Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. Waiting not,
  2. Tisiphone, revengeful, takes a torch;—
  3. besmeared with blood, and vested in a robe,
  4. dripping with crimson gore, and twisting-snakes
  5. engirdled, she departs her dire abode—
  6. with twitching Madness, Terror, Fear and Woe:
  7. and when she had arrived the destined house,
  8. the door-posts shrank from her, the maple doors
  9. turned ashen grey: the Sun amazed fled.
  10. Affrighted, Athamas and Ino viewed
  11. and fled these prodigies; but suddenly
  12. that baneful Fury stood across the way,
  13. blocking the passage— There she stands with arms
  14. extended, and alive with twisting vipers.—
  15. She shakes her hair; the moving serpents hiss;
  16. they cling upon her shoulders, and they glide
  17. around her temples, dart their fangs, and vomit
  18. corruption.—Plucking from the midst two snakes,
  19. she hurls them with her pestilential hand
  20. upon her victims, Athamas and Ino, whom,
  21. although the vipers strike upon their breasts,
  22. no injury attacks their mortal parts;—
  23. only their minds are stricken with wild rage,
  24. inciting to mad violence and crime.
  25. And with a monstrous composite of foam—
  26. once gathered from the mouth of Cerberus,
  27. the venom of Echidna, purposeless
  28. aberrances, crimes, tears, hatred—the lust
  29. of homicide, and the dark vapourings
  30. of foolish brains; a liquid poison, mixed,
  31. and mingled with fresh blood, in hollow brass,
  32. and boiled, and stirred up with a slip of hemlock—
  33. she took of it, and as they trembled, threw
  34. that mad-mixed poison on them; and it scorched
  35. their inmost vitals—and she waved her torch
  36. repeatedly, within a circle's rim—
  37. and added flame to flame.—
  38. Then, confident
  39. of having executed her commands,
  40. the Fury hastened to the void expanse
  41. where Pluto reigns, and swiftly put aside
  42. the serpents that were wreathed around her robes.
  43. At once, the son of Aeolus, enraged,
  44. shouts loudly in his palace; “Ho, my lads!
  45. Spread out your nets! a savage lioness
  46. and her twin whelps are lurking in the wood;—
  47. behold them!” In his madness he believes
  48. his wife a savage beast. He follows her,
  49. and quickly from her bosom snatches up
  50. her smiling babe, Learchus, holding forth
  51. his tiny arms, and whirls him in the air,
  52. times twice and thrice, as whirls the whizzing sling,
  53. and dashes him in pieces on the rocks; —
  54. cracking his infant bones.
  55. The mother, roused
  56. to frenzy (who can tell if grief the cause,
  57. or fires of scattered poison?) yells aloud,
  58. and with her torn hair tangled, running mad,
  59. she carries swiftly in her clutching arms,
  60. her little Melicerta! and begins
  61. to shout, “Evoe, Bacche!”—Juno hears
  62. the shouted name of Bacchus, and she laughs,
  63. and taunts her;—“Let thy foster-child award!”
  64. There is a crag, out-jutting on the deep,
  65. worn hollow at the base by many waves,
  66. where not the rain may ripple on that pool;—
  67. high up the rugged summit overhangs
  68. its ragged brows above the open sea:
  69. there, Ino climbs with frenzy-given strength,
  70. and fearless, with her burden in her arms,
  71. leaps in the waves where whitening foams arise.
  72. Venus takes pity on her guiltless child,
  73. unfortunate grand-daughter, and begins
  74. to soothe her uncle Neptune with these words;—
  75. “O Neptune, ruler of the deep, to whom,
  76. next to the Power in Heaven, was given sway,
  77. consider my request! Open thy heart
  78. to my descendants, which thine eyes behold,
  79. tossed on the wild Ionian Sea! I do implore thee,
  80. remember they are thy true Deities—
  81. are thine as well as mine—for it is known
  82. my birth was from the white foam of thy sea;—
  83. a truth made certain by my Grecian name.”
  84. Neptune regards her prayer: he takes from them
  85. their mortal dross: he clothes in majesty,
  86. and hallows their appearance. Even their names
  87. and forms are altered; Melicerta, changed,
  88. is now Palaemon called, and Ino, changed,
  89. Leucothoe called, are known as Deities.
  90. When her Sidonian attendants traced
  91. fresh footprints to the last verge of the rock,
  92. and found no further vestige, they declared
  93. her dead, nor had they any doubt of it.
