Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. While Perseus, the brave son of Jupiter,
  2. surrounded at the feast by Cepheus' lords,
  3. narrated this, a raging multitude
  4. with sudden outcry filled the royal courts—
  5. not with the clamours of a wedding feast
  6. but boisterous rage, portentous of dread war.
  7. As when the fury of a great wind strikes
  8. a tranquil sea, tempestuous billows roll
  9. across the peaceful bosom of the deep;
  10. so were the pleasures at the banquet changed
  11. to sudden tumult.
  12. Foremost of that throng,
  13. the rash ring-leader, Phineus, shook his spear,
  14. brass-tipped of ash, and shouted, “Ha, 'tis I!
  15. I come avenger of my ravished bride!
  16. Let now your flittering wings deliver you,
  17. or even Jupiter, dissolved in showers
  18. of imitation gold.” So boasted he,
  19. aiming his spear at Perseus.
  20. Thus to him
  21. cried Cepheus: “Hold your hand, and strike him not!
  22. What strange delusions, O my brother, have
  23. compelled you to this crime? Is it the just
  24. requital of heroic worth? A fair
  25. reguerdon for the life of her you loved?
  26. “If truth were known, not Perseus ravished her
  27. from you; but, either 'twas the awful God
  28. that rules the Nereides; or Ammon, crowned
  29. with crescent horns; or that monstrosity
  30. of Ocean's vast abyss, which came to glut
  31. his famine on the issue of my loins.
  32. Nor was your suit abandoned till the time
  33. when she must perish and be lost to you.
  34. So cruel are you, seeking my daughter's death,
  35. rejoicing lightly in our deep despair.—
  36. “And was it not enough for you to stand
  37. supinely by, while she was bound in chains,
  38. and offer no assistance, though you were
  39. her lover and betrothed? And will you grieve
  40. that she was rescued from a dreadful fate,
  41. and spoil her champion of his just rewards?
  42. Rewards that now may seem magnificent,
  43. but not denied to you if you had won
  44. and saved, when she was fettered to the rock.
  45. “Let him, whose strength to my declining years
  46. restored my child, receive the merit due
  47. his words and deeds; and know his suit was not
  48. preferred to yours, but granted to prevent
  49. her certain death.”
  50. not deigning to reply,
  51. against them Phineus stood; and glancing back
  52. from him to Perseus, with alternate looks,
  53. as doubtful which should feel his first attack,
  54. made brief delay. Then vain at Perseus hurled
  55. his spear, with all the force that rage inspired,
  56. but, missing him it quivered in a couch.
  57. Provoked beyond endurance Perseus leaped
  58. forth from the cushioned seats, and fiercely sent
  59. that outwrenched weapon back. It would have pierced
  60. his hostile breast had not the miscreant crouched
  61. behind the altars. Oh perverted good,
  62. that thus an altar should abet the wrong!
  63. But, though the craven Phineus escaped,
  64. not vainly flew the whizzing point, but struck
  65. in Rhoetus' forehead. As the barb was torn
  66. out of the bone, the victim's heels began
  67. to kick upon the floor, and spouting blood
  68. defiled the festal board. Then truly flame
  69. in uncontrolled rage the vulgar crowd,
  70. and hurl their harmful darts.
  71. And there are some
  72. who hold that Cepheus and his son-in-law
  73. deserved to die; but Cepheus had passed forth
  74. the threshold of his palace: having called
  75. on all the Gods of Hospitality
  76. and Truth and Justice to attest, he gave
  77. no comfort to the enemies of Peace.
  78. Unconquered Pallas is at hand and holds
  79. her Aegis to protect her brother's life;
  80. she lends him dauntless courage. At the feast
  81. was one from India's distant shores, whose name
  82. was Athis. It was said that Limnate,
  83. the daughter of the River Ganges, him
  84. in vitreous caverns bright had brought to birth;
  85. and now at sixteen summers in his prime,
  86. the handsome youth was clad in costly robes.
  87. A purple mantle with a golden fringe
  88. covered his shoulders, and a necklace, carved
  89. of gold, enhanced the beauty of his throat.
