15058 lines
910 KiB
Plaintext
15058 lines
910 KiB
Plaintext
1 AD
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METAMORPHOSES
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by Ovid
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translated into English verse under the direction of
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Sir Samuel Garth by John Dryden, Alexander Pope, Joseph Addison,
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William Congreve and other eminent hands
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BOOK THE FIRST
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OF bodies chang'd to various forms, I sing:
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Ye Gods, from whom these miracles did spring,
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Inspire my numbers with coelestial heat;
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'Till I my long laborious work compleat:
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And add perpetual tenour to my rhimes,
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Deduc'd from Nature's birth, to Caesar's times.
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The Creation of Before the seas, and this terrestrial ball,
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the World And Heav'n's high canopy, that covers all,
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One was the face of Nature; if a face:
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Rather a rude and indigested mass:
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A lifeless lump, unfashion'd, and unfram'd,
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Of jarring seeds; and justly Chaos nam'd.
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No sun was lighted up, the world to view;
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No moon did yet her blunted horns renew:
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Nor yet was Earth suspended in the sky,
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Nor pois'd, did on her own foundations lye:
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Nor seas about the shores their arms had thrown;
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But earth, and air, and water, were in one.
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Thus air was void of light, and earth unstable,
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And water's dark abyss unnavigable.
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No certain form on any was imprest;
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All were confus'd, and each disturb'd the rest.
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For hot and cold were in one body fixt;
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And soft with hard, and light with heavy mixt.
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But God, or Nature, while they thus contend,
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To these intestine discords put an end:
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Then earth from air, and seas from earth were
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driv'n,
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And grosser air sunk from aetherial Heav'n.
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Thus disembroil'd, they take their proper place;
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The next of kin, contiguously embrace;
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And foes are sunder'd, by a larger space.
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The force of fire ascended first on high,
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And took its dwelling in the vaulted sky:
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Then air succeeds, in lightness next to fire;
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Whose atoms from unactive earth retire.
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Earth sinks beneath, and draws a num'rous throng
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Of pondrous, thick, unwieldy seeds along.
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About her coasts, unruly waters roar;
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And rising, on a ridge, insult the shore.
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Thus when the God, whatever God was he,
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Had form'd the whole, and made the parts agree,
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That no unequal portions might be found,
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He moulded Earth into a spacious round:
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Then with a breath, he gave the winds to blow;
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And bad the congregated waters flow.
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He adds the running springs, and standing lakes;
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And bounding banks for winding rivers makes.
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Some part, in Earth are swallow'd up, the most
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In ample oceans, disembogu'd, are lost.
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He shades the woods, the vallies he restrains
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With rocky mountains, and extends the plains.
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And as five zones th' aetherial regions bind,
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Five, correspondent, are to Earth assign'd:
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The sun with rays, directly darting down,
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Fires all beneath, and fries the middle zone:
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The two beneath the distant poles, complain
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Of endless winter, and perpetual rain.
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Betwixt th' extreams, two happier climates hold
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The temper that partakes of hot, and cold.
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The fields of liquid air, inclosing all,
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Surround the compass of this earthly ball:
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The lighter parts lye next the fires above;
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The grosser near the watry surface move:
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Thick clouds are spread, and storms engender there,
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And thunder's voice, which wretched mortals fear,
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And winds that on their wings cold winter bear.
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Nor were those blustring brethren left at large,
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On seas, and shores, their fury to discharge:
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Bound as they are, and circumscrib'd in place,
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They rend the world, resistless, where they pass;
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And mighty marks of mischief leave behind;
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Such is the rage of their tempestuous kind.
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First Eurus to the rising morn is sent
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(The regions of the balmy continent);
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And Eastern realms, where early Persians run,
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To greet the blest appearance of the sun.
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Westward, the wanton Zephyr wings his flight;
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Pleas'd with the remnants of departing light:
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Fierce Boreas, with his off-spring, issues forth
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T' invade the frozen waggon of the North.
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While frowning Auster seeks the Southern sphere;
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And rots, with endless rain, th' unwholsom year.
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High o'er the clouds, and empty realms of wind,
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The God a clearer space for Heav'n design'd;
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Where fields of light, and liquid aether flow;
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Purg'd from the pondrous dregs of Earth below.
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Scarce had the Pow'r distinguish'd these, when
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streight
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The stars, no longer overlaid with weight,
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Exert their heads, from underneath the mass;
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And upward shoot, and kindle as they pass,
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And with diffusive light adorn their heav'nly
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place.
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Then, every void of Nature to supply,
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With forms of Gods he fills the vacant sky:
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New herds of beasts he sends, the plains to share:
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New colonies of birds, to people air:
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And to their oozy beds, the finny fish repair.
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A creature of a more exalted kind
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Was wanting yet, and then was Man design'd:
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Conscious of thought, of more capacious breast,
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For empire form'd, and fit to rule the rest:
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Whether with particles of heav'nly fire
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The God of Nature did his soul inspire,
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Or Earth, but new divided from the sky,
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And, pliant, still retain'd th' aetherial energy:
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Which wise Prometheus temper'd into paste,
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And, mixt with living streams, the godlike image
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cast.
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Thus, while the mute creation downward bend
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Their sight, and to their earthly mother tend,
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Man looks aloft; and with erected eyes
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Beholds his own hereditary skies.
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From such rude principles our form began;
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And earth was metamorphos'd into Man.
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The The golden age was first; when Man yet new,
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Golden Age No rule but uncorrupted reason knew:
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And, with a native bent, did good pursue.
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Unforc'd by punishment, un-aw'd by fear,
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His words were simple, and his soul sincere;
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Needless was written law, where none opprest:
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The law of Man was written in his breast:
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No suppliant crowds before the judge appear'd,
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No court erected yet, nor cause was heard:
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But all was safe, for conscience was their guard.
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The mountain-trees in distant prospect please,
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E're yet the pine descended to the seas:
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E're sails were spread, new oceans to explore:
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And happy mortals, unconcern'd for more,
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Confin'd their wishes to their native shore.
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No walls were yet; nor fence, nor mote, nor mound,
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Nor drum was heard, nor trumpet's angry sound:
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Nor swords were forg'd; but void of care and crime,
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The soft creation slept away their time.
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The teeming Earth, yet guiltless of the plough,
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And unprovok'd, did fruitful stores allow:
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Content with food, which Nature freely bred,
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On wildings and on strawberries they fed;
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Cornels and bramble-berries gave the rest,
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And falling acorns furnish'd out a feast.
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The flow'rs unsown, in fields and meadows reign'd:
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And Western winds immortal spring maintain'd.
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In following years, the bearded corn ensu'd
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From Earth unask'd, nor was that Earth renew'd.
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From veins of vallies, milk and nectar broke;
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And honey sweating through the pores of oak.
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The But when good Saturn, banish'd from above,
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Silver Age Was driv'n to Hell, the world was under Jove.
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Succeeding times a silver age behold,
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Excelling brass, but more excell'd by gold.
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Then summer, autumn, winter did appear:
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And spring was but a season of the year.
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The sun his annual course obliquely made,
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Good days contracted, and enlarg'd the bad.
