Metamorphoses
Ovid
Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.
- But pleasure always is alloyed with grief,
- and sorrow mingles in the joyous hour.
- While the king Aegeus and his son rejoiced,
- Minos prepared for war. He was invincible
- in men and ships—and stronger in his rage
- to wreak due vengeance on the king who slew
- his son Androgeus. But first he sought
- some friends to aid his warfare; and he scoured
- the sea with a swift fleet—which was his strength.
- Anaphe and Astypalaea, both
- agreed to join his cause—the first one moved
- by promises, the second by his threats.
- Level Myconus and the chalky fields
- of Cimolus agreed to aid, and Syros
- covered with wild thyme, level Seriphos,
- Paros of marble cliffs, and that place which
- Arne the impious Siphnian had betrayed,
- who having got the gold which in her greed
- she had demanded, was changed to a bird
- which ever since that day imagines gold
- its chief delight—a black-foot black-winged daw.
- But Oliarus, Didymae, and Tenos,
- Gyaros, Andros, and Peparethos
- rich in its glossy olives, gave no aid
- to the strong Cretan fleet. Sailing from them
- Minos went to Oenopia, known realm
- of the Aeacidae.—Men of old time
- had called the place Oenopia; but Aeacus
- styled it Aegina from his mother's name.
- At his approach an eager rabble rushed
- resolved to see and know so great a man.
- Telamon met him, and his brother,
- younger than Telamon, and Phocus who
- was third in age. Even Aeacus appeared,
- slow with the weight of years, and asked him what
- could be a reason for his coming there.
- The ruler of a hundred cities, sighed,
- as he beheld the sons of Aeacus,
- for they reminded him of his lost son;—
- and heavy with his sorrow, he replied:
- “I come imploring you to take up arms,
- and aid me in the war against my foes;
- for I must give that comfort to the shade
- of my misfortuned son—whose blood they shed.”
- But Aeacus replied to Minos, “Nay,
- it is a vain request you make, for we
- are bound in strict alliance to the land
- and people of Cecropia.”
- Full of rage,
- because he was denied, the king of Crete,
- Minos, as he departed from their shores
- replied, “Let such a treaty be your bane.”
- And he departed with his crafty threat,
- believing it expedient not to waste
- his power in wars until the proper time.
- Before the ships of Crete had disappeared,
- before the mist and blue of waves concealed
- their fading outlines from the anxious throng
- which gathered on Oenopian shores, a ship
- of Athens covered with wide sails appeared,
- and anchored safely by their friendly shore;
- and, presently, the mighty Cephalus,
- well known through all that nation for his deeds,
- addressed them as he landed, and declared
- the good will of his people. Him the sons
- of Aeacus remembered well, although
- they had not seen him for some untold years.
- They led him to their father's welcome home;
- and with him, also, his two comrades went,
- Clytus and Butes.
- Center of all eyes,
- the hero still retained his charm,
- the customary greetings were exchanged,
- the graceful hero, bearing in his hands
- a branch of olive from his native soil,
- delivered the Athenian message, which
- requested aid and offered for their thought
- the treaty and the ancestral league between
- their nations. And he added, Minos sought
- not only conquest of the Athenian state
- but sovereignty of all the states of Greece.
- And when this eloquence had shown his cause;
- with left hand on his gleaming sceptre's hilt,
- King Aeacus exclaimed: “Ask not our aid,
- but take it, Athens; and count boldly yours
- all of the force this island holds, and all
- things which the state of my affairs supplies.
- My strength for this war is not light, and I
- have many soldiers for myself and for
- my enemy. Thanks to the Gods! the times
- are happy, giving no excuse for my
- refusal.” “May it prove so,” Cephalus
- replied, “and may your city multiply
- in men: just now as I was landing, I
- rejoiced to meet youths, fair and matched in age.
- And yet I miss among them many whom
- I saw before when last I visited
- your city.” Aeacus then groaned and with
- sad voice replied: “With weeping we began,
- but better fortune followed. Would that I
- could tell the last of it, and not the first!
- Giving my heart command that simple words
- and briefly spoken may not long detain.
- Those happy youths who waited at your need,
- who smiled upon you and for whom you ask,
- because their absence grieves your noble mind,
- they've perished! and their bleaching bones
- or scattered ashes, only may remain,
- sad remnants, impotent, of vanished power,
- so recently my hope and my resource.
- “Because this island bears a rival's name,
- a deadly pestilence was visited
- on my confiding people, through the rage
- of jealous Juno flaming for revenge.
- This great calamity at first appeared
- a natural disease—but soon its power
- baffled our utmost efforts. Medicines
- availing not, a reign of terror swept
- from shore to shore and fearful havoc raged.
- “Thick darkness, gathered from descending skies,
- enveloped our devoted land with heat
- and languid sickness, for the space of full
- four moons.—Four times the Moon increased her size.
- Hot south winds blew with pestilential breath
- upon us. At the same time the diseased
- infection reached our needed springs and pools,
- thousands of serpents crawling over our
- deserted fields, defiled our rivers with
- their poison. The swift power of the disease
- at first was limited to death of dogs
- and birds and cattle, or among wild beasts.
- The luckless plowman marvels when he sees
- his strong bulls fall while at their task
- and sink down in the furrow. Woolly flocks
- bleat feebly while their wool falls off without
- a cause, and while their bodies pine away.
- The prized horse of high courage, and of great
- renown when on the race-course, has now lost
- victorious spirit, and forgetting his
- remembered glory groans in his shut stall,
- doomed for inglorious death. The boar forgets
- to rage, the stag to trust his speed; and even
- the famished bear to fight the stronger herd.
- “Death seizes on the vitals of all life;
- and in the woods, and in the fields and roads
- the loathsome bodies of the dead corrupt
- the heavy-hanging air. Even the dogs,
- the vultures and the wolves refuse to touch
- the putrid flesh, there in the sultry sun
- rotting upon the earth; emitting steams,
- and exhalations, with a baneful sweep
- increasing the dread contagion's wide extent.
- So spreading, with renewed destruction gained
- from its own poison, the fierce pestilence
- appeared to leap from moulding carcases
- of all the brute creation, till it struck
- the wretched tillers of the soil, and then
- extended its dominion over all
- this mighty city.
- “Always it began
- as if the patient's bowels were scorched with flames;
- red blotches on the body next appeared,
- and sharp pains in the lungs prevented breath.
- The swollen tongue would presently loll out,
- rough and discolored from the gaping mouth,
- wide-gasping to inhale the noxious air—
- and show red throbbing veins. The softest bed.
- And richest covering gave to none relief;
- but rather, the diseased would bare himself
- to cool his burning breast upon the ground,
- only to heat the earth—and no relief
- returned. And no physician could be found;
- for those who ministered among the sick
- were first to suffer from the dread disease—
- the cruel malady broke out upon
- the very ones who offered remedies.
