Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. The King, sore troubled by these portents, sought
  2. oracular wisdom of his sacred sire,
  3. Faunus, the fate-revealer, where the groves
  4. stretch under high Albunea, and her stream
  5. roars from its haunted well, exhaling through
  6. vast, gloomful woods its pestilential air.
  7. Here all Oenotria's tribes ask oracles
  8. in dark and doubtful days: here, when the priest
  9. has brought his gifts, and in the night so still,
  10. couched on spread fleeces of the offered flock,
  11. awaiting slumber lies, then wondrously
  12. a host of flitting shapes he sees, and hears
  13. voices that come and go: with gods he holds
  14. high converse, or in deep Avernian gloom
  15. parleys with Acheron. Thither drew near
  16. Father Latinus, seeking truth divine.
  17. Obedient to the olden rite, he slew
  18. a hundred fleecy sheep, and pillowed lay
  19. upon their outstretched skins. Straightway a voice
  20. out of the lofty forest met his prayer.
  21. “Seek not in wedlock with a Latin lord
  22. to join thy daughter, O my son and seed!
  23. Beware this purposed marriage! There shall come
  24. sons from afar, whose blood shall bear our name
  25. starward; the children of their mighty loins,
  26. as far as eve and morn enfold the seas,
  27. shall see a subject world beneath their feet
  28. submissive lie.” This admonition given
  29. Latinus hid not. But on restless wing
  30. rumor had spread it, when the men of Troy
  31. along the river-bank of mounded green
  32. their fleet made fast.Aeneas and his chiefs,
  33. with fair Iulus, under spreading boughs
  34. of one great tree made resting-place, and set
  35. the banquet on. Thin loaves of altar-bread
  36. along the sward to bear their meats were laid
  37. (such was the will of Jove), and wilding fruits
  38. rose heaping high, with Ceres' gift below.
  39. Soon, all things else devoured, their hunger turned
  40. to taste the scanty bread, which they attacked
  41. with tooth and nail audacious, and consumed
  42. both round and square of that predestined leaven.
  43. “Look, how we eat our tables even!” cried
  44. Iulus, in a jest. Such was the word
  45. which bade their burdens fall. From his boy's lip
  46. the father caught this utterance of Fate,
  47. silent with wonder at the ways of Heaven;
  48. then swift he spoke: “Hail! O my destined shore,
  49. protecting deities of Ilium, hail!
  50. Here is our home, our country here! This day
  51. I publish the mysterious prophecy
  52. by Sire Anchises given: ‘My son,’ said he,
  53. ‘When hunger in strange lands shall bid devour
  54. the tables of thy banquet gone, then hope
  55. for home, though weary, and take thought to build
  56. a dwelling and a battlement.’ Behold!
  57. This was our fated hunger! This last proof
  58. will end our evil days. Up, then! For now
  59. by morning's joyful beam we will explore
  60. what men, what cities, in this region be,
  61. and, leaving ship, our several errands ply.
  62. Your gift to Jove outpour! Make thankful prayer
  63. unto Anchises' shade! To this our feast
  64. bring back the flowing wine!” Thereat he bound
  65. his forehead with green garland, calling loud
  66. upon the Genius of that place, and Earth,
  67. eldest of names divine; the Nymphs he called,
  68. and river-gods unknown; his voice invoked
  69. the night, the omen-stars through night that roll.
  70. Jove, Ida's child, and Phrygia's fertile Queen:
  71. he called his mother from Olympian skies,
  72. and sire from Erebus. Lo, o'er his head
  73. three times unclouded Jove omnipotent
  74. in thunder spoke, and, with effulgent ray
  75. from his ethereal tract outreaching far,
  76. shook visibly the golden-gleaming air.
  77. Swift, through the concourse of the Trojans, spread
  78. news of the day at hand when they should build
  79. their destined walls. So, with rejoicing heart
  80. at such vast omen, they set forth a feast
  81. with zealous emulation, ranging well
  82. the wine-cups fair with many a garland crowned.
