Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. He spoke; Ilioneus this answer made:
  2. “O King, great heir of Faunus! No dark storm
  3. impelled us o'er the flood thy realm to find.
  4. Nor star deceived, nor strange, bewildering shore
  5. threw out of our true course; but we are come
  6. by our free choice and with deliberate aim
  7. to this thy town, though exiled forth of realms
  8. once mightiest of all the sun-god sees
  9. when moving from his utmost eastern bound.
  10. From Jove our line began; the sons of Troy
  11. boast Jove to be their sire, and our true King
  12. is of Olympian seed. To thine abode
  13. Trojan Aeneas sent us. How there burst
  14. o'er Ida's vales from dread Mycenae's kings
  15. a tempest vast, and by what stroke of doom
  16. all Asia's world with Europe clashed in war,
  17. that lone wight hears whom earth's remotest isle
  18. has banished to the Ocean's rim, or he
  19. whose dwelling is the ample zone that burns
  20. betwixt the changeful sun-god's milder realms,
  21. far severed from the world. We are the men
  22. from war's destroying deluge safely borne
  23. over the waters wide. We only ask
  24. some low-roofed dwelling for our fathers' gods,
  25. some friendly shore, and, what to all is free,
  26. water and air. We bring no evil name
  27. upon thy people; thy renown will be
  28. but wider spread; nor of a deed so fair
  29. can grateful memory die. Ye ne'er will rue
  30. that to Ausonia's breast ye gathered Troy.
  31. I swear thee by the favored destinies
  32. of great Aeneas, by his strength of arm
  33. in friendship or in war, that many a tribe
  34. (O, scorn us not, that, bearing olive green,
  35. with suppliant words we come), that many a throne
  36. has sued us to be friends. But Fate's decree
  37. to this thy realm did guide. Here Dardanus
  38. was born; and with reiterate command
  39. this way Apollo pointed to the stream
  40. of Tiber and Numicius' haunted spring.
  41. Lo, these poor tributes from his greatness gone
  42. Aeneas sends, these relics snatched away
  43. from Ilium burning: with this golden bowl
  44. Anchises poured libation when he prayed;
  45. and these were Priam's splendor, when he gave
  46. laws to his gathered states; this sceptre his,
  47. this diadem revered, and beauteous pall,
  48. handwork of Asia's queens.” So ceased to speak
  49. Ilioneus. But King Latinus gazed
  50. unanswering on the ground, all motionless
  51. save for his musing eyes. The broidered pall
  52. of purple, and the sceptre Priam bore,
  53. moved little on his kingly heart, which now
  54. pondered of giving to the bridal bed
  55. his daughter dear. He argues in his mind
  56. the oracle of Faunus:—might this be
  57. that destined bridegroom from an alien land,
  58. to share his throne, to get a progeny
  59. of glorious valor, which by mighty deeds
  60. should win the world for kingdom? So at last
  61. with joyful brow he spoke: “Now let the gods
  62. our purpose and their own fair promise bless!
  63. Thou hast, O Trojan, thy desire. Thy gifts
  64. I have not scorned; nor while Latinus reigns
  65. shall ye lack riches in my plenteous land,
  66. not less than Trojan store. But where is he,
  67. Aeneas' self? If he our royal love
  68. so much desire, and have such urgent mind
  69. to be our guest and friend, let him draw near,
  70. nor turn him from well-wishing looks away!
  71. My offering and pledge of peace shall be
  72. to clasp your monarch's hand. Bear back, I pray,
  73. this answer to your King: my dwelling holds
  74. a daughter, whom with husband of her blood
  75. great signs in heaven and from my father's tomb
  76. forbid to wed. A son from alien shores
  77. they prophesy for Latium's heir, whose seed
  78. shall lift our glory to the stars divine.
  79. I am persuaded this is none but he,
  80. that man of destiny; and if my heart
  81. be no false prophet, I desire it so.”
  82. Thus having said, the sire took chosen steeds
  83. from his full herd, whereof, well-groomed and fair,
  84. three hundred stood within his ample pale.
  85. Of these to every Teucrian guest he gave
  86. a courser swift and strong, in purple clad
  87. and broidered housings gay; on every breast
  88. hung chains of gold; in golden robes arrayed,
  89. they champed the red gold curb their teeth between.
