Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- While Perseus, the brave son of Jupiter,
- surrounded at the feast by Cepheus' lords,
- narrated this, a raging multitude
- with sudden outcry filled the royal courts—
- not with the clamours of a wedding feast
- but boisterous rage, portentous of dread war.
- As when the fury of a great wind strikes
- a tranquil sea, tempestuous billows roll
- across the peaceful bosom of the deep;
- so were the pleasures at the banquet changed
- to sudden tumult.
- Foremost of that throng,
- the rash ring-leader, Phineus, shook his spear,
- brass-tipped of ash, and shouted, “Ha, 'tis I!
- I come avenger of my ravished bride!
- Let now your flittering wings deliver you,
- or even Jupiter, dissolved in showers
- of imitation gold.” So boasted he,
- aiming his spear at Perseus.
- Thus to him
- cried Cepheus: “Hold your hand, and strike him not!
- What strange delusions, O my brother, have
- compelled you to this crime? Is it the just
- requital of heroic worth? A fair
- reguerdon for the life of her you loved?
- “If truth were known, not Perseus ravished her
- from you; but, either 'twas the awful God
- that rules the Nereides; or Ammon, crowned
- with crescent horns; or that monstrosity
- of Ocean's vast abyss, which came to glut
- his famine on the issue of my loins.
- Nor was your suit abandoned till the time
- when she must perish and be lost to you.
- So cruel are you, seeking my daughter's death,
- rejoicing lightly in our deep despair.—
- “And was it not enough for you to stand
- supinely by, while she was bound in chains,
- and offer no assistance, though you were
- her lover and betrothed? And will you grieve
- that she was rescued from a dreadful fate,
- and spoil her champion of his just rewards?
- Rewards that now may seem magnificent,
- but not denied to you if you had won
- and saved, when she was fettered to the rock.
- “Let him, whose strength to my declining years
- restored my child, receive the merit due
- his words and deeds; and know his suit was not
- preferred to yours, but granted to prevent
- her certain death.”
- not deigning to reply,
- against them Phineus stood; and glancing back
- from him to Perseus, with alternate looks,
- as doubtful which should feel his first attack,
- made brief delay. Then vain at Perseus hurled
- his spear, with all the force that rage inspired,
- but, missing him it quivered in a couch.
- Provoked beyond endurance Perseus leaped
- forth from the cushioned seats, and fiercely sent
- that outwrenched weapon back. It would have pierced
- his hostile breast had not the miscreant crouched
- behind the altars. Oh perverted good,
- that thus an altar should abet the wrong!
- But, though the craven Phineus escaped,
- not vainly flew the whizzing point, but struck
- in Rhoetus' forehead. As the barb was torn
- out of the bone, the victim's heels began
- to kick upon the floor, and spouting blood
- defiled the festal board. Then truly flame
- in uncontrolled rage the vulgar crowd,
- and hurl their harmful darts.
- And there are some
- who hold that Cepheus and his son-in-law
- deserved to die; but Cepheus had passed forth
- the threshold of his palace: having called
- on all the Gods of Hospitality
- and Truth and Justice to attest, he gave
- no comfort to the enemies of Peace.
- Unconquered Pallas is at hand and holds
- her Aegis to protect her brother's life;
- she lends him dauntless courage. At the feast
- was one from India's distant shores, whose name
- was Athis. It was said that Limnate,
- the daughter of the River Ganges, him
- in vitreous caverns bright had brought to birth;
- and now at sixteen summers in his prime,
- the handsome youth was clad in costly robes.
- A purple mantle with a golden fringe
- covered his shoulders, and a necklace, carved
- of gold, enhanced the beauty of his throat.
- His hair encompassed with a coronal,
- delighted with sweet myrrh. Well taught was he
- to hurl the javelin at a distant mark,
- and none with better skill could stretch the bow.
- No sooner had he bent the pliant horns
- than Perseus, with a smoking billet, seized
- from the mid-altar, struck him on the face,
- and smashed his features in his broken skull.
- And when Assyrian Lycabas had seen
- his dear companion, whom he truly loved,
- beating his handsome countenance in blood.
