Metamorphoses

Ovid

Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.

  1. Although Aurora had given aid to Troy,
  2. she had no heart nor leisure to be moved
  3. by fall of Troy or fate of Hecuba.
  4. At home she bore a greater grief and care;
  5. her loss of Memnon is afflicting her.
  6. Aurora, his rose-tinted mother, saw
  7. him perish by Achilles' deadly spear,
  8. upon the Phrygian plain. She saw his death,
  9. and the loved rose that lights the dawning hour
  10. turned death-pale, and the sky was veiled in clouds.
  11. The parent could not bear to see his limbs
  12. laid on the final flames. Just as she was,
  13. with loose hair streaming round her, she did not
  14. disdain to crouch down at the knees of Jove,
  15. and said these sad words added to her tears:
  16. “Beneath all those whom golden heaven sustains;
  17. (inferior, for see, through all the world
  18. my temples are so few) I have come now
  19. a goddess, to you; not with any hope
  20. that you may grant me temples, festivals,
  21. and altars, heated with devoted fires:
  22. but if you will consider the good deeds,
  23. which I, a woman, may yet do for you,
  24. when at the dawn I mark the edge of night;
  25. then you may think of some reward for me.
  26. But that is not my care; nor is it now
  27. Aurora's purpose here, that she should plead
  28. for honors, though deserved. I come bereaved,
  29. of my son Memnon, who in vain bore arms
  30. to aid his uncle and in prime of life
  31. (0, thus you willed it!) fell stricken by the sword
  32. of great Achilles. Give my son, I pray,
  33. O highest ruler of the gods, some honor,
  34. some comfort for his death, a little ease
  35. his mother's grief.” Jove nodded his assent.
  36. Immediately the high-wrought funeral-pile
  37. of Memnon fell down with its lofty fire,
  38. and volumes of black smoke obscured the day,
  39. as streams exhaling their dense rising fogs,
  40. exclude the bright sun from the land below.
  41. Black ashes fly and, rolling up a shape,
  42. retain a form and gather heat and life
  43. out of the fire. Their lightness gave them wings,
  44. first like a bird and then in fact a bird.
  45. The wings move whirring. In the neighboring air
  46. uncounted sisters, of one birth and growth
  47. together make one noise. Three times they flew
  48. around the funeral pile; and thrice the sound
  49. accordant of their fluttering wings went swift
  50. upon the soft breeze. When they turned about,
  51. their fourth flight in the skies divided them.
  52. As two fierce races from two hostile camps,
  53. clash in their warfare, these bird-sisters with
  54. their beaks and crooked claws clashed, passionate,
  55. until their tired wings and opposing breasts
  56. could not sustain them. And those kindred-foes
  57. fell down a sacrifice, memorial,
  58. to Memnon's ashes buried in that place.
  59. Brave Memnon, author of their birth, has given
  60. his name to those birds, marvellously formed,—
  61. and from him they are called Memnonides.—
  62. now, always when the Sun has passed the twelve
  63. signs of the Zodiac, they war again,
  64. to perish as a sacrifice for him.
  65. So others grieved, while Dymas' royal daughter
  66. was barking: but Aurora overcome
  67. with lasting sorrows, could not think of her:
  68. and even now, she sheds affectionate tears:
  69. and sprinkles them as dew on all the world.
  1. The Fates did not allow the hope of Troy
  2. to be destroyed entirely with her walls.
  3. Aeneas, the heroic son of Venus,
  4. bore on his shoulders holy images
  5. and still another holy weight, his sire,
  6. a venerable burden. From all his wealth
  7. the pious hero chose this for his care
  8. together with his child, Ascanius.
  9. Then with a fleet of exiles he sails forth,
  10. he leaves Antandrus, leaves the wicked realm
  11. and shore of Thrace now dripping with the blood
  12. of Polydorus. With fair winds and tide
  13. he and his comrades reach Apollo's isle.
  14. Good Anius, king of Delos, vigilant
  15. for all his subjects' welfare, and as priest
  16. devoted to Apollo, took him there
  17. into his temple and his home, and showed
  18. the city, the famed shrines, and the two trees
  19. which once Latona, while in labor, held.
  20. They burned sweet incense, adding to it wine,
  21. and laid the flesh of cattle in the flames,
  22. an offering marked by custom for the god.
  23. Then in the palace and its kingly hall,
  24. reclining on luxurious couches, they
  25. drank flowing wine with Ceres' gifts of food.
