Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- “Nothing retains the form that seems its own,
- and Nature, the renewer of all things,
- continually changes every form
- into some other shape. Believe my word,
- in all this universe of vast extent,
- not one thing ever perished. All have changed
- appearance. Men say a certain thing is born,
- if it takes a different form from what it had;
- and yet they say, that certain thing has died,
- if it no longer keeps the self same shape.
- Though distant things move near, and near things far,
- always the sum of all things is unchanged.
- “For my part, I cannot believe a thing
- remains long under the same form unchanged.
- Look at the change of times from gold to iron,:
- look at the change in places. I have seen
- what had been solid earth become salt waves,
- and I have seen dry land made from the deep;
- and, far away from ocean, sea-shells strewn,
- and on the mountain-tops old anchors found.
- Water has made that which was once a plain
- into a valley, and the mountain has
- been levelled by the floods down to a plain.
- A former marshland is now parched dry sand,
- and places which endured severest drought
- are wet with standing pools. Here Nature has
- opened fresh springs, but there has shut them up;
- rivers aroused by ancient earthquakes have
- rushed out or vanished, as they lost their depth.
- “So, when the Lycus has been swallowed by
- a chasm in the earth, it rushes forth
- at a distance and is reborn a different stream.
- The Erasinus now flows down into a cave,
- now runs beneath the ground a darkened course,
- then rises lordly in the Argolic fields.
- They say the Mysus, wearied of his spring
- and of his former banks, appears elsewhere
- and takes another name, the Caicus.
- “The Amenanus in Sicilian sands
- now smoothly rolling, at another time
- is quenched, because its fountain springs are dry.
- The water of the Anigros formerly
- was used for drinking, but it pours out now
- foul water which you would decline to touch,
- because (unless all credit is denied
- to poets) long ago the Centaurs, those
- strange mortals double-limbed, bathed in the stream
- wounds which club-bearing Hercules had made
- with his strong bow.—Yes, does not Hypanis
- descending fresh from mountains of Sarmatia,
- become embittered with the taste of salt?
- “Antissa, Pharos, and Phoenician Tyre,
- were once surrounded by the wavy sea:
- they are not islands now. Long years ago
- Leucas was mainland, if we can believe
- what the old timers there will tell, but now
- the waves sweep round it. Zancle was a part
- of Italy, until the sea cut off
- the neighboring land with strong waves in between.
- Should you seek Helice and Buris, those
- two cities of Achaea, you will find
- them underneath the waves, where sailors point
- to sloping roofs and streets in the clear deep.
- “Near Pittheaan Troezen a steep, high hill,
- quite bare of trees, was once a level plain,
- but now is a hill, for (dreadful even to tell)
- the raging power of winds, long pent in deep,
- dark caverns, tried to find a proper vent,
- long struggling to attain free sky.
- Finding no opening from the prison-caves,
- imperious to their force, they raised the earth,
- exactly as pent air breathed from the mouth
- inflates a bladder, or the bottle-hides
- stripped off the two-horned goats. The swollen earth
- remained on that spot and has ever since
- appearance of a high hill hardened by
- the flight of time.
- “Of many strange events
- that I have heard and known, I will add a few.
- Why, does not water give and take strange forms?
- Your wave, O horned Ammon, will turn cold
- at mid-day, but is always mild and warm
- at sun-rise and at sun-set. I have heard
- that Athamanians kindle wood, if they
- pour water on it, when the waning moon
- has shrunk away into her smallest orb.
- The people of Ciconia have a stream
- which turns the drinker's entrails into stone,
- which changes into marble all it raves.
- The Achaean Crathis and the Sybaris,
- which flow not far from here, will turn the hair
- to something like clear amber or bright gold.
- “What is more wonderful, there are some waters
- which change not only bodies but the minds:
- who has no knowledge of the Salmacis
- and of its ill famed waves? Who has not
- heard of the lakes of Aethiopia:
- how those who drink of them go raving mad
- or fall in a deep sleep, most wonderful
- in heaviness. Whoever quenches thirst
- from the Clitorian spring will hate all wine,
- and soberly secure great pleasure from
- pure water. Either that spring has a power
- the opposite of wine-heat, or perhaps
- as natives tell us, after the famed son
- of Amythaon by his charms and herbs,
- delivered from their base insanity
- the stricken Proetides, he threw the rest
- of his mind healing herbs into the spring,
- where hatred of all wine has since remained.
