Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- So he related how the clowns were changed
- to leaping frogs; and after he was through,
- another told the tale of Marsyas, in these words:
- The Satyr Marsyas, when he played the flute
- in rivalry against Apollo's lyre,
- lost that audacious contest and, alas!
- His life was forfeit; for, they had agreed
- the one who lost should be the victor's prey.
- And, as Apollo punished him, he cried,
- “Ah-h-h! why are you now tearing me apart?
- A flute has not the value of my life!”
- Even as he shrieked out in his agony,
- his living skin was ripped off from his limbs,
- till his whole body was a flaming wound,
- with nerves and veins and viscera exposed.
- But all the weeping people of that land,
- and all the Fauns and Sylvan Deities,
- and all the Satyrs, and Olympus, his
- loved pupil—even then renowned in song,
- and all the Nymphs, lamented his sad fate;
- and all the shepherds, roaming on the hills,
- lamented as they tended fleecy flocks.
- And all those falling tears, on fruitful Earth,
- descended to her deepest veins, as drip
- the moistening dews,—and, gathering as a fount,
- turned upward from her secret-winding caves,
- to issue, sparkling, in the sun-kissed air,
- the clearest river in the land of Phrygia,—
- through which it swiftly flows between steep banks
- down to the sea: and, therefore, from his name,
- 'Tis called “The Marsyas” to this very day.
- And after this was told, the people turned
- and wept for Niobe's loved children dead,
- and also, mourned Amphion, sorrow-slain.
- The Theban people hated Niobe,
- but Pelops, her own brother, mourned her death;
- and as he rent his garment, and laid bare
- his white left shoulder, you could see the part
- composed of ivory.—At his birth 'twas all
- of healthy flesh; but when his father cut
- his limbs asunder, and the Gods restored
- his life, all parts were rightly joined, except
- part of one shoulder, which was wanting; so
- to serve the purpose of the missing flesh,
- a piece of ivory was inserted there,
- making his body by such means complete.
- The lords of many cities that were near,
- now met together and implored their kings
- to mourn with Pelops those unhappy deeds.—
- The lords of Argos; Sparta and Mycenae;
- and Calydon, before it had incurred
- the hatred of Diana, goddess of the chase;
- fertile Orchomenus and Corinth, great
- in wealth of brass; Patrae and fierce Messena;
- Cleone, small; and Pylus and Troezen,
- not ruled by Pittheus then,—and also, all
- the other cities which are shut off by
- the Isthmus there dividing by its two seas,
- and all the cities which are seen from there.
- What seemed most wonderful, of all those towns
- Athens alone was wanting, for a war
- had gathered from the distant seas, a host
- of savage warriors had alarmed her walls,
- and hindered her from mourning for the dead.
- Now Tereus, then the mighty king of Thrace,
- came to the aid of Athens as defense
- from that fierce horde; and there by his great deeds
- achieved a glorious fame. Since his descent
- was boasted from the mighty Gradivus,
- and he was gifted with enormous wealth,
- Pandion, king of Athens, gave to him
- in sacred wedlock his dear daughter, Procne.
- But Juno, guardian of the sacred rites
- attended not, nor Hymenaeus, nor
- the Graces. But the Furies snatched up brands
- from burning funeral pyres, and brandished them
- as torches. They prepared the nuptial couch,—
- a boding owl flew over the bride's room,
- and then sat silently upon the roof.
- With such bad omens Tereus married her,
- sad Procne, and those omens cast a gloom
- on all the household till the fateful birth
- of their first born. All Thrace went wild with joy—
- and even they, rejoicing, blessed the Gods,
- when he, the little Itys, saw the light;
- and they ordained each year their wedding day,
- and every year the birthday of their child,
- should be observed with festival and song:
- so the sad veil of fate conceals from us
- our future woes.
- Now Titan had drawn forth
- the changing seasons through five autumns, when,
- in gentle accents, Procne spoke these words:
- “My dearest husband, if you love me, let
- me visit my dear sister, or consent
- that she may come to us and promise her
- that she may soon return. If you will but
- permit me to enjoy her company
- my heart will bless you as I bless the Gods.”
- At once the monarch ordered his long ships
- to launch upon the sea; and driven by sail,
- and hastened by the swiftly sweeping oars,
- they entered the deep port of Athens, where
- he made fair landing on the fortified
- Piraeus. There, when time was opportune
- to greet his father-in-law and shake his hand,
- they both exchanged their wishes for good health,
- and Tereus told the reason why he came.
- He was relating all his wife's desire.
- Promising Philomela's safe return
- from a brief visit, when Philomela appeared
- rich in her costly raiment, yet more rich
- in charm and beauty, just as if a fair
- Dryad or Naiad should be so attired,
- appearing radiant, from dark solitudes.
- As if someone should kindle whitening corn
- or the dry leaves, or hay piled in a stack;
- so Tereus, when he saw the beautiful
- and blushing virgin, was consumed with love.
- Her modest beauty was a worthy cause
- of worthy love; but by his heritage,
- derived from a debasing clime, his love
- was base; and fires unholy burned within
- from his own lawless nature, just as fierce
- as are the habits of his evil race.
- In the wild frenzy of his wicked heart,
- he thought he would corrupt her trusted maid,
- her tried attendants, and corrupt even
- her virtue with large presents: he would waste
- his kingdom in the effort.—He prepared
- to seize her at the risk of cruel war.
- And he would do or dare all things to feed
- his raging flame.—He could not brook delay.
- With most impassioned words he begged for her,
- pretending he gave voice to Procne's hopes.—
- his own desire made him wax eloquent,
- as often as his words exceeded bounds,
- he pleaded he was uttering Procne's words.
- His hypocritic eyes were filled with tears,
- as though they represented her desire—
- and, O you Gods above, what devious ways
- are harbored in the hearts of mortals! Through
- his villainous desire he gathered praise,
- and many lauded him for the great love
- he bore his wife.
- And even Philomela
- desires her own undoing; and with fond
- embraces nestles to her father, while
- she pleads for his consent, that she may go
- to visit her dear sister.—Tereus viewed
- her pretty pleading, and in his hot heart,
- imagined he was then embracing her;
- and as he saw her kiss her father's lips,
- her arms around his neck, it seemed that each
- caress was his; and so his fire increased.
- He even wished he were her father; though,
- if it were so, his passion would no less
- be impious.—Overcome at last by these
- entreaties, her kind father gave consent.