  90. For offering to Aeneas, he bade send
  91. a chariot, with chargers twain of seed
  92. ethereal, their nostrils breathing fire:
  93. the famous kind which guileful Circe bred,
  94. cheating her sire, and mixed the sun-god's team
  95. with brood-mares earthly born. The sons of Troy,
  96. such gifts and greetings from Latinus bearing,
  97. rode back in pomp his words of peace to bring.
  1. But lo! from Argos on her voyage of air
  2. rides the dread spouse of Jove. She, sky-enthroned
  3. above the far Sicilian promontory,
  4. pachynus, sees Dardania's rescued fleet,
  5. and all Aeneas' joy. The prospect shows
  6. houses a-building, lands of safe abode,
  7. and the abandoned ships. With bitter grief
  8. she stands at gaze: then with storm-shaken brows,
  9. thus from her heart lets loose the wrathful word:
  10. “O hated race! O Phrygian destinies —
  11. to mine forevermore (unhappy me!)
  12. a scandal and offense! Did no one die
  13. on Troy's embattled plain? Could captured slaves
  14. not be enslaved again? Was Ilium's flame
  15. no warrior's funeral pyre? Did they walk safe
  16. through serried swords and congregated fires?
  17. At last, methought, my godhead might repose,
  18. and my full-fed revenge in slumber lie.
  19. But nay! Though flung forth from their native land,
  20. I o'er the waves, with enmity unstayed,
  21. dared give them chase, and on that exiled few
  22. hurled the whole sea. I smote the sons of Troy
  23. with ocean's power and heaven's. But what availed
  24. Syrtes, or Scylla, or Charybdis' waves?
  25. The Trojans are in Tiber; and abide
  26. within their prayed-for land delectable,
  27. safe from the seas and me! Mars once had power
  28. the monstrous Lapithae to slay; and Jove
  29. to Dian's honor and revenge gave o'er
  30. the land of Calydon. What crime so foul
  31. was wrought by Lapithae or Calydon?
  32. But I, Jove's wife and Queen, who in my woes
  33. have ventured each bold stroke my power could find,
  34. and every shift essayed,—behold me now
  35. outdone by this Aeneas! If so weak
  36. my own prerogative of godhead be,
  37. let me seek strength in war, come whence it will!
  38. If Heaven I may not move, on Hell I call.
  39. To bar him from his Latin throne exceeds
  40. my fated power. So be it! Fate has given
  41. Lavinia for his bride. But long delays
  42. I still can plot, and to the high event
  43. deferment and obstruction. I can smite
  44. the subjects of both kings. Let sire and son
  45. buy with their people's blood this marriage-bond!
  46. Let Teucrian and Rutulian slaughter be
  47. thy virgin dower, and Bellona's blaze
  48. light thee the bridal bed! Not only teemed
  49. the womb of Hecuba with burning brand,
  50. and brought forth nuptial fires; but Venus, too,
  51. such offspring bore, a second Paris, who
  52. to their new Troy shall fatal wedlock bring.”
  1. So saying, with aspect terrible she sped
  2. earthward her way; and called from gloom of hell
  3. Alecto, woeful power, from cloudy throne
  4. among the Furies, where her heart is fed
  5. with horrid wars, wrath, vengeance, treason foul,
  6. and fatal feuds. Her father Pluto loathes
  7. the creature he engendered, and with hate
  8. her hell-born sister-fiends the monster view.
  9. A host of shapes she wears, and many a front
  10. of frowning black brows viper-garlanded.
  11. Juno to her this goading speech addressed:
  12. “O daughter of dark Night, arouse for me
  13. thy wonted powers and our task begin!
  14. Lest now my glory fail, my royal name
  15. be vanquished, while Aeneas and his crew
  16. cheat with a wedlock bond the Latin King
  17. and seize Italia's fields. Thou canst thrust on
  18. two Ioving brothers to draw sword and slay,
  19. and ruin homes with hatred, calling in
  20. the scourge of Furies and avenging fires.
  21. A thousand names thou bearest, and thy ways
  22. of ruin multiply a thousand-fold.
  23. Arouse thy fertile breast! Go, rend in twain
  24. this plighted peace! Breed calumnies and sow
  25. causes of battle, till yon warrior hosts
  26. cry out for swords and leap to gird them on.”
