth, and bade to wear
- the mouths and maws of beasts in Circe's thrall.
- But lest the sacred Trojans should endure
- such prodigy of doom, or anchor there
- on that destroying shore, kind Neptune filled
- their sails with winds of power, and sped them on
- in safety past the perils of that sea.
- Now morning flushed the wave, and saffron-garbed
- Aurora from her rose-red chariot beamed
- in highest heaven; the sea-winds ceased to stir;
- a sudden calm possessed the air, and tides
- of marble smoothness met the laboring oar.
- Then, gazing from the deep, Aeneas saw
- a stretch of groves, whence Tiber's smiling stream,
- its tumbling current rich with yellow sands,
- burst seaward forth: around it and above
- shore-haunting birds of varied voice and plume
- flattered the sky with song, and, circling far
- o'er river-bed and grove, took joyful wing.
- Thither to landward now his ships he steered,
- and sailed, high-hearted, up the shadowy stream.
- Hail, Erato! while olden kings and thrones
- and all their sequent story I unfold!
- How Latium's honor stood, when alien ships
- brought war to Italy, and from what cause
- the primal conflict sprang, O goddess, breathe
- upon thy bard in song. Dread wars I tell,
- array of battle, and high-hearted kings
- thrust forth to perish, when Etruria's host
- and all Hesperia gathered to the fray.
- Events of grander march impel my song,
- and loftier task I try. Latinus, then
- an aged king, held long-accepted sway
- o'er tranquil vales and towns. He was the son
- of Faunus, so the legend tells, who wed
- the nymph Marica of Laurentian stem.
- Picus was Faunus' father, whence the line
- to Saturn's Ioins ascends. O heavenly sire,
- from thee the stem began! But Fate had given
- to King Latinus' body no heirs male:
- for taken in the dawning of his day
- his only son had been; and now his home
- and spacious palace one sole daughter kept,
- who was grown ripe to wed and of full age
- to take a husband. Many suitors tried
- from all Ausonia and Latium's bounds;
- but comeliest in all their princely throng
- came Turnus, of a line of mighty sires.
- Him the queen mother chiefly loved, and yearned
- to call him soon her son. But omens dire
- and menaces from Heaven withstood her will.
- A laurel-tree grew in the royal close,
- of sacred leaf and venerated age,
- which, when he builded there his wall and tower,
- Father Latinus found, and hallowed it
- to Phoebus' grace and power, wherefrom the name
- Laurentian, which his realm and people bear.
- Unto this tree-top, wonderful to tell,
- came hosts of bees, with audible acclaim
- voyaging the stream of air, and seized a place
- on the proud, pointing crest, where the swift swarm,
- with interlacement of close-clinging feet,
- swung from the leafy bough. “Behold, there comes,”
- the prophet cried, “a husband from afar!
- To the same region by the self-same path
- behold an arm'd host taking lordly sway
- upon our city's crown!” Soon after this,
- when, coming to the shrine with torches pure,
- Lavinia kindled at her father's side
- the sacrifice, swift seemed the flame to burn
- along her flowing hair—O sight of woe!
- Over her broidered snood it sparkling flew,
- lighting her queenly tresses and her crown
- of jewels rare: then, wrapt in flaming cloud,
- from hall to hall the fire-god's gift she flung.
- This omen dread and wonder terrible
- was rumored far: for prophet-voices told
- bright honors on the virgin's head to fall
- by Fate's decree, but on her people, war.
- The King, sore troubled by these portents, sought
- oracular wisdom of his sacred sire,
- Faunus, the fate-revealer, where the groves
- stretch under high Albunea, and her stream
- roars from its haunted well, exhaling through
- vast, gloomful woods its pestilential air.
- Here all Oenotria's tribes ask oracles
- in dark and doubtful days: here, when the priest
- has brought his gifts, and in the night so still,
- couched on spread fleeces of the offered flock,
- awaiting slumber lies, then wondrously
- a host of flitting shapes he sees, and hears
- voices that come and go: with gods he holds
- high converse, or in deep Avernian gloom
- parleys with Acheron. Thither drew near
- Father Latinus, seeking truth divine.
- Obedient to the olden rite, he slew
- a hundred fleecy sheep, and pillowed lay
- upon their outstretched skins. Straightway a voice
- out of the lofty forest met his prayer.
- “Seek not in wedlock with a Latin lord
- to join thy daughter, O my son and seed!