- The hallowed art of medicine became
- a deadly snare to those who knew it best.
- “The only safety was in flight; and those
- who were the nearest to the stricken ones,
- and who most faithfully observed their wants,
- were always first to suffer as their wards.
- “And many, certain of approaching death,
- indulged their wicked passions—recklessly
- abandoned and without the sense of shame,
- promiscuously huddled by the wells,
- and rivers and cool fountains; but their thirst
- no water could assuage, and death alone
- was able to extinguish their desire.
- Too weak to rise, they die in water they
- pollute, while others drink its death.
- “A madness seizing on them made their beds
- become most irksome to their tortured nerves.
- Demented they could not endure the pain,
- and leaped insanely forth. Or if too weak,
- the wretches rolled their bodies on the ground,
- insistent to escape from hated homes—
- imagined sources of calamity;
- for, since the cause was hidden and unknown,
- the horrible locality was blamed.
- Suspicion seizes on each frail presence
- as proof of what can never be resolved.
- “And many half-dead wretches staggered out
- on sultry roads as long as they could stand;
- and others weeping, stretched out on the ground,
- died in convulsions, as their rolling eyes
- gazed upwards at the overhanging clouds;
- under the sad stars they breathed out their souls.
- “And oh, the deep despair that seized on me,
- the sovereign of that wretched people! I
- was tortured with a passionate desire
- to die the same death—And I hated life.
- “No matter where my shrinking eyes were turned,
- I saw a multitude of gruesome forms
- in ghastly attitudes bestrew the ground,
- scattered as rotten apples that have dropped
- from moving branches, or as acorns thick
- around a gnarled oak.
- “Lift up your eyes!
- Behold that holy temple! unto Jove
- long dedicated!—What availed the prayers
- of frightened multitudes, or incense burned
- on those devoted altars?—In the midst
- of his most fervent supplications,
- the husband as he pled for his dear wife,
- or the fond father for his stricken son,
- would suddenly, before a word prevailed,
- die clutching at the altars of his Gods,
- while holding in his stiffened hand, a spray
- of frankincense still waiting for the fire.
- How often sacrificial bulls have been
- brought to those temples, and while white-robed priest
- was pouring offered wine between their horns,
- have fallen without waiting for the stroke.
- “While I prepared a sacrifice to Jove,
- for my behalf, my country and three sons,
- the victim, ever moaning dismal sounds,
- before a blow was struck, fell suddenly
- beside the altar; and his scanty blood
- ran thinly from the knives that slaughtered him.
- His entrails, wanting all the marks of truth
- were so diseased, the warnings of the Gods
- could not be read—the baneful malady
- had penetrated to the heart of life.
- “And I have seen the carcases of men
- lie rotting at the sacred temple gates,
- or by the very altars, where they fell,
- making death odious to the living Gods.
- And often I have seen some desperate man
- end life by his own halter, and so cheat
- by voluntary death his fear of death,
- in mad haste to outrun approaching fate.
- “The bodies of the dead, indecently
- were cast forth, lacking sacred funeral rites
- as hitherto the custom. All the gates
- were crowded with processions of the dead.
- Unburied, they might lie upon the ground,
- or else, deserted, on their lofty pyres
- with no one to lament their dismal end,
- dissolve in their dishonored ashes. All
- restraint forgotten, a mad rabble fought
- and took possession of the burning pyres,
- and even the dead were ravished of their rest.—
- And who should mourn them wanting, all the souls
- of sons and husbands, and of old and young,
- must wander unlamented: and the land
- sufficed not for the crowded sepulchers:
- and the dense forest was denuded of all trees.
- “Heart-broken at the sight of this great woe,
- I wailed, ‘O Jupiter! if truth were told
- of your sweet comfort in Aegina's arms,
- if you were not ashamed of me, your son,
- restore my people, or entomb my corpse,
- that I may suffer as the ones I love.’—
- Great lightning flashed around me, and the sound
- of thunder proved that my complaint was heard.
- Accepting it, I cried, ‘Let these, Great Jove,
- the happy signs of your assent, be shown
- good omens given as a sacred pledge.’
- “Near by, a sacred oak tree grown from seed
- brought thither from Dodona, spread abroad
- its branches thinly covered with green leaves;
- and creeping as an army, on the tree
- we saw a train of ants that carried grain,
- half-hidden in the deep and wrinkled bark.
- And while I wondered at the endless line
- I said, ‘Good father, give me citizens
- of equal number for my empty walls.’
- Soon as I said those words, though not a wind
- was moving nor a breeze,—the lofty tree
- began to tremble, and I heard a sound
- of motion in its branches. Wonder not
- that sudden fear possessed me; and my hair
- began to rise; and I could hardly stand
- for so my weak knees tottered!—As I made
- obeisance to the soil and sacred tree,
- perhaps I cherished in my heart a thought,
- that, not acknowledged, cheered me with some hope.
- “At night I lay exhausted by such thoughts,
- a deep sleep seized my body, but the tree
- seemed always present—to my gaze distinct
- with all its branches—I could even see
- the birds among its leaves; and from its boughs,
- that trembled in the still air, moving ants
- were scattered to the ground in troops below;
- and ever, as they touched the soil, they grew
- larger and larger.—As they raised themselves,
- they stood with upright bodies, and put off
- their lean shapes; and absorbed their many feet:
- and even as their dark brown color changed,
- their rounded forms took on a human shape.
- “When my strange dream departed, I awoke,
- the vision vanished, I complained to Heaven
- against the idle comfort of such dreams;
- but as I voiced my own lament, I heard
- a mighty murmur echoing through the halls
- of my deserted palace, and a multitude
- of voices in confusion; where the sound
- of scarce an echo had disturbed the still
- deserted chambers for so many days.
- “All this I thought the fancy of my dream,
- until my brave son Telamon, in haste
- threw open the closed doorway, as he called,
- ‘Come quickly father, and behold a sight
- beyond the utmost of your fondest dreams!’
- I did go out, and there I saw such men
- each in his turn, as I had seen transformed
- in that weird vision of the moving ants.
- “They all advanced, and hailed me as their king.
- So soon as I had offered vows to Jove,
- I subdivided the deserted farms,
- and dwellings in the cities to these men
- miraculously raised —which now are called
- my Myrmidons, —the living evidence
- of my strange vision. You have seen these men;
- and since that day, their name has been declared,
- ‘Decisive evidence.’ They have retained
- the well-known customs of the days before
- their transformation. Patiently they toil;
- they store the profits of their labor; which
- they guard with valiant skill. They'll follow you
- to any war, well matched in years and courage,
- and I do promise, when this east wind turns,
- this wind that favored you and brought you here,
- and when a south wind favors our design,
- then my brave Myrmidons will go with you.”
