Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- “Ah wretched me! ” her father cried;
- and as he clung around her horns and neck
- repeated while she groaned, “Ah wretched me!
- Art thou my daughter sought in every clime?
- When lost I could not grieve for thee as now
- that thou art found; thy sighs instead of words
- heave up from thy deep breast, thy longings give
- me answer. I prepared the nuptial torch
- and bridal chamber, in my ignorance,
- since my first hope was for a son in law;
- and then I dreamed of children from the match:
- but now the herd may furnish thee a mate,
- and all thy issue of the herd must be.
- Oh that a righteous death would end my grief!—
- it is a dreadful thing to be a God!
- Behold the lethal gate of death is shut
- against me, and my growing grief must last
- throughout eternity.”
- While thus he moaned
- came starry Argus there, and Io bore
- from her lamenting father. Thence he led
- his charge to other pastures; and removed
- from her, upon a lofty mountain sat,
- whence he could always watch her, undisturbed.
- The sovereign god no longer could endure
- to witness Io's woes. He called his son,
- whom Maia brightest of the Pleiades
- brought forth, and bade him slay the star eyed guard,
- argus. He seized his sleep compelling wand
- and fastened waving wings on his swift feet,
- and deftly fixed his brimmed hat on his head:—
- lo, Mercury, the favoured son of Jove,
- descending to the earth from heaven's plains,
- put off his cap and wings,— though still retained
- his wand with which he drove through pathless wilds
- some stray she goats, and as a shepherd fared,
- piping on oaten reeds melodious tunes.
- Argus, delighted with the charming sound
- of this new art began; “Whoever thou art,
- sit with me on this stone beneath the trees
- in cooling shade, whilst browse the tended flock
- abundant herbs; for thou canst see the shade
- is fit for shepherds.” Wherefore, Mercury
- sat down beside the keeper and conversed
- of various things—passing the laggard hours.—
- then soothly piped he on the joined reeds
- to lull those ever watchful eyes asleep;
- but Argus strove his languor to subdue,
- and though some drowsy eyes might slumber, still
- were some that vigil kept. Again he spoke,
- (for the pipes were yet a recent art)
- “I pray thee tell what chance discovered these.”
- To him the God, “ A famous Naiad dwelt
- among the Hamadryads, on the cold
- Arcadian summit Nonacris, whose name
- was Syrinx. Often she escaped the Gods,
- that wandered in the groves of sylvan shades,
- and often fled from Satyrs that pursued.
- Vowing virginity, in all pursuits
- she strove to emulate Diana's ways:
- and as that graceful goddess wears her robe,
- so Syrinx girded hers that one might well
- believe Diana there. Even though her bow
- were made of horn, Diana's wrought of gold,
- vet might she well deceive.
- “Now chanced it Pan.
- Whose head was girt with prickly pines, espied
- the Nymph returning from the Lycian Hill,
- and these words uttered he: ”—But Mercury
- refrained from further speech, and Pan's appeal
- remains untold. If he had told it all,
- the tale of Syrinx would have followed thus:—
- but she despised the prayers of Pan, and fled
- through pathless wilds until she had arrived
- the placid Ladon's sandy stream, whose waves
- prevented her escape. There she implored
- her sister Nymphs to change her form: and Pan,
- believing he had caught her, held instead
- some marsh reeds for the body of the Nymph;
- and while he sighed the moving winds began
- to utter plaintive music in the reeds,
- so sweet and voice like that poor Pan exclaimed;
- “Forever this discovery shall remain
- a sweet communion binding thee to me.”—
- and this explains why reeds of different length,
- when joined together by cementing wax,
- derive the name of Syrinx from the maid.
- Such words the bright god Mercury would say;
- but now perceiving Argus' eyes were dimmed
- in languorous doze, he hushed his voice and touched
- the drooping eyelids with his magic wand,
- compelling slumber. Then without delay
- he struck the sleeper with his crescent sword,
- where neck and head unite, and hurled his head,
- blood dripping, down the rocks and rugged cliff.
- Low lies Argus: dark is the light of all
- his hundred eyes, his many orbed lights
- extinguished in the universal gloom
- that night surrounds; but Saturn's daughter spread
- their glister on the feathers of her bird,
- emblazoning its tail with starry gems.