- And when he had bewailed his lost life,
- that ebbed away from that unpiteous wound,
- he snatched the bow that Athis used, and said;
- “Let us in single combat seek revenge;
- not long will you rejoice the stripling's fate;
- a deed most worthy shame.” So speaking, forth
- the piercing arrow bounded from the cord,
- which, though avoided, struck the hero's cloak
- and fastened in its folds.—
- Then Perseus turned
- upon him, with the trusted curving sword,
- cause of Medusa's death, and drove the blade
- deep in his breast. The dying victim's eyes,
- now swimming in a shadowous night, looked 'round
- for Athis, whom, beholding, he reclined
- upon, and ushered to the other world,—
- sad consolation of united death.
- And Phorbas the descendant of Methion.
- Who hailed from far Syene, with his friend
- Amphimedon of Libya, in their haste
- to join the battle, slipped up in the blood
- and fell together: just as they arose
- that glittering sword was driven through the throat
- of Phorbas into the ribs of his companion.
- But Erithus, the son of Actor, swung
- a battle-ax, so weighty, Perseus chose
- not combat with his curving blade. He seized
- in his two hands a huge bowl, wrought around
- with large design, outstanding from its mass.
- This, lifting up, he dashes on his foe,
- who vomits crimson blood, and falling back
- beats on the hard floor with his dying head.
- And next he slew Caucasian Abaris,
- and Polydaemon—from Semiramis
- nobly descended—and Sperchius, son,
- Lycetus, long-haired Elyces, unshorn,
- Clytus and Phlegias, the hero slew;—
- and trampled on the dying heaped around.
- Not daring to engage his enemy
- in open contest, Phineus held aloof,
- and hurled his javelin. Badly aimed—by some
- mischance or turned—it wounded Idas, who
- had followed neither side; vain-hoping thus
- to shun the conflict.
- Idas, filled with rage,
- on Phineus gazed with futile hate, and said,
- “Since I am forced unwilling to such deeds,
- behold, whom you have made your enemy,
- O savage Phineus! Let your recompense
- be stroke for stroke.” So speaking, from the wound
- he drew the steel, but, faint from loss of blood,
- before his arm could hurl the weapon back,
- he sank upon his knees.
- Here, also, lies
- Odytes,—noblest of the Cephenes,
- save Cepheus only,—slaughtered by the sword
- of Clymenus. And Prothoenor lies
- the victim of Hypseus; by his side
- Hypseus slaughtered by Lyncidas falls.
- And in the midst of this destruction stood
- Emathion, now an aged man, revered,
- who feared the Gods, and stood for upright deeds.
- And, since his years denied him strength for war,
- he battled with his tongue, and railed, and cursed
- their impious weapons. As that aged man
- clings to the altar with his trembling hands,
- Chromis with ruthless sword cuts off his head,
- which straightway falls upon the altar, whence
- his dying tongue denounces them in words
- of execration: and his soul expires
- amid the altar flames.
- Then Broteas
- and Ammon, his twin brother, who not knew
- their equals at the cestus, by the hand
- of Phineus fell; for what avails in deed
- the cestus as a weapon matched with swords.
- Ampycus by the same hand fell,—the priest
- of Ceres, with his temples wreathed in white.
- And O, Iapetides not for this
- did you attend the feast! Your voice attuned
- melodious to the harp, was in request
- to celebrate the wedding-day with song,—
- a work of peace; as you did stand aside,
- holding the peaceful plectrum in your hand,
- the mocking Pettalus in ridicule said,
- “Go sing your ditties to the Stygian shades.”
- And, mocking thus, he drove his pointed sword
- in your right temple. As your limbs gave way,
- your dying fingers swept the tuneful strings:
- and falling you did chant a mournful dirge.—
- You to avenge enraged Lycormas tore
- a huge bar from the door-post, on the right,
- and dashing it against the mocker crushed
- his neck-bones: as a slaughtered bullock falls—
- he tumbled to the ground.
- Then on the left.
- Cinyphian Pelates began to wrench
- an oak plank from the door-post, but the spear
- of Corythus, the son of Marmarus,
- pinioned his right hand to the wooden post;
- and while he struggled Abas pierced his side.—
- He fell not to the floor, but dying hung
- suspended from the door-post by his hand.
- And of the friends of Perseus, Melaneus
- was slain, and Dorylas whose wealth was large
- in Nasamonian land. No other lord,
- as Dorylas, such vast estates possessed;
- no other owned so many heaps of corn.
- The missile steel stood fastened in his groin,
- obliquely fixed,—a fatal spot—and when
- the author of his wound, Halcyoneus
- the Bactrian, beheld his victim thus,
- rolling his eyes and sobbing forth his soul,
- he railed; “Keep for yourself of all your lands
- as much as you can cover.” And he left
- the bleeding corpse.
