Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. “First Ceres broke with crooked plow the glebe;
  2. first gave to earth its fruit and wholesome food;
  3. first gave the laws;—all things of Ceres came;
  4. of her I sing; and oh, that I could tell
  5. her worth in verse; in verse her worth is due.
  6. “Because he dared to covet heavenly thrones
  7. Typhoeus, giant limbs are weighted down
  8. beneath Sicilia's Isle—vast in extent—
  9. how often thence he strains and strives to rise?
  10. But his right hand Pachynus holds; his legs are pressed
  11. by Lilybaeus, Aetna weights his head.
  12. Beneath that ponderous mass Typhoeus lies,
  13. flat on his back; and spues the sands on high;
  14. and vomits flames from his ferocious mouth.
  15. He often strives to push the earth away,
  16. the cities and the mountains from his limbs—
  17. by which the lands are shaken. Even the king,
  18. that rules the silent shades is made to quake,
  19. for fear the earth may open and the ground,
  20. cleft in wide chasms, letting in the day,
  21. may terrify the trembling ghosts. Afraid
  22. of this disaster, that dark despot left
  23. his gloomy habitation; carried forth
  24. by soot-black horses, in his gloomy car.
  25. “He circumspectly viewed Sicilia's vast
  26. foundations.—Having well explored and proved
  27. no part was shattered; having laid aside
  28. his careful fears, he wandered in those parts.
  29. “Him, Venus, Erycina, in her mount
  30. thus witnessed, and embraced her winged son,
  31. and said, ‘O Cupid! thou who art my son—
  32. my arms, my hand, my strength; take up those arms,
  33. by which thou art victorious over all,
  34. and aim thy keenest arrow at the heart
  35. of that divinity whom fortune gave
  36. the last award, what time the triple realm,
  37. by lot was portioned out.
  38. ‘The Gods of Heaven
  39. are overcome by thee; and Jupiter,
  40. and all the Deities that swim the deep,
  41. and the great ruler of the Water-Gods:
  42. why, then, should Tartarus escape our sway—
  43. the third part of the universe at stake—
  44. by which thy mother's empire and thy own
  45. may be enlarged according to great need.
  46. ‘How shameful is our present lot in Heaven,
  47. the powers of love and I alike despised;
  48. for, mark how Pallas has renounced my sway,
  49. besides Diana, javelin-hurler—so
  50. will Ceres' daughter choose virginity,
  51. if we permit,—that way her hopes incline.
  52. Do thou this goddess Proserpine, unite
  53. in marriage to her uncle. Venus spoke;—
  54. “Cupid then loosed his quiver, and of all
  55. its many arrows, by his mother's aid,
  56. selected one; the keenest of them all;
  57. the least uncertain, surest from the string:
  58. and having fixed his knee against the bow,
  59. bent back the flexile horn.—The flying shaft
  60. struck Pluto in the breast.
  61. “There is a lake
  62. of greatest depth, not far from Henna's walls,
  63. long since called Pergus; and the songs of swans,
  64. that wake Cayster, rival not the notes
  65. of swans melodious on its gliding waves:
  66. a fringe of trees, encircling as a wreath
  67. its compassed waters, with a leafy veil
  68. denies the heat of noon; cool breezes blow
  69. beneath the boughs; the humid ground is sprent
  70. with purpling flowers, and spring eternal reigns.
  71. “While Proserpine once dallied in that grove,
  72. plucking white lilies and sweet violets,
  73. and while she heaped her basket, while she filled
  74. her bosom, in a pretty zeal to strive
  75. beyond all others; she was seen, beloved,
  76. and carried off by Pluto—such the haste
  77. of sudden love.
  78. “The goddess, in great fear,
  79. called on her mother and on all her friends;
  80. and, in her frenzy, as her robe was rent,
  81. down from the upper edge, her gathered flowers
  82. fell from her loosened tunic.—This mishap,
  83. so perfect was her childish innocence,
  84. increased her virgin grief.—
  85. “The ravisher
  86. urged on his chariot, and inspired his steeds;
  87. called each by name, and on their necks and manes
  88. shook the black-rusted reins. They hastened through
  89. deep lakes, and through the pools of Palici,
  90. which boiling upward from the ruptured earth
  91. smell of strong sulphur. And they bore him thence
  92. to where the sons of Bacchus, who had sailed
  93. from twin-sea Corinth, long ago had built
  94. a city's walls between unequal ports.
  1. “Midway between the streams of Cyane
  2. and Arethusa lies a moon-like pool,
  3. of silvered narrow horns. There stood the Nymph,
  4. revered above all others in that land,
  5. whose name was Cyane. From her that pond
  6. was always called. And as she stood, concealed
  7. in middle waves that circled her white thighs,
  8. she recognized the God, and said; ‘O thou
  9. shalt go no further, Pluto, thou shalt not
  10. by force alone become the son-in-law
  11. of Ceres. It is better to beseech
  12. a mother's aid than drag her child away!