- Greatly she joyed and thanked him for her own
- misfortune. She imagined a success,
- instead of all the sorrow that would come.
- The day declining, little of his toil
- remained for Phoebus. Now his flaming steeds
- were beating with their hoofs the downward slope
- of high Olympus; and the regal feast
- was set before the guests, and flashing wine
- was poured in golden vessels, and the feast
- went merrily, until the satisfied
- assembly sought in gentle sleep their rest.
- Not so, the love-hot Tereus, king of Thrace,
- who, sleepless, imaged in his doting mind
- the form of Philomela, recalled the shape
- of her fair hands, and in his memory
- reviewed her movements. And his flaming heart
- pictured her beauties yet unseen.—He fed
- his frenzy on itself, and could not sleep.
- Fair broke the day; and now the ancient king,
- Pandion, took his son-in-law's right hand
- to bid farewell; and, as he wept,
- commended his dear daughter, Philomela,
- unto his guarding care. “And in your care,
- my son-in-law, I trust my daughter's health.
- Good reason, grounded on my love, compels
- my sad approval. You have begged for her,
- and both my daughters have persuaded me.
- Wherefore, I do entreat you and implore
- your honor, as I call upon the Gods,
- that you will ever shield her with the love
- of a kind father and return her safe,
- as soon as may be—my last comfort given
- to bless my doting age. And all delay
- will agitate and vex my failing heart.
- “And, O my dearest daughter, Philomela,
- if you have any love for me, return
- without too long delay and comfort me,
- lest I may grieve; for it is quite enough
- that I should suffer while your sister stays away.”
- The old king made them promise, and he kissed
- his daughter, while he wept. Then did he join
- their hands in pledge of their fidelity,
- and, as he gave his blessing, cautioned them
- to kiss his absent daughter and her son
- for his dear sake. Then as he spoke a last
- farewell, his trembling voice was filled with sobs.
- And he could hardly speak;—for a great fear
- from some vague intuition of his mind,
- surged over him, and he was left forlorn.
- So soon as Philomela was safe aboard
- the painted ship and as the sailors urged
- the swiftly gliding keel across the deep
- and the dim land fast-faded from their view,
- then Tereus, in exultant humor, thought,
- “Now all is well, the object of my love
- sails with me while the sailors ply the oars.”,
- He scarcely could control his barbarous
- desire—with difficulty stayed his lust,
- he followed all her actions with hot eyes. —
- So, when the ravenous bird of Jupiter
- has caught with crooked talons the poor hare,
- and dropped it—ruthless,—in his lofty nest,
- where there is no escape, his cruel eyes
- gloat on the victim he anticipates.
- And now, as Tereus reached his journey's end,
- they landed from the travel-wearied ship,
- safe on the shores of his own kingdom. Then
- he hastened with the frightened Philomela
- into most wild and silent solitudes
- of an old forest; where, concealed among
- deep thickets a forbidding old house stood:
- there he immured the pale and trembling maid,
- who, vainly in her fright, began to call
- upon her absent sister,—and her tears
- implored his pity. His obdurate mind
- could not be softened by such piteous cries;
- but even while her agonizing screams
- implored her sister's and her father's aid,
- and while she vainly called upon the Gods,
- he overmastered her with brutal force.—
- The poor child trembled as a frightened lamb,
- which, just delivered from the frothing jaws
- of a gaunt wolf, dreads every moving twig.
- She trembled as a timid injured dove,
- (her feathers dripping with her own life-blood)
- that dreads the ravening talons of a hawk
- from which some fortune has delivered her.
- But presently, as consciousness returned,
- she tore her streaming hair and beat her arms,
- and, stretching forth her hands in frenzied grief,
- cried out, “Oh, barbarous and brutal wretch!
- Unnatural monster of abhorrent deeds!
- Could not my anxious father's parting words,
- nor his foreboding tears restrain your lust?
- Have you no slight regard for your chaste wife,
- my dearest sister, and are you without
- all honor, so to spoil virginity
- now making me invade my sister's claim,
- you have befouled the sacred fount of life,—
- you are a lawless bond of double sin!
- “Oh, this dark punishment was not my due!
- Come, finish with my murder your black deed,
- so nothing wicked may remain undone.
- But oh, if you had only slaughtered me
- before your criminal embrace befouled
- my purity, I should have had a shade
- entirely pure, and free from any stain!
- Oh, if there is a Majesty in Heaven,
- and if my ruin has not wrecked the world,
- then, you shall suffer for this grievous wrong
- and time shall hasten to avenge my wreck.
- “I shall declare your sin before the world,
- and publish my own shame to punish you!
- And if I'm prisoned in the solitudes,
- my voice will wake the echoes in the wood
- and move the conscious rocks. Hear me, O Heaven!
- And let my imprecations rouse the Gods—
- ah-h-h, if there can be a god in Heaven!”
- Her cries aroused the dastard tyrant's wrath,
- and frightened him, lest ever his foul deed
- might shock his kingdom: and, roused at once
- by rage and guilty fear; he seized her hair,
- forced her weak arms against her back, and bound
- them fast with brazen chains, then drew his sword.
- When she first saw his sword above her head.
- Flashing and sharp, she wished only for death,
- and offered her bare throat: but while she screamed,
- and, struggling, called upon her father's name,
- he caught her tongue with pincers, pitiless,
- And cut it with his sword.—The mangled root
- still quivered, but the bleeding tongue itself,
- fell murmuring on the blood-stained floor. As the tail
- of a slain snake still writhes upon the ground,
- so did the throbbing tongue; and, while it died,
- moved up to her, as if to seek her feet.—
- And, it is said that after this foul crime,
- the monster violated her again.
- And after these vile deeds, that wicked king
- returned to Procne, who, when she first met
- her brutal husband, anxiously inquired
- for tidings of her sister; but with sighs
- and tears, he told a false tale of her death,
- and with such woe that all believed it true.
- Then Procne, full of lamentation, took
- her royal robe, bordered with purest gold,
- and putting it away, assumed instead
- garments of sable mourning; and she built
- a noble sepulchre, and offered there
- her pious gifts to an imagined shade;—
- lamenting the sad death of her who lived.
- A year had passed by since that awful date—
- the sun had coursed the Zodiac's twelve signs.
- But what could Philomela hope or do?
- For like a jail the strong walls of the house
- were built of massive stone, and guards around
- prevented flight; and mutilated, she
- could not communicate with anyone
- to tell her injuries and tragic woe.