- Juno made haste, inflamed with towering rage,
- to vent her wrath on Io; and she raised
- in thought and vision of the Grecian girl
- a dreadful Fury. Stings invisible,
- and pitiless, she planted in her breast,
- and drove her wandering throughout the globe.
- The utmost limit of her laboured way,
- O Nile, thou didst remain. Which, having reached,
- and placed her tired knees on that river's edge,
- she laid her there, and as she raised her neck
- looked upward to the stars, and groaned and wept
- and mournfully bellowed: trying thus to plead,
- by all the means she had, that Jupiter
- might end her miseries. Repentant Jove
- embraced his consort, and entreated her
- to end the punishment: “Fear not,” he said,
- “For she shall trouble thee no more.” He spoke,
- and called on bitter Styx to hear his oath.
- And now imperial Juno, pacified,
- permitted Io to resume her form,—
- at once the hair fell from her snowy sides;
- the horns absorbed, her dilate orbs decreased;
- the opening of her jaws contracted; hands
- appeared and shoulders; and each transformed hoof
- became five nails. And every mark or form
- that gave the semblance of a heifer changed,
- except her fair white skin; and the glad Nymph
- was raised erect and stood upon her feet.
- But long the very thought of speech, that she
- might bellow as a heifer, filled her mind
- with terror, till the words so long forgot
- for some sufficient cause were tried once more.
- and since that time, the linen wearing throng
- of Egypt have adored her as a God;
- for they believe the seed of Jove prevailed;
- and when her time was due she bore to him
- a son called Epaphus; who also dwells
- in temples with his mother in that land.
- Now Phaethon, whose father was the Sun,
- was equal to his rival, Epaphus,
- in mind and years; and he was glad to boast
- of wonders, nor would yield to Epaphus
- for pride of Phoebus, his reputed sire.
- Unable to endure it, Io's son
- thus mocked him; “Poor, demented fellow, what
- will you not credit if your mother speaks,
- you are so puffed up with the fond conceit
- of your imagined sire, the Lord of Day.”
- shame crimsoned in his cheeks, but Phaethon
- withholding rage, reported all the taunts
- of Epaphus to Clymene his mother:
- “'Twill grieve you, mother, I, the bold and free,
- was silent; and it shames me to report
- this dark reproach remains unchallenged. Oh,
- if I am born of race divine, give proof
- of that illustrious descent and claim
- my right to Heaven.” Around his mother's neck
- he drew his arms, and by the head of Merops,
- and by his own, and by the nuptial torch
- of his beloved sisters, he implored
- for some true token of his origin.
- Or moved by Phaethon's importuned words,
- or by the grievous charge, who might declare?
- She raised her arms to Heaven, and gazing full
- upon the broad sun said; “I swear to you
- by yonder orb, so radiant and bright,
- which both beholds and hears us while we speak,
- that you are his begotten son.—You are
- the child of that great light which sways the world:
- and if I have not spoken what is true,
- let not mine eyes behold his countenance,
- and let this fatal moment be the last
- that I shall look upon the light of day!
- Nor will it weary you, my son, to reach
- your father's dwelling; for the very place
- where he appears at dawn is near our land.
- Go, if it please you, and the very truth
- learn from your father.” Instantly sprang forth
- exultant Phaethon. Overjoyed with words
- so welcome, he imagined he could leap
- and touch the skies. And so he passed his land
- of Ethiopia, and the Indies, hot
- beneath the tawny sun, and there he turned
- his footsteps to his father's Land of Dawn.
- Glowing with gold, flaming with carbuncles
- on stately columns raised, refulgent shone
- the palace of the Sun, with polished dome
- of ivory gleaming, and with portals twain
- of burnished silver. And the workmanship
- exceeded all the wealth of gems and gold;
- for there had Mulciber engraved the seas
- encircling middle earth; the round of earth,
- and heaven impending over the land.
- And there
- amid the waves were azure deities:
- melodious Triton and elusive Proteus; there
- Aegeaan pressing with his arms the backs.
- Of monstrous whales; and Doris in the sea
- and all her daughters; some amid the waves
- and others sitting on the bank to dry
- their sea-green hair, and others borne about
- by fishes. Each was made to show a fair
- resemblance to her sisters—yet not one
- appearance was assigned to all—they seemed
- as near alike as sisters should in truth.