- Beware this purposed marriage! There shall come
- sons from afar, whose blood shall bear our name
- starward; the children of their mighty loins,
- as far as eve and morn enfold the seas,
- shall see a subject world beneath their feet
- submissive lie.” This admonition given
- Latinus hid not. But on restless wing
- rumor had spread it, when the men of Troy
- along the river-bank of mounded green
- their fleet made fast.Aeneas and his chiefs,
- with fair Iulus, under spreading boughs
- of one great tree made resting-place, and set
- the banquet on. Thin loaves of altar-bread
- along the sward to bear their meats were laid
- (such was the will of Jove), and wilding fruits
- rose heaping high, with Ceres' gift below.
- Soon, all things else devoured, their hunger turned
- to taste the scanty bread, which they attacked
- with tooth and nail audacious, and consumed
- both round and square of that predestined leaven.
- “Look, how we eat our tables even!” cried
- Iulus, in a jest. Such was the word
- which bade their burdens fall. From his boy's lip
- the father caught this utterance of Fate,
- silent with wonder at the ways of Heaven;
- then swift he spoke: “Hail! O my destined shore,
- protecting deities of Ilium, hail!
- Here is our home, our country here! This day
- I publish the mysterious prophecy
- by Sire Anchises given: ‘My son,’ said he,
- ‘When hunger in strange lands shall bid devour
- the tables of thy banquet gone, then hope
- for home, though weary, and take thought to build
- a dwelling and a battlement.’ Behold!
- This was our fated hunger! This last proof
- will end our evil days. Up, then! For now
- by morning's joyful beam we will explore
- what men, what cities, in this region be,
- and, leaving ship, our several errands ply.
- Your gift to Jove outpour! Make thankful prayer
- unto Anchises' shade! To this our feast
- bring back the flowing wine!” Thereat he bound
- his forehead with green garland, calling loud
- upon the Genius of that place, and Earth,
- eldest of names divine; the Nymphs he called,
- and river-gods unknown; his voice invoked
- the night, the omen-stars through night that roll.
- Jove, Ida's child, and Phrygia's fertile Queen:
- he called his mother from Olympian skies,
- and sire from Erebus. Lo, o'er his head
- three times unclouded Jove omnipotent
- in thunder spoke, and, with effulgent ray
- from his ethereal tract outreaching far,
- shook visibly the golden-gleaming air.
- Swift, through the concourse of the Trojans, spread
- news of the day at hand when they should build
- their destined walls. So, with rejoicing heart
- at such vast omen, they set forth a feast
- with zealous emulation, ranging well
- the wine-cups fair with many a garland crowned.
- Soon as the morrow with the lamp of dawn
- looked o'er the world, they took their separate ways,
- exploring shore and towns; here spread the pools
- and fountain of Numicius; here they see
- the river Tiber, where bold Latins dwell.
- Anchises' son chose out from his brave band
- a hundred envoys, bidding them depart
- to the King's sacred city, each enwreathed
- with Pallas' silver leaf; and gifts they bear
- to plead for peace and friendship at his throne.
- While on this errand their swift steps are sped,
- Aeneas, by a shallow moat and small,
- his future city shows, breaks ground, and girds
- with mound and breastwork like a camp of war
- the Trojans' first abode. Soon, making way
- to where the Latin citadel uprose,
- the envoys scanned the battlements, and paused
- beneath its wall. Outside the city gates
- fair youths and striplings in life's early bloom
- course with swift steeds, or steer through dusty cloud
- the whirling chariot, or stretch stout bows,
- or hurl the seasoned javelin, or strive
- in boxing-bout and foot-race: one of these
- made haste on horseback to the aged King,
- with tidings of a stranger company
- in foreign garb approaching. The good King
- bade call them to his house, and took his seat
- in mid-court on his high, ancestral throne.
- Large and majestical the castle rose:
- a hundred columns lifted it in air
- upon the city's crown—the royal keep
- of Picus of Laurentum; round it lay
- deep, gloomy woods by olden worship blest.
- Here kings took sceptre and the fasces proud
- with omens fair; the selfsame sacred place
- was senate-house and temple; here was found
- a hall for hallowed feasting, where a ram
- was offered up, and at long banquet-boards
- the nation's fathers sat in due array.
- Here ranged ancestral statues roughly hewn
- of ancient cedar-wood: King Italus;
- Father Sabinus, planter of the vine,
- a curving sickle in his sculptured hand;
- gray-bearded Saturn; and the double brow
- of Janus' head; and other sires and kings
- were wardens of the door, with many a chief
- wounded in battle for his native land.
- Trophies of arms in goodly order hung
- along the columns: chariots of war
- from foeman taken, axes of round blade,
- plumed helmets, bolts and barriers of steel
- from city-gates, shields, spears, and beaks of bronze
- from captured galleys by the conqueror torn.
- Here, wielding his Quirinal augur-staff,
- girt in scant shift, and bearing on his left
- the sacred oval shield, appeared enthroned
- Picus, breaker of horses, whom his bride,
- enamoured Circe, smote with golden wand,
- and, raining o'er him potent poison-dew,
- changed to a bird of pied and dappled wings.