- But even in despair and utmost grief,
- there is an ingenuity which gives
- inventive genius to protect from harm:
- and now, the grief-distracted Philomela
- wove in a warp with purple marks and white,
- a story of the crime; and when 'twas done
- she gave it to her one attendant there
- and begged her by appropriate signs to take
- it secretly to Procne. She took the web,
- she carried it to Procne, with no thought
- of words or messages by art conveyed.
- The wife of that inhuman tyrant took
- the cloth, and after she unwrapped it saw
- and understood the mournful record sent.
- She pondered it in silence and her tongue
- could find no words to utter her despair;—
- her grief and frenzy were too great for tears.—
- In a mad rage her rapid mind counfounded
- the right and wrong—intent upon revenge.
- Since it was now the time of festival,
- when all the Thracian matrons celebrate
- the rites of Bacchus—every third year thus—
- night then was in their secret; and at night
- the slopes of Rhodope resounded loud
- with clashing of shrill cymbals. So, at night
- the frantic queen of Tereus left her home
- and, clothed according to the well known rites
- of Bacchus, hurried to the wilderness.
- Her head was covered with the green vine leaves;
- and from her left side native deer skin hung;
- and on her shoulder rested a light spear.—
- so fashioned, the revengeful Procne rushed
- through the dark woods, attended by a host
- of screaming followers, and wild with rage,
- pretended it was Bacchus urged her forth.
- At last she reached the lonely building, where
- her sister, Philomela, was immured;
- and as she howled and shouted “Ee-woh-ee-e!”,
- She forced the massive doors; and having seized
- her sister, instantly concealed her face
- in ivy leaves, arrayed her in the trappings
- of Bacchanalian rites. When this was done,
- they rushed from there, demented, to the house
- where as the Queen of Tereus, Procne dwelt.
- When Philomela knew she had arrived
- at that accursed house, her countenance,
- though pale with grief, took on a ghastlier hue:
- and, wretched in her misery and fright,
- she shuddered in convulsions.—Procne took
- the symbols, Bacchanalian, from her then,
- and as she held her in a strict embrace
- unveiled her downcast head. But she refused
- to lift her eyes, and fixing her sad gaze
- on vacant space, she raised her hand, instead;
- as if in oath she called upon the Gods
- to witness truly she had done no wrong,
- but suffered a disgrace of violence.—
- Lo, Procne, wild with a consuming rage,
- cut short her sister's terror in these words,
- “This is no time for weeping! awful deeds
- demand a great revenge—take up the sword,
- and any weapon fiercer than its edge!
- My breast is hardened to the worst of crime
- make haste with me! together let us put
- this palace to the torch!
- “Come, let us maim,
- the beastly Tereus with revenging iron,
- cut out his tongue, and quench his cruel eyes,
- and hurl and burn him writhing in the flames!
- Or, shall we pierce him with a grisly blade,
- and let his black soul issue from deep wounds
- a thousand.—Slaughter him with every death
- imagined in the misery of hate!”
- While Procne still was raving out such words,
- Itys, her son, was hastening to his mother;
- and when she saw him, her revengeful eyes
- conceiving a dark punishment, she said,
- “Aha! here comes the image of his father!”
- She gave no other warning, but prepared
- to execute a horrible revenge.
- But when the tender child came up to her,
- and called her “mother”, put his little arms
- around her neck, and when he smiled and kissed
- her often, gracious in his cunning ways,—
- again the instinct of true motherhood
- pulsed in her veins, and moved to pity, she
- began to weep in spite of her resolve.
- Feeling the tender impulse of her love
- unnerving her, she turned her eyes from him
- and looked upon her sister, and from her
- glanced at her darling boy again. And so,
- while she was looking at them both, by turns,
- she said, “Why does the little one prevail
- with pretty words, while Philomela stands
- in silence always, with her tongue torn out?
- She cannot call her sister, whom he calls
- his mother! Oh, you daughter of Pandion,
- consider what a wretch your husband is!
- The wife of such a monster must be flint;
- compassion in her heart is but a crime.”
- No more she hesitated, but as swift
- as the fierce tigress of the Ganges leaps,
- seizes the suckling offspring of the hind,
- and drags it through the forest to its lair;
- so, Procne seized and dragged the frightened boy
- to a most lonely section of the house;
- and there she put him to the cruel sword,
- while he, aware of his sad fate, stretched forth
- his little hands, and cried, “Ah, mother,—ah!—”
- And clung to her—clung to her, while she struck—
- her fixed eyes, maddened, glaring horribly—
- struck wildly, lopping off his tender limbs.
- But Philomela cut through his tender throat.
- Then they together, mangled his remains,
- still quivering with the remnant of his life,
- and boiled a part of him in steaming pots,
- that bubbled over with the dead child's blood,
- and roasted other parts on hissing spits.
- And, after all was ready, Procne bade
- her husband, Tereus, to the loathsome feast,
- and with a false pretense of sacred rites,
- according to the custom of her land,
- by which, but one man may partake of it,
- she sent the servants from the banquet hall.—
- Tereus, majestic on his ancient throne
- high in imagined state, devoured his son,
- and gorged himself with flesh of his own flesh—
- and in his rage of gluttony called out
- for Itys to attend and share the feast!
- Curst with a joy she could conceal no more,
- and eager to gloat over his distress,
- Procne cried out,
- “Inside yourself, you have
- the thing that you are asking for!” — Amazed,
- he looked around and called his son again:—
- that instant, Philomela sprang forth—her hair
- disordered, and all stained with blood of murder,
- unable then to speak, she hurled the head
- of Itys in his father's fear-struck face,
- and more than ever longed for fitting words.
- The Thracian Tereus overturned the table,
- and howling, called up from the Stygian pit,
- the viperous sisters. Tearing at his breast,
- in miserable efforts to disgorge
- the half-digested gobbets of his son,
- he called himself his own child's sepulchre,
- and wept the hot tears of a frenzied man.
- Then with his sword he rushed at the two sisters.
- Fleeing from him, they seemed to rise on wings,
- and it was true, for they had changed to birds.
- Then Philomela, flitting to the woods,
- found refuge in the leaves: but Procne flew
- straight to the sheltering gables of a roof—
- and always, if you look, you can observe
- the brand of murder on the swallow's breast—
- red feathers from that day. And Tereus, swift
- in his great agitation, and his will
- to wreak a fierce revenge, himself is turned
- into a crested bird. His long, sharp beak
- is given him instead of a long sword,
- and so, because his beak is long and sharp,
- he rightly bears the name of Hoopoe.