  1. Straightway Alecto, through whose body flows
  2. the Gorgon poison, took her viewless way
  3. to Latium and the lofty walls and towers
  4. of the Laurentian King. Crouching she sate
  5. in silence on the threshold of the bower
  6. where Queen Amata in her fevered soul
  7. pondered, with all a woman's wrath and fear,
  8. upon the Trojans and the marriage-suit
  9. of Turnus. From her Stygian hair the fiend
  10. a single serpent flung, which stole its way
  11. to the Queen's very heart, that, frenzy-driven,
  12. she might on her whole house confusion pour.
  13. Betwixt her smooth breast and her robe it wound
  14. unfelt, unseen, and in her wrathful mind
  15. instilled its viper soul. Like golden chain
  16. around her neck it twined, or stretched along
  17. the fillets on her brow, or with her hair
  18. enwrithing coiled; then on from limb to limb
  19. slipped tortuous. Yet though the venom strong
  20. thrilled with its first infection every vein,
  21. and touched her bones with fire, she knew it not,
  22. nor yielded all her soul, but made her plea
  23. in gentle accents such as mothers use;
  24. and many a tear she shed, about her child,
  25. her darling, destined for a Phrygian's bride:
  26. “O father! can we give Lavinia's hand
  27. to Trojan fugitives? why wilt thou show
  28. no mercy on thy daughter, nor thyself;
  29. nor unto me, whom at the first fair wind
  30. that wretch will leave deserted, bearing far
  31. upon his pirate ship my stolen child?
  32. Was it not thus that Phrygian shepherd came
  33. to Lacedaemon, ravishing away
  34. Helen, the child of Leda, whom he bore
  35. to those false Trojan lands? Hast thou forgot
  36. thy plighted word? Where now thy boasted love
  37. of kith and kin, and many a troth-plight given
  38. unto our kinsman Turnus? If we need
  39. an alien son, and Father Faunus' words
  40. irrevocably o'er thy spirit brood,
  41. I tell thee every land not linked with ours
  42. under one sceptre, but distinct and free,
  43. is alien; and 't is thus the gods intend.
  44. Indeed, if Turnus' ancient race be told,
  45. it sprang of Inachus, Acrisius,
  46. and out of mid-Mycenae.” But she sees
  47. her lord Latinus resolute, her words
  48. an effort vain; and through her body spreads
  49. the Fury's deeply venomed viper-sting.
  50. Then, woe-begone, by dark dreams goaded on,
  51. she wanders aimless, fevered and unstrung
  52. along the public ways; as oft one sees
  53. beneath the twisted whips a leaping top
  54. sped in long spirals through a palace-close
  55. by lads at play: obedient to the thong,
  56. it weaves wide circles in the gaping view
  57. of its small masters, who admiring see
  58. the whirling boxwood made a living thing
  59. under their lash. So fast and far she roved
  60. from town to town among the clansmen wild.
  61. Then to the wood she ran, feigning to feel
  62. the madness Bacchus loves; for she essays
  63. a fiercer crime, by fiercer frenzy moved.
  64. Now in the leafy dark of mountain vales
  65. she hides her daughter, ravished thus away
  66. from Trojan bridegroom and the wedding-feast.
  67. “Hail, Bacchus! Thou alone,” she shrieked and raved,
  68. “art worthy such a maid. For thee she bears
  69. the thyrsus with soft ivy-clusters crowned,
  70. and trips ecstatic in thy beauteous choir.
  71. For thee alone my daughter shall unbind
  72. the glory of her virgin hair.” Swift runs
  73. the rumor of her deed; and, frenzy-driven,
  74. the wives of Latium to the forests fly,
  75. enkindled with one rage. They leave behind
  76. their desolated hearths, and let rude winds
  77. o'er neck and tresses blow; their voices fill
  78. the welkin with convulsive shriek and wail;
  79. and, with fresh fawn-skins on their bodies bound,
  80. they brandish vine-clad spears. The Queen herself
  81. lifts high a blazing pine tree, while she sings
  82. a wedding-song for Turnus and her child.
  83. With bloodshot glance and anger wild, she cries:
  84. “Ho! all ye Latin wives, if e'er ye knew
  85. kindness for poor Amata, if ye care
  86. for a wronged mother's woes, O, follow me!
