Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  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.