  90. His hair encompassed with a coronal,
  91. delighted with sweet myrrh. Well taught was he
  92. to hurl the javelin at a distant mark,
  93. and none with better skill could stretch the bow.
  94. No sooner had he bent the pliant horns
  95. than Perseus, with a smoking billet, seized
  96. from the mid-altar, struck him on the face,
  97. and smashed his features in his broken skull.
  98. And when Assyrian Lycabas had seen
  99. his dear companion, whom he truly loved,
  100. beating his handsome countenance in blood.
  101. And when he had bewailed his lost life,
  102. that ebbed away from that unpiteous wound,
  103. he snatched the bow that Athis used, and said;
  104. “Let us in single combat seek revenge;
  105. not long will you rejoice the stripling's fate;
  106. a deed most worthy shame.” So speaking, forth
  107. the piercing arrow bounded from the cord,
  108. which, though avoided, struck the hero's cloak
  109. and fastened in its folds.—
  110. Then Perseus turned
  111. upon him, with the trusted curving sword,
  112. cause of Medusa's death, and drove the blade
  113. deep in his breast. The dying victim's eyes,
  114. now swimming in a shadowous night, looked 'round
  115. for Athis, whom, beholding, he reclined
  116. upon, and ushered to the other world,—
  117. sad consolation of united death.
  1. And Phorbas the descendant of Methion.
  2. Who hailed from far Syene, with his friend
  3. Amphimedon of Libya, in their haste
  4. to join the battle, slipped up in the blood
  5. and fell together: just as they arose
  6. that glittering sword was driven through the throat
  7. of Phorbas into the ribs of his companion.
  8. But Erithus, the son of Actor, swung
  9. a battle-ax, so weighty, Perseus chose
  10. not combat with his curving blade. He seized
  11. in his two hands a huge bowl, wrought around
  12. with large design, outstanding from its mass.
  13. This, lifting up, he dashes on his foe,
  14. who vomits crimson blood, and falling back
  15. beats on the hard floor with his dying head.
  16. And next he slew Caucasian Abaris,
  17. and Polydaemon—from Semiramis
  18. nobly descended—and Sperchius, son,
  19. Lycetus, long-haired Elyces, unshorn,
  20. Clytus and Phlegias, the hero slew;—
  21. and trampled on the dying heaped around.
  22. Not daring to engage his enemy
  23. in open contest, Phineus held aloof,
  24. and hurled his javelin. Badly aimed—by some
  25. mischance or turned—it wounded Idas, who
  26. had followed neither side; vain-hoping thus
  27. to shun the conflict.
  28. Idas, filled with rage,
  29. on Phineus gazed with futile hate, and said,
  30. “Since I am forced unwilling to such deeds,
  31. behold, whom you have made your enemy,
  32. O savage Phineus! Let your recompense
  33. be stroke for stroke.” So speaking, from the wound
  34. he drew the steel, but, faint from loss of blood,
  35. before his arm could hurl the weapon back,
  36. he sank upon his knees.
  37. Here, also, lies
  38. Odytes,—noblest of the Cephenes,
  39. save Cepheus only,—slaughtered by the sword
  40. of Clymenus. And Prothoenor lies
  41. the victim of Hypseus; by his side
  42. Hypseus slaughtered by Lyncidas falls.
  43. And in the midst of this destruction stood
  44. Emathion, now an aged man, revered,
  45. who feared the Gods, and stood for upright deeds.
  46. And, since his years denied him strength for war,
  47. he battled with his tongue, and railed, and cursed
  48. their impious weapons. As that aged man
  49. clings to the altar with his trembling hands,
  50. Chromis with ruthless sword cuts off his head,
  51. which straightway falls upon the altar, whence
  52. his dying tongue denounces them in words
  53. of execration: and his soul expires
  54. amid the altar flames.
  55. Then Broteas
  56. and Ammon, his twin brother, who not knew
  57. their equals at the cestus, by the hand
  58. of Phineus fell; for what avails in deed
  59. the cestus as a weapon matched with swords.
  60. Ampycus by the same hand fell,—the priest
  61. of Ceres, with his temples wreathed in white.