- And men and cities, woods and savage beasts,
- and streams and nymphs, and sylvan deities
- were carved upon the land; and over these
- an image of the glittering sky was fixed;—
- six signs were on the right, six on the left.
- Here when audacious Phaethon arrived
- by steep ascending paths, without delay
- he entered in the shining palace-gates
- of his reputed parent, making haste
- to stand in his paternal presence. There,
- unable to endure the dazzling light,
- he waited at a distance.
- Phoebus sat,
- arrayed in royal purple, on a throne
- that glittered with the purest emeralds.—
- there to the left and right, Day, Month and Year,
- time and the Hours, at equal distance stood;
- and vernal Spring stood crowned with wreathed flowers;
- and naked Summer stood with sheaves of wheat;
- and Autumn stood besmeared with trodden grapes;
- and icy Winter rough with hoary hair.
- And from the midst, with orbs that view the world,
- Phoebus beheld the trembling youth, fear-struck,
- in mute amazement, and he said; “Declare
- the reason of thy journey. What wilt thou
- in this my palace, Phaethon my child
- beloved?”
- And to him replied the youth;
- “O universal light of all the world,
- my father Phoebus, if thy name be mine,
- if Clymene has not concealed her sin
- beneath some pretext, give to me, my sire,
- a token to declare thy fatherhood
- which may establish my assured descent,
- and leave no dark suspicions in our minds.”—
- then Phoebus from his shining brows cast down
- his circling rays; called Phaethon to him,
- and as he held him to his breast replied;
- “O child most worthy of thy sire, the truth
- was told thee by thy mother; wherefore doubts
- to dissipate, consider thy desire,
- and ask of me that I may freely give:
- yea, let the Nether Lake, beyond our view,
- (which is the oath of Gods inviolate)
- be witness to my word.”
- When this was said
- the happy youth at once began to plead
- command and guidance of his father's steeds,
- wing-footed, and his chariot for a day.
- But Phoebus much repented that he sware,
- and thrice and four times shook his radiant head;
- “Ah, would I might refuse my plighted word;
- and oh, that it were lawful to deny
- the promised boon.—For I confess, O son,
- this only I should keep from thee—and yet
- 'Tis lawful to dissuade. It is unsafe
- to satisfy thy will. It is a great
- request, O Phaethon, which neither suits
- thy utmost strength nor tender years; for thou
- art mortal, and thou hast aspired to things
- immortal. Ignorance has made thy thought
- transcend the province of the Gods. I vaunt
- no vain exploits; but only I can stand
- securely on the flame-fraught axle-tree:
- even the Ruler of Olympian Gods,
- who hurls fierce lightnings with his great right hand,
- may never dare to drive this chariot,
- and what art thou to equal mighty Jove?
- “The opening path is steep and difficult,
- for scarcely can the steeds, refreshed at dawn,
- climb up the steeps: and when is reached the height,
- extreme of midmost Heaven, and sea and earth
- are viewed below, my trembling breast is filled
- with fearful apprehensions: and requires
- the last precipitous descent a sure
- command. Then, also, Tethys, who receives
- me in her subject waves, is wont to fear
- lest I should fall disastrous. And around
- the hastening sky revolves in constant whirl,
- drawing the lofty stars with rapid twist.
- “I struggle on. The force that overcomes
- the heavenly bodies overwhelms me not,
- and I am borne against that rapid globe.
- Suppose the chariot thine: what canst thou do?
- Canst thou drive straight against the twisted pole
- and not be carried from the lofty path
- by the swift car? Art thou deceived to think
- there may be groves and cities of the Gods,
- and costly temples wondrously endowed?
- “The journey is beset with dreadful snares
- and shapes of savage animals. If thou
- shouldst hold upon thy way without mistake
- yet must thy journey be through Taurus' horns,
- and through the Bow Haemonian, and the jaws
- of the fierce Lion, and the cruel arms
- of Scorpion, bent throughout a vast expanse,—
- and Cancer's curving arms reversely bent.
- “It is no easy task for thee to rule
- the mettled four-foot steeds, enflamed in fires
- that kindle in their breasts, forth issuing
- in breathings from their mouths and nostrils hot;—
- I scarce restrain them, as their struggling necks
- pull on the harness, when their heated fires
- are thus aroused.
- “And, O my son, lest I
- may be the author of a baneful gift,
- beware, and as the time permits recall
- thy rash request. Forsooth thou hast besought
- undoubted signs of thy descent from me?
