Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- “I need not linger over the many things
- which by my counsel and my bravery
- I have accomplished through this long-drawn war.
- “A long time, after the first battle clash,
- the foe lay quiet within city walls,
- giving no challenge for an open fight—
- he stood nine years of siege before we fought
- what were you doing all that tedious time,
- what use were you, good only in a fight?
- If you will make inquiry of my deeds:
- I fashioned ambuscades for enemies;
- and circled our defenses with a trench;
- I cheered allies so they might all endure
- with patient minds a long, protracted war;
- I showed how our own army might subsist
- and how it could be armed; and I was sent
- wherever the necessity required.
- “Then, at the wish of Jove, our king, deceive
- by A false dream, bids us give up the war—
- he could excuse his order by the cause.
- Let Ajax tell him Troy must be laid low
- or let him fight—at least he can do that!
- Why does he fail to stop the fugitives?
- Why not take arms and tell the wavering crowd
- to rally round him? Would that be too much
- for one who never speaks except to boast?
- But now words fail me: Ajax turns and flees!
- I witnessed it and was ashamed to see
- you turn disgraced, preparing sails for flight.
- With exclamations and without delay,
- I said, ‘What are you doing? O my friends,
- has madness seized you that you will quit Troy,
- which is as good as taken? What can you
- bear home, after ten years, but your disgrace?’
- “With these commanding words, which grief itself
- gave eloquence, I brought resisting Greeks
- back from their purposed flight. Atrides called
- together his allies, all terror struck.
- Even then, Ajax the son of Telamon
- dared not vouchsafe one word. But impudent
- Thersites hurled vile words against the kings,
- and, thanks to me, he did not miss reproof.
- I rose and spoke to my disheartened friends,
- reviving their lost courage with my words
- from that time forth, whatever deeds this man,
- my rival, may have done, belong to me.
- 'Twas I who stayed his flight and brought him back.
- “Which of the noble Greeks has given you praise
- or sought your company? Yet Diomed
- has shared his deeds with me and praises me,
- and, while Ulysses is with him, is brave
- and confident. 'Tis worthy of regard,
- when out of many thousands of the Greeks,
- a man becomes the choice of Diomed!
- “It was not lot that ordered me to go;
- and yet, despising dangers of the night,
- despising dangers of the enemy,
- I slew one, Dolon, of the Phrygian race,
- who dared to do the very things we dared,
- but not before I had prevailed on him
- to tell me everything, by which I learned
- perfidious actions which Troy had designed.
- “Of such things now, I had discovered all
- that should be found out, and I might have then
- returned to enjoy the praise I had deserved.
- But not content with that, I sought the tent
- of Rhesus, and within his camp I slew
- him and his proved attendants. Having thus
- gained as a conqueror my own desires,
- I drove back in a captured chariot,—
- a joyous triumph. Well, deny me, then.
- The arms of him whose steeds the enemy
- demanded as the price of one night's aid.
- Ajax himself has been more generous.
- “Why should I name Sarpedon's Lycian troops
- among whom I made havoc with my sword?
- I left Coeranos dead and streaming blood,
- with the sword I killed Alastor, Chromius,
- Alcander, Prytanis, Halius, and Noemon,
- Thoon and Charops with Chersidamas,
- and Ennomus—all driven by cruel fate,
- not reckoning humbler men whom I laid low,
- battling beneath the shadow of the city walls.
- And fellow citizens, I have my wounds
- honorable in the front. Do not believe
- my word alone. Look for yourselves and see!”
- Then with one hand, he drew his robe aside.
- “Here is a breast,” he cried, “that bled for you!
- But Ajax never shed a drop of blood
- to aid his friends, in all these many years,
- and has a body free of any wound.
- “What does it prove, if he declares that he
- fought for our ships against both Troy and Jove?
- I grant he did, for it is not my wont
- with malice to belittle other's deeds.
- But let him not claim for himself alone
- an honor in which all may have a share,
- let him concede some credit due to you.
- Disguised within the fear inspiring arms
- of great Achilles, Actor's son drove back
- the host of Trojans from our threatened fleet
- or ships and Ajax would have burned together.
- “Unmindful of the king, the chiefs, and me,
- he dreams that he alone dared to engage
- in single fight with Hector—he the ninth
- to volunteer and chosen just by lot.
- But yet, O brave chief! What availed the fight?
- Hector returned, not injured by a wound.
- “Ah, bitter fate, with how much grief I am
- compelled to recollect the time, when brave
- Achilles, bulwark of the Greeks, was slain.
- Nor tears, nor grief, nor fear, could hinder me:
- I carried his dead body from the ground,
- uplifted on these shoulders, I repeat,
- upon these shoulders from that ground
- I bore off dead Achilles, and those arms
- which now I want to bear away again.
- I have the strength to walk beneath their weight,
- I have a mind to understand their worth.
- Did the hero's mother, goddess of the sea,
- win for her son these arms, made by a god,
- a work of wondrous art, to have them clothe
- a rude soldier, who has no mind at all?
- He never could be made to understand
- the rich engravings, pictured on the shield—
- the ocean, earth, and stars in lofty skies;
- the Pleiades, and Hyades, the Bear,
- which touches not the ocean, far beyond
- the varied planets, and the fire-bright sword
- of high Orion. He demands a prize,
- which, if he had it, would be lost on him.
- “What of his taunting me, because I shrank
- from hardships of this war and I was slow
- to join the expedition? Does he not see,
- that he reviles the great Achilles too?
- Was my pretense a crime? then so was his.
- Was our delay a fault? mine was the less,
- for I came sooner; me a loving wife
- detained from war, a loving mother him.
- Some hours we gave to them, the rest to you.
- Why should I be alarmed, if now I am
- unable to defend myself against
- this accusation, which is just the same
- as you have brought against so great a man?
- Yet he was found by the dexterity
- of me, Ulysses, and Ulysses was
- not found by the dexterity of Ajax.
- “It is no wonder that he pours on me
- reproaches of his silly tongue, because
- he charges you with what is worthy shame.
- Am I depraved because this Palamedes has
- improperly been charged with crime by me?