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Then air with sultry heats began to glow;
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The wings of winds were clogg'd with ice and snow;
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And shivering mortals, into houses driv'n,
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Sought shelter from th' inclemency of Heav'n.
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Those houses, then, were caves, or homely sheds;
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With twining oziers fenc'd; and moss their beds.
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Then ploughs, for seed, the fruitful furrows broke,
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And oxen labour'd first beneath the yoke.
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The To this came next in course, the brazen age:
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Brazen Age A warlike offspring, prompt to bloody rage,
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Not impious yet...
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The Hard steel succeeded then:
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Iron Age And stubborn as the metal, were the men.
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Truth, modesty, and shame, the world forsook:
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Fraud, avarice, and force, their places took.
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Then sails were spread, to every wind that blew.
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Raw were the sailors, and the depths were new:
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Trees, rudely hollow'd, did the waves sustain;
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E're ships in triumph plough'd the watry plain.
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Then land-marks limited to each his right:
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For all before was common as the light.
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Nor was the ground alone requir'd to bear
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Her annual income to the crooked share,
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But greedy mortals, rummaging her store,
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Digg'd from her entrails first the precious oar;
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Which next to Hell, the prudent Gods had laid;
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And that alluring ill, to sight display'd.
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Thus cursed steel, and more accursed gold,
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Gave mischief birth, and made that mischief bold:
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And double death did wretched Man invade,
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By steel assaulted, and by gold betray'd,
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Now (brandish'd weapons glittering in their hands)
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Mankind is broken loose from moral bands;
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No rights of hospitality remain:
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The guest, by him who harbour'd him, is slain,
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The son-in-law pursues the father's life;
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The wife her husband murders, he the wife.
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The step-dame poyson for the son prepares;
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The son inquires into his father's years.
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Faith flies, and piety in exile mourns;
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And justice, here opprest, to Heav'n returns.
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The Nor were the Gods themselves more safe above;
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Giants' War Against beleaguer'd Heav'n the giants move.
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Hills pil'd on hills, on mountains mountains lie,
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To make their mad approaches to the skie.
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'Till Jove, no longer patient, took his time
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T' avenge with thunder their audacious crime:
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Red light'ning plaid along the firmament,
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And their demolish'd works to pieces rent.
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Sing'd with the flames, and with the bolts
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transfixt,
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With native Earth, their blood the monsters mixt;
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The blood, indu'd with animating heat,
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Did in th' impregnant Earth new sons beget:
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They, like the seed from which they sprung,
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accurst,
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Against the Gods immortal hatred nurst,
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An impious, arrogant, and cruel brood;
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Expressing their original from blood.
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Which when the king of Gods beheld from high
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(Withal revolving in his memory,
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What he himself had found on Earth of late,
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Lycaon's guilt, and his inhumane treat),
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He sigh'd; nor longer with his pity strove;
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But kindled to a wrath becoming Jove:
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Then call'd a general council of the Gods;
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Who summon'd, issue from their blest abodes,
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And fill th' assembly with a shining train.
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A way there is, in Heav'n's expanded plain,
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Which, when the skies are clear, is seen below,
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And mortals, by the name of Milky, know.
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The ground-work is of stars; through which the road
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Lyes open to the Thunderer's abode:
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The Gods of greater nations dwell around,
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And, on the right and left, the palace bound;
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The commons where they can: the nobler sort
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With winding-doors wide open, front the court.
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This place, as far as Earth with Heav'n may vie,
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I dare to call the Louvre of the skie.
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When all were plac'd, in seats distinctly known,
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And he, their father, had assum'd the throne,
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Upon his iv'ry sceptre first he leant,
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Then shook his head, that shook the firmament:
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Air, Earth, and seas, obey'd th' almighty nod;
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And, with a gen'ral fear, confess'd the God.
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At length, with indignation, thus he broke
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His awful silence, and the Pow'rs bespoke.
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I was not more concern'd in that debate
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Of empire, when our universal state
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Was put to hazard, and the giant race
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Our captive skies were ready to imbrace:
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For tho' the foe was fierce, the seeds of all
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Rebellion, sprung from one original;
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Now, wheresoever ambient waters glide,
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All are corrupt, and all must be destroy'd.
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Let me this holy protestation make,
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By Hell, and Hell's inviolable lake,
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I try'd whatever in the godhead lay:
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But gangren'd members must be lopt away,
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Before the nobler parts are tainted to decay.
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There dwells below, a race of demi-gods,
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Of nymphs in waters, and of fawns in woods:
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Who, tho' not worthy yet, in Heav'n to live,
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Let 'em, at least, enjoy that Earth we give.
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Can these be thought securely lodg'd below,
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When I my self, who no superior know,
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I, who have Heav'n and Earth at my command,
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Have been attempted by Lycaon's hand?
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At this a murmur through the synod went,
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And with one voice they vote his punishment.
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Thus, when conspiring traytors dar'd to doom
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The fall of Caesar, and in him of Rome,
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The nations trembled with a pious fear;
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All anxious for their earthly Thunderer:
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Nor was their care, o Caesar, less esteem'd
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By thee, than that of Heav'n for Jove was deem'd:
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Who with his hand, and voice, did first restrain
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Their murmurs, then resum'd his speech again.
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The Gods to silence were compos'd, and sate
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With reverence, due to his superior state.
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Cancel your pious cares; already he
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Has paid his debt to justice, and to me.
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Yet what his crimes, and what my judgments were,
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Remains for me thus briefly to declare.
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The clamours of this vile degenerate age,
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The cries of orphans, and th' oppressor's rage,
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Had reach'd the stars: I will descend, said I,
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In hope to prove this loud complaint a lye.
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Disguis'd in humane shape, I travell'd round
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The world, and more than what I heard, I found.
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O'er Maenalus I took my steepy way,
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By caverns infamous for beasts of prey:
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Then cross'd Cyllene, and the piny shade
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More infamous, by curst Lycaon made:
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Dark night had cover'd Heaven, and Earth, before
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I enter'd his unhospitable door.
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Just at my entrance, I display'd the sign
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That somewhat was approaching of divine.
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The prostrate people pray; the tyrant grins;
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And, adding prophanation to his sins,
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I'll try, said he, and if a God appear,
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To prove his deity shall cost him dear.
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'Twas late; the graceless wretch my death prepares,
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When I shou'd soundly sleep, opprest with cares:
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This dire experiment he chose, to prove
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If I were mortal, or undoubted Jove:
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But first he had resolv'd to taste my pow'r;
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Not long before, but in a luckless hour,
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Some legates, sent from the Molossian state,
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Were on a peaceful errand come to treat:
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Of these he murders one, he boils the flesh;
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And lays the mangled morsels in a dish:
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Some part he roasts; then serves it up, so drest,
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And bids me welcome to this humane feast.
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Mov'd with disdain, the table I o'er-turn'd;
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And with avenging flames, the palace burn'd.
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The tyrant in a fright, for shelter gains
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The neighb'ring fields, and scours along the
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plains.
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Howling he fled, and fain he wou'd have spoke;
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But humane voice his brutal tongue forsook.
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About his lips the gather'd foam he churns,
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And, breathing slaughters, still with rage he
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burns,
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But on the bleating flock his fury turns.
