Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- As a great ship with steady prow speeds on;
- forced forwards by the sweating arms of youth
- it plows the deep; so, breasting the great waves,
- the monster moved, until to reach the rock
- no further space remained than might the whirl
- of Balearic string encompass, through
- the middle skies, with plummet-mold of lead.
- That instant, spurning with his feet the ground,
- the youth rose upwards to a cloudy height;
- and when the shadow of the hero marked
- the surface of the sea, the monster sought
- vainly to vent his fury on the shade.
- As the swift bird of Jove, when he beholds
- a basking serpent in an open field,
- exposing to the sun its mottled back,
- and seizes on its tail; lest it shall turn
- to strike with venomed fang, he fixes fast
- his grasping talons in the scaly neck;
- so did the winged youth, in rapid flight
- through yielding elements, press down
- on the great monster's back, and thrust his sword,
- sheer to the hilt, in its right shoulder—loud
- its frightful torture sounded over the waves.—
- So fought the hero-son of Inachus.
- Wild with the grievous wound, the monster rears
- high in the air, or plunges in the waves;—
- or wheels around as turns the frightened boar
- shunning the hounds around him in full cry.
- The hero on his active wings avoids
- the monster's jaws, and with his crooked sword
- tortures its back wherever he may pierce
- its mail of hollow shell, or strikes betwixt
- the ribs each side, or wounds its lashing tail,
- long, tapered as a fish.
- The monster spouts
- forth streams—incarnadined with blood—
- that spray upon the hero's wings; who drenched,
- and heavy with the spume, no longer dares
- to trust existence to his dripping wings;
- but he discerns a rock, which rises clear
- above the water when the sea is calm,
- but now is covered by the lashing waves.
- On this he rests; and as his left hand holds
- firm on the upmost ledge, he thrusts his sword,
- times more than three, unswerving in his aim,
- sheer through the monster's entrails.—Shouts of praise
- resound along the shores, and even the Gods
- may hear his glory in their high abodes.
- Her parents, Cepheus and Cassiope,
- most joyfully salute their son-in-law;
- declaring him the saviour of their house.
- And now, her chains struck off, the lovely cause
- and guerdon of his toil, walks on the shore.
- The hero washes his victorious hands
- in water newly taken from the sea:
- but lest the sand upon the shore might harm
- the viper-covered head, he first prepared
- a bed of springy leaves, on which he threw
- weeds of the sea, produced beneath the waves.
- On them he laid Medusa's awful face,
- daughter of Phorcys;—and the living weeds,
- fresh taken from the boundless deep, imbibed
- the monster's poison in their spongy pith:
- they hardened at the touch, and felt in branch
- and leaf unwonted stiffness. Sea-Nymphs, too,
- attempted to perform that prodigy
- on numerous other weeds, with like result:
- so pleased at their success, they raised new seeds,
- from plants wide-scattered on the salt expanse.
- Even from that day the coral has retained
- such wondrous nature, that exposed to air
- it hardens.—Thus, a plant beneath the waves
- becomes a stone when taken from the sea.
- Three altars to three Gods he made of turf.
- To thee, victorious Virgin, did he build
- an altar on the right, to Mercury
- an altar on the left, and unto Jove
- an altar in the midst. He sacrificed
- a heifer to Minerva, and a calf
- to Mercury, the Wingfoot, and a bull
- to thee, O greatest of the Deities.
- Without a dower he takes Andromeda,
- the guerdon of his glorious victory,
- nor hesitates.—Now pacing in the van,
- both Love and Hymen wave the flaring torch,
- abundant perfumes lavished in the flames.
- The houses are bedecked with wreathed flowers;
- and lyres and flageolets resound, and songs—
- felicit notes that happy hearts declare.
- The portals opened, sumptuous halls display
- their golden splendours, and the noble lords
- of Cepheus' court take places at the feast,
- magnificently served.
- After the feast,
- when every heart was warming to the joys of genial Bacchus,
- then, Lyncidian Perseus asked about the land and its ways
- about the customs and the character of its heroes.
- Straightway one of the dinner-companions made reply,
- and asked in turn, “ Now, valiant Perseus, pray
- tell the story of the deed, that all may know,
- and what the arts and power prevailed, when you
- struck off the serpent-covered head.”
- “There is,”
- continued Perseus of the house of Agenor,
- “There is a spot beneath cold Atlas, where
- in bulwarks of enormous strength, to guard
- its rocky entrance, dwelt two sisters, born
- of Phorcys. These were wont to share in turn
- a single eye between them: this by craft
- I got possession of, when one essayed
- to hand it to the other.—I put forth
- my hand and took it as it passed between:
- then, far, remote, through rocky pathless crags,
- over wild hills that bristled with great woods,
- I thence arrived to where the Gorgon dwelt.
- “Along the way, in fields and by the roads,
- I saw on all sides men and animals—
- like statues—turned to flinty stone at sight
- of dread Medusa's visage. Nevertheless
- reflected on the brazen shield, I bore
- upon my left, I saw her horrid face.
- “When she was helpless in the power of sleep
- and even her serpent-hair was slumber-bound,
- I struck, and took her head sheer from the neck.—
- To winged Pegasus the blood gave birth,
- his brother also, twins of rapid wing.”
- So did he speak, and truly told besides
- the perils of his journey, arduous
- and long—He told of seas and lands that far
- beneath him he had seen, and of the stars
- that he had touched while on his waving wings.
- And yet, before they were aware, the tale
- was ended; he was silent. Then rejoined
- a noble with enquiry why alone
- of those three sisters, snakes were interspersed
- in dread Medusa's locks. And he replied:—
- “Because, O Stranger, it is your desire
- to learn what worthy is for me to tell,
- hear ye the cause: Beyond all others she
- was famed for beauty, and the envious hope
- of many suitors. Words would fail to tell
- the glory of her hair, most wonderful
- of all her charms—A friend declared to me
- he saw its lovely splendour. Fame declares
- the Sovereign of the Sea attained her love
- in chaste Minerva's temple. While enraged
- she turned her head away and held her shield
- before her eyes. To punish that great crime
- Minerva changed the Gorgon's splendid hair
- to serpents horrible. And now to strike
- her foes with fear, she wears upon her breast
- those awful vipers—creatures of her rage.