  62. And O, Iapetides not for this
  63. did you attend the feast! Your voice attuned
  64. melodious to the harp, was in request
  65. to celebrate the wedding-day with song,—
  66. a work of peace; as you did stand aside,
  67. holding the peaceful plectrum in your hand,
  68. the mocking Pettalus in ridicule said,
  69. “Go sing your ditties to the Stygian shades.”
  70. And, mocking thus, he drove his pointed sword
  71. in your right temple. As your limbs gave way,
  72. your dying fingers swept the tuneful strings:
  73. and falling you did chant a mournful dirge.—
  74. You to avenge enraged Lycormas tore
  75. a huge bar from the door-post, on the right,
  76. and dashing it against the mocker crushed
  77. his neck-bones: as a slaughtered bullock falls—
  78. he tumbled to the ground.
  79. Then on the left.
  80. Cinyphian Pelates began to wrench
  81. an oak plank from the door-post, but the spear
  82. of Corythus, the son of Marmarus,
  83. pinioned his right hand to the wooden post;
  84. and while he struggled Abas pierced his side.—
  85. He fell not to the floor, but dying hung
  86. suspended from the door-post by his hand.
  87. And of the friends of Perseus, Melaneus
  88. was slain, and Dorylas whose wealth was large
  89. in Nasamonian land. No other lord,
  90. as Dorylas, such vast estates possessed;
  91. no other owned so many heaps of corn.
  92. The missile steel stood fastened in his groin,
  93. obliquely fixed,—a fatal spot—and when
  94. the author of his wound, Halcyoneus
  95. the Bactrian, beheld his victim thus,
  96. rolling his eyes and sobbing forth his soul,
  97. he railed; “Keep for yourself of all your lands
  98. as much as you can cover.” And he left
  99. the bleeding corpse.
  100. But Perseus in revenge
  101. hurled after him a spear, which, in his need,
  102. he ripped out from the wound, yet warm, and struck
  103. the boaster on the middle of his nose.
  104. The piercing steel, passed through his nose and neck,—
  105. remained projecting from the front and back.
  106. And while good fortune helped his hand, he slew
  107. Clanis and Clytius, of one mother born,
  108. but with a different wound he slaughtered each:
  109. for, leveled by a mighty arm, his ashen spear
  110. drove through the thighs of Clytius, right and left,
  111. and Clanis bit the javelin with his teeth.
  112. And by his might, Mendesian Celadon
  113. and Atreus fell, his mother of the tribes
  114. of Palestine, his father was unknown.
  115. Aethion, also, who could well foresee
  116. the things to come, but was at last deceived
  117. by some false omen. And Thoactes fell,
  118. the armour-bearer of the king; and, next,
  119. the infamous Agyrtes who had slain
  120. his father. These he slew; and though his strength
  121. was nearly spent, so many more remained:
  122. for now the multitude with one accord
  123. conspired to slaughter him. From every side
  124. the raging troops assailed the better cause.
  125. In vain the pious father and the bride,
  126. together with her mother, fill the halls
  127. with lamentations; for the clash of arms,
  128. the groans of fallen heroes drown their cries.—
  129. Bellona in a sea of blood has drenched
  130. their Household Gods, polluted by these deeds,
  131. and she endeavours to renew the strife.
  132. Perseus, alone against that raging throng,
  133. is now surrounded by a myriad men,
  134. led on by Phineus; and their flying darts,
  135. as thick as wintry tail, are showered around
  136. on every side, grazing his eyes and ears.—
  137. Quickly he fixed his shoulder firm against
  138. the rock of a great pillar, which secured
  139. his back from danger, and he faced his foes,
  140. and baffled their attack.
  141. Upon his left
  142. Chaonian Molpeus pressed, and on his right
  143. a Nabathe an called Ethemon pressed.—
  144. As when a tiger from a valley hears
  145. the lowing of two herds, in separate fields,
  146. though hunger urges he not knows on which
  147. to spring, but rages equally for each;
  148. so, Perseus doubtful which may first attack
  149. his left or right, knows not on which to turn,
  150. but stands attentive witness to the flight
  151. of Molpeus, whom he wounded in the leg.
