3001 lines
133 KiB
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3001 lines
133 KiB
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Vergil's Georgics in English**
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Vergil's Georgics in English
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March, 1995 [Etext #232]
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of Vergil's Georgics in English**
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29 BC
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THE GEORGICS
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by Virgil
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GEORGIC I
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What makes the cornfield smile; beneath what star
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Maecenas, it is meet to turn the sod
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Or marry elm with vine; how tend the steer;
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What pains for cattle-keeping, or what proof
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Of patient trial serves for thrifty bees;-
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Such are my themes.
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O universal lights
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Most glorious! ye that lead the gliding year
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Along the sky, Liber and Ceres mild,
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If by your bounty holpen earth once changed
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Chaonian acorn for the plump wheat-ear,
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And mingled with the grape, your new-found gift,
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The draughts of Achelous; and ye Fauns
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To rustics ever kind, come foot it, Fauns
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And Dryad-maids together; your gifts I sing.
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And thou, for whose delight the war-horse first
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Sprang from earth's womb at thy great trident's stroke,
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Neptune; and haunter of the groves, for whom
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Three hundred snow-white heifers browse the brakes,
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The fertile brakes of Ceos; and clothed in power,
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Thy native forest and Lycean lawns,
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Pan, shepherd-god, forsaking, as the love
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Of thine own Maenalus constrains thee, hear
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And help, O lord of Tegea! And thou, too,
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Minerva, from whose hand the olive sprung;
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And boy-discoverer of the curved plough;
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And, bearing a young cypress root-uptorn,
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Silvanus, and Gods all and Goddesses,
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Who make the fields your care, both ye who nurse
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The tender unsown increase, and from heaven
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Shed on man's sowing the riches of your rain:
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And thou, even thou, of whom we know not yet
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What mansion of the skies shall hold thee soon,
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Whether to watch o'er cities be thy will,
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Great Caesar, and to take the earth in charge,
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That so the mighty world may welcome thee
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Lord of her increase, master of her times,
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Binding thy mother's myrtle round thy brow,
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Or as the boundless ocean's God thou come,
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Sole dread of seamen, till far Thule bow
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Before thee, and Tethys win thee to her son
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With all her waves for dower; or as a star
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Lend thy fresh beams our lagging months to cheer,
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Where 'twixt the Maid and those pursuing Claws
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A space is opening; see! red Scorpio's self
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His arms draws in, yea, and hath left thee more
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Than thy full meed of heaven: be what thou wilt-
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For neither Tartarus hopes to call thee king,
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Nor may so dire a lust of sovereignty
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E'er light upon thee, howso Greece admire
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Elysium's fields, and Proserpine not heed
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Her mother's voice entreating to return-
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Vouchsafe a prosperous voyage, and smile on this
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My bold endeavour, and pitying, even as I,
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These poor way-wildered swains, at once begin,
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Grow timely used unto the voice of prayer.
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In early spring-tide, when the icy drip
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Melts from the mountains hoar, and Zephyr's breath
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Unbinds the crumbling clod, even then 'tis time;
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Press deep your plough behind the groaning ox,
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And teach the furrow-burnished share to shine.
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That land the craving farmer's prayer fulfils,
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Which twice the sunshine, twice the frost has felt;
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Ay, that's the land whose boundless harvest-crops
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Burst, see! the barns.
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But ere our metal cleave
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An unknown surface, heed we to forelearn
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The winds and varying temper of the sky,
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The lineal tilth and habits of the spot,
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What every region yields, and what denies.
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Here blithelier springs the corn, and here the grape,
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There earth is green with tender growth of trees
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And grass unbidden. See how from Tmolus comes
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The saffron's fragrance, ivory from Ind,
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From Saba's weakling sons their frankincense,
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Iron from the naked Chalybs, castor rank
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From Pontus, from Epirus the prize-palms
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O' the mares of Elis.
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Such the eternal bond
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And such the laws by Nature's hand imposed
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On clime and clime, e'er since the primal dawn
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When old Deucalion on the unpeopled earth
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Cast stones, whence men, a flinty race, were reared.
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Up then! if fat the soil, let sturdy bulls
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Upturn it from the year's first opening months,
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And let the clods lie bare till baked to dust
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By the ripe suns of summer; but if the earth
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Less fruitful just ere Arcturus rise
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With shallower trench uptilt it- 'twill suffice;
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There, lest weeds choke the crop's luxuriance, here,
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Lest the scant moisture fail the barren sand.
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Then thou shalt suffer in alternate years
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The new-reaped fields to rest, and on the plain
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A crust of sloth to harden; or, when stars
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Are changed in heaven, there sow the golden grain
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Where erst, luxuriant with its quivering pod,
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Pulse, or the slender vetch-crop, thou hast cleared,
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And lupin sour, whose brittle stalks arise,
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A hurtling forest. For the plain is parched
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By flax-crop, parched by oats, by poppies parched
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In Lethe-slumber drenched. Nathless by change
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The travailing earth is lightened, but stint not
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With refuse rich to soak the thirsty soil,
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And shower foul ashes o'er the exhausted fields.
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Thus by rotation like repose is gained,
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Nor earth meanwhile uneared and thankless left.
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Oft, too, 'twill boot to fire the naked fields,
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And the light stubble burn with crackling flames;
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Whether that earth therefrom some hidden strength
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And fattening food derives, or that the fire
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Bakes every blemish out, and sweats away
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Each useless humour, or that the heat unlocks
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New passages and secret pores, whereby
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Their life-juice to the tender blades may win;
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Or that it hardens more and helps to bind
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The gaping veins, lest penetrating showers,
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Or fierce sun's ravening might, or searching blast
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Of the keen north should sear them. Well, I wot,
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He serves the fields who with his harrow breaks
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The sluggish clods, and hurdles osier-twined
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Hales o'er them; from the far Olympian height
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Him golden Ceres not in vain regards;
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And he, who having ploughed the fallow plain
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And heaved its furrowy ridges, turns once more
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Cross-wise his shattering share, with stroke on stroke
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The earth assails, and makes the field his thrall.
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Pray for wet summers and for winters fine,
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Ye husbandmen; in winter's dust the crops
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Exceedingly rejoice, the field hath joy;
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No tilth makes Mysia lift her head so high,
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Nor Gargarus his own harvests so admire.
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Why tell of him, who, having launched his seed,
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Sets on for close encounter, and rakes smooth
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The dry dust hillocks, then on the tender corn
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Lets in the flood, whose waters follow fain;
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And when the parched field quivers, and all the blades
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Are dying, from the brow of its hill-bed,
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See! see! he lures the runnel; down it falls,
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Waking hoarse murmurs o'er the polished stones,
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And with its bubblings slakes the thirsty fields?
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Or why of him, who lest the heavy ears
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O'erweigh the stalk, while yet in tender blade
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Feeds down the crop's luxuriance, when its growth
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First tops the furrows? Why of him who drains
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The marsh-land's gathered ooze through soaking sand,
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Chiefly what time in treacherous moons a stream
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Goes out in spate, and with its coat of slime
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Holds all the country, whence the hollow dykes
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Sweat steaming vapour?
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But no whit the more
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For all expedients tried and travail borne
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By man and beast in turning oft the soil,
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Do greedy goose and Strymon-haunting cranes
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And succory's bitter fibres cease to harm,
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Or shade not injure. The great Sire himself
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No easy road to husbandry assigned,
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And first was he by human skill to rouse
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The slumbering glebe, whetting the minds of men
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With care on care, nor suffering realm of his
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In drowsy sloth to stagnate. Before Jove
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Fields knew no taming hand of husbandmen;
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To mark the plain or mete with boundary-line-
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Even this was impious; for the common stock
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They gathered, and the earth of her own will
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All things more freely, no man bidding, bore.
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He to black serpents gave their venom-bane,
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And bade the wolf go prowl, and ocean toss;
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Shook from the leaves their honey, put fire away,
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And curbed the random rivers running wine,
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That use by gradual dint of thought on thought
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Might forge the various arts, with furrow's help
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The corn-blade win, and strike out hidden fire
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|
From the flint's heart. Then first the streams were ware
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Of hollowed alder-hulls: the sailor then
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|
Their names and numbers gave to star and star,
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Pleiads and Hyads, and Lycaon's child
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Bright Arctos; how with nooses then was found
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To catch wild beasts, and cozen them with lime,
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And hem with hounds the mighty forest-glades.
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Soon one with hand-net scourges the broad stream,
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Probing its depths, one drags his dripping toils
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Along the main; then iron's unbending might,
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And shrieking saw-blade,- for the men of old
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With wedges wont to cleave the splintering log;-
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Then divers arts arose; toil conquered all,
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Remorseless toil, and poverty's shrewd push
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In times of hardship. Ceres was the first
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Set mortals on with tools to turn the sod,
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When now the awful groves 'gan fail to bear
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Acorns and arbutes, and her wonted food
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Dodona gave no more. Soon, too, the corn
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Gat sorrow's increase, that an evil blight
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Ate up the stalks, and thistle reared his spines
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An idler in the fields; the crops die down;
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Upsprings instead a shaggy growth of burrs
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And caltrops; and amid the corn-fields trim
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|
Unfruitful darnel and wild oats have sway.
|
|
Wherefore, unless thou shalt with ceaseless rake
|
|
The weeds pursue, with shouting scare the birds,
|
|
Prune with thy hook the dark field's matted shade,
|
|
Pray down the showers, all vainly thou shalt eye,
|
|
Alack! thy neighbour's heaped-up harvest-mow,
|
|
And in the greenwood from a shaken oak
|
|
Seek solace for thine hunger.
|
|
Now to tell
|
|
The sturdy rustics' weapons, what they are,
|
|
Without which, neither can be sown nor reared
|
|
The fruits of harvest; first the bent plough's share
|
|
And heavy timber, and slow-lumbering wains
|
|
Of the Eleusinian mother, threshing-sleighs
|
|
And drags, and harrows with their crushing weight;
|
|
Then the cheap wicker-ware of Celeus old,
|
|
Hurdles of arbute, and thy mystic fan,
|
|
Iacchus; which, full tale, long ere the time
|
|
Thou must with heed lay by, if thee await
|
|
Not all unearned the country's crown divine.
|
|
While yet within the woods, the elm is tamed
|
|
And bowed with mighty force to form the stock,
|
|
And take the plough's curved shape, then nigh the root
|
|
A pole eight feet projecting, earth-boards twain,
|
|
And share-beam with its double back they fix.
|
|
For yoke is early hewn a linden light,
|
|
And a tall beech for handle, from behind
|
|
To turn the car at lowest: then o'er the hearth
|
|
The wood they hang till the smoke knows it well.
|
|
Many the precepts of the men of old
|
|
I can recount thee, so thou start not back,
|
|
And such slight cares to learn not weary thee.
|
|
And this among the first: thy threshing-floor
|
|
With ponderous roller must be levelled smooth,
|
|
And wrought by hand, and fixed with binding chalk,
|
|
Lest weeds arise, or dust a passage win
|
|
Splitting the surface, then a thousand plagues
|
|
Make sport of it: oft builds the tiny mouse
|
|
Her home, and plants her granary, underground,
|
|
Or burrow for their bed the purblind moles,
|
|
Or toad is found in hollows, and all the swarm
|
|
Of earth's unsightly creatures; or a huge
|
|
Corn-heap the weevil plunders, and the ant,
|
|
Fearful of coming age and penury.
|
|
Mark too, what time the walnut in the woods
|
|
With ample bloom shall clothe her, and bow down
|
|
Her odorous branches, if the fruit prevail,
|
|
Like store of grain will follow, and there shall come
|
|
A mighty winnowing-time with mighty heat;
|
|
But if the shade with wealth of leaves abound,
|
|
Vainly your threshing-floor will bruise the stalks
|
|
Rich but in chaff. Many myself have seen
|
|
Steep, as they sow, their pulse-seeds, drenching them
|
|
With nitre and black oil-lees, that the fruit
|
|
Might swell within the treacherous pods, and they
|
|
Make speed to boil at howso small a fire.
|
|
Yet, culled with caution, proved with patient toil,
|
|
These have I seen degenerate, did not man
|
|
Put forth his hand with power, and year by year
|
|
Choose out the largest. So, by fate impelled,
|
|
Speed all things to the worse, and backward borne
|
|
Glide from us; even as who with struggling oars
|
|
Up stream scarce pulls a shallop, if he chance
|
|
His arms to slacken, lo! with headlong force
|
|
The current sweeps him down the hurrying tide.
|
|
Us too behoves Arcturus' sign observe,
|
|
And the Kids' seasons and the shining Snake,
|
|
No less than those who o'er the windy main
|
|
Borne homeward tempt the Pontic, and the jaws
|
|
Of oyster-rife Abydos. When the Scales
|
|
Now poising fair the hours of sleep and day
|
|
Give half the world to sunshine, half to shade,
|
|
Then urge your bulls, my masters; sow the plain
|
|
Even to the verge of tameless winter's showers
|
|
With barley: then, too, time it is to hide
|
|
Your flax in earth, and poppy, Ceres' joy,
|
|
Aye, more than time to bend above the plough,
|
|
While earth, yet dry, forbids not, and the clouds
|
|
Are buoyant. With the spring comes bean-sowing;
|
|
Thee, too, Lucerne, the crumbling furrows then
|
|
Receive, and millet's annual care returns,
|
|
What time the white bull with his gilded horns
|
|
Opens the year, before whose threatening front,
|
|
Routed the dog-star sinks. But if it be
|
|
For wheaten harvest and the hardy spelt,
|
|
Thou tax the soil, to corn-ears wholly given,
|
|
Let Atlas' daughters hide them in the dawn,
|
|
The Cretan star, a crown of fire, depart,
|
|
Or e'er the furrow's claim of seed thou quit,
|
|
Or haste thee to entrust the whole year's hope
|
|
To earth that would not. Many have begun
|
|
Ere Maia's star be setting; these, I trow,
|
|
Their looked-for harvest fools with empty ears.
|
|
But if the vetch and common kidney-bean
|
|
Thou'rt fain to sow, nor scorn to make thy care
|
|
Pelusiac lentil, no uncertain sign
|
|
Bootes' fall will send thee; then begin,
|
|
Pursue thy sowing till half the frosts be done.
|
|
Therefore it is the golden sun, his course
|
|
Into fixed parts dividing, rules his way
|
|
Through the twelve constellations of the world.
|
|
Five zones the heavens contain; whereof is one
|
|
Aye red with flashing sunlight, fervent aye
|
|
From fire; on either side to left and right
|
|
Are traced the utmost twain, stiff with blue ice,
|
|
And black with scowling storm-clouds, and betwixt
|
|
These and the midmost, other twain there lie,
|
|
By the Gods' grace to heart-sick mortals given,
|
|
And a path cleft between them, where might wheel
|
|
On sloping plane the system of the Signs.
|
|
And as toward Scythia and Rhipaean heights
|
|
The world mounts upward, likewise sinks it down
|
|
Toward Libya and the south, this pole of ours
|
|
Still towering high, that other, 'neath their feet,
|
|
By dark Styx frowned on, and the abysmal shades.
|
|
Here glides the huge Snake forth with sinuous coils
|
|
'Twixt the two Bears and round them river-wise-
|
|
The Bears that fear 'neath Ocean's brim to dip.
|
|
There either, say they, reigns the eternal hush
|
|
Of night that knows no seasons, her black pall
|
|
Thick-mantling fold on fold; or thitherward
|
|
From us returning Dawn brings back the day;
|
|
And when the first breath of his panting steeds
|
|
On us the Orient flings, that hour with them
|
|
Red Vesper 'gins to trim his his 'lated fires.
|
|
Hence under doubtful skies forebode we can
|
|
The coming tempests, hence both harvest-day
|
|
And seed-time, when to smite the treacherous main
|
|
With driving oars, when launch the fair-rigged fleet,
|
|
Or in ripe hour to fell the forest-pine.
|
|
Hence, too, not idly do we watch the stars-
|
|
Their rising and their setting-and the year,
|
|
Four varying seasons to one law conformed.
|
|
If chilly showers e'er shut the farmer's door,
|
|
Much that had soon with sunshine cried for haste,
|
|
He may forestall; the ploughman batters keen
|
|
His blunted share's hard tooth, scoops from a tree
|
|
His troughs, or on the cattle stamps a brand,
|
|
Or numbers on the corn-heaps; some make sharp
|
|
The stakes and two-pronged forks, and willow-bands
|
|
Amerian for the bending vine prepare.
|
|
Now let the pliant basket plaited be
|
|
Of bramble-twigs; now set your corn to parch
|
|
Before the fire; now bruise it with the stone.
|
|
Nay even on holy days some tasks to ply
|
|
Is right and lawful: this no ban forbids,
|
|
To turn the runnel's course, fence corn-fields in,
|
|
Make springes for the birds, burn up the briars,
|
|
And plunge in wholesome stream the bleating flock.
|
|
Oft too with oil or apples plenty-cheap
|
|
The creeping ass's ribs his driver packs,
|
|
And home from town returning brings instead
|
|
A dented mill-stone or black lump of pitch.
|
|
The moon herself in various rank assigns
|
|
The days for labour lucky: fly the fifth;
|
|
Then sprang pale Orcus and the Eumenides;
|
|
Earth then in awful labour brought to light
|
|
Coeus, Iapetus, and Typhoeus fell,
|
|
And those sworn brethren banded to break down
|
|
The gates of heaven; thrice, sooth to say, they strove
|
|
Ossa on Pelion's top to heave and heap,
|
|
Aye, and on Ossa to up-roll amain
|
|
Leafy Olympus; thrice with thunderbolt
|
|
Their mountain-stair the Sire asunder smote.
