Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. The tale of this unholy passion would
  2. perhaps, have filled Crete's hundred cities then,
  3. if Crete had not a wonder of its own
  4. to talk of, in the change of Iphis. Once,
  5. there lived at Phaestus, not far from the town
  6. of Gnossus, a man Ligdus, not well known;
  7. in fact obscure, of humble parentage,
  8. whose income was no greater than his birth;
  9. but he was held trustworthy and his life
  10. had been quite blameless. When the time drew near
  11. his wife should give birth to a child, he warned
  12. her and instructed her, with words we quote:—
  13. “There are two things which I would ask of Heaven:
  14. that you may be delivered with small pain,
  15. and that your child may surely be a boy.
  16. Girls are such trouble, fair strength is denied
  17. to them.—Therefore (may Heaven refuse the thought)
  18. if chance should cause your child to be a girl,
  19. (gods pardon me for having said the word!)
  20. we must agree to have her put to death.”
  21. And all the time he spoke such dreaded words,
  22. their faces were completely bathed in tears;
  23. not only hers but also his while he
  24. forced on her that unnatural command.
  25. Ah, Telethusa ceaselessly implored
  26. her husband to give way to fortune's cast;
  27. but Ligdus held his resolution fixed.
  28. And now the expected time of birth was near,
  29. when in the middle of the night she seemed
  30. to see the goddess Isis, standing by
  31. her bed, in company of serious spirit forms;
  32. Isis had crescent horns upon her forehead,
  33. and a bright garland made of golden grain
  34. encircled her fair brow. It was a crown
  35. of regal beauty: and beside her stood
  36. the dog Anubis, and Bubastis, there
  37. the sacred, dappled Apis, and the God
  38. of silence with pressed finger on his lips;
  39. the sacred rattles were there, and Osiris, known
  40. the constant object of his worshippers' desire,
  41. and there the Egyptian serpent whose quick sting
  42. gives long-enduring sleep. She seemed to see
  43. them all, and even to hear the goddess say
  44. to her, “O Telethusa, one of my
  45. remembered worshippers, forget your grief;
  46. your husband's orders need not be obeyed;
  47. and when Lucina has delivered you,
  48. save and bring up your child, if either boy
  49. or girl. I am the goddess who brings help
  50. to all who call upon me; and you shall
  51. never complain of me—that you adored
  52. a thankless deity.” So she advised
  53. by vision the sad mother, and left her.
  54. The Cretan woman joyfully arose
  55. from her sad bed, and supplicating, raised
  56. ecstatic hands up towards the listening stars,
  57. and prayed to them her vision might come true.
  58. Soon, when her pains gave birth, the mother knew
  59. her infant was a girl (the father had
  60. no knowledge of it, as he was not there).
  61. Intending to deceive, the mother said,
  62. “Feed the dear boy.” All things had favored her
  63. deceit—no one except the trusted nurse,
  64. knew of it. And the father paid his vows,
  65. and named the child after its grandfather, whose
  66. name was honored Iphis. Hearing it so called,
  67. the mother could not but rejoice, because
  68. her child was given a name of common gender,
  69. and she could use it with no more deceit.
  70. She took good care to dress it as a boy,
  71. and either as a boy or girl, its face
  72. must always be accounted lovable.
  73. And so she grew,—ten years and three had gone,
  74. and then your father found a bride for you
  75. O Iphis—promised you should take to wife
  76. the golden-haired Ianthe, praised by all
  77. the women of Phaestus for the dower
  78. of her unequalled beauty, and well known,
  79. the daughter of a Cretan named Telestes.
  80. Of equal age and equal loveliness,
  81. they had received from the same teachers, all
  82. instruction in their childish rudiments.
  83. So unsuspected love had filled their hearts
  84. with equal longing—but how different!
  85. Ianthe waits in confidence and hope
  86. the ceremonial as agreed upon,
  87. and is quite certain she will wed a man.
  88. But Iphis is in love without one hope
  89. of passion's ecstasy, the thought of which
  90. only increased her flame; and she a girl
  91. is burnt with passion for another girl!
  92. She hardly can hold back her tears, and says:
  93. “O what will be the awful dreaded end,
  94. with such a monstrous love compelling me?
  95. If the Gods should wish to save me, certainly
  96. they should have saved me; but, if their desire
  97. was for my ruin, still they should have given
  98. some natural suffering of humanity.
  99. The passion for a cow does not inflame a cow,
  100. no mare has ever sought another mare.
  101. The ram inflames the ewe, and every doe
  102. follows a chosen stag; so also birds
  103. are mated, and in all the animal world
  104. no female ever feels love passion for
  105. another female—why is it in me?