- In such a temple of his gods did Sire
- Latinus, on hereditary throne,
- welcome the Trojans to his halls, and thus
- with brow serene gave greeting as they came:
- “O sons of Dardanus, think not unknown
- your lineage and city! Rumored far
- your venturous voyage has been. What seek ye here?
- What cause, what quest, has brought your barks and you
- o'er the blue waters to Ausonia's hills?
- What way uncharted, or wild stress of storm,
- or what that sailors suffer in mid-sea,
- unto this river bank and haven bore?
- Doubt not our welcome! We of Latin land
- are Saturn's sons, whose equitable minds,
- not chained by statute or compulsion, keep
- in freedom what the god's good custom gave.
- Now I bethink me our Ausonian seers
- have dark, dim lore that 't was this land gave birth
- to Dardanus, who after took his way
- through Phrygian Ida's towns and Samothrace.
- Once out of Tuscan Corythus he fared;
- but now in golden house among the stars
- he has a throne, and by his altars blest
- adds to the number of the gods we praise.”
- He spoke; Ilioneus this answer made:
- “O King, great heir of Faunus! No dark storm
- impelled us o'er the flood thy realm to find.
- Nor star deceived, nor strange, bewildering shore
- threw out of our true course; but we are come
- by our free choice and with deliberate aim
- to this thy town, though exiled forth of realms
- once mightiest of all the sun-god sees
- when moving from his utmost eastern bound.
- From Jove our line began; the sons of Troy
- boast Jove to be their sire, and our true King
- is of Olympian seed. To thine abode
- Trojan Aeneas sent us. How there burst
- o'er Ida's vales from dread Mycenae's kings
- a tempest vast, and by what stroke of doom
- all Asia's world with Europe clashed in war,
- that lone wight hears whom earth's remotest isle
- has banished to the Ocean's rim, or he
- whose dwelling is the ample zone that burns
- betwixt the changeful sun-god's milder realms,
- far severed from the world. We are the men
- from war's destroying deluge safely borne
- over the waters wide. We only ask
- some low-roofed dwelling for our fathers' gods,
- some friendly shore, and, what to all is free,
- water and air. We bring no evil name
- upon thy people; thy renown will be
- but wider spread; nor of a deed so fair
- can grateful memory die. Ye ne'er will rue
- that to Ausonia's breast ye gathered Troy.
- I swear thee by the favored destinies
- of great Aeneas, by his strength of arm
- in friendship or in war, that many a tribe
- (O, scorn us not, that, bearing olive green,
- with suppliant words we come), that many a throne
- has sued us to be friends. But Fate's decree
- to this thy realm did guide. Here Dardanus
- was born; and with reiterate command
- this way Apollo pointed to the stream
- of Tiber and Numicius' haunted spring.
- Lo, these poor tributes from his greatness gone
- Aeneas sends, these relics snatched away
- from Ilium burning: with this golden bowl
- Anchises poured libation when he prayed;
- and these were Priam's splendor, when he gave
- laws to his gathered states; this sceptre his,
- this diadem revered, and beauteous pall,
- handwork of Asia's queens.” So ceased to speak
- Ilioneus. But King Latinus gazed
- unanswering on the ground, all motionless
- save for his musing eyes. The broidered pall
- of purple, and the sceptre Priam bore,
- moved little on his kingly heart, which now
- pondered of giving to the bridal bed
- his daughter dear. He argues in his mind
- the oracle of Faunus:—might this be
- that destined bridegroom from an alien land,
- to share his throne, to get a progeny
- of glorious valor, which by mighty deeds
- should win the world for kingdom? So at last
- with joyful brow he spoke: “Now let the gods
- our purpose and their own fair promise bless!
- Thou hast, O Trojan, thy desire. Thy gifts
- I have not scorned; nor while Latinus reigns
- shall ye lack riches in my plenteous land,
- not less than Trojan store. But where is he,
- Aeneas' self? If he our royal love
- so much desire, and have such urgent mind
- to be our guest and friend, let him draw near,
- nor turn him from well-wishing looks away!
- My offering and pledge of peace shall be
- to clasp your monarch's hand. Bear back, I pray,
- this answer to your King: my dwelling holds
- a daughter, whom with husband of her blood
- great signs in heaven and from my father's tomb
- forbid to wed. A son from alien shores
- they prophesy for Latium's heir, whose seed
- shall lift our glory to the stars divine.
- I am persuaded this is none but he,
- that man of destiny; and if my heart
- be no false prophet, I desire it so.”