- Before the number of his years was told,
- Pandion with the shades of Tartarus,
- because of this, has wandered in sad dooms.
- Erectheus, next in line, with mighty sway
- and justice, ruled all Athens on the throne
- left vacant by the good Pandion's death.
- Four daughters and four sons were granted him;
- and of his daughters, two were beautiful,
- and one of these was wed to Cephalus,
- grandson of Aeolus. — But mighty Boreas
- desired the hand of Orithyia, fair
- and lovable.—King Tereus and the Thracians
- were then such obstacles to Boreas
- the god was long kept from his dear beloved.
- Although the great king (who compels the cold
- north-wind) had sought with prayers to win her hand,
- and urged his love in gentleness, not force.
- When quite aware his wishes were disdained,
- he roughly said, with customary rage
- and violence: “Away with sentimental talk!
- My prayers and kind intentions are despised,
- but I should blame nobody but myself;
- then why should I, despising my great strength,
- debase myself to weakness and soft prayers?—
- might is my right, and violence my strength!—
- by force I drive the force of gloomy clouds.
- “Tremendous actions are the wine of life!—
- monarch of Violence, rolling on clouds,
- I toss wide waters, and I fell huge trees—
- knotted old oaks—and whirled upon ice-wings,
- I scatter the light snow, and pelt the Earth
- with sleet and hail! I rush through boundless voids.
- My thunders rumble in the hollow clouds—
- and crash upon my brothers—fire to fire!
- “Possessed of daemon-rage, I penetrate,
- sheer to the utmost caverns of old Earth;
- and straining, up from those unfathomed deeps,
- scatter the terror-stricken shades of hell;
- and hurl death-dealing earthquakes through the world!
- “Such are the fateful powers I should use,
- and never trust entreaties to prevail,
- or win my bride—Force is the law of life!”
- And now impetuous Boreas, having howled
- resounding words, unrolled his rustling wings—
- that fan the earth and ruffle the wide sea—
- and, swiftly wrapping untrod mountain peaks
- in whirling mantles of far-woven dust,
- thence downward hovered to the darkened world;
- and, canopied in artificial night
- of swarthy overshadowing wings, caught up
- the trembling Orithyia to his breast:
- nor did he hesitate in airy course
- until his huge wings fanned the chilling winds
- around Ciconian Walls.
- There, she was pledged
- the wife of that cold, northern king of storms;
- and unto him she gave those hero twins,
- endowed with wings of their immortal sire,
- and graceful in their mother's form and face.
- Their bird-like wings were not fledged at their birth
- and those twin boys, Zetes and Calais,
- at first were void of feathers and soft down.
- But when their golden hair and beards were grown,
- wings like an eagle's came;—and feather-down
- grew golden on their cheeks: and when from youth
- they entered manhood, quick they were to join
- the Argonauts, who for the Golden Fleece,
- sought in that first ship, ventured on the sea.
- Over the storm-tossed waves, the Argonauts
- had sailed in Argo, their long ship to where
- King Phineus, needy in his old age, reigned—
- deprived of sight and feeble. When the sons
- of Boreas had landed on the shore,
- and seen the Harpies snatching from the king
- his nourishment, befouling it with beaks
- obscene, they drove those human-vultures thence.
- And having suffered hardships and great toils,
- after the day they rescued the sad king
- from the vile Harpies, those twin valiant youths,
- Zetes and Calais came with their chief,
- the mighty Jason, where the Phasis flows.
- From the green margin of that river, all
- the crew of Argonauts, by Jason led,
- went to the king Aeetes and required
- the Golden Fleece, that he received from Phryxus.
- When they had bargained with him, full of wiles
- he offered to restore the Golden Fleece
- only to those who might to him return,
- victorious from hard labors of great risk.
- Medea, the king's daughter, near his throne,
- saw Jason, leader of the Argonauts,
- as he was pressing to secure a prize—
- and loved at sight with a consuming flame.
- Although she struggled to suppress her love,
- unable to restrain herself, she said,
- “In vain I've striven to subdue my heart:
- some god it must be, which I cannot tell,
- is working to destroy my hapless life;
- or else it is the burning flame of love
- that in me rages. If it is not love,
- why do the mandates of my father seem
- too harsh? They surely are too harsh. Why do
- I fear that he may perish whom I have
- seen only once? What is the secret cause
- that I am agitated by such fears?—
- It is no other than the god of Love.
- “Thrust from your virgin breast such burning flames
- and overcome their hot unhappiness—
- if I could do so, I should be myself:
- but some deluding power is holding me
- helpless against my will. Desire persuades
- me one way, but my reason still persuades
- another way. I see a better course
- and I approve, but follow its defeat. —
- “O royal maiden, why are you consumed
- with love for this strange man, and why are you
- so willing to be carried by the nuptial ties
- so far from your own country, where, indeed,
- are many brave men worthy of your love?
- “Whether for life or death his numbered hours
- are in the mercy of the living Gods,
- and that he may not suffer risk of death,
- too well foreseen, now let my prayers prevail—
- righteously uttered of a generous heart
- without the stress of love. What wicked thing
- has Jason done? His handsome person, youth,
- and noble ways, would move a heart of stone.
- “Have I a heart of flint, or was I born
- a tigress to deny him timely aid?—
- Unless I interpose, he will be slain
- by the hot breath of brazen-footed bulls,
- or will be slaughtered by the warriors, sprung
- miraculous from earth, or will be given
- to satisfy the ravenous appetite
- of a huge dragon.
- “Let my gloating eyes
- be satiate with his dying agonies!
- Let me incite the fury of these bulls!
- Stir to their blood-lust mad-born sons of Earth!
- Rouse up the never-sleeping dragon's rage!—
- “Avert it Gods!—
- “But why should I cry out
- upon the Gods to save him from such wrong,
- when, by my actions and my power, myself
- may shield him from all evils?
- “Such a course
- would wreck the kingdom of my father—and by me
- the wily stranger would escape from him;
- and spreading to the wind his ready sails
- he would forget and leave me to my fate.—
- Oh, if he should forget my sacrifice,
- and so prefer those who neglected him,
- let him then perish in his treachery.—
- “But these are idle thoughts: his countenance,
- reveals innate nobility and grace,
- that should dispel all fear of treachery,
- and guarantee his ever-faithful heart.