- My fears for thee are certain signs that thou
- art of my race—by my paternal fears
- 'Tis manifest I am thy father. Lo!
- Behold my countenance! and oh, that thou
- couldst even pierce my bosom with thine eyes,
- and so discover my paternal cares!
- “Look round thee on the treasured world's delights
- and ask the greatest blessing of the sky,
- or sea or land, and thou shalt suffer no
- repulse: but only this I must deplore,
- which rightly named would be a penalty
- and not an honour.—Thou hast made request
- of punishment and not a gift indeed.
- O witless boy! why dost thou hold my neck
- with thy caressing arms? For, doubt it not,
- as I have sworn it by the Stygian Waves,
- whatever thou shalt wish, it shall be given—
- but thou shouldst wish more wisely.”
- So were all
- his admonitions said, availing naught;
- for Phaethon resisted his advice,
- and urged again his claim, and eagerly burned
- to use the chariot. Wherefore, Phoebus long
- delaying and reluctant, took the youth
- to view the spacious chariot, gift of Vulcan.—
- gold was the axle and the beam was gold,
- the great Wheel had a golden tire and spokes
- of silver; chrysolites and diamonds
- reflected from the spangled yoke the light
- of Phoebus.
- While aspiring Phaethon admired
- the glittering chariot and its workmanship,
- the vigilant Aurora opened forth
- her purple portals from the ruddy east,
- disclosing halls replete with roses. All
- the stars took flight, while Lucifer, the last
- to quit his vigil, gathered that great host
- and disappeared from his celestial watch.
- And when his father, Phoebus, saw the earth
- and the wide universe in glowing tints
- arrayed, as waned the Moon's diminished horns,
- far-distant, then he bade the nimble Hours
- to yoke the steeds.—At once the Deities
- accomplished his commands, and led the steeds,
- ambrosia-fed and snorting flames, from out
- their spacious stalls; and fixed their sounding bits.
- Then with a hallowed drug the father touched
- the stripling's face, to make him proof against
- the rapid flame, and wrought around his hair
- the sun-rays. But, foreboding grief, he said,
- while many a sigh heaved from his anxious breast;
- “If thou canst only heed thy father's voice—
- be sparing of the whip and use with nerve
- the reins; for of their own accord the steeds
- will hasten. Difficult are they to check
- in full career. Thou must not drive the car
- directly through five circles, for the track
- takes a wide curve, obliquely, and is bound
- by the extreme edge of three zones.—It avoids
- the Southern Pole, and it avoids the Bear
- that roams around the north. The way is plain;
- the traces of the Wheel are manifest.
- “Observe with care that both the earth and sky
- have their appropriate heat—Drive not too low,
- nor urge the chariot through the highest plane;
- for if thy course attain too great a height
- thou wilt consume the mansions of the sky,
- and if too low the land will scorch with heat.
- “Take thou the middle plane, where all is safe;
- nor let the Wheel turn over to the right
- and bear thee to the twisted Snake! nor let
- it take thee to the Altar on the left—
- so close to earth—but steer the middle course.—
- to Fortune I commit thy fate, whose care
- for thee so reckless of thyself I pray.
- “While I am speaking humid night has touched
- the margin of Hesperian shores. 'Tis not
- for us to idle; we are called away;—
- when bright Aurora shines the darkness flies.
- Take up the reins! But if thy stubborn breast
- be capable of change use not our car,
- but heed my counsel while the time permits,
- and while thy feet are on a solid base,
- but not, according to thy foolish wish,
- pressing the axle. Rather let me light
- the world beneath thy safe and wondering gaze.”
- But Phaethon with youthful vigor leaped,
- and in the light-made chariot lightly stood:
- and he rejoiced, and with the reins in hand
- thanked his reluctant parent.
- Instantly
- Eous, Aethon, Pyrois and Phlegon,
- the winged horses of the Sun, gave vent
- to flame-like neighs that filled the shaking air;
- they pawed the barriers with their shining hoofs.
- Then Tethys, witless of her grandson's fate
- let back the barriers,—and the universe
- was theirs to traverse. Taking the well-known road,
- and moving through the air with winged feet,
- they pierced resisting clouds, and spreading wide
- their pinions soared upon the eastern wind,
- far-wafted from that realm. But Phaethon,
- so easy of their yoke, lost all control,
- and the great car was tossed,—as tapered ships
- when lightened of their ballast toss and heave
- unsteady in the surging seas: the car
- leaped lightly in the air, and in the heights
- was tossed unsteady as an empty shell.