- Thus having said, the sire took chosen steeds
- from his full herd, whereof, well-groomed and fair,
- three hundred stood within his ample pale.
- Of these to every Teucrian guest he gave
- a courser swift and strong, in purple clad
- and broidered housings gay; on every breast
- hung chains of gold; in golden robes arrayed,
- they champed the red gold curb their teeth between.
- For offering to Aeneas, he bade send
- a chariot, with chargers twain of seed
- ethereal, their nostrils breathing fire:
- the famous kind which guileful Circe bred,
- cheating her sire, and mixed the sun-god's team
- with brood-mares earthly born. The sons of Troy,
- such gifts and greetings from Latinus bearing,
- rode back in pomp his words of peace to bring.
- But lo! from Argos on her voyage of air
- rides the dread spouse of Jove. She, sky-enthroned
- above the far Sicilian promontory,
- pachynus, sees Dardania's rescued fleet,
- and all Aeneas' joy. The prospect shows
- houses a-building, lands of safe abode,
- and the abandoned ships. With bitter grief
- she stands at gaze: then with storm-shaken brows,
- thus from her heart lets loose the wrathful word:
- “O hated race! O Phrygian destinies —
- to mine forevermore (unhappy me!)
- a scandal and offense! Did no one die
- on Troy's embattled plain? Could captured slaves
- not be enslaved again? Was Ilium's flame
- no warrior's funeral pyre? Did they walk safe
- through serried swords and congregated fires?
- At last, methought, my godhead might repose,
- and my full-fed revenge in slumber lie.
- But nay! Though flung forth from their native land,
- I o'er the waves, with enmity unstayed,
- dared give them chase, and on that exiled few
- hurled the whole sea. I smote the sons of Troy
- with ocean's power and heaven's. But what availed
- Syrtes, or Scylla, or Charybdis' waves?
- The Trojans are in Tiber; and abide
- within their prayed-for land delectable,
- safe from the seas and me! Mars once had power
- the monstrous Lapithae to slay; and Jove
- to Dian's honor and revenge gave o'er
- the land of Calydon. What crime so foul
- was wrought by Lapithae or Calydon?
- But I, Jove's wife and Queen, who in my woes
- have ventured each bold stroke my power could find,
- and every shift essayed,—behold me now
- outdone by this Aeneas! If so weak
- my own prerogative of godhead be,
- let me seek strength in war, come whence it will!
- If Heaven I may not move, on Hell I call.
- To bar him from his Latin throne exceeds
- my fated power. So be it! Fate has given
- Lavinia for his bride. But long delays
- I still can plot, and to the high event
- deferment and obstruction. I can smite
- the subjects of both kings. Let sire and son
- buy with their people's blood this marriage-bond!
- Let Teucrian and Rutulian slaughter be
- thy virgin dower, and Bellona's blaze
- light thee the bridal bed! Not only teemed
- the womb of Hecuba with burning brand,
- and brought forth nuptial fires; but Venus, too,
- such offspring bore, a second Paris, who
- to their new Troy shall fatal wedlock bring.”
- So saying, with aspect terrible she sped
- earthward her way; and called from gloom of hell
- Alecto, woeful power, from cloudy throne
- among the Furies, where her heart is fed
- with horrid wars, wrath, vengeance, treason foul,
- and fatal feuds. Her father Pluto loathes
- the creature he engendered, and with hate
- her hell-born sister-fiends the monster view.
- A host of shapes she wears, and many a front
- of frowning black brows viper-garlanded.
- Juno to her this goading speech addressed:
- “O daughter of dark Night, arouse for me
- thy wonted powers and our task begin!
- Lest now my glory fail, my royal name
- be vanquished, while Aeneas and his crew
- cheat with a wedlock bond the Latin King
- and seize Italia's fields. Thou canst thrust on
- two Ioving brothers to draw sword and slay,
- and ruin homes with hatred, calling in
- the scourge of Furies and avenging fires.
- A thousand names thou bearest, and thy ways
- of ruin multiply a thousand-fold.
- Arouse thy fertile breast! Go, rend in twain
- this plighted peace! Breed calumnies and sow
- causes of battle, till yon warrior hosts
- cry out for swords and leap to gird them on.”
- Straightway Alecto, through whose body flows
- the Gorgon poison, took her viewless way
- to Latium and the lofty walls and towers
- of the Laurentian King. Crouching she sate
- in silence on the threshold of the bower
- where Queen Amata in her fevered soul
- pondered, with all a woman's wrath and fear,
- upon the Trojans and the marriage-suit
- of Turnus. From her Stygian hair the fiend
- a single serpent flung, which stole its way
- to the Queen's very heart, that, frenzy-driven,
- she might on her whole house confusion pour.