|
|
Seventh after tenth is lucky both to set
|
|
The vine in earth, and take and tame the steer,
|
|
And fix the leashes to the warp; the ninth
|
|
To runagates is kinder, cross to thieves.
|
|
Many the tasks that lightlier lend themselves
|
|
In chilly night, or when the sun is young,
|
|
And Dawn bedews the world. By night 'tis best
|
|
To reap light stubble, and parched fields by night;
|
|
For nights the suppling moisture never fails.
|
|
And one will sit the long late watches out
|
|
By winter fire-light, shaping with keen blade
|
|
The torches to a point; his wife the while,
|
|
Her tedious labour soothing with a song,
|
|
Speeds the shrill comb along the warp, or else
|
|
With Vulcan's aid boils the sweet must-juice down,
|
|
And skims with leaves the quivering cauldron's wave.
|
|
But ruddy Ceres in mid heat is mown,
|
|
And in mid heat the parched ears are bruised
|
|
Upon the floor; to plough strip, strip to sow;
|
|
Winter's the lazy time for husbandmen.
|
|
In the cold season farmers wont to taste
|
|
The increase of their toil, and yield themselves
|
|
To mutual interchange of festal cheer.
|
|
Boon winter bids them, and unbinds their cares,
|
|
As laden keels, when now the port they touch,
|
|
And happy sailors crown the sterns with flowers.
|
|
Nathless then also time it is to strip
|
|
Acorns from oaks, and berries from the bay,
|
|
Olives, and bleeding myrtles, then to set
|
|
Snares for the crane, and meshes for the stag,
|
|
And hunt the long-eared hares, then pierce the doe
|
|
With whirl of hempen-thonged Balearic sling,
|
|
While snow lies deep, and streams are drifting ice.
|
|
What need to tell of autumn's storms and stars,
|
|
And wherefore men must watch, when now the day
|
|
Grows shorter, and more soft the summer's heat?
|
|
When Spring the rain-bringer comes rushing down,
|
|
Or when the beards of harvest on the plain
|
|
Bristle already, and the milky corn
|
|
On its green stalk is swelling? Many a time,
|
|
When now the farmer to his yellow fields
|
|
The reaping-hind came bringing, even in act
|
|
To lop the brittle barley stems, have I
|
|
Seen all the windy legions clash in war
|
|
Together, as to rend up far and wide
|
|
The heavy corn-crop from its lowest roots,
|
|
And toss it skyward: so might winter's flaw,
|
|
Dark-eddying, whirl light stalks and flying straws.
|
|
Oft too comes looming vast along the sky
|
|
A march of waters; mustering from above,
|
|
The clouds roll up the tempest, heaped and grim
|
|
With angry showers: down falls the height of heaven,
|
|
And with a great rain floods the smiling crops,
|
|
The oxen's labour: now the dikes fill fast,
|
|
And the void river-beds swell thunderously,
|
|
And all the panting firths of Ocean boil.
|
|
The Sire himself in midnight of the clouds
|
|
Wields with red hand the levin; through all her bulk
|
|
Earth at the hurly quakes; the beasts are fled,
|
|
And mortal hearts of every kindred sunk
|
|
In cowering terror; he with flaming brand
|
|
Athos, or Rhodope, or Ceraunian crags
|
|
Precipitates: then doubly raves the South
|
|
With shower on blinding shower, and woods and coasts
|
|
Wail fitfully beneath the mighty blast.
|
|
This fearing, mark the months and Signs of heaven,
|
|
Whither retires him Saturn's icy star,
|
|
And through what heavenly cycles wandereth
|
|
The glowing orb Cyllenian. Before all
|
|
Worship the Gods, and to great Ceres pay
|
|
Her yearly dues upon the happy sward
|
|
With sacrifice, anigh the utmost end
|
|
Of winter, and when Spring begins to smile.
|
|
Then lambs are fat, and wines are mellowest then;
|
|
Then sleep is sweet, and dark the shadows fall
|
|
Upon the mountains. Let your rustic youth
|
|
To Ceres do obeisance, one and all;
|
|
And for her pleasure thou mix honeycombs
|
|
With milk and the ripe wine-god; thrice for luck
|
|
Around the young corn let the victim go,
|
|
And all the choir, a joyful company,
|
|
Attend it, and with shouts bid Ceres come
|
|
To be their house-mate; and let no man dare
|
|
Put sickle to the ripened ears until,
|
|
With woven oak his temples chapleted,
|
|
He foot the rugged dance and chant the lay.
|
|
Aye, and that these things we might win to know
|
|
By certain tokens, heats, and showers, and winds
|
|
That bring the frost, the Sire of all himself
|
|
Ordained what warnings in her monthly round
|
|
The moon should give, what bodes the south wind's fall,
|
|
What oft-repeated sights the herdsman seeing
|
|
Should keep his cattle closer to their stalls.
|
|
No sooner are the winds at point to rise,
|
|
Than either Ocean's firths begin to toss
|
|
And swell, and a dry crackling sound is heard
|
|
Upon the heights, or one loud ferment booms
|
|
The beach afar, and through the forest goes
|
|
A murmur multitudinous. By this
|
|
Scarce can the billow spare the curved keels,
|
|
When swift the sea-gulls from the middle main
|
|
Come winging, and their shrieks are shoreward borne,
|
|
When ocean-loving cormorants on dry land
|
|
Besport them, and the hern, her marshy haunts
|
|
Forsaking, mounts above the soaring cloud.
|
|
Oft, too, when wind is toward, the stars thou'lt see
|
|
From heaven shoot headlong, and through murky night
|
|
Long trails of fire white-glistening in their wake,
|
|
Or light chaff flit in air with fallen leaves,
|
|
Or feathers on the wave-top float and play.
|
|
But when from regions of the furious North
|
|
It lightens, and when thunder fills the halls
|
|
Of Eurus and of Zephyr, all the fields
|
|
With brimming dikes are flooded, and at sea
|
|
No mariner but furls his dripping sails.
|
|
Never at unawares did shower annoy:
|
|
Or, as it rises, the high-soaring cranes
|
|
Flee to the vales before it, with face
|
|
Upturned to heaven, the heifer snuffs the gale
|
|
Through gaping nostrils, or about the meres
|
|
Shrill-twittering flits the swallow, and the frogs
|
|
Crouch in the mud and chant their dirge of old.
|
|
Oft, too, the ant from out her inmost cells,
|
|
Fretting the narrow path, her eggs conveys;
|
|
Or the huge bow sucks moisture; or a host
|
|
Of rooks from food returning in long line
|
|
Clamour with jostling wings. Now mayst thou see
|
|
The various ocean-fowl and those that pry
|
|
Round Asian meads within thy fresher-pools,
|
|
Cayster, as in eager rivalry,
|
|
About their shoulders dash the plenteous spray,
|
|
Now duck their head beneath the wave, now run
|
|
Into the billows, for sheer idle joy
|
|
Of their mad bathing-revel. Then the crow
|
|
With full voice, good-for-naught, inviting rain,
|
|
Stalks on the dry sand mateless and alone.
|
|
Nor e'en the maids, that card their nightly task,
|
|
Know not the storm-sign, when in blazing crock
|
|
They see the lamp-oil sputtering with a growth
|
|
Of mouldy snuff-clots.
|
|
So too, after rain,
|
|
Sunshine and open skies thou mayst forecast,
|
|
And learn by tokens sure, for then nor dimmed
|
|
Appear the stars' keen edges, nor the moon
|
|
As borrowing of her brother's beams to rise,
|
|
Nor fleecy films to float along the sky.
|
|
Not to the sun's warmth then upon the shore
|
|
Do halcyons dear to Thetis ope their wings,
|
|
Nor filthy swine take thought to toss on high
|
|
With scattering snout the straw-wisps. But the clouds
|
|
Seek more the vales, and rest upon the plain,
|
|
And from the roof-top the night-owl for naught
|
|
Watching the sunset plies her 'lated song.
|
|
Distinct in clearest air is Nisus seen
|
|
Towering, and Scylla for the purple lock
|
|
Pays dear; for whereso, as she flies, her wings
|
|
The light air winnow, lo! fierce, implacable,
|
|
Nisus with mighty whirr through heaven pursues;
|
|
Where Nisus heavenward soareth, there her wings
|
|
Clutch as she flies, the light air winnowing still.
|
|
Soft then the voice of rooks from indrawn throat
|
|
Thrice, four times, o'er repeated, and full oft
|
|
On their high cradles, by some hidden joy
|
|
Gladdened beyond their wont, in bustling throngs
|
|
Among the leaves they riot; so sweet it is,
|
|
When showers are spent, their own loved nests again
|
|
And tender brood to visit. Not, I deem,
|
|
That heaven some native wit to these assigned,
|
|
Or fate a larger prescience, but that when
|
|
The storm and shifting moisture of the air
|
|
Have changed their courses, and the sky-god now,
|
|
Wet with the south-wind, thickens what was rare,
|
|
And what was gross releases, then, too, change
|
|
Their spirits' fleeting phases, and their breasts
|
|
Feel other motions now, than when the wind
|
|
Was driving up the cloud-rack. Hence proceeds
|
|
That blending of the feathered choirs afield,
|
|
The cattle's exultation, and the rooks'
|
|
Deep-throated triumph.
|
|
But if the headlong sun
|
|
And moons in order following thou regard,
|
|
Ne'er will to-morrow's hour deceive thee, ne'er
|
|
Wilt thou be caught by guile of cloudless night.
|
|
When first the moon recalls her rallying fires,
|
|
If dark the air clipped by her crescent dim,
|
|
For folks afield and on the open sea
|
|
A mighty rain is brewing; but if her face
|
|
With maiden blush she mantle, 'twill be wind,
|
|
For wind turns Phoebe still to ruddier gold.
|
|
But if at her fourth rising, for 'tis that
|
|
Gives surest counsel, clear she ride thro' heaven
|
|
With horns unblunted, then shall that whole day,
|
|
And to the month's end those that spring from it,
|
|
Rainless and windless be, while safe ashore
|
|
Shall sailors pay their vows to Panope,
|
|
Glaucus, and Melicertes, Ino's child.
|
|
The sun too, both at rising, and when soon
|
|
He dives beneath the waves, shall yield thee signs;
|
|
For signs, none trustier, travel with the sun,
|
|
Both those which in their course with dawn he brings,
|
|
And those at star-rise. When his springing orb
|
|
With spots he pranketh, muffled in a cloud,
|
|
And shrinks mid-circle, then of showers beware;
|
|
For then the South comes driving from the deep,
|
|
To trees and crops and cattle bringing bane.
|
|
Or when at day-break through dark clouds his rays
|
|
Burst and are scattered, or when rising pale
|
|
Aurora quits Tithonus' saffron bed,
|
|
But sorry shelter then, alack I will yield
|
|
Vine-leaf to ripening grapes; so thick a hail
|
|
In spiky showers spins rattling on the roof.
|
|
And this yet more 'twill boot thee bear in mind,
|
|
When now, his course upon Olympus run,
|
|
He draws to his decline: for oft we see
|
|
Upon the sun's own face strange colours stray;
|
|
Dark tells of rain, of east winds fiery-red;
|
|
If spots with ruddy fire begin to mix,
|
|
Then all the heavens convulsed in wrath thou'lt see-
|
|
Storm-clouds and wind together. Me that night
|
|
Let no man bid fare forth upon the deep,
|
|
Nor rend the rope from shore. But if, when both
|
|
He brings again and hides the day's return,
|
|
Clear-orbed he shineth,idly wilt thou dread
|
|
The storm-clouds, and beneath the lustral North
|
|
See the woods waving. What late eve in fine
|
|
Bears in her bosom, whence the wind that brings
|
|
Fair-weather-clouds, or what the rain South
|
|
Is meditating, tokens of all these
|
|
The sun will give thee. Who dare charge the sun
|
|
With leasing? He it is who warneth oft
|
|
Of hidden broils at hand and treachery,
|
|
And secret swelling of the waves of war.
|
|
He too it was, when Caesar's light was quenched,
|
|
For Rome had pity, when his bright head he veiled
|
|
In iron-hued darkness, till a godless age
|
|
Trembled for night eternal; at that time
|
|
Howbeit earth also, and the ocean-plains,
|
|
And dogs obscene, and birds of evil bode
|
|
Gave tokens. Yea, how often have we seen
|
|
Etna, her furnace-walls asunder riven,
|
|
In billowy floods boil o'er the Cyclops' fields,
|
|
And roll down globes of fire and molten rocks!
|
|
A clash of arms through all the heaven was heard
|
|
By Germany; strange heavings shook the Alps.
|
|
Yea, and by many through the breathless groves
|
|
A voice was heard with power, and wondrous-pale
|
|
Phantoms were seen upon the dusk of night,
|
|
And cattle spake, portentous! streams stand still,
|
|
And the earth yawns asunder, ivory weeps
|
|
For sorrow in the shrines, and bronzes sweat.
|
|
Up-twirling forests with his eddying tide,
|
|
Madly he bears them down, that lord of floods,
|
|
Eridanus, till through all the plain are swept
|
|
Beasts and their stalls together. At that time
|
|
In gloomy entrails ceased not to appear
|
|
Dark-threatening fibres, springs to trickle blood,
|
|
And high-built cities night-long to resound
|
|
With the wolves' howling. Never more than then
|
|
From skies all cloudless fell the thunderbolts,
|
|
Nor blazed so oft the comet's fire of bale.
|
|
Therefore a second time Philippi saw
|
|
The Roman hosts with kindred weapons rush
|
|
To battle, nor did the high gods deem it hard
|
|
That twice Emathia and the wide champaign
|
|
Of Haemus should be fattening with our blood.
|
|
Ay, and the time will come when there anigh,
|
|
Heaving the earth up with his curved plough,
|
|
Some swain will light on javelins by foul rust
|
|
Corroded, or with ponderous harrow strike
|
|
On empty helmets, while he gapes to see
|
|
Bones as of giants from the trench untombed.
|
|
Gods of my country, heroes of the soil,
|
|
And Romulus, and Mother Vesta, thou
|
|
Who Tuscan Tiber and Rome's Palatine
|
|
Preservest, this new champion at the least
|
|
Our fallen generation to repair
|
|
Forbid not. To the full and long ago
|
|
Our blood thy Trojan perjuries hath paid,
|
|
Laomedon. Long since the courts of heaven
|
|
Begrudge us thee, our Caesar, and complain
|
|
That thou regard'st the triumphs of mankind,
|
|
Here where the wrong is right, the right is wrong,
|
|
Where wars abound so many, and myriad-faced
|
|
Is crime; where no meet honour hath the plough;
|
|
The fields, their husbandmen led far away,
|
|
Rot in neglect, and curved pruning-hooks
|
|
Into the sword's stiff blade are fused and forged.
|
|
Euphrates here, here Germany new strife
|
|
Is stirring; neighbouring cities are in arms,
|
|
The laws that bound them snapped; and godless war
|
|
Rages through all the universe; as when
|
|
The four-horse chariots from the barriers poured
|
|
Still quicken o'er the course, and, idly now
|
|
Grasping the reins, the driver by his team
|
|
Is onward borne, nor heeds the car his curb.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GEORGIC II
|
|
|
|
Thus far the tilth of fields and stars of heaven;
|
|
Now will I sing thee, Bacchus, and, with thee,
|
|
The forest's young plantations and the fruit
|
|
Of slow-maturing olive. Hither haste,
|
|
O Father of the wine-press; all things here
|
|
Teem with the bounties of thy hand; for thee
|
|
With viny autumn laden blooms the field,
|
|
And foams the vintage high with brimming vats;
|
|
Hither, O Father of the wine-press, come,
|
|
And stripped of buskin stain thy bared limbs
|
|
In the new must with me.
|
|
First, nature's law
|
|
For generating trees is manifold;
|
|
For some of their own force spontaneous spring,
|
|
No hand of man compelling, and possess
|
|
The plains and river-windings far and wide,
|
|
As pliant osier and the bending broom,
|
|
Poplar, and willows in wan companies
|
|
With green leaf glimmering gray; and some there be
|
|
From chance-dropped seed that rear them, as the tall
|
|
Chestnuts, and, mightiest of the branching wood,
|
|
Jove's Aesculus, and oaks, oracular
|
|
Deemed by the Greeks of old. With some sprouts forth
|
|
A forest of dense suckers from the root,
|
|
As elms and cherries; so, too, a pigmy plant,
|
|
Beneath its mother's mighty shade upshoots
|
|
The bay-tree of Parnassus. Such the modes
|
|
Nature imparted first; hence all the race
|
|
Of forest-trees and shrubs and sacred groves
|
|
Springs into verdure.
|
|
Other means there are,
|
|
Which use by method for itself acquired.
|
|
One, sliving suckers from the tender frame
|
|
Of the tree-mother, plants them in the trench;
|
|
One buries the bare stumps within his field,
|
|
Truncheons cleft four-wise, or sharp-pointed stakes;
|
|
Some forest-trees the layer's bent arch await,
|
|
And slips yet quick within the parent-soil;
|
|
No root need others, nor doth the pruner's hand
|
|
Shrink to restore the topmost shoot to earth
|
|
That gave it being. Nay, marvellous to tell,
|
|
Lopped of its limbs, the olive, a mere stock,
|
|
Still thrusts its root out from the sapless wood,
|
|
And oft the branches of one kind we see
|
|
Change to another's with no loss to rue,
|
|
Pear-tree transformed the ingrafted apple yield,
|
|
And stony cornels on the plum-tree blush.