- Soon as the steeds perceived it, with a rush
- impetuous, they left the beaten track;
- regardless of all order and control;
- and Phaethon filled with fear, knew not to guide
- with trusted reins, nor where the way might be—
- nor, if he knew, could he control their flight.
- Warmed in the sunshine, never felt before,
- the gelid Triones attempted vain
- to bathe in seas forbid: the Serpent cold
- and torpid by the frozen Pole, too cold
- for contest, warmed, and rage assumed from heat
- bootes, troubled by the heat, took flight,
- impeded by his wain.
- And as from skies
- of utmost height unhappy Phaethon
- beheld the earth receding from his view,
- a pallor spread his cheeks with sudden fear;
- his knees began to quake; and through the flare
- of vast effulgence darkness closed his eyes.
- Now vainy he regrets he ever touched
- his father's steeds, and he is stunned with grief
- that so entreating he prevailed to know
- his true descent. He rather would be called
- the son of Merops. As a ship is tossed
- by raging Boreas, when the conquered helm
- has been abandoned, and the pilot leaves
- the vessel to his vows and to the Gods;
- so, helpless, he is borne along the sky.
- What can he? Much of heaven remains behind;
- a longer distance is in front of him—
- each way is measured in his anxious mind.—
- at first his gaze is fixed upon the west,
- which fate has destined he shall never reach,
- and then his eyes turn backward to the east.—
- so, stupefied and dazed he neither dares
- to loose the bits, nor tighten on the reins,
- and he is ignorant of the horses' names.
- He sees horrific wonders scattered round,
- and images of hideous animals.—
- and there's a spot where Scorpion bends his claws
- in double circles, and with tail and arms
- on either side, stretches his limbs throughout
- the space of two Celestial Signs; and when
- the lad beheld him, steeped in oozing slime
- of venom, swart, and threatening to strike
- grim wounds with jagged spear-points, he was lost;
- and, fixed in chills of horror, dropped the reins.
- When these they felt upon their rising backs,
- the startled steeds sprang forthwith; and, unchecked,
- through atmospheres of regions unexplored,
- thence goaded by their unchecked violence,
- broke through the lawful bounds, and rushed upon
- the high fixed stars. They dragged the chariot
- through devious ways, and soared amid the heights;
- dashed down deep pathways, far, precipitous,
- and gained a level near the scorching earth.
- Phoebe is wondering that her brother's steeds
- run lower than her own, and sees the smoke
- of scorching clouds. The highest altitudes
- are caught in flames, and as their moistures dry
- they crack in chasms. The grass is blighted; trees
- are burnt up with their leaves; the ripe brown crops
- give fuel for self destruction—Oh what small
- complaints! Great cities perish with their walls,
- and peopled nations are consumed to dust—
- the forests and the mountains are destroyed.
- Cilician Taurus, Athos and Tmolus,
- and Oeta are burning; and the far-famed Ida
- and all her cooling rills are dry and burning,
- and virgin Helicon, and Hoemos—later
- Oeagrius called—and Aetna with tremendous,
- redoubled flames, and double-peaked Parnassus,
- Sicilian Eryx, Cynthus—Othrys, pine-clad,
- and Rhodope, deprived his snowy mantle,
- and Dindyma and Mycale and Mimas,
- and Mount Cithaeron, famed for sacred rites:
- and Scythia, though a land of frost, is burning,
- and Caucasus,—and Ossa burns with Pindus,—
- and greater than those two Olympus burns—
- the lofty Alps, the cloud-topped Apennines.
- And Phaethon, as he inhaled the air,
- burning and scorching as a furnace blast,
- and saw destruction on the flaming world,
- and his great chariot wreathed in quenchless fires,
- was suddenly unable to endure the heat,
- the smoke and cinders, and he swooned away.—
- if he had known the way, those winged steeds
- would rush as wild unguided.—
- then the skin
- of Ethiopians took a swarthy hue,
- the hot blood tingling to the surface: then
- the heat dried up the land of Libya;
- dishevelled, the lorn Nymphs, lamenting, sought
- for all their emptied springs and lakes in vain;
- Boeotia wailed for Dirce's cooling wave,
- and Argos wailed for Amymone's stream—
- and even Corinth for the clear Pyrene.