  106. “Monstrosities are natural to Crete,
  107. the daughter of the Sun there loved a bull—
  108. it was a female's mad love for the male—
  109. but my desire is far more mad than hers,
  110. in strict regard of truth, for she had hope
  111. of love's fulfillment. She secured the bull
  112. by changing herself to a heifer's form;
  113. and in that subtlety it was the male
  114. deceived at last. Though all the subtleties
  115. of all the world should be collected here;—
  116. if Daedalus himself should fly back here
  117. upon his waxen wings, what could he do?
  118. What skillful art of his could change my sex,
  119. a girl into a boy—or could he change
  120. Ianthe? What a useless thought! Be bold
  121. take courage Iphis, and be strong of soul.
  122. This hopeless passion stultifies your heart;
  123. so shake it off, and hold your memory
  124. down to the clear fact of your birth: unless
  125. your will provides deception for yourself:
  126. do only what is lawful, and confine
  127. strictly, your love within a woman's right.
  128. “Hope of fulfillment can beget true love,
  129. and hope keeps it alive. You are deprived
  130. of this hope by the nature of your birth.
  131. No guardian keeps you from her dear embrace,
  132. no watchful jealous husband, and she has
  133. no cruel father: she does not deny
  134. herself to you. With all that liberty,
  135. you can not have her for your happy wife,
  136. though Gods and men should labor for your wish.
  137. None of my prayers has ever been denied;
  138. the willing Deities have granted me
  139. whatever should be, and my father helps
  140. me to accomplish everything I plan:
  141. she and her father also, always help.
  142. But Nature is more powerful than all,
  143. and only Nature works for my distress.
  144. “The wedding-day already is at hand;
  145. the longed-for time is come; Ianthe soon
  146. will be mine only—and yet, not my own:
  147. with water all around me I shall thirst!
  148. O why must Juno, goddess of sweet brides,
  149. and why should Hymen also, favor us
  150. when man with woman cannot join in wedlock,
  151. but both are brides?” And so she closed her lips.
  1. The other maiden flamed with equal love,
  2. and often prayed for Hymen to appear.
  3. But Telethusa, fearing that event,
  4. the marriage which Ianthe keenly sought,
  5. procrastinated, causing first delay
  6. by some pretended illness; and then gave
  7. pretence of omens and of visions seen,
  8. sufficient for delay, until she had
  9. exhausted every avenue of excuse,
  10. and only one more day remained before
  11. the fateful time, it was so near at hand.
  12. Despairing then of finding other cause
  13. which might prevent the fated wedding-day,
  14. the mother took the circled fillets from
  15. her own head, and her daughter's head, and prayed,
  16. as she embraced the altar—her long hair
  17. spread out upon the flowing breeze—and said:
  18. “O Isis, goddess of Paraetonium,
  19. the Mareotic fields, Pharos, and Nile
  20. of seven horns divided—oh give help!
  21. Goddess of nations! heal us of our fears!
  22. I saw you, goddess, and your symbols once,
  23. and I adored them all, the clashing sounds
  24. of sistra and the torches of your train,
  25. and I took careful note of your commands,
  26. for which my daughter lives to see the sun,
  27. and also I have so escaped from harm;—
  28. all this is of your counsel and your gift;
  29. oh, pity both of us—and give us aid!”
  30. Tears emphasized her prayer; the goddess seemed
  31. to move—in truth it was the altar moved;
  32. the firm doors of the temple even shook—
  33. and her horns, crescent, flashed with gleams of light,
  34. and her loud sistrum rattled noisily.
  35. Although not quite free of all fear, yet pleased
  36. by that good omen, gladly the mother left
  37. the temple with her daughter Iphis, who
  38. beside her walked, but with a lengthened stride.
  39. Her face seemed of a darker hue, her strength
  40. seemed greater, and her features were more stern.
  41. Her hair once long, was unadorned and short.
  42. There is more vigor in her than she showed
  43. in her girl ways. For in the name of truth,
  44. Iphis, who was a girl, is now a man!
  45. Make offerings at the temple and rejoice
  46. without a fear!—They offer at the shrines,
  47. and add a votive tablet, on which this
  48. inscription is engraved:
  49. these gifts are paid
  50. by Iphis as a man which as a maid
  51. he vowed to give.
  52. The morrow's dawn
  53. revealed the wide world; on the day agreed,
  54. Venus, Juno and Hymen, all have met
  55. our happy lovers at the marriage fires;
  56. and Iphis, a new man, gained his Ianthe.
  1. Veiled in a saffron mantle, through the air
  2. unmeasured, after the strange wedding, Hymen
  3. departed swiftly for Ciconian land;
  4. regardless and not listening to the voice
  5. of tuneful Orpheus. Truly Hymen there
  6. was present during the festivities
  7. of Orpheus and Eurydice, but gave
  8. no happy omen, neither hallowed words
  9. nor joyful glances; and the torch he held
  10. would only sputter, fill the eyes with smoke,
  11. and cause no blaze while waving. The result
  12. of that sad wedding, proved more terrible
  13. than such foreboding fates.
