Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. High in the dome of Heaven, behold the bright
  2. Caduceus-Bearer soared on balanced wings;
  3. and far below him through a fruitful grove,
  4. devoted to Minerva's hallowed reign,
  5. some virgins bearing on their lovely heads,
  6. in wicker baskets wreathed and decked with flowers,
  7. their sacred offerings to the citadel
  8. of that chaste goddess. And the winged God,
  9. while circling in the clear unbounded skies,
  10. beheld that train of virgins, beautiful,
  11. as they were thence returning on their way.
  12. Not forward on a level line he flew,
  13. but wheeled in circles round. Lo, the swift kite
  14. swoops round the smoking entrails, while the priests
  15. enclose in guarded ranks their sacrifice:
  16. wary with fear, that swiftest of all birds,
  17. dares not to venture from his vantage height,
  18. but greedily hovers on his waving wings
  19. around his keen desire. So, the bright God
  20. circled those towers, Actaean, round and round,
  21. in mazey circles, greedy as the bird.
  22. As much as Lucifer outshines the stars
  23. that emulate the glory of his rays,
  24. as greatly as bright Phoebe pales thy light,
  25. O lustrous Lucifer! so far surpassed
  26. in beauty the fair maiden Herse, all
  27. those lovely virgins of that sacred train,
  28. departing joyous from Minerva's grove.
  29. The Son of Jove, astonished, while he wheeled
  30. on balanced pinions through the yielding air,
  31. burned hot; as oft from Balearic sling
  32. the leaden missile, hurled with sudden force,
  33. burns in a glowing heat beneath the clouds.
  34. Then sloped the god his course from airy height,
  35. and turned a different way; another way
  36. he went without disguise, in confidence
  37. of his celestial grace. But though he knew
  38. his face was beautiful, he combed his hair,
  39. and fixed his flowing raiment, that the fringe
  40. of radiant gold appeared. And in his hand
  41. he waved his long smooth wand, with which he gives
  42. the wakeful sleep or waketh ridded eyes.
  43. He proudly glanced upon his twinkling feet
  44. that sparkled with their scintillating wings.
  45. In a secluded part of that great fane,
  46. devoted to Minerva's hallowed rites,
  47. three chambers were adorned with tortoise shell
  48. and ivory and precious woods inlaid;
  49. and there, devoted to Minerva's praise,
  50. three well known sisters dwelt. Upon the right
  51. dwelt Pandrosos and over on the left
  52. Aglauros dwelt, and Herse occupied
  53. the room between those two.
  54. When Mercury
  55. drew near to them, Aglauros first espied
  56. the God, and ventured to enquire his name,
  57. and wherefore he was come. Then gracious spoke
  58. to her in answer the bright son of Jove;
  59. “Behold the god who carries through the air
  60. the mandates of almighty Jupiter!
  61. But I come hither not to waste my time
  62. in idle words, but rather to beseech
  63. thy kindness and good aid, that I may win
  64. the love of thy devoted sister Herse.”
  65. Aglauros, on the son of Jupiter,
  66. gazed with those eyes that only lately viewed
  67. the guarded secret of the yellow-haired
  68. Minerva, and demanded as her price
  69. gold of great weight; before he paid denied
  70. admittance of the house.
  71. Minerva turned,
  72. with orbs of stern displeasure, towards the maid
  73. Aglauros; and her bosom heaved with sighs
  74. so deeply laboured that her Aegis-shield
  75. was shaken on her valiant breast. For she
  76. remembered when Aglauros gave to view
  77. her charge, with impious hand, that monster form
  78. without a mother, maugre Nature's law,
  79. what time the god who dwells on Lemnos loved.—
  80. now to requite the god and sister; her
  81. to punish whose demand of gold was great;
  82. Minerva to the Cave of Envy sped.
  83. Dark, hideous with black gore, her dread abode
  84. is hidden in the deepest hollowed cave,
  85. in utmost limits where the genial sun
  86. may never shine, and where the breathing winds
  87. may never venture; dismal, bitter cold,
  88. untempered by the warmth of welcome fires,
  89. involved forever in abounding gloom.