  87. Cast off the matron fillet from your brows,
  88. and revel to our mad, voluptuous song.”
  89. Thus, through the woodland haunt of creatures wild,
  90. Alecto urges on the raging Queen
  91. with Bacchus' cruel goad. But when she deemed
  92. the edge of wrath well whetted, and the house
  93. of wise Latinus of all reason reft,
  94. then soared the black-winged goddess to the walls
  95. of the bold Rutule, to the city built
  96. (So runs the tale) by beauteous Danae
  97. and her Acrisian people, shipwrecked there
  98. by south wind strong. Its name was Ardea
  99. in language of our sires, and that proud name
  100. of Ardea still it wears, though proud no more.
  101. Here Turnus in the gloom of midnight lay
  102. half-sleeping in his regal hall. For him
  103. Alecto her grim fury-guise put by,
  104. and wore an old crone's face, her baleful brow
  105. delved deep with wrinkled age, her hoary hair
  106. in sacred fillet bound, and garlanded
  107. with leaf of olive: Calybe she seemed,
  108. an aged servitress ot Juno's shrine,
  109. and in this seeming thus the prince addressed:—
  110. “O Turnus, wilt thou tamely see thy toil
  111. lavished in vain? and thy true throne consigned
  112. to Trojan wanderers? The King repels
  113. thy noble wooing and thy war-won dower.
  114. He summons him a son of alien stem
  115. to take his kingdom. Rouse thee now, and front,
  116. scorned and without reward, these perilous days.
  117. Tread down that Tuscan host! Protect the peace
  118. of Latium from its foe! Such is the word
  119. which, while in night and slumber thou wert laid,
  120. Saturnia's godhead, visibly revealed,
  121. bade me declare. Up, therefore, and array
  122. thy warriors in arms! Swift sallying forth
  123. from thy strong city-gates, on to the fray
  124. exultant go! Assail the Phrygian chiefs
  125. who tent them by thy beauteous river's marge,
  126. and burn their painted galleys! 't is the will
  127. of gods above that speaks. Yea, even the King
  128. Latinus, if he will not heed thy plea,
  129. or hear thy wooing, shall be taught too late
  130. what Turnus is in panoply of war.”
  1. In mocking answer to the prophetess
  2. the warrior thus replied: “That stranger fleet
  3. in Tiber moored, not, as thy folly prates,
  4. of me unnoted lies. Vex me no more
  5. with thy fantastic terror. Juno's power
  6. is watchful of my cause. 'T is mere old age,
  7. gone to decay and dotage, fills thy breast
  8. with vain foreboding, and, while kings contend,
  9. scares and deceives thy visionary eye.
  10. Guard thou in yonder temple's holy shade
  11. the images divine! Of peace and war
  12. let men and warriors the burden bear!”
  1. So kindled he Alecto's wrath to flame;
  2. and even as he spoke a shudder thrilled
  3. the warrior's body, and his eyeballs stood
  4. stonily staring at the hydra hair
  5. which hissed and writhed above the grisly head
  6. of the large-looming fiend. With eyes of fire
  7. horribly rolling, she repelled him far,
  8. while he but faltered speechless. She upraised
  9. two coiling snakes out of her tresses, cracked
  10. the lashes of her scourge, and wrathfully,
  11. with raving lips replied: “Look well on me,
  12. gone to decay and dotage of old age!
  13. And mocked with foolish fear while kings contend!
  14. Wilt hearken now! Behold me, hither flown
  15. from where my sister-furies dwell! My hands
  16. bring bloody death and war.” She spoke, and hurled
  17. her firebrand at the hero, thrusting deep
  18. beneath his heart her darkly smouldering flame.
  19. Then horror broke his sleep, and fearful sweat
  20. dripped from his every limb. He shrieked aloud
  21. for arms; and seized the ready arms that lay
  22. around his couch and hall. Then o'er his soul
  23. the lust of battle and wild curse of war
  24. broke forth in angry power, as when the flames
  25. of faggots round the bubbling cauldron sing,
  26. and up the waters leap; the close-kept flood
  27. brims over, streaming, foaming, breaking bound,
  28. and flings thick clouds in air. He, summoning
  29. his chieftains, bade them on Latinus move,
  30. break peace, take arms, and, over Italy
  31. their shields extending, to thrust forth her foe:
  32. himself for Teucrian with Latin joined
  33. was more than match. He called upon the gods
  34. in witness of his vows: while, nothing loth,
  35. Rutulia's warriors rushed into array;
  36. some by his youth and noble beauty moved,
  37. some by his kingly sires and fame in arms.