- Then was it honorable for all of you,
- if you condemned him? Only think, that he,
- the son of Naplius, made no defence
- against the crime, so great, so manifest:
- nor did you only hear the charges brought
- against him, but you saw the proof yourselves,
- and in the gold his villainy was shown.
- “Nor am I to be blamed, if Vulcan's isle
- of Lemnos has become the residence
- of Philoctetes. Greeks, defend yourselves,
- for you agreed to it! Yes, I admit
- I urged him to withdraw from toils of war
- and those of travel and attempt by rest
- to ease his cruel pain. He took my advice
- and lives! The advice was not alone well meant
- (that would have been enough) but it was wise.
- Because our prophets have declared, he must
- lead us, if we may still maintain our hope
- for Troy's destruction—therefore, you must not
- intrust that work to me. Much better, send
- the son of Telamon. His eloquence
- will overcome the hero's rage, most fierce
- from his disease and anger: or else his
- invention of some wile will skilfully
- deliver him to us.—The Simois
- will first flow backward, Ida stand without
- its foliage, and Achaia promise aid
- to Troy itself; ere, lacking aid from me,
- the craft of stupid Ajax will avail.
- “Though, Philoctetes, you should be enraged
- against your friends, against the king and me;
- although you curse and everlastingly
- devote my head to harm; although you wish,
- to ease your anguish, that I may be given
- into your power, that you may shed my blood;
- and though you wait your turn and chance at me;
- still I will undertake the quest and will
- try all my skill to bring you back with me.
- If my good fortune then will favor me,
- I shall obtain your arrows; as I made
- the Trojan seer my captive, as I learned
- the heavenly oracles and fate of Troy,
- and as I brought back through a host of foes
- Minerva's image from the citadel.
- “And is it possible, Ajax may now
- compare himself with me? Truly the Fates
- will hold Troy from our capture, if we leave
- the statue. Where is valiant Ajax now,
- where are the boasts of that tremendous man?
- Why are you trembling, while Ulysses dares
- to go beyond our guards and brave the night?
- In spite of hostile swords, he goes within
- not only the strong walls of Troy but even
- the citadel, lifts up the goddess from
- her shrine, and takes her through the enemy!
- If I had not done this, Telamon's son
- would bear his shield of seven bull hides in vain.
- That night I gained the victory over Troy—
- 'Twas then I won our war with Pergama,
- because I made it possible to win.
- “Stop hinting by your look and muttered words
- that Diomed was my partner in the deed.
- The praise he won is his. You, certainly
- fought not alone, when you held up your shield
- to save the allied fleet: a multitude
- was with you, but a single man gave me
- his valued help.
- “And if he did not know
- a fighting man can not gain victory
- so surely as the wise man, that the prize
- is given to something rarer than a brave right hand,
- he would himself be a contender now
- for these illustrious arms. Ajax the less
- would have come forward too, so would the fierce
- Eurypylus, so would Andraemon's son.
- Nor would Idomeneus withhold his claim,
- nor would his countryman Meriones.
- Yes, Menelaus too would seek the prize.
- All these brave men, my equals in the field,
- have yielded to my wisdom.
- “Your right hand
- is valuable in war, your temper stands
- in need of my direction. You have strength
- without intelligence; I look out for
- the future. You are able in the fight;
- I help our king to find the proper time.
- Your body may give service, and my mind
- must point the way: and just as much as he
- who guides the ship must be superior
- to him who rows it; and we all agree
- the general is greater than the soldier; so,
- do I excel you. In the body lives
- an intellect much rarer than a hand,
- by that we measure human excellence.
- “O chieftains, recompense my vigilance!
- For all these years of anxious care, award
- this honor to my many services.
- Our victory is in sight; I have removed
- the opposing fates and, opening wide the way
- to capture Pergama, have captured it.
- Now by our common hopes, by Troy's high walls
- already tottering and about to fall,
- and by the gods that I won from the foe,
- by what remains for wisdom to devise
- or what may call for bold and fearless deeds—
- if you think any hope is left for Troy,
- remember me! Or, if you do not give
- these arms to me, then give them all to her!”
- And he pointed to Minerva's fateful head.
- The assembled body of the chiefs was moved;
- and then, appeared the power of eloquence:
- the fluent man received, amid applause,
- the arms of the brave man. His rival, who
- so often when alone, stood firm against
- great Hector and the sword, and flames and Jove,
- stood not against a single passion, wrath.
- The unconquerable was conquered by his grief.
- He drew his sword, and said:—“This is at least
- my own; or will Ulysses also claim
- this, for himself. I must use this against
- myself—the blade which often has been wet,
- dripping with blood of Phrygians I have slain,.
- Will drip with his own master's:blood,
- lest any man but Ajax vanquish Ajax.”
- Saying this, he turned toward the vital spot
- in his own breast, which never had felt a wound,
- the fated sword and plunged it deeply in.
- though many sought to aid, no hand had strength
- to draw that steel—deep driven. The blood itself
- unaided drove it out. The ensanguined earth
- sprouted from her green turf that purple flower
- which grew of old from Hyacinthine blood.
- Its petals now are charged with double freight—
- the warrior's name, Apollo's cry of woe.
- The conqueror, Ulysses, now set sail,
- for Lemnos, country of Hypsipyle,
- and for the land of Thoas, famed afar,
- those regions infamous in olden days,
- where women slew their husbands. So he went
- that he might capture and bring back with him
- the arrows of brave Hercules. When these
- were given back to the Greeks, their lord with them,
- a final hand at last prevailed to end
- that long fought war. Both Troy and Priam fell,
- and Priam's wretched wife lost all she had,
- until at last she lost her human form.
- Her savage barkings frightened foreign lands,
- where the long Hellespont is narrowed down.
- Great Troy was burning: while the fire still raged,
- Jove's altar drank old Priam's scanty blood.
- The priestess of Apollo then, alas!
- Was dragged by her long hair, while up towards heaven
- she lifted supplicating hands in vain.
- The Trojan matrons, clinging while they could
- to burning temples and ancestral gods,
- victorious Greeks drag off as welcome spoil.
- Astyanax was hurled down from the very tower
- from which he often had looked forth and seen
- his father, by his mother pointed out,
- when Hector fought for honor and his country's weal.