|
|
Come then, and learn what tilth to each belongs
|
|
According to their kinds, ye husbandmen,
|
|
And tame with culture the wild fruits, lest earth
|
|
Lie idle. O blithe to make all Ismarus
|
|
One forest of the wine-god, and to clothe
|
|
With olives huge Tabernus! And be thou
|
|
At hand, and with me ply the voyage of toil
|
|
I am bound on, O my glory, O thou that art
|
|
Justly the chiefest portion of my fame,
|
|
Maecenas, and on this wide ocean launched
|
|
Spread sail like wings to waft thee. Not that I
|
|
With my poor verse would comprehend the whole,
|
|
Nay, though a hundred tongues, a hundred mouths
|
|
Were mine, a voice of iron; be thou at hand,
|
|
Skirt but the nearer coast-line; see the shore
|
|
Is in our grasp; not now with feigned song
|
|
Through winding bouts and tedious preludings
|
|
Shall I detain thee.
|
|
Those that lift their head
|
|
Into the realms of light spontaneously,
|
|
Fruitless indeed, but blithe and strenuous spring,
|
|
Since Nature lurks within the soil. And yet
|
|
Even these, should one engraft them, or transplant
|
|
To well-drilled trenches, will anon put of
|
|
Their woodland temper, and, by frequent tilth,
|
|
To whatso craft thou summon them, make speed
|
|
To follow. So likewise will the barren shaft
|
|
That from the stock-root issueth, if it be
|
|
Set out with clear space amid open fields:
|
|
Now the tree-mother's towering leaves and boughs
|
|
Darken, despoil of increase as it grows,
|
|
And blast it in the bearing. Lastly, that
|
|
Which from shed seed ariseth, upward wins
|
|
But slowly, yielding promise of its shade
|
|
To late-born generations; apples wane
|
|
Forgetful of their former juice, the grape
|
|
Bears sorry clusters, for the birds a prey.
|
|
Soothly on all must toil be spent, and all
|
|
Trained to the trench and at great cost subdued.
|
|
But reared from truncheons olives answer best,
|
|
As vines from layers, and from the solid wood
|
|
The Paphian myrtles; while from suckers spring
|
|
Both hardy hazels and huge ash, the tree
|
|
That rims with shade the brows of Hercules,
|
|
And acorns dear to the Chaonian sire:
|
|
So springs the towering palm too, and the fir
|
|
Destined to spy the dangers of the deep.
|
|
But the rough arbutus with walnut-fruit
|
|
Is grafted; so have barren planes ere now
|
|
Stout apples borne, with chestnut-flower the beech,
|
|
The mountain-ash with pear-bloom whitened o'er,
|
|
And swine crunched acorns 'neath the boughs of elms.
|
|
Nor is the method of inserting eyes
|
|
And grafting one: for where the buds push forth
|
|
Amidst the bark, and burst the membranes thin,
|
|
Even on the knot a narrow rift is made,
|
|
Wherein from some strange tree a germ they pen,
|
|
And to the moist rind bid it cleave and grow.
|
|
Or, otherwise, in knotless trunks is hewn
|
|
A breach, and deep into the solid grain
|
|
A path with wedges cloven; then fruitful slips
|
|
Are set herein, and- no long time- behold!
|
|
To heaven upshot with teeming boughs, the tree
|
|
Strange leaves admires and fruitage not its own.
|
|
Nor of one kind alone are sturdy elms,
|
|
Willow and lotus, nor the cypress-trees
|
|
Of Ida; nor of self-same fashion spring
|
|
Fat olives, orchades, and radii
|
|
And bitter-berried pausians, no, nor yet
|
|
Apples and the forests of Alcinous;
|
|
Nor from like cuttings are Crustumian pears
|
|
And Syrian, and the heavy hand-fillers.
|
|
Not the same vintage from our trees hangs down,
|
|
Which Lesbos from Methymna's tendril plucks.
|
|
Vines Thasian are there, Mareotids white,
|
|
These apt for richer soils, for lighter those:
|
|
Psithian for raisin-wine more useful, thin
|
|
Lageos, that one day will try the feet
|
|
And tie the tongue: purples and early-ripes,
|
|
And how, O Rhaetian, shall I hymn thy praise?
|
|
Yet cope not therefore with Falernian bins.
|
|
Vines Aminaean too, best-bodied wine,
|
|
To which the Tmolian bows him, ay, and king
|
|
Phanaeus too, and, lesser of that name,
|
|
Argitis, wherewith not a grape can vie
|
|
For gush of wine-juice or for length of years.
|
|
Nor thee must I pass over, vine of Rhodes,
|
|
Welcomed by gods and at the second board,
|
|
Nor thee, Bumastus, with plump clusters swollen.
|
|
But lo! how many kinds, and what their names,
|
|
There is no telling, nor doth it boot to tell;
|
|
Who lists to know it, he too would list to learn
|
|
How many sand-grains are by Zephyr tossed
|
|
On Libya's plain, or wot, when Eurus falls
|
|
With fury on the ships, how many waves
|
|
Come rolling shoreward from the Ionian sea.
|
|
Not that all soils can all things bear alike.
|
|
Willows by water-courses have their birth,
|
|
Alders in miry fens; on rocky heights
|
|
The barren mountain-ashes; on the shore
|
|
Myrtles throng gayest; Bacchus, lastly, loves
|
|
The bare hillside, and yews the north wind's chill.
|
|
Mark too the earth by outland tillers tamed,
|
|
And Eastern homes of Arabs, and tattooed
|
|
Geloni; to all trees their native lands
|
|
Allotted are; no clime but India bears
|
|
Black ebony; the branch of frankincense
|
|
Is Saba's sons' alone; why tell to thee
|
|
Of balsams oozing from the perfumed wood,
|
|
Or berries of acanthus ever green?
|
|
Of Aethiop forests hoar with downy wool,
|
|
Or how the Seres comb from off the leaves
|
|
Their silky fleece? Of groves which India bears,
|
|
Ocean's near neighbour, earth's remotest nook,
|
|
Where not an arrow-shot can cleave the air
|
|
Above their tree-tops? yet no laggards they,
|
|
When girded with the quiver! Media yields
|
|
The bitter juices and slow-lingering taste
|
|
Of the blest citron-fruit, than which no aid
|
|
Comes timelier, when fierce step-dames drug the cup
|
|
With simples mixed and spells of baneful power,
|
|
To drive the deadly poison from the limbs.
|
|
Large the tree's self in semblance like a bay,
|
|
And, showered it not a different scent abroad,
|
|
A bay it had been; for no wind of heaven
|
|
Its foliage falls; the flower, none faster, clings;
|
|
With it the Medes for sweetness lave the lips,
|
|
And ease the panting breathlessness of age.
|
|
But no, not Mede-land with its wealth of woods,
|
|
Nor Ganges fair, and Hermus thick with gold,
|
|
Can match the praise of Italy; nor Ind,
|
|
Nor Bactria, nor Panchaia, one wide tract
|
|
Of incense-teeming sand. Here never bulls
|
|
With nostrils snorting fire upturned the sod
|
|
Sown with the monstrous dragon's teeth, nor crop
|
|
Of warriors bristled thick with lance and helm;
|
|
But heavy harvests and the Massic juice
|
|
Of Bacchus fill its borders, overspread
|
|
With fruitful flocks and olives. Hence arose
|
|
The war-horse stepping proudly o'er the plain;
|
|
Hence thy white flocks, Clitumnus, and the bull,
|
|
Of victims mightiest, which full oft have led,
|
|
Bathed in thy sacred stream, the triumph-pomp
|
|
Of Romans to the temples of the gods.
|
|
Here blooms perpetual spring, and summer here
|
|
In months that are not summer's; twice teem the flocks;
|
|
Twice doth the tree yield service of her fruit.
|
|
But ravening tigers come not nigh, nor breed
|
|
Of savage lion, nor aconite betrays
|
|
Its hapless gatherers, nor with sweep so vast
|
|
Doth the scaled serpent trail his endless coils
|
|
Along the ground, or wreathe him into spires.
|
|
Mark too her cities, so many and so proud,
|
|
Of mighty toil the achievement, town on town
|
|
Up rugged precipices heaved and reared,
|
|
And rivers undergliding ancient walls.
|
|
Or should I celebrate the sea that laves
|
|
Her upper shores and lower? or those broad lakes?
|
|
Thee, Larius, greatest and, Benacus, thee
|
|
With billowy uproar surging like the main?
|
|
Or sing her harbours, and the barrier cast
|
|
Athwart the Lucrine, and how ocean chafes
|
|
With mighty bellowings, where the Julian wave
|
|
Echoes the thunder of his rout, and through
|
|
Avernian inlets pours the Tuscan tide?
|
|
A land no less that in her veins displays
|
|
Rivers of silver, mines of copper ore,
|
|
Ay, and with gold hath flowed abundantly.
|
|
A land that reared a valiant breed of men,
|
|
The Marsi and Sabellian youth, and, schooled
|
|
To hardship, the Ligurian, and with these
|
|
The Volscian javelin-armed, the Decii too,
|
|
The Marii and Camilli, names of might,
|
|
The Scipios, stubborn warriors, ay, and thee,
|
|
Great Caesar, who in Asia's utmost bounds
|
|
With conquering arm e'en now art fending far
|
|
The unwarlike Indian from the heights of Rome.
|
|
Hail! land of Saturn, mighty mother thou
|
|
Of fruits and heroes; 'tis for thee I dare
|
|
Unseal the sacred fountains, and essay
|
|
Themes of old art and glory, as I sing
|
|
The song of Ascra through the towns of Rome.
|
|
Now for the native gifts of various soils,
|
|
What powers hath each, what hue, what natural bent
|
|
For yielding increase. First your stubborn lands
|
|
And churlish hill-sides, where are thorny fields
|
|
Of meagre marl and gravel, these delight
|
|
In long-lived olive-groves to Pallas dear.
|
|
Take for a sign the plenteous growth hard by
|
|
Of oleaster, and the fields strewn wide
|
|
With woodland berries. But a soil that's rich,
|
|
In moisture sweet exulting, and the plain
|
|
That teems with grasses on its fruitful breast,
|
|
Such as full oft in hollow mountain-dell
|
|
We view beneath us- from the craggy heights
|
|
Streams thither flow with fertilizing mud-
|
|
A plain which southward rising feeds the fern
|
|
By curved ploughs detested, this one day
|
|
Shall yield thee store of vines full strong to gush
|
|
In torrents of the wine-god; this shall be
|
|
Fruitful of grapes and flowing juice like that
|
|
We pour to heaven from bowls of gold, what time
|
|
The sleek Etruscan at the altar blows
|
|
His ivory pipe, and on the curved dish
|
|
We lay the reeking entrails. If to rear
|
|
Cattle delight thee rather, steers, or lambs,
|
|
Or goats that kill the tender plants, then seek
|
|
Full-fed Tarentum's glades and distant fields,
|
|
Or such a plain as luckless Mantua lost
|
|
Whose weedy water feeds the snow-white swan:
|
|
There nor clear springs nor grass the flocks will fail,
|
|
And all the day-long browsing of thy herds
|
|
Shall the cool dews of one brief night repair.
|
|
Land which the burrowing share shows dark and rich,
|
|
With crumbling soil- for this we counterfeit
|
|
In ploughing- for corn is goodliest; from no field
|
|
More wains thou'lt see wend home with plodding steers;
|
|
Or that from which the husbandman in spleen
|
|
Has cleared the timber, and o'erthrown the copse
|
|
That year on year lay idle, and from the roots
|
|
Uptorn the immemorial haunt of birds;
|
|
They banished from their nests have sought the skies;
|
|
But the rude plain beneath the ploughshare's stroke
|
|
Starts into sudden brightness. For indeed
|
|
The starved hill-country gravel scarce serves the bees
|
|
With lowly cassias and with rosemary;
|
|
Rough tufa and chalk too, by black water-worms
|
|
Gnawed through and through, proclaim no soils beside
|
|
So rife with serpent-dainties, or that yield
|
|
Such winding lairs to lurk in. That again,
|
|
Which vapoury mist and flitting smoke exhales,
|
|
Drinks moisture up and casts it forth at will,
|
|
Which, ever in its own green grass arrayed,
|
|
Mars not the metal with salt scurf of rust-
|
|
That shall thine elms with merry vines enwreathe;
|
|
That teems with olive; that shall thy tilth prove kind
|
|
To cattle, and patient of the curved share.
|
|
Such ploughs rich Capua, such the coast that skirts
|
|
Thy ridge, Vesuvius, and the Clanian flood,
|
|
Acerrae's desolation and her bane.
|
|
How each to recognize now hear me tell.
|
|
Dost ask if loose or passing firm it be-
|
|
Since one for corn hath liking, one for wine,
|
|
The firmer sort for Ceres, none too loose
|
|
For thee, Lyaeus?- with scrutinizing eye
|
|
First choose thy ground, and bid a pit be sunk
|
|
Deep in the solid earth, then cast the mould
|
|
All back again, and stamp the surface smooth.
|
|
If it suffice not, loose will be the land,
|
|
More meet for cattle and for kindly vines;
|
|
But if, rebellious, to its proper bounds
|
|
The soil returns not, but fills all the trench
|
|
And overtops it, then the glebe is gross;
|
|
Look for stiff ridges and reluctant clods,
|
|
And with strong bullocks cleave the fallow crust.
|
|
Salt ground again, and bitter, as 'tis called-
|
|
Barren for fruits, by tilth untamable,
|
|
Nor grape her kind, nor apples their good name
|
|
Maintaining- will in this wise yield thee proof:
|
|
Stout osier-baskets from the rafter-smoke,
|
|
And strainers of the winepress pluck thee down;
|
|
Hereinto let that evil land, with fresh
|
|
Spring-water mixed, be trampled to the full;
|
|
The moisture, mark you, will ooze all away,
|
|
In big drops issuing through the osier-withes,
|
|
But plainly will its taste the secret tell,
|
|
And with a harsh twang ruefully distort
|
|
The mouths of them that try it. Rich soil again
|
|
We learn on this wise: tossed from hand to hand
|
|
Yet cracks it never, but pitch-like, as we hold,
|
|
Clings to the fingers. A land with moisture rife
|
|
Breeds lustier herbage, and is more than meet
|
|
Prolific. Ah I may never such for me
|
|
O'er-fertile prove, or make too stout a show
|
|
At the first earing! Heavy land or light
|
|
The mute self-witness of its weight betrays.
|
|
A glance will serve to warn thee which is black,
|
|
Or what the hue of any. But hard it is
|
|
To track the signs of that pernicious cold:
|
|
Pines only, noxious yews, and ivies dark
|
|
At times reveal its traces.
|
|
All these rules
|
|
Regarding, let your land, ay, long before,
|
|
Scorch to the quick, and into trenches carve
|
|
The mighty mountains, and their upturned clods
|
|
Bare to the north wind, ere thou plant therein
|
|
The vine's prolific kindred. Fields whose soil
|
|
Is crumbling are the best: winds look to that,
|
|
And bitter hoar-frosts, and the delver's toil
|
|
Untiring, as he stirs the loosened glebe.
|
|
But those, whose vigilance no care escapes,
|
|
Search for a kindred site, where first to rear
|
|
A nursery for the trees, and eke whereto
|
|
Soon to translate them, lest the sudden shock
|
|
From their new mother the young plants estrange.
|
|
Nay, even the quarter of the sky they brand
|
|
Upon the bark, that each may be restored,
|
|
As erst it stood, here bore the southern heats,
|
|
Here turned its shoulder to the northern pole;
|
|
So strong is custom formed in early years.
|
|
Whether on hill or plain 'tis best to plant
|
|
Your vineyard first inquire. If on some plain
|
|
You measure out rich acres, then plant thick;
|
|
Thick planting makes no niggard of the vine;
|
|
But if on rising mound or sloping bill,
|
|
Then let the rows have room, so none the less
|
|
Each line you draw, when all the trees are set,
|
|
May tally to perfection. Even as oft
|
|
In mighty war, whenas the legion's length
|
|
Deploys its cohorts, and the column stands
|
|
In open plain, the ranks of battle set,
|
|
And far and near with rippling sheen of arms
|
|
The wide earth flickers, nor yet in grisly strife
|
|
Foe grapples foe, but dubious 'twixt the hosts
|
|
The war-god wavers; so let all be ranged
|
|
In equal rows symmetric, not alone
|
|
To feed an idle fancy with the view,
|
|
But since not otherwise will earth afford
|
|
Vigour to all alike, nor yet the boughs
|
|
Have power to stretch them into open space.
|
|
Shouldst haply of the furrow's depth inquire,
|
|
Even to a shallow trench I dare commit
|
|
The vine; but deeper in the ground is fixed
|
|
The tree that props it, aesculus in chief,
|
|
Which howso far its summit soars toward heaven,
|
|
So deep strikes root into the vaults of hell.
|
|
It therefore neither storms, nor blasts, nor showers
|
|
Wrench from its bed; unshaken it abides,
|
|
Sees many a generation, many an age
|
|
Of men roll onward, and survives them all,
|
|
Stretching its titan arms and branches far,
|
|
Sole central pillar of a world of shade.
|
|
Nor toward the sunset let thy vineyards slope,
|
|
Nor midst the vines plant hazel; neither take
|
|
The topmost shoots for cuttings, nor from the top
|
|
Of the supporting tree your suckers tear;
|
|
So deep their love of earth; nor wound the plants
|
|
With blunted blade; nor truncheons intersperse
|
|
Of the wild olive: for oft from careless swains
|
|
A spark hath fallen, that, 'neath the unctuous rind
|
|
Hid thief-like first, now grips the tough tree-bole,
|
|
And mounting to the leaves on high, sends forth
|
|
A roar to heaven, then coursing through the boughs
|
|
And airy summits reigns victoriously,
|
|
Wraps all the grove in robes of fire, and gross
|
|
With pitch-black vapour heaves the murky reek
|
|
Skyward, but chiefly if a storm has swooped
|
|
Down on the forest, and a driving wind
|
|
Rolls up the conflagration. When 'tis so,
|
|
Their root-force fails them, nor, when lopped away,
|
|
Can they recover, and from the earth beneath
|
|
Spring to like verdure; thus alone survives
|
|
The bare wild olive with its bitter leaves.
