Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- “Another sight still comes before my eyes,
- the centaur Phaeocomes with his log.
- He wore six lion skins well wrapped around
- his body, and with fixed connecting knots
- they covered him, both horse and man. He hurled
- a trunk two yokes of oxen scarce could move
- and struck the hapless son of Olenus
- a crushing blow upon the head. The broad
- round dome was shattered, and his dying brains
- oozed out through hollow nostrils, mouth, and ears,
- as curdled milk seeps down through oaken twigs;
- or other liquors, crushed out under weights,
- flow through a well-pierced sieve and, thick,
- squeeze out through numerous holes.
- As he began
- to spoil his victim—and your father can
- affirm the truth of this—I thrust my sword
- deep in the wretch's groin. Chthonius, too,
- and Teleboas fell there by my sword.
- The former had a two-pronged stick as his
- sole weapon, and the other had a spear,
- with which the wounded me. You see the scar.
- The old scar still is surely visible!
- “Those were my days of youth and strength, and then
- I ought to have warred against the citadel
- of Pergama. I could have checked, or even
- vanquished, the arms of Hector: but, alas,
- Hector had not been born, or was perhaps
- a boy. Old age has dulled my youthful strength.
- What use is it, to speak of Periphas,
- who overcame Pyretus, double-formed?
- Why tell of Ampyx, who with pointless shaft,
- victorious thrust Echeclus through the face?
- Macareus, hurling a heavy crowbar pierced
- Erigdupus and laid him low.
- A hunting spear that Nessus strongly hurled,
- was buried in the groin of Cymelus.
- Do not believe that Mopsus, son of Ampycus,
- was merely a prophet of events to come,
- he slew a daring two-formed monster there.
- Hodites tried in vain to speak, before
- his death, but could not, for his tongue was nailed
- against his chin, his chin against his throat.
- “Five of the centaurs Caeneus put to death:
- Styphelus, Bromus, and Antimachus,
- Elymus, and Pyracmos with his axe.
- I have forgot their wounds but noted well
- their names and number. Latreus, huge of limb,
- had killed and stripped Emathian Halesus.
- Now in his armor he came rushing out,
- in years he was between old age and youth;
- but he retained the vigor of his youth;
- his temples showed his hair was mixed with grey.
- Conspicuous for his Macedonian lance
- and sword and shield, facing both sides—each way,
- he insolently clashed his arms; and while
- he rode poured out these words in empty air.
- “ ‘Shall I put up with one like you, O Caeneus?
- For you are still a woman in my sight.
- Have you forgot your birth or that disgrace
- by which you won reward—at what a price
- you got the false resemblance to a man?!
- Consider both your birth, and what you have
- submitted to! Take up a distaff, and
- wool basket! Twist your threads with practiced thumb!
- Leave warfare to your men!’
- “While puffed-up pride
- was vaunting out such nonsense, Caeneus hurled
- a spear and pierced the stretched out running side,
- just where the man was joined upon the horse.
- “The Centaur, Latreus, raved with pain and struck
- with his great pike, the face of Caeneus.
- His pike rebounded as the hail that slants
- up from the roof; or as a pebble might
- rebound from hollow drum. Then coming near,
- he tried to drive a sword into the hard side
- of Caeneus, but it could not make a wound.
- ‘Aha!’ he cried, ‘this will not get you off.
- The good edge of my sword will take your life,
- although the point is blunt!’ He turned the edge
- against the flank of Caeneus and swung round
- the hero's loins with his long, curving arm.
- The flesh resounded like a marble block,
- the keen blade shattered on the unyielding skin.
- “And, after Caeneus had exposed his limbs
- unhurt to Latreus, who stood there amazed,
- ‘Come now,’ he said, ‘and let us try my steel
- against your body!’ And, clear to the hilt,
- down through the monster's shoulder-blade he plunged
- his deadly sword and, turning it again,
- deep in the Centaur's entrails, made new wounds
- within his wound.
- “Then, quite beside themselves,
- the double-natured monsters rushed against
- that single-handed youth with huge uproar,
- and thrust and hurled their weapons all at him.
- Their blunted weapons fell and he remained
- unharmed and without even a mark.”
- “That strange sight left them speechless. ‘Oh what shame!’
- at length cried Monychus, ‘Our mighty host,—
- a nation of us, are defeated and defied
- by one who hardly is a man. Although
- indeed, he is a man, and we have proved,
- by our weak actions, we are certainly
- what he was! Shame on us! Oh, what if we
- have twofold strength, of what avail our huge
- and mighty limbs, doubly united in
- the strongest, hugest bodies in this world?
- And how can I believe that we were born
- of any goddess? It is surely vain
- to claim descent of great Ixion, who
- high-souled, sought Juno for his mighty mate;
- imagine it, while we are conquered by
- an enemy, who is but half a man!
- Wake up! and let us heap tree-trunks and stones
- and mountains on him! Crush his stubborn life!
- Let forests smother him to death! Their weight
- will be as deadly as a hundred wounds!’
- “While he was raving, by some chance he found
- a tree thrown down there by the boisterous wind:
- example to the rest, he threw that tree
- against the powerful foe; and in short time
- Othrys was bare of trees, and Pelion had no shade.
- Buried under that mountainous forest heap,
- Caeneus heaved up against the weight of oaks
- upon his brawny shoulders piled. But, as
- the load increased above his face and head,
- he could not draw a breath. Gasping for life,
- he strove to lift his head into the air,
- and sometimes he convulsed the towering mass,
- as if great Ida, now before our eyes,
- should tremble with some heaving of the earth.
- “What happened to him could not well be known.
- Some thought his body was borne down by weight
- into the vast expanse of Tartarus.
- The son of Ampycus did not agree,
- for from the middle of the pile we saw
- a bird with golden wings mount high in air.
- Before or since, I never saw the like.
- “When Mopsus was aware of that bird's flight—
- it circled round the camp on rustling wings—
- with eyes and mind he followed it and shouted aloud:
- ‘Hail, glory of the Lapithaean race,
- their greatest hero, now a bird unique!’
- and we believed the verdict of the seer.
- “Our grief increased resentment, and we bore
- it with disgust that one was overwhelmed
- by such a multitude. Then in revenge
- we plied our swords, till half our foes were dead,
- and only flight and darkness saved the rest.”