- Betwixt her smooth breast and her robe it wound
- unfelt, unseen, and in her wrathful mind
- instilled its viper soul. Like golden chain
- around her neck it twined, or stretched along
- the fillets on her brow, or with her hair
- enwrithing coiled; then on from limb to limb
- slipped tortuous. Yet though the venom strong
- thrilled with its first infection every vein,
- and touched her bones with fire, she knew it not,
- nor yielded all her soul, but made her plea
- in gentle accents such as mothers use;
- and many a tear she shed, about her child,
- her darling, destined for a Phrygian's bride:
- “O father! can we give Lavinia's hand
- to Trojan fugitives? why wilt thou show
- no mercy on thy daughter, nor thyself;
- nor unto me, whom at the first fair wind
- that wretch will leave deserted, bearing far
- upon his pirate ship my stolen child?
- Was it not thus that Phrygian shepherd came
- to Lacedaemon, ravishing away
- Helen, the child of Leda, whom he bore
- to those false Trojan lands? Hast thou forgot
- thy plighted word? Where now thy boasted love
- of kith and kin, and many a troth-plight given
- unto our kinsman Turnus? If we need
- an alien son, and Father Faunus' words
- irrevocably o'er thy spirit brood,
- I tell thee every land not linked with ours
- under one sceptre, but distinct and free,
- is alien; and 't is thus the gods intend.
- Indeed, if Turnus' ancient race be told,
- it sprang of Inachus, Acrisius,
- and out of mid-Mycenae.” But she sees
- her lord Latinus resolute, her words
- an effort vain; and through her body spreads
- the Fury's deeply venomed viper-sting.
- Then, woe-begone, by dark dreams goaded on,
- she wanders aimless, fevered and unstrung
- along the public ways; as oft one sees
- beneath the twisted whips a leaping top
- sped in long spirals through a palace-close
- by lads at play: obedient to the thong,
- it weaves wide circles in the gaping view
- of its small masters, who admiring see
- the whirling boxwood made a living thing
- under their lash. So fast and far she roved
- from town to town among the clansmen wild.
- Then to the wood she ran, feigning to feel
- the madness Bacchus loves; for she essays
- a fiercer crime, by fiercer frenzy moved.
- Now in the leafy dark of mountain vales
- she hides her daughter, ravished thus away
- from Trojan bridegroom and the wedding-feast.
- “Hail, Bacchus! Thou alone,” she shrieked and raved,
- “art worthy such a maid. For thee she bears
- the thyrsus with soft ivy-clusters crowned,
- and trips ecstatic in thy beauteous choir.
- For thee alone my daughter shall unbind
- the glory of her virgin hair.” Swift runs
- the rumor of her deed; and, frenzy-driven,
- the wives of Latium to the forests fly,
- enkindled with one rage. They leave behind
- their desolated hearths, and let rude winds
- o'er neck and tresses blow; their voices fill
- the welkin with convulsive shriek and wail;
- and, with fresh fawn-skins on their bodies bound,
- they brandish vine-clad spears. The Queen herself
- lifts high a blazing pine tree, while she sings
- a wedding-song for Turnus and her child.
- With bloodshot glance and anger wild, she cries:
- “Ho! all ye Latin wives, if e'er ye knew
- kindness for poor Amata, if ye care
- for a wronged mother's woes, O, follow me!
- Cast off the matron fillet from your brows,
- and revel to our mad, voluptuous song.”
- Thus, through the woodland haunt of creatures wild,
- Alecto urges on the raging Queen
- with Bacchus' cruel goad. But when she deemed
- the edge of wrath well whetted, and the house
- of wise Latinus of all reason reft,
- then soared the black-winged goddess to the walls
- of the bold Rutule, to the city built
- (So runs the tale) by beauteous Danae
- and her Acrisian people, shipwrecked there
- by south wind strong. Its name was Ardea
- in language of our sires, and that proud name
- of Ardea still it wears, though proud no more.
- Here Turnus in the gloom of midnight lay
- half-sleeping in his regal hall. For him
- Alecto her grim fury-guise put by,
- and wore an old crone's face, her baleful brow
- delved deep with wrinkled age, her hoary hair
- in sacred fillet bound, and garlanded
- with leaf of olive: Calybe she seemed,
- an aged servitress ot Juno's shrine,
- and in this seeming thus the prince addressed:—
- “O Turnus, wilt thou tamely see thy toil
- lavished in vain? and thy true throne consigned
- to Trojan wanderers? The King repels
- thy noble wooing and thy war-won dower.
- He summons him a son of alien stem
- to take his kingdom. Rouse thee now, and front,
- scorned and without reward, these perilous days.