|
|
Let none persuade thee, howso weighty-wise,
|
|
To stir the soil when stiff with Boreas' breath.
|
|
Then ice-bound winter locks the fields, nor lets
|
|
The young plant fix its frozen root to earth.
|
|
Best sow your vineyards when in blushing Spring
|
|
Comes the white bird long-bodied snakes abhor,
|
|
Or on the eve of autumn's earliest frost,
|
|
Ere the swift sun-steeds touch the wintry Signs,
|
|
While summer is departing. Spring it is
|
|
Blesses the fruit-plantation, Spring the groves;
|
|
In Spring earth swells and claims the fruitful seed.
|
|
Then Aether, sire omnipotent, leaps down
|
|
With quickening showers to his glad wife's embrace,
|
|
And, might with might commingling, rears to life
|
|
All germs that teem within her; then resound
|
|
With songs of birds the greenwood-wildernesses,
|
|
And in due time the herds their loves renew;
|
|
Then the boon earth yields increase, and the fields
|
|
Unlock their bosoms to the warm west winds;
|
|
Soft moisture spreads o'er all things, and the blades
|
|
Face the new suns, and safely trust them now;
|
|
The vine-shoot, fearless of the rising south,
|
|
Or mighty north winds driving rain from heaven,
|
|
Bursts into bud, and every leaf unfolds.
|
|
Even so, methinks, when Earth to being sprang,
|
|
Dawned the first days, and such the course they held;
|
|
'Twas Spring-tide then, ay, Spring, the mighty world
|
|
Was keeping: Eurus spared his wintry blasts,
|
|
When first the flocks drank sunlight, and a race
|
|
Of men like iron from the hard glebe arose,
|
|
And wild beasts thronged the woods, and stars the heaven.
|
|
Nor could frail creatures bear this heavy strain,
|
|
Did not so large a respite interpose
|
|
'Twixt frost and heat, and heaven's relenting arms
|
|
Yield earth a welcome.
|
|
For the rest, whate'er
|
|
The sets thou plantest in thy fields, thereon
|
|
Strew refuse rich, and with abundant earth
|
|
Take heed to hide them, and dig in withal
|
|
Rough shells or porous stone, for therebetween
|
|
Will water trickle and fine vapour creep,
|
|
And so the plants their drooping spirits raise.
|
|
Aye, and there have been, who with weight of stone
|
|
Or heavy potsherd press them from above;
|
|
This serves for shield in pelting showers, and this
|
|
When the hot dog-star chaps the fields with drought.
|
|
The slips once planted, yet remains to cleave
|
|
The earth about their roots persistently,
|
|
And toss the cumbrous hoes, or task the soil
|
|
With burrowing plough-share, and ply up and down
|
|
Your labouring bullocks through the vineyard's midst,
|
|
Then too smooth reeds and shafts of whittled wand,
|
|
And ashen poles and sturdy forks to shape,
|
|
Whereby supported they may learn to mount,
|
|
Laugh at the gales, and through the elm-tops win
|
|
From story up to story.
|
|
Now while yet
|
|
The leaves are in their first fresh infant growth,
|
|
Forbear their frailty, and while yet the bough
|
|
Shoots joyfully toward heaven, with loosened rein
|
|
Launched on the void, assail it not as yet
|
|
With keen-edged sickle, but let the leaves alone
|
|
Be culled with clip of fingers here and there.
|
|
But when they clasp the elms with sturdy trunks
|
|
Erect, then strip the leaves off, prune the boughs;
|
|
Sooner they shrink from steel, but then put forth
|
|
The arm of power, and stem the branchy tide.
|
|
Hedges too must be woven and all beasts
|
|
Barred entrance, chiefly while the leaf is young
|
|
And witless of disaster; for therewith,
|
|
Beside harsh winters and o'erpowering sun,
|
|
Wild buffaloes and pestering goats for ay
|
|
Besport them, sheep and heifers glut their greed.
|
|
Nor cold by hoar-frost curdled, nor the prone
|
|
Dead weight of summer upon the parched crags,
|
|
So scathe it, as the flocks with venom-bite
|
|
Of their hard tooth, whose gnawing scars the stem.
|
|
For no offence but this to Bacchus bleeds
|
|
The goat at every altar, and old plays
|
|
Upon the stage find entrance; therefore too
|
|
The sons of Theseus through the country-side-
|
|
Hamlet and crossway- set the prize of wit,
|
|
And on the smooth sward over oiled skins
|
|
Dance in their tipsy frolic. Furthermore
|
|
The Ausonian swains, a race from Troy derived,
|
|
Make merry with rough rhymes and boisterous mirth,
|
|
Grim masks of hollowed bark assume, invoke
|
|
Thee with glad hymns, O Bacchus, and to thee
|
|
Hang puppet-faces on tall pines to swing.
|
|
Hence every vineyard teems with mellowing fruit,
|
|
Till hollow vale o'erflows, and gorge profound,
|
|
Where'er the god hath turned his comely head.
|
|
Therefore to Bacchus duly will we sing
|
|
Meet honour with ancestral hymns, and cates
|
|
And dishes bear him; and the doomed goat
|
|
Led by the horn shall at the altar stand,
|
|
Whose entrails rich on hazel-spits we'll roast.
|
|
This further task again, to dress the vine,
|
|
Hath needs beyond exhausting; the whole soil
|
|
Thrice, four times, yearly must be cleft, the sod
|
|
With hoes reversed be crushed continually,
|
|
The whole plantation lightened of its leaves.
|
|
Round on the labourer spins the wheel of toil,
|
|
As on its own track rolls the circling year.
|
|
Soon as the vine her lingering leaves hath shed,
|
|
And the chill north wind from the forests shook
|
|
Their coronal, even then the careful swain
|
|
Looks keenly forward to the coming year,
|
|
With Saturn's curved fang pursues and prunes
|
|
The vine forlorn, and lops it into shape.
|
|
Be first to dig the ground up, first to clear
|
|
And burn the refuse-branches, first to house
|
|
Again your vine-poles, last to gather fruit.
|
|
Twice doth the thickening shade beset the vine,
|
|
Twice weeds with stifling briers o'ergrow the crop;
|
|
And each a toilsome labour. Do thou praise
|
|
Broad acres, farm but few. Rough twigs beside
|
|
Of butcher's broom among the woods are cut,
|
|
And reeds upon the river-banks, and still
|
|
The undressed willow claims thy fostering care.
|
|
So now the vines are fettered, now the trees
|
|
Let go the sickle, and the last dresser now
|
|
Sings of his finished rows; but still the ground
|
|
Must vexed be, the dust be stirred, and heaven
|
|
Still set thee trembling for the ripened grapes.
|
|
Not so with olives; small husbandry need they,
|
|
Nor look for sickle bowed or biting rake,
|
|
When once they have gripped the soil, and borne the breeze.
|
|
Earth of herself, with hooked fang laid bare,
|
|
Yields moisture for the plants, and heavy fruit,
|
|
The ploughshare aiding; therewithal thou'lt rear
|
|
The olive's fatness well-beloved of Peace.
|
|
Apples, moreover, soon as first they feel
|
|
Their stems wax lusty, and have found their strength,
|
|
To heaven climb swiftly, self-impelled, nor crave
|
|
Our succour. All the grove meanwhile no less
|
|
With fruit is swelling, and the wild haunts of birds
|
|
Blush with their blood-red berries. Cytisus
|
|
Is good to browse on, the tall forest yields
|
|
Pine-torches, and the nightly fires are fed
|
|
And shoot forth radiance. And shall men be loath
|
|
To plant, nor lavish of their pains? Why trace
|
|
Things mightier? Willows even and lowly brooms
|
|
To cattle their green leaves, to shepherds shade,
|
|
Fences for crops, and food for honey yield.
|
|
And blithe it is Cytorus to behold
|
|
Waving with box, Narycian groves of pitch;
|
|
Oh! blithe the sight of fields beholden not
|
|
To rake or man's endeavour! the barren woods
|
|
That crown the scalp of Caucasus, even these,
|
|
Which furious blasts for ever rive and rend,
|
|
Yield various wealth, pine-logs that serve for ships,
|
|
Cedar and cypress for the homes of men;
|
|
Hence, too, the farmers shave their wheel-spokes, hence
|
|
Drums for their wains, and curved boat-keels fit;
|
|
Willows bear twigs enow, the elm-tree leaves,
|
|
Myrtle stout spear-shafts, war-tried cornel too;
|
|
Yews into Ituraean bows are bent:
|
|
Nor do smooth lindens or lathe-polished box
|
|
Shrink from man's shaping and keen-furrowing steel;
|
|
Light alder floats upon the boiling flood
|
|
Sped down the Padus, and bees house their swarms
|
|
In rotten holm-oak's hollow bark and bole.
|
|
What of like praise can Bacchus' gifts afford?
|
|
Nay, Bacchus even to crime hath prompted, he
|
|
The wine-infuriate Centaurs quelled with death,
|
|
Rhoetus and Pholus, and with mighty bowl
|
|
Hylaeus threatening high the Lapithae.
|
|
Oh! all too happy tillers of the soil,
|
|
Could they but know their blessedness, for whom
|
|
Far from the clash of arms all-equal earth
|
|
Pours from the ground herself their easy fare!
|
|
What though no lofty palace portal-proud
|
|
From all its chambers vomits forth a tide
|
|
Of morning courtiers, nor agape they gaze
|
|
On pillars with fair tortoise-shell inwrought,
|
|
Gold-purfled robes, and bronze from Ephyre;
|
|
Nor is the whiteness of their wool distained
|
|
With drugs Assyrian, nor clear olive's use
|
|
With cassia tainted; yet untroubled calm,
|
|
A life that knows no falsehood, rich enow
|
|
With various treasures, yet broad-acred ease,
|
|
Grottoes and living lakes, yet Tempes cool,
|
|
Lowing of kine, and sylvan slumbers soft,
|
|
They lack not; lawns and wild beasts' haunts are there,
|
|
A youth of labour patient, need-inured,
|
|
Worship, and reverend sires: with them from earth
|
|
Departing justice her last footprints left.
|
|
Me before all things may the Muses sweet,
|
|
Whose rites I bear with mighty passion pierced,
|
|
Receive, and show the paths and stars of heaven,
|
|
The sun's eclipses and the labouring moons,
|
|
From whence the earthquake, by what power the seas
|
|
Swell from their depths, and, every barrier burst,
|
|
Sink back upon themselves, why winter-suns
|
|
So haste to dip 'neath ocean, or what check
|
|
The lingering night retards. But if to these
|
|
High realms of nature the cold curdling blood
|
|
About my heart bar access, then be fields
|
|
And stream-washed vales my solace, let me love
|
|
Rivers and woods, inglorious. Oh for you
|
|
Plains, and Spercheius, and Taygete,
|
|
By Spartan maids o'er-revelled! Oh, for one,
|
|
Would set me in deep dells of Haemus cool,
|
|
And shield me with his boughs' o'ershadowing might!
|
|
Happy, who had the skill to understand
|
|
Nature's hid causes, and beneath his feet
|
|
All terrors cast, and death's relentless doom,
|
|
And the loud roar of greedy Acheron.
|
|
Blest too is he who knows the rural gods,
|
|
Pan, old Silvanus, and the sister-nymphs!
|
|
Him nor the rods of public power can bend,
|
|
Nor kingly purple, nor fierce feud that drives
|
|
Brother to turn on brother, nor descent
|
|
Of Dacian from the Danube's leagued flood,
|
|
Nor Rome's great State, nor kingdoms like to die;
|
|
Nor hath he grieved through pitying of the poor,
|
|
Nor envied him that hath. What fruit the boughs,
|
|
And what the fields, of their own bounteous will
|
|
Have borne, he gathers; nor iron rule of laws,
|
|
Nor maddened Forum have his eyes beheld,
|
|
Nor archives of the people. Others vex
|
|
The darksome gulfs of Ocean with their oars,
|
|
Or rush on steel: they press within the courts
|
|
And doors of princes; one with havoc falls
|
|
Upon a city and its hapless hearths,
|
|
From gems to drink, on Tyrian rugs to lie;
|
|
This hoards his wealth and broods o'er buried gold;
|
|
One at the rostra stares in blank amaze;
|
|
One gaping sits transported by the cheers,
|
|
The answering cheers of plebs and senate rolled
|
|
Along the benches: bathed in brothers' blood
|
|
Men revel, and, all delights of hearth and home
|
|
For exile changing, a new country seek
|
|
Beneath an alien sun. The husbandman
|
|
With hooked ploughshare turns the soil; from hence
|
|
Springs his year's labour; hence, too, he sustains
|
|
Country and cottage homestead, and from hence
|
|
His herds of cattle and deserving steers.
|
|
No respite! still the year o'erflows with fruit,
|
|
Or young of kine, or Ceres' wheaten sheaf,
|
|
With crops the furrow loads, and bursts the barns.
|
|
Winter is come: in olive-mills they bruise
|
|
The Sicyonian berry; acorn-cheered
|
|
The swine troop homeward; woods their arbutes yield;
|
|
So, various fruit sheds Autumn, and high up
|
|
On sunny rocks the mellowing vintage bakes.
|
|
Meanwhile about his lips sweet children cling;
|
|
His chaste house keeps its purity; his kine
|
|
Drop milky udders, and on the lush green grass
|
|
Fat kids are striving, horn to butting horn.
|
|
Himself keeps holy days; stretched o'er the sward,
|
|
Where round the fire his comrades crown the bowl,
|
|
He pours libation, and thy name invokes,
|
|
Lenaeus, and for the herdsmen on an elm
|
|
Sets up a mark for the swift javelin; they
|
|
Strip their tough bodies for the rustic sport.
|
|
Such life of yore the ancient Sabines led,
|
|
Such Remus and his brother: Etruria thus,
|
|
Doubt not, to greatness grew, and Rome became
|
|
The fair world's fairest, and with circling wall
|
|
Clasped to her single breast the sevenfold hills.
|
|
Ay, ere the reign of Dicte's king, ere men,
|
|
Waxed godless, banqueted on slaughtered bulls,
|
|
Such life on earth did golden Saturn lead.
|
|
Nor ear of man had heard the war-trump's blast,
|
|
Nor clang of sword on stubborn anvil set.
|
|
But lo! a boundless space we have travelled o'er;
|
|
'Tis time our steaming horses to unyoke.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GEORGIC III
|
|
|
|
Thee too, great Pales, will I hymn, and thee,
|
|
Amphrysian shepherd, worthy to be sung,
|
|
You, woods and waves Lycaean. All themes beside,
|
|
Which else had charmed the vacant mind with song,
|
|
Are now waxed common. Of harsh Eurystheus who
|
|
The story knows not, or that praiseless king
|
|
Busiris, and his altars? or by whom
|
|
Hath not the tale been told of Hylas young,
|
|
Latonian Delos and Hippodame,
|
|
And Pelops for his ivory shoulder famed,
|
|
Keen charioteer? Needs must a path be tried,
|
|
By which I too may lift me from the dust,
|
|
And float triumphant through the mouths of men.
|
|
Yea, I shall be the first, so life endure,
|
|
To lead the Muses with me, as I pass
|
|
To mine own country from the Aonian height;
|
|
I, Mantua, first will bring thee back the palms
|
|
Of Idumaea, and raise a marble shrine
|
|
On thy green plain fast by the water-side,
|
|
Where Mincius winds more vast in lazy coils,
|
|
And rims his margent with the tender reed.
|
|
Amid my shrine shall Caesar's godhead dwell.
|
|
To him will I, as victor, bravely dight
|
|
In Tyrian purple, drive along the bank
|
|
A hundred four-horse cars. All Greece for me,
|
|
Leaving Alpheus and Molorchus' grove,
|
|
On foot shall strive, or with the raw-hide glove;
|
|
Whilst I, my head with stripped green olive crowned,
|
|
Will offer gifts. Even 'tis present joy
|
|
To lead the high processions to the fane,
|
|
And view the victims felled; or how the scene
|
|
Sunders with shifted face, and Britain's sons
|
|
Inwoven thereon with those proud curtains rise.
|
|
Of gold and massive ivory on the doors
|
|
I'll trace the battle of the Gangarides,
|
|
And our Quirinus' conquering arms, and there
|
|
Surging with war, and hugely flowing, the Nile,
|
|
And columns heaped on high with naval brass.
|
|
And Asia's vanquished cities I will add,
|
|
And quelled Niphates, and the Parthian foe,
|
|
Who trusts in flight and backward-volleying darts,
|
|
And trophies torn with twice triumphant hand
|
|
From empires twain on ocean's either shore.
|
|
And breathing forms of Parian marble there
|
|
Shall stand, the offspring of Assaracus,
|
|
And great names of the Jove-descended folk,
|
|
And father Tros, and Troy's first founder, lord
|
|
Of Cynthus. And accursed Envy there
|
|
Shall dread the Furies, and thy ruthless flood,
|
|
Cocytus, and Ixion's twisted snakes,
|
|
And that vast wheel and ever-baffling stone.