- The Gods will witness our united souls,
- and he shall pledge his faith. Secure of it
- my fear will be removed. Be ready, then—
- and make a virtue of necessity:
- your Jason owes himself to you; and he
- must join you in true wedlock. Then you shall
- be celebrated through the land of Greece,
- by throngs of women, for the man you saved.
- “Shall I then sail away, and so forsake
- my sister, brother, father, Gods, and land
- that gave me birth? My father is indeed
- a stern man, and my native land is all
- too barbarous; my brother is a child,—
- my sister's goodwill is good help for me;
- and heaven's supreme god is within my breast.
- “I shall not so be leaving valued hopes,
- but will be going surely to great things.
- And I should gain applause from all the world,
- as having saved the threatened Argonauts,
- most noble of the Greeks; and in their land,
- which certainly is better than my own,
- become the bride of Jason, for whose love
- I should not hesitate to give the world—
- and in whose love the living Gods rejoice
- so greatly; for his sake they would bestow
- their favors on my head, and make the stars
- my habitation.
- “Should I hesitate
- because the wreck-strewn mountains bar the way,
- and clash together in the Euxine waves;
- or fear Charybdis, fatal to large ships,
- that sucks the deep sea in its whirling gulf
- and spouts far upward, with alternate force,
- or Scylla, circled with infuriate hounds
- howling in rage from deep Sicilian waves?
- “Safe in the shielding arms of him I love,
- on Jason's bosom leaning, I shall be
- borne safely over wide and hostile seas;
- and in his dear embrace forget my fears—
- or if for anything I suffer dread,
- it will be only for the one I love.—
- “Alas, Medea, this vain argument
- has only furnished plausible excuse
- for criminal desires, and desecrates
- the marriage rite. It is a wicked thing
- to think upon. Before it is too late
- forget your passion and deny this guilt.”
- And after she had said these words, her eyes
- were opened to the prize of modesty,
- chaste virtue, and a pure affection:
- and Cupid, vanquished, turned away and fled.
- Then, to an ancient altar of the goddess named
- Hecate, Perse's daughter took her way
- in the deep shadows of a forest. She
- was strong of purpose now, and all the flames
- of vanquished passion had died down; but when
- she saw the son of Aeson, dying flames
- leaped up again. Her cheeks grew red, then all
- her face went pale again; as a small spark
- when hid beneath the ashes, if fed by
- a breath of wind grows and regains its strength,
- as it is fanned to life; so now her love
- that had been smoldering, and which you would
- have thought was almost dead, when she had see
- again his manly youth, blazed up once more.
- For on that day his graceful person seemed
- as glorious as a God;—and as she gazed,
- and fixed her eyes upon his countenance,
- her frenzy so prevailed, she was convinced
- that he was not a mortal. And her eyes
- were fascinated; and she could not turn
- away from him. But when he spoke to her,
- and promised marriage, grasping her right hand:
- she answered, as her eyes suffused with tears;
- “I see what I will do, and ignorance
- of truth will not be my undoing now,
- but love itself. By my assistance you
- shall be preserved; but when preserved fulfill
- your promise.”
- He swore that she could trust in him.
- Then by the goddess of the triple form,
- Diana, Trivia, or Luna called,
- and by her sacred groves and fanes, he vowed,
- and by the hallowed Sun that sees all things,
- and by his own adventures, and his life,—
- on these the youthful Jason took his oath.—
- With this she was assured and quickly gave
- to him the magic herbs: he learnt their use
- and full of joy withdrew into his house.
- Now when the dawn had dimmed the glittering stars,
- the people hastened to the sacred field
- of Mars, and on the hills expectant stood.—
- Arrayed in purple, and in majesty
- distinguished by his ivory sceptre, sat
- the king, surrounded by a multitude.
- Below them on the visioned Field of Mars,
- huge brazen-footed bulls were breathing forth
- from adamantine nostrils living flames,
- blasting the verdant herbage in their path!
- As forges glowing with hot flames resound,
- or as much quick-lime, burnt in earthen kilns,
- crackles and hisses as if mad with rage,
- sprinkled with water, liberating heat;
- so their hot throats and triple-heated sides,
- resounding told of pent-up fires within.
- The son of Aeson went to meet them. As
- he came to meet them the fierce animals
- turned on him faces terrible, and sharp
- horns tipped with iron, and they pawed
- the dusty earth with cloven feet, and filled
- the place with fiery bellowings. The Minyans
- were stark with fear; he went up to the bulls
- not feeling their hot breath at all, so great
- the power of his charmed drugs; and while he
- was stroking their down-hanging dewlaps with
- a fearless hand, he placed the yoke down on
- their necks and made them draw the heavy plow,
- and cut through fields that never felt the steel
- before. The Colchians were amazed and silent;
- but the loud shouting of the Minyans
- increased their hero's courage. Taking then
- the serpent's teeth out of a brazen helmet
- he sowed them broadcast in the new-plowed field.
- The moist earth softened these seeds that were steeped
- in virulent poison and the teeth swelled up
- and took new forms. And just as in its mother
- an infant gradually assumes the form
- of man, and is perfected through all parts
- within, and does not come forth to the light
- till fully formed; so, when the forms of men
- had been completed in the womb of earth
- made pregnant, they rose up from it,
- and what is yet more wonderful, each one
- clashed weapons that had been brought forth with him.
- When his companions saw the warriors turn
- as if with one accord, to hurl their spears,
- sharp-pointed, at the head of Jason, fear
- unnerved the boldest and their courage failed.
- So, too, the maid whose sorcery had saved
- him from much danger, when she saw the youth
- encompassed by those raging enemies,
- and he alone against so many—struck
- with sudden panic, she turned ashen white,
- her bloodless cheeks were blanched; and chilled with fear
- she wilted to the ground; and lest the herbs,
- so lately given him, might fail his need
- she added incantations and invoked
- mysterious arts. While she protected him
- He seized upon a heavy stone, and hurled
- it in the midst of his new enemies—
- distracted by this cast, and murderous,
- they turned from him, and clashing their new arms,
- those earth-born brothers fought among themselves
- till all were slaughtered in blood-thirsty strife.
- Gladly the Greeks acclaimed him conqueror,
- and pressed around him for the first embrace.
- Then, too, Medea, barbarous Colchian maid,
- although her modesty restrained her heart,
- eagerly longed to fold him in her arms,
- but careful of her good name, held aloof,—
- rejoicing in deep, silent love; and she
- acknowledged to the Gods her mighty gift
- of incantations.