- This narrative and many other tales
- had occupied the day. As twilight fell,
- festivities were blended in the night—
- the night, in turn, afforded sweet repose.
- Soon as the golden Sun had shown his light,
- the east wind blowing still, the ships were stayed
- from sailing home. The sons of Pallas came
- to Cephalus, who was the elder called;
- and Cephalus together with the sons
- of Pallas, went to see the king. Deep sleep
- still held the king; and Phocus who was son
- of Aeacus, received them at the gate,
- instead of Telamon and Peleus who
- were marshalling the men for war. Into
- the inner court and beautiful apartments
- Phocus conducted the Athenians,
- and they sat down together. Phocus then
- observed that Cephalus held in his hand
- a curious javelin with golden head,
- and shaft of some rare wood. And as they talked,
- he said; “It is my pleasure to explore
- the forest in the chase of startled game,
- and so I've learned the nature of rare woods,
- but never have I seen the match of this
- from which was fashioned this good javelin;
- it lacks the yellow tint of forest ash,
- it is not knotted like all corner-wood;
- although I cannot name the kind of wood,
- my eyes have never seen a javelin-shaft
- so beautiful as this.”
- To him replied
- a friend of Cephalus; “But you will find
- its beauty is not equal to its worth,
- for whatsoever it is aimed against,
- its flight is always certain to the mark,
- nor is it subject to the shift of chance;
- and after it has struck, although no hand
- may cast it back, it certainly returns,
- bloodstained with every victim.”
- Then indeed,
- was Phocus anxious to be told, whence came
- and who had given such a precious gift.
- And Cephalus appeared to tell him all;
- but craftily was silent on one strange
- condition of the fatal gift. As he
- recalled the mournful fate of his dear wife,
- his eyes filled up with tears. “Ah, pity me,”
- he said, “If Fate should grant me many years,
- I must weep every time that I regard
- this weapon which has been my cause of tears;
- the unforgiven death of my dear wife—
- ah, would that I had never handled it!
- “My sweet wife, Procris!—if you could compare
- her beauty with her sister's—Orithyia's,
- (ravished by the blustering Boreas)
- you would declare my wife more beautiful.
- “'Tis she her sire Erectheus joined to me,
- 'Tis she the god Love also joined to me.
- They called me happy, and in truth I was,
- and all pronounced us so until the Gods
- decreed it otherwise. Two joyful months
- of our united love were almost passed,
- when, as the grey light of the dawn dispelled,
- upon the summit of Hymettus green,
- Aurora, glorious in her golden robes,
- observed me busy with encircling nets,
- trapping the antlered deer.
- “Against my will
- incited by desire, she carried me
- away with her. Oh, let me not increase
- her anger, for I tell you what is true,
- I found no comfort in her lovely face!
- And, though she is the very queen of light,
- and reigns upon the edge of shadowy space
- where she is nourished on rich nectar-wine,
- adding delight to beauty, I could give
- no heed to her entreaties, for the thought
- of my beloved Procris intervened;
- and only her sweet name was on my lips.
- “I told Aurora of our wedding joys
- and all refreshing joys of love — and my
- first union of my couch deserted now:
- “Enraged against me, then the goddess said:
- ‘Keep to your Procris, I but trouble you,
- ungrateful clown! but, if you can be warned,
- you will no longer wish for her!’ And so,
- in anger, she returned me to my wife.
- “Alas, as I retraced the weary way,
- long-brooding over all Aurora said,
- suspicion made me doubtful of my wife,
- so faithful and so fair.—But many things
- reminding me of steadfast virtue, I
- suppressed all doubts; until the dreadful thought
- of my long absence filled my jealous mind:
- from which I argued to the criminal
- advances of Aurora; for if she,
- so lovely in appearance, did conceal
- such passion in the garb of innocence
- until the moment of temptation, how
- could I be certain of the purity
- of even the strongest when the best are frail?
- “So brooding—every effort I devised
- to cause my own undoing. By the means
- of bribing presents, favored by disguise,
- I sought to win her guarded chastity.
- Aurora had disguised me, and her guile
- determined me to work in subtle snares.
- “Unknown to all my friends, I paced the streets
- of sacred Athens till I reached my home.
- I hoped to search out evidence of guilt:
- but everything seemed waiting my return;
- and all the household breathed an air of grief.
- “With difficulty I, disguised, obtained
- an entrance to her presence by the use
- of artifices many: and when I
- there saw her, silent in her grief,—amazed,
- my heart no longer prompted me to test
- such constant love. An infinite desire
- took hold upon me. I could scarce restrain
- an impulse to caress and kiss her. Pale
- with grief that I was gone, her lovely face
- in sorrow was more beautiful—the world
- has not another so divinely fair.
- “Ah, Phocus, it is wonderful to think
- of beauty so surpassing fair it seems
- more lovable in sorrow! Why relate
- to you how often she repulsed my feigned
- attempts upon her virtue? To each plea
- she said: ‘I serve one man: no matter where
- he may be I will keep my love for one.’
- “Who but a man insane with jealousy,
- would doubt the virtue of a loving wife,
- when tempted by the most insidious wiles,
- whose hallowed honor was her husband's love?
- But I, not satisfied with proof complete,
- would not abandon my depraved desire
- to poison the pure fountain I should guard;—
- increasing my temptations, I caused her
- to hesitate, and covet a rich gift.
- “Then, angered at my own success I said,
- discarding all disguise, ‘Behold the man
- whose lavish promise has established proof,
- the witness of your shameful treachery;
- your absent husband has returned to this!’
- “Unable to endure a ruined home,
- where desecration held her sin to view,
- despairing and in silent shame she fled;
- and I, the author of that wickedness
- ran after: but enraged at my deceit
- and hating all mankind, she wandered far
- in wildest mountains; hunting the wild game.
- “I grieved at her desertion; and the fires
- of my neglected love consumed my health;
- with greater violence my love increased,
- until unable to endure such pain,
- I begged forgiveness and acknowledged fault:
- nor hesitated to declare that I
- might yield, the same way tempted, if such great
- gifts had been offered to me. When I had made
- abject confession and she had avenged
- her outraged feelings, she came back to me
- and we spent golden years in harmony.
- “She gave to me the hound she fondly loved,
- the very one Diana gave to her
- when lovingly the goddess had declared,
- ‘This hound all others shall excel in speed.’
- Nor was that gift the only one was given
- by kind Diana when my wife was hers,
- as you may guess—this javelin I hold forth,
- no other but a goddess could bestow.
- “Would you be told the story of both gifts
- attend my words and you shall be amazed,
- for never such another sad event
- has added sorrow to the grieving world.