- Not safer from the flames were distant streams;—
- the Tanais in middle stream was steaming
- and old Peneus and Teuthrantian Caicus,
- Ismenus, rapid and Arcadian Erymanthus;
- and even Xanthus destined for a second burning,
- and tawny-waved Lycormas, and Meander,
- turning and twisting, and Thracian Melas burns,
- and the Laconian Eurotas burns,
- the mighty Babylonian Euphrates,
- Orontes and the Ganges, swift Thermodon,
- Ister and Phasis and Alpheus boil.
- The banks of Spercheus burn, the gold of Tagus
- is melting in the flames. The swans whose songs
- enhanced the beauties of Maeonian banks
- are scalded in the Cayster's middle wave.
- The Nile affrighted fled to parts remote,
- and hid his head forever from the world:
- now empty are his seven mouths, and dry
- without or wave or stream; and also dry
- Ismenian Hebrus, Strymon and the streams
- of Hesper-Land, the rivers Rhine and Rhone,
- and Po, and Tiber, ruler of the world.
- And even as the ground asunder burst,
- the light amazed in gloomy Tartarus
- the King Infernal and his Spouse. The sea
- contracted and his level waste became
- a sandy desert. The huge mountain tops,
- once covered by the ocean's waves, reared up,
- by which the scattered Cyclades increased.
- Even the fishes sought for deeper pools;—
- the crooked dolphins dared not skip the waves;
- the lifeless sea-calves floated on the top;
- and it is even famed that Nereus hid
- with Doris and her daughters, deep below
- in seething caverns. With a dauntless mien
- thrice Neptune tried to thrust his arms above
- the waters;—thrice the heated air overcame
- his courage.
- Then the genial Earth, although
- surrounded by the waters of the sea,
- was parched and dry; for all her streams had hid
- deep in the darkness of her winding caves.—
- she lifted her productive countenance,
- up to her rounded neck, and held her palms
- on her sad brows; and as the mountains huge
- trembled and tottered, beneath her wonted plane
- declined she for a space—and thus began,
- with parched voice;
- “If this is thy decree,
- O, Highest of the Gods,—if I have sinned
- why do thy lightnings linger? For if doomed
- by fires consuming I to perish must,
- let me now die in thy celestial flames—
- hurled by thine arm—and thus alleviate,
- by thine omnipotence, this agony.
- “How difficult to open my parched mouth,
- and speak these words! (the vapours choking her),
- behold my scorching hair, and see the clouds
- of ashes falling on my blinded eyes,
- and on my features! What a recompense
- for my fertility! How often I
- have suffered from the wounds of crooked plows
- and rending harrows—tortured year by year!
- For this I give to cattle juicy leaves
- and fruits to man and frankincense to thee!
- “Suppose destruction is my just award
- what have the waters and thy brother done?
- Why should thy brother's cooling waves decrease
- and thus recede so distant from the skies?
- If not thy brother's good nor mine may touch
- thy mercy, let the pity of thy Heaven,
- for lo, the smoking poles on either side
- attest, if flames consume them or destroy,
- the ruin of thy palace. Atlas, huge,
- with restive shoulders hardly can support
- the burning heavens. If the seas and lands
- together perish and thy palace fall,
- the universe confused will plunge once more
- to ancient Chaos. Save it from this wreck—
- if anything survive the fury of the flames.”
- So made the tortured Earth an end of speech;
- and she was fain to hide her countenance
- in caves that border on the nether night.
- But now the Almighty Father, having called
- to witness all the Gods of Heaven, and him
- who gave the car, that, else his power be shown,
- must perish all in dire confusion, high
- he mounted to the altitude from which
- he spreads the mantling clouds, and fulminates
- his dreadful thunders and swift lightning-bolts
- terrific.—Clouds were none to find on the earth,
- and the surrounding skies were void of rain.—
- Jove, having reached that summit, stood and poised
- in his almighty hand a flashing dart,
- and, hurling it, deprived of life and seat
- the youthful charioteer, and struck with fire
- the raging flames— and by the same great force
- those flames enveloping the earth were quenched,
- and he who caused their fury lost his life.