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His mantle, now his hide, with rugged hairs
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Cleaves to his back; a famish'd face he bears;
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His arms descend, his shoulders sink away
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To multiply his legs for chase of prey.
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He grows a wolf, his hoariness remains,
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And the same rage in other members reigns.
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His eyes still sparkle in a narr'wer space:
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His jaws retain the grin, and violence of his face
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This was a single ruin, but not one
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Deserves so just a punishment alone.
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Mankind's a monster, and th' ungodly times
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Confed'rate into guilt, are sworn to crimes.
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All are alike involv'd in ill, and all
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Must by the same relentless fury fall.
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Thus ended he; the greater Gods assent;
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By clamours urging his severe intent;
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The less fill up the cry for punishment.
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Yet still with pity they remember Man;
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And mourn as much as heav'nly spirits can.
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They ask, when those were lost of humane birth,
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What he wou'd do with all this waste of Earth:
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If his dispeopl'd world he would resign
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To beasts, a mute, and more ignoble line;
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Neglected altars must no longer smoke,
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If none were left to worship, and invoke.
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To whom the Father of the Gods reply'd,
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Lay that unnecessary fear aside:
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Mine be the care, new people to provide.
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I will from wondrous principles ordain
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A race unlike the first, and try my skill again.
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Already had he toss'd the flaming brand;
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And roll'd the thunder in his spacious hand;
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Preparing to discharge on seas and land:
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But stopt, for fear, thus violently driv'n,
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The sparks should catch his axle-tree of Heav'n.
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Remembring in the fates, a time when fire
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Shou'd to the battlements of Heaven aspire,
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And all his blazing worlds above shou'd burn;
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And all th' inferior globe to cinders turn.
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His dire artill'ry thus dismist, he bent
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His thoughts to some securer punishment:
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Concludes to pour a watry deluge down;
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And what he durst not burn, resolves to drown.
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The northern breath, that freezes floods, he
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binds;
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With all the race of cloud-dispelling winds:
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The south he loos'd, who night and horror brings;
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And foggs are shaken from his flaggy wings.
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From his divided beard two streams he pours,
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His head, and rheumy eyes distill in show'rs,
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With rain his robe, and heavy mantle flow:
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And lazy mists are lowring on his brow;
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Still as he swept along, with his clench'd fist
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He squeez'd the clouds, th' imprison'd clouds
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resist:
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The skies, from pole to pole, with peals resound;
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And show'rs inlarg'd, come pouring on the ground.
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Then, clad in colours of a various dye,
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Junonian Iris breeds a new supply
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To feed the clouds: impetuous rain descends;
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The bearded corn beneath the burden bends:
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Defrauded clowns deplore their perish'd grain;
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And the long labours of the year are vain.
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Nor from his patrimonial Heaven alone
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Is Jove content to pour his vengeance down;
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Aid from his brother of the seas he craves,
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To help him with auxiliary waves.
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The watry tyrant calls his brooks and floods,
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Who rowl from mossie caves (their moist abodes);
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And with perpetual urns his palace fill:
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To whom in brief, he thus imparts his will.
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Small exhortation needs; your pow'rs employ:
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And this bad world, so Jove requires, destroy.
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Let loose the reins to all your watry store:
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Bear down the damms, and open ev'ry door.
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The floods, by Nature enemies to land,
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And proudly swelling with their new command,
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Remove the living stones, that stopt their way,
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And gushing from their source, augment the sea.
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Then, with his mace, their monarch struck the
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ground;
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With inward trembling Earth receiv'd the wound;
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And rising streams a ready passage found.
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Th' expanded waters gather on the plain:
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They float the fields, and over-top the grain;
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Then rushing onwards, with a sweepy sway,
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Bear flocks, and folds, and lab'ring hinds away.
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Nor safe their dwellings were, for, sap'd by
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floods,
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Their houses fell upon their houshold Gods.
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The solid piles, too strongly built to fall,
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High o'er their heads, behold a watry wall:
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Now seas and Earth were in confusion lost;
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A world of waters, and without a coast.
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One climbs a cliff; one in his boat is born:
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And ploughs above, where late he sow'd his corn.
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Others o'er chimney-tops and turrets row,
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And drop their anchors on the meads below:
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Or downward driv'n, they bruise the tender vine,
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Or tost aloft, are knock'd against a pine.
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And where of late the kids had cropt the grass,
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The monsters of the deep now take their place.
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Insulting Nereids on the cities ride,
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And wond'ring dolphins o'er the palace glide.
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On leaves, and masts of mighty oaks they brouze;
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And their broad fins entangle in the boughs.
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The frighted wolf now swims amongst the sheep;
|
|
The yellow lion wanders in the deep:
|
|
His rapid force no longer helps the boar:
|
|
The stag swims faster, than he ran before.
|
|
The fowls, long beating on their wings in vain,
|
|
Despair of land, and drop into the main.
|
|
Now hills, and vales no more distinction know;
|
|
And levell'd Nature lies oppress'd below.
|
|
The most of mortals perish in the flood:
|
|
The small remainder dies for want of food.
|
|
A mountain of stupendous height there stands
|
|
Betwixt th' Athenian and Boeotian lands,
|
|
The bound of fruitful fields, while fields they
|
|
were,
|
|
But then a field of waters did appear:
|
|
Parnassus is its name; whose forky rise
|
|
Mounts thro' the clouds, and mates the lofty skies.
|
|
High on the summit of this dubious cliff,
|
|
Deucalion wafting, moor'd his little skiff.
|
|
He with his wife were only left behind
|
|
Of perish'd Man; they two were human kind.
|
|
The mountain nymphs, and Themis they adore,
|
|
And from her oracles relief implore.
|
|
The most upright of mortal men was he;
|
|
The most sincere, and holy woman, she.
|
|
When Jupiter, surveying Earth from high,
|
|
Beheld it in a lake of water lie,
|
|
That where so many millions lately liv'd,
|
|
But two, the best of either sex, surviv'd;
|
|
He loos'd the northern wind; fierce Boreas flies
|
|
To puff away the clouds, and purge the skies:
|
|
Serenely, while he blows, the vapours driv'n,
|
|
Discover Heav'n to Earth, and Earth to Heav'n.
|
|
The billows fall, while Neptune lays his mace
|
|
On the rough sea, and smooths its furrow'd face.
|
|
Already Triton, at his call, appears
|
|
Above the waves; a Tyrian robe he wears;
|
|
And in his hand a crooked trumpet bears.
|
|
The soveraign bids him peaceful sounds inspire,
|
|
And give the waves the signal to retire.
|
|
His writhen shell he takes; whose narrow vent
|
|
Grows by degrees into a large extent,
|
|
Then gives it breath; the blast with doubling
|
|
sound,
|
|
Runs the wide circuit of the world around:
|
|
The sun first heard it, in his early east,
|
|
And met the rattling ecchos in the west.
|
|
The waters, listning to the trumpet's roar,
|
|
Obey the summons, and forsake the shore.
|
|
A thin circumference of land appears;
|
|
And Earth, but not at once, her visage rears,
|
|
And peeps upon the seas from upper grounds;
|
|
The streams, but just contain'd within their
|
|
bounds,
|
|
By slow degrees into their channels crawl;
|
|
And Earth increases, as the waters fall.