|
|
Meanwhile the Dryad-haunted woods and lawns
|
|
Unsullied seek we; 'tis thy hard behest,
|
|
Maecenas. Without thee no lofty task
|
|
My mind essays. Up! break the sluggish bonds
|
|
Of tarriance; with loud din Cithaeron calls,
|
|
Steed-taming Epidaurus, and thy hounds,
|
|
Taygete; and hark! the assenting groves
|
|
With peal on peal reverberate the roar.
|
|
Yet must I gird me to rehearse ere long
|
|
The fiery fights of Caesar, speed his name
|
|
Through ages, countless as to Caesar's self
|
|
From the first birth-dawn of Tithonus old.
|
|
If eager for the prized Olympian palm
|
|
One breed the horse, or bullock strong to plough,
|
|
Be his prime care a shapely dam to choose.
|
|
Of kine grim-faced is goodliest, with coarse head
|
|
And burly neck, whose hanging dewlaps reach
|
|
From chin to knee; of boundless length her flank;
|
|
Large every way she is, large-footed even,
|
|
With incurved horns and shaggy ears beneath.
|
|
Nor let mislike me one with spots of white
|
|
Conspicuous, or that spurns the yoke, whose horn
|
|
At times hath vice in't: liker bull-faced she,
|
|
And tall-limbed wholly, and with tip of tail
|
|
Brushing her footsteps as she walks along.
|
|
The age for Hymen's rites, Lucina's pangs,
|
|
Ere ten years ended, after four begins;
|
|
Their residue of days nor apt to teem,
|
|
Nor strong for ploughing. Meantime, while youth's delight
|
|
Survives within them, loose the males: be first
|
|
To speed thy herds of cattle to their loves,
|
|
Breed stock with stock, and keep the race supplied.
|
|
Ah! life's best hours are ever first to fly
|
|
From hapless mortals; in their place succeed
|
|
Disease and dolorous eld; till travail sore
|
|
And death unpitying sweep them from the scene.
|
|
Still will be some, whose form thou fain wouldst change;
|
|
Renew them still; with yearly choice of young
|
|
Preventing losses, lest too late thou rue.
|
|
Nor steeds crave less selection; but on those
|
|
Thou think'st to rear, the promise of their line,
|
|
From earliest youth thy chiefest pains bestow.
|
|
See from the first yon high-bred colt afield,
|
|
His lofty step, his limbs' elastic tread:
|
|
Dauntless he leads the herd, still first to try
|
|
The threatening flood, or brave the unknown bridge,
|
|
By no vain noise affrighted; lofty-necked,
|
|
With clean-cut head, short belly, and stout back;
|
|
His sprightly breast exuberant with brawn.
|
|
Chestnut and grey are good; the worst-hued white
|
|
And sorrel. Then lo! if arms are clashed afar,
|
|
Bide still he cannot: ears stiffen and limbs quake;
|
|
His nostrils snort and roll out wreaths of fire.
|
|
Dense is his mane, that when uplifted falls
|
|
On his right shoulder; betwixt either loin
|
|
The spine runs double; his earth-dinting hoof
|
|
Rings with the ponderous beat of solid horn.
|
|
Even such a horse was Cyllarus, reined and tamed
|
|
By Pollux of Amyclae; such the pair
|
|
In Grecian song renowned, those steeds of Mars,
|
|
And famed Achilles' team: in such-like form
|
|
Great Saturn's self with mane flung loose on neck
|
|
Sped at his wife's approach, and flying filled
|
|
The heights of Pelion with his piercing neigh.
|
|
Even him, when sore disease or sluggish eld
|
|
Now saps his strength, pen fast at home, and spare
|
|
His not inglorious age. A horse grown old
|
|
Slow kindling unto love in vain prolongs
|
|
The fruitless task, and, to the encounter come,
|
|
As fire in stubble blusters without strength,
|
|
He rages idly. Therefore mark thou first
|
|
Their age and mettle, other points anon,
|
|
As breed and lineage, or what pain was theirs
|
|
To lose the race, what pride the palm to win.
|
|
Seest how the chariots in mad rivalry
|
|
Poured from the barrier grip the course and go,
|
|
When youthful hope is highest, and every heart
|
|
Drained with each wild pulsation? How they ply
|
|
The circling lash, and reaching forward let
|
|
The reins hang free! Swift spins the glowing wheel;
|
|
And now they stoop, and now erect in air
|
|
Seem borne through space and towering to the sky:
|
|
No stop, no stay; the dun sand whirls aloft;
|
|
They reek with foam-flakes and pursuing breath;
|
|
So sweet is fame, so prized the victor's palm.
|
|
'Twas Ericthonius first took heart to yoke
|
|
Four horses to his car, and rode above
|
|
The whirling wheels to victory: but the ring
|
|
And bridle-reins, mounted on horses' backs,
|
|
The Pelethronian Lapithae bequeathed,
|
|
And taught the knight in arms to spurn the ground,
|
|
And arch the upgathered footsteps of his pride.
|
|
Each task alike is arduous, and for each
|
|
A horse young, fiery, swift of foot, they seek;
|
|
How oft so-e'er yon rival may have chased
|
|
The flying foe, or boast his native plain
|
|
Epirus, or Mycenae's stubborn hold,
|
|
And trace his lineage back to Neptune's birth.
|
|
These points regarded, as the time draws nigh,
|
|
With instant zeal they lavish all their care
|
|
To plump with solid fat the chosen chief
|
|
And designated husband of the herd:
|
|
And flowery herbs they cut, and serve him well
|
|
With corn and running water, that his strength
|
|
Not fail him for that labour of delight,
|
|
Nor puny colts betray the feeble sire.
|
|
The herd itself of purpose they reduce
|
|
To leanness, and when love's sweet longing first
|
|
Provokes them, they forbid the leafy food,
|
|
And pen them from the springs, and oft beside
|
|
With running shake, and tire them in the sun,
|
|
What time the threshing-floor groans heavily
|
|
With pounding of the corn-ears, and light chaff
|
|
Is whirled on high to catch the rising west.
|
|
This do they that the soil's prolific powers
|
|
May not be dulled by surfeiting, nor choke
|
|
The sluggish furrows, but eagerly absorb
|
|
Their fill of love, and deeply entertain.
|
|
To care of sire the mother's care succeeds.
|
|
When great with young they wander nigh their time,
|
|
Let no man suffer them to drag the yoke
|
|
In heavy wains, nor leap across the way,
|
|
Nor scour the meads, nor swim the rushing flood.
|
|
In lonely lawns they feed them, by the course
|
|
Of brimming streams, where moss is, and the banks
|
|
With grass are greenest, where are sheltering caves,
|
|
And far outstretched the rock-flung shadow lies.
|
|
Round wooded Silarus and the ilex-bowers
|
|
Of green Alburnus swarms a winged pest-
|
|
Its Roman name Asilus, by the Greeks
|
|
Termed Oestros- fierce it is, and harshly hums,
|
|
Driving whole herds in terror through the groves,
|
|
Till heaven is madded by their bellowing din,
|
|
And Tanager's dry bed and forest-banks.
|
|
With this same scourge did Juno wreak of old
|
|
The terrors of her wrath, a plague devised
|
|
Against the heifer sprung from Inachus.
|
|
From this too thou, since in the noontide heats
|
|
'Tis most persistent, fend thy teeming herds,
|
|
And feed them when the sun is newly risen,
|
|
Or the first stars are ushering in the night.
|
|
But, yeaning ended, all their tender care
|
|
Is to the calves transferred; at once with marks
|
|
They brand them, both to designate their race,
|
|
And which to rear for breeding, or devote
|
|
As altar-victims, or to cleave the ground
|
|
And into ridges tear and turn the sod.
|
|
The rest along the greensward graze at will.
|
|
Those that to rustic uses thou wouldst mould,
|
|
As calves encourage and take steps to tame,
|
|
While pliant wills and plastic youth allow.
|
|
And first of slender withies round the throat
|
|
Loose collars hang, then when their free-born necks
|
|
Are used to service, with the self-same bands
|
|
Yoke them in pairs, and steer by steer compel
|
|
Keep pace together. And time it is that oft
|
|
Unfreighted wheels be drawn along the ground
|
|
Behind them, as to dint the surface-dust;
|
|
Then let the beechen axle strain and creak
|
|
'Neath some stout burden, whilst a brazen pole
|
|
Drags on the wheels made fast thereto. Meanwhile
|
|
For their unbroken youth not grass alone,
|
|
Nor meagre willow-leaves and marish-sedge,
|
|
But corn-ears with thy hand pluck from the crops.
|
|
Nor shall the brood-kine, as of yore, for thee
|
|
Brim high the snowy milking-pail, but spend
|
|
Their udders' fullness on their own sweet young.
|
|
But if fierce squadrons and the ranks of war
|
|
Delight thee rather, or on wheels to glide
|
|
At Pisa, with Alpheus fleeting by,
|
|
And in the grove of Jupiter urge on
|
|
The flying chariot, be your steed's first task
|
|
To face the warrior's armed rage, and brook
|
|
The trumpet, and long roar of rumbling wheels,
|
|
And clink of chiming bridles in the stall;
|
|
Then more and more to love his master's voice
|
|
Caressing, or loud hand that claps his neck.
|
|
Ay, thus far let him learn to dare, when first
|
|
Weaned from his mother, and his mouth at times
|
|
Yield to the supple halter, even while yet
|
|
Weak, tottering-limbed, and ignorant of life.
|
|
But, three years ended, when the fourth arrives,
|
|
Now let him tarry not to run the ring
|
|
With rhythmic hoof-beat echoing, and now learn
|
|
Alternately to curve each bending leg,
|
|
And be like one that struggleth; then at last
|
|
Challenge the winds to race him, and at speed
|
|
Launched through the open, like a reinless thing,
|
|
Scarce print his footsteps on the surface-sand.
|
|
As when with power from Hyperborean climes
|
|
The north wind stoops, and scatters from his path
|
|
Dry clouds and storms of Scythia; the tall corn
|
|
And rippling plains 'gin shiver with light gusts;
|
|
A sound is heard among the forest-tops;
|
|
Long waves come racing shoreward: fast he flies,
|
|
With instant pinion sweeping earth and main.
|
|
A steed like this or on the mighty course
|
|
Of Elis at the goal will sweat, and shower
|
|
Red foam-flakes from his mouth, or, kindlier task,
|
|
With patient neck support the Belgian car.
|
|
Then, broken at last, let swell their burly frame
|
|
With fattening corn-mash, for, unbroke, they will
|
|
With pride wax wanton, and, when caught, refuse
|
|
Tough lash to brook or jagged curb obey.
|
|
But no device so fortifies their power
|
|
As love's blind stings of passion to forefend,
|
|
Whether on steed or steer thy choice be set.
|
|
Ay, therefore 'tis they banish bulls afar
|
|
To solitary pastures, or behind
|
|
Some mountain-barrier, or broad streams beyond,
|
|
Or else in plenteous stalls pen fast at home.
|
|
For, even through sight of her, the female wastes
|
|
His strength with smouldering fire, till he forget
|
|
Both grass and woodland. She indeed full oft
|
|
With her sweet charms can lovers proud compel
|
|
To battle for the conquest horn to horn.
|
|
In Sila's forest feeds the heifer fair,
|
|
While each on each the furious rivals run;
|
|
Wound follows wound; the black blood laves their limbs;
|
|
Horns push and strive against opposing horns,
|
|
With mighty groaning; all the forest-side
|
|
And far Olympus bellow back the roar.
|
|
Nor wont the champions in one stall to couch;
|
|
But he that's worsted hies him to strange climes
|
|
Far off, an exile, moaning much the shame,
|
|
The blows of that proud conqueror, then love's loss
|
|
Avenged not; with one glance toward the byre,
|
|
His ancient royalties behind him lie.
|
|
So with all heed his strength he practiseth,
|
|
And nightlong makes the hard bare stones his bed,
|
|
And feeds on prickly leaf and pointed rush,
|
|
And proves himself, and butting at a tree
|
|
Learns to fling wrath into his horns, with blows
|
|
Provokes the air, and scattering clouds of sand
|
|
Makes prelude of the battle; afterward,
|
|
With strength repaired and gathered might breaks camp,
|
|
And hurls him headlong on the unthinking foe:
|
|
As in mid ocean when a wave far of
|
|
Begins to whiten, mustering from the main
|
|
Its rounded breast, and, onward rolled to land
|
|
Falls with prodigious roar among the rocks,
|
|
Huge as a very mountain: but the depths
|
|
Upseethe in swirling eddies, and disgorge
|
|
The murky sand-lees from their sunken bed.
|
|
Nay, every race on earth of men, and beasts,
|
|
And ocean-folk, and flocks, and painted birds,
|
|
Rush to the raging fire: love sways them all.
|
|
Never than then more fiercely o'er the plain
|
|
Prowls heedless of her whelps the lioness:
|
|
Nor monstrous bears such wide-spread havoc-doom
|
|
Deal through the forests; then the boar is fierce,
|
|
Most deadly then the tigress: then, alack!
|
|
Ill roaming is it on Libya's lonely plains.
|
|
Mark you what shivering thrills the horse's frame,
|
|
If but a waft the well-known gust conveys?
|
|
Nor curb can check them then, nor lash severe,
|
|
Nor rocks and caverned crags, nor barrier-floods,
|
|
That rend and whirl and wash the hills away.
|
|
Then speeds amain the great Sabellian boar,
|
|
His tushes whets, with forefoot tears the ground,
|
|
Rubs 'gainst a tree his flanks, and to and fro
|
|
Hardens each wallowing shoulder to the wound.
|
|
What of the youth, when love's relentless might
|
|
Stirs the fierce fire within his veins? Behold!
|
|
In blindest midnight how he swims the gulf
|
|
Convulsed with bursting storm-clouds! Over him
|
|
Heaven's huge gate thunders; the rock-shattered main
|
|
Utters a warning cry; nor parents' tears
|
|
Can backward call him, nor the maid he loves,
|
|
Too soon to die on his untimely pyre.
|
|
What of the spotted ounce to Bacchus dear,
|
|
Or warlike wolf-kin or the breed of dogs?
|
|
Why tell how timorous stags the battle join?
|
|
O'er all conspicuous is the rage of mares,
|
|
By Venus' self inspired of old, what time
|
|
The Potnian four with rending jaws devoured
|
|
The limbs of Glaucus. Love-constrained they roam
|
|
Past Gargarus, past the loud Ascanian flood;
|
|
They climb the mountains, and the torrents swim;
|
|
And when their eager marrow first conceives
|
|
The fire, in Spring-tide chiefly, for with Spring
|
|
Warmth doth their frames revisit, then they stand
|
|
All facing westward on the rocky heights,
|
|
And of the gentle breezes take their fill;
|
|
And oft unmated, marvellous to tell,
|
|
But of the wind impregnate, far and wide
|
|
O'er craggy height and lowly vale they scud,
|
|
Not toward thy rising, Eurus, or the sun's,
|
|
But westward and north-west, or whence up-springs
|
|
Black Auster, that glooms heaven with rainy cold.
|
|
Hence from their groin slow drips a poisonous juice,
|
|
By shepherds truly named hippomanes,
|
|
Hippomanes, fell stepdames oft have culled,
|
|
And mixed with herbs and spells of baneful bode.
|
|
Fast flies meanwhile the irreparable hour,
|
|
As point to point our charmed round we trace.
|
|
Enough of herds. This second task remains,
|
|
The wool-clad flocks and shaggy goats to treat.
|
|
Here lies a labour; hence for glory look,
|
|
Brave husbandmen. Nor doubtfully know
|
|
How hard it is for words to triumph here,
|
|
And shed their lustre on a theme so slight:
|
|
But I am caught by ravishing desire
|
|
Above the lone Parnassian steep; I love
|
|
To walk the heights, from whence no earlier track
|
|
Slopes gently downward to Castalia's spring.
|
|
Now, awful Pales, strike a louder tone.
|
|
First, for the sheep soft pencotes I decree
|
|
To browse in, till green summer's swift return;
|
|
And that the hard earth under them with straw
|
|
And handfuls of the fern be littered deep,
|
|
Lest chill of ice such tender cattle harm
|
|
With scab and loathly foot-rot. Passing thence
|
|
I bid the goats with arbute-leaves be stored,
|
|
And served with fresh spring-water, and their pens
|
|
Turned southward from the blast, to face the suns
|
|
Of winter, when Aquarius' icy beam
|
|
Now sinks in showers upon the parting year.
|
|
These too no lightlier our protection claim,
|
|
Nor prove of poorer service, howsoe'er
|
|
Milesian fleeces dipped in Tyrian reds
|
|
Repay the barterer; these with offspring teem
|
|
More numerous; these yield plenteous store of milk:
|
|
The more each dry-wrung udder froths the pail,
|
|
More copious soon the teat-pressed torrents flow.
|
|
Ay, and on Cinyps' bank the he-goats too
|
|
Their beards and grizzled chins and bristling hair
|
|
Let clip for camp-use, or as rugs to wrap
|
|
Seafaring wretches. But they browse the woods
|
|
And summits of Lycaeus, and rough briers,
|
|
And brakes that love the highland: of themselves
|
|
Right heedfully the she-goats homeward troop
|
|
Before their kids, and with plump udders clogged
|
|
Scarce cross the threshold. Wherefore rather ye,
|
|
The less they crave man's vigilance, be fain
|
|
From ice to fend them and from snowy winds;
|
|
Bring food and feast them with their branchy fare,
|
|
Nor lock your hay-loft all the winter long.
|
|
But when glad summer at the west wind's call
|
|
Sends either flock to pasture in the glades,
|
|
Soon as the day-star shineth, hie we then
|
|
To the cool meadows, while the dawn is young,
|
|
The grass yet hoary, and to browsing herds
|
|
The dew tastes sweetest on the tender sward.