  94. They tore their garments and their hair—and wailed
  95. the House of Cadmus— and they cursed at Juno,
  96. for the sad fate of the wretched concubine.
  97. That goddess could no longer brook their words,
  98. and thus made answer, “I will make of you
  99. eternal monuments of my revenge!”
  100. Her words were instantly confirmed—The one
  101. whose love for Ino was the greatest, cried;
  102. “Into the deep; look—look—I seek my queen.”
  103. But even as she tried to leap, she stood
  104. fast-rooted to the ever-living rock;
  105. another, as she tried to beat her breast
  106. with blows repeated, noticed that her arms
  107. grew stiff and hard; another, as by chance,
  108. was petrified with hands stretched over the waves:
  109. another could be seen, as suddenly
  110. her fingers hardened, clutching at her hair
  111. to tear it from the roots.—And each remained
  112. forever in the posture first assumed.—
  113. But others of those women, sprung from Cadmus,
  114. were changed to birds, that always with wide wings
  115. skim lightly the dark surface of that sea.
  1. Unwitting that his daughter and his son
  2. are Ocean deities, Agenor's son,—
  3. depressed by sorrow and unnumbered woes,
  4. calamities, and prodigies untold,—
  5. the founder fled the city he had built,
  6. as though fatalities that gathered round
  7. that city grieved him deeper than the fate
  8. of his own family; and thence, at last
  9. arrived the confines of Illyria;
  10. in exile with his wife.—
  11. Weighted with woe,
  12. bowed down with years, their minds recalled the time
  13. when first disaster fell upon their House:—
  14. relating their misfortunes, Cadmus spoke;
  15. “Was that a sacred dragon that my spear
  16. impaled, when on the way from Sidon's gates
  17. I planted in the earth those dragon-teeth,
  18. unthought-of seed? If haply 'tis the Gods,
  19. (whose rage unerring, gives me to revenge)
  20. I only pray that I may lengthen out,
  21. as any serpent.” Even as he spoke,
  22. he saw and felt himself increase in length.
  23. His body coiled into a serpent's form;
  24. bright scale's enveloped his indurate skin,
  25. and azure macules in speckled pride,
  26. enriched his glowing folds; and as he fell
  27. supinely on his breast, his legs were joined,
  28. and gradually tapered as a serpent's tail.—
  29. Some time his arms remained, which stretching forth
  30. while tears rolled down his human face, not changed
  31. as yet, he said; “Hither, O hapless one!
  32. Come hither my unhappy wife, while aught
  33. is left of manhood; touch me, take my hand,
  34. unchanged as yet—ah, soon this serpent-form
  35. will cover me!”
  36. So did he speak, nor thought
  37. to make an end; but suddenly his tongue
  38. became twin-forked. As often as he tried,
  39. a hissing sound escaped; the only voice
  40. that Nature left him. —
  41. And his wife bewailed,
  42. and smote her breast, “Ah, Cadmus, ah!
  43. Most helpless one, put off that monster-shape!
  44. Your feet, your shoulders and your hands are gone;
  45. your manly form, your very colour gone; all—all
  46. is changed!—Oh, why not, ye celestial Gods,
  47. me likewise, to a serpent-shape transform!”—
  48. So ended her complaint. Cadmus caressed
  49. her gently with his tongue; and slid to her
  50. dear bosom, just as if he knew his wife;
  51. and he embraced her, and he touched her neck.
  52. All their attendants, who had seen the change,
  53. were filled with fear; but when as crested snakes
  54. the twain appeared in brightly glistening mail,
  55. their grief was lightened: and the pair, enwreathed
  56. in twisting coils, departed from that place,
  57. and sought a covert in the nearest grove.—
  58. There, then, these gentle serpents never shun
  59. mankind, nor wound, nor strike with poisoned fangs;
  60. for they are always conscious of the past.
  1. The fortune of their grandson, Bacchus, gave
  2. great comfort to them—as a god adored
  3. in conquered India; by Achaia praised
  4. in stately temples. — But Acrisius
  5. the son of Abas, of the Cadmean race,
  6. remained to banish Bacchus from the walls
  7. of Argos, and to lift up hostile arms
  8. against that deity, who he denied
  9. was born to Jove. He would not even grant
  10. that Perseus from the loins of Jupiter
  11. was got of Danae in the showering gold.