- Tread down that Tuscan host! Protect the peace
- of Latium from its foe! Such is the word
- which, while in night and slumber thou wert laid,
- Saturnia's godhead, visibly revealed,
- bade me declare. Up, therefore, and array
- thy warriors in arms! Swift sallying forth
- from thy strong city-gates, on to the fray
- exultant go! Assail the Phrygian chiefs
- who tent them by thy beauteous river's marge,
- and burn their painted galleys! 't is the will
- of gods above that speaks. Yea, even the King
- Latinus, if he will not heed thy plea,
- or hear thy wooing, shall be taught too late
- what Turnus is in panoply of war.”
- In mocking answer to the prophetess
- the warrior thus replied: “That stranger fleet
- in Tiber moored, not, as thy folly prates,
- of me unnoted lies. Vex me no more
- with thy fantastic terror. Juno's power
- is watchful of my cause. 'T is mere old age,
- gone to decay and dotage, fills thy breast
- with vain foreboding, and, while kings contend,
- scares and deceives thy visionary eye.
- Guard thou in yonder temple's holy shade
- the images divine! Of peace and war
- let men and warriors the burden bear!”
- So kindled he Alecto's wrath to flame;
- and even as he spoke a shudder thrilled
- the warrior's body, and his eyeballs stood
- stonily staring at the hydra hair
- which hissed and writhed above the grisly head
- of the large-looming fiend. With eyes of fire
- horribly rolling, she repelled him far,
- while he but faltered speechless. She upraised
- two coiling snakes out of her tresses, cracked
- the lashes of her scourge, and wrathfully,
- with raving lips replied: “Look well on me,
- gone to decay and dotage of old age!
- And mocked with foolish fear while kings contend!
- Wilt hearken now! Behold me, hither flown
- from where my sister-furies dwell! My hands
- bring bloody death and war.” She spoke, and hurled
- her firebrand at the hero, thrusting deep
- beneath his heart her darkly smouldering flame.
- Then horror broke his sleep, and fearful sweat
- dripped from his every limb. He shrieked aloud
- for arms; and seized the ready arms that lay
- around his couch and hall. Then o'er his soul
- the lust of battle and wild curse of war
- broke forth in angry power, as when the flames
- of faggots round the bubbling cauldron sing,
- and up the waters leap; the close-kept flood
- brims over, streaming, foaming, breaking bound,
- and flings thick clouds in air. He, summoning
- his chieftains, bade them on Latinus move,
- break peace, take arms, and, over Italy
- their shields extending, to thrust forth her foe:
- himself for Teucrian with Latin joined
- was more than match. He called upon the gods
- in witness of his vows: while, nothing loth,
- Rutulia's warriors rushed into array;
- some by his youth and noble beauty moved,
- some by his kingly sires and fame in arms.
- While Turnus stirred Rutulia's valiant souls,
- Alecto on her Stygian pinions sped
- to where the Teucrians lay. She scanned the ground
- with eager guile, where by the river's marge
- fair-browed Iulus with his nets and snares
- rode fiercely to the chase. Then o'er his hounds
- that hell-born virgin breathed a sudden rage,
- and filled each cunning nostril with the scent
- of stags, till forth in wild pursuit they flew.
- Here all the woe began, and here awoke
- in rustic souls the swift-enkindling war.
- For a fair stag, tall-antlered, stolen away
- even from its mother's milk, had long been kept
- by Tyrrhus and his sons—the shepherd he
- of all the royal flocks, and forester
- of a wide region round. With fondest care
- their sister Silvia entwined its horns
- with soft, fresh garlands, tamed it to run close,
- and combed the creature, or would bring to bathe
- at a clear, crystal spring. It knew the hands
- of all its gentle masters, and would feed
- from their own dish; or wandering through the wood,
- come back unguided to their friendly door,
- though deep the evening shade. Iulus' dogs
- now roused this wanderer in their ravening chase,
- as, drifted down-stream far from home it lay,
- on a green bank a-cooling. From bent bow
- Ascanius, eager for a hunter's praise,
- let go his shaft; nor did Alecto fail
- his aim to guide: but, whistling through the air,
- the light-winged reed pierced deep in flank and side.
- Swift to its cover fled the wounded thing,
- and crept loud-moaning to its wonted stall,
- where, like a blood-stained suppliant, it seemed
- to fill that shepherd's house with plaintive prayer.
- Then Silvia the sister, smiting oft
- on breast and arm, made cry for help, and called
- the sturdy rustics forth in gathering throng.
- These now (for in the silent forest couched
- the cruel Fury) swift to battle flew.