  1. While Turnus stirred Rutulia's valiant souls,
  2. Alecto on her Stygian pinions sped
  3. to where the Teucrians lay. She scanned the ground
  4. with eager guile, where by the river's marge
  5. fair-browed Iulus with his nets and snares
  6. rode fiercely to the chase. Then o'er his hounds
  7. that hell-born virgin breathed a sudden rage,
  8. and filled each cunning nostril with the scent
  9. of stags, till forth in wild pursuit they flew.
  10. Here all the woe began, and here awoke
  11. in rustic souls the swift-enkindling war.
  12. For a fair stag, tall-antlered, stolen away
  13. even from its mother's milk, had long been kept
  14. by Tyrrhus and his sons—the shepherd he
  15. of all the royal flocks, and forester
  16. of a wide region round. With fondest care
  17. their sister Silvia entwined its horns
  18. with soft, fresh garlands, tamed it to run close,
  19. and combed the creature, or would bring to bathe
  20. at a clear, crystal spring. It knew the hands
  21. of all its gentle masters, and would feed
  22. from their own dish; or wandering through the wood,
  23. come back unguided to their friendly door,
  24. though deep the evening shade. Iulus' dogs
  25. now roused this wanderer in their ravening chase,
  26. as, drifted down-stream far from home it lay,
  27. on a green bank a-cooling. From bent bow
  28. Ascanius, eager for a hunter's praise,
  29. let go his shaft; nor did Alecto fail
  30. his aim to guide: but, whistling through the air,
  31. the light-winged reed pierced deep in flank and side.
  32. Swift to its cover fled the wounded thing,
  33. and crept loud-moaning to its wonted stall,
  34. where, like a blood-stained suppliant, it seemed
  35. to fill that shepherd's house with plaintive prayer.
  36. Then Silvia the sister, smiting oft
  37. on breast and arm, made cry for help, and called
  38. the sturdy rustics forth in gathering throng.
  39. These now (for in the silent forest couched
  40. the cruel Fury) swift to battle flew.
  41. One brandished a charred stake, another swung
  42. a knotted cudgel, as rude anger shapes
  43. its weapon of whate'er the searching eye
  44. first haps to fall on. Tyrrhus roused his clans,
  45. just when by chance he split with blows of wedge
  46. an oak in four; and, panting giant breath,
  47. shouldered his woodman's axe. Alecto then,
  48. prompt to the stroke of mischief, soared aloft
  49. from where she spying sate, to the steep roof
  50. of a tall byre, and from its peak of straw
  51. blew a wild signal on a shepherd's horn,
  52. outflinging her infernal note so far
  53. that all the forest shuddered, and the grove
  54. throbbed to its deepest glen. Cold Trivia's lake
  55. from end to end gave ear, and every wave
  56. of the white stream of Nar, the lonely pools
  57. of still Velinus heard: while at the sound
  58. pale mothers to their breasts their children drew.
  59. Swift to the signal of the dreadful horn,
  60. snatching their weapons rude, the freeborn swains
  61. assembled for the fray; the Trojan bands
  62. poured from their bivouac with instant aid
  63. for young Ascanius. In array of war
  64. both stand confronting. Not mere rustic brawl
  65. with charred oak-staff and cudgel is the fight,
  66. but with the two-edged steel; the naked swords
  67. wave like dark-bladed harvest-field, while far
  68. the brazen arms flash in the smiting sun,
  69. and skyward fling their beam: so some wide sea,
  70. at first but whitened in the rising wind,
  71. swells its slow-rolling mass and ever higher
  72. its billows rears, until the utmost deep
  73. lifts in one surge to heaven. The first to fall
  74. was Almo, eldest-born of Tyrrhus' sons,
  75. whom, striding in the van, a loud-winged shaft
  76. laid low in death; deep in his throat it clung,
  77. and silenced with his blood the dying cry
  78. of his frail life. Around him fell the forms
  79. of many a brave and strong; among them died
  80. gray-haired Galaesus pleading for a truce:
  81. righteous he was, and of Ausonian fields
  82. a prosperous master; five full flocks had he
  83. of bleating sheep, and from his pastures came
  84. five herds of cattle home; his busy churls
  85. turned with a hundred ploughs his fruitful glebe.