  12. So mighty is the hidden power of truth,
  13. Acrisius soon lamented that affront
  14. to Bacchus, and that ever he refused
  15. to own his grandson; for the one achieved
  16. high heaven, and the other, (as he bore
  17. the viperous monster-head) on sounding wings
  18. hovered a conqueror in the fluent air,
  19. over sands, Libyan, where the Gorgon-head
  20. dropped clots of gore, that, quickening on the ground,
  21. became unnumbered serpents; fitting cause
  22. to curse with vipers that infested land.
  23. Thence wafted by the never-constant winds
  24. through boundless latitudes, now here now there,
  25. as flits a vapour-cloud in dizzy flight,
  26. down-looking from the lofty skies on earth,
  27. removed far, so compassed he the world.
  28. Three times did he behold the frozen Bears,
  29. times thrice his gaze was on the Crab's bent arms.
  30. Now shifting to the west, now to the east,
  31. how often changed his course? Time came, when day
  32. declining, he began to fear the night,
  33. by which he stopped his flight far in the west—
  34. the realm of Atlas—where he sought repose
  35. till Lucifer might call Aurora's fires;
  36. Aurora chariot of the Day.
  37. There dwelt
  38. huge Atlas, vaster than the race of man:
  39. son of Iapetus, his lordly sway
  40. extended over those extreme domains,
  41. and over oceans that command their waves
  42. to take the panting coursers of the Sun,
  43. and bathe the wearied Chariot of the Day.
  44. For him a thousand flocks, a thousand herds
  45. overwandered pasture fields; and neighbour tribes
  46. might none disturb that land. Aglint with gold
  47. bright leaves adorn the trees,—boughs golden-wrought
  48. bear apples of pure gold. And Perseus spoke
  49. to Atlas, “O my friend, if thou art moved
  50. to hear the story of a noble race,
  51. the author of my life is Jupiter;
  52. if valiant deeds perhaps are thy delight
  53. mine may deserve thy praise.—Behold of thee
  54. kind treatment I implore—a place of rest.”
  55. But Atlas, mindful of an oracle
  56. since by Themis, the Parnassian, told,
  57. recalled these words, “O Atlas! mark the day
  58. a son of Jupiter shall come to spoil;
  59. for when thy trees been stripped of golden fruit,
  60. the glory shall be his.”
  61. Fearful of this,
  62. Atlas had built solid walls around
  63. his orchard, and secured a dragon, huge,
  64. that kept perpetual guard, and thence expelled
  65. all strangers from his land. Wherefore he said,
  66. “Begone! The glory of your deeds is all
  67. pretense; even Jupiter, will fail your need.”
  68. With that he added force and strove to drive
  69. the hesitating Alien from his doors;
  70. who pled reprieve or threatened with bold words.
  71. Although he dared not rival Atlas' might,
  72. Perseus made this reply; “For that my love
  73. you hold in light esteem, let this be yours.”
  74. He said no more, but turning his own face,
  75. he showed upon his left Medusa's head,
  76. abhorrent features.—Atlas, huge and vast,
  77. becomes a mountain—His great beard and hair
  78. are forests, and his shoulders and his hands
  79. mountainous ridges, and his head the top
  80. of a high peak;—his bones are changed to rocks.
  81. Augmented on all sides, enormous height
  82. attains his growth; for so ordained it, ye,
  83. O mighty Gods! who now the heavens' expanse
  84. unnumbered stars, on him command to rest.
  85. In their eternal prison, Aeous,
  86. grandson of Hippotas, had shut the winds;
  87. and Lucifer, reminder of our toil,
  88. in splendour rose upon the lofty sky:
  89. and Perseus bound his wings upon his feet,
  90. on each foot bound he them; his sword he girt
  91. and sped wing-footed through the liquid air.
  92. Innumerous kingdoms far behind were left,
  93. till peoples Ethiopic and the lands
  94. of Cepheus were beneath his lofty view.
  95. There Ammon, the Unjust, had made decree
  96. Andromeda, the Innocent, should grieve
  97. her mother's tongue. They bound her fettered arms
  98. fast to the rock. When Perseus her beheld
  99. as marble he would deem her, but the breeze
  100. moved in her hair, and from her streaming eyes
  101. the warm tears fell. Her beauty so amazed
  102. his heart, unconscious captive of her charms,
  103. that almost his swift wings forgot to wave.—
  104. Alighted on the ground, he thus began;
  105. “O fairest! whom these chains become not so,
  106. but worthy are for links that lovers bind,
  107. make known to me your country's name and your's
  108. and wherefore bound in chains.” A moment then,
  109. as overcome with shame, she made no sound:
  110. were not she fettered she would surely hide
  111. her blushing head; but what she could perform
  112. that did she do—she filled her eyes with tears.