- But Perseus in revenge
- hurled after him a spear, which, in his need,
- he ripped out from the wound, yet warm, and struck
- the boaster on the middle of his nose.
- The piercing steel, passed through his nose and neck,—
- remained projecting from the front and back.
- And while good fortune helped his hand, he slew
- Clanis and Clytius, of one mother born,
- but with a different wound he slaughtered each:
- for, leveled by a mighty arm, his ashen spear
- drove through the thighs of Clytius, right and left,
- and Clanis bit the javelin with his teeth.
- And by his might, Mendesian Celadon
- and Atreus fell, his mother of the tribes
- of Palestine, his father was unknown.
- Aethion, also, who could well foresee
- the things to come, but was at last deceived
- by some false omen. And Thoactes fell,
- the armour-bearer of the king; and, next,
- the infamous Agyrtes who had slain
- his father. These he slew; and though his strength
- was nearly spent, so many more remained:
- for now the multitude with one accord
- conspired to slaughter him. From every side
- the raging troops assailed the better cause.
- In vain the pious father and the bride,
- together with her mother, fill the halls
- with lamentations; for the clash of arms,
- the groans of fallen heroes drown their cries.—
- Bellona in a sea of blood has drenched
- their Household Gods, polluted by these deeds,
- and she endeavours to renew the strife.
- Perseus, alone against that raging throng,
- is now surrounded by a myriad men,
- led on by Phineus; and their flying darts,
- as thick as wintry tail, are showered around
- on every side, grazing his eyes and ears.—
- Quickly he fixed his shoulder firm against
- the rock of a great pillar, which secured
- his back from danger, and he faced his foes,
- and baffled their attack.
- Upon his left
- Chaonian Molpeus pressed, and on his right
- a Nabathe an called Ethemon pressed.—
- As when a tiger from a valley hears
- the lowing of two herds, in separate fields,
- though hunger urges he not knows on which
- to spring, but rages equally for each;
- so, Perseus doubtful which may first attack
- his left or right, knows not on which to turn,
- but stands attentive witness to the flight
- of Molpeus, whom he wounded in the leg.
- Nor could he choose—Ethemon, full of rage,
- pressed on him to inflict a fatal wound,
- deep in his neck; but with incautious force
- struck the stone pillar with his ringing sword
- and shattered the metal blade, close to the hilt;
- the flying fragment pierced its owner's neck,
- but not with mortal wound. In vain he pled
- for mercy, stretching forth his helpless arms:
- perseus transfixed him with his glittering blade,
- Cyllenian.
- But when he saw his strength
- was yielding to the multitude, he said,
- “Since you have forced disaster on yourselves,
- why should I hesitate to save myself?—
- O friends, avert your faces if ye stand
- before me!” And he raised Medusa,s head.
- Thescelus answered him; “Seek other dupes
- to chase with wonders!” Just as he prepared
- to hurl the deadly javelin from his hand,
- he stood, unmoving in that attitude,
- a marble statue.
- Ampyx, close to him,
- exulting in a mighty spirit, made
- a lunge to pierce Lyncides in the breast;
- but, as his sword was flashing in the air,
- his right arm grew so rigid, there he stood
- unable to draw back or thrust it forth.
- But Nileus, who had feigned himself begot
- by seven-fold Nile, and carved his shield with gold
- and silver streams, alternate seven, shouted;
- “Look, look! O Perseus, him from whom I sprung!
- And you shall carry to the silent shades
- a mighty consolation in your death,
- that you were slain by such a one as I.”
- But in the midst of boasting, the last words
- were silenced; and his open mouth, although
- incapable of motion, seemed intent
- to utter speech.
- Then Eryx, chiding says;
- “Your craven spirits have benumbed you, not
- Medusa's poison.—Come with me and strike
- this youthful mover of magician charms
- down to the ground.”—He started with a rush;
- the earth detained his steps; it held him fast;
- he could not speak; he stood, complete with arms,
- a statue.
- Such a penalty was theirs,
- and justly earned; but near by there was one,
- aconteus, who defending Perseus, saw
- medusa as he fought; and at the sight
- the soldier hardened to an upright stone.—
- Assured he was alive, Astyages
- now struck him with his long sword, but the blade
- resounded with a ringing note; and there,
- astonished at the sound, Astyages,
- himself, assumed that nature; and remained
- with wonder pictured on his marble face.