  152. Nor could he choose—Ethemon, full of rage,
  153. pressed on him to inflict a fatal wound,
  154. deep in his neck; but with incautious force
  155. struck the stone pillar with his ringing sword
  156. and shattered the metal blade, close to the hilt;
  157. the flying fragment pierced its owner's neck,
  158. but not with mortal wound. In vain he pled
  159. for mercy, stretching forth his helpless arms:
  160. perseus transfixed him with his glittering blade,
  161. Cyllenian.
  1. But when he saw his strength
  2. was yielding to the multitude, he said,
  3. “Since you have forced disaster on yourselves,
  4. why should I hesitate to save myself?—
  5. O friends, avert your faces if ye stand
  6. before me!” And he raised Medusa,s head.
  7. Thescelus answered him; “Seek other dupes
  8. to chase with wonders!” Just as he prepared
  9. to hurl the deadly javelin from his hand,
  10. he stood, unmoving in that attitude,
  11. a marble statue.
  12. Ampyx, close to him,
  13. exulting in a mighty spirit, made
  14. a lunge to pierce Lyncides in the breast;
  15. but, as his sword was flashing in the air,
  16. his right arm grew so rigid, there he stood
  17. unable to draw back or thrust it forth.
  18. But Nileus, who had feigned himself begot
  19. by seven-fold Nile, and carved his shield with gold
  20. and silver streams, alternate seven, shouted;
  21. “Look, look! O Perseus, him from whom I sprung!
  22. And you shall carry to the silent shades
  23. a mighty consolation in your death,
  24. that you were slain by such a one as I.”
  25. But in the midst of boasting, the last words
  26. were silenced; and his open mouth, although
  27. incapable of motion, seemed intent
  28. to utter speech.
  29. Then Eryx, chiding says;
  30. “Your craven spirits have benumbed you, not
  31. Medusa's poison.—Come with me and strike
  32. this youthful mover of magician charms
  33. down to the ground.”—He started with a rush;
  34. the earth detained his steps; it held him fast;
  35. he could not speak; he stood, complete with arms,
  36. a statue.
  37. Such a penalty was theirs,
  38. and justly earned; but near by there was one,
  39. aconteus, who defending Perseus, saw
  40. medusa as he fought; and at the sight
  41. the soldier hardened to an upright stone.—
  42. Assured he was alive, Astyages
  43. now struck him with his long sword, but the blade
  44. resounded with a ringing note; and there,
  45. astonished at the sound, Astyages,
  46. himself, assumed that nature; and remained
  47. with wonder pictured on his marble face.
  48. And not to weary with the names of men,
  49. sprung from the middle classes, there remained
  50. two hundred warriors eager for the fight—
  51. as soon as they could see Medusa's face,
  52. two hundred warriors stiffened into stone.
  53. At last, repentant, Phineus dreads the war,
  54. unjust, for in a helpless fright he sees
  55. the statues standing in strange attitudes;
  56. and, recognizing his adherents, calls
  57. on each by name to rescue from that death.
  58. Still unbelieving he begins to touch
  59. the bodies, nearest to himself, and all
  60. are hard stone.
  61. Having turned his eyes away,
  62. he stretched his hands and arms obliquely back
  63. to Perseus, and confessed his wicked deeds;
  64. and thus imploring spoke;
  65. “Remove, I pray,
  66. O Perseus, thou invincible, remove
  67. from me that dreadful Gorgon: take away
  68. the stone-creating countenance of thy
  69. unspeakable Medusa! For we warred
  70. not out of hatred, nor to gain a throne,
  71. but clashed our weapons for a woman's sake.—
  72. “Thy merit proved thy valid claim, and time
  73. gave argument for mine. It grieves me not
  74. to yield, O bravest, only give me life,
  75. and all the rest be thine.” Such words implored
  76. the craven, never daring to address
  77. his eyes to whom he spoke.
  78. And thus returned
  79. the valiant Perseus; “I will grant to you,
  80. O timid-hearted Phineus! as behoves
  81. your conduct; and it should appear a gift,
  82. magnanimous, to one who fears to move.—
  83. Take courage, for no steel shall violate
  84. your carcase; and, moreover, you shall be
  85. a monument, that ages may record
  86. your unforgotten name. You shall be seen
  87. thus always, in the palace where resides
  88. my father-in-law, that my surrendered spouse
  89. may soften her great grief when she but sees
  90. the darling image of her first betrothed.”