- Now Boreas counsels to depart. The sails,
- moved by a prosperous breeze, resound and wave—
- the Trojan women cry,—“Farewell to Troy!
- Ah, we are hurried off! ” and, falling down,
- they kiss the soil, and leave the smoking roofs
- of their loved native land. The last to go
- on board the fleet was Hecuba, a sight
- most pitiful. She was found among the tombs
- of her lost sons. While she embraced each urn
- and fondly kissed their bones, Ulysses came
- with ruthless hands and bore her off, his prize
- she in her bosom took away the urn
- of Hector only, and upon his grave
- she left some white hair taken from her head,
- a meager gift, her white hair and her tears.
- Across the strait from Troy, there is a land
- claimed by Bistonian men, and in that land
- was a rich palace, built there by a king
- named Polymnestor. To him the Phrygian king
- in secret gave his youngest son to rear,
- his Polydorus, safe from Troy and war,
- a prudent course, if he had not sent gold
- arousing greed, incitement to a crime.
- Soon, when the fortunes of the Trojans fell,
- that wicked king of Thrace took his own sword,
- and pierced the throat of his poor foster son
- and then, as if the deed could be concealed,
- if he removed the body, hurled the boy
- from a wild cliff into the waves below.
- Until the sea might be more calm, and gales
- of wind might be subdued, Atrides moored
- his fleet of ships upon the Thracian shore;
- there, from wide gaping earth, Achilles rose,
- as large as when he lived, with look as fierce,
- as when his sword once threatened Agamemnon.
- “Forgetting me do you depart, O Greeks?”
- He said, “And is your grateful! memory
- of all my worth interred with my bones?
- Do not do so. And that my sepulchre
- may have due worship, let Polyxena
- be immolated to appease the ghost:
- of dead Achilles.” Fiercely so he spoke.
- The old friends of Achilles all obeyed
- his unforgiving shade; and instantly
- the noble and unhappy virgin—brave,
- more like a man than woman—was torn from
- her mother's bosom, cherished more by her,
- since widowed and alone. And then they led
- the virgin as a sacrifice from there
- up to the cruel altar. When the maid
- observed the savage rites prepared for her,
- and when she noticed Neoptolemus
- stand by her with his cruel sword in hand,
- his fixed eyes on her countenance; she said:—
- “Do not delay my generous gift of blood,
- with no resistance thrust the ready steel
- into my throat or breast!” And then she laid
- both throat and bosom bare. “Polyxena
- would never wish to live in slavery.
- And such rites win no favor from a god.
- Only I fondly wish my mother might
- not know that I have died. My love of her
- takes from my joy in death and gives me fear.
- Not my death truly, but her own sad life
- should be the most lamented in her tears.
- Now let your men stand back, that I may go
- with dignity down to the Stygian shades,
- and, if my plea is just, let no man's hand
- touch my pure virgin body. A nobler gift
- to him, whoever he may be, whom you
- desire to placate with my death today,
- shall be a free maid's blood. But, if my words—
- my parting wish, has power to touch your hearts,
- (King Priam's daughter, not a captive, pleads)
- freely return my body to my mother,
- let her not pay with gold for the sad right
- to bury me—but only with her tears!
- Yes, when she could, she also paid with gold.”
- After she said these words, the people could
- no more restrain their tears; but no one saw
- her shed one tear. Even the priest himself,
- reluctantly and weeping, drove the steel
- into her proffered breast. On failing knees
- she sank down to the earth; but still maintained
- a countenance undaunted to the last:
- and, even unto death, it was her care
- to cover all that ought to be concealed,
- and save the value of chaste modesty.
- The Trojan matrons took her and recalled,
- lamenting, all the sons of Priam dead,
- the wealth of blood one house had shed for all.
- And they bewailed the chaste Polyxena
- and you, her mother, only lately called
- a royal mother and a royal wife,—
- the soul of Asia's fair prosperity,;
- now lowest fallen in all the wreck of Troy.
- The conquering Ulysses only claimed
- her his because she had brought Hector forth:
- and Hector hardly found a master for
- his mother. She continued to embrace
- the body of a soul so brave, and shed
- her tears, as she had shed them often before
- for country lost, for sons, for royal mate.
- She bathed her daughter's wounds with tears and kissed
- them with her lips and once more beat her breast.
- Her white hair streamed down in the clotting blood,
- she tore her breast, and this and more she said:
- “My daughter, what further sorrow can be mine?
- My daughter you lie dead, I see your wounds—
- they are indeed my own. Lest I should lose
- one child of mine without a cruel sword,
- you have your wound. I thought, because
- you were a woman, you were safe from swords.
- But you, a woman, felt the deadly steel.
- That same Achilles, who has given to death
- so many of your brothers, caused your death,
- the bane of Troy and the serpent by my nest!
- When Paris and when Phoebus with their shafts
- had laid him low, ‘Ah, now at least,’ I said,
- ‘Achilles will no longer cause me dread.’
- Yet even then he still was to be feared.
- For him I have been fertile! Mighty Troy
- now lies in ruin, and the public woe
- is ended in one vast calamity.
- For me alone the woe of Troy still lives.
- “But lately on the pinnacle of fame,
- surrounded by my powerful sons-in-law,
- daughters, and daughters-in-law, and strong
- in my great husband, I am exiled now,
- and destitute, and forced from the sad tombs
- of those I love, to wretched slavery,
- serving Penelope: who showing me
- to curious dames of Ithaca, will point
- and say, while I am bending to my task,
- ‘Look at that woman who was widely known,
- the mother of great Hector, once the wife
- of Priam!’ After so many have been lost,
- now you, last comfort of a mother's grief,
- must make atonement on the foeman's tomb.
- I bore a victim for my enemy.
- “Why do I live—an iron witted wretch?
- Why do I linger? Why does cruel age
- detain me? Why, pernicious deities,
- thus hold me to this earth, unless you will
- that I may weep at future funerals?
- After the fall of Troy, who would suppose
- King Priam could be happy? Blest in death,
- he has not seen my daughter's dreadful fate.
- He lost at once his kingdom and his life.
- “Can I imagine you, a royal maid,
- will soon be honored with due funeral rites,
- and will be buried in our family tomb?
- Such fortune comes no more to your sad house.