  26. But old Anchises asked: “O chosen priest
  27. of Phoebus, can I be deceived? When first
  28. I saw these walls, did you not have a son,
  29. and twice two daughters? Is it possible
  30. I am mistaken?” Anius replied,—
  31. shaking his temples wreathed with fillets white,—
  32. “It can be no mistake, great hero, you
  33. did see the father of five children then,
  34. (so much the risk of fortune may affect
  35. the best of men). You see me now, almost
  36. bereft of all. For what assistance can
  37. my absent son afford, while he is king,
  38. the ruler over Andros—that land named
  39. for his name—over which he rules for me?
  40. “The Delian god gave to my son the art
  41. of augury; and likewise, Liber gave
  42. my daughters precious gifts exceeding all
  43. my wishes and belief: since, every thing
  44. my daughters touched assumed the forms of corn,
  45. of sparkling wine, or gray-green olive oil.
  46. Most surely, wonderful advantages.
  47. “Soon as Atrides, he who conquered Troy
  48. had heard of this (for you should not suppose
  49. that we, too, did not suffer from your storms)
  50. he dragged my daughters there with savage force,
  51. from my loved bosom to his hostile camp,
  52. and ordered them to feed the Argive fleet,
  53. by their divinely given power of touch.
  54. “Whichever way they could, they made escape
  55. two hastened to Euboea, and two sought
  56. their brother's island, Andros. Quickly then
  57. an Argive squadron, following, threatened war,
  58. unless they were surrendered. The brother's love
  59. gave way to fear. And there is reason why
  60. you should forgive a timid brother's fear:
  61. he had no warrior like Aeneas, none
  62. like Hector, by whose prowess you held Troy
  63. from its destruction through ten years of war.
  64. “Strong chains were brought to hold my daughters' arms.
  65. Both lifted suppliant hands, which still were free,
  66. to heaven and cried, ‘0, Father Bacchus! give
  67. us needed aid!’ And he who had before
  68. given them the power of touch, did give them aid—
  69. if giving freedom without human shape
  70. can be called giving aid.—I never knew
  71. by what means they lost shape, and cannot tell;
  72. but their calamity is surely known:
  73. my daughters were transformed to snow-white doves,
  74. white birds of Venus, guardian of your days.”
  75. With this and other talk they shared the feast,
  76. then left the table and retired to sleep.
  77. They rose up with the day, and went at once
  78. to hear the oracle of Phoebus speak.
  79. He counselled them to leave that land and find
  80. their ancient mother and their kindred shores.
  81. The king attended them, and gave them gifts
  82. when ready to depart; a sceptre to
  83. Anchises, and a robe and quiver to
  84. his grandson, and he gave a goblet to
  85. Aeneas, that which formerly was sent
  86. to him by Therses, once his Theban guest.
  87. Therses had sent it from Aonian shores;
  88. but Alcon the Hylean should be named,
  89. for he had made the goblet and inscribed
  90. a pictured story on the polished side.
  91. There was a city shown with seven gates,
  92. from which the name could be derived by all.
  93. Outside the walls was a sad funeral,
  94. and tombs and fires and funeral pyres were shown,
  95. and many matrons with dishevelled hair
  96. and naked breasts, expressive of their grief,
  97. and many nymphs too, weeping mournfully
  98. because their streams were dry. Without a leaf
  99. the bare trees stood straight up and the she goats
  100. were nibbling in dry, stony fields. And there he carved
  101. Orion's daughters in the Theban square,
  102. one giving her bare throat a cruel cut,
  103. one with her shuttle making clumsy wounds;
  104. both dying for their people. Next they were borne
  105. out through the city with doe funeral pomp,
  106. and mourning crowds were gathered round their pyre.
  107. Then from the virgin ashes, lest the race
  108. should die. twin youths arose, whom fame
  109. has named Coroni and they shared
  110. in all the rites becoming for their mothers' dust.
  111. Even so in shining figures all was shown
  112. inscribed on ancient bronze. The top rim, made
  113. quite rough, was gilded with acanthus leaves.
  114. Presents of equal worth the Trojans gave:
  115. a maple incense casket for the priest,
  116. a bowl, a crown adorned with gold and gems.
  1. Then, recollecting how the Trojans had
  2. derived their origin from Teucer's race,
  3. they sailed to Crete but there could not endure
  4. ills sent by Jove, and, having left behind
  5. the hundred cities, they desired to reach
  6. the western harbors of the Ausonian land.