|
|
In longer time the tops of trees appear,
|
|
Which mud on their dishonour'd branches bear.
|
|
At length the world was all restor'd to view;
|
|
But desolate, and of a sickly hue:
|
|
Nature beheld her self, and stood aghast,
|
|
A dismal desart, and a silent waste.
|
|
Which when Deucalion, with a piteous look
|
|
Beheld, he wept, and thus to Pyrrha spoke:
|
|
Oh wife, oh sister, oh of all thy kind
|
|
The best, and only creature left behind,
|
|
By kindred, love, and now by dangers joyn'd;
|
|
Of multitudes, who breath'd the common air,
|
|
We two remain; a species in a pair:
|
|
The rest the seas have swallow'd; nor have we
|
|
Ev'n of this wretched life a certainty.
|
|
The clouds are still above; and, while I speak,
|
|
A second deluge o'er our heads may break.
|
|
Shou'd I be snatcht from hence, and thou remain,
|
|
Without relief, or partner of thy pain,
|
|
How cou'dst thou such a wretched life sustain?
|
|
Shou'd I be left, and thou be lost, the sea
|
|
That bury'd her I lov'd, shou'd bury me.
|
|
Oh cou'd our father his old arts inspire,
|
|
And make me heir of his informing fire,
|
|
That so I might abolisht Man retrieve,
|
|
And perisht people in new souls might live.
|
|
But Heav'n is pleas'd, nor ought we to complain,
|
|
That we, th' examples of mankind, remain.
|
|
He said; the careful couple joyn their tears:
|
|
And then invoke the Gods, with pious prayers.
|
|
Thus, in devotion having eas'd their grief,
|
|
From sacred oracles they seek relief;
|
|
And to Cephysus' brook their way pursue:
|
|
The stream was troubled, but the ford they knew;
|
|
With living waters, in the fountain bred,
|
|
They sprinkle first their garments, and their head,
|
|
Then took the way, which to the temple led.
|
|
The roofs were all defil'd with moss, and mire,
|
|
The desart altars void of solemn fire.
|
|
Before the gradual, prostrate they ador'd;
|
|
The pavement kiss'd; and thus the saint implor'd.
|
|
O righteous Themis, if the Pow'rs above
|
|
By pray'rs are bent to pity, and to love;
|
|
If humane miseries can move their mind;
|
|
If yet they can forgive, and yet be kind;
|
|
Tell how we may restore, by second birth,
|
|
Mankind, and people desolated Earth.
|
|
Then thus the gracious Goddess, nodding, said;
|
|
Depart, and with your vestments veil your head:
|
|
And stooping lowly down, with losen'd zones,
|
|
Throw each behind your backs, your mighty mother's
|
|
bones.
|
|
Amaz'd the pair, and mute with wonder stand,
|
|
'Till Pyrrha first refus'd the dire command.
|
|
Forbid it Heav'n, said she, that I shou'd tear
|
|
Those holy reliques from the sepulcher.
|
|
They ponder'd the mysterious words again,
|
|
For some new sense; and long they sought in vain:
|
|
At length Deucalion clear'd his cloudy brow,
|
|
And said, the dark Aenigma will allow
|
|
A meaning, which, if well I understand,
|
|
From sacrilege will free the God's command:
|
|
This Earth our mighty mother is, the stones
|
|
In her capacious body, are her bones:
|
|
These we must cast behind. With hope, and fear,
|
|
The woman did the new solution hear:
|
|
The man diffides in his own augury,
|
|
And doubts the Gods; yet both resolve to try.
|
|
Descending from the mount, they first unbind
|
|
Their vests, and veil'd, they cast the stones
|
|
behind:
|
|
The stones (a miracle to mortal view,
|
|
But long tradition makes it pass for true)
|
|
Did first the rigour of their kind expel,
|
|
And suppled into softness, as they fell;
|
|
Then swell'd, and swelling, by degrees grew warm;
|
|
And took the rudiments of human form.
|
|
Imperfect shapes: in marble such are seen,
|
|
When the rude chizzel does the man begin;
|
|
While yet the roughness of the stone remains,
|
|
Without the rising muscles, and the veins.
|
|
The sappy parts, and next resembling juice,
|
|
Were turn'd to moisture, for the body's use:
|
|
Supplying humours, blood, and nourishment;
|
|
The rest, too solid to receive a bent,
|
|
Converts to bones; and what was once a vein,
|
|
Its former name and Nature did retain.
|
|
By help of pow'r divine, in little space,
|
|
What the man threw, assum'd a manly face;
|
|
And what the wife, renew'd the female race.
|
|
Hence we derive our nature; born to bear
|
|
Laborious life; and harden'd into care.
|
|
The rest of animals, from teeming Earth
|
|
Produc'd, in various forms receiv'd their birth.
|
|
The native moisture, in its close retreat,
|
|
Digested by the sun's aetherial heat,
|
|
As in a kindly womb, began to breed:
|
|
Then swell'd, and quicken'd by the vital seed.
|
|
And some in less, and some in longer space,
|
|
Were ripen'd into form, and took a sev'ral face.
|
|
Thus when the Nile from Pharian fields is fled,
|
|
And seeks, with ebbing tides, his ancient bed,
|
|
The fat manure with heav'nly fire is warm'd;
|
|
And crusted creatures, as in wombs, are form'd;
|
|
These, when they turn the glebe, the peasants find;
|
|
Some rude, and yet unfinish'd in their kind:
|
|
Short of their limbs, a lame imperfect birth:
|
|
One half alive; and one of lifeless earth.
|
|
For heat, and moisture, when in bodies join'd,
|
|
The temper that results from either kind
|
|
Conception makes; and fighting 'till they mix,
|
|
Their mingled atoms in each other fix.
|
|
Thus Nature's hand the genial bed prepares
|
|
With friendly discord, and with fruitful wars.
|
|
From hence the surface of the ground, with mud
|
|
And slime besmear'd (the faeces of the flood),
|
|
Receiv'd the rays of Heav'n: and sucking in
|
|
The seeds of heat, new creatures did begin:
|
|
Some were of sev'ral sorts produc'd before,
|
|
But of new monsters, Earth created more.
|
|
Unwillingly, but yet she brought to light
|
|
Thee, Python too, the wondring world to fright,
|
|
And the new nations, with so dire a sight:
|
|
So monstrous was his bulk, so large a space
|
|
Did his vast body, and long train embrace.
|
|
Whom Phoebus basking on a bank espy'd;
|
|
E're now the God his arrows had not try'd
|
|
But on the trembling deer, or mountain goat;
|
|
At this new quarry he prepares to shoot.
|
|
Though ev'ry shaft took place, he spent the store
|
|
Of his full quiver; and 'twas long before
|
|
Th' expiring serpent wallow'd in his gore.
|
|
Then, to preserve the fame of such a deed,
|
|
For Python slain, he Pythian games decred.
|
|
Where noble youths for mastership shou'd strive,
|
|
To quoit, to run, and steeds, and chariots drive.
|
|
The prize was fame: in witness of renown
|
|
An oaken garland did the victor crown.