- A drift of foreign sand will be your grave,
- the parting gift will be your mother's tears.
- We have lost everything! But no, there is
- one reason why I should endure a while.
- His mother's dearest, now her only child,
- once youngest of that company of sons,
- my Polydorus lives here on these shores
- protected by the friendly Thracian king.
- Then why delay to bathe these cruel wounds,
- her dear face spattered with the dreadful blood?”
- So Hecuba went wailing towards the shore
- with aged step and tearing her gray hair.
- At last the unhappy mother said, “Give me
- an urn; O, Trojan women!” for, she wished
- to dip up salt sea water. But just then,
- she saw the corpse of her last son, thrown out
- upon the shore; her Polydorus, killed,
- disfigured with deep wounds of Thracian swords.
- The Trojan women cried aloud, and she
- was struck dumb with her agony, which quite
- consumed both voice and tears within her heart—
- rigid and still she seemed as a hard rock.
- And now she gazes at the earth in front
- now lifts her haggard face up toward the skies,
- now scans that body lying stark and dead,
- now scans his wounds and most of all the wounds.
- She arms herself and draws up all her wrath.
- It burned as if she still held regal power
- she gave up all life to the single thought
- of quick revenge. Just as a lioness
- rages when plundered of her suckling cub
- and follows on his trail the unseen foe,
- so, Hecuba with rage mixed in her grief
- forgetful of her years, not her intent,
- went hastily to Polymnestor, who
- contrived this dreadful murder, and desired
- an interview, pretending it was her wish
- to show him hidden gold, for her lost son.
- The Odrysian king believed it all:
- accustomed to the love of gain, he went
- with her, in secret, to the spot she chose.
- Then craftily he said in his bland way:
- “Oh, Hecuba, you need not wait, give now,
- munificently to your son—and all
- you give, and all that you have given,
- by the good gods, I swear, shall be his own.”
- She eyed him sternly as he spoke
- and swore so falsely.—Then her rage boiled over,
- and, seconded by all her captive train,
- she flew at him and drove her fingers deep
- in his perfidious eyes; and tore them from
- his face—and plunged her hands into the raw
- and bleeding sockets (passion made her strong),
- defiled with his bad blood. How could she tear
- his eyes, gone from their seats? She wildly gouged
- the sightless sockets of his bleeding face!
- The Thracians, angered by such violence done
- upon their king, immediately attacked
- the Trojan matron with their stones and darts
- but she with hoarse growling and snapping jaws
- sprang at the stones, and, when she tried to speak,
- she barked like a fierce dog. The place still bears
- a name suggested by her hideous change.
- And she, long mindful! of her old time woe,
- ran howling dismally in Thracian fields.
- Her sad fate moved the Trojans and the Greeks,
- her friends and foes, and all the heavenly gods.
- Yes all, for even the sister-wife of Jove
- denied that Hecuba deserved such fate.
- Although Aurora had given aid to Troy,
- she had no heart nor leisure to be moved
- by fall of Troy or fate of Hecuba.
- At home she bore a greater grief and care;
- her loss of Memnon is afflicting her.
- Aurora, his rose-tinted mother, saw
- him perish by Achilles' deadly spear,
- upon the Phrygian plain. She saw his death,
- and the loved rose that lights the dawning hour
- turned death-pale, and the sky was veiled in clouds.
- The parent could not bear to see his limbs
- laid on the final flames. Just as she was,
- with loose hair streaming round her, she did not
- disdain to crouch down at the knees of Jove,
- and said these sad words added to her tears:
- “Beneath all those whom golden heaven sustains;
- (inferior, for see, through all the world
- my temples are so few) I have come now
- a goddess, to you; not with any hope
- that you may grant me temples, festivals,
- and altars, heated with devoted fires:
- but if you will consider the good deeds,
- which I, a woman, may yet do for you,
- when at the dawn I mark the edge of night;
- then you may think of some reward for me.
- But that is not my care; nor is it now
- Aurora's purpose here, that she should plead
- for honors, though deserved. I come bereaved,
- of my son Memnon, who in vain bore arms
- to aid his uncle and in prime of life
- (0, thus you willed it!) fell stricken by the sword
- of great Achilles. Give my son, I pray,
- O highest ruler of the gods, some honor,
- some comfort for his death, a little ease
- his mother's grief.” Jove nodded his assent.
- Immediately the high-wrought funeral-pile
- of Memnon fell down with its lofty fire,
- and volumes of black smoke obscured the day,
- as streams exhaling their dense rising fogs,
- exclude the bright sun from the land below.
- Black ashes fly and, rolling up a shape,
- retain a form and gather heat and life
- out of the fire. Their lightness gave them wings,
- first like a bird and then in fact a bird.
- The wings move whirring. In the neighboring air
- uncounted sisters, of one birth and growth
- together make one noise. Three times they flew
- around the funeral pile; and thrice the sound
- accordant of their fluttering wings went swift
- upon the soft breeze. When they turned about,
- their fourth flight in the skies divided them.
- As two fierce races from two hostile camps,
- clash in their warfare, these bird-sisters with
- their beaks and crooked claws clashed, passionate,
- until their tired wings and opposing breasts
- could not sustain them. And those kindred-foes
- fell down a sacrifice, memorial,
- to Memnon's ashes buried in that place.
- Brave Memnon, author of their birth, has given
- his name to those birds, marvellously formed,—
- and from him they are called Memnonides.—
- now, always when the Sun has passed the twelve
- signs of the Zodiac, they war again,
- to perish as a sacrifice for him.
- So others grieved, while Dymas' royal daughter
- was barking: but Aurora overcome
- with lasting sorrows, could not think of her:
- and even now, she sheds affectionate tears:
- and sprinkles them as dew on all the world.
- The Fates did not allow the hope of Troy
- to be destroyed entirely with her walls.
- Aeneas, the heroic son of Venus,
- bore on his shoulders holy images
- and still another holy weight, his sire,
- a venerable burden. From all his wealth
- the pious hero chose this for his care
- together with his child, Ascanius.
- Then with a fleet of exiles he sails forth,
- he leaves Antandrus, leaves the wicked realm
- and shore of Thrace now dripping with the blood
- of Polydorus. With fair winds and tide
- he and his comrades reach Apollo's isle.