  7. Wintry seas then tossed the heroic band,
  8. and in a treacherous harbor of those isles,
  9. called Strophades, Aello frightened them.
  10. They passed Dulichium's port, and Ithaca,
  11. Samos, and all the homes of Neritos,—
  12. the kingdom of the shrewd deceitful man,
  13. Ulysses; and they reached Ambracia,
  14. contended for by those disputing gods;
  15. which is today renowned abroad, because
  16. of Actian Apollo, and the stone
  17. seen there conspicuous as a transformed judge;
  18. they saw Dodona, vocal with its oaks;
  19. and also, the well known Chaonian bays,
  20. where sons of the Molossian king escaped
  21. with wings attached, from unavailing flames.
  22. They set their sails then for the neighboring land
  23. of the Phaeacians, rich with luscious fruit:
  24. then for Epirus and to Buthrotos,
  25. and came then to a mimic town of Troy,
  26. ruled by the Phrygian seer. With prophecies
  27. which Helenus, the son of Priam, gave,
  28. they came to Sicily, whose three high capes
  29. jut outward in the sea. Of these three points
  30. Pachynos faces towards the showery south;
  31. and Lilybaeum is exposed to soft
  32. delicious zephyrs; but Peloros looks
  33. out towards the Bears which never touch the sea.
  34. The Trojans came there. Favored by the tide,
  35. and active oars, by nightfall all the fleet
  36. arrived together on Zanclaean sands.
  37. Scylla upon the right infests the shore,
  38. Charybdis, restless on the left, destroys.
  39. Charybdis swallows and then vomits forth
  40. misfortuned ships that she has taken down;
  41. Scylla's dark waist is girt with savage dogs.
  42. She has a maiden's face, and, if we may believe
  43. what poets tell, she was in olden time
  44. a maiden. Many suitors courted her,
  45. but she repulsed them; and, because she was
  46. so much beloved by all the Nereids,
  47. she sought these nymphs and used to tell
  48. how she escaped from the love-stricken youths.
  49. But Galatea, while her loosened locks
  50. were being combed, said to her visitor,—
  51. “Truly, O maiden, a gentle race of men
  52. courts you, and so you can, and do, refuse
  53. all with impunity. But I, whose sire
  54. is Nereus, whom the azure Doris bore,
  55. though guarded by so many sister nymphs,
  56. escaped the Cyclops' love with tragic loss.”
  57. And, sobbing, she was choked with tears.
  58. When with her fingers, marble white and smooth,
  59. Scylla had wiped away the rising tears
  60. of sorrow and had comforted the nymph,
  61. she said, “Tell me, dear goddess, and do not
  62. conceal from me (for I am true to you)
  63. the cause of your great sorrows.” And the nymph,
  64. daughter of Nereus, thus replied to her:—
  1. “Acis, the son of Faunus and the nymph
  2. Symaethis, was a great delight to his
  3. dear father and his mother, but even more
  4. to me, for he alone had won my love.
  5. Eight birthdays having passed a second time,
  6. his tender cheeks were marked with softest down.
  7. “While I pursued him with a constant love,
  8. the Cyclops followed me as constantly.
  9. And, should you ask me, I could not declare
  10. whether my hatred of him, or my love
  11. of Acis was the stronger.—They were equal.
  12. “O gentle Venus! what power equals yours!
  13. That savage, dreaded by the forest trees,
  14. feared by the stranger who beholds his face
  15. contemner of Olympus and the gods,
  16. now he can feel what love is. He is filled
  17. with passion for me. He burns hot for me,
  18. forgetful of his cattle and his caves.
  19. “Now, Polyphemus, wretched Cyclops, you
  20. are careful of appearance, and you try
  21. the art of pleasing. You have even combed
  22. your stiffened hair with rakes: it pleases you
  23. to trim your shaggy beard with sickles, while
  24. you gaze at your fierce features in a pool
  25. so earnest to compose them. Love of flesh,
  26. ferocity and your keen thirst for blood
  27. have ceased. The ships may safely come and go!
  28. “While all this happened, Telemus arrived
  29. at the Sicilian Aetna—Telemus,
  30. the son of Eurymus, who never could
  31. mistake an omen, met the dreadful fierce,
  32. huge Cyclops, Polyphemus, and he said,
  33. ‘That single eye now midmost in your brow
  34. Ulysses will take from you.’ In reply,
  35. the Cyclops only laughed at him and said,
  36. ‘Most silly of the prophets! you are wrong,
  37. a maiden has already taken it!’
