Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- There was a truce
- for many days after this opening fight
- while both sides resting, laid aside their arms.
- A watchful guard patroled the Phrygian walls;
- the Grecian trenches had their watchful guard.
- Then, on a festal day, Achilles gave
- the blood of a slain heifer to obtain
- the favor of Athena for their cause.
- The entrails burned upon the altar, while
- the odor, grateful to the deities,
- was mounting to the skies. When sacred rites
- were done, a banquet for the heroes was
- served on their tables. There the Grecian chiefs
- reclined on couches; while they satisfied
- themselves with roasted flesh, and banished cares:
- and thirst with wine. Nor harp nor singing voice
- nor long pipe made of boxwood pierced with holes,
- delighted them. They talked of their own deeds
- and valor, all that thrilling night: and even
- the strength of enemies whom they had met
- and overcome. What else could they admit
- or think of, while the great Achilles spoke
- or listened to them? But especially
- the recent victory over Cygnus held
- them ardent. Wonderful it seemed to them
- that such a youth could be composed of flesh
- not penetrable by the sharpest spear;
- of flesh which blunted even hardened steel,
- and never could be wounded. All the Greeks,
- and even Achilles wondered at the thought.
- Then Nestor said to them: “During your time,
- Cygnus has been the only man you knew
- who could despise all weapons and whose flesh
- could not be pierced by thrust of sword or spear.
- But long ago I saw another man
- able to bear unharmed a thousand strokes,
- Caeneus of Thessaly, Caeneus who lived
- upon Mt. Othrys. He was famed in war
- yet, strange to say, by birth he was a woman!”
- Then all expressed the greatest wonderment,
- and begged to hear the story of his life.
- Achilles cried, “O eloquent old man!
- The wisdom of our age! All of us wish
- to hear, who was this Caeneus? Why was he
- changed to the other sex? in what campaigns,
- and in what wars was he so known to you?
- Who conquered him, if any ever did?”
- The aged man replied to them with care:—
- “Although my great age is a harm to me,
- and many actions of my early days
- escape my memory; yet, most of them
- are well remembered. Nothing of old days,
- amid so many deeds of war and peace,
- can be more firmly fixed upon my mind
- than the strange story I shall tell of him.
- “If long extent of years made anyone
- a witness of most wonderful events
- and many, truly I may say to you
- that I have lived two hundred years; and now
- have entered my third century.
- The daughter of Elatus, Caenis, was
- remarkable for charm—most beautiful
- of all Thessalian maidens—many sighed
- for her in vain through all the neighboring towns
- and yours, Achilles, for that was her home.
- But Peleus did not try to win her love,
- for he was either married at that time
- to your dear mother, or was pledged to her.
- “Caenis never became the willing bride
- of any suitor; but report declares,
- while she was walking on a lonely shore,
- the god of ocean saw and ravished her.
- And in the joy of that love Neptune said,
- ‘Request of me whatever you desire,
- and nothing shall deny your dearest wish!’—
- the story tells us that he made this pledge.
- And Caenis said to Neptune, ‘The great wrong,
- which I have suffered from you justifies
- the wonderful request that I must make;
- I ask that I may never suffer such
- an injury again. Grant I may be
- no longer woman, and I'll ask no more.’
- while she was speaking to him, the last words
- of her strange prayer were uttered in so deep,
- in such a manly tone, it seemed indeed
- they must be from a man.—That was a fact:
- Neptune not only had allowed her prayer
- but made the new man proof against all wounds
- of spear or sword. Rejoicing in the gift
- he went his way as Caeneus Atracides,
- spent years in every manful exercise,
- and roamed the plains of northern Thessaly.