- Good Anius, king of Delos, vigilant
- for all his subjects' welfare, and as priest
- devoted to Apollo, took him there
- into his temple and his home, and showed
- the city, the famed shrines, and the two trees
- which once Latona, while in labor, held.
- They burned sweet incense, adding to it wine,
- and laid the flesh of cattle in the flames,
- an offering marked by custom for the god.
- Then in the palace and its kingly hall,
- reclining on luxurious couches, they
- drank flowing wine with Ceres' gifts of food.
- But old Anchises asked: “O chosen priest
- of Phoebus, can I be deceived? When first
- I saw these walls, did you not have a son,
- and twice two daughters? Is it possible
- I am mistaken?” Anius replied,—
- shaking his temples wreathed with fillets white,—
- “It can be no mistake, great hero, you
- did see the father of five children then,
- (so much the risk of fortune may affect
- the best of men). You see me now, almost
- bereft of all. For what assistance can
- my absent son afford, while he is king,
- the ruler over Andros—that land named
- for his name—over which he rules for me?
- “The Delian god gave to my son the art
- of augury; and likewise, Liber gave
- my daughters precious gifts exceeding all
- my wishes and belief: since, every thing
- my daughters touched assumed the forms of corn,
- of sparkling wine, or gray-green olive oil.
- Most surely, wonderful advantages.
- “Soon as Atrides, he who conquered Troy
- had heard of this (for you should not suppose
- that we, too, did not suffer from your storms)
- he dragged my daughters there with savage force,
- from my loved bosom to his hostile camp,
- and ordered them to feed the Argive fleet,
- by their divinely given power of touch.
- “Whichever way they could, they made escape
- two hastened to Euboea, and two sought
- their brother's island, Andros. Quickly then
- an Argive squadron, following, threatened war,
- unless they were surrendered. The brother's love
- gave way to fear. And there is reason why
- you should forgive a timid brother's fear:
- he had no warrior like Aeneas, none
- like Hector, by whose prowess you held Troy
- from its destruction through ten years of war.
- “Strong chains were brought to hold my daughters' arms.
- Both lifted suppliant hands, which still were free,
- to heaven and cried, ‘0, Father Bacchus! give
- us needed aid!’ And he who had before
- given them the power of touch, did give them aid—
- if giving freedom without human shape
- can be called giving aid.—I never knew
- by what means they lost shape, and cannot tell;
- but their calamity is surely known:
- my daughters were transformed to snow-white doves,
- white birds of Venus, guardian of your days.”
- With this and other talk they shared the feast,
- then left the table and retired to sleep.
- They rose up with the day, and went at once
- to hear the oracle of Phoebus speak.
- He counselled them to leave that land and find
- their ancient mother and their kindred shores.
- The king attended them, and gave them gifts
- when ready to depart; a sceptre to
- Anchises, and a robe and quiver to
- his grandson, and he gave a goblet to
- Aeneas, that which formerly was sent
- to him by Therses, once his Theban guest.
- Therses had sent it from Aonian shores;
- but Alcon the Hylean should be named,
- for he had made the goblet and inscribed
- a pictured story on the polished side.
- There was a city shown with seven gates,
- from which the name could be derived by all.
- Outside the walls was a sad funeral,
- and tombs and fires and funeral pyres were shown,
- and many matrons with dishevelled hair
- and naked breasts, expressive of their grief,
- and many nymphs too, weeping mournfully
- because their streams were dry. Without a leaf
- the bare trees stood straight up and the she goats
- were nibbling in dry, stony fields. And there he carved
- Orion's daughters in the Theban square,
- one giving her bare throat a cruel cut,
- one with her shuttle making clumsy wounds;
- both dying for their people. Next they were borne
- out through the city with doe funeral pomp,
- and mourning crowds were gathered round their pyre.
- Then from the virgin ashes, lest the race
- should die. twin youths arose, whom fame
- has named Coroni and they shared
- in all the rites becoming for their mothers' dust.
- Even so in shining figures all was shown
- inscribed on ancient bronze. The top rim, made
- quite rough, was gilded with acanthus leaves.
- Presents of equal worth the Trojans gave:
- a maple incense casket for the priest,
- a bowl, a crown adorned with gold and gems.
- Then, recollecting how the Trojans had
- derived their origin from Teucer's race,
- they sailed to Crete but there could not endure
- ills sent by Jove, and, having left behind
- the hundred cities, they desired to reach
- the western harbors of the Ausonian land.
- Wintry seas then tossed the heroic band,
- and in a treacherous harbor of those isles,
- called Strophades, Aello frightened them.
- They passed Dulichium's port, and Ithaca,
- Samos, and all the homes of Neritos,—
- the kingdom of the shrewd deceitful man,
- Ulysses; and they reached Ambracia,
- contended for by those disputing gods;
- which is today renowned abroad, because
- of Actian Apollo, and the stone
- seen there conspicuous as a transformed judge;
- they saw Dodona, vocal with its oaks;
- and also, the well known Chaonian bays,
- where sons of the Molossian king escaped
- with wings attached, from unavailing flames.
- They set their sails then for the neighboring land
- of the Phaeacians, rich with luscious fruit:
- then for Epirus and to Buthrotos,
- and came then to a mimic town of Troy,
- ruled by the Phrygian seer. With prophecies
- which Helenus, the son of Priam, gave,
- they came to Sicily, whose three high capes
- jut outward in the sea. Of these three points
- Pachynos faces towards the showery south;
- and Lilybaeum is exposed to soft
- delicious zephyrs; but Peloros looks
- out towards the Bears which never touch the sea.
- The Trojans came there. Favored by the tide,
- and active oars, by nightfall all the fleet
- arrived together on Zanclaean sands.
- Scylla upon the right infests the shore,
- Charybdis, restless on the left, destroys.
- Charybdis swallows and then vomits forth
- misfortuned ships that she has taken down;
- Scylla's dark waist is girt with savage dogs.
- She has a maiden's face, and, if we may believe
- what poets tell, she was in olden time
- a maiden. Many suitors courted her,
- but she repulsed them; and, because she was
- so much beloved by all the Nereids,
- she sought these nymphs and used to tell
- how she escaped from the love-stricken youths.