- Frantic in their affright the horses sprang
- across the bounded way and cast their yokes,
- and through the tangled harness lightly leaped.
- And here the scattered harness lay, and there
- the shattered axle, wrenched from off the pole,
- and various portions of the broken car;
- spokes of the broken Wheel were scattered round.
- And far fell Phaethon with flaming hair;
- as haply from the summer sky appears
- a falling star, although it never drops
- to startled earth.—Far distant from his home
- the deep Eridanus received the lad
- and bathed his foaming face. His body charred
- by triple flames Hesperian Naiads bore,
- still smoking, to a tomb, and this engraved
- upon the stone; “Here Phaethon's remains
- lie buried. He who drove his father's car
- and fell, although he made a great attempt.”
- Filled with consuming woe, his father hid
- his countenance which grief had overcast.
- And now, surpassing our belief, they say
- a day passed over with no glowing sun;—
- but light-affording flames appeared to change
- disaster to the cause of good.
- Amazed,
- the woeful Clymene, when she had moaned
- in grief, amid her lamentations tore
- her bosom, as across the world she roamed,
- at first to seek his lifeless corpse, and then
- his bones. She wandered to that distant land
- and found at last his bones ensepulchred.
- There, clinging to the grave she fell and bathed
- with many tears his name on marble carved,
- and with her bosom warmed the freezing
- stone.
- And all the daughters of the Sun went there
- giving their tears, alas a useless gift;—
- they wept and beat their breasts, and day and night
- called, “Phaethon,” who heard not any sound
- of their complaint:—and there they lay foredone,
- all scattered round the tomb.
- The silent moon
- had four times joined her horns and filled her disk,
- while they, according to an ancient rite,
- made lamentation. Prone upon the ground,
- the eldest, Phaethusa, would arise
- from there, but found her feet were growing stiff;
- and uttered moan. Lampetia wished to aid
- her sister but was hindered by new roots;
- a third when she would tear her hair, plucked forth
- but leaves: another wailed to find her legs
- were fastened in a tree; another moaned
- to find her arms to branches had been changed.
- And while they wondered, bark enclosed their thighs,
- and covered their smooth bellies, and their breasts,
- and shoulders and their hands, but left untouched
- their lips that called upon their mother's name.
- What can she do for them? Hither she runs
- and thither runs, wherever frenzy leads.
- She kisses them, alas, while yet she may!
- But not content with this, she tried to hale
- their bodies from the trees; and she would tear
- the tender branches with her hands, but lo!
- The blood oozed out as from a bleeding wound;
- and as she wounded them they shrieked aloud,
- “Spare me! O mother spare me; in the tree
- my flesh is torn! farewell! farewell! farewell!”
- And as they spoke the bark enclosed their lips.
- Their tears flow forth, and from the new-formed
- boughs
- amber distils and slowly hardens in the sun;
- and far from there upon the waves is borne
- to deck the Latin women.
- Cycnus, son
- of Sthenelus, by his maternal house
- akin to Phaethon, and thrice by love
- allied, beheld this wonderful event.—
- he left his kingdom of Liguria,
- and all its peopled cities, to lament
- where the sad sisters had increased the woods,
- beside the green banks of Eridanus.
- There, as he made complaint, his manly voice
- began to pipe a treble, shrill; and long
- gray plumes concealed his hair. A slender neck
- extended from his breast, and reddening toes
- were joined together by a membrane. Wings
- grew from his sides, and from his mouth was made
- a blunted beak. Now Cycnus is a swan,
- and yet he fears to trust the skies and Jove,
- for he remembers fires, unjustly sent,
- and therefore shuns the heat that he abhors,
- and haunts the spacious lakes and pools and streams
- that quench the fires.
- In squalid garb, meanwhile,
- and destitute of all his rays, the sire
- of Phaethon, as dark as when eclipse bedims
- his Wheel, abhors himself and hates the light,
- shuns the bright day, gives up his mind to grief,
- adds passion to his woe, denies the earth
- his countenance, and thus laments; “My lot
- was ever restless from the dawn of time,
- and I am weary of this labour, void
- and endless. Therefore, let who will urge forth
- my car, light-bearing, and if none may dare,
- when all the Gods of Heaven acknowledge it,
- let Jove himself essay the task. Perchance,
- when he takes up the reins, he may forget
- his dreadful lightning that bereaves of child
- a father's love; and as he tries the strength
- of those flame-footed steeds will know, in truth,
- the lad who failed to guide my chariot
- deserved not death.”