  1. Soon as the morrow with the lamp of dawn
  2. looked o'er the world, they took their separate ways,
  3. exploring shore and towns; here spread the pools
  4. and fountain of Numicius; here they see
  5. the river Tiber, where bold Latins dwell.
  6. Anchises' son chose out from his brave band
  7. a hundred envoys, bidding them depart
  8. to the King's sacred city, each enwreathed
  9. with Pallas' silver leaf; and gifts they bear
  10. to plead for peace and friendship at his throne.
  11. While on this errand their swift steps are sped,
  12. Aeneas, by a shallow moat and small,
  13. his future city shows, breaks ground, and girds
  14. with mound and breastwork like a camp of war
  15. the Trojans' first abode. Soon, making way
  16. to where the Latin citadel uprose,
  17. the envoys scanned the battlements, and paused
  18. beneath its wall. Outside the city gates
  19. fair youths and striplings in life's early bloom
  20. course with swift steeds, or steer through dusty cloud
  21. the whirling chariot, or stretch stout bows,
  22. or hurl the seasoned javelin, or strive
  23. in boxing-bout and foot-race: one of these
  24. made haste on horseback to the aged King,
  25. with tidings of a stranger company
  26. in foreign garb approaching. The good King
  27. bade call them to his house, and took his seat
  28. in mid-court on his high, ancestral throne.
  1. Large and majestical the castle rose:
  2. a hundred columns lifted it in air
  3. upon the city's crown—the royal keep
  4. of Picus of Laurentum; round it lay
  5. deep, gloomy woods by olden worship blest.
  6. Here kings took sceptre and the fasces proud
  7. with omens fair; the selfsame sacred place
  8. was senate-house and temple; here was found
  9. a hall for hallowed feasting, where a ram
  10. was offered up, and at long banquet-boards
  11. the nation's fathers sat in due array.
  12. Here ranged ancestral statues roughly hewn
  13. of ancient cedar-wood: King Italus;
  14. Father Sabinus, planter of the vine,
  15. a curving sickle in his sculptured hand;
  16. gray-bearded Saturn; and the double brow
  17. of Janus' head; and other sires and kings
  18. were wardens of the door, with many a chief
  19. wounded in battle for his native land.
  20. Trophies of arms in goodly order hung
  21. along the columns: chariots of war
  22. from foeman taken, axes of round blade,
  23. plumed helmets, bolts and barriers of steel
  24. from city-gates, shields, spears, and beaks of bronze
  25. from captured galleys by the conqueror torn.
  26. Here, wielding his Quirinal augur-staff,
  27. girt in scant shift, and bearing on his left
  28. the sacred oval shield, appeared enthroned
  29. Picus, breaker of horses, whom his bride,
  30. enamoured Circe, smote with golden wand,
  31. and, raining o'er him potent poison-dew,
  32. changed to a bird of pied and dappled wings.
  1. In such a temple of his gods did Sire
  2. Latinus, on hereditary throne,
  3. welcome the Trojans to his halls, and thus
  4. with brow serene gave greeting as they came:
  5. “O sons of Dardanus, think not unknown
  6. your lineage and city! Rumored far
  7. your venturous voyage has been. What seek ye here?
  8. What cause, what quest, has brought your barks and you
  9. o'er the blue waters to Ausonia's hills?
  10. What way uncharted, or wild stress of storm,
  11. or what that sailors suffer in mid-sea,
  12. unto this river bank and haven bore?
  13. Doubt not our welcome! We of Latin land
  14. are Saturn's sons, whose equitable minds,
  15. not chained by statute or compulsion, keep
  16. in freedom what the god's good custom gave.
  17. Now I bethink me our Ausonian seers
  18. have dark, dim lore that 't was this land gave birth
  19. to Dardanus, who after took his way
  20. through Phrygian Ida's towns and Samothrace.
  21. Once out of Tuscan Corythus he fared;
  22. but now in golden house among the stars
  23. he has a throne, and by his altars blest
  24. adds to the number of the gods we praise.”
  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.”