- But Galatea, while her loosened locks
- were being combed, said to her visitor,—
- “Truly, O maiden, a gentle race of men
- courts you, and so you can, and do, refuse
- all with impunity. But I, whose sire
- is Nereus, whom the azure Doris bore,
- though guarded by so many sister nymphs,
- escaped the Cyclops' love with tragic loss.”
- And, sobbing, she was choked with tears.
- When with her fingers, marble white and smooth,
- Scylla had wiped away the rising tears
- of sorrow and had comforted the nymph,
- she said, “Tell me, dear goddess, and do not
- conceal from me (for I am true to you)
- the cause of your great sorrows.” And the nymph,
- daughter of Nereus, thus replied to her:—
- “Acis, the son of Faunus and the nymph
- Symaethis, was a great delight to his
- dear father and his mother, but even more
- to me, for he alone had won my love.
- Eight birthdays having passed a second time,
- his tender cheeks were marked with softest down.
- “While I pursued him with a constant love,
- the Cyclops followed me as constantly.
- And, should you ask me, I could not declare
- whether my hatred of him, or my love
- of Acis was the stronger.—They were equal.
- “O gentle Venus! what power equals yours!
- That savage, dreaded by the forest trees,
- feared by the stranger who beholds his face
- contemner of Olympus and the gods,
- now he can feel what love is. He is filled
- with passion for me. He burns hot for me,
- forgetful of his cattle and his caves.
- “Now, Polyphemus, wretched Cyclops, you
- are careful of appearance, and you try
- the art of pleasing. You have even combed
- your stiffened hair with rakes: it pleases you
- to trim your shaggy beard with sickles, while
- you gaze at your fierce features in a pool
- so earnest to compose them. Love of flesh,
- ferocity and your keen thirst for blood
- have ceased. The ships may safely come and go!
- “While all this happened, Telemus arrived
- at the Sicilian Aetna—Telemus,
- the son of Eurymus, who never could
- mistake an omen, met the dreadful fierce,
- huge Cyclops, Polyphemus, and he said,
- ‘That single eye now midmost in your brow
- Ulysses will take from you.’ In reply,
- the Cyclops only laughed at him and said,
- ‘Most silly of the prophets! you are wrong,
- a maiden has already taken it!’
- So he made fun of Telemus, who warned
- him vainly of the truth—and after that,
- he either burdened with his bulk the shore,
- by stalking back and forth with lengthy strides,
- or came back weary to his shaded cave.
- “A wedge-formed hill projects far in the sea
- and either side there flow the salty waves.
- To this the giant savage climbed and sat
- upon the highest point. The wooly flock,
- no longer guided by him, followed after.
- There, after he had laid his pine tree down,
- which served him for a staff, although so tall
- it seemed best fitted for a ship's high mast,
- he played his shepherd pipes—in them I saw
- a hundred reeds. The very mountains felt
- the pipings of that shepherd, and the waves
- beneath him shook respondent to each note.
- All this time I was hidden by a rock,
- reclining on the bosom of my own
- dear Acis; and, although afar, I heard
- such words as these, which I can not forget:—
- ‘O Galatea, fairer than the flower
- of snow-white privet, and more blooming than
- the meadows, and more slender than the tall
- delightful alder, brighter than smooth glass,
- more wanton than the tender skipping kid,
- smoother than shells worn by continual floods,
- more pleasing than the winter sun, or than
- the summer shade, more beautiful than fruit
- of apple trees, more pleasing to the sight
- than lofty plane tree, clearer than pure ice,
- and sweeter than the ripe grape, softer than
- soft swan-down and the softest curdled milk;
- alas, and if you did not fly from me,
- I would declare you are more beautiful
- than any watered garden of this world.
- ‘And yet, O Galatea; I must say,
- that you are wilder than all untrained bullocks,
- harder than seasoned oak, more treacherous
- than tumbled waters, tougher than the twigs
- of osier and the white vine, harder to move
- than cliffs which front these waves, more violent
- than any torrent, you are prouder than
- the flattered peacock, fiercer than hot fire,
- rougher than thistles, and more cruel than
- the pregnant she-bear, deafer than the waves
- of stormy seas, more deadly savage than
- the trodden water-snake: and, (what I would
- endeavor surely to deprive you of)
- your speed is fleeter than the deer
- pursued by frightful barkings, and more swift
- than rapid storm-winds and the flitting air.
- ‘But Galatea, if you knew me well
- you would regret your hasty flight from me,
- and you would even blame your own delay,
- and strive for my affection. I now hold
- the choice part of this mountain for my cave,
- roofed over with the native rock. The sun
- is not felt in the heat of middle day,
- nor is the winter felt there: apples load
- the bending boughs and luscious grapes
- hang on the lengthened vines, resembling gold,
- and purple grapes as rich—I keep for you
- those two delicious fruits. With your own hands,
- you shall yourself uncover strawberries,
- growing so soft beneath the woodland shade;
- you shall pluck corners in the autumn ripe,
- and plums, not only darkened with black juice
- but larger kinds as yellow as new wax.
- If I may be your mate, you shall have chestnuts,
- fruits of the arbute shall be always near,
- and every tree shall yield at your desire.
- ‘The ewes here all are mine, and many more
- are wandering in the valleys; and the woods
- conceal a multitude—and many more
- are penned within my caves. If you perchance
- should ask me, I could never even guess
- or count the number; it is for the poor
- to count their cattle. Do not trust my word,
- but go yourself and see with your own eyes,
- how they can hardly stand up on their legs
- because of their distended udders' weight.
- ‘I have lambs also, as a future flock,
- kept in warm folds, and kids of their same age
- in other folds. I always have supplies
- of snow-white milk for drinking, and much more
- is hardened with good rennet liquefied.
- ‘The common joys of ordinary things
- will not be all you should expect of me—
- tame does and hares and she-goats or a pair
- of doves, or even a nest from a tall tree—
- for I have found upon a mountain top,
- the twin cubs of a shaggy wild she-bear,
- of such appearance you can hardly know
- the one from other. They will play with you.
- The very day I found them I declared,
- these I will keep for my dear loved one's joy.