  14. While through the grass
  15. delighted Naiads wandered with the bride,
  16. a serpent struck its venomed tooth in her
  17. soft ankle— and she died.—After the bard
  18. of Rhodope had mourned, and filled the highs
  19. of heaven with the moans of his lament,
  20. determined also the dark underworld
  21. should recognize the misery of death,
  22. he dared descend by the Taenarian gate
  23. down to the gloomy Styx. And there passed through
  24. pale-glimmering phantoms, and the ghosts
  25. escaped from sepulchres, until he found
  26. Persephone and Pluto, master-king
  27. of shadow realms below: and then began
  28. to strike his tuneful lyre, to which he sang:—
  29. “O deities of this dark world beneath
  30. the earth! this shadowy underworld, to which
  31. all mortals must descend! If it can be
  32. called lawful, and if you will suffer speech
  33. of strict truth (all the winding ways
  34. of Falsity forbidden) I come not
  35. down here because of curiosity
  36. to see the glooms of Tartarus and have
  37. no thought to bind or strangle the three necks
  38. of the Medusan Monster, vile with snakes.
  39. But I have come, because my darling wife
  40. stepped on a viper that sent through her veins
  41. death-poison, cutting off her coming years.
  42. “If able, I would bear it, I do not
  43. deny my effort—but the god of Love
  44. has conquered me—a god so kindly known
  45. in all the upper world. We are not sure
  46. he can be known so well in this deep world,
  47. but have good reason to conjecture he
  48. is not unknown here, and if old report
  49. almost forgotten, that you stole your wife
  50. is not a fiction, Love united you
  51. the same as others. By this Place of Fear
  52. this huge void and these vast and silent realms,
  53. renew the life-thread of Eurydice.
  54. “All things are due to you, and though on earth
  55. it happens we may tarry a short while,
  56. slowly or swiftly we must go to one
  57. abode; and it will be our final home.
  58. Long and tenaciously you will possess
  59. unquestioned mastery of the human race.
  60. She also shall be yours to rule, when full
  61. of age she shall have lived the days of her
  62. allotted years. So I ask of you
  63. possession of her few days as a boon.
  64. But if the fates deny to me this prayer
  65. for my true wife, my constant mind must hold
  66. me always so that I can not return—
  67. and you may triumph in the death of two!”
  68. While he sang all his heart said to the sound
  69. of his sweet lyre, the bloodless ghosts themselves
  70. were weeping, and the anxious Tantalus
  71. stopped clutching at return-flow of the wave,
  72. Ixion's twisting wheel stood wonder-bound;
  73. and Tityus' liver for a while escaped
  74. the vultures, and the listening Belides
  75. forgot their sieve-like bowls and even you,
  76. O Sisyphus! sat idly on your rock!
  77. Then Fame declared that conquered by the song
  78. of Orpheus, for the first and only time
  79. the hard cheeks of the fierce Eumenides
  80. were wet with tears: nor could the royal queen,
  81. nor he who rules the lower world deny
  82. the prayer of Orpheus; so they called to them
  83. Eurydice, who still was held among
  84. the new-arriving shades, and she obeyed
  85. the call by walking to them with slow steps,
  86. yet halting from her wound. So Orpheus then
  87. received his wife; and Pluto told him he
  88. might now ascend from these Avernian vales
  89. up to the light, with his Eurydice;
  90. but, if he turned his eyes to look at her,
  91. the gift of her delivery would be lost.
  92. They picked their way in silence up a steep
  93. and gloomy path of darkness. There remained
  94. but little more to climb till they would touch
  95. earth's surface, when in fear he might again
  96. lose her, and anxious for another look
  97. at her, he turned his eyes so he could gaze
  98. upon her. Instantly she slipped away.
  99. He stretched out to her his despairing arms,
  100. eager to rescue her, or feel her form,
  101. but could hold nothing save the yielding air.
  102. Dying the second time, she could not say
  103. a word of censure of her husband's fault;
  104. what had she to complain of — his great love?
  105. Her last word spoken was, “Farewell!” which he
  106. could barely hear, and with no further sound
  107. she fell from him again to Hades.—Struck
  108. quite senseless by this double death of his
  109. dear wife, he was as fixed from motion as
  110. the frightened one who saw the triple necks
  111. of Cerberus, that dog whose middle neck
  112. was chained. The sight filled him with terror he
  113. had no escape from, until petrified
  114. to stone; or like Olenos, changed to stone,
  115. because he fastened on himself the guilt
  116. of his wife. O unfortunate Lethaea!