- But the dragon, still
- alert,—magnificent and terrible
- with gorgeous crest and triple tongue, and fangs
- barbed as a javelin, guards the Golden Fleece:
- and Jason can obtain that quest only
- if slumber may seal up the monster's eyes.—
- Jason, successful, sprinkled on his crest
- Lethean juices of a magic herb,
- and then recited thrice the words which bring
- deep slumber, potent words which would becalm
- the storm-tossed ocean, and would stop the flow
- of the most rapid rivers of our earth:
- and slowly slumber sealed the dragon's eyes.
- While that great monster slept, the hero took
- the Golden Fleece; and proudly sailed away
- bearing his treasure and the willing maid,
- (whose aid had saved him) to his native port
- Iolcus—victorious with the Argonauts.
- Now when the valiant Argonauts returned
- to Thessaly, their happy relatives,
- fathers and mothers, praised the living Gods;
- and with their hallowed gifts enhanced the flames
- with precious incense; and they offered Jove
- a sacred bullock, rich with gilded horns.
- But Jason's father, Aeson, came not down
- rejoicing to behold his son, for now
- worn out with many years, he waited death.
- And Jason to Medea grieving said:
- “Dearest, to whom my life and love are due,
- although your kindness has been great to me,
- and you have granted more than I should ask,
- yet one thing more I beg of you; if your
- enchantments can accomplish my desire,
- take from my life some years that I should live
- and add them to my father's ending days.”—
- And as he spoke he could not check his tears.
- Medea, moved by his affection, thought
- how much less she had grieved for her loved sire:
- and she replied:—“A wicked thing you ask!
- Can I be capable of using you
- in such a manner as to take your life
- and give it to another? Ask not me
- a thing so dreadful! May the Gods forbid!—
- I will endeavor to perform for you
- a task much greater. By the powers of Night
- I will most certainly return to him
- the lost years of your father, but must not
- deprive you of your own. — Oh grant the power,
- great goddess of the triple form, that I
- may fail not to accomplish this great deed!”
- Three nights were wanting for the moon to join
- her circling horns and form a perfect orb.
- When these were passed, the rounded light shone full
- and bright upon the earth.—Through the still night
- alone, Medea stole forth from the house
- with feet bare, and in flowing garment clothed—
- her long hair unadorned and not confined.
- Deep slumber has relaxed the world, and all
- that's living, animals and birds and men,
- and even the hedges and the breathing leaves
- are still—and motionless the laden air.
- Only the stars are twinkling, and to them
- she looks and beckons with imploring hands.
- Now thrice around she paces, and three times
- besprinkles her long hair with water dipt
- from crystal streams, which having done
- she kneels a moment on the cold, bare ground,
- and screaming three times calls upon the Night,—
- “O faithful Night, regard my mysteries!
- O golden-lighted Stars! O softly-moving Moon—
- genial, your fire succeeds the heated day!
- O Hecate! grave three-faced queen of these
- charms of enchanters and enchanters, arts!
- O fruitful Earth, giver of potent herbs!
- O gentle Breezes and destructive Winds!
- You Mountains, Rivers, Lakes and sacred Groves,
- and every dreaded god of silent Night!
- Attend upon me!—
- “When my power commands,
- the rivers turn from their accustomed ways
- and roll far backward to their secret springs!
- I speak—and the wild, troubled sea is calm,
- and I command the waters to arise!
- The clouds I scatter—and I bring the clouds;
- I smooth the winds and ruffle up their rage;
- I weave my spells and I recite my charms;
- I pluck the fangs of serpents, and I move
- the living rocks and twist the rooted oaks;
- I blast the forests. Mountains at my word
- tremble and quake; and from her granite tombs
- the liberated ghosts arise as Earth
- astonished groans! From your appointed ways,
- O wonder-working Moon, I draw you down
- against the magic-making sound of gongs
- and brazen vessels of Temesa's ore;
- I cast my spells and veil the jeweled rays
- of Phoebus' wain, and quench Aurora's fires.
- “At my command you tamed the flaming bulls
- which long disdained to bend beneath the yoke,
- until they pressed their necks against the plows;
- and, subject to my will, you raised up war
- till the strong company of dragon-birth
- were slaughtered as they fought amongst themselves;
- and, last, you lulled asleep the warden's eyes—
- guards of the Golden Fleece—till then awake
- and sleeping never—so, deceiving him,
- you sent the treasure to the Grecian cities!
- “Witness my need of super-natured herbs,
- elixirs potent to renew the years of age,
- giving the bloom of youth.—You shall not fail
- to grant me this; for not in vain the stars
- are flashing confirmation; not in vain
- the flying dragons, harnessed by their necks,
- from skies descending bring my chariot down.”
- A chariot, sent from heaven, came to her—
- and soon as she had stroked the dragons' necks,
- and shaken in her hands the guiding reins—
- as soon as she had mounted, she was borne
- quickly above, through unresisting air.
- And, sailing over Thessaly, she saw
- the vale of Tempe, where the level soil
- is widely covered with a crumbling chalk—
- she turned her dragons towards new regions there:
- and she observed the herbs by Ossa born,
- the weeds on lofty Pelion, Othrys, Pindus
- and vast Olympus—and from here she plucked
- the needed roots, or there, the blossoms clipped
- all with a moon-curved sickle made of brass—
- many the wild weeds by Apidanus,
- as well as blue Amphrysus' banks, she chose,
- and not escaped Enipeus from her search;
- Peneian stretches and Spercheian banks
- all yielded what she chose:—and Boebe's shore
- where sway the rushes; and she plucked up grass,
- a secret grass, from fair Euboean fields
- life-giving virtues in their waving blades,
- as yet unknown for transformation wrought
- on Glaucus.
- All those fields she visited,
- with ceaseless diligence in quest of charms,
- nine days and nine nights sought strong herbs,
- and the swift dragons with their active wings,
- failed not to guide the chariot where she willed—
- until they reached her home. The dragons then
- had not been even touched by anything,
- except the odor of surrounding herbs,
- and yet they sloughed their skins, the growth of years.
- She would not cross the threshold of her home
- nor pass its gates; but, standing in the field,
- alone beneath the canopy of Heaven,
- she shunned all contact with her husband, while
- she built up from the ever-living turf
- two altars, one of which upon the right
- to Hecate was given, but the one
- upon the left was sacred then to you,
- O Hebe, goddess of eternal youth!