|
|
The laurel was not yet for triumphs born;
|
|
But every green alike by Phoebus worn,
|
|
Did, with promiscuous grace, his flowing locks
|
|
adorn.
|
|
The The first and fairest of his loves, was she
|
|
Transformation Whom not blind fortune, but the dire decree
|
|
of Daphne into Of angry Cupid forc'd him to desire:
|
|
a Lawrel Daphne her name, and Peneus was her sire.
|
|
Swell'd with the pride, that new success attends,
|
|
He sees the stripling, while his bow he bends,
|
|
And thus insults him: Thou lascivious boy,
|
|
Are arms like these for children to employ?
|
|
Know, such atchievements are my proper claim;
|
|
Due to my vigour, and unerring aim:
|
|
Resistless are my shafts, and Python late
|
|
In such a feather'd death, has found his fate.
|
|
Take up the torch (and lay my weapons by),
|
|
With that the feeble souls of lovers fry.
|
|
To whom the son of Venus thus reply'd,
|
|
Phoebus, thy shafts are sure on all beside,
|
|
But mine of Phoebus, mine the fame shall be
|
|
Of all thy conquests, when I conquer thee.
|
|
He said, and soaring, swiftly wing'd his flight:
|
|
Nor stopt but on Parnassus' airy height.
|
|
Two diff'rent shafts he from his quiver draws;
|
|
One to repel desire, and one to cause.
|
|
One shaft is pointed with refulgent gold:
|
|
To bribe the love, and make the lover bold:
|
|
One blunt, and tipt with lead, whose base allay
|
|
Provokes disdain, and drives desire away.
|
|
The blunted bolt against the nymph he drest:
|
|
But with the sharp transfixt Apollo's breast.
|
|
Th' enamour'd deity pursues the chace;
|
|
The scornful damsel shuns his loath'd embrace:
|
|
In hunting beasts of prey, her youth employs;
|
|
And Phoebe rivals in her rural joys.
|
|
With naked neck she goes, and shoulders bare;
|
|
And with a fillet binds her flowing hair.
|
|
By many suitors sought, she mocks their pains,
|
|
And still her vow'd virginity maintains.
|
|
Impatient of a yoke, the name of bride
|
|
She shuns, and hates the joys, she never try'd.
|
|
On wilds, and woods, she fixes her desire:
|
|
Nor knows what youth, and kindly love, inspire.
|
|
Her father chides her oft: Thou ow'st, says he,
|
|
A husband to thy self, a son to me.
|
|
She, like a crime, abhors the nuptial bed:
|
|
She glows with blushes, and she hangs her head.
|
|
Then casting round his neck her tender arms,
|
|
Sooths him with blandishments, and filial charms:
|
|
Give me, my Lord, she said, to live, and die,
|
|
A spotless maid, without the marriage tye.
|
|
'Tis but a small request; I beg no more
|
|
Than what Diana's father gave before.
|
|
The good old sire was soften'd to consent;
|
|
But said her wish wou'd prove her punishment:
|
|
For so much youth, and so much beauty join'd,
|
|
Oppos'd the state, which her desires design'd.
|
|
The God of light, aspiring to her bed,
|
|
Hopes what he seeks, with flattering fancies fed;
|
|
And is, by his own oracles, mis-led.
|
|
And as in empty fields the stubble burns,
|
|
Or nightly travellers, when day returns,
|
|
Their useless torches on dry hedges throw,
|
|
That catch the flames, and kindle all the row;
|
|
So burns the God, consuming in desire,
|
|
And feeding in his breast a fruitless fire:
|
|
Her well-turn'd neck he view'd (her neck was bare)
|
|
And on her shoulders her dishevel'd hair;
|
|
Oh were it comb'd, said he, with what a grace
|
|
Wou'd every waving curl become her face!
|
|
He view'd her eyes, like heav'nly lamps that shone,
|
|
He view'd her lips, too sweet to view alone,
|
|
Her taper fingers, and her panting breast;
|
|
He praises all he sees, and for the rest
|
|
Believes the beauties yet unseen are best:
|
|
Swift as the wind, the damsel fled away,
|
|
Nor did for these alluring speeches stay:
|
|
Stay Nymph, he cry'd, I follow, not a foe.
|
|
Thus from the lyon trips the trembling doe;
|
|
Thus from the wolf the frighten'd lamb removes,
|
|
And, from pursuing faulcons, fearful doves;
|
|
Thou shunn'st a God, and shunn'st a God, that
|
|
loves.
|
|
Ah, lest some thorn shou'd pierce thy tender foot,
|
|
Or thou shou'dst fall in flying my pursuit!
|
|
To sharp uneven ways thy steps decline;
|
|
Abate thy speed, and I will bate of mine.
|
|
Yet think from whom thou dost so rashly fly;
|
|
Nor basely born, nor shepherd's swain am I.
|
|
Perhaps thou know'st not my superior state;
|
|
And from that ignorance proceeds thy hate.
|
|
Me Claros, Delphi, Tenedos obey;
|
|
These hands the Patareian scepter sway.
|
|
The King of Gods begot me: what shall be,
|
|
Or is, or ever was, in Fate, I see.
|
|
Mine is th' invention of the charming lyre;
|
|
Sweet notes, and heav'nly numbers, I inspire.
|
|
Sure is my bow, unerring is my dart;
|
|
But ah! more deadly his, who pierc'd my heart.
|
|
Med'cine is mine; what herbs and simples grow
|
|
In fields, and forrests, all their pow'rs I know;
|
|
And am the great physician call'd, below.
|
|
Alas that fields and forrests can afford.
|
|
No remedies to heal their love-sick lord!
|
|
To cure the pains of love, no plant avails:
|
|
And his own physick, the physician falls.
|
|
She heard not half; so furiously she flies;
|
|
And on her ear th' imperfect accent dies,
|
|
Fear gave her wings; and as she fled, the wind
|
|
Increasing, spread her flowing hair behind;
|
|
And left her legs and thighs expos'd to view:
|
|
Which made the God more eager to pursue.
|
|
The God was young, and was too hotly bent
|
|
To lose his time in empty compliment:
|
|
But led by love, and fir'd with such a sight,
|
|
Impetuously pursu'd his near delight.
|
|
As when th' impatient greyhound slipt from far,
|
|
Bounds o'er the glebe to course the fearful hare,
|
|
She in her speed does all her safety lay;
|
|
And he with double speed pursues the prey;
|
|
O'er-runs her at the sitting turn, and licks
|
|
His chaps in vain, and blows upon the flix:
|
|
She scapes, and for the neighb'ring covert strives,
|
|
And gaining shelter, doubts if yet she lives:
|
|
If little things with great we may compare,
|
|
Such was the God, and such the flying fair,
|
|
She urg'd by fear, her feet did swiftly move,
|
|
But he more swiftly, who was urg'd by love.
|
|
He gathers ground upon her in the chace:
|
|
Now breathes upon her hair, with nearer pace;
|
|
And just is fast'ning on the wish'd embrace.
|
|
The nymph grew pale, and in a mortal fright,
|
|
Spent with the labour of so long a flight;
|
|
And now despairing, cast a mournful look
|
|
Upon the streams of her paternal brook;
|
|
Oh help, she cry'd, in this extreamest need!