- “After the son of Laius,—Oedipus,—
- had solved the riddle of the monster-sphinx,
- so often baffling to the wits of men,
- and after she had fallen from her hill,
- mangled, forgetful of her riddling craft;
- not unrevenged the mighty Themis brooked
- her loss. Without delay that goddess raised
- another savage beast to ravage Thebes,
- by which the farmer's cattle were devoured,
- the land was ruined and its people slain.
- “Then all the valiant young men of the realm,
- with whom I also went, enclosed the field
- (where lurked the monster) in a mesh
- of many tangled nets: but not a strand
- could stay its onrush, and it leaped the crest
- of every barrier where the toils were set.
- “Already they had urged their eager dogs,
- which swiftly as a bird it left behind,
- eluding all the hunters as it fled.
- “At last all begged me to let slip the leash
- of straining Tempest; such I called the hound,
- my dear wife's present. As he tugged and pulled
- upon the tightened cords, I let them slip:
- no sooner done, then he was lost to sight;
- although, wherever struck his rapid feet
- the hot dust whirled. Not swifter flies the spear,
- nor whizzing bullet from the twisted sling,
- nor feathered arrow from the twanging bow!
- “A high hill jutted from a rolling plain,
- on which I mounted to enjoy the sight
- of that unequalled chase. One moment caught,
- the next as surely free, the wild beast seemed
- now here now there, elusive in its flight;
- swiftly sped onward, or with sudden turn
- doubled in circles to deceive or gain.
- With equal speed pursuing at each turn,
- the rapid hound could neither gain nor lose.
- Now springing forward and now doubling back,
- his great speed foiled, he snapped at empty air.
- “I then turned to my javelin's aid; and while
- I poised it in my right hand, turned away
- my gaze a moment as I sought to twine
- my practiced fingers in the guiding thongs;
- but when again I lifted up my eyes,
- to cast the javelin where the monster sped,
- I saw two marble statues standing there,
- transformed upon the plain. One statue seemed
- to strain in attitude of rapid flight,
- the other with wide-open jaws was changed,
- just in the act of barking and pursuit.
- Surely some God—if any god controls—
- decreed both equal, neither could succeed.”
- Now after these miraculous events,
- it seemed he wished to stop, but Phocus said.
- “What charge have you against the javelin?”
- And Cephalus rejoined; “I must relate
- my sorrows last; for I would tell you first
- the story of my joys—'Tis sweet to think,
- upon the gliding tide of those few years
- of married life, when my dear wife and I
- were happy in our love and confidence.
- No woman could allure me then from her;
- and even Venus could not tempt my love;
- all my great passion for my dearest wife
- was equalled by the passion she returned.
- “As early as the sun, when golden rays
- first glittered on the mountains, I would rise
- in youthful ardor, to explore the fields
- in search of game. With no companions, hounds,
- nor steeds nor nets, this javelin was alone
- my safety and companion in my sport.
- “And often when my right hand felt its weight,
- a-wearied of the slaughter it had caused,
- I would come back to rest in the cool shade,
- and breezes from cool vales—the breeze I wooed,
- blowing so gently on me in the heat;
- the breeze I waited for; she was my rest
- from labor. I remember, ‘Aura come,’
- I used to say, ‘Come soothe me, come into
- my breast most welcome one, and yes indeed,
- you do relieve the heat with which I burn.’
- “And as I felt the sweet breeze of the morn,
- as if in answer to my song, my fate impelled
- me further to declare my joy in song;
- “ ‘You are my comfort, you are my delight!
- Refresh me, cherish me, breathe on my face!
- I love you child of lonely haunts and trees!’
- “Such words I once was singing, not aware
- of some one spying on me from the trees,
- who thought I sang to some beloved Nymph,
- or goddess by the name of Aura—so
- I always called the breeze.—Unhappy man!
- The meddling tell-tale went to Procris with
- a story of supposed unfaithfulness,
- and slyly told in whispers all he heard.
- True love is credulous; (and as I heard
- the story) Procris in a swoon fell down.
- When she awakened from her bitter swoon,
- she ceased not wailing her unhappy fate,
- and, wretched, moaned for an imagined woe.
- “So she lamented what was never done!
- Her woe incited by a whispered tale,
- she feared the fiction of a harmless name!
- But hope returning soothed her wretched state;
- and now, no longer willing to believe
- such wrong, unless her own eyes saw it, she
- refused to think her husband sinned.
- “When dawn
- had banished night, and I, rejoicing, ranged
- the breathing woods, victorious in the hunt
- paused and said, ‘Come Aura—lovely breeze—
- relieve my panting breast!’ It seemed I heard
- the smothered moans of sorrow as I spoke:
- but not conceiving harm, I said again;
- “ ‘Come here, oh my delight!’ And as those words
- fell from my lips, I thought I heard a soft
- sound in the thicket, as of moving leaves;
- and thinking surely 'twas a hidden beast,
- I threw this winged javelin at the spot.—
- “It was my own wife, Procris, and the shaft
- was buried in her breast—‘Ah, wretched me!’
- She cried; and when I heard her well-known voice,
- distracted I ran towards her,—only to find
- her bathed in blood, and dying from the wound
- of that same javelin she had given to me:
- and in her agony she drew it forth,—
- ah me! alas! from her dear tender side.
- “I lifted her limp body to my own,
- in these blood-guilty arms, and wrapped the wound
- with fragments of my tunic, that I tore
- in haste to staunch her blood; and all the while
- I moaned, ‘Oh, do not now forsake me—slain
- by these accursed hands!’
- “Weak with the loss
- of blood, and dying, she compelled herself
- to utter these few words, ‘It is my death;
- but let my eyes not close upon this life
- before I plead with you! — By the dear ties
- of sacred marriage; by your god and mine;
- and if my love for you can move your heart;
- and even by the cause of my sad death,—
- my love for you increasing as I die,—
- ah, put away that Aura you have called,
- that she may never separate your soul,—
- your love from me.’
- “So, by those dying words
- I knew that she had heard me call the name
- of Aura, when I wished the cooling breeze,
- and thought I called a goddess,—cause of all
- her jealous sorrow and my bitter woe
- “Alas, too late, I told her the sad truth;
- but she was sinking, and her little strength
- swiftly was ebbing with her flowing blood.
- As long as life remained her loving gaze
- was fixed on mine; and her unhappy life
- at last was breathed out on my grieving face.
- It seemed to me a look of sweet content
- was in her face, as if she feared not death.”
- In tears he folds these things; and, as they wept
- in came the aged monarch, Aeacus,
- and with the monarch his two valiant sons,
- and troops, new-levied, trained to glorious arms.