- Festooning woodland boughs and sweet vervain
- adorned these altars, near by which she dug
- as many trenches. Then, when all was done,
- she slaughtered a black ram, and sprinkled with blood
- the thirsty trenches; after which she poured
- from rich carchesian goblets generous wine
- and warm milk, grateful to propitious Gods—
- the Deities of earth on whom she called—
- entreating, as she did so, Pluto, lord
- of ghostly shades, and ravished Proserpine,
- that they should not, in undue haste,
- deprive her patient's aged limbs of life.
- When certain she compelled the God's regard,
- assured her incantations and long prayers
- were both approved and heard, she bade her people
- bring out the body of her father-in-law—
- old Aeson's worn out body—and when she
- had buried him in a deep slumber by
- her spells, as if he were a dead man, she
- then stretched him out upon a bed of herbs.
- She ordered Jason and his servants thence,
- and warned them not to spy upon her rites,
- with eyes profane. As soon as they retired,
- Medea, with disheveled hair and wild
- abandon, as a Bacchanalian, paced
- times three around the blazing altars, while
- she dipped her torches, splintered at the top,
- into the trenches, dark: with blood, and lit
- the dipt ends in the sacred altar flames.
- Times three she purified the ancient man
- with flames, and thrice with water, and three times
- with sulphur,—as the boiling mixture seethed
- and bubbled in the brazen cauldron near.
- And into this, acerbic juices, roots,
- and flowers and seeds—from vales Hemonian—
- and mixed elixirs, into which she cast
- stones of strange virtue from the Orient,
- and sifted sands of ebbing ocean's tide;
- white hoar-frost, gathered when the moon was full,
- the nauseating flesh and luckless wings
- of the uncanny screech-owl, and the entrails
- from a mysterious animal that changed
- from wolf to man, from man to wolf again;
- the scaly sloughing of a water-snake,
- the medic liver of a long-lived stag,
- and the hard beak and head of an old crow
- which was alive nine centuries before;
- these, and a thousand nameless things
- the foreign sorceress prepared and mixed,
- and blended all together with a branch
- of peaceful olive, old and dry with years. —
- And while she stirred the withered olive branch
- in the hot mixture, it began to change
- from brown to green; and presently put forth
- new leaves, and soon was heavy with a wealth
- of luscious olives.—As the ever-rising fire
- threw bubbling froth beyond the cauldron's rim,
- the ground was covered with fresh verdure — flowers
- and all luxuriant grasses, and green plants.
- Medea, when she saw this wonder took
- her unsheathed knife and cut the old man's throat;
- then, letting all his old blood out of him
- she filled his ancient veins with rich elixir.
- As he received it through his lips or wound,
- his beard and hair no longer white with age,
- turned quickly to their natural vigor, dark
- and lustrous; and his wasted form renewed,
- appeared in all the vigor of bright youth,
- no longer lean and sallow, for new blood
- coursed in his well-filled veins.—Astonished, when
- released from his deep sleep, and strong in youth,
- his memory assured him, such he was
- years four times ten before that day!—
- Bacchus, from his celestial vantage saw
- this marvel, and convinced his nurses might
- then all regain their former vigor, he
- pled with Medea to restore their youth.
- The Colchian woman granted his request.
- but so her malice might be satisfied
- Medea feigned she had a quarrel with
- her husband, and for safety she had fled
- to Pelias. There, since the king himself
- was heavy with old age, his daughters gave
- her generous reception. And these girls
- the shrewd Medea in a short time won,
- by her false show of friendliness; and while
- among the most remarkable of her
- achievements she was telling how she had
- rejuvenated Aeson, and she dwelt
- particularly, on that strange event,
- these daughters were induced to hope that by
- some skill like this their father might regain
- his lost youth also. And they begged of her
- this boon, persuading her to name the price;
- no matter if it was large. She did not
- reply at once and seemed to hesitate,
- and so she held their fond minds in a deep
- suspense by her feigned meditation. When
- she had at length declared she would restore
- his youth, she said to them: “That you may have
- strong confidence in this my promised boon,
- the oldest leader of your flock of sheep shall be
- changed to a lamb again by my prized drugs.”
- Straightway a wooly ram, worn out with length
- of untold years was brought, his great horns curved
- around his hollow temples. After she
- had cut his scrawny throat with her sharp knife
- Thessalian, barely staining it with his
- thin blood, Medea plunged his carcass in
- a bronze-made kettle, throwing in it at
- the same time juices of great potency.
- These made his body shrink and burnt away
- his two horns, and with horns his years. And now
- thin bleating was heard from within the pot;
- and even while they wondered at the sound,
- a lamb jumped out and frisking, ran away
- to find some udder with its needed milk.
- Amazed the daughters looked on and, now that
- these promises had been performed, they urged
- more eagerly their first request. Three times
- Phoebus unyoked his steeds after their plunge
- in Ebro's stream, and on the fourth night stars
- shown brilliant on the dark foil of the sky,
- and then the treacherous daughter of Aeetes
- set some clear water over a hot fire
- and put in it herbs of no potency.
- And now a death-like sleep held the king down,
- his body all relaxed, and with the king
- his guards, a sleep which incantations with
- the potency of magic words had given.
- The sad king's daughters, as they had been bid,
- were in his room, and with Medea stood
- around his bed. “Why do you hesitate,”
- Medea said. “You laggards, come and draw
- your swords; let out his old blood that
- I may refill his empty veins again
- with young blood. In your hands your father's life
- and youth are resting. You, his daughters, must
- have love for him, and if the hopes you have
- are not all vain, come, do your duty by
- your father; drive out old age at the point
- of your good weapons; and let out his blood
- enfeebled—cure him with the stroke of iron.”
- Spurred on by these words, as each one of them
- was filial she became the leader in
- the most unfilial act, and that she might
- not be most wicked did the wicked deed.
- Not one could bear to see her own blows, so
- they turned their eyes away; and every face
- averted so, they blindly struck him with
- their cruel hands. The old man streaming with
- his blood, still raised himself on elbow, and
- half mangled tried to get up from his bed;
- with all those swords around him, he stretched out
- his pale arms and he cried: “What will you do,
- my daughters? What has armed you to the death
- of your loved father?” Their wrong courage left
- them, and their hands fell. When he would have said
- still more, Medea cut his throat and plunged
- his mangled body into boiling water.
- Only because her winged dragons sailed
- swiftly with her up to the lofty sky,
- escaped Medea punishment for this
- unheard of crime.