|
|
If water Gods are deities indeed:
|
|
Gape Earth, and this unhappy wretch intomb;
|
|
Or change my form, whence all my sorrows come.
|
|
Scarce had she finish'd, when her feet she found
|
|
Benumb'd with cold, and fasten'd to the ground:
|
|
A filmy rind about her body grows;
|
|
Her hair to leaves, her arms extend to boughs:
|
|
The nymph is all into a lawrel gone;
|
|
The smoothness of her skin remains alone.
|
|
Yet Phoebus loves her still, and casting round
|
|
Her bole, his arms, some little warmth he found.
|
|
The tree still panted in th' unfinish'd part:
|
|
Not wholly vegetive, and heav'd her heart.
|
|
He fixt his lips upon the trembling rind;
|
|
It swerv'd aside, and his embrace declin'd.
|
|
To whom the God, Because thou canst not be
|
|
My mistress, I espouse thee for my tree:
|
|
Be thou the prize of honour, and renown;
|
|
The deathless poet, and the poem, crown.
|
|
Thou shalt the Roman festivals adorn,
|
|
And, after poets, be by victors worn.
|
|
Thou shalt returning Caesar's triumph grace;
|
|
When pomps shall in a long procession pass.
|
|
Wreath'd on the posts before his palace wait;
|
|
And be the sacred guardian of the gate.
|
|
Secure from thunder, and unharm'd by Jove,
|
|
Unfading as th' immortal Pow'rs above:
|
|
And as the locks of Phoebus are unshorn,
|
|
So shall perpetual green thy boughs adorn.
|
|
The grateful tree was pleas'd with what he said;
|
|
And shook the shady honours of her head.
|
|
The An ancient forest in Thessalia grows;
|
|
Transformation Which Tempe's pleasing valley does inclose:
|
|
of Io into a Through this the rapid Peneus take his course;
|
|
Heyfer From Pindus rolling with impetuous force;
|
|
Mists from the river's mighty fall arise:
|
|
And deadly damps inclose the cloudy skies:
|
|
Perpetual fogs are hanging o'er the wood;
|
|
And sounds of waters deaf the neighbourhood.
|
|
Deep, in a rocky cave, he makes abode
|
|
(A mansion proper for a mourning God).
|
|
Here he gives audience; issuing out decrees
|
|
To rivers, his dependant deities.
|
|
On this occasion hither they resort;
|
|
To pay their homage, and to make their court.
|
|
All doubtful, whether to congratulate
|
|
His daughter's honour, or lament her fate.
|
|
Sperchaeus, crown'd with poplar, first appears;
|
|
Then old Apidanus came crown'd with years:
|
|
Enipeus turbulent, Amphrysos tame;
|
|
And Aeas last with lagging waters came.
|
|
Then, of his kindred brooks, a num'rous throng
|
|
Condole his loss; and bring their urns along.
|
|
Not one was wanting of the wat'ry train,
|
|
That fill'd his flood, or mingled with the main:
|
|
But Inachus, who in his cave, alone,
|
|
Wept not another's losses, but his own,
|
|
For his dear Io, whether stray'd, or dead,
|
|
To him uncertain, doubtful tears he shed.
|
|
He sought her through the world; but sought in
|
|
vain;
|
|
And no where finding, rather fear'd her slain.
|
|
Her, just returning from her father's brook,
|
|
Jove had beheld, with a desiring look:
|
|
And, Oh fair daughter of the flood, he said,
|
|
Worthy alone of Jove's imperial bed,
|
|
Happy whoever shall those charms possess;
|
|
The king of Gods (nor is thy lover less)
|
|
Invites thee to yon cooler shades; to shun
|
|
The scorching rays of the meridian sun.
|
|
Nor shalt thou tempt the dangers of the grove
|
|
Alone, without a guide; thy guide is Jove.
|
|
No puny Pow'r, but he whose high command
|
|
Is unconfin'd, who rules the seas and land;
|
|
And tempers thunder in his awful hand,
|
|
Oh fly not: for she fled from his embrace
|
|
O'er Lerna's pastures: he pursu'd the chace
|
|
Along the shades of the Lyrcaean plain;
|
|
At length the God, who never asks in vain,
|
|
Involv'd with vapours, imitating night,
|
|
Both Air, and Earth; and then suppress'd her
|
|
flight,
|
|
And mingling force with love, enjoy'd the full
|
|
delight.
|
|
Mean-time the jealous Juno, from on high,
|
|
Survey'd the fruitful fields of Arcady;
|
|
And wonder'd that the mist shou'd over-run
|
|
The face of day-light, and obscure the sun.
|
|
No nat'ral cause she found, from brooks, or bogs,
|
|
Or marshy lowlands, to produce the fogs;
|
|
Then round the skies she sought for Jupiter,
|
|
Her faithless husband; but no Jove was there:
|
|
Suspecting now the worst, Or I, she said,
|
|
Am much mistaken, or am much betray'd.
|
|
With fury she precipitates her flight:
|
|
Dispels the shadows of dissembled night;
|
|
And to the day restores his native light.
|
|
Th' Almighty Leacher, careful to prevent
|
|
The consequence, foreseeing her descent,
|
|
Transforms his mistress in a trice; and now
|
|
In Io's place appears a lovely cow.
|
|
So sleek her skin, so faultless was her make,
|
|
Ev'n Juno did unwilling pleasure take
|
|
To see so fair a rival of her love;
|
|
And what she was, and whence, enquir'd of Jove:
|
|
Of what fair herd, and from what pedigree?
|
|
The God, half caught, was forc'd upon a lye:
|
|
And said she sprung from Earth. She took the word,
|
|
And begg'd the beauteous heyfer of her lord.
|
|
What should he do? 'twas equal shame to Jove
|
|
Or to relinquish, or betray his love:
|
|
Yet to refuse so slight a gift, wou'd be
|
|
But more t' increase his consort's jealousie:
|
|
Thus fear, and love, by turns, his heart assail'd;
|
|
And stronger love had sure, at length, prevail'd:
|
|
But some faint hope remain'd, his jealous queen
|
|
Had not the mistress through the heyfer seen.
|
|
The cautious Goddess, of her gift possest,
|
|
Yet harbour'd anxious thoughts within her breast;
|
|
As she who knew the falshood of her Jove;
|
|
And justly fear'd some new relapse of love.
|
|
Which to prevent, and to secure her care,
|
|
To trusty Argus she commits the fair.
|
|
The head of Argus (as with stars the skies)
|
|
Was compass'd round, and wore an hundred eyes.
|
|
But two by turns their lids in slumber steep;
|
|
The rest on duty still their station keep;
|
|
Nor cou'd the total constellation sleep.
|
|
Thus, ever present, to his eyes, and mind,
|
|
His charge was still before him, tho' behind.
|
|
In fields he suffer'd her to feed by Day,
|
|
But when the setting sun to night gave way,
|
|
The captive cow he summon'd with a call;
|
|
And drove her back, and ty'd her to the stall.