  90. When the fair champion came to this abode
  91. she stood before its entrance, for she deemed
  92. it not a lawful thing to enter there:
  93. and she whose arm is mortal to her foes,
  94. struck the black door-posts with her pointed spear,
  95. and shook them to the center. Straight the doors
  96. flew open, and, behold, within was Envy
  97. ravening the flesh of vipers, self-begot,
  98. the nutriment of her depraved desires.—
  99. when the great goddess met her evil gaze
  100. she turned her eyes away. But Envy slow,
  101. in sluggish languor from the ground uprose,
  102. and left the scattered serpents half-devoured;
  103. then moving with a sullen pace approached.—
  104. and when she saw the gracious goddess, girt
  105. with beauty and resplendent in her arms,
  106. she groaned aloud and fetched up heavy sighs.
  107. Her face is pale, her body long and lean,
  108. her shifting eyes glance to the left and right,
  109. her snaggle teeth are covered with black rust,
  110. her hanging paps overflow with bitter gall,
  111. her slavered tongue drips venom to the ground;
  112. busy in schemes and watchful in dark snares
  113. sweet sleep is banished from her blood-shot eyes;
  114. her smiles are only seen when others weep;
  115. with sorrow she observes the fortunate,
  116. and pines away as she beholds their joy;
  117. her own existence is her punishment,
  118. and while tormenting she torments herself.
  119. Although Minerva held her in deep scorn
  120. she thus commanded her with winged words;
  121. “Instil thy poison in Aglauros, child
  122. of Cecrops; I command thee; do my will.”
  123. She spake; and spurning with her spear the ground
  124. departed; and the sad and furtive-eyed
  125. envy observed her in her glorious flight:
  126. she murmured at the goddess, great in arms:
  127. but waiting not she took in hand her staff,
  128. which bands of thorns encircled as a wreath,
  129. and veiled in midnight clouds departed thence.
  130. She blasted on her way the ripening fields;
  131. scorched the green meadows, starred with flowers,
  132. and breathed a pestilence throughout the land
  133. and the great cities. When her eyes beheld
  134. the glorious citadel of Athens, great
  135. in art and wealth, abode of joyful peace,
  136. she hardly could refrain from shedding tears,
  137. that nothing might be witnessed worthy tears.
  138. She sought the chamber where Aglauros slept,
  139. and hastened to obey the God's behest.
  140. She touched the maiden's bosom with her hands,
  141. foul with corrupting stains, and pierced her heart
  142. with jagged thorns, and breathed upon her face
  143. a noxious venom; and distilled through all
  144. the marrow of her bones, and in her lungs,
  145. a poison blacker than the ooze of pitch.
  146. And lest the canker of her poisoned soul
  147. might spread unchecked throughout increasing space,
  148. she caused a vision of her sister's form
  149. to rise before her, happy with the God
  150. who shone in his celestial beauty. All
  151. appeared more beautiful than real life.—
  152. when the most wretched daughter of Cecrops
  153. had seen the vision secret torment seized
  154. on all her vitals; and she groaned aloud,
  155. tormented by her frenzy day and night.
  156. A slow consumption wasted her away,
  157. as ice is melted by the slant sunbeam,
  158. when the cool clouds are flitting in the sky.
  159. If she but thought of Herse's happiness
  160. she burned, as thorny bushes are consumed
  161. with smoldering embers under steaming stems.
  162. She could not bear to see her sister's joy,
  163. and longed for death, an end of misery;
  164. or schemed to end the torture of her mind
  165. by telling all she knew in shameful words,
  166. whispered to her austere and upright sire.
  167. But after many agonizing hours,
  168. she sat before the threshold of their home
  169. to intercept the God, who as he neared
  170. spoke softly in smooth blandishment.
  171. “Enough,” she said, “I will not move from here
  172. until thou hast departed from my sight.”
  173. “Let us adhere to that which was agreed.”
  174. Rejoined the graceful-formed Cyllenian God,
  175. who as he spoke thrust open with a touch
  176. of his compelling wand the carved door.
  177. But when she made an effort to arise,
  178. her thighs felt heavy, rigid and benumbed;
  179. and as she struggled to arise her knees
  180. were stiffened? and her nails turned pale and cold;
  181. her veins grew pallid as the blood congealed.
  182. And even as the dreaded cancer spreads
  183. through all the body, adding to its taint
  184. the flesh uninjured; so, a deadly chill
  185. entered by slow degrees her breast, and stopped
  186. her breathing, and the passages of life.
  187. She did not try to speak, but had she made
  188. an effort to complain there was not left
  189. a passage for her voice. Her neck was changed
  190. to rigid stone, her countenance felt hard;
  191. she sat a bloodless statue, but of stone
  192. not marble-white—her mind had stained it black.