  13. And this sustains my word, if I may thus
  14. compare great things with small, Anapis loved
  15. me also; but he wooed and married me
  16. by kind endearments; not by fear, as thou
  17. hast terrified this girl.’ So did she speak;
  18. and stretching out her arms on either side
  19. opposed his way.
  20. “The son of Saturn blazed
  21. with uncontrolled rage; and urged his steeds,
  22. and hurled his royal scepter in the pool.
  23. Cast with a mighty arm it pierced the deeps.
  24. The smitten earth made way to Tartarus;—
  25. it opened a wide basin and received
  26. the plunging chariot in the midst.—But now
  27. the mournful Cyane began to grieve,
  28. because from her against her fountain-rights
  29. the goddess had been torn. The deepening wound
  30. still rankled in her breast, and she dissolved
  31. in many tears, and wasted in those waves
  32. which lately were submissive to her rule.
  33. “So you could see her members waste away:
  34. her hones begin to bend; her nails get soft;
  35. her azure hair, her fingers, legs and feet,
  36. and every slender part melt in the pool:
  37. so brief the time in which her tender limbs
  38. were changed to flowing waves; and after them
  39. her back and shoulders, and her sides and breasts
  40. dissolved and vanished into rivulets:
  41. and while she changed, the water slowly filled
  42. her faulty veins instead of living blood—
  43. and nothing that a hand could hold remained.
  44. “Now it befell when Proserpine was lost,
  45. her anxious mother sought through every land
  46. and every sea in vain. She rested not.
  47. Aurora, when she came with ruddy locks,
  48. might never know, nor even Hesperus,
  49. if she might deign to rest.—She lit two pines
  50. from Aetna's flames and held one in each hand,
  51. and restless bore them through the frosty glooms:
  52. and when serene the day had dimmed the stars
  53. she sought her daughter by the rising sun;
  54. and when the sun declined she rested not.
  55. “Wearied with labour she began to thirst,
  56. for all this while no streams had cooled her lips;
  57. when, as by chance, a cottage thatched with straw
  58. gladdened her sight. Thither the goddess went,
  59. and, after knocking at the humble door,
  60. waited until an ancient woman came;
  61. who, when she saw the goddess and had heard
  62. her plea for water, gave her a sweet drink,
  63. but lately brewed of parched barley-meal;
  64. and while the goddess quaffed this drink a boy,
  65. of bold and hard appearance, stood before
  66. and laughed and called her greedy. While he spoke
  67. the angry goddess sprinkled him with meal,
  68. mixed with the liquid which had not been drunk.
  69. “His face grew spotted where the mixture struck,
  70. and legs appeared where he had arms before,
  71. a tail was added to his changing trunk;
  72. and lest his former strength might cause great harm,
  73. all parts contracted till he measured less
  74. than common lizards. While the ancient dame
  75. wondered and wept and strove for one caress,
  76. the reptile fled and sought a lurking place.—
  77. His very name describes him to the eye,
  78. a body starred with many coloured spots.
  79. “What lands, what oceans Ceres wandered then,
  80. would weary to relate. The bounded world
  81. was narrow for the search. Again she passed
  82. through Sicily; again observed all signs;
  83. and as she wandered came to Cyane,
  84. who strove to tell where Proserpine had gone,
  85. but since her change, had neither mouth nor tongue,
  86. and so was mute. And yet the Nymph made plain
  87. by certain signs what she desired to say:
  88. for on the surface of the waves she showed
  89. a well-known girdle Proserpine had lost,
  90. by chance had dropped it in that sacred pool;
  91. which when the goddess recognized, at last,
  92. convinced her daughter had been forced from her,
  93. she tore her streaming locks, and frenzied struck
  94. her bosom with her palms. And in her rage,
  95. although she wist not where her daughter was,
  96. she blamed all countries and cried out against
  97. their base ingratitude; and she declared
  98. the world unworthy of the gift of corn:
  99. but Sicily before all other lands,
  100. for there was found the token of her loss.
  101. “For that she broke with savage hand the plows,
  102. which there had turned the soil, and full of wrath
  103. leveled in equal death the peasant and his ox—
  104. both tillers of the soil—and made decree
  105. that land should prove deceptive to the seed,
  106. and rot all planted germs.—That fertile isle,
  107. so noted through the world, becomes a waste;
  108. the corn is blighted in the early blade;
  109. excessive heat, excessive rain destroys;
  110. the winds destroy, the constellations harm;
  111. the greedy birds devour the scattered seeds;
  112. thistles and tares and tough weeds choke the wheat.
  1. “For this the Nymph, Alpheian, raised her head
  2. above Elean waves; and having first
  3. pushed back her dripping tresses from her brows,
  4. back to her ears, she thus began to speak;
  5. ‘O mother of the virgin, sought throughout
  6. the globe! O mother of nutritious fruits!
  7. Let these tremendous labours have an end;
  8. do not increase the violence of thy wrath
  9. against the Earth, devoted to thy sway,
  10. and not deserving blame; for only force
  11. compelled the Earth to open for that wrong.