- And not to weary with the names of men,
- sprung from the middle classes, there remained
- two hundred warriors eager for the fight—
- as soon as they could see Medusa's face,
- two hundred warriors stiffened into stone.
- At last, repentant, Phineus dreads the war,
- unjust, for in a helpless fright he sees
- the statues standing in strange attitudes;
- and, recognizing his adherents, calls
- on each by name to rescue from that death.
- Still unbelieving he begins to touch
- the bodies, nearest to himself, and all
- are hard stone.
- Having turned his eyes away,
- he stretched his hands and arms obliquely back
- to Perseus, and confessed his wicked deeds;
- and thus imploring spoke;
- “Remove, I pray,
- O Perseus, thou invincible, remove
- from me that dreadful Gorgon: take away
- the stone-creating countenance of thy
- unspeakable Medusa! For we warred
- not out of hatred, nor to gain a throne,
- but clashed our weapons for a woman's sake.—
- “Thy merit proved thy valid claim, and time
- gave argument for mine. It grieves me not
- to yield, O bravest, only give me life,
- and all the rest be thine.” Such words implored
- the craven, never daring to address
- his eyes to whom he spoke.
- And thus returned
- the valiant Perseus; “I will grant to you,
- O timid-hearted Phineus! as behoves
- your conduct; and it should appear a gift,
- magnanimous, to one who fears to move.—
- Take courage, for no steel shall violate
- your carcase; and, moreover, you shall be
- a monument, that ages may record
- your unforgotten name. You shall be seen
- thus always, in the palace where resides
- my father-in-law, that my surrendered spouse
- may soften her great grief when she but sees
- the darling image of her first betrothed.”
- He spoke, and moved Medusa to that side
- where Phineus had turned his trembling face:
- and as he struggled to avert his gaze
- his neck grew stiff; the moisture of his eyes
- was hardened into stone.—And since that day
- his timid face and coward eyes and hands,
- forever shall be guilty as in life.
- After such deeds, victorious Perseus turned,
- and sought the confines of his native land;
- together with his bride; which, having reached,
- he punished Proetus—who by force of arms
- had routed his own brother from the throne
- of Argos. By his aid Acrisius,
- although his undeserving parent, gained
- his citadels once more: for Proetus failed,
- with all his arms and towers unjustly held,
- to quell the grim-eyed monster, snake-begin.
- Yet not the valour of the youth, upheld
- by many labours, nor his grievous wrongs
- have softened you, O Polydectes! king
- of Little Seriphus; but bitter hate
- ungoverned, rankles in your hardened heart—
- there is no limit to your unjust rage.
- Even his praises are defamed by you
- and all your arguments are given to prove
- Medusa's death a fraud.—Perseus rejoined;
- “By this we give our true pledge of the truth,
- avert your eyes!” And by Medusa's face
- he made the features of that impious king
- a bloodless stone.
- Through all these mighty deeds
- Pallas, Minerva, had availed to guide
- her gold-begotten brother. Now she sped,
- surrounded in a cloud, from Seriphus,
- while Cynthus on the right, and Gyarus
- far faded from her view. And where a path,
- high over the deep sea, leads the near way,
- she winged the air for Thebes, and Helicon
- haunt of the Virgin Nine.
- High on that mount
- she stayed her flight, and with these words bespoke
- those well-taught sisters; “Fame has given to me
- the knowledge of a new-made fountain—gift
- of Pegasus, that fleet steed, from the blood
- of dread Medusa sprung—it opened when
- his hard hoof struck the ground.—It is the cause
- that brought me.—For my longing to have seen
- this fount, miraculous and wonderful,
- grows not the less in that myself did see
- the swift steed, nascent from maternal blood.”
- To which Urania thus; “Whatever the cause
- that brings thee to our habitation, thou,
- O goddess, art to us the greatest joy.
- And now, to answer thee, reports are true;
- this fountain is the work of Pegasus,”
- And having said these words, she gladly thence
- conducted Pallas to the sacred streams.
- And Pallas, after she had long admired
- that fountain, flowing where the hoof had struck,
- turned round to view the groves of ancient trees;
- the grottoes and the grass bespangled, rich
- with flowers unnumbered—all so beautiful
- she deemed the charm of that locality
- a fair surrounding for the studious days
- of those Mnemonian Maids.