|
|
On leaves of trees, and bitter herbs she fed,
|
|
Heav'n was her canopy, bare earth her bed:
|
|
So hardly lodg'd, and to digest her food,
|
|
She drank from troubled streams, defil'd with mud.
|
|
Her woeful story fain she wou'd have told,
|
|
With hands upheld, but had no hands to hold.
|
|
Her head to her ungentle keeper bow'd,
|
|
She strove to speak, she spoke not, but she low'd:
|
|
Affrighted with the noise, she look'd around,
|
|
And seem'd t' inquire the author of the sound.
|
|
Once on the banks where often she had play'd
|
|
(Her father's banks), she came, and there survey'd
|
|
Her alter'd visage, and her branching head;
|
|
And starting, from her self she wou'd have fled.
|
|
Her fellow nymphs, familiar to her eyes,
|
|
Beheld, but knew her not in this disguise.
|
|
Ev'n Inachus himself was ignorant;
|
|
And in his daughter, did his daughter want.
|
|
She follow'd where her fellows went, as she
|
|
Were still a partner of the company:
|
|
They stroak her neck; the gentle heyfer stands,
|
|
And her neck offers to their stroaking hands.
|
|
Her father gave her grass; the grass she took;
|
|
And lick'd his palms, and cast a piteous look;
|
|
And in the language of her eyes, she spoke.
|
|
She wou'd have told her name, and ask'd relief,
|
|
But wanting words, in tears she tells her grief.
|
|
Which, with her foot she makes him understand;
|
|
And prints the name of Io in the sand.
|
|
Ah wretched me! her mournful father cry'd;
|
|
She, with a sigh, to wretched me reply'd:
|
|
About her milk-white neck, his arms he threw;
|
|
And wept, and then these tender words ensue.
|
|
And art thou she, whom I have sought around
|
|
The world, and have at length so sadly found?
|
|
So found, is worse than lost: with mutual words
|
|
Thou answer'st not, no voice thy tongue affords:
|
|
But sighs are deeply drawn from out thy breast;
|
|
And speech deny'd, by lowing is express'd.
|
|
Unknowing, I prepar'd thy bridal bed;
|
|
With empty hopes of happy issue fed.
|
|
But now the husband of a herd must be
|
|
Thy mate, and bell'wing sons thy progeny.
|
|
Oh, were I mortal, death might bring relief:
|
|
But now my God-head but extends my grief:
|
|
Prolongs my woes, of which no end I see,
|
|
And makes me curse my immortality!
|
|
More had he said, but fearful of her stay,
|
|
The starry guardian drove his charge away,
|
|
To some fresh pasture; on a hilly height
|
|
He sate himself, and kept her still in sight.
|
|
The Eyes of Now Jove no longer cou'd her suff'rings bear;
|
|
Argus But call'd in haste his airy messenger,
|
|
transform'd The son of Maia, with severe decree
|
|
into a To kill the keeper, and to set her free.
|
|
Peacock's With all his harness soon the God was sped,
|
|
Train His flying hat was fastned on his head,
|
|
Wings on his heels were hung, and in his hand
|
|
He holds the vertue of the snaky wand.
|
|
The liquid air his moving pinions wound,
|
|
And, in the moment, shoot him on the ground.
|
|
Before he came in sight, the crafty God
|
|
His wings dismiss'd, but still retain'd his rod:
|
|
That sleep-procuring wand wise Hermes took,
|
|
But made it seem to sight a sherpherd's hook.
|
|
With this, he did a herd of goats controul;
|
|
Which by the way he met, and slily stole.
|
|
Clad like a country swain, he pip'd, and sung;
|
|
And playing, drove his jolly troop along.
|
|
With pleasure, Argus the musician heeds;
|
|
But wonders much at those new vocal reeds.
|
|
And whosoe'er thou art, my friend, said he,
|
|
Up hither drive thy goats, and play by me:
|
|
This hill has browz for them, and shade for thee.
|
|
The God, who was with ease induc'd to climb,
|
|
Began discourse to pass away the time;
|
|
And still betwixt, his tuneful pipe he plies;
|
|
And watch'd his hour, to close the keeper's eyes.
|
|
With much ado, he partly kept awake;
|
|
Not suff'ring all his eyes repose to take:
|
|
And ask'd the stranger, who did reeds invent,
|
|
And whence began so rare an instrument?
|
|
The Then Hermes thus: A nymph of late there was
|
|
Transformation Whose heav'nly form her fellows did surpass.
|
|
of Syrinx The pride and joy of fair Arcadia's plains,
|
|
into Reeds Belov'd by deities, ador'd by swains:
|
|
Syrinx her name, by Sylvans oft pursu'd,
|
|
As oft she did the lustful Gods delude:
|
|
The rural, and the woodland Pow'rs disdain'd;
|
|
With Cynthia hunted, and her rites maintain'd:
|
|
Like Phoebe clad, even Phoebe's self she seems,
|
|
So tall, so streight, such well-proportion'd limbs:
|
|
The nicest eye did no distinction know,
|
|
But that the goddess bore a golden bow:
|
|
Distinguish'd thus, the sight she cheated too.
|
|
Descending from Lycaeus, Pan admires
|
|
The matchless nymph, and burns with new desires.
|
|
A crown of pine upon his head he wore;
|
|
And thus began her pity to implore.
|
|
But e'er he thus began, she took her flight
|
|
So swift, she was already out of sight.
|
|
Nor stay'd to hear the courtship of the God;
|
|
But bent her course to Ladon's gentle flood:
|
|
There by the river stopt, and tir'd before;
|
|
Relief from water nymphs her pray'rs implore.
|
|
Now while the lustful God, with speedy pace,
|
|
Just thought to strain her in a strict embrace,
|
|
He fill'd his arms with reeds, new rising on the
|
|
place.
|
|
And while he sighs, his ill success to find,
|
|
The tender canes were shaken by the wind;
|
|
And breath'd a mournful air, unheard before;
|
|
That much surprizing Pan, yet pleas'd him more.
|
|
Admiring this new musick, Thou, he said,
|
|
Who canst not be the partner of my bed,
|
|
At least shall be the confort of my mind:
|
|
And often, often to my lips be joyn'd.
|
|
He form'd the reeds, proportion'd as they are,
|
|
Unequal in their length, and wax'd with care,
|
|
They still retain the name of his ungrateful fair.
|
|
While Hermes pip'd, and sung, and told his tale,
|
|
The keeper's winking eyes began to fail,
|
|
And drowsie slumber on the lids to creep;
|
|
'Till all the watchman was at length asleep.
|
|
Then soon the God his voice, and song supprest;
|
|
And with his pow'rful rod confirm'd his rest:
|
|
Without delay his crooked faulchion drew,
|
|
And at one fatal stroke the keeper slew.
|
|
Down from the rock fell the dissever'd head,
|
|
Opening its eyes in death; and falling, bled;
|
|
And mark'd the passage with a crimson trail:
|
|
Thus Argus lies in pieces, cold, and pale;
|
|
And all his hundred eyes, with all their light,
|
|
Are clos'd at once, in one perpetual night.
|
|
These Juno takes, that they no more may fail,
|
|
And spreads them in her peacock's gaudy tail.
