Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. So made the tortured Earth an end of speech;
  2. and she was fain to hide her countenance
  3. in caves that border on the nether night.
  4. But now the Almighty Father, having called
  5. to witness all the Gods of Heaven, and him
  6. who gave the car, that, else his power be shown,
  7. must perish all in dire confusion, high
  8. he mounted to the altitude from which
  9. he spreads the mantling clouds, and fulminates
  10. his dreadful thunders and swift lightning-bolts
  11. terrific.—Clouds were none to find on the earth,
  12. and the surrounding skies were void of rain.—
  13. Jove, having reached that summit, stood and poised
  14. in his almighty hand a flashing dart,
  15. and, hurling it, deprived of life and seat
  16. the youthful charioteer, and struck with fire
  17. the raging flames— and by the same great force
  18. those flames enveloping the earth were quenched,
  19. and he who caused their fury lost his life.
  20. Frantic in their affright the horses sprang
  21. across the bounded way and cast their yokes,
  22. and through the tangled harness lightly leaped.
  23. And here the scattered harness lay, and there
  24. the shattered axle, wrenched from off the pole,
  25. and various portions of the broken car;
  26. spokes of the broken Wheel were scattered round.
  27. And far fell Phaethon with flaming hair;
  28. as haply from the summer sky appears
  29. a falling star, although it never drops
  30. to startled earth.—Far distant from his home
  31. the deep Eridanus received the lad
  32. and bathed his foaming face. His body charred
  33. by triple flames Hesperian Naiads bore,
  34. still smoking, to a tomb, and this engraved
  35. upon the stone; “Here Phaethon's remains
  36. lie buried. He who drove his father's car
  37. and fell, although he made a great attempt.”
  38. Filled with consuming woe, his father hid
  39. his countenance which grief had overcast.
  40. And now, surpassing our belief, they say
  41. a day passed over with no glowing sun;—
  42. but light-affording flames appeared to change
  43. disaster to the cause of good.
  44. Amazed,
  45. the woeful Clymene, when she had moaned
  46. in grief, amid her lamentations tore
  47. her bosom, as across the world she roamed,
  48. at first to seek his lifeless corpse, and then
  49. his bones. She wandered to that distant land
  50. and found at last his bones ensepulchred.
  51. There, clinging to the grave she fell and bathed
  52. with many tears his name on marble carved,
  53. and with her bosom warmed the freezing
  54. stone.
  55. And all the daughters of the Sun went there
  56. giving their tears, alas a useless gift;—
  57. they wept and beat their breasts, and day and night
  58. called, “Phaethon,” who heard not any sound
  59. of their complaint:—and there they lay foredone,
  60. all scattered round the tomb.
  61. The silent moon
  62. had four times joined her horns and filled her disk,
  63. while they, according to an ancient rite,
  64. made lamentation. Prone upon the ground,
  65. the eldest, Phaethusa, would arise
  66. from there, but found her feet were growing stiff;
  67. and uttered moan. Lampetia wished to aid
  68. her sister but was hindered by new roots;
  69. a third when she would tear her hair, plucked forth
  70. but leaves: another wailed to find her legs
  71. were fastened in a tree; another moaned
  72. to find her arms to branches had been changed.
  73. And while they wondered, bark enclosed their thighs,
  74. and covered their smooth bellies, and their breasts,
  75. and shoulders and their hands, but left untouched
  76. their lips that called upon their mother's name.
  77. What can she do for them? Hither she runs
  78. and thither runs, wherever frenzy leads.
  79. She kisses them, alas, while yet she may!
  80. But not content with this, she tried to hale
  81. their bodies from the trees; and she would tear
  82. the tender branches with her hands, but lo!
  83. The blood oozed out as from a bleeding wound;
  84. and as she wounded them they shrieked aloud,
  85. “Spare me! O mother spare me; in the tree
  86. my flesh is torn! farewell! farewell! farewell!”
  87. And as they spoke the bark enclosed their lips.
  88. Their tears flow forth, and from the new-formed
  89. boughs
  90. amber distils and slowly hardens in the sun;
  91. and far from there upon the waves is borne
  92. to deck the Latin women.
  93. Cycnus, son
  94. of Sthenelus, by his maternal house
  95. akin to Phaethon, and thrice by love
  96. allied, beheld this wonderful event.—
  97. he left his kingdom of Liguria,
  98. and all its peopled cities, to lament
  99. where the sad sisters had increased the woods,
  100. beside the green banks of Eridanus.
  101. There, as he made complaint, his manly voice
  102. began to pipe a treble, shrill; and long
  103. gray plumes concealed his hair. A slender neck
  104. extended from his breast, and reddening toes
  105. were joined together by a membrane. Wings
  106. grew from his sides, and from his mouth was made
  107. a blunted beak. Now Cycnus is a swan,
  108. and yet he fears to trust the skies and Jove,
  109. for he remembers fires, unjustly sent,
  110. and therefore shuns the heat that he abhors,
  111. and haunts the spacious lakes and pools and streams
  112. that quench the fires.
  113. In squalid garb, meanwhile,
  114. and destitute of all his rays, the sire
  115. of Phaethon, as dark as when eclipse bedims
  116. his Wheel, abhors himself and hates the light,
  117. shuns the bright day, gives up his mind to grief,
  118. adds passion to his woe, denies the earth
  119. his countenance, and thus laments; “My lot
  120. was ever restless from the dawn of time,
  121. and I am weary of this labour, void
  122. and endless. Therefore, let who will urge forth
  123. my car, light-bearing, and if none may dare,
  124. when all the Gods of Heaven acknowledge it,
  125. let Jove himself essay the task. Perchance,
  126. when he takes up the reins, he may forget
  127. his dreadful lightning that bereaves of child
  128. a father's love; and as he tries the strength
  129. of those flame-footed steeds will know, in truth,
  130. the lad who failed to guide my chariot
  131. deserved not death.”
  132. But all the Deities
  133. encircle Phoebus as he makes complaint,
  134. and with their supplications they entreat
  135. him not to plunge the world in darkness. Jove
  136. would find excuses for the lightning-bolt,
  137. hurled from his hand, and adds imperious threats
  138. to his entreaties. Phoebus calls his steeds,
  139. frenzied with their maddening fires, and
  140. breaks
  141. their fury, as he vents with stinging lash
  142. his rage upon them, and in passion lays
  143. on them the death of Phaethon his son.