|
|
When heaven's fourth hour draws on the thickening drought,
|
|
And shrill cicalas pierce the brake with song,
|
|
Then at the well-springs bid them, or deep pools,
|
|
From troughs of holm-oak quaff the running wave:
|
|
But at day's hottest seek a shadowy vale,
|
|
Where some vast ancient-timbered oak of Jove
|
|
Spreads his huge branches, or where huddling black
|
|
Ilex on ilex cowers in awful shade.
|
|
Then once more give them water sparingly,
|
|
And feed once more, till sunset, when cool eve
|
|
Allays the air, and dewy moonbeams slake
|
|
The forest glades, with halcyon's song the shore,
|
|
And every thicket with the goldfinch rings.
|
|
Of Libya's shepherds why the tale pursue?
|
|
Why sing their pastures and the scattered huts
|
|
They house in? Oft their cattle day and night
|
|
Graze the whole month together, and go forth
|
|
Into far deserts where no shelter is,
|
|
So flat the plain and boundless. All his goods
|
|
The Afric swain bears with him, house and home,
|
|
Arms, Cretan quiver, and Amyclaean dog;
|
|
As some keen Roman in his country's arms
|
|
Plies the swift march beneath a cruel load;
|
|
Soon with tents pitched and at his post he stands,
|
|
Ere looked for by the foe. Not thus the tribes
|
|
Of Scythia by the far Maeotic wave,
|
|
Where turbid Ister whirls his yellow sands,
|
|
And Rhodope stretched out beneath the pole
|
|
Comes trending backward. There the herds they keep
|
|
Close-pent in byres, nor any grass is seen
|
|
Upon the plain, nor leaves upon the tree:
|
|
But with snow-ridges and deep frost afar
|
|
Heaped seven ells high the earth lies featureless:
|
|
Still winter? still the north wind's icy breath!
|
|
Nay, never sun disparts the shadows pale,
|
|
Or as he rides the steep of heaven, or dips
|
|
In ocean's fiery bath his plunging car.
|
|
Quick ice-crusts curdle on the running stream,
|
|
And iron-hooped wheels the water's back now bears,
|
|
To broad wains opened, as erewhile to ships;
|
|
Brass vessels oft asunder burst, and clothes
|
|
Stiffen upon the wearers; juicy wines
|
|
They cleave with axes; to one frozen mass
|
|
Whole pools are turned; and on their untrimmed beards
|
|
Stiff clings the jagged icicle. Meanwhile
|
|
All heaven no less is filled with falling snow;
|
|
The cattle perish: oxen's mighty frames
|
|
Stand island-like amid the frost, and stags
|
|
In huddling herds, by that strange weight benumbed,
|
|
Scarce top the surface with their antler-points.
|
|
These with no hounds they hunt, nor net with toils,
|
|
Nor scare with terror of the crimson plume;
|
|
But, as in vain they breast the opposing block,
|
|
Butcher them, knife in hand, and so dispatch
|
|
Loud-bellowing, and with glad shouts hale them home.
|
|
Themselves in deep-dug caverns underground
|
|
Dwell free and careless; to their hearths they heave
|
|
Oak-logs and elm-trees whole, and fire them there,
|
|
There play the night out, and in festive glee
|
|
With barm and service sour the wine-cup mock.
|
|
So 'neath the seven-starred Hyperborean wain
|
|
The folk live tameless, buffeted with blasts
|
|
Of Eurus from Rhipaean hills, and wrap
|
|
Their bodies in the tawny fells of beasts.
|
|
If wool delight thee, first, be far removed
|
|
All prickly boskage, burrs and caltrops; shun
|
|
Luxuriant pastures; at the outset choose
|
|
White flocks with downy fleeces. For the ram,
|
|
How white soe'er himself, be but the tongue
|
|
'Neath his moist palate black, reject him, lest
|
|
He sully with dark spots his offspring's fleece,
|
|
And seek some other o'er the teeming plain.
|
|
Even with such snowy bribe of wool, if ear
|
|
May trust the tale, Pan, God of Arcady,
|
|
Snared and beguiled thee, Luna, calling thee
|
|
To the deep woods; nor thou didst spurn his call.
|
|
But who for milk hath longing, must himself
|
|
Carry lucerne and lotus-leaves enow
|
|
With salt herbs to the cote, whence more they love
|
|
The streams, more stretch their udders, and give back
|
|
A subtle taste of saltness in the milk.
|
|
Many there be who from their mothers keep
|
|
The new-born kids, and straightway bind their mouths
|
|
With iron-tipped muzzles. What they milk at dawn,
|
|
Or in the daylight hours, at night they press;
|
|
What darkling or at sunset, this ere morn
|
|
They bear away in baskets- for to town
|
|
The shepherd hies him- or with dash of salt
|
|
Just sprinkle, and lay by for winter use.
|
|
Nor be thy dogs last cared for; but alike
|
|
Swift Spartan hounds and fierce Molossian feed
|
|
On fattening whey. Never, with these to watch,
|
|
Dread nightly thief afold and ravening wolves,
|
|
Or Spanish desperadoes in the rear.
|
|
And oft the shy wild asses thou wilt chase,
|
|
With hounds, too, hunt the hare, with hounds the doe;
|
|
Oft from his woodland wallowing-den uprouse
|
|
The boar, and scare him with their baying, and drive,
|
|
And o'er the mountains urge into the toils
|
|
Some antlered monster to their chiming cry.
|
|
Learn also scented cedar-wood to burn
|
|
Within the stalls, and snakes of noxious smell
|
|
With fumes of galbanum to drive away.
|
|
Oft under long-neglected cribs, or lurks
|
|
A viper ill to handle, that hath fled
|
|
The light in terror, or some snake, that wont
|
|
'Neath shade and sheltering roof to creep, and shower
|
|
Its bane among the cattle, hugs the ground,
|
|
Fell scourge of kine. Shepherd, seize stakes, seize stones!
|
|
And as he rears defiance, and puffs out
|
|
A hissing throat, down with him! see how low
|
|
That cowering crest is vailed in flight, the while,
|
|
His midmost coils and final sweep of tail
|
|
Relaxing, the last fold drags lingering spires.
|
|
Then that vile worm that in Calabrian glades
|
|
Uprears his breast, and wreathes a scaly back,
|
|
His length of belly pied with mighty spots-
|
|
While from their founts gush any streams, while yet
|
|
With showers of Spring and rainy south-winds earth
|
|
Is moistened, lo! he haunts the pools, and here
|
|
Housed in the banks, with fish and chattering frogs
|
|
Crams the black void of his insatiate maw.
|
|
Soon as the fens are parched, and earth with heat
|
|
Is gaping, forth he darts into the dry,
|
|
Rolls eyes of fire and rages through the fields,
|
|
Furious from thirst and by the drought dismayed.
|
|
Me list not then beneath the open heaven
|
|
To snatch soft slumber, nor on forest-ridge
|
|
Lie stretched along the grass, when, slipped his slough,
|
|
To glittering youth transformed he winds his spires,
|
|
And eggs or younglings leaving in his lair,
|
|
Towers sunward, lightening with three-forked tongue.
|
|
Of sickness, too, the causes and the signs
|
|
I'll teach thee. Loathly scab assails the sheep,
|
|
When chilly showers have probed them to the quick,
|
|
And winter stark with hoar-frost, or when sweat
|
|
Unpurged cleaves to them after shearing done,
|
|
And rough thorns rend their bodies. Hence it is
|
|
Shepherds their whole flock steep in running streams,
|
|
While, plunged beneath the flood, with drenched fell,
|
|
The ram, launched free, goes drifting down the tide.
|
|
Else, having shorn, they smear their bodies o'er
|
|
With acrid oil-lees, and mix silver-scum
|
|
And native sulphur and Idaean pitch,
|
|
Wax mollified with ointment, and therewith
|
|
Sea-leek, strong hellebores, bitumen black.
|
|
Yet ne'er doth kindlier fortune crown his toil,
|
|
Than if with blade of iron a man dare lance
|
|
The ulcer's mouth ope: for the taint is fed
|
|
And quickened by confinement; while the swain
|
|
His hand of healing from the wound withholds,
|
|
Or sits for happier signs imploring heaven.
|
|
Aye, and when inward to the bleater's bones
|
|
The pain hath sunk and rages, and their limbs
|
|
By thirsty fever are consumed, 'tis good
|
|
To draw the enkindled heat therefrom, and pierce
|
|
Within the hoof-clefts a blood-bounding vein.
|
|
Of tribes Bisaltic such the wonted use,
|
|
And keen Gelonian, when to Rhodope
|
|
He flies, or Getic desert, and quaffs milk
|
|
With horse-blood curdled.
|
|
Seest one far afield
|
|
Oft to the shade's mild covert win, or pull
|
|
The grass tops listlessly, or hindmost lag,
|
|
Or, browsing, cast her down amid the plain,
|
|
At night retire belated and alone;
|
|
With quick knife check the mischief, ere it creep
|
|
With dire contagion through the unwary herd.
|
|
Less thick and fast the whirlwind scours the main
|
|
With tempest in its wake, than swarm the plagues
|
|
Of cattle; nor seize they single lives alone,
|
|
But sudden clear whole feeding grounds, the flock
|
|
With all its promise, and extirpate the breed.
|
|
Well would he trow it who, so long after, still
|
|
High Alps and Noric hill-forts should behold,
|
|
And Iapydian Timavus' fields,
|
|
Ay, still behold the shepherds' realms a waste,
|
|
And far and wide the lawns untenanted.
|
|
Here from distempered heavens erewhile arose
|
|
A piteous season, with the full fierce heat
|
|
Of autumn glowed, and cattle-kindreds all
|
|
And all wild creatures to destruction gave,
|
|
Tainted the pools, the fodder charged with bane.
|
|
Nor simple was the way of death, but when
|
|
Hot thirst through every vein impelled had drawn
|
|
Their wretched limbs together, anon o'erflowed
|
|
A watery flux, and all their bones piecemeal
|
|
Sapped by corruption to itself absorbed.
|
|
Oft in mid sacrifice to heaven- the white
|
|
Wool-woven fillet half wreathed about his brow-
|
|
Some victim, standing by the altar, there
|
|
Betwixt the loitering carles a-dying fell:
|
|
Or, if betimes the slaughtering priest had struck,
|
|
Nor with its heaped entrails blazed the pile,
|
|
Nor seer to seeker thence could answer yield;
|
|
Nay, scarce the up-stabbing knife with blood was stained,
|
|
Scarce sullied with thin gore the surface-sand.
|
|
Hence die the calves in many a pasture fair,
|
|
Or at full cribs their lives' sweet breath resign;
|
|
Hence on the fawning dog comes madness, hence
|
|
Racks the sick swine a gasping cough that chokes
|
|
With swelling at the jaws: the conquering steed,
|
|
Uncrowned of effort and heedless of the sward,
|
|
Faints, turns him from the springs, and paws the earth
|
|
With ceaseless hoof: low droop his ears, wherefrom
|
|
Bursts fitful sweat, a sweat that waxes cold
|
|
Upon the dying beast; the skin is dry,
|
|
And rigidly repels the handler's touch.
|
|
These earlier signs they give that presage doom.
|
|
But, if the advancing plague 'gin fiercer grow,
|
|
Then are their eyes all fire, deep-drawn their breath,
|
|
At times groan-laboured: with long sobbing heave
|
|
Their lowest flanks; from either nostril streams
|
|
Black blood; a rough tongue clogs the obstructed jaws.
|
|
'Twas helpful through inverted horn to pour
|
|
Draughts of the wine-god down; sole way it seemed
|
|
To save the dying: soon this too proved their bane,
|
|
And, reinvigorate but with frenzy's fire,
|
|
Even at death's pinch- the gods some happier fate
|
|
Deal to the just, such madness to their foes-
|
|
Each with bared teeth his own limbs mangling tore.
|
|
See! as he smokes beneath the stubborn share,
|
|
The bull drops, vomiting foam-dabbled gore,
|
|
And heaves his latest groans. Sad goes the swain,
|
|
Unhooks the steer that mourns his fellow's fate,
|
|
And in mid labour leaves the plough-gear fast.
|
|
Nor tall wood's shadow, nor soft sward may stir
|
|
That heart's emotion, nor rock-channelled flood,
|
|
More pure than amber speeding to the plain:
|
|
But see! his flanks fail under him, his eyes
|
|
Are dulled with deadly torpor, and his neck
|
|
Sinks to the earth with drooping weight. What now
|
|
Besteads him toil or service? to have turned
|
|
The heavy sod with ploughshare? And yet these
|
|
Ne'er knew the Massic wine-god's baneful boon,
|
|
Nor twice replenished banquets: but on leaves
|
|
They fare, and virgin grasses, and their cups
|
|
Are crystal springs and streams with running tired,
|
|
Their healthful slumbers never broke by care.
|
|
Then only, say they, through that country side
|
|
For Juno's rites were cattle far to seek,
|
|
And ill-matched buffaloes the chariots drew
|
|
To their high fanes. So, painfully with rakes
|
|
They grub the soil, aye, with their very nails
|
|
Dig in the corn-seeds, and with strained neck
|
|
O'er the high uplands drag the creaking wains.
|
|
No wolf for ambush pries about the pen,
|
|
Nor round the flock prowls nightly; pain more sharp
|
|
Subdues him: the shy deer and fleet-foot stags
|
|
With hounds now wander by the haunts of men
|
|
Vast ocean's offspring, and all tribes that swim,
|
|
On the shore's confine the wave washes up,
|
|
Like shipwrecked bodies: seals, unwonted there,
|
|
Flee to the rivers. Now the viper dies,
|
|
For all his den's close winding, and with scales
|
|
Erect the astonied water-worms. The air
|
|
Brooks not the very birds, that headlong fall,
|
|
And leave their life beneath the soaring cloud.
|
|
Moreover now nor change of fodder serves,
|
|
And subtlest cures but injure; then were foiled
|
|
The masters, Chiron sprung from Phillyron,
|
|
And Amythaon's son Melampus. See!
|
|
From Stygian darkness launched into the light
|
|
Comes raging pale Tisiphone; she drives
|
|
Disease and fear before her, day by day
|
|
Still rearing higher that all-devouring head.
|
|
With bleat of flocks and lowings thick resound
|
|
Rivers and parched banks and sloping heights.
|
|
At last in crowds she slaughters them, she chokes
|
|
The very stalls with carrion-heaps that rot
|
|
In hideous corruption, till men learn
|
|
With earth to cover them, in pits to hide.
|
|
For e'en the fells are useless; nor the flesh
|
|
With water may they purge, or tame with fire,
|
|
Nor shear the fleeces even, gnawed through and through
|
|
With foul disease, nor touch the putrid webs;
|
|
But, had one dared the loathly weeds to try,
|
|
Red blisters and an unclean sweat o'erran
|
|
His noisome limbs, till, no long tarriance made,
|
|
The fiery curse his tainted frame devoured.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
GEORGIC IV
|
|
|
|
Of air-born honey, gift of heaven, I now
|
|
Take up the tale. Upon this theme no less
|
|
Look thou, Maecenas, with indulgent eye.
|
|
A marvellous display of puny powers,
|
|
High-hearted chiefs, a nation's history,
|
|
Its traits, its bent, its battles and its clans,
|
|
All, each, shall pass before you, while I sing.
|
|
Slight though the poet's theme, not slight the praise,
|
|
So frown not heaven, and Phoebus hear his call.
|
|
First find your bees a settled sure abode,
|
|
Where neither winds can enter (winds blow back
|
|
The foragers with food returning home)
|
|
Nor sheep and butting kids tread down the flowers,
|
|
Nor heifer wandering wide upon the plain
|
|
Dash off the dew, and bruise the springing blades.
|
|
Let the gay lizard too keep far aloof
|
|
His scale-clad body from their honied stalls,
|
|
And the bee-eater, and what birds beside,
|
|
And Procne smirched with blood upon the breast
|
|
From her own murderous hands. For these roam wide
|
|
Wasting all substance, or the bees themselves
|
|
Strike flying, and in their beaks bear home, to glut
|
|
Those savage nestlings with the dainty prey.
|
|
But let clear springs and moss-green pools be near,
|
|
And through the grass a streamlet hurrying run,
|
|
Some palm-tree o'er the porch extend its shade,
|
|
Or huge-grown oleaster, that in Spring,
|
|
Their own sweet Spring-tide, when the new-made chiefs
|
|
Lead forth the young swarms, and, escaped their comb,
|
|
The colony comes forth to sport and play,
|
|
The neighbouring bank may lure them from the heat,
|
|
Or bough befriend with hospitable shade.
|
|
O'er the mid-waters, whether swift or still,
|
|
Cast willow-branches and big stones enow,
|
|
Bridge after bridge, where they may footing find
|
|
And spread their wide wings to the summer sun,
|
|
If haply Eurus, swooping as they pause,
|
|
Have dashed with spray or plunged them in the deep.
|
|
And let green cassias and far-scented thymes,
|
|
And savory with its heavy-laden breath
|
|
Bloom round about, and violet-beds hard by
|
|
Sip sweetness from the fertilizing springs.
|
|
For the hive's self, or stitched of hollow bark,
|
|
Or from tough osier woven, let the doors
|
|
Be strait of entrance; for stiff winter's cold
|
|
Congeals the honey, and heat resolves and thaws,
|
|
To bees alike disastrous; not for naught
|
|
So haste they to cement the tiny pores
|
|
That pierce their walls, and fill the crevices
|
|
With pollen from the flowers, and glean and keep
|
|
To this same end the glue, that binds more fast
|
|
Than bird-lime or the pitch from Ida's pines.