  91. He spoke, and moved Medusa to that side
  92. where Phineus had turned his trembling face:
  93. and as he struggled to avert his gaze
  94. his neck grew stiff; the moisture of his eyes
  95. was hardened into stone.—And since that day
  96. his timid face and coward eyes and hands,
  97. forever shall be guilty as in life.
  98. After such deeds, victorious Perseus turned,
  99. and sought the confines of his native land;
  100. together with his bride; which, having reached,
  101. he punished Proetus—who by force of arms
  102. had routed his own brother from the throne
  103. of Argos. By his aid Acrisius,
  104. although his undeserving parent, gained
  105. his citadels once more: for Proetus failed,
  106. with all his arms and towers unjustly held,
  107. to quell the grim-eyed monster, snake-begin.
  108. Yet not the valour of the youth, upheld
  109. by many labours, nor his grievous wrongs
  110. have softened you, O Polydectes! king
  111. of Little Seriphus; but bitter hate
  112. ungoverned, rankles in your hardened heart—
  113. there is no limit to your unjust rage.
  114. Even his praises are defamed by you
  115. and all your arguments are given to prove
  116. Medusa's death a fraud.—Perseus rejoined;
  117. “By this we give our true pledge of the truth,
  118. avert your eyes!” And by Medusa's face
  119. he made the features of that impious king
  120. a bloodless stone.
  1. Through all these mighty deeds
  2. Pallas, Minerva, had availed to guide
  3. her gold-begotten brother. Now she sped,
  4. surrounded in a cloud, from Seriphus,
  5. while Cynthus on the right, and Gyarus
  6. far faded from her view. And where a path,
  7. high over the deep sea, leads the near way,
  8. she winged the air for Thebes, and Helicon
  9. haunt of the Virgin Nine.
  10. High on that mount
  11. she stayed her flight, and with these words bespoke
  12. those well-taught sisters; “Fame has given to me
  13. the knowledge of a new-made fountain—gift
  14. of Pegasus, that fleet steed, from the blood
  15. of dread Medusa sprung—it opened when
  16. his hard hoof struck the ground.—It is the cause
  17. that brought me.—For my longing to have seen
  18. this fount, miraculous and wonderful,
  19. grows not the less in that myself did see
  20. the swift steed, nascent from maternal blood.”
  21. To which Urania thus; “Whatever the cause
  22. that brings thee to our habitation, thou,
  23. O goddess, art to us the greatest joy.
  24. And now, to answer thee, reports are true;
  25. this fountain is the work of Pegasus,”
  26. And having said these words, she gladly thence
  27. conducted Pallas to the sacred streams.
  28. And Pallas, after she had long admired
  29. that fountain, flowing where the hoof had struck,
  30. turned round to view the groves of ancient trees;
  31. the grottoes and the grass bespangled, rich
  32. with flowers unnumbered—all so beautiful
  33. she deemed the charm of that locality
  34. a fair surrounding for the studious days
  35. of those Mnemonian Maids.
  36. But one of them
  37. addressed her thus; “O thou whose valour gave
  38. thy mind to greater deeds! if thou hadst stooped
  39. to us, Minerva, we had welcomed thee
  40. most worthy of our choir! Thy words are true;
  41. and well hast thou approved the joys of art,
  42. and this retreat. Most happy would we be
  43. if only we were safe; but wickedness
  44. admits of no restraint, and everything
  45. affrights our virgin minds; and everywhere
  46. the dreadful Pyrenaeus haunts our sight;—
  47. scarcely have we recovered from the shock.
  48. “That savage, with his troops of Thrace. had seized
  49. the lands of Daulis and of Phocis, where
  50. he ruled in tyranny; and when we sought
  51. the Temples of Parnassus, he observed
  52. us on our way;—and knowing our estate,
  53. pretending to revere our sacred lives,
  54. he said; ‘O Muses, I beseech you pause!
  55. Choose now the shelter of my roof and shun
  56. the heavy stars that teem with pouring rain;
  57. nor hesitate, for often the glorious Gods
  58. have entered humbler homes.’