- But all the Deities
- encircle Phoebus as he makes complaint,
- and with their supplications they entreat
- him not to plunge the world in darkness. Jove
- would find excuses for the lightning-bolt,
- hurled from his hand, and adds imperious threats
- to his entreaties. Phoebus calls his steeds,
- frenzied with their maddening fires, and
- breaks
- their fury, as he vents with stinging lash
- his rage upon them, and in passion lays
- on them the death of Phaethon his son.
- Now after Phaethon had suffered death
- for the vast ruin wrought by scorching flames,
- all the great walls of Heaven's circumference,
- unmeasured, views the Father of the Gods,
- with searching care, that none impaired by heat
- may fall in ruins. Well assured they stand
- in self-sustaining strength, his view, at last,
- on all the mundane works of man is turned;—
- his loving gaze long resting on his own
- Arcadia. And he starts the streams and springs
- that long have feared to flow; paints the wide earth
- with verdant fields; covers the trees with leaves,
- and clothes the injured forests in their green.
- While wandering in the world, he stopped amazed,
- when he beheld the lovely Nymph, Calisto,
- and fires of love were kindled in his breast.
- Calisto was not clothed in sumptuous robes,
- nor did she deck her hair in artful coils;
- but with a buckle she would gird her robe,
- and bind her long hair with a fillet white.
- She bore a slender javelin in her hand,
- or held the curving bow; and thus in arms
- as chaste Diana, none of Maenalus
- was loved by that fair goddess more than she.
- But everything must change. When bright the sun
- rolled down the sky, beyond his middle course,
- she pierced a secret thicket, known to her,
- and having slipped the quiver from her arm,
- she loosed the bended bow, and softly down
- upon the velvet turf reclining, pressed
- her white neck on the quiver while she slept.
- When Jupiter beheld her, negligent
- and beautiful, he argued thus, “How can
- my consort, Juno, learn of this? And yet,
- if chance should give her knowledge, what care I?
- Let gain offset the scolding of her tongue!”
- This said, the god transformed himself and took
- Diana's form—assumed Diana's dress
- and imitating her awoke the maid,
- and spoke in gentle tones, “What mountain slope,
- O virgin of my train, hath been thy chase?”
- Which, having heard, Calisto, rose and said,
- “Hail, goddess! greater than celestial Jove!
- I would declare it though he heard the words.”
- Jove heard and smiled, well pleased to be preferred
- above himself, and kissed her many times,
- and strained her in his arms, while she began
- to tell the varied fortunes of her hunt.—
- but when his ardent love was known to her,
- she struggled to escape from his embrace:
- ah, how could she, a tender maid, resist
- almighty Jove?—Be sure, Saturnia
- if thou hadst only witnessed her thy heart
- had shown more pity!—
- Jupiter on wings,
- transcendent, sought his glorious heights;
- but she, in haste departing from that grove,
- almost forgot her quiver and her bow.
- Behold, Diana, with her virgin train,
- when hunting on the slopes of Maenalus,
- amidst the pleasures of exciting sport,
- espied the Nymph and called her, who, afraid
- that Jove apparelled in disguise deceived,
- drew backward for a moment, till appeared
- to her the lovely Nymphs that followed: thus,
- assured deceit was none, she ventured near.
- Alas, how difficult to hide disgrace!
- She could not raise her vision from the ground,
- nor as the leader of the hunting Nymphs,
- as was her wont, walk by the goddess' side.
- Her silence and her blushes were the signs
- of injured honour. Ah Diana, thou,
- if thou wert not a virgin, wouldst perceive
- and pity her unfortunate distress.
- The Moon's bent horns were rising from their ninth
- sojourn, when, fainting from Apollo's flames,
- the goddess of the Chase observed a cool
- umbrageous grove, from which a murmuring stream
- ran babbling gently over golden sands.
- When she approved the spot, lightly she struck
- her foot against the ripples of the stream,
- and praising it began; “Far from the gaze
- of all the curious we may bathe our limbs,
- and sport in this clear water.” Quickly they
- undid their garments,—but Calisto hid
- behind the others, till they knew her state.—
- Diana in a rage exclaimed, “Away!
- Thou must not desecrate our sacred springs!”
- And she was driven thence.