- Unlike in nature flows another stream
- of the country, called Lyncestius: everyone
- who drinks of it, even with most temperate care,
- will reel, as if he had drunk unmixed wine.
- In Arcadia is a place, called Pheneos
- by men of old, which is mistrusted for
- the twofold nature of its waters. Stand
- in dread of them at night; if drunk at night,
- they harm you, but in daytime they will do
- no harm at all.
- So lakes and rivers have
- now this, now that effect.
- “Ortygia once
- moved like a ship that drifts among the waves.
- Now it is fixed. The Argo was in dread
- of the Symplegades, which moved apart
- with waves in-rushing. Now immovable
- they stand, resisting the attack of winds.
- “Aetna, which burns with sulphur furnaces,
- will not be always concentrated fire,
- nor was it always fiery. If the earth
- is like an animal and is alive
- and breathes out flame at many openings,
- then it can change these many passages
- used for its breathing and, when it is moved,
- may close these caverns as it opens up
- some others. Or if rushing winds are penned
- in deepest caverns, and they drive great stones
- against the rock, and substances which have
- the properties of flame and fire are made
- by those concussions; when the winds are calmed
- the caverns will, of course, be cool again.
- “Or if some black bitumen catches fire
- or yellow sulphur burns with little smoke,
- then surely, when the ground no longer gives
- such food and oily nutriment for flames
- and they in time have ravined all their store,
- their greedy nature soon will pine with death—
- it will not bear such famine but depart
- and, when deserted, will desert the place.
- “'Tis said that Hyperboreans of Pallene
- can cover all their bodies with light plumes
- by plunging nine times in Minerva's marsh.
- But I cannot believe another tale:
- that Scythian women get a like result
- by having poison sprinkled on their limbs.
- “If we give any credit to the things
- proved by experience, we can surely know
- whatever bodies are decayed by time
- or by dissolving heat are by such means
- changed into tiny animals—Come now,
- bury choice bullocks killed for sacrifice,
- and it is well known by experience
- that the flower-gathering bees are so produced,
- miraculous, from entrails putrefied.
- These, like the faithful animals from which
- they were produced, inhabit the green fields,
- delight in toil, and labor for reward.
- “The warlike steed, when buried in the ground,
- is a known source of hornets. If you cut
- the bending claws off from the sea-shore crab
- and bury the remainder in the earth,
- a scorpion will come forth from the dead crab
- buried there, threatening with its crooked tail.
- “The worms which cover leaves with their white threads,
- a thing observable by husbandmen,
- will change themselves to funeral butterflies.
- Mud holds the seeds that generate green frogs,
- at first producing tadpoles with no feet,
- and soon it gives them legs adapted for
- their swimming, and, so they may be as well
- adapted to good leaping, their hind legs
- are longer than the fore-legs. The mother bear
- does not bring forth a cub but a limp mass
- of flesh that hardly can be called alive.
- By licking it the mother forms the limbs,
- and brings it to a shape just like her own.
- “Do not the offspring of the honey bees,
- concealed in cells hexagonal, at first
- get life with no limbs, and assume in time
- both feet and wings? Unless the fact were known,
- could anyone suppose it possible
- that Juno's bird, whose tail is bright with stars;
- the eagle, armor-bearer of high Jove;
- the doves of Cytherea; and all birds
- emerge from the middle part of eggs?
- And some believe the human marrow turns
- into a serpent when the spine at length
- has putrefied in the closed sepulchre.
- “Now these I named derive their origin
- from other living forms. There is one bird
- which reproduces and renews itself:
- the Assyrians gave this bird his name—the Phoenix.
- He does not live either on grain or herbs,
- but only on small drops of frankincense
- and juices of amomum. When this bird
- completes a full five centuries of life
- straightway with talons and with shining beak
- he builds a nest among palm branches, where
- they join to form the palm tree's waving top.
- “As soon as he has strewn in this new nest
- the cassia bark and ears of sweet spikenard,
- and some bruised cinnamon with yellow myrrh,
- he lies down on it and refuses life
- among those dreamful odors.—And they say
- that from the body of the dying bird
- is reproduced a little Phoenix which
- is destined to live just as many years.