- Now Lucifer unveiled the glorious day,
- and as the session of the night dissolved,
- the cool east wind declined, and vapors wreathed
- the moistened valleys. Veering to the south
- the welcome wind gave passage to the sons
- of Aeacus, and wafted Cephalus
- on his returning way, propitious; where
- before the wonted hour, they entered port.
- King Minos, while the fair wind moved their ship,
- was laying waste the land of Megara.
- He gathered a great army round the walls
- built by Alcathous, where reigned in splendor
- King Nisus—mighty and renowned in war—
- upon the center of whose hoary head
- a lock of purple hair was growing.—Its
- proved virtue gave protection to his throne.
- Six times the horns of rising Phoebe grew,
- and still the changing fortune of the war
- was in suspense; so, Victory day by day
- between them hovered on uncertain wings.
- Within that city was a regal tower
- on tuneful walls; where once Apollo laid
- his golden harp; and in the throbbing stone
- the sounds remained. And there, in times of peace
- the daughter of king Nisus loved to mount
- the walls and strike the sounding stone with pebbles:
- so, when the war began, she often viewed
- the dreadful contest from that height;
- until, so long the hostile camp remained,
- she had become acquainted with the names,
- and knew the habits, horses and the arms
- of many a chief, and could discern the signs
- of their Cydonean quivers.
- More than all,
- the features of King Minos were engraved
- upon the tablets of her mind. And when
- he wore his helmet, crested with gay plumes,
- she deemed it glorious; when he held his shield
- shining with gold, no other seemed so grand;
- and when he poised to hurl the tough spear home,
- she praised his skill and strength; and when he bent
- his curving bow with arrow on the cord,
- she pictured him as Phoebus taking aim,—
- but when, arrayed in purple, and upon
- the back of his white war horse, proudly decked
- with richly broidered housings, he reined in
- the nervous steed, and took his helmet off,
- showing his fearless features, then the maid,
- daughter of Nisus, could control herself
- no longer; and a frenzy seized her mind.
- She called the javelin happy which he touched,
- and blessed were the reins within his hand.
- She had an impulse to direct her steps,
- a tender virgin, through the hostile ranks,
- or cast her body from the topmost towers
- into the Gnossian camp. She had a wild
- desire to open to the enemy
- the heavy brass-bound gates, or anything
- that Minos could desire.
- And as she sat
- beholding the white tents, she cried, “Alas!
- Should I rejoice or grieve to see this war?
- I grieve that Minos is the enemy
- of her who loves him; but unless the war
- had brought him, how could he be known to me?
- But should he take me for a hostage? That
- might end the war—a pledge of peace, he might
- keep me for his companion.
- “O, supreme
- of mankind! she who bore you must have been
- as beautiful as you are; ample cause
- for Jove to lose his heart.
- “O, happy hour!
- If moving upon wings through yielding air,
- I could alight within the hostile camp
- in front of Minos, and declare to him
- my name and passion!
- “Then would I implore
- what dowry he could wish, and would provide
- whatever he might ask, except alone
- the city of my father. Perish all
- my secret hopes before one act of mine
- should offer treason to accomplish it.
- And yet, the kindness of a conqueror
- has often proved a blessing, manifest
- to those who were defeated. Certainly
- the war he carries on is justified
- by his slain son.
- “He is a mighty king,
- thrice strengthened in his cause. Undoubtedly
- we shall be conquered, and, if such a fate
- awaits our city, why should he by force
- instead of my consuming love, prevail
- to open the strong gates? Without delay
- and dreadful slaughter, it is best for him
- to conquer and decide this savage war.
- “Ah, Minos, how I fear the bitter fate
- should any warrior hurl his cruel spear
- and pierce you by mischance, for surely none
- can be so hardened to transfix your breast
- with purpose known.”
- Oh, let her love prevail
- to open for his army the great gates.
- Only the thought of it, has filled her soul;
- she is determined to deliver up
- her country as a dowry with herself,
- and so decide the war! But what avails
- this idle talk.
- “A guard surrounds the gates,
- my father keeps the keys, and he alone
- is my obstruction, and the innocent
- account of my despair. Would to the Gods
- I had no father! Is not man the God
- of his own fortune, though his idle prayers
- avail not to compel his destiny?
- “Another woman crazed with passionate desires,
- which now inflame me, would not hesitate,
- but with a fierce abandon would destroy
- whatever checked her passion. Who is there
- with love to equal mine? I dare to go
- through flames and swords; but swords and flames
- are not now needed, for I only need
- my royal father's lock of purple hair.
- More precious than fine gold, it has a power
- to give my heart all that it may desire.”
- While Scylla said this, night that heals our cares
- came on, and she grew bolder in the dark.
- And now it is the late and silent hour
- when slumber takes possession of the breast.
- Outwearied with the cares of busy day;
- then as her father slept, with stealthy tread
- she entered his abode, and there despoiled,
- and clipped his fatal lock of purple hair.
- Concealing in her bosom the sad prize
- of crime degenerate, she at once went forth
- a gate unguarded, and with shameless haste
- sped through the hostile army to the tent
- of Minos, whom, astonished, she addressed:
- “Only my love has led me to this deed.
- The daughter of King Nisus, I am called
- the maiden Scylla. Unto you I come
- and offer up a power that will prevail
- against my country, and I stipulate
- no recompense except yourself. Take then
- this purple hair, a token of my love.—
- Deem it not lightly as a lock of hair
- held idly forth to you; it is in truth
- my father's life.” And as she spoke
- she held out in her guilty hand the prize,
- and begged him to accept it with her love.
- Shocked at the thought of such a heinous crime,
- Minos refused, and said, “O execrable thing!
- Despised abomination of our time!
- May all the Gods forever banish you
- from their wide universe, and may the earth
- and the deep ocean be denied to you!
- So great a monster shall not be allowed
- to desecrate the sacred Isle of Crete,
- where Jupiter was born.” So Minos spoke.
- Nevertheless he conquered Megara,
- (so aided by the damsel's wicked deed)
- and as a just and mighty king imposed
- his own conditions on the vanquished land.
- He ordered his great fleet to tarry not;
- the hawsers were let loose, and the long oars
- quickly propelled his brazen-pointed ships.—
- When Scylla saw them launching forth,
- observed them sailing on the mighty deep,
- she called with vain entreaties; but at last,
- aware the prince ignored her and refused
- to recompense her wickedness, enraged,
- and raving, she held up her impious hands,
- her long hair streaming on the wind, — and said:
- “Oh, wherefore have you flown, and left behind
- the author of your glory. Oh, wretch! wretch
- to whom I offered up my native land,
- and sacrificed my father! Where have you
- now flown, ungrateful man whose victory
- is both my crime and virtue? And the gift
- presented to you, and my passion,
- have these not moved you? All my love and hope
- in you alone!
- “Forsaken by my prince,
- shall I return to my defeated land?