|
|
Oft too in burrowed holes, if fame be true,
|
|
They make their cosy subterranean home,
|
|
And deeply lodged in hollow rocks are found,
|
|
Or in the cavern of an age-hewn tree.
|
|
Thou not the less smear round their crannied cribs
|
|
With warm smooth mud-coat, and strew leaves above;
|
|
But near their home let neither yew-tree grow,
|
|
Nor reddening crabs be roasted, and mistrust
|
|
Deep marish-ground and mire with noisome smell,
|
|
Or where the hollow rocks sonorous ring,
|
|
And the word spoken buffets and rebounds.
|
|
What more? When now the golden sun has put
|
|
Winter to headlong flight beneath the world,
|
|
And oped the doors of heaven with summer ray,
|
|
Forthwith they roam the glades and forests o'er,
|
|
Rifle the painted flowers, or sip the streams,
|
|
Light-hovering on the surface. Hence it is
|
|
With some sweet rapture, that we know not of,
|
|
Their little ones they foster, hence with skill
|
|
Work out new wax or clinging honey mould.
|
|
So when the cage-escaped hosts you see
|
|
Float heavenward through the hot clear air, until
|
|
You marvel at yon dusky cloud that spreads
|
|
And lengthens on the wind, then mark them well;
|
|
For then 'tis ever the fresh springs they seek
|
|
And bowery shelter: hither must you bring
|
|
The savoury sweets I bid, and sprinkle them,
|
|
Bruised balsam and the wax-flower's lowly weed,
|
|
And wake and shake the tinkling cymbals heard
|
|
By the great Mother: on the anointed spots
|
|
Themselves will settle, and in wonted wise
|
|
Seek of themselves the cradle's inmost depth.
|
|
But if to battle they have hied them forth-
|
|
For oft 'twixt king and king with uproar dire
|
|
Fierce feud arises, and at once from far
|
|
You may discern what passion sways the mob,
|
|
And how their hearts are throbbing for the strife;
|
|
Hark! the hoarse brazen note that warriors know
|
|
Chides on the loiterers, and the ear may catch
|
|
A sound that mocks the war-trump's broken blasts;
|
|
Then in hot haste they muster, then flash wings,
|
|
Sharpen their pointed beaks and knit their thews,
|
|
And round the king, even to his royal tent,
|
|
Throng rallying, and with shouts defy the foe.
|
|
So, when a dry Spring and clear space is given,
|
|
Forth from the gates they burst, they clash on high;
|
|
A din arises; they are heaped and rolled
|
|
Into one mighty mass, and headlong fall,
|
|
Not denselier hail through heaven, nor pelting so
|
|
Rains from the shaken oak its acorn-shower.
|
|
Conspicuous by their wings the chiefs themselves
|
|
Press through the heart of battle, and display
|
|
A giant's spirit in each pigmy frame,
|
|
Steadfast no inch to yield till these or those
|
|
The victor's ponderous arm has turned to flight.
|
|
Such fiery passions and such fierce assaults
|
|
A little sprinkled dust controls and quells.
|
|
And now, both leaders from the field recalled,
|
|
Who hath the worser seeming, do to death,
|
|
Lest royal waste wax burdensome, but let
|
|
His better lord it on the empty throne.
|
|
One with gold-burnished flakes will shine like fire,
|
|
For twofold are their kinds, the nobler he,
|
|
Of peerless front and lit with flashing scales;
|
|
That other, from neglect and squalor foul,
|
|
Drags slow a cumbrous belly. As with kings,
|
|
So too with people, diverse is their mould,
|
|
Some rough and loathly, as when the wayfarer
|
|
Scapes from a whirl of dust, and scorched with heat
|
|
Spits forth the dry grit from his parched mouth:
|
|
The others shine forth and flash with lightning-gleam,
|
|
Their backs all blazoned with bright drops of gold
|
|
Symmetric: this the likelier breed; from these,
|
|
When heaven brings round the season, thou shalt strain
|
|
Sweet honey, nor yet so sweet as passing clear,
|
|
And mellowing on the tongue the wine-god's fire.
|
|
But when the swarms fly aimlessly abroad,
|
|
Disport themselves in heaven and spurn their cells,
|
|
Leaving the hive unwarmed, from such vain play
|
|
Must you refrain their volatile desires,
|
|
Nor hard the task: tear off the monarchs' wings;
|
|
While these prove loiterers, none beside will dare
|
|
Mount heaven, or pluck the standards from the camp.
|
|
Let gardens with the breath of saffron flowers
|
|
Allure them, and the lord of Hellespont,
|
|
Priapus, wielder of the willow-scythe,
|
|
Safe in his keeping hold from birds and thieves.
|
|
And let the man to whom such cares are dear
|
|
Himself bring thyme and pine-trees from the heights,
|
|
And strew them in broad belts about their home;
|
|
No hand but his the blistering task should ply,
|
|
Plant the young slips, or shed the genial showers.
|
|
And I myself, were I not even now
|
|
Furling my sails, and, nigh the journey's end,
|
|
Eager to turn my vessel's prow to shore,
|
|
Perchance would sing what careful husbandry
|
|
Makes the trim garden smile; of Paestum too,
|
|
Whose roses bloom and fade and bloom again;
|
|
How endives glory in the streams they drink,
|
|
And green banks in their parsley, and how the gourd
|
|
Twists through the grass and rounds him to paunch;
|
|
Nor of Narcissus had my lips been dumb,
|
|
That loiterer of the flowers, nor supple-stemmed
|
|
Acanthus, with the praise of ivies pale,
|
|
And myrtles clinging to the shores they love.
|
|
For 'neath the shade of tall Oebalia's towers,
|
|
Where dark Galaesus laves the yellowing fields,
|
|
An old man once I mind me to have seen-
|
|
From Corycus he came- to whom had fallen
|
|
Some few poor acres of neglected land,
|
|
And they nor fruitful' neath the plodding steer,
|
|
Meet for the grazing herd, nor good for vines.
|
|
Yet he, the while his meagre garden-herbs
|
|
Among the thorns he planted, and all round
|
|
White lilies, vervains, and lean poppy set,
|
|
In pride of spirit matched the wealth of kings,
|
|
And home returning not till night was late,
|
|
With unbought plenty heaped his board on high.
|
|
He was the first to cull the rose in spring,
|
|
He the ripe fruits in autumn; and ere yet
|
|
Winter had ceased in sullen ire to rive
|
|
The rocks with frost, and with her icy bit
|
|
Curb in the running waters, there was he
|
|
Plucking the rathe faint hyacinth, while he chid
|
|
Summer's slow footsteps and the lagging West.
|
|
Therefore he too with earliest brooding bees
|
|
And their full swarms o'erflowed, and first was he
|
|
To press the bubbling honey from the comb;
|
|
Lime-trees were his, and many a branching pine;
|
|
And all the fruits wherewith in early bloom
|
|
The orchard-tree had clothed her, in full tale
|
|
Hung there, by mellowing autumn perfected.
|
|
He too transplanted tall-grown elms a-row,
|
|
Time-toughened pear, thorns bursting with the plum
|
|
And plane now yielding serviceable shade
|
|
For dry lips to drink under: but these things,
|
|
Shut off by rigorous limits, I pass by,
|
|
And leave for others to sing after me.
|
|
Come, then, I will unfold the natural powers
|
|
Great Jove himself upon the bees bestowed,
|
|
The boon for which, led by the shrill sweet strains
|
|
Of the Curetes and their clashing brass,
|
|
They fed the King of heaven in Dicte's cave.
|
|
Alone of all things they receive and hold
|
|
Community of offspring, and they house
|
|
Together in one city, and beneath
|
|
The shelter of majestic laws they live;
|
|
And they alone fixed home and country know,
|
|
And in the summer, warned of coming cold,
|
|
Make proof of toil, and for the general store
|
|
Hoard up their gathered harvesting. For some
|
|
Watch o'er the victualling of the hive, and these
|
|
By settled order ply their tasks afield;
|
|
And some within the confines of their home
|
|
Plant firm the comb's first layer, Narcissus' tear,
|
|
And sticky gum oozed from the bark of trees,
|
|
Then set the clinging wax to hang therefrom.
|
|
Others the while lead forth the full-grown young,
|
|
Their country's hope, and others press and pack
|
|
The thrice repured honey, and stretch their cells
|
|
To bursting with the clear-strained nectar sweet.
|
|
Some, too, the wardship of the gates befalls,
|
|
Who watch in turn for showers and cloudy skies,
|
|
Or ease returning labourers of their load,
|
|
Or form a band and from their precincts drive
|
|
The drones, a lazy herd. How glows the work!
|
|
How sweet the honey smells of perfumed thyme
|
|
Like the Cyclopes, when in haste they forge
|
|
From the slow-yielding ore the thunderbolts,
|
|
Some from the bull's-hide bellows in and out
|
|
Let the blasts drive, some dip i' the water-trough
|
|
The sputtering metal: with the anvil's weight
|
|
Groans Etna: they alternately in time
|
|
With giant strength uplift their sinewy arms,
|
|
Or twist the iron with the forceps' grip-
|
|
Not otherwise, to measure small with great,
|
|
The love of getting planted in their breasts
|
|
Goads on the bees, that haunt old Cecrops' heights,
|
|
Each in his sphere to labour. The old have charge
|
|
To keep the town, and build the walled combs,
|
|
And mould the cunning chambers; but the youth,
|
|
Their tired legs packed with thyme, come labouring home
|
|
Belated, for afar they range to feed
|
|
On arbutes and the grey-green willow-leaves,
|
|
And cassia and the crocus blushing red,
|
|
Glue-yielding limes, and hyacinths dusky-eyed.
|
|
One hour for rest have all, and one for toil:
|
|
With dawn they hurry from the gates- no room
|
|
For loiterers there: and once again, when even
|
|
Now bids them quit their pasturing on the plain,
|
|
Then homeward make they, then refresh their strength:
|
|
A hum arises: hark! they buzz and buzz
|
|
About the doors and threshold; till at length
|
|
Safe laid to rest they hush them for the night,
|
|
And welcome slumber laps their weary limbs.
|
|
But from the homestead not too far they fare,
|
|
When showers hang like to fall, nor, east winds nigh,
|
|
Confide in heaven, but 'neath the city walls
|
|
Safe-circling fetch them water, or essay
|
|
Brief out-goings, and oft weigh-up tiny stones,
|
|
As light craft ballast in the tossing tide,
|
|
Wherewith they poise them through the cloudy vast.
|
|
This law of life, too, by the bees obeyed,
|
|
Will move thy wonder, that nor sex with sex
|
|
Yoke they in marriage, nor yield their limbs to love,
|
|
Nor know the pangs of labour, but alone
|
|
From leaves and honied herbs, the mothers, each,
|
|
Gather their offspring in their mouths, alone
|
|
Supply new kings and pigmy commonwealth,
|
|
And their old court and waxen realm repair.
|
|
Oft, too, while wandering, against jagged stones
|
|
Their wings they fray, and 'neath the burden yield
|
|
Their liberal lives: so deep their love of flowers,
|
|
So glorious deem they honey's proud acquist.
|
|
Therefore, though each a life of narrow span,
|
|
Ne'er stretched to summers more than seven, befalls,
|
|
Yet deathless doth the race endure, and still
|
|
Perennial stands the fortune of their line,
|
|
From grandsire unto grandsire backward told.
|
|
Moreover, not Aegyptus, nor the realm
|
|
Of boundless Lydia, no, nor Parthia's hordes,
|
|
Nor Median Hydaspes, to their king
|
|
Do such obeisance: lives the king unscathed,
|
|
One will inspires the million: is he dead,
|
|
Snapt is the bond of fealty; they themselves
|
|
Ravage their toil-wrought honey, and rend amain
|
|
Their own comb's waxen trellis. He is the lord
|
|
Of all their labour; him with awful eye
|
|
They reverence, and with murmuring throngs surround,
|
|
In crowds attend, oft shoulder him on high,
|
|
Or with their bodies shield him in the fight,
|
|
And seek through showering wounds a glorious death.
|
|
Led by these tokens, and with such traits to guide,
|
|
Some say that unto bees a share is given
|
|
Of the Divine Intelligence, and to drink
|
|
Pure draughts of ether; for God permeates all-
|
|
Earth, and wide ocean, and the vault of heaven-
|
|
From whom flocks, herds, men, beasts of every kind,
|
|
Draw each at birth the fine essential flame;
|
|
Yea, and that all things hence to Him return,
|
|
Brought back by dissolution, nor can death
|
|
Find place: but, each into his starry rank,
|
|
Alive they soar, and mount the heights of heaven.
|
|
If now their narrow home thou wouldst unseal,
|
|
And broach the treasures of the honey-house,
|
|
With draught of water first toment thy lips,
|
|
And spread before thee fumes of trailing smoke.
|
|
Twice is the teeming produce gathered in,
|
|
Twofold their time of harvest year by year,
|
|
Once when Taygete the Pleiad uplifts
|
|
Her comely forehead for the earth to see,
|
|
With foot of scorn spurning the ocean-streams,
|
|
Once when in gloom she flies the watery Fish,
|
|
And dips from heaven into the wintry wave.
|
|
Unbounded then their wrath; if hurt, they breathe
|
|
Venom into their bite, cleave to the veins
|
|
And let the sting lie buried, and leave their lives
|
|
Behind them in the wound. But if you dread
|
|
Too rigorous a winter, and would fain
|
|
Temper the coming time, and their bruised hearts
|
|
And broken estate to pity move thy soul,
|
|
Yet who would fear to fumigate with thyme,
|
|
Or cut the empty wax away? for oft
|
|
Into their comb the newt has gnawed unseen,
|
|
And the light-loathing beetles crammed their bed,
|
|
And he that sits at others' board to feast,
|
|
The do-naught drone; or 'gainst the unequal foe
|
|
Swoops the fierce hornet, or the moth's fell tribe;
|
|
Or spider, victim of Minerva's spite,
|
|
Athwart the doorway hangs her swaying net.
|
|
The more impoverished they, the keenlier all
|
|
To mend the fallen fortunes of their race
|
|
Will nerve them, fill the cells up, tier on tier,
|
|
And weave their granaries from the rifled flowers.
|
|
Now, seeing that life doth even to bee-folk bring
|
|
Our human chances, if in dire disease
|
|
Their bodies' strength should languish- which anon
|
|
By no uncertain tokens may be told-
|
|
Forthwith the sick change hue; grim leanness mars
|
|
Their visage; then from out the cells they bear
|
|
Forms reft of light, and lead the mournful pomp;
|
|
Or foot to foot about the porch they hang,
|
|
Or within closed doors loiter, listless all
|
|
From famine, and benumbed with shrivelling cold.
|
|
Then is a deep note heard, a long-drawn hum,
|
|
As when the chill South through the forests sighs,
|
|
As when the troubled ocean hoarsely booms
|
|
With back-swung billow, as ravening tide of fire
|
|
Surges, shut fast within the furnace-walls.
|
|
Then do I bid burn scented galbanum,
|
|
And, honey-streams through reeden troughs instilled,
|
|
Challenge and cheer their flagging appetite
|
|
To taste the well-known food; and it shall boot
|
|
To mix therewith the savour bruised from gall,
|
|
And rose-leaves dried, or must to thickness boiled
|
|
By a fierce fire, or juice of raisin-grapes
|
|
From Psithian vine, and with its bitter smell
|
|
Centaury, and the famed Cecropian thyme.
|
|
There is a meadow-flower by country folk
|
|
Hight star-wort; 'tis a plant not far to seek;
|
|
For from one sod an ample growth it rears,
|
|
Itself all golden, but girt with plenteous leaves,
|
|
Where glory of purple shines through violet gloom.
|
|
With chaplets woven hereof full oft are decked
|
|
Heaven's altars: harsh its taste upon the tongue;
|
|
Shepherds in vales smooth-shorn of nibbling flocks
|
|
By Mella's winding waters gather it.
|
|
The roots of this, well seethed in fragrant wine,
|
|
Set in brimmed baskets at their doors for food.
|
|
But if one's whole stock fail him at a stroke,
|
|
Nor hath he whence to breed the race anew,
|
|
'Tis time the wondrous secret to disclose
|
|
Taught by the swain of Arcady, even how
|
|
The blood of slaughtered bullocks oft has borne
|
|
Bees from corruption. I will trace me back
|
|
To its prime source the story's tangled thread,
|
|
And thence unravel. For where thy happy folk,
|
|
Canopus, city of Pellaean fame,
|
|
Dwell by the Nile's lagoon-like overflow,
|
|
And high o'er furrows they have called their own
|
|
Skim in their painted wherries; where, hard by,
|
|
The quivered Persian presses, and that flood
|
|
Which from the swart-skinned Aethiop bears him down,
|
|
Swift-parted into sevenfold branching mouths
|
|
With black mud fattens and makes Aegypt green,
|
|
That whole domain its welfare's hope secure
|
|
Rests on this art alone. And first is chosen
|
|
A strait recess, cramped closer to this end,
|
|
Which next with narrow roof of tiles atop
|
|
'Twixt prisoning walls they pinch, and add hereto
|
|
From the four winds four slanting window-slits.
|
|
Then seek they from the herd a steer, whose horns
|
|
With two years' growth are curling, and stop fast,
|
|
Plunge madly as he may, the panting mouth
|
|
And nostrils twain, and done with blows to death,
|
|
Batter his flesh to pulp i' the hide yet whole,
|
|
And shut the doors, and leave him there to lie.
|
|
But 'neath his ribs they scatter broken boughs,
|
|
With thyme and fresh-pulled cassias: this is done
|
|
When first the west winds bid the waters flow,
|
|
Ere flush the meadows with new tints, and ere
|
|
The twittering swallow buildeth from the beams.