- “When time has given to him sufficient strength
- and he is able to sustain the weight,
- he lifts the nest up from the lofty tree
- and dutifully carries from that place
- his cradle and the parent's sepulchre.
- As soon as he has reached through yielding air
- the city of Hyperion, he will lay
- the burden just before the sacred doors
- within the temple of Hyperion.
- “But, if we wonder at strange things like these,
- we ought to wonder also, when we learn
- that a hyena has a change of sex:
- the female, quitting her embracing male,
- herself becomes a male.—That animal
- which feeds upon the winds and air, at once
- assumes with contact any color touched.
- “Conquered India gave to the vine crowned Bacchus
- lynxes, whose urine turns, they say to stones,
- hardening in air. So coral, too, as soon
- as it has risen above the sea, turns hard.
- Below the waves it was a tender plant.
- “The day will fail me; Phoebus will have bathed
- his panting horses in the deep sea waves,
- before I can include in my discourse
- the myriad things transforming to new shapes.
- In lapse of time we see the nations change;
- some grow in power, some wane. Troy was once great
- in riches and in men—so great she could
- for ten unequalled years afford much blood;
- now she lies low and offers to our gaze
- but ancient ruins and, instead of wealth,
- ancestral tombs. Sparta was famous once
- and great Mycenae was most flourishing.
- And Cecrops' citadel and Amphion's shone
- in ancient power. Sparta is nothing now
- save barren ground, the proud Mycenae fell,
- what is the Thebes of storied Oedipus
- except a name? And of Pandion's Athens
- what now remains beyond the name?
- “Reports come to me that Dardanian Rome
- is rising, and beside the Tiber's waves,
- whose springs are high in the Apennines, is laying
- her deep foundations. So in her growth
- her form is changing, and one day she will
- be the sole mistress of the boundless world.
- “They say that soothsayers and that oracles,
- revealers of our destiny, declare
- this fate, and, if I recollect it right,
- Helenus, son of Priam, prophesied
- unto Aeneas, when he was in doubt
- of safety and lamenting for the state
- of Troy, about to fall, ‘O, son of a goddess,
- if you yourself, will fully understand
- this prophecy now surging in my mind
- Troy shall not, while you are preserved to life
- fall utterly. Flames and the sword shall give
- you passage. You shall go and bear away
- Pergama, ruined; till a foreign soil,
- more friendly to you than your native land,
- shall be the lot of Troy and of yourself.
- “Even now I know it is decreed by Fate
- that our posterity, born far from Troy,
- will build a city greater than exists,
- or ever will exist, or ever has
- been seen in former times. Through a long lapse
- of ages other noted men shall make
- it strong, but one of the race of Iulus;
- shall make it the great mistress of the world.
- After the earth has thoroughly enjoyed
- his glorious life, aetherial abodes
- shall gain him, and immortal heaven shall be
- his destiny.’
- Such was the prophesy
- of Helenus, when great Aeneas took
- away his guardian deities, and I
- rejoice to see my kindred walls rise high
- and realize how much the Trojans won
- by that resounding victory of the Greeks!
- “But, that we may not range afar with steeds
- forgetful of the goal, the heavens and all
- beneath them and the earth and everything
- upon it change in form. We likewise change,
- who are a portion of the universe,
- and, since we are not only things of flesh
- but winged souls as well, we may be doomed
- to enter into beasts as our abode;
- and even to be hidden in the breasts
- of cattle. Therefore, should we not allow
- these bodies to be safe which may contain
- the souls of parents, brothers, or of those
- allied to us by kinship or of men
- at least, who should be saved from every harm?
- Let us not gorge down a Thyestean feast!
- “How greatly does a man disgrace himself,
- how impiously does he prepare himself
- for shedding human blood, who with u knife
- cuts the calf's throat and offers a deaf ear
- to its death-longings! who can kill the kid
- while it is sending forth heart rending cries
- like those of a dear child; or who can feed
- upon the bird which he has given food.
- How little do such deeds as these fall short
- of actual murder? Yes, where will they lead?
- “Let the ox plough, or let him owe his death
- to weight of years; and let the sheep give us
- defence against the cold of Boreas;
- and let the well-fed she-goats give to man
- their udders for the pressure of kind hands.
- “Away with cruel nets and springs and snares
- and fraudulent contrivances: deceive
- not birds with bird-limed twigs: do not deceive
- the trusting deer with dreaded feather foils:
- do not conceal barbed hooks with treacherous bait:
- if any beast is harmful, take his life,
- but, even so, let killing be enough.