- ‘Do now but raise your shining head above
- the azure sea: come Galatea come,
- and do not scorn my presents. Certainly,
- I know myself, for only recently
- I saw my own reflection pictured clear
- in limpid water, and my features pleased
- and charmed me when I saw it. See how huge
- I am. Not even Jove in his high heaven
- is larger than my body: this I say
- because you tell me how imperial Jove
- surpasses.—Who is he? I never knew.
- ‘My long hair plentifully hangs to hide
- unpleasant features; as a grove of trees
- overshadowing my shoulders. Never think
- my body is uncomely, although rough,
- thick set with wiry bristles. Every tree
- without leaves is unseemly; every horse,
- unless a mane hangs on his tawny neck;
- feathers must cover birds; and their soft wool
- is ornamental on the best formed sheep:
- therefore a beard, and rough hair spread upon
- the body is becoming to all men.
- I have but one eye centered perfectly
- within my forehead, so it seems most like
- a mighty buckler. Ha! does not the Sun
- see everything from heaven? Yet it has
- but one eye.—
- ‘Galatea, you must know,
- my father is chief ruler in your sea,
- and therefor I now offer him to you
- as your own father-in-law—But oh, do take
- some pity on a suppliant,— and hear his prayer,
- for only unto you my heart is given.
- ‘I, who despise the power of Jove, his heavens
- and piercing lightnings, am afraid of you—
- your wrath more fearful than the lightning's flash—
- but I should be more patient under slights,
- if you avoided all men: why reject
- the Cyclops for the love that Acis gives?
- And why prefer his smiles to my embraces,
- but let him please himself, and let him please
- you, Galatea, though against my will.
- ‘If I am given an opportunity
- he will be shown that I have every strength
- proportioned to a body vast as mine:
- I will pull out his palpitating entrails,
- and scatter his torn limbs about the fields
- and over and throughout your salty waves;
- and then let him unite himself to you.—
- I burn so, and my slighted passion raves
- with greater fury and I seem to hold
- and carry Aetna in my breast—transferred
- there with its flames—Oh Galatea! can
- you listen to my passion thus unmoved!’
- “I saw all this; and, after he in vain
- had uttered such complaints, he stood up like
- a raging bull whose heifer has been lost,
- that cannot stand still, but must wander on
- through brush and forests, that he knows so well:
- when that fierce monster saw me and my Acis—
- we neither knew nor guessed our fate—he roared:
- ‘I see you and you never will again
- parade your love before me!’ In such a voice
- as matched his giant size. All Aetna shook
- and trembled at the noise; and I amazed
- with horror, plunged into the adjoining sea.
- “My loved one, Acis turned his back and fled
- and cried out, ‘Help me Galatea, help!
- 0, let your parents help me, and admit
- me safe within their realm; for I am now
- near my destruction!’ But the Cyclops rushed
- at him and hurled a fragment, he had torn
- out from the mountain, and although the extreme
- edge only of the rock could reach him there.
- It buried him entirely.
- “Then I did
- the only thing the Fates permitted me:
- I let my Acis take ancestral power
- of river deities. The purple blood
- flowed from beneath the rock, but soon
- the sanguine richness faded and became
- at first the color of a stream, disturbed
- and muddied by a shower. And presently
- it clarified.— The rock that had been thrown
- then split in two, and through the cleft a reed,
- stately and vigorous, arose to life.
- And soon the hollow mouth in the great rock,
- resounded with the waters gushing forth.
- And wonderful to tell, a youth emerged,
- the water flowing clear about his waist,
- his new horns circled with entwining reeds,
- and the youth certainly was Acis, though
- he was of larger stature and his face
- and features all were azure. Acis changed
- into a stream which ever since that time
- has flowed there and retained its former name.
- So Galatea, after she had told
- her sorrow, ceased; and, when the company
- had gone from there, the Nereids swam again
- in the calm and quiet waves. But Scylla soon
- returned (because she did not trust herself
- in deep salt waters) and she wandered there
- naked of garments on the thirsty sand;
- but, tired, by chance she found a lonely bay,
- and cooled her limbs with its enclosing waves.
- Then suddenly appeared a newly made
- inhabitant of that deep sea, whose name
- was Glaucus. Cleaving through the blue sea waves,
- he swam towards her. His shape had been transformed
- but lately for this watery life, while he
- was living at Anthedon in Euboea.—
- now he is lingering from desire for her
- he saw there and speaks whatever words
- he thought might stop her as she fled from him.
- Yet still she fled from him, and swift through fear,
- climbed to a mountain top above the sea.
- Facing the waves, it rose in one huge peak,
- parting the waters with a forest crown.
- She stood on that high summit quite secure:
- and, doubtful whether he might be a god
- or monster, wondered at his flowing hair
- which covered his broad shoulders and his back,—
- and marvelled at the color of his skin
- and at his waist merged into a twisted fish.
- All this he noticed, and while leaning there
- against a rock that stood near by, he said: —
- “I am no monster, maiden, I am not
- a savage beast; I am in truth a god
- of waters, with such power upon the seas
- as that of Proteus, Triton, or Palaemon—
- reared on land the son of Athamas.
- “Not long ago I was a mortal man,
- yet even then my thought turned to the sea
- and all my living came from waters deep,
- for I would drag the nets that swept up fish,
- or, seated on a rock, I flung the line
- forth from the rod. The shore I loved was near
- a verdant meadow. One side were the waves,
- the other grass, which never had been touched
- by horned, grazing cattle. Harmless sheep
- and shaggy goats had never cropped it—no
- industrious bee came there to harvest flowers;
- no festive garlands had been gathered there,
- adornments of the head; no mower's hands
- had ever cut it. I was certainly
- the first who ever sat upon that turf,—
- while I was drying there the dripping nets.
- And so that I might in due order count
- the fish that I had caught, I laid out those
- which by good chance were driven into my nets,
- or credulous, were caught on my barbed hooks.
- “It all seems like a fiction (but what good
- can I derive from fictions?) just as soon
- as any of my fish-prey touched the grass,
- they instantly began to move and skip
- as usual in sea water. While I paused
- and wondered, all of them slid to the waves,
- and left me, their late captor, and the shore.