- But one of them
- addressed her thus; “O thou whose valour gave
- thy mind to greater deeds! if thou hadst stooped
- to us, Minerva, we had welcomed thee
- most worthy of our choir! Thy words are true;
- and well hast thou approved the joys of art,
- and this retreat. Most happy would we be
- if only we were safe; but wickedness
- admits of no restraint, and everything
- affrights our virgin minds; and everywhere
- the dreadful Pyrenaeus haunts our sight;—
- scarcely have we recovered from the shock.
- “That savage, with his troops of Thrace. had seized
- the lands of Daulis and of Phocis, where
- he ruled in tyranny; and when we sought
- the Temples of Parnassus, he observed
- us on our way;—and knowing our estate,
- pretending to revere our sacred lives,
- he said; ‘O Muses, I beseech you pause!
- Choose now the shelter of my roof and shun
- the heavy stars that teem with pouring rain;
- nor hesitate, for often the glorious Gods
- have entered humbler homes.’
- “Moved by his words,
- and by the growing storm, we gave assent,
- and entered his first house. But presently
- the storm abated, and the southern wind
- was conquered by the north; the black clouds fled,
- and soon the skies were clear.
- “At once we sought
- to quit the house, but Pyrenaeus closed
- all means of exit,—and prepared to force
- our virtue. Instantly we spread our wings,
- and so escaped; but on a lofty tower
- he stood, as if to follow, and exclaimed;
- ‘A path for you marks out a way for me.,
- and quite insane, he leaped down from the top
- of that high tower.—Falling on his face,
- the bones were crushed, and as his life ebbed out
- the ground was crimsoned with his wicked blood.”
- So spoke the Muse. And now was heard the sound
- of pennons in the air, and voices, too,
- gave salutations from the lofty trees.
- Minerva, thinking they were human tongues,
- looked up in question whence the perfect words;
- but on the boughs, nine ugly magpies perched,
- those mockers of all sounds, which now complained
- their hapless fate. And as she wondering stood,
- Urania, goddess of the Muse, rejoined;—
- “Look, those but lately worsted in dispute
- augment the number of unnumbered birds.—
- Pierus was their father, very rich
- in lands of Pella; and their mother (called
- Evippe of Paeonia) when she brought
- them forth, nine times evoked, in labours nine,
- Lucina's aid.—Unduly puffed with pride,
- because it chanced their number equalled ours,
- these stupid sisters, hither to engage
- in wordy contest, fared through many towns;—
- through all Haemonia and Achaia came
- to us, and said;—
- ‘Oh, cease your empty songs,
- attuned to dulcet numbers, that deceive
- the vulgar, untaught throng. If aught is yours
- of confidence, O Thespian Deities
- contend with us: our number equals yours.
- We will not be defeated by your arts;
- nor shall your songs prevail.—Then, conquered, give
- Hyantean Aganippe; yield to us
- the Medusean Fount;—and should we fail,
- we grant Emathia's plains, to where uprise
- Paeonia's peaks of snow.—Let chosen Nymphs
- award the prize—.’ 'Twas shameful to contend;
- it seemed more shameful to submit. At once,
- the chosen Nymphs swore justice by their streams,
- and sat in judgment on their thrones of rock.
- “At once, although the lot had not been cast,
- the leading sister hastened to begin.—
- She chanted of celestial wars; she gave
- the Giants false renown; she gave the Gods
- small credit for great deeds.—She droned out, ‘Forth,
- those deepest realms of earth, Typhoeus came,
- and filled the Gods with fear. They turned their backs
- in flight to Egypt; and the wearied rout,
- where Great Nile spreads his seven-channeled mouth,
- were there received.—Thither the earth-begot
- Typhoeus hastened: but the Gods of Heaven
- deceptive shapes assumed.—Lo, Jupiter,
- (As Libyan Ammon's crooked horns attest)
- was hidden in the leader of a flock;
- Apollo in a crow; Bacchus in a goat;
- Diana in a cat; Venus in a fish;
- Saturnian Juno in a snow-white cow;
- Cyllenian Hermes in an Ibis' wings.’—
- Such stuff she droned out from her noisy mouth:
- and then they summoned us; but, haply, time
- permits thee not, nor leisure thee permits,
- that thou shouldst hearken to our melodies.”
- “Nay doubt it not,” quoth Pallas, “but relate
- your melodies in order.” And she sat
- beneath the pleasant shadows of the grove.
- And thus again Urania; “On our side
- we trusted all to one.” Which having said,
- Calliope arose. Her glorious hair
- was bound with ivy. She attuned the chords,
- and chanted as she struck the sounding strings:—