- If never ruined it would shut its walls
- against me.—Shall I seek my father's face
- whom I delivered to all-conquering arms?
- My fellow-citizens despise my name;
- my friends and neighbors hate me; I have shut
- the world against me, only in the hope
- that Crete would surely welcome me;—and now,
- he has forbidden me.
- “And is it so
- I am requited by this thankless wretch!
- Europa could not be your mother! Spawn
- of cruel Syrtis! Savage cub of fierce
- Armenian tigress;—or Charybdis, tossed
- by the wild South-wind begot you! Can you be
- the son of Jupiter? Your mother was
- not ever tricked by the false semblance
- of a bull. All that story of your birth
- is false! You are the offspring of a bull
- as fierce as you are!
- “Let your vengeance fall
- upon me, O my father Nisus, let
- the ruined city I betrayed rejoice
- at my misfortunes—richly merited—
- destroy me, you whom I have ruined;—I
- should perish for my crimes! But why should you,
- who conquered by my crime, abandon me?
- The treason to my father and my land
- becomes an act of kindness in your cause.
- “That woman is a worthy mate for you
- who hid in wood deceived the raging bull,
- and bore to him the infamy of Crete.
- I do not wonder that Pasiphae
- preferred the bull to you, more savage than
- the wildest beast. Alas, alas for me!
- “Do my complaints reach your unwilling ears?
- Or do the same winds waft away my words
- that blow upon your ships, ungrateful man?—
- Ah, wretched that I am, he takes delight
- in hastening from me. The deep waves resound
- as smitten by the oars, his ship departs;
- and I am lost and even my native land
- is fading from his sight.
- “Oh heart of flint!
- you shall not prosper in your cruelty,
- and you shall not forget my sacrifice;
- in spite of everything I follow you!
- I'll grasp the curving stern of your swift ship,
- and I will follow through unending seas.”
- And as she spoke, she leaped into the waves,
- and followed the receding ships—for strength
- from passion came to her. And soon she clung
- unwelcome, to the sailing Gnossian ship.
- Meanwhile, the Gods had changed her father's form
- and now he hovered over the salt deep,
- a hawk with tawny wings. So when he saw
- his daughter clinging to the hostile ship
- he would have torn her with his rending beak;—
- he darted towards her through the yielding air.
- In terror she let go, but as she fell
- the light air held her from the ocean spray;
- her feather-weight supported by the breeze;
- she spread her wings, and changed into a bird.
- They called her “Ciris” when she cut the wind,
- and “Ciris”—cut-the-lock—remains her name.
- King Minos, when he reached the land of Crete
- and left his ships, remembered he had made
- a vow to Jupiter, and offered up
- a hundred bulls.—The splendid spoils of war
- adorned his palace.—
- Now the infamous
- reproach of Crete had grown, till it exposed
- the double-natured shame. So, Minos, moved
- to cover his disgrace, resolved to hide
- the monster in a prison, and he built
- with intricate design, by Daedalus
- contrived, an architect of wonderful
- ability, and famous. This he planned
- of mazey wanderings that deceived the eyes,
- and labyrinthic passages involved.
- so sports the clear Maeander, in the fields
- of Phrygia winding doubtful; back and forth
- it meets itself, until the wandering stream
- fatigued, impedes its wearied waters' flow;
- from source to sea, from sea to source involved.
- So Daedalus contrived innumerous paths,
- and windings vague, so intricate that he,
- the architect, hardly could retrace his steps.
- In this the Minotaur was long concealed,
- and there devoured Athenian victims sent
- three seasons, nine years each, till Theseus, son
- of Aegeus, slew him and retraced his way,
- finding the path by Ariadne's thread.
- Without delay the victor fled from Crete,
- together with the loving maid, and sailed
- for Dia Isle of Naxos, where he left
- the maid forlorn, abandoned. Her, in time,
- lamenting and deserted, Bacchus found
- and for his love immortalized her name.
- He set in the dark heavens the bright crown
- that rested on her brows. Through the soft air
- it whirled, while all the sparkling jewels changed
- to flashing fires, assuming in the sky
- between the Serpent-holder and the Kneeler
- the well-known shape of Ariadne's Crown.
- But Daedalus abhorred the Isle of Crete—
- and his long exile on that sea-girt shore,
- increased the love of his own native place.
- “Though Minos blocks escape by sea and land.”
- He said, “The unconfined skies remain
- though Minos may be lord of all the world
- his sceptre is not regnant of the air,
- and by that untried way is our escape.”
- This said, he turned his mind to arts unknown
- and nature unrevealed. He fashioned quills
- and feathers in due order — deftly formed
- from small to large, as any rustic pipe
- prom straws unequal slants. He bound with thread
- the middle feathers, and the lower fixed
- with pliant wax; till so, in gentle curves
- arranged, he bent them to the shape of birds.
- While he was working, his son Icarus,
- with smiling countenance and unaware
- of danger to himself, perchance would chase
- the feathers, ruffled by the shifting breeze,
- or soften with his thumb the yellow wax,
- and by his playfulness retard the work
- his anxious father planned.
- But when at last
- the father finished it, he poised himself,
- and lightly floating in the winnowed air
- waved his great feathered wings with bird-like ease.
- And, likewise he had fashioned for his son
- such wings; before they ventured in the air
- he said, “My son, I caution you to keep
- the middle way, for if your pinions dip
- too low the waters may impede your flight;
- and if they soar too high the sun may scorch them.
- Fly midway. Gaze not at the boundless sky,
- far Ursa Major and Bootes next.
- Nor on Orion with his flashing brand,
- but follow my safe guidance.”
- As he spoke
- he fitted on his son the plumed wings
- with trembling hands, while down his withered cheeks
- the tears were falling. Then he gave his son
- a last kiss, and upon his gliding wings
- assumed a careful lead solicitous.
- As when the bird leads forth her tender young,
- from high-swung nest to try the yielding air;
- so he prevailed on willing Icarus;
- encouraged and instructed him in a]l
- the fatal art; and as he waved his wings
- looked backward on his son.
- Beneath their flight,
- the fisherman while casting his long rod,
- or the tired shepherd leaning on his crook,
- or the rough plowman as he raised his eyes,
- astonished might observe them on the wing,
- and worship them as Gods.
- Upon the left
- they passed by Samos, Juno's sacred isle;
- Delos and Paros too, were left behind;
- and on the right Lebinthus and Calymne,
- fruitful in honey. Proud of his success,
- the foolish Icarus forsook his guide,
- and, bold in vanity, began to soar,
- rising upon his wings to touch the skies;
- but as he neared the scorching sun, its heat
- softened the fragrant wax that held his plumes;
- and heat increasing melted the soft wax—
- he waved his naked arms instead of wings,
- with no more feathers to sustain his flight.