  117. Too boastful of your beauty, you and he,
  118. united once in love, are now two stones
  119. upon the mountain Ida, moist with springs.
  120. Orpheus implored in vain the ferryman
  121. to help him cross the River Styx again,
  122. but was denied the very hope of death.
  123. Seven days he sat upon Death's river bank,
  124. in squalid misery and without all food—
  125. nourished by grief, anxiety, and tears—
  126. complaining that the Gods of Erebus
  127. were pitiless, at last he wandered back,
  128. until he came to lofty Rhodope
  129. and Haemus, beaten by the strong north wind.
  130. Three times the Sun completed his full course
  131. to watery Pisces, and in all that time,
  132. shunning all women, Orpheus still believed
  133. his love-pledge was forever. So he kept
  134. away from women, though so many grieved,
  135. because he took no notice of their love.
  136. The only friendship he enjoyed was given
  137. to the young men of Thrace.
  1. There was a hill
  2. which rose up to a level plateau, high
  3. and beautiful with green grass; and there was
  4. not any shade for comfort on the top
  5. and there on that luxuriant grass the bard,
  6. while heaven-inspired reclined, and struck
  7. such harmonies on his sweet lyre that shade
  8. most grateful to the hill was spread around.
  9. Strong trees came up there—the Chaonian oak
  10. the Heliads' poplar, and the lofty-branched
  11. deep mast-tree, the soft linden and the beech,
  12. the brittle hazel, and the virgin laurel-tree,
  13. the ash for strong spears, the smooth silver-fir,
  14. the flex bent with acorns and the plane,
  15. the various tinted maple and with those,
  16. the lotus and green willows from their streams,
  17. evergreen box and slender tamarisks,
  18. rich myrtles of two colors and the tine,
  19. bending with green-blue berries: and you, too,
  20. the pliant-footed ivy, came along
  21. with tendril-branching grape-vines, and the elm
  22. all covered with twist-vines, the mountain-ash,
  23. pitch-trees and arbute-trees of blushing fruit,
  24. the bending-palm prized after victories,
  25. the bare-trunk pine of tufted foliage,
  26. bristled upon the top, a pleasant sight
  27. delightful to the Mother of the Gods;
  28. since Attis dear to Cybele, exchanged
  29. his human form which hardened in that tree.
  30. In all the throng the cone-shaped cypress came;
  31. a tree now, it was changed from a dear youth
  32. loved by the god who strings the lyre and bow.
  33. For there was at one time, a mighty stag
  34. held sacred by those nymphs who haunt the fields
  35. Carthaean. His great antlers spread so wide,
  36. they gave an ample shade to his own head.
  37. Those antlers shone with gold: from his smooth throat
  38. a necklace, studded with a wealth of gems,
  39. hung down to his strong shoulders—beautiful.
  40. A silver boss, fastened with little thongs,
  41. played on his forehead, worn there from his birth;
  42. and pendants from both ears, of gleaming pearls,
  43. adorned his hollow temples. Free of fear,
  44. and now no longer shy, frequenting homes
  45. of men he knew, he offered his soft neck
  46. even to strangers for their petting hands.
  47. But more than by all others, he was loved
  48. by you, O Cyparissus, fairest youth
  49. of all the lads of Cea. It was you
  50. who led the pet stag to fresh pasturage,
  51. and to the waters of the clearest spring.
  52. Sometimes you wove bright garlands for his horns,
  53. and sometimes, like a horseman on his back,
  54. now here now there, you guided his soft mouth
  55. with purple reins. It was upon a summer day,
  56. at high noon when the Crab, of spreading claws,
  57. loving the sea-shore, almost burnt beneath
  58. the sun's hot burning rays; and the pet stag
  59. was then reclining on the grassy earth
  60. and, wearied of all action, found relief
  61. under the cool shade of the forest trees;
  62. that as he lay there Cyparissus pierced
  63. him with a javelin: and although it was
  64. quite accidental, when the shocked youth saw
  65. his loved stag dying from the cruel wound
  66. he could not bear it, and resolved on death.
  67. What did not Phoebus say to comfort him?
  68. He cautioned him to hold his grief in check,
  69. consistent with the cause. But still the lad
  70. lamented, and with groans implored the Gods
  71. that he might mourn forever. His life force
  72. exhausted by long weeping, now his limbs
  73. began to take a green tint, and his hair,
  74. which overhung his snow-white brow, turned up
  75. into a bristling crest; and he became
  76. a stiff tree with a slender top and pointed
  77. up to the starry heavens. And the God,
  78. groaning with sorrow, said; “You shall be mourned
  79. sincerely by me, surely as you mourn
  80. for others, and forever you shall stand
  81. in grief, where others grieve.”