|
|
Meanwhile the juice within his softened bones
|
|
Heats and ferments, and things of wondrous birth,
|
|
Footless at first, anon with feet and wings,
|
|
Swarm there and buzz, a marvel to behold;
|
|
And more and more the fleeting breeze they take,
|
|
Till, like a shower that pours from summer-clouds,
|
|
Forth burst they, or like shafts from quivering string
|
|
When Parthia's flying hosts provoke the fray.
|
|
Say what was he, what God, that fashioned forth
|
|
This art for us, O Muses? of man's skill
|
|
Whence came the new adventure? From thy vale,
|
|
Peneian Tempe, turning, bee-bereft,
|
|
So runs the tale, by famine and disease,
|
|
Mournful the shepherd Aristaeus stood
|
|
Fast by the haunted river-head, and thus
|
|
With many a plaint to her that bare him cried:
|
|
"Mother, Cyrene, mother, who hast thy home
|
|
Beneath this whirling flood, if he thou sayest,
|
|
Apollo, lord of Thymbra, be my sire,
|
|
Sprung from the Gods' high line, why barest thou me
|
|
With fortune's ban for birthright? Where is now
|
|
Thy love to me-ward banished from thy breast?
|
|
O! wherefore didst thou bid me hope for heaven?
|
|
Lo! even the crown of this poor mortal life,
|
|
Which all my skilful care by field and fold,
|
|
No art neglected, scarce had fashioned forth,
|
|
Even this falls from me, yet thou call'st me son.
|
|
Nay, then, arise! With thine own hands pluck up
|
|
My fruit-plantations: on the homestead fling
|
|
Pitiless fire; make havoc of my crops;
|
|
Burn the young plants, and wield the stubborn axe
|
|
Against my vines, if there hath taken the
|
|
Such loathing of my greatness." But that cry,
|
|
Even from her chamber in the river-deeps,
|
|
His mother heard: around her spun the nymphs
|
|
Milesian wool stained through with hyaline dye,
|
|
Drymo, Xantho, Ligea, Phyllodoce,
|
|
Their glossy locks o'er snowy shoulders shed,
|
|
Cydippe and Lycorias yellow-haired,
|
|
A maiden one, one newly learned even then
|
|
To bear Lucina's birth-pang. Clio, too,
|
|
And Beroe, sisters, ocean-children both,
|
|
Both zoned with gold and girt with dappled fell,
|
|
Ephyre and Opis, and from Asian meads
|
|
Deiopea, and, bow at length laid by,
|
|
Fleet-footed Arethusa. But in their midst
|
|
Fair Clymene was telling o'er the tale
|
|
Of Vulcan's idle vigilance and the stealth
|
|
Of Mars' sweet rapine, and from Chaos old
|
|
Counted the jostling love-joys of the Gods.
|
|
Charmed by whose lay, the while their woolly tasks
|
|
With spindles down they drew, yet once again
|
|
Smote on his mother's ears the mournful plaint
|
|
Of Aristaeus; on their glassy thrones
|
|
Amazement held them all; but Arethuse
|
|
Before the rest put forth her auburn head,
|
|
Peering above the wave-top, and from far
|
|
Exclaimed, "Cyrene, sister, not for naught
|
|
Scared by a groan so deep, behold! 'tis he,
|
|
Even Aristaeus, thy heart's fondest care,
|
|
Here by the brink of the Peneian sire
|
|
Stands woebegone and weeping, and by name
|
|
Cries out upon thee for thy cruelty."
|
|
To whom, strange terror knocking at her heart,
|
|
"Bring, bring him to our sight," the mother cried;
|
|
"His feet may tread the threshold even of Gods."
|
|
So saying, she bids the flood yawn wide and yield
|
|
A pathway for his footsteps; but the wave
|
|
Arched mountain-wise closed round him, and within
|
|
Its mighty bosom welcomed, and let speed
|
|
To the deep river-bed. And now, with eyes
|
|
Of wonder gazing on his mother's hall
|
|
And watery kingdom and cave-prisoned pools
|
|
And echoing groves, he went, and, stunned by that
|
|
Stupendous whirl of waters, separate saw
|
|
All streams beneath the mighty earth that glide,
|
|
Phasis and Lycus, and that fountain-head
|
|
Whence first the deep Enipeus leaps to light,
|
|
Whence father Tiber, and whence Anio's flood,
|
|
And Hypanis that roars amid his rocks,
|
|
And Mysian Caicus, and, bull-browed
|
|
'Twixt either gilded horn, Eridanus,
|
|
Than whom none other through the laughing plains
|
|
More furious pours into the purple sea.
|
|
Soon as the chamber's hanging roof of stone
|
|
Was gained, and now Cyrene from her son
|
|
Had heard his idle weeping, in due course
|
|
Clear water for his hands the sisters bring,
|
|
With napkins of shorn pile, while others heap
|
|
The board with dainties, and set on afresh
|
|
The brimming goblets; with Panchaian fires
|
|
Upleap the altars; then the mother spake,
|
|
"Take beakers of Maconian wine," she said,
|
|
"Pour we to Ocean." Ocean, sire of all,
|
|
She worships, and the sister-nymphs who guard
|
|
The hundred forests and the hundred streams;
|
|
Thrice Vesta's fire with nectar clear she dashed,
|
|
Thrice to the roof-top shot the flame and shone:
|
|
Armed with which omen she essayed to speak:
|
|
"In Neptune's gulf Carpathian dwells a seer,
|
|
Caerulean Proteus, he who metes the main
|
|
With fish-drawn chariot of two-footed steeds;
|
|
Now visits he his native home once more,
|
|
Pallene and the Emathian ports; to him
|
|
We nymphs do reverence, ay, and Nereus old;
|
|
For all things knows the seer, both those which are
|
|
And have been, or which time hath yet to bring;
|
|
So willed it Neptune, whose portentous flocks,
|
|
And loathly sea-calves 'neath the surge he feeds.
|
|
Him first, my son, behoves thee seize and bind
|
|
That he may all the cause of sickness show,
|
|
And grant a prosperous end. For save by force
|
|
No rede will he vouchsafe, nor shalt thou bend
|
|
His soul by praying; whom once made captive, ply
|
|
With rigorous force and fetters; against these
|
|
His wiles will break and spend themselves in vain.
|
|
I, when the sun has lit his noontide fires,
|
|
When the blades thirst, and cattle love the shade,
|
|
Myself will guide thee to the old man's haunt,
|
|
Whither he hies him weary from the waves,
|
|
That thou mayst safelier steal upon his sleep.
|
|
But when thou hast gripped him fast with hand and gyve,
|
|
Then divers forms and bestial semblances
|
|
Shall mock thy grasp; for sudden he will change
|
|
To bristly boar, fell tigress, dragon scaled,
|
|
And tawny-tufted lioness, or send forth
|
|
A crackling sound of fire, and so shake of
|
|
The fetters, or in showery drops anon
|
|
Dissolve and vanish. But the more he shifts
|
|
His endless transformations, thou, my son,
|
|
More straitlier clench the clinging bands, until
|
|
His body's shape return to that thou sawest,
|
|
When with closed eyelids first he sank to sleep."
|
|
So saying, an odour of ambrosial dew
|
|
She sheds around, and all his frame therewith
|
|
Steeps throughly; forth from his trim-combed locks
|
|
Breathed effluence sweet, and a lithe vigour leapt
|
|
Into his limbs. There is a cavern vast
|
|
Scooped in the mountain-side, where wave on wave
|
|
By the wind's stress is driven, and breaks far up
|
|
Its inmost creeks- safe anchorage from of old
|
|
For tempest-taken mariners: therewithin,
|
|
Behind a rock's huge barrier, Proteus hides.
|
|
Here in close covert out of the sun's eye
|
|
The youth she places, and herself the while
|
|
Swathed in a shadowy mist stands far aloof.
|
|
And now the ravening dog-star that burns up
|
|
The thirsty Indians blazed in heaven; his course
|
|
The fiery sun had half devoured: the blades
|
|
Were parched, and the void streams with droughty jaws
|
|
Baked to their mud-beds by the scorching ray,
|
|
When Proteus seeking his accustomed cave
|
|
Strode from the billows: round him frolicking
|
|
The watery folk that people the waste sea
|
|
Sprinkled the bitter brine-dew far and wide.
|
|
Along the shore in scattered groups to feed
|
|
The sea-calves stretch them: while the seer himself,
|
|
Like herdsman on the hills when evening bids
|
|
The steers from pasture to their stall repair,
|
|
And the lambs' bleating whets the listening wolves,
|
|
Sits midmost on the rock and tells his tale.
|
|
But Aristaeus, the foe within his clutch,
|
|
Scarce suffering him compose his aged limbs,
|
|
With a great cry leapt on him, and ere he rose
|
|
Forestalled him with the fetters; he nathless,
|
|
All unforgetful of his ancient craft,
|
|
Transforms himself to every wondrous thing,
|
|
Fire and a fearful beast, and flowing stream.
|
|
But when no trickery found a path for flight,
|
|
Baffled at length, to his own shape returned,
|
|
With human lips he spake, "Who bade thee, then,
|
|
So reckless in youth's hardihood, affront
|
|
Our portals? or what wouldst thou hence?"- But he,
|
|
"Proteus, thou knowest, of thine own heart thou knowest;
|
|
For thee there is no cheating, but cease thou
|
|
To practise upon me: at heaven's behest
|
|
I for my fainting fortunes hither come
|
|
An oracle to ask thee." There he ceased.
|
|
Whereat the seer, by stubborn force constrained,
|
|
Shot forth the grey light of his gleaming eyes
|
|
Upon him, and with fiercely gnashing teeth
|
|
Unlocks his lips to spell the fates of heaven:
|
|
"Doubt not 'tis wrath divine that plagues thee thus,
|
|
Nor light the debt thou payest; 'tis Orpheus' self,
|
|
Orpheus unhappy by no fault of his,
|
|
So fates prevent not, fans thy penal fires,
|
|
Yet madly raging for his ravished bride.
|
|
She in her haste to shun thy hot pursuit
|
|
Along the stream, saw not the coming death,
|
|
Where at her feet kept ward upon the bank
|
|
In the tall grass a monstrous water-snake.
|
|
But with their cries the Dryad-band her peers
|
|
Filled up the mountains to their proudest peaks:
|
|
Wailed for her fate the heights of Rhodope,
|
|
And tall Pangaea, and, beloved of Mars,
|
|
The land that bowed to Rhesus, Thrace no less
|
|
With Hebrus' stream; and Orithyia wept,
|
|
Daughter of Acte old. But Orpheus' self,
|
|
Soothing his love-pain with the hollow shell,
|
|
Thee his sweet wife on the lone shore alone,
|
|
Thee when day dawned and when it died he sang.
|
|
Nay to the jaws of Taenarus too he came,
|
|
Of Dis the infernal palace, and the grove
|
|
Grim with a horror of great darkness- came,
|
|
Entered, and faced the Manes and the King
|
|
Of terrors, the stone heart no prayer can tame.
|
|
Then from the deepest deeps of Erebus,
|
|
Wrung by his minstrelsy, the hollow shades
|
|
Came trooping, ghostly semblances of forms
|
|
Lost to the light, as birds by myriads hie
|
|
To greenwood boughs for cover, when twilight-hour
|
|
Or storms of winter chase them from the hills;
|
|
Matrons and men, and great heroic frames
|
|
Done with life's service, boys, unwedded girls,
|
|
Youths placed on pyre before their fathers' eyes.
|
|
Round them, with black slime choked and hideous weed,
|
|
Cocytus winds; there lies the unlovely swamp
|
|
Of dull dead water, and, to pen them fast,
|
|
Styx with her ninefold barrier poured between.
|
|
Nay, even the deep Tartarean Halls of death
|
|
Stood lost in wonderment, and the Eumenides,
|
|
Their brows with livid locks of serpents twined;
|
|
Even Cerberus held his triple jaws agape,
|
|
And, the wind hushed, Ixion's wheel stood still.
|
|
And now with homeward footstep he had passed
|
|
All perils scathless, and, at length restored,
|
|
Eurydice to realms of upper air
|
|
Had well-nigh won, behind him following-
|
|
So Proserpine had ruled it- when his heart
|
|
A sudden mad desire surprised and seized-
|
|
Meet fault to be forgiven, might Hell forgive.
|
|
For at the very threshold of the day,
|
|
Heedless, alas! and vanquished of resolve,
|
|
He stopped, turned, looked upon Eurydice
|
|
His own once more. But even with the look,
|
|
Poured out was all his labour, broken the bond
|
|
Of that fell tyrant, and a crash was heard
|
|
Three times like thunder in the meres of hell.
|
|
'Orpheus! what ruin hath thy frenzy wrought
|
|
On me, alas! and thee? Lo! once again
|
|
The unpitying fates recall me, and dark sleep
|
|
Closes my swimming eyes. And now farewell:
|
|
Girt with enormous night I am borne away,
|
|
Outstretching toward thee, thine, alas! no more,
|
|
These helpless hands.' She spake, and suddenly,
|
|
Like smoke dissolving into empty air,
|
|
Passed and was sundered from his sight; nor him
|
|
Clutching vain shadows, yearning sore to speak,
|
|
Thenceforth beheld she, nor no second time
|
|
Hell's boatman brooks he pass the watery bar.
|
|
What should he do? fly whither, twice bereaved?
|
|
Move with what tears the Manes, with what voice
|
|
The Powers of darkness? She indeed even now
|
|
Death-cold was floating on the Stygian barge!
|
|
For seven whole months unceasingly, men say,
|
|
Beneath a skyey crag, by thy lone wave,
|
|
Strymon, he wept, and in the caverns chill
|
|
Unrolled his story, melting tigers' hearts,
|
|
And leading with his lay the oaks along.
|
|
As in the poplar-shade a nightingale
|
|
Mourns her lost young, which some relentless swain,
|
|
Spying, from the nest has torn unfledged, but she
|
|
Wails the long night, and perched upon a spray
|
|
With sad insistence pipes her dolorous strain,
|
|
Till all the region with her wrongs o'erflows.
|
|
No love, no new desire, constrained his soul:
|
|
By snow-bound Tanais and the icy north,
|
|
Far steppes to frost Rhipaean forever wed,
|
|
Alone he wandered, lost Eurydice
|
|
Lamenting, and the gifts of Dis ungiven.
|
|
Scorned by which tribute the Ciconian dames,
|
|
Amid their awful Bacchanalian rites
|
|
And midnight revellings, tore him limb from limb,
|
|
And strewed his fragments over the wide fields.
|
|
Then too, even then, what time the Hebrus stream,
|
|
Oeagrian Hebrus, down mid-current rolled,
|
|
Rent from the marble neck, his drifting head,
|
|
The death-chilled tongue found yet a voice to cry
|
|
'Eurydice! ah! poor Eurydice!'
|
|
With parting breath he called her, and the banks
|
|
From the broad stream caught up 'Eurydice!'"
|
|
So Proteus ending plunged into the deep,
|
|
And, where he plunged, beneath the eddying whirl
|
|
Churned into foam the water, and was gone;
|
|
But not Cyrene, who unquestioned thus
|
|
Bespake the trembling listener: "Nay, my son,
|
|
From that sad bosom thou mayst banish care:
|
|
Hence came that plague of sickness, hence the nymphs,
|
|
With whom in the tall woods the dance she wove,
|
|
Wrought on thy bees, alas! this deadly bane.
|
|
Bend thou before the Dell-nymphs, gracious powers:
|
|
Bring gifts, and sue for pardon: they will grant
|
|
Peace to thine asking, and an end of wrath.
|
|
But how to approach them will I first unfold-
|
|
Four chosen bulls of peerless form and bulk,
|
|
That browse to-day the green Lycaean heights,
|
|
Pick from thy herds, as many kine to match,
|
|
Whose necks the yoke pressed never: then for these
|
|
Build up four altars by the lofty fanes,
|
|
And from their throats let gush the victims' blood,
|
|
And in the greenwood leave their bodies lone.
|
|
Then, when the ninth dawn hath displayed its beams,
|
|
To Orpheus shalt thou send his funeral dues,
|
|
Poppies of Lethe, and let slay a sheep
|
|
Coal-black, then seek the grove again, and soon
|
|
For pardon found adore Eurydice
|
|
With a slain calf for victim."
|
|
No delay:
|
|
The self-same hour he hies him forth to do
|
|
His mother's bidding: to the shrine he came,
|
|
The appointed altars reared, and thither led
|
|
Four chosen bulls of peerless form and bulk,
|
|
With kine to match, that never yoke had known;
|
|
Then, when the ninth dawn had led in the day,
|
|
To Orpheus sent his funeral dues, and sought
|
|
The grove once more. But sudden, strange to tell
|
|
A portent they espy: through the oxen's flesh,
|
|
Waxed soft in dissolution, hark! there hum
|
|
Bees from the belly; the rent ribs overboil
|
|
In endless clouds they spread them, till at last
|
|
On yon tree-top together fused they cling,
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And drop their cluster from the bending boughs.
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So sang I of the tilth of furrowed fields,
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Of flocks and trees, while Caesar's majesty
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Launched forth the levin-bolts of war by deep
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Euphrates, and bare rule o'er willing folk
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Though vanquished, and essayed the heights of heaven.
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I Virgil then, of sweet Parthenope
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The nursling, wooed the flowery walks of peace
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Inglorious, who erst trilled for shepherd-wights
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The wanton ditty, and sang in saucy youth
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Thee, Tityrus, 'neath the spreading beech tree's shade.
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End of Project Gutenberg's Georgics in English
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