- “I was amazed and doubtful, a long time;
- while I considered what could be the cause.
- What god had done this? Or perhaps the juice
- of some herb caused it? ‘But,’ I said, ‘what herb
- can have such properties?’ and with my hand
- I plucked the grass and chewed it with my teeth.
- My throat had hardly time to swallow those
- unheard of juices, when I suddenly
- felt all my entrails throbbing inwardly,
- and my entire mind also, felt possessed
- by passions foreign to my life before.
- “I could not stay in that place, and I said
- with shouting, ‘Farewell! dry land! never more
- shall I revisit you;’ and with those words
- upon my lips, I plunged beneath the waves.
- The gods of that deep water gave to me,
- when they received me, kindred honors, while
- they prayed Oceanus and Tethys both
- to take from me such mortal essence as
- might yet remain. So I was purified
- by them and after a good charm had been
- nine times repeated over me, which washed
- away all guilt, I was commanded then
- to put my breast beneath a hundred streams.
- “So far I can relate to you all things
- most worthy to be told; for all so far
- I can remember; but from that time on
- I was unconscious of the many things
- that followed. When my mind returned to me,
- I found myself entirely different
- from what I was before; and my changed mind
- was not the same as it had always been.
- Then, for the first time I beheld this beard
- so green in its deep color, and I saw
- my flowing hair which now I sweep along
- the spacious seas, and my huge shoulders with
- their azure colored arms, and I observed
- my leg extremities hung tapering
- exactly perfect as a finny fish.
- “But what avail is this new form to me.
- Although it pleased the Ocean deities?
- What benefit, although I am a god,
- if you are not persuaded by these things?”
- While he was telling wonders such as these—
- quite ready to say more—Scylla arose
- and left the god. Provoked at his repulse—
- enraged, he hastened to the marvellous court
- of Circe, well known daughter of the Sun.
- Now the Euboean dweller in great waves,
- Glaucus, had left behind the crest of Aetna,
- raised upward from a giant's head; and left
- the Cyclops' fields, that never had been torn
- by harrow or by plough and never were
- indebted to the toil of oxen yoked;
- left Zancle, also, and the opposite walls
- of Rhegium, and the sea, abundant cause
- of shipwreck, which confined with double shores
- bounds the Ausonian and Sicilian lands.
- All these behind him, Glaucus, swimming on
- with his huge hands through those Tyrrhenian seas,
- drew near the hills so rich in magic herbs
- and halls of Circe, daughter of the Sun,—
- halls filled with men in guise of animals.
- After due salutations had been given—
- received by her as kindly—Glaucus said,
- “You as a goddess, certainly should have
- compassion upon me, a god; for you
- alone (if I am worthy of it) can
- relieve my passion. What the power of herbs
- can be, Titania, none knows more than I,
- for by their power I was myself transformed.
- To make the cause of my strange madness known,
- I have found Scylla on Italian shores,
- directly opposite Messenian walls.
- “It shames me to recount my promises,
- entreaties, and caresses, and at last
- rejection of my suit. If you have known
- a power of incantation, I implore
- you now repeat that incantation here,
- with sacred lips—If herbs have greater power,
- use the tried power of herbs. But I would not
- request a cure—the healing of this wound.
- Much better than an end of pain, let her
- share, and feel with me my impassioned flame.”
- But Circe was more quick than any other
- to burn with passion's flame. It may have been
- her nature or it may have been the work
- of Venus, angry at her tattling sire.
- “You might do better,” she replied, “to court
- one who is willing, one who wants your love,
- and feels a like desire. You did deserve
- to win her love, yes, to be wooed yourself.
- In fact you might be. If you give some hope,
- you have my word, you shall indeed be wooed.
- That you may have no doubt, and so retain
- all confidence in your attraction's power—
- behold! I am a goddess, and I am
- the daughter also, of the radiant Sun!
- And I who am so potent with my charms,
- and I who am so potent with my herbs,
- wish only to be yours. Despise her who
- despises you, and her who is attached
- to you repay with like attachment—so
- by one act offer each her just reward.”
- But Glaucus answered her attempt of love,
- “The trees will sooner grow in ocean waves,
- the sea-weed sooner grow on mountain tops,
- than I shall change my love for graceful! Scylla.”
- The goddess in her jealous rage could not
- and would not injure him, whom she still loved,
- but turned her wrath upon the one preferred.
- She bruised immediately the many herbs
- most infamous for horrid juices, which,
- when bruised, she mingled with most artful care
- and incantations given by Hecate.
- Then, clothed in azure vestments, she passed through
- her troop of fawning savage animals,
- and issued from the center of her hall.
- Pacing from there to Rhegium, opposite
- the dangerous rocks of Zancle, she at once
- entered the tossed waves boiling up with tides:
- on these as if she walked on the firm shore,
- she set her feet and, hastening on dry shod,
- she skimmed along the surface of the deep.
- Not far away there was an inlet curved,
- round as a bent bow, which was often used
- by Scylla as a favorite retreat.
- There, she withdrew from heat of sea and sky
- when in the zenith blazed the unclouded sun
- and cast the shortest shadows on the ground.
- Circe infected it before that hour,
- polluting it with monster-breeding drugs.
- She sprinkled juices over it, distilled
- from an obnoxious root, and thrice times nine
- she muttered over it with magic lips,
- her most mysterious charm involved in words
- of strangest import and of dubious thought.
- Scylla came there and waded in waist deep,
- then saw her loins defiled with barking shapes.
- Believing they could be no part of her,
- she ran and tried to drive them back and feared
- the boisterous canine jaws. But what she fled
- she carried with her. And, feeling for her thighs,
- her legs, and feet, she found Cerberian jaws
- instead. She rises from a rage of dogs,
- and shaggy backs encircle her shortened loins.
- The lover Glaucus wept. He fled the embrace
- of Circe and her hostile power of herbs
- and magic spells. But Scylla did not leave
- the place of her disaster; and, as soon
- as she had opportunity, for hate
- of Circe, she robbed Ulysses of his men.
- She would have wrecked the Trojan ships, if she
- had not been changed beforehand to a rock
- which to this day reveals a craggy rim.
- And even the rock awakes the sailors' dread.