Aeneid
Virgil
Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.
- While thus in distant region moves the war,
- down to bold Turnus Saturn's daughter sends
- celestial Iris. In a sacred vale,
- the seat of worship at his grandsire's tomb,
- Pilumnus, Faunus' son, the hero mused.
- And thus the wonder-child of Thaumas called
- with lips of rose: “O Turnus, what no god
- dared give for reward of thy fondest vow,
- has come unbidden on its destined day.
- Behold, Aeneas, who has left behind
- the city with his fleet and followers,
- is gone to kingly Palatine, the home
- of good Evander. Yea, his march invades
- the far Etrurian towns, where now he arms
- the Lydian rustics. Wilt thou longer muse?
- Call for thy chariot and steeds! Away!
- Take yonder tents by terror and surprise!”
- She spoke; and heavenward on poising wings
- soared, cleaving as she fled from cloud to cloud
- a vast, resplendent bow. The warrior saw,
- and, lifting both his hands, pursued with prayer
- the fading glory: “Beauteous Iris, hail!
- Proud ornament of heaven! who sent thee here
- across yon cloud to earth, and unto me?
- Whence may this sudden brightness fall? I see
- the middle welkin lift, and many a star,
- far-wandering in the sky. Such solemn sign
- I shall obey, and thee, O god unknown!”
- So saying, he turned him to a sacred stream,
- took water from its brim, and offered Heaven
- much prayer, with many an importuning vow.
- Soon o'er the spreading fields in proud array
- the gathered legions poured; no lack was there
- of steeds all fire, and broidered pomp and gold.
- Messapus led the van; in rearguard rode
- the sons of Tyrrheus; kingly Turnus towered
- from the mid-column eminent: the host
- moved as great Ganges lifting silently
- his seven peaceful streams, or when the flood
- of fructifying Nile from many a field
- back to his channel flows. A swift-blown cloud
- of black, uprolling dust the Teucrians see
- o'ershadowing the plain; Calcus calls
- from lofty outpost: “O my countrymen,
- I see a huge, black ball of rolling smoke.
- Your swords and lances! Man the walls! To arms!
- The foe is here! What ho!” With clamors loud
- the Teucrians through the city-gates retire,
- and muster on the walls. For, wise in war,
- Aeneas, ere he went, had left command
- they should not range in battle-line, nor dare,
- whate'er might hap, to risk in open plain
- the bold sortie, but keep them safe entrenched
- in mounded walls. So now, though rage and shame
- prick to a close fight, they defensive bar
- each portal strong, and, patient of control,
- from hollow towers expect th' encircling foe.
- Turnus, at full speed, had outridden far
- his laggard host, and, leading in his train
- a score of chosen knights, dashed into view
- hard by the walls. A barb of Thracian breed
- dappled with white he rode; a crimson plume
- flamed over his golden helmet. “Who,” he cries,
- “Is foremost at the foe? Who follows me?
- Behold!” And, with the word, he hurled in air
- a javelin, provoking instant war:
- and, towering from his horse, charged o'er the field.
- With answering shout his men-at-arms pursue,
- and war-cries terrible. They laugh to scorn
- “the craven hearts of Troy, that cannot give
- fair, equal vantage, matching man to man,
- but cuddle into camp.” This way and that
- Turnus careers, and stormily surveys
- the frowning rampart, and where way is none
- some entering breach would find: so prowls a wolf
- nigh the full sheepfold, and through wind and rain
- stands howling at the postern all night long;
- beneath the ewes their bleating lambs lie safe;
- but he, with undesisting fury, more
- rages from far, made frantic for his prey
- by hunger of long hours, his foaming jaws
- athirst for blood: not less the envy burned
- of the Rutulian, as he scanned in vain
- the stronghold of his foe. Indignant scorn
- thrilled all his iron frame. But how contrive
- to storm the fortress or by force expel
- the Trojans from the rampart, and disperse
- along the plain? Straightway he spied the ships,
- in hiding near the camp, defended well
- by mounded river-bank and fleeting wave.
- On these he fell; while his exultant crew
- brought firebrands, and he with heart aflame
- grasped with a vengeful hand the blazing pine.
- To the wild work his followers sped; for who
- could prove him craven under Turnus' eye?
- The whole troop for the weapon of their rage
- seized smoking coals, of many a hearth the spoil;
- red glare of fuming torches burned abroad,
- and Vulcan starward flung a sparkling cloud.
- What god, O Muses, saved the Trojans then
- from wrathful flame? Who shielded then the fleet,
- I pray you tell, from bursting storm of fire?
- From hoary eld the tale, but its renown
- sings on forever. When Aeneas first
- on Phrygian Ida hewed the sacred wood
- for rib and spar, and soon would put to sea,
- that mighty mother of the gods, they say,
- the Berecynthian goddess, thus to Jove
- addressed her plea: “Grant, O my son, a boon,
- which thy dear mother asks, who aided thee
- to quell Olympian war. A grove I have
- of sacred pine, long-loved from year to year.
- On lofty hill it grew, and thither came
- my worshippers with gifts, in secret gloom
- of pine-trees dark and shadowing maple-boughs.;
- these on the Dardan warrior at his need
- I, not unwilling, for his fleet bestowed.
- But I have fears. O, Iet a parent's prayer
- in this prevail, and bid my care begone!
- Let not rude voyages nor the shock of storm
- my ships subdue, but let their sacred birth
- on my charmed hills their strength and safety be!”
- Then spake her son, who guides the wheeling spheres:
- “Wouldst thou, my mother, strive to oversway
- the course of Fate? What means this prayer of thine?
- Can it be granted ships of mortal mould
- to wear immortal being? Wouldst thou see
- Aeneas pass undoubting and secure
- through doubtful strait and peril? On what god
- was e'er such power bestowed? Yet will I grant
- a different boon. Whatever ships shall find
- a safe Ausonian haven, and convey
- safe through the seas to yon Laurentian plain
- the Dardan King, from such I will remove
- their perishable shapes, and bid them be
- sea-nymphs divine, like Nereus' daughters fair,
- Doto and Galatea, whose white breasts
- divide the foaming wave.” He said, and swore
- by his Tartarean brother's mournful stream,
- the pitch-black floods and dark engulfing shore
- of Styx; then great Jove bowed his head, and all
- Olympus quaked at his consenting brow.
- Now was the promised day at hand (for Fate
- had woven the web so far) when Turnus' rage
- stirred the divine progenitress to save
- her sacred ships from fire. Then sudden shone
- a strange effulgence in the eastern air;
- and in a storm-cloud wafted o'er the sky
- were Corybantic choirs, whose dreadful song
- smote both on Teucrian and Rutulian ear:
- “O Teucrians, fear not for the sure defence
- of all the ships, nor arm your mortal hands.
- Yon impious Turnus shall burn up the seas
- before my pine-trees blest. Arise! Be free,
- ye goddesses of ocean, and obey
- your mother's mighty word.” Then instant broke
- the hawsers of the sterns; the beaked prows
- went plunging like great dolphins from the shore
- down to the deeps, and, wonderful to tell,
- the forms of virgin goddesses uprose,
- one for each ship, and seaward sped away.