Aeneid

Virgil

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

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