  59. “Moved by his words,
  60. and by the growing storm, we gave assent,
  61. and entered his first house. But presently
  62. the storm abated, and the southern wind
  63. was conquered by the north; the black clouds fled,
  64. and soon the skies were clear.
  65. “At once we sought
  66. to quit the house, but Pyrenaeus closed
  67. all means of exit,—and prepared to force
  68. our virtue. Instantly we spread our wings,
  69. and so escaped; but on a lofty tower
  70. he stood, as if to follow, and exclaimed;
  71. ‘A path for you marks out a way for me.,
  72. and quite insane, he leaped down from the top
  73. of that high tower.—Falling on his face,
  74. the bones were crushed, and as his life ebbed out
  75. the ground was crimsoned with his wicked blood.”
  76. So spoke the Muse. And now was heard the sound
  77. of pennons in the air, and voices, too,
  78. gave salutations from the lofty trees.
  79. Minerva, thinking they were human tongues,
  80. looked up in question whence the perfect words;
  81. but on the boughs, nine ugly magpies perched,
  82. those mockers of all sounds, which now complained
  83. their hapless fate. And as she wondering stood,
  84. Urania, goddess of the Muse, rejoined;—
  85. “Look, those but lately worsted in dispute
  86. augment the number of unnumbered birds.—
  87. Pierus was their father, very rich
  88. in lands of Pella; and their mother (called
  89. Evippe of Paeonia) when she brought
  90. them forth, nine times evoked, in labours nine,
  91. Lucina's aid.—Unduly puffed with pride,
  92. because it chanced their number equalled ours,
  93. these stupid sisters, hither to engage
  94. in wordy contest, fared through many towns;—
  95. through all Haemonia and Achaia came
  96. to us, and said;—
  97. ‘Oh, cease your empty songs,
  98. attuned to dulcet numbers, that deceive
  99. the vulgar, untaught throng. If aught is yours
  100. of confidence, O Thespian Deities
  101. contend with us: our number equals yours.
  102. We will not be defeated by your arts;
  103. nor shall your songs prevail.—Then, conquered, give
  104. Hyantean Aganippe; yield to us
  105. the Medusean Fount;—and should we fail,
  106. we grant Emathia's plains, to where uprise
  107. Paeonia's peaks of snow.—Let chosen Nymphs
  108. award the prize—.’ 'Twas shameful to contend;
  109. it seemed more shameful to submit. At once,
  110. the chosen Nymphs swore justice by their streams,
  111. and sat in judgment on their thrones of rock.
  112. “At once, although the lot had not been cast,
  113. the leading sister hastened to begin.—
  114. She chanted of celestial wars; she gave
  115. the Giants false renown; she gave the Gods
  116. small credit for great deeds.—She droned out, ‘Forth,
  117. those deepest realms of earth, Typhoeus came,
  118. and filled the Gods with fear. They turned their backs
  119. in flight to Egypt; and the wearied rout,
  120. where Great Nile spreads his seven-channeled mouth,
  121. were there received.—Thither the earth-begot
  122. Typhoeus hastened: but the Gods of Heaven
  123. deceptive shapes assumed.—Lo, Jupiter,
  124. (As Libyan Ammon's crooked horns attest)
  125. was hidden in the leader of a flock;
  126. Apollo in a crow; Bacchus in a goat;
  127. Diana in a cat; Venus in a fish;
  128. Saturnian Juno in a snow-white cow;
  129. Cyllenian Hermes in an Ibis' wings.’—
  130. Such stuff she droned out from her noisy mouth:
  131. and then they summoned us; but, haply, time
  132. permits thee not, nor leisure thee permits,
  133. that thou shouldst hearken to our melodies.”
  134. “Nay doubt it not,” quoth Pallas, “but relate
  135. your melodies in order.” And she sat
  136. beneath the pleasant shadows of the grove.
  137. And thus again Urania; “On our side
  138. we trusted all to one.” Which having said,
  139. Calliope arose. Her glorious hair
  140. was bound with ivy. She attuned the chords,
  141. and chanted as she struck the sounding strings:—