- Taste not his flesh, but look for harmless food!”
- They say that Numa with a mind well taught
- by these and other precepts traveled back
- to his own land and, being urged again,
- assumed the guidance of the Latin state.
- Blest with a nymph as consort, blest also with
- the Muses for his guides, he taught the rites
- of sacrifice and trained in arts of peace
- a race accustomed long to savage war.
- When, ripe in years, he ended reign and life,
- the Latin matrons, the fathers of the state,
- and all the people wept for Numa's death.
- For the nymph, his widow, had withdrawn from Rome,
- concealed within the thick groves of the vale
- Aricia, where with groans and wailing she
- disturbed the holy rites of Cynthia,
- established by Orestes. Ah! how often
- nymphs of the grove and lake entreated her
- to cease and offered her consoling words.
- How often the son of Theseus said to her
- “Control your sorrow; surely your sad lot
- is not the only one; consider now
- the like calamities by others borne,
- and you can bear your sorrow. To my grief
- my own disaster was far worse than yours.
- At least it can afford you comfort now.
- “Is it not true, discourse has reached yours ears
- that one Hippolytus met with his death
- through the credulity of his loved sire,
- deceived by a stepmother's wicked art?
- It will amaze you much, and I may fail
- to prove what I declare, but I am he!
- Long since the daughter of Pasiphae
- tempted me to defile my father's bed
- and, failing, feigned that I had wished to do
- what she herself had wished. Perverting truth—
- either through fear of some discovery
- or else through spite at her deserved repulse—
- she charged me with attempting the foul crime.
- “Though I was guiltless of all wrong,
- my father banished me and, while I was
- departing, laid on me a mortal curse.
- Towards Pittheus and Troezen I fled aghast,
- guiding the swift chariot near the shore
- of the Corinthian Gulf, when all at once
- the sea rose up and seemed to arch itself
- and lift high as a white topped mountain height,
- make bellowings, and open at the crest.
- Then through the parting waves a horned bull
- emerged with head and breast into the wind,
- spouting white foam from his nostrils and his mouth.
- “The hearts of my attendants quailed with fear,
- yet I unfrightened thought but of my exile.
- Then my fierce horses turned their necks to face
- the waters, and with ears erect they quaked
- before the monster shape, they dashed in flight
- along the rock strewn ground below the cliff.
- I struggled, but with unavailing hand,
- to use the reins now covered with white foam;
- and throwing myself back, pulled on the thongs
- with weight and strength. Such effort might have checked
- the madness of my steeds, had not a wheel,
- striking the hub on a projecting stump,
- been shattered and hurled in fragments from the axle.
- “I was thrown forward from my chariot
- and with the reins entwined about my legs.
- My palpitating entrails could be seen
- dragged on, my sinews fastened on a stump.
- My torn legs followed, but a part
- remained behind me, caught by various snags.
- The breaking bones gave out a crackling noise,
- my tortured spirit soon had fled away,
- no part of the torn body could be known—
- all that was left was only one crushed wound—
- how can, how dare you, nymph, compare your ills
- to my disaster?
- “I saw the Lower World
- deprived of light: and I have bathed my flesh,
- so tortured, in the waves of Phlegethon.
- Life could not have been given again to me,
- but through the remedies Apollo's son
- applied to me. After my life returned—
- by potent herbs and the Paeonian aid,
- despite the will of Pluto—Cynthia then
- threw heavy clouds around that I might not
- be seen and cause men envy by new life:
- and that she might be sure my life was safe
- she made me seem an old man; and she changed
- me so that I could not be recognized.
- “A long time she debated whether she
- would give me Crete or Delos for my home.
- Delos and Crete abandoned, she then brought
- me here, and at the same time ordered me
- to lay aside my former name—one which
- when mentioned would remind me of my steeds.
- She said to me, ‘You were Hippolytus,
- but now instead you shall be Virbius.’
- And from that time I have inhabited
- this grove; and, as one of the lesser gods,
- I live concealed and numbered in her train.”
- The grief of others could not ease the woe
- of sad Egeria, and she laid herself
- down at a mountain's foot, dissolved in tears,
- till moved by pity for her faithful sorrow,
- Diana changed her body to a spring,
- her limbs into a clear continual stream.