- One brandished a charred stake, another swung
- a knotted cudgel, as rude anger shapes
- its weapon of whate'er the searching eye
- first haps to fall on. Tyrrhus roused his clans,
- just when by chance he split with blows of wedge
- an oak in four; and, panting giant breath,
- shouldered his woodman's axe. Alecto then,
- prompt to the stroke of mischief, soared aloft
- from where she spying sate, to the steep roof
- of a tall byre, and from its peak of straw
- blew a wild signal on a shepherd's horn,
- outflinging her infernal note so far
- that all the forest shuddered, and the grove
- throbbed to its deepest glen. Cold Trivia's lake
- from end to end gave ear, and every wave
- of the white stream of Nar, the lonely pools
- of still Velinus heard: while at the sound
- pale mothers to their breasts their children drew.
- Swift to the signal of the dreadful horn,
- snatching their weapons rude, the freeborn swains
- assembled for the fray; the Trojan bands
- poured from their bivouac with instant aid
- for young Ascanius. In array of war
- both stand confronting. Not mere rustic brawl
- with charred oak-staff and cudgel is the fight,
- but with the two-edged steel; the naked swords
- wave like dark-bladed harvest-field, while far
- the brazen arms flash in the smiting sun,
- and skyward fling their beam: so some wide sea,
- at first but whitened in the rising wind,
- swells its slow-rolling mass and ever higher
- its billows rears, until the utmost deep
- lifts in one surge to heaven. The first to fall
- was Almo, eldest-born of Tyrrhus' sons,
- whom, striding in the van, a loud-winged shaft
- laid low in death; deep in his throat it clung,
- and silenced with his blood the dying cry
- of his frail life. Around him fell the forms
- of many a brave and strong; among them died
- gray-haired Galaesus pleading for a truce:
- righteous he was, and of Ausonian fields
- a prosperous master; five full flocks had he
- of bleating sheep, and from his pastures came
- five herds of cattle home; his busy churls
- turned with a hundred ploughs his fruitful glebe.
- While o'er the battle-field thus doubtful swung
- the scales of war, the Fury (to her task
- now equal proven) having dyed the day
- a deep-ensanguined hue, and opened fight
- with death and slaughter, made no tarrying
- within Hesperia, but skyward soared,
- and, Ioud in triumph, insolently thus
- to Juno called: “See, at thy will, their strife
- full-blown to war and woe! Could even thyself
- command them now to truce and amity?
- But I, that with Ausonia's blood befoul
- their Trojan hands, yet more can do, if thou
- shift not thy purpose. For with dire alarms
- I will awake the bordering states to war
- enkindling in their souls the frenzied lust
- the war-god breathes; till from th' horizon round
- the reinforcement pours—I scattering seeds
- of carnage through the land.” In answer spoke
- juno: “Enough of artifice and fear!
- Thy provocation works. Now have they joined
- in close and deadly combat, and warm blood
- those sudden-leaping swords incarnadines,
- which chance put in their hands. Such nuptial joys,
- such feast of wedlock, let the famous son
- of Venus with the King Latinus share!
- But yon Olympian Sire and King no more
- permits thee freely in our skies to roam.
- Go, quit the field! Myself will take control
- of hazards and of labors yet to be.”
- Thus Saturn's daughter spoke. Alecto then,
- unfolding far her hissing, viperous wings,
- turned toward her Stygian home, and took farewell
- of upper air. Deep in Italia lies
- a region mountain-girded, widely famed,
- and known in olden songs from land to land:
- the valley of Amsanctus; deep, dark shades
- enclose it between forest-walls, whereby
- through thunderous stony channel serpentines
- a roaring fall. Here in a monstrous cave
- are breathing-holes of hell, a vast abyss
- where Acheron opes wide its noisome jaws:
- in this Alecto plunged, concealing so
- her execrable godhead, while the air
- of earth and heaven felt the curse removed.
- Forthwith the sovereign hands of Juno haste
- to consummate the war. The shepherds bear
- back from the field of battle to the town
- the bodies of the slain: young Almo's corse
- and gray Galaesus' bleeding head. They call
- just gods in heaven to Iook upon their wrong,
- and bid Latinus see it. Turnus comes,
- and, while the angry mob surveys the slain,
- adds fury to the hour. “Shall the land
- have Trojan lords? Shall Phrygian marriages
- debase our ancient, royal blood—and I
- be spurned upon the threshold?” Then drew near
- the men whose frenzied women-folk had held
- bacchantic orgies in the pathless grove,
- awed by Amata's name: these, gathering,
- sued loud for war. Yea, all defied the signs
- and venerable omens; all withstood
- divine decrees, and clamored for revenge,
- prompted by evil powers. They besieged
- the house of King Latinus, shouting-loud
- with emulous rage. But like a sea-girt rock
- unmoved he stood; like sea-girt rock when surge
- of waters o'er it sweeps, or howling waves
- surround; it keeps a ponderous front of power,
- though foaming cliffs around it vainly roar;
- from its firm base the broken sea-weeds fall.