  113. So pleaded he that lest refusal seem
  114. implied confession of a crime, she told
  115. her name, her country's name, and how her charms
  116. had been her mother's pride. But as she spoke
  117. the mighty ocean roared. Over the waves
  118. a monster fast approached, its head held high,
  119. abreast the wide expanse.—The virgin shrieked;—
  120. no aid her wretched father gave, nor aid
  121. her still more wretched mother; but they wept
  122. and mingled lamentations with their tears—
  123. clinging distracted to her fettered form.
  124. And thus the stranger spoke to them, “Time waits
  125. for tears, but flies the moment of our need:
  126. were I, who am the son of Regal Jove
  127. and her whom he embraced in showers of gold,
  128. leaving her pregnant in her brazen cell, —
  129. I, Perseus, who destroyed the Gorgon, wreathed
  130. with snake-hair, I, who dared on waving wings
  131. to cleave etherial air—were I to ask
  132. the maid in marriage, I should be preferred
  133. above all others as your son-in-law.
  134. Not satisfied with deeds achieved, I strive
  135. to add such merit as the Gods permit;
  136. now, therefore, should my velour save her life,
  137. be it conditioned that I win her love.”
  138. To this her parents gave a glad assent,
  139. for who could hesitate? And they entreat,
  140. and promise him the kingdom as a dower.
  1. As a great ship with steady prow speeds on;
  2. forced forwards by the sweating arms of youth
  3. it plows the deep; so, breasting the great waves,
  4. the monster moved, until to reach the rock
  5. no further space remained than might the whirl
  6. of Balearic string encompass, through
  7. the middle skies, with plummet-mold of lead.
  8. That instant, spurning with his feet the ground,
  9. the youth rose upwards to a cloudy height;
  10. and when the shadow of the hero marked
  11. the surface of the sea, the monster sought
  12. vainly to vent his fury on the shade.
  13. As the swift bird of Jove, when he beholds
  14. a basking serpent in an open field,
  15. exposing to the sun its mottled back,
  16. and seizes on its tail; lest it shall turn
  17. to strike with venomed fang, he fixes fast
  18. his grasping talons in the scaly neck;
  19. so did the winged youth, in rapid flight
  20. through yielding elements, press down
  21. on the great monster's back, and thrust his sword,
  22. sheer to the hilt, in its right shoulder—loud
  23. its frightful torture sounded over the waves.—
  24. So fought the hero-son of Inachus.
  25. Wild with the grievous wound, the monster rears
  26. high in the air, or plunges in the waves;—
  27. or wheels around as turns the frightened boar
  28. shunning the hounds around him in full cry.
  29. The hero on his active wings avoids
  30. the monster's jaws, and with his crooked sword
  31. tortures its back wherever he may pierce
  32. its mail of hollow shell, or strikes betwixt
  33. the ribs each side, or wounds its lashing tail,
  34. long, tapered as a fish.
  35. The monster spouts
  36. forth streams—incarnadined with blood—
  37. that spray upon the hero's wings; who drenched,
  38. and heavy with the spume, no longer dares
  39. to trust existence to his dripping wings;
  40. but he discerns a rock, which rises clear
  41. above the water when the sea is calm,
  42. but now is covered by the lashing waves.
  43. On this he rests; and as his left hand holds
  44. firm on the upmost ledge, he thrusts his sword,
  45. times more than three, unswerving in his aim,
  46. sheer through the monster's entrails.—Shouts of praise
  47. resound along the shores, and even the Gods
  48. may hear his glory in their high abodes.
  49. Her parents, Cepheus and Cassiope,
  50. most joyfully salute their son-in-law;
  51. declaring him the saviour of their house.
  52. And now, her chains struck off, the lovely cause
  53. and guerdon of his toil, walks on the shore.
  54. The hero washes his victorious hands
  55. in water newly taken from the sea:
  56. but lest the sand upon the shore might harm
  57. the viper-covered head, he first prepared
  58. a bed of springy leaves, on which he threw
  59. weeds of the sea, produced beneath the waves.