- Her chariot sailed above
- embowered Pelion — long the lofty home
- of Chiron—over Othrys, and the vale
- made famous where Cerambus met his fate.
- Cerambus, by the aid of nymphs, from there
- was wafted through the air on wings, when earth
- was covered by the overwhelming sea—
- and so escaped Deucalion's flood, uncrowned.
- She passed by Pittane upon the left,
- with its huge serpent-image of hard stone,
- and also passed the grove called Ida's, where
- the stolen bull was changed by Bacchus' power
- into a hunted stag—in that same vale
- Paris lies buried in the sand; and over fields
- where Mera warning harked, Medea flew;
- over the city of Eurypylus
- upon the Isle of Cos, whose women wore
- the horns of cattle when from there had gone
- the herd of Hercules; and over Rhodes
- beloved of Phoebus, where Telchinian tribes
- dwelt, whose bad eyes corrupting power shot forth;—
- Jove, utterly despising, thrust them deep
- beneath his brother's waves; over the walls
- of old Carthaea, where Alcidamas
- had seen with wonder a tame dove arise
- from his own daughter's body.
- And she saw
- the lakes of Hyrie in Teumesia's Vale,
- by swans frequented—There to satisfy
- his love for Cycnus, Phyllius gave
- two living vultures: shell for him subdued
- a lion, and delivered it to him;
- and mastered a great bull, at his command;
- but when the wearied Phyllius refused
- to render to his friend the valued bull.
- Indignant, the youth said, “You shall regret
- your hasty words;” which having said, he leaped
- from a high precipice, as if to death;
- but gliding through the air, on snow-white wings,
- was changed into a swan—Dissolved in tears,
- his mother Hyrie knew not he was saved;
- and weeping, formed the lake that bears her name.
- And over Pleuron, where on trembling wings
- escaped the mother Combe from her sons,
- Medea flew; and over the far isle
- Calauria, sacred to Latona.—She
- beheld the conscious fields whose lawful king,
- together with his queen were changed to birds.
- Upon her right Cyllene could be seen;
- there Menephon, degraded as a beast,
- outraged his mother. In the distance, she
- beheld Cephisius, who lamented long
- his hapless grandson, by Apollo changed
- into a bloated sea-calf. And she saw
- the house where king Eumelus mourned the death
- of his aspiring son.—Borne on the wings
- of her enchanted dragons, she arrived
- at Corinth, whose inhabitants, 'tis said,
- from many mushrooms, watered by the rain
- sprang into being.
- There she spent some years.
- But after the new wife had been burnt by
- the Colchian witchcraft and two seas
- had seen the king's own palace all aflame,
- then, savagely she drew her sword, and bathed
- it in the blood of her own infant sons;
- by which atrocious act she was revenged;
- and she, a wife and mother, fled the sword
- of her own husband, Jason.
- On the wings
- of her enchanted Titan Dragons borne,
- she made escape, securely, nor delayed
- until she entered the defended walls
- of great Minerva's city, at the hour
- when aged Periphas — transformed by Jove,
- together with his queen, on eagle wings
- flew over its encircling walls: with whom
- the guilty Halcyone, skimming seas
- safely escaped, upon her balanced wings.
- And after these events, Medea went
- to Aegeus, king of Athens, where she found
- protection from her enemies for all
- this evil done. With added wickedness
- Aegeus, after that, united her
- to him in marriage.—
- All unknown to him
- came Theseus to his kingly court.—Before
- the time his valor had established peace
- on all the isthmus, raved by dual seas.
- Medea, seeking his destruction, brewed
- the juice of aconite, infesting shores
- of Scythia, where, 'tis fabled, the plant grew
- on soil infected by Cerberian teeth.
- There is a gloomy entrance to a cave,
- that follows a declivitous descent:
- there Hercules with chains of adamant
- dragged from the dreary edge of Tartarus
- that monster-watch-dog, Cerberus, which, vain
- opposing, turned his eyes aslant from light—
- from dazzling day. Delirious, enraged,
- that monster shook the air with triple howls;
- and, frothing, sprinkled as it raved, the fields,
- once green—with spewing of white poison-foam.
- And this, converted into plants, sucked up
- a deadly venom with the nourishment
- of former soils,—from which productive grew
- upon the rock, thus formed, the noxious plant;
- by rustics, from that cause, named aconite.
- Medea worked on Aegeus to present
- his own son, Theseus, with a deadly cup
- of aconite; prevailing by her art
- so that he deemed his son an enemy.
- Theseus unwittingly received the cup,
- but just before he touched it to his lips,
- his father recognized the sword he wore,
- for, graven on its ivory hilt was wrought
- a known device—the token of his race.
- Astonished, Aegeus struck the poison-cup
- from his devoted son's confiding lips.
- Medea suddenly escaped from death,
- in a dark whirlwind her witch-singing raised.
- Recoiling from such utter wickedness,
- rejoicing that his son escaped from death,
- the grateful father kindled altar-fires,
- and gave rich treasure to the living Gods. —
- He slaughtered scores of oxen, decked with flowers
- and gilded horns. The sun has never shone
- upon a day more famous in that land,
- for all the elders and the common folk
- united in festivities,—with wine
- inspiring wit and song;—“O you,” they sang,
- “Immortal Theseus, victory was yours!
- Did you not slaughter the huge bull of Crete?
- “Yes, you did slay the boar of Cromyon —
- where now the peasant unmolested plows;
- “And Periphetes, wielder of the club,
- was worsted when he struggled with your strength;
- “And fierce Procrustes, matched with you
- beside the rapid river, met his death;
- “And even Cercyon, in Eleusis lost
- his wicked life—inferior to your might;
- “And Sinis, a monstrosity of strength,
- who bent the trunks of trees, and used his might
- “Against the world for everything that's wrong.
- For evil, he would force down to the earth,
- “Pine tops to shoot men's bodies through the air.
- Even the road to Megara is safe,
- “For you did hurl the robber Scyron,—sheer—
- over the cliff. Both land and sea denied
- “His bones a resting place—as tossed about
- they changed into the cliffs that bear his name.
- “How can we tell the number of your deeds,—
- deeds glorious, that now exceed your years!
- “For you, brave hero, we give public thanks
- and prayers; to you we drain our cups of wine!”
- And all the palace rings with happy songs,
- and with the grateful prayers of all the people.
- And sorrow in that city is not known.—