  1. While o'er the battle-field thus doubtful swung
  2. the scales of war, the Fury (to her task
  3. now equal proven) having dyed the day
  4. a deep-ensanguined hue, and opened fight
  5. with death and slaughter, made no tarrying
  6. within Hesperia, but skyward soared,
  7. and, Ioud in triumph, insolently thus
  8. to Juno called: “See, at thy will, their strife
  9. full-blown to war and woe! Could even thyself
  10. command them now to truce and amity?
  11. But I, that with Ausonia's blood befoul
  12. their Trojan hands, yet more can do, if thou
  13. shift not thy purpose. For with dire alarms
  14. I will awake the bordering states to war
  15. enkindling in their souls the frenzied lust
  16. the war-god breathes; till from th' horizon round
  17. the reinforcement pours—I scattering seeds
  18. of carnage through the land.” In answer spoke
  19. juno: “Enough of artifice and fear!
  20. Thy provocation works. Now have they joined
  21. in close and deadly combat, and warm blood
  22. those sudden-leaping swords incarnadines,
  23. which chance put in their hands. Such nuptial joys,
  24. such feast of wedlock, let the famous son
  25. of Venus with the King Latinus share!
  26. But yon Olympian Sire and King no more
  27. permits thee freely in our skies to roam.
  28. Go, quit the field! Myself will take control
  29. of hazards and of labors yet to be.”
  30. Thus Saturn's daughter spoke. Alecto then,
  31. unfolding far her hissing, viperous wings,
  32. turned toward her Stygian home, and took farewell
  33. of upper air. Deep in Italia lies
  34. a region mountain-girded, widely famed,
  35. and known in olden songs from land to land:
  36. the valley of Amsanctus; deep, dark shades
  37. enclose it between forest-walls, whereby
  38. through thunderous stony channel serpentines
  39. a roaring fall. Here in a monstrous cave
  40. are breathing-holes of hell, a vast abyss
  41. where Acheron opes wide its noisome jaws:
  42. in this Alecto plunged, concealing so
  43. her execrable godhead, while the air
  44. of earth and heaven felt the curse removed.
  1. Forthwith the sovereign hands of Juno haste
  2. to consummate the war. The shepherds bear
  3. back from the field of battle to the town
  4. the bodies of the slain: young Almo's corse
  5. and gray Galaesus' bleeding head. They call
  6. just gods in heaven to Iook upon their wrong,
  7. and bid Latinus see it. Turnus comes,
  8. and, while the angry mob surveys the slain,
  9. adds fury to the hour. “Shall the land
  10. have Trojan lords? Shall Phrygian marriages
  11. debase our ancient, royal blood—and I
  12. be spurned upon the threshold?” Then drew near
  13. the men whose frenzied women-folk had held
  14. bacchantic orgies in the pathless grove,
  15. awed by Amata's name: these, gathering,
  16. sued loud for war. Yea, all defied the signs
  17. and venerable omens; all withstood
  18. divine decrees, and clamored for revenge,
  19. prompted by evil powers. They besieged
  20. the house of King Latinus, shouting-loud
  21. with emulous rage. But like a sea-girt rock
  22. unmoved he stood; like sea-girt rock when surge
  23. of waters o'er it sweeps, or howling waves
  24. surround; it keeps a ponderous front of power,
  25. though foaming cliffs around it vainly roar;
  26. from its firm base the broken sea-weeds fall.
  27. But when authority no whit could change
  28. their counsels blind, and each event fulfilled
  29. dread Juno's will, then with complaining prayer
  30. the aged sire cried loud upon his gods
  31. and on th' unheeding air: “Alas,” said he,
  32. “My doom is shipwreck, and the tempest bears
  33. my bark away! O wretches, your own blood
  34. shall pay the forfeit for your impious crime.
  35. O Turnus! O abominable deed!
  36. Avenging woes pursue thee; to deaf gods
  37. thy late and unavailing prayer shall rise.
  38. Now was my time to rest. But as I come
  39. close to my journey's end, thou spoilest me
  40. of comfort in my death.” With this the King
  41. fled to his house and ceased his realm to guide.