  60. On them he laid Medusa's awful face,
  61. daughter of Phorcys;—and the living weeds,
  62. fresh taken from the boundless deep, imbibed
  63. the monster's poison in their spongy pith:
  64. they hardened at the touch, and felt in branch
  65. and leaf unwonted stiffness. Sea-Nymphs, too,
  66. attempted to perform that prodigy
  67. on numerous other weeds, with like result:
  68. so pleased at their success, they raised new seeds,
  69. from plants wide-scattered on the salt expanse.
  70. Even from that day the coral has retained
  71. such wondrous nature, that exposed to air
  72. it hardens.—Thus, a plant beneath the waves
  73. becomes a stone when taken from the sea.
  74. Three altars to three Gods he made of turf.
  75. To thee, victorious Virgin, did he build
  76. an altar on the right, to Mercury
  77. an altar on the left, and unto Jove
  78. an altar in the midst. He sacrificed
  79. a heifer to Minerva, and a calf
  80. to Mercury, the Wingfoot, and a bull
  81. to thee, O greatest of the Deities.
  82. Without a dower he takes Andromeda,
  83. the guerdon of his glorious victory,
  84. nor hesitates.—Now pacing in the van,
  85. both Love and Hymen wave the flaring torch,
  86. abundant perfumes lavished in the flames.
  87. The houses are bedecked with wreathed flowers;
  88. and lyres and flageolets resound, and songs—
  89. felicit notes that happy hearts declare.
  90. The portals opened, sumptuous halls display
  91. their golden splendours, and the noble lords
  92. of Cepheus' court take places at the feast,
  93. magnificently served.
  94. After the feast,
  95. when every heart was warming to the joys of genial Bacchus,
  96. then, Lyncidian Perseus asked about the land and its ways
  97. about the customs and the character of its heroes.
  98. Straightway one of the dinner-companions made reply,
  99. and asked in turn, “ Now, valiant Perseus, pray
  100. tell the story of the deed, that all may know,
  101. and what the arts and power prevailed, when you
  102. struck off the serpent-covered head.”
  103. “There is,”
  104. continued Perseus of the house of Agenor,
  105. “There is a spot beneath cold Atlas, where
  106. in bulwarks of enormous strength, to guard
  107. its rocky entrance, dwelt two sisters, born
  108. of Phorcys. These were wont to share in turn
  109. a single eye between them: this by craft
  110. I got possession of, when one essayed
  111. to hand it to the other.—I put forth
  112. my hand and took it as it passed between:
  113. then, far, remote, through rocky pathless crags,
  114. over wild hills that bristled with great woods,
  115. I thence arrived to where the Gorgon dwelt.
  116. “Along the way, in fields and by the roads,
  117. I saw on all sides men and animals—
  118. like statues—turned to flinty stone at sight
  119. of dread Medusa's visage. Nevertheless
  120. reflected on the brazen shield, I bore
  121. upon my left, I saw her horrid face.
  122. “When she was helpless in the power of sleep
  123. and even her serpent-hair was slumber-bound,
  124. I struck, and took her head sheer from the neck.—
  125. To winged Pegasus the blood gave birth,
  126. his brother also, twins of rapid wing.”
  127. So did he speak, and truly told besides
  128. the perils of his journey, arduous
  129. and long—He told of seas and lands that far
  130. beneath him he had seen, and of the stars
  131. that he had touched while on his waving wings.
  132. And yet, before they were aware, the tale
  133. was ended; he was silent. Then rejoined
  134. a noble with enquiry why alone
  135. of those three sisters, snakes were interspersed
  136. in dread Medusa's locks. And he replied:—
  137. “Because, O Stranger, it is your desire
  138. to learn what worthy is for me to tell,
  139. hear ye the cause: Beyond all others she
  140. was famed for beauty, and the envious hope
  141. of many suitors. Words would fail to tell
  142. the glory of her hair, most wonderful
  143. of all her charms—A friend declared to me
  144. he saw its lovely splendour. Fame declares
  145. the Sovereign of the Sea attained her love
  146. in chaste Minerva's temple. While enraged
  147. she turned her head away and held her shield
  148. before her eyes. To punish that great crime
  149. Minerva changed the Gorgon's splendid hair
  150. to serpents horrible. And now to strike
  151. her foes with fear, she wears upon her breast
  152. those awful vipers—creatures of her rage.