  38. So he made fun of Telemus, who warned
  39. him vainly of the truth—and after that,
  40. he either burdened with his bulk the shore,
  41. by stalking back and forth with lengthy strides,
  42. or came back weary to his shaded cave.
  43. “A wedge-formed hill projects far in the sea
  44. and either side there flow the salty waves.
  45. To this the giant savage climbed and sat
  46. upon the highest point. The wooly flock,
  47. no longer guided by him, followed after.
  48. There, after he had laid his pine tree down,
  49. which served him for a staff, although so tall
  50. it seemed best fitted for a ship's high mast,
  51. he played his shepherd pipes—in them I saw
  52. a hundred reeds. The very mountains felt
  53. the pipings of that shepherd, and the waves
  54. beneath him shook respondent to each note.
  55. All this time I was hidden by a rock,
  56. reclining on the bosom of my own
  57. dear Acis; and, although afar, I heard
  58. such words as these, which I can not forget:—
  59. ‘O Galatea, fairer than the flower
  60. of snow-white privet, and more blooming than
  61. the meadows, and more slender than the tall
  62. delightful alder, brighter than smooth glass,
  63. more wanton than the tender skipping kid,
  64. smoother than shells worn by continual floods,
  65. more pleasing than the winter sun, or than
  66. the summer shade, more beautiful than fruit
  67. of apple trees, more pleasing to the sight
  68. than lofty plane tree, clearer than pure ice,
  69. and sweeter than the ripe grape, softer than
  70. soft swan-down and the softest curdled milk;
  71. alas, and if you did not fly from me,
  72. I would declare you are more beautiful
  73. than any watered garden of this world.
  74. ‘And yet, O Galatea; I must say,
  75. that you are wilder than all untrained bullocks,
  76. harder than seasoned oak, more treacherous
  77. than tumbled waters, tougher than the twigs
  78. of osier and the white vine, harder to move
  79. than cliffs which front these waves, more violent
  80. than any torrent, you are prouder than
  81. the flattered peacock, fiercer than hot fire,
  82. rougher than thistles, and more cruel than
  83. the pregnant she-bear, deafer than the waves
  84. of stormy seas, more deadly savage than
  85. the trodden water-snake: and, (what I would
  86. endeavor surely to deprive you of)
  87. your speed is fleeter than the deer
  88. pursued by frightful barkings, and more swift
  89. than rapid storm-winds and the flitting air.
  90. ‘But Galatea, if you knew me well
  91. you would regret your hasty flight from me,
  92. and you would even blame your own delay,
  93. and strive for my affection. I now hold
  94. the choice part of this mountain for my cave,
  95. roofed over with the native rock. The sun
  96. is not felt in the heat of middle day,
  97. nor is the winter felt there: apples load
  98. the bending boughs and luscious grapes
  99. hang on the lengthened vines, resembling gold,
  100. and purple grapes as rich—I keep for you
  101. those two delicious fruits. With your own hands,
  102. you shall yourself uncover strawberries,
  103. growing so soft beneath the woodland shade;
  104. you shall pluck corners in the autumn ripe,
  105. and plums, not only darkened with black juice
  106. but larger kinds as yellow as new wax.
  107. If I may be your mate, you shall have chestnuts,
  108. fruits of the arbute shall be always near,
  109. and every tree shall yield at your desire.
  110. ‘The ewes here all are mine, and many more
  111. are wandering in the valleys; and the woods
  112. conceal a multitude—and many more
  113. are penned within my caves. If you perchance
  114. should ask me, I could never even guess
  115. or count the number; it is for the poor
  116. to count their cattle. Do not trust my word,
  117. but go yourself and see with your own eyes,
  118. how they can hardly stand up on their legs
  119. because of their distended udders' weight.
  120. ‘I have lambs also, as a future flock,
  121. kept in warm folds, and kids of their same age
  122. in other folds. I always have supplies
  123. of snow-white milk for drinking, and much more
  124. is hardened with good rennet liquefied.
  125. ‘The common joys of ordinary things
  126. will not be all you should expect of me—
  127. tame does and hares and she-goats or a pair
  128. of doves, or even a nest from a tall tree—
  129. for I have found upon a mountain top,
  130. the twin cubs of a shaggy wild she-bear,
  131. of such appearance you can hardly know
  132. the one from other. They will play with you.
