Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- High in the dome of Heaven, behold the bright
- Caduceus-Bearer soared on balanced wings;
- and far below him through a fruitful grove,
- devoted to Minerva's hallowed reign,
- some virgins bearing on their lovely heads,
- in wicker baskets wreathed and decked with flowers,
- their sacred offerings to the citadel
- of that chaste goddess. And the winged God,
- while circling in the clear unbounded skies,
- beheld that train of virgins, beautiful,
- as they were thence returning on their way.
- Not forward on a level line he flew,
- but wheeled in circles round. Lo, the swift kite
- swoops round the smoking entrails, while the priests
- enclose in guarded ranks their sacrifice:
- wary with fear, that swiftest of all birds,
- dares not to venture from his vantage height,
- but greedily hovers on his waving wings
- around his keen desire. So, the bright God
- circled those towers, Actaean, round and round,
- in mazey circles, greedy as the bird.
- As much as Lucifer outshines the stars
- that emulate the glory of his rays,
- as greatly as bright Phoebe pales thy light,
- O lustrous Lucifer! so far surpassed
- in beauty the fair maiden Herse, all
- those lovely virgins of that sacred train,
- departing joyous from Minerva's grove.
- The Son of Jove, astonished, while he wheeled
- on balanced pinions through the yielding air,
- burned hot; as oft from Balearic sling
- the leaden missile, hurled with sudden force,
- burns in a glowing heat beneath the clouds.
- Then sloped the god his course from airy height,
- and turned a different way; another way
- he went without disguise, in confidence
- of his celestial grace. But though he knew
- his face was beautiful, he combed his hair,
- and fixed his flowing raiment, that the fringe
- of radiant gold appeared. And in his hand
- he waved his long smooth wand, with which he gives
- the wakeful sleep or waketh ridded eyes.
- He proudly glanced upon his twinkling feet
- that sparkled with their scintillating wings.
- In a secluded part of that great fane,
- devoted to Minerva's hallowed rites,
- three chambers were adorned with tortoise shell
- and ivory and precious woods inlaid;
- and there, devoted to Minerva's praise,
- three well known sisters dwelt. Upon the right
- dwelt Pandrosos and over on the left
- Aglauros dwelt, and Herse occupied
- the room between those two.
- When Mercury
- drew near to them, Aglauros first espied
- the God, and ventured to enquire his name,
- and wherefore he was come. Then gracious spoke
- to her in answer the bright son of Jove;
- “Behold the god who carries through the air
- the mandates of almighty Jupiter!
- But I come hither not to waste my time
- in idle words, but rather to beseech
- thy kindness and good aid, that I may win
- the love of thy devoted sister Herse.”
- Aglauros, on the son of Jupiter,
- gazed with those eyes that only lately viewed
- the guarded secret of the yellow-haired
- Minerva, and demanded as her price
- gold of great weight; before he paid denied
- admittance of the house.
- Minerva turned,
- with orbs of stern displeasure, towards the maid
- Aglauros; and her bosom heaved with sighs
- so deeply laboured that her Aegis-shield
- was shaken on her valiant breast. For she
- remembered when Aglauros gave to view
- her charge, with impious hand, that monster form
- without a mother, maugre Nature's law,
- what time the god who dwells on Lemnos loved.—
- now to requite the god and sister; her
- to punish whose demand of gold was great;
- Minerva to the Cave of Envy sped.
- Dark, hideous with black gore, her dread abode
- is hidden in the deepest hollowed cave,
- in utmost limits where the genial sun
- may never shine, and where the breathing winds
- may never venture; dismal, bitter cold,
- untempered by the warmth of welcome fires,
- involved forever in abounding gloom.