  12. Think not my supplication is to aid
  13. my native country; hither I am come
  14. an alien: Pisa is my native land,
  15. and Elis gave me birth. Though I sojourn
  16. a stranger in this isle of Sicily
  17. it yet delights me more than all the world.
  18. ‘I, Arethusa, claim this isle my home,
  19. and do implore thee keep my throne secure,
  20. O greatest of the Gods! A better hour,
  21. when thou art lightened of thy cares, will come,
  22. and when thy countenance again is kind;
  23. and then may I declare what cause removed
  24. me from my native place—and through the waves
  25. of such a mighty ocean guided me
  26. to find Ortygia.
  27. ‘Through the porous earth
  28. by deepest caverns, I uplift my head
  29. and see unwonted stars. Now it befell,
  30. as I was gliding far beneath the world,
  31. where flow dark Stygian streams, I saw
  32. thy Proserpine. Although her countenance
  33. betrayed anxiety and grief, a queen She reigned
  34. supremely great in that opacous world
  35. queen consort mighty to the King of Hell.’
  36. “Astonished and amazed, as thunderstruck,
  37. when Proserpina's mother heard these words,
  38. long while she stood till great bewilderment
  39. gave way to heavy grief. Then to the skies,
  40. ethereal, she mounted in her car
  41. and with beclouded face and streaming hair
  42. stood fronting Jove, opprobrious. ‘I have come
  43. O Jupiter, a suppliant to thee,
  44. both for my own offspring as well as thine.
  45. If thy hard heart deny a mother grace,
  46. yet haply as a father thou canst feel
  47. some pity for thy daughter; and I pray
  48. thy care for her may not be valued less
  49. because my groaning travail brought her forth.—
  50. My long-sought daughter has at last been found,
  51. if one can call it, found, when certain loss
  52. more certain has been proved; or so may deem
  53. the knowledge of her state.—But I may bear
  54. his rude ways, if again he bring her back.
  55. ‘Thy worthy child should not be forced to wed
  56. a bandit-chief, nor should my daughter's charms
  57. reward his crime.’ She spoke;—and Jupiter
  58. took up the word; ‘This daughter is a care,
  59. a sacred pledge to me as well as thee;
  60. but if it please us to acknowledge truth,
  61. this is a deed of love and injures not.
  62. And if, O goddess, thou wilt not oppose,
  63. such law-son cannot compass our disgrace:
  64. for though all else were wanting, naught can need
  65. Jove's brother, who in fortune yields to none
  66. save me. But if thy fixed desire compel
  67. dissent, let Proserpine return to Heaven;
  68. however, subject to the binding law,
  69. if there her tongue have never tasted food—
  70. a sure condition, by the Fates decreed.’
  71. he spoke; but Ceres was no less resolved
  72. to lead her daughter thence.
  73. “Not so the Fates
  74. permit.—The virgin, thoughtless while she strayed
  75. among the cultivated Stygian fields,
  76. had broken fast. While there she plucked the fruit
  77. by bending a pomegranate tree, and plucked,
  78. and chewed seven grains, picked from the pallid rind;
  79. and none had seen except Ascalaphus—
  80. him Orphne, famed of all Avernian Nymphs,
  81. had brought to birth in some infernal cave,
  82. days long ago, from Acheron's embrace—
  83. he saw it, and with cruel lips debarred
  84. young Proserpine's return. Heaving a sigh,
  85. the Queen of Erebus, indignant changed
  86. that witness to an evil bird: she turned
  87. his head, with sprinkled Phlegethonian lymph,
  88. into a beak, and feathers, and great eyes;
  89. his head grew larger and his shape, deformed,
  90. was cased in tawny wings; his lengthened nails
  91. bent inward;—and his sluggish arms
  92. as wings can hardly move. So he became
  93. the vilest bird; a messenger of grief;
  94. the lazy owl; sad omen to mankind.
  95. “The telltale's punishment was only just;
  96. O Siren Maids, but wherefore thus have ye
  97. the feet and plumes of birds, although remain
  98. your virgin features? Is it from the day
  99. when Proserpina gathered vernal flowers;
  100. because ye mingled with her chosen friends?
  101. And after she was lost, in vain ye sought
  102. through all the world; and wished for wings to waft
  103. you over the great deep, that soon the sea
  104. might feel your great concern.—The Gods were kind:
  105. ye saw your limbs grow yellow, with a growth
  106. of sudden-sprouting feathers; but because
  107. your melodies that gently charm the ear,
  108. besides the glory of your speech, might lose
  109. the blessing, of a tongue, your virgin face
  110. and human voice remained.
  111. “But Jupiter,
  112. the mediator of these rival claims,
  113. urged by his brother and his grieving sister,
  114. divided the long year in equal parts.
  115. Now Proserpina, as a Deity,
  116. of equal merit, in two kingdoms reigns:—
  117. for six months with her mother she abides,
  118. and six months with her husband.—Both her mind
  119. and her appearance quickly were transformed;
  120. for she who seemed so sad in Pluto's eyes,
  121. now as a goddess beams in joyful smiles;
  122. so, when the sun obscured by watery mist
  123. conquers the clouds, it shines in splendour forth.