  133. The very day I found them I declared,
  134. these I will keep for my dear loved one's joy.
  135. ‘Do now but raise your shining head above
  136. the azure sea: come Galatea come,
  137. and do not scorn my presents. Certainly,
  138. I know myself, for only recently
  139. I saw my own reflection pictured clear
  140. in limpid water, and my features pleased
  141. and charmed me when I saw it. See how huge
  142. I am. Not even Jove in his high heaven
  143. is larger than my body: this I say
  144. because you tell me how imperial Jove
  145. surpasses.—Who is he? I never knew.
  146. ‘My long hair plentifully hangs to hide
  147. unpleasant features; as a grove of trees
  148. overshadowing my shoulders. Never think
  149. my body is uncomely, although rough,
  150. thick set with wiry bristles. Every tree
  151. without leaves is unseemly; every horse,
  152. unless a mane hangs on his tawny neck;
  153. feathers must cover birds; and their soft wool
  154. is ornamental on the best formed sheep:
  155. therefore a beard, and rough hair spread upon
  156. the body is becoming to all men.
  157. I have but one eye centered perfectly
  158. within my forehead, so it seems most like
  159. a mighty buckler. Ha! does not the Sun
  160. see everything from heaven? Yet it has
  161. but one eye.—
  162. ‘Galatea, you must know,
  163. my father is chief ruler in your sea,
  164. and therefor I now offer him to you
  165. as your own father-in-law—But oh, do take
  166. some pity on a suppliant,— and hear his prayer,
  167. for only unto you my heart is given.
  168. ‘I, who despise the power of Jove, his heavens
  169. and piercing lightnings, am afraid of you—
  170. your wrath more fearful than the lightning's flash—
  171. but I should be more patient under slights,
  172. if you avoided all men: why reject
  173. the Cyclops for the love that Acis gives?
  174. And why prefer his smiles to my embraces,
  175. but let him please himself, and let him please
  176. you, Galatea, though against my will.
  177. ‘If I am given an opportunity
  178. he will be shown that I have every strength
  179. proportioned to a body vast as mine:
  180. I will pull out his palpitating entrails,
  181. and scatter his torn limbs about the fields
  182. and over and throughout your salty waves;
  183. and then let him unite himself to you.—
  184. I burn so, and my slighted passion raves
  185. with greater fury and I seem to hold
  186. and carry Aetna in my breast—transferred
  187. there with its flames—Oh Galatea! can
  188. you listen to my passion thus unmoved!’
  189. “I saw all this; and, after he in vain
  190. had uttered such complaints, he stood up like
  191. a raging bull whose heifer has been lost,
  192. that cannot stand still, but must wander on
  193. through brush and forests, that he knows so well:
  194. when that fierce monster saw me and my Acis—
  195. we neither knew nor guessed our fate—he roared:
  196. ‘I see you and you never will again
  197. parade your love before me!’ In such a voice
  198. as matched his giant size. All Aetna shook
  199. and trembled at the noise; and I amazed
  200. with horror, plunged into the adjoining sea.
  201. “My loved one, Acis turned his back and fled
  202. and cried out, ‘Help me Galatea, help!
  203. 0, let your parents help me, and admit
  204. me safe within their realm; for I am now
  205. near my destruction!’ But the Cyclops rushed
  206. at him and hurled a fragment, he had torn
  207. out from the mountain, and although the extreme
  208. edge only of the rock could reach him there.
  209. It buried him entirely.
  210. “Then I did
  211. the only thing the Fates permitted me:
  212. I let my Acis take ancestral power
  213. of river deities. The purple blood
  214. flowed from beneath the rock, but soon
  215. the sanguine richness faded and became
  216. at first the color of a stream, disturbed
  217. and muddied by a shower. And presently
  218. it clarified.— The rock that had been thrown
  219. then split in two, and through the cleft a reed,
  220. stately and vigorous, arose to life.
  221. And soon the hollow mouth in the great rock,
  222. resounded with the waters gushing forth.
  223. And wonderful to tell, a youth emerged,
  224. the water flowing clear about his waist,
  225. his new horns circled with entwining reeds,
  226. and the youth certainly was Acis, though
  227. he was of larger stature and his face
  228. and features all were azure. Acis changed
  229. into a stream which ever since that time
  230. has flowed there and retained its former name.