- But when authority no whit could change
- their counsels blind, and each event fulfilled
- dread Juno's will, then with complaining prayer
- the aged sire cried loud upon his gods
- and on th' unheeding air: “Alas,” said he,
- “My doom is shipwreck, and the tempest bears
- my bark away! O wretches, your own blood
- shall pay the forfeit for your impious crime.
- O Turnus! O abominable deed!
- Avenging woes pursue thee; to deaf gods
- thy late and unavailing prayer shall rise.
- Now was my time to rest. But as I come
- close to my journey's end, thou spoilest me
- of comfort in my death.” With this the King
- fled to his house and ceased his realm to guide.
- A sacred custom the Hesperian land
- of Latium knew, by all the Alban hills
- honored unbroken, which wide-ruling Rome
- keeps to this day, when to new stroke she stirs
- the might of Mars; if on the Danube's wave
- resolved to fling the mournful doom of war,
- or on the Caspian folk or Arabs wild;
- or chase the morning far as India's verge,
- ind from the Parthian despot wrest away
- our banners Iost. Twin Gates of War there be,
- of fearful name, to Mars' fierce godhead vowed:
- a hundred brass bars shut them, and the strength
- of uncorrupting steel; in sleepless watch
- Janus the threshold keeps. 'T is here, what time
- the senate's voice is war, the consul grave
- in Gabine cincture and Quirinal shift
- himself the griding hinges backward moves,
- and bids the Romans arm; obedient then
- the legionary host makes Ioud acclaim,
- and hoarse consent the brazen trumpets blow.
- Thus King Latinus on the sons of Troy
- was urged to open war, and backward roll
- those gates of sorrow: but the aged king
- recoiled, refused the loathsome task, and fled
- to solitary shades. Then from the skies
- the Queen of gods stooped down, and her sole hand
- the lingering portal moved; Saturnia
- swung on their hinges the barred gates of war.
- ausonia from its old tranquillity
- bursts forth in flame. Foot-soldiers through the field
- run to and fro; and mounted on tall steeds
- the cavaliers in clouds of dust whirl by.
- All arm in haste. Some oil the glittering shield
- or javelin bright, or on the whetstone wear
- good axes to an edge, while joyful bands
- uplift the standards or the trumpets blow.
- Five mighty cities to their anvils bring
- new-tempered arms: Atina—martial name —
- proud Tibur, Ardea, Crustumium,
- and river-walled Antemnae, crowned with towers
- strong hollow helmets on their brows they draw
- and weave them willow-shields; or melt and mould
- corselets of brass or shining silver greaves;
- none now for pruning-hook or sacred plough
- have love or care: but old, ancestral swords
- for hardier tempering to the smith they bring.
- Now peals the clarion; through the legions pass
- the watchwords: the impatient yeoman takes
- his helmet from the idle roof-tree hung;
- while to his chariot the master yokes
- the mettled war-horse, dons a shining shield
- and golden mail, and buckles his good sword.
- Virgins of Helicon, renew my song!
- Instruct me what proud kings to battle flown
- with following legions throng the serried plain.
- Tell me what heroes and illustrious arms
- Italia's bosom in her dawning day
- benignant bore: for your celestial minds,
- have memory of the past, but faint and low
- steals glory's whisper on a mortal ear.
- Foremost in fight, from shores Etrurian came
- Mezentius, scornful rebel against Heaven,
- his people all in arms; and at his side
- Lausus his heir (no fairer youth than he,
- save Turnus of Laurentum), Lausus, skilled
- o break proud horses and wild beasts to quell;
- who from Agylla's citadel in vain
- led forth his thousand warriors: worthy he
- to serve a nobler sire, and happier far
- he had ne'er been born Mezentius' son.
- Next after these, conspicuous o'er the plain,
- with palm-crowned chariot and victorious steeds,
- rode forth well-moulded Aventinus, sprung
- from shapely Hercules; upon the shield
- his blazon was a hundred snakes, and showed
- his father's hydra-cincture serpentine;
- him deep in Aventine's most secret grove
- the priestess Rhea bore—a mortal maid
- clasped in a god's embrace the wondrous day
- when, flushed with conquest of huge Geryon,
- the lord of Tiryns to Laurentum drove,
- and washed in Tiber's wave th' Iberian kine.
- His followers brandished pointed pikes and staves,
- or smooth Sabellian bodkin tipped with steel;
- but he, afoot, swung round him as he strode
- a monstrous lion-skin, its bristling mane
- and white teeth crowning his ferocious brow:
- for garbed as Hercules he sought his King.