- And as he called upon his father's name
- his voice was smothered in the dark blue sea,
- now called Icarian from the dead boy's name.
- The unlucky father, not a father, called,
- “Where are you, Icarus?” and “Where are you?
- In what place shall I seek you, Icarus?”
- He called again; and then he saw the wings
- of his dear Icarus, floating on the waves;
- and he began to rail and curse his art.
- He found the body on an island shore,
- now called Icaria, and at once prepared
- to bury the unfortunate remains;
- but while he labored a pert partridge near,
- observed him from the covert of an oak,
- and whistled his unnatural delight.
- Know you the cause? 'Twas then a single bird,
- the first one of its kind. 'Twas never seen
- before the sister of Daedalus had brought
- him Perdix, her dear son, to be his pupil.
- And as the years went by the gifted youth
- began to rival his instructor's art.
- He took the jagged backbone of a fish,
- and with it as a model made a saw,
- with sharp teeth fashioned from a strip of iron.
- And he was first to make two arms of iron,
- smooth hinged upon the center, so that one
- would make a pivot while the other, turned,
- described a circle. Wherefore Daedalus
- enraged and envious, sought to slay the youth
- and cast him headlong from Minerva's fane,—
- then spread the rumor of an accident.
- But Pallas, goddess of ingenious men,
- saving the pupil changed him to a bird,
- and in the middle of the air he flew
- on feathered wings; and so his active mind—
- and vigor of his genius were absorbed
- into his wings and feet; although the name
- of Perdix was retained.
- The Partridge hides
- in shaded places by the leafy trees
- its nested eggs among the bush's twigs;
- nor does it seek to rise in lofty flight,
- for it is mindful of its former fall.
- Wearied with travel Daedalus arrived
- at Sicily,—where Cocalus was king;
- and when the wandering Daedalus implored
- the monarch's kind protection from his foe,
- he gathered a great army for his guest,
- and gained renown from an applauding world.
- Now after Theseus had destroyed in Crete
- the dreadful monster, Athens then had ceased
- to pay her mournful tribute; and with wreaths
- her people decked the temples of the Gods;
- and they invoked Minerva, Jupiter,
- and many other Gods whom they adored,
- with sacrifice and precious offerings,
- and jars of Frankincense.
- Quick-flying Fame
- had spread reports of Theseus through the land;
- and all the peoples of Achaia, from that day,
- when danger threatened would entreat his aid.
- So it befell, the land of Calydon,
- through Meleager and her native hero,
- implored the valiant Theseus to destroy
- a raging boar, the ravage of her realm.
- Diana in her wrath had sent the boar
- to wreak her vengeance; and they say the cause
- was this:—The nation had a fruitful year,
- for which the good king Oeneus had decreed
- that all should offer the first fruits of corn
- to Ceres—and to Bacchus wine of grapes—
- and oil of olives to the golden haired
- Minerva. Thus, the Gods were all adored,
- beginning with the lowest to the highest,
- except alone Diana, and of all the Gods
- her altars only were neglected. No
- frankincense unto her was given! Neglect
- enrages even Deities.
- “Am I
- to suffer this indignity?” she cried,
- “Though I am thus dishonored, I will not
- be unrevenged!” And so the boar was sent
- to ravage the fair land of Calydon.
- And this avenging boar was quite as large
- as bulls now feeding on the green Epirus,
- and larger than the bulls of Sicily.
- A dreadful boar.—His burning, bloodshot eyes
- seemed coals of living fire, and his rough neck
- was knotted with stiff muscles, and thick-set
- with bristles like sharp spikes. A seething froth
- dripped on his shoulders, and his tusks
- were like the spoils of Ind. Discordant roars
- reverberated from his hideous jaws;
- and lightning—belched forth from his horrid throat—
- scorched the green fields. He trampled the green corn
- and doomed the farmer to lament his crops,
- in vain the threshing-floor has been prepared,
- in vain the barns await the promised yield.
- Long branches of the vine and heavy grapes
- are scattered in confusion, and the fruits
- and branches of the olive tree, whose leaves
- should never wither, are cast on the ground.
- His spleen was vented on the simple flocks,
- which neither dogs nor shepherd could protect;
- and the brave bulls could not defend their herds.
- The people fled in all directions from the fields,
- for safety to the cities. Terror reigned.
- There seemed no remedy to save the land,
- till Meleager chose a band of youths,
- united for the glory of great deeds.
- What heroes shall immortal song proclaim?
- Castor and Pollux, twins of Tyndarus;
- one famous for his skill in horsemanship,
- the other for his boxing. Jason, too, was there,
- the glorious builder of the world's first ship,
- and Theseus with his friend Perithous,
- and Toxeus and Plexippus, fated sons
- of Thestius, and the son of Aphareus,
- Lynkeus with his fleet-foot brother Idas
- and Caeneus, first a woman then a man
- the brave Leucippus and the argonaut
- Acastus, swift of dart; and warlike Dryas,
- Hippothous and Phoenix, not then blind,
- the son of King Amyntor, and the twain
- who sprung from Actor, Phyleus thither brought
- from Elis; Telamon was one of them
- and even Peleus, father of the great
- Achilles; and the son of Pheres joined,
- and Iolas, the swift Eurytion,
- Echion fleet of foot, Narycian Lelex—
- and Panopeus, and Hyleus and Hippasus,
- and Nestor (youthful then), and the four sons
- Hippocoon from eld Amyclae sent,
- the father-in-law of queen Penelope,
- Ancaeus of Arcadia, and the wise
- soothsayer Mopsus, and the prophet, son
- of Oeclus, victim of a traitor-wife.—
- And Atalanta, virgin of the groves,
- of Mount Lycaeus, glory of her sex;
- a polished buckle fastened her attire;
- her lustrous hair was fashioned in a knot;
- her weapons rattled in an ivory case,
- swung from her white left shoulder, and she held
- a bow in her left hand. Her face appeared
- as maidenly for boy, or boyish for girl.
- When Meleager saw her, he at once
- longed for her beauty, though some god forbade.
- The fires of love flamed in him; and he said,
- “Happy the husband who shall win this girl!”
- Neither the time nor his own modesty
- permitted him to say another word.
- But now the dreadful contest with the boar
- engaged this hero's energy and thought.
- A wood, umbrageous, not impaired with age,
- slopes from a plain and shadows the wide fields,
- and there this band of valiant heroes went—
- eager to slay the dreaded enemy,
- some spread the nets and some let loose the dogs,
- some traced the wide spoor of the monster's hoofs.
- There is a deep gorge where the rivulets
- that gather from the rain, discharge themselves;
- and there the bending willow, the smooth sedge,
- the marsh-rush, ozier and tall tangled reed
- in wild profusion cover up the marsh.
