Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- So made the tortured Earth an end of speech;
- and she was fain to hide her countenance
- in caves that border on the nether night.
- But now the Almighty Father, having called
- to witness all the Gods of Heaven, and him
- who gave the car, that, else his power be shown,
- must perish all in dire confusion, high
- he mounted to the altitude from which
- he spreads the mantling clouds, and fulminates
- his dreadful thunders and swift lightning-bolts
- terrific.—Clouds were none to find on the earth,
- and the surrounding skies were void of rain.—
- Jove, having reached that summit, stood and poised
- in his almighty hand a flashing dart,
- and, hurling it, deprived of life and seat
- the youthful charioteer, and struck with fire
- the raging flames— and by the same great force
- those flames enveloping the earth were quenched,
- and he who caused their fury lost his life.
- Frantic in their affright the horses sprang
- across the bounded way and cast their yokes,
- and through the tangled harness lightly leaped.
- And here the scattered harness lay, and there
- the shattered axle, wrenched from off the pole,
- and various portions of the broken car;
- spokes of the broken Wheel were scattered round.
- And far fell Phaethon with flaming hair;
- as haply from the summer sky appears
- a falling star, although it never drops
- to startled earth.—Far distant from his home
- the deep Eridanus received the lad
- and bathed his foaming face. His body charred
- by triple flames Hesperian Naiads bore,
- still smoking, to a tomb, and this engraved
- upon the stone; “Here Phaethon's remains
- lie buried. He who drove his father's car
- and fell, although he made a great attempt.”
- Filled with consuming woe, his father hid
- his countenance which grief had overcast.
- And now, surpassing our belief, they say
- a day passed over with no glowing sun;—
- but light-affording flames appeared to change
- disaster to the cause of good.
- Amazed,
- the woeful Clymene, when she had moaned
- in grief, amid her lamentations tore
- her bosom, as across the world she roamed,
- at first to seek his lifeless corpse, and then
- his bones. She wandered to that distant land
- and found at last his bones ensepulchred.
- There, clinging to the grave she fell and bathed
- with many tears his name on marble carved,
- and with her bosom warmed the freezing
- stone.
- And all the daughters of the Sun went there
- giving their tears, alas a useless gift;—
- they wept and beat their breasts, and day and night
- called, “Phaethon,” who heard not any sound
- of their complaint:—and there they lay foredone,
- all scattered round the tomb.
- The silent moon
- had four times joined her horns and filled her disk,
- while they, according to an ancient rite,
- made lamentation. Prone upon the ground,
- the eldest, Phaethusa, would arise
- from there, but found her feet were growing stiff;
- and uttered moan. Lampetia wished to aid
- her sister but was hindered by new roots;
- a third when she would tear her hair, plucked forth
- but leaves: another wailed to find her legs
- were fastened in a tree; another moaned
- to find her arms to branches had been changed.
- And while they wondered, bark enclosed their thighs,
- and covered their smooth bellies, and their breasts,
- and shoulders and their hands, but left untouched
- their lips that called upon their mother's name.
- What can she do for them? Hither she runs
- and thither runs, wherever frenzy leads.
- She kisses them, alas, while yet she may!
- But not content with this, she tried to hale
- their bodies from the trees; and she would tear
- the tender branches with her hands, but lo!
- The blood oozed out as from a bleeding wound;
- and as she wounded them they shrieked aloud,
- “Spare me! O mother spare me; in the tree
- my flesh is torn! farewell! farewell! farewell!”
- And as they spoke the bark enclosed their lips.
- Their tears flow forth, and from the new-formed
- boughs
- amber distils and slowly hardens in the sun;
- and far from there upon the waves is borne
- to deck the Latin women.
- Cycnus, son
- of Sthenelus, by his maternal house
- akin to Phaethon, and thrice by love
- allied, beheld this wonderful event.—
- he left his kingdom of Liguria,
- and all its peopled cities, to lament
- where the sad sisters had increased the woods,
- beside the green banks of Eridanus.
- There, as he made complaint, his manly voice
- began to pipe a treble, shrill; and long
- gray plumes concealed his hair. A slender neck
- extended from his breast, and reddening toes
- were joined together by a membrane. Wings
- grew from his sides, and from his mouth was made
- a blunted beak. Now Cycnus is a swan,
- and yet he fears to trust the skies and Jove,
- for he remembers fires, unjustly sent,
- and therefore shuns the heat that he abhors,
- and haunts the spacious lakes and pools and streams
- that quench the fires.
- In squalid garb, meanwhile,
- and destitute of all his rays, the sire
- of Phaethon, as dark as when eclipse bedims
- his Wheel, abhors himself and hates the light,
- shuns the bright day, gives up his mind to grief,
- adds passion to his woe, denies the earth
- his countenance, and thus laments; “My lot
- was ever restless from the dawn of time,
- and I am weary of this labour, void
- and endless. Therefore, let who will urge forth
- my car, light-bearing, and if none may dare,
- when all the Gods of Heaven acknowledge it,
- let Jove himself essay the task. Perchance,
- when he takes up the reins, he may forget
- his dreadful lightning that bereaves of child
- a father's love; and as he tries the strength
- of those flame-footed steeds will know, in truth,
- the lad who failed to guide my chariot
- deserved not death.”
- But all the Deities
- encircle Phoebus as he makes complaint,
- and with their supplications they entreat
- him not to plunge the world in darkness. Jove
- would find excuses for the lightning-bolt,
- hurled from his hand, and adds imperious threats
- to his entreaties. Phoebus calls his steeds,
- frenzied with their maddening fires, and
- breaks
- their fury, as he vents with stinging lash
- his rage upon them, and in passion lays
- on them the death of Phaethon his son.