- When the fair champion came to this abode
- she stood before its entrance, for she deemed
- it not a lawful thing to enter there:
- and she whose arm is mortal to her foes,
- struck the black door-posts with her pointed spear,
- and shook them to the center. Straight the doors
- flew open, and, behold, within was Envy
- ravening the flesh of vipers, self-begot,
- the nutriment of her depraved desires.—
- when the great goddess met her evil gaze
- she turned her eyes away. But Envy slow,
- in sluggish languor from the ground uprose,
- and left the scattered serpents half-devoured;
- then moving with a sullen pace approached.—
- and when she saw the gracious goddess, girt
- with beauty and resplendent in her arms,
- she groaned aloud and fetched up heavy sighs.
- Her face is pale, her body long and lean,
- her shifting eyes glance to the left and right,
- her snaggle teeth are covered with black rust,
- her hanging paps overflow with bitter gall,
- her slavered tongue drips venom to the ground;
- busy in schemes and watchful in dark snares
- sweet sleep is banished from her blood-shot eyes;
- her smiles are only seen when others weep;
- with sorrow she observes the fortunate,
- and pines away as she beholds their joy;
- her own existence is her punishment,
- and while tormenting she torments herself.
- Although Minerva held her in deep scorn
- she thus commanded her with winged words;
- “Instil thy poison in Aglauros, child
- of Cecrops; I command thee; do my will.”
- She spake; and spurning with her spear the ground
- departed; and the sad and furtive-eyed
- envy observed her in her glorious flight:
- she murmured at the goddess, great in arms:
- but waiting not she took in hand her staff,
- which bands of thorns encircled as a wreath,
- and veiled in midnight clouds departed thence.
- She blasted on her way the ripening fields;
- scorched the green meadows, starred with flowers,
- and breathed a pestilence throughout the land
- and the great cities. When her eyes beheld
- the glorious citadel of Athens, great
- in art and wealth, abode of joyful peace,
- she hardly could refrain from shedding tears,
- that nothing might be witnessed worthy tears.
- She sought the chamber where Aglauros slept,
- and hastened to obey the God's behest.
- She touched the maiden's bosom with her hands,
- foul with corrupting stains, and pierced her heart
- with jagged thorns, and breathed upon her face
- a noxious venom; and distilled through all
- the marrow of her bones, and in her lungs,
- a poison blacker than the ooze of pitch.
- And lest the canker of her poisoned soul
- might spread unchecked throughout increasing space,
- she caused a vision of her sister's form
- to rise before her, happy with the God
- who shone in his celestial beauty. All
- appeared more beautiful than real life.—
- when the most wretched daughter of Cecrops
- had seen the vision secret torment seized
- on all her vitals; and she groaned aloud,
- tormented by her frenzy day and night.
- A slow consumption wasted her away,
- as ice is melted by the slant sunbeam,
- when the cool clouds are flitting in the sky.
- If she but thought of Herse's happiness
- she burned, as thorny bushes are consumed
- with smoldering embers under steaming stems.
- She could not bear to see her sister's joy,
- and longed for death, an end of misery;
- or schemed to end the torture of her mind
- by telling all she knew in shameful words,
- whispered to her austere and upright sire.
- But after many agonizing hours,
- she sat before the threshold of their home
- to intercept the God, who as he neared
- spoke softly in smooth blandishment.
- “Enough,” she said, “I will not move from here
- until thou hast departed from my sight.”
- “Let us adhere to that which was agreed.”
- Rejoined the graceful-formed Cyllenian God,
- who as he spoke thrust open with a touch
- of his compelling wand the carved door.
- But when she made an effort to arise,
- her thighs felt heavy, rigid and benumbed;
- and as she struggled to arise her knees
- were stiffened? and her nails turned pale and cold;
- her veins grew pallid as the blood congealed.
- And even as the dreaded cancer spreads
- through all the body, adding to its taint
- the flesh uninjured; so, a deadly chill
- entered by slow degrees her breast, and stopped
- her breathing, and the passages of life.
- She did not try to speak, but had she made
- an effort to complain there was not left
- a passage for her voice. Her neck was changed
- to rigid stone, her countenance felt hard;
- she sat a bloodless statue, but of stone
- not marble-white—her mind had stained it black.