- Aroused from this retreat the startled boar,
- as quick as lightning from the clashing clouds
- crashed all the trees that cumbered his mad way.—
- The young men raised a shout, leveled their spears,
- and brandished their keen weapons; but the boar
- rushed onward through the yelping dogs,
- and scattered them with deadly sidelong stroke.
- Echion was the first to hurl his spear,
- but slanting in its course it only glanced
- a nearby maple tree, and next the spear
- of long-remembered Jason cut the air;
- so swiftly hurled it seemed it might transfix
- the boar's back, but with over-force it sped
- beyond the monster. Poising first his dart,
- the son of Ampyx, as he cast it, he
- implored Apollo, “Grant my prayer if I
- have truly worshiped you, harken to me
- as always I adore you! Let my spear
- unerring strike its aim.” Apollo heard,
- and guided the swift spear, but as it sped
- Diana struck the iron head from the shaft,
- and the blunt wood fell harmless from his hide.
- Then was the monster's savage anger roused;
- as the bright lightning's flash his red eyes flamed;
- his breath was hot as fire. As when a stone
- is aimed at walls or strong towers, which protect
- encompassed armies,—launched by the taut rope
- it strikes with dreaded impact; so the boar
- with fatal onset rushed among this band
- of noble lads, and stretched upon the ground
- Eupalamon and Pelagon whose guard
- was on the right; and their companions bore
- their bodies from the field.
- Another youth,
- the brave son of Hippocoon received
- a deadly wound—while turning to escape,
- the sinew of his thigh was cut and failed
- to bear his tottering steps.—
- And Nestor might
- have perished then, so long before he fought
- the heroes of old Troy, but ever wise,
- he vaulted on his long lance from the ground
- into the branches of a sheltering tree;
- where in a safe position, he could look
- down on his baffled foe. The raging boar
- whetted his gleaming tushes on an oak.
- Then with his sharpened tusks he gored the thigh
- of mighty Hippasus. Observed of all,
- and mounted on their horses—whiter than
- the northern snow—the twins (long afterward
- transformed to constellations) sallied forth,
- and brandishing their lances, poised in air,
- determined to destroy the bristling boar.
- It thwarted their design by hiding in
- a thicket intricate; where neither steed
- nor lance could penetrate. But Telamon
- pursued undaunted, and in haste tripped up
- by tangled roots, fell headlong.—Peleus stooped
- to rescue him.
- While he regained his feet,
- the virgin, Atalanta, took her bow
- and fitting a sharp arrow to the notch,
- twanged the tight cord. The feathered shaft
- quivered beneath the monster's ear, the red blood
- stained his hard bristles.
- Flushed with her success
- rejoiced the maid, but not more gladly than
- the hero Meleager. He it was
- who first observed the blood, and pointed out
- the stain to his companions as he cried,
- “Give honor to the courage of a maid!”
- Unwilling to be worsted by a maid,
- the rushing heroes raised a mighty cry
- and as they shouted in excitement, hurled
- their weapons in confusion; and so great
- the multitude their actions interfered.
- Behold! Ancaeus wielding his war-axe,
- and rushing madly to his fate, exclaimed,
- “Witness it! See the weapons of a man
- excel a woman's! Ho, make way for my
- achievement! Let Diana shield the brute!
- Despite her utmost effort my right hand
- shall slaughter him!” So mighty in his boast
- he puffed himself; and, lifting with both hands
- his double-edged axe, he stood erect,
- on tiptoe fiercely bold. The savage boar
- caught him, and ripped his tushes through his groin,
- a spot where death is sure.—Ancaeus fell;
- and his torn entrails and his crimson blood
- stained the fair verdure of the spot with death.
- Ixion's doughty son was running straight
- against the monster, shaking his long lance
- with nervous vigor in his strong right hand;
- but Theseus, standing at a distance called:
- “Beware! beware, O, dearest of my friends;
- be valiant at a distance, or the fate
- of rashly-bold Ancaeus may be yours!”
- Even as he spoke he balanced in his hand
- his brazen-pointed lance of corner wood;
- with aim so true it seemed the great boar's death
- was certain, but an evergreen oak branch
- shielded the beast.—Then Jason hurled his dart,
- which turned by chance, transfixed a luckless dog
- and pinned him yelping, to the sanguine earth.—
- So fared those heroes. Better fortune gave
- success to Meleager; first he threw
- a spear that missed and quivered in the ground;
- but next he hurled a spear with certain aim.
- It pierced the middle of the monster's back;
- and rushing in upon the dreaded beast,
- while raging it was whirling round and round,
- the fearless prince provoked to greater rage
- the wounded adversary. Bloody froth
- dripped down his champing jaws—his purple blood
- poured from a rankling wound. Without delay
- the mighty Meleager plunged a spear
- deep in the monster's shoulder. All his friends
- raised a glad shout, and gathering round him, tried
- to grasp his hand.—With wonder they beheld
- the monster's bulk stretched out upon the plain;
- and fearful still to touch him, they began
- to stain their weapons in his spouting blood.
- At length the hero Meleager pressed
- his conquering foot upon the monster's head
- and said, “O Atalanta, glorious maid,
- of Nonacris, to you is yielded spoil,
- my lawful right, and I rejoice to share
- the merit of this glorious victory.”
- And while he spoke, he gave to her the pelt,
- covered with horrid bristles, and the head
- frightful with gory tusks: and she rejoiced
- in Meleager and his royal gift.
- But all the others, envious, began
- to murmur; and the sons of Thestius
- levelled their pointed spears, and shouted out;
- “Give up the prize! Let not the confidence
- of your great beauty be a snare to you!
- A woman should not interfering filch
- the manly honors of a mighty hunt!
- Aside! and let your witless lover yield!”
- So threatened they and took from her the prize;
- and forcibly despoiled him of his rights.
- The warlike prince, indignant and enraged,—
- rowed with resentment, shouted out. “What! Ho!
- You spoilers of this honor that is ours,
- brave deeds are different far from craven threats!”
- And with his cruel sword he pierced the breast
- of rash Plexippus, taken unawares,
- and while his brother, Toxeus, struck with fear,
- stood hesitating whether to avenge
- or run to safety, Meleager plunged
- the hot sword, smoking with a brother's blood,
- in his breast also. And so perished they.
- Ere this, Althaea, mother of the prince,
- and sister of the slaughtered twain,—because
- her son had killed the boar, made haste to bear
- rich offerings to the temples of the Gods;
- but when she saw her slaughtered brothers borne
- in sad procession, she began to shriek,
- and filled the city with her wild lament.
- Unwilling to abide her festal robes
- she dressed in sable.—When she was informed
- her own son Meleager was the cause,
- she banished grief and lamentations,—
- thirsting for vengeance.