|
|
Impatient to revenge her injur'd bed,
|
|
She wreaks her anger on her rival's head;
|
|
With Furies frights her from her native home;
|
|
And drives her gadding, round the world to roam:
|
|
Nor ceas'd her madness, and her flight, before
|
|
She touch'd the limits of the Pharian shore.
|
|
At length, arriving on the banks of Nile,
|
|
Wearied with length of ways, and worn with toil,
|
|
She laid her down; and leaning on her knees,
|
|
Invok'd the cause of all her miseries:
|
|
And cast her languishing regards above,
|
|
For help from Heav'n, and her ungrateful Jove.
|
|
She sigh'd, she wept, she low'd; 'twas all she
|
|
cou'd;
|
|
And with unkindness seem'd to tax the God.
|
|
Last, with an humble pray'r, she beg'd repose,
|
|
Or death at least, to finish all her woes.
|
|
Jove heard her vows, and with a flatt'ring look,
|
|
In her behalf to jealous Juno spoke,
|
|
He cast his arms about her neck, and said,
|
|
Dame, rest secure; no more thy nuptial bed
|
|
This nymph shall violate; by Styx I swear,
|
|
And every oath that binds the Thunderer.
|
|
The Goddess was appeas'd; and at the word
|
|
Was Io to her former shape restor'd.
|
|
The rugged hair began to fall away;
|
|
The sweetness of her eyes did only stay,
|
|
Tho' not so large; her crooked horns decrease;
|
|
The wideness of her jaws and nostrils cease:
|
|
Her hoofs to hands return, in little space:
|
|
The five long taper fingers take their place,
|
|
And nothing of the heyfer now is seen,
|
|
Beside the native whiteness of the skin.
|
|
Erected on her feet she walks again:
|
|
And two the duty of the four sustain.
|
|
She tries her tongue; her silence softly breaks,
|
|
And fears her former lowings when she speaks:
|
|
A Goddess now, through all th' Aegyptian State:
|
|
And serv'd by priests, who in white linnen wait.
|
|
Her son was Epaphus, at length believ'd
|
|
The son of Jove, and as a God receiv'd;
|
|
With sacrifice ador'd, and publick pray'rs,
|
|
He common temples with his mother shares.
|
|
Equal in years, and rival in renown
|
|
With Epaphus, the youthful Phaeton
|
|
Like honour claims; and boasts his sire the sun.
|
|
His haughty looks, and his assuming air,
|
|
The son of Isis could no longer bear:
|
|
Thou tak'st thy mother's word too far, said he,
|
|
And hast usurp'd thy boasted pedigree.
|
|
Go, base pretender to a borrow'd name.
|
|
Thus tax'd, he blush'd with anger, and with shame;
|
|
But shame repress'd his rage: the daunted youth
|
|
Soon seeks his mother, and enquires the truth:
|
|
Mother, said he, this infamy was thrown
|
|
By Epaphus on you, and me your son.
|
|
He spoke in publick, told it to my face;
|
|
Nor durst I vindicate the dire disgrace:
|
|
Even I, the bold, the sensible of wrong,
|
|
Restrain'd by shame, was forc'd to hold my tongue.
|
|
To hear an open slander, is a curse:
|
|
But not to find an answer, is a worse.
|
|
If I am Heav'n-begot, assert your son
|
|
By some sure sign; and make my father known,
|
|
To right my honour, and redeem your own.
|
|
He said, and saying cast his arms about
|
|
Her neck, and beg'd her to resolve the doubt.
|
|
'Tis hard to judge if Clymene were mov'd
|
|
More by his pray'r, whom she so dearly lov'd,
|
|
Or more with fury fir'd, to find her name
|
|
Traduc'd, and made the sport of common fame.
|
|
She stretch'd her arms to Heav'n, and fix'd her
|
|
eyes
|
|
On that fair planet that adorns the skies;
|
|
Now by those beams, said she, whose holy fires
|
|
Consume my breast, and kindle my desires;
|
|
By him, who sees us both, and clears our sight,
|
|
By him, the publick minister of light,
|
|
I swear that Sun begot thee; if I lye,
|
|
Let him his chearful influence deny:
|
|
Let him no more this perjur'd creature see;
|
|
And shine on all the world but only me.
|
|
If still you doubt your mother's innocence,
|
|
His eastern mansion is not far from hence;
|
|
With little pains you to his Leve go,
|
|
And from himself your parentage may know.
|
|
With joy th' ambitious youth his mother heard,
|
|
And eager, for the journey soon prepar'd.
|
|
He longs the world beneath him to survey;
|
|
To guide the chariot; and to give the day:
|
|
From Meroe's burning sands he bends his course,
|
|
Nor less in India feels his father's force:
|
|
His travel urging, till he came in sight;
|
|
And saw the palace by the purple light.
|
|
|
|
The End of the First Book.
|
|
BOOK THE SECOND
|
|
|
|
THE Sun's bright palace, on high columns rais'd,
|
|
With burnish'd gold and flaming jewels blaz'd;
|
|
The folding gates diffus'd a silver light,
|
|
And with a milder gleam refresh'd the sight;
|
|
Of polish'd iv'ry was the cov'ring wrought:
|
|
The Story of The matter vied not with the sculptor's thought,
|
|
Phaeton For in the portal was display'd on high
|
|
(The work of Vulcan) a fictitious sky;
|
|
A waving sea th' inferiour Earth embrac'd,
|
|
And Gods and Goddesses the waters grac'd.
|
|
Aegeon here a mighty whale bestrode;
|
|
Triton, and Proteus (the deceiving God)
|
|
With Doris here were carv'd, and all her train,
|
|
Some loosely swimming in the figur'd main,
|
|
While some on rocks their dropping hair divide,
|
|
And some on fishes through the waters glide:
|
|
Tho' various features did the sisters grace,
|
|
A sister's likeness was in ev'ry face.
|
|
On Earth a diff'rent landskip courts the eyes,
|
|
Men, towns, and beasts in distant prospects rise,
|
|
And nymphs, and streams, and woods, and rural
|
|
deities.
|
|
O'er all, the Heav'n's refulgent image shines;
|
|
On either gate were six engraven signs.
|
|
Here Phaeton still gaining on th' ascent,
|
|
To his suspected father's palace went,
|
|
'Till pressing forward through the bright abode,
|
|
He saw at distance the illustrious God:
|
|
He saw at distance, or the dazling light
|
|
Had flash'd too strongly on his aking sight.
|
|
The God sits high, exalted on a throne
|
|
Of blazing gems, with purple garments on;
|
|
The Hours, in order rang'd on either hand,
|
|
And Days, and Months, and Years, and Ages stand.
|
|
Here Spring appears with flow'ry chaplets bound;
|
|
Here Summer in her wheaten garland crown'd;
|
|
Here Autumn the rich trodden grapes besmear;
|
|
And hoary Winter shivers in the reer.
|
|
Phoebus beheld the youth from off his throne;
|
|
That eye, which looks on all, was fix'd in one.
|
|
He saw the boy's confusion in his face,
|
|
Surpriz'd at all the wonders of the place;
|
|
And cries aloud, "What wants my son? for know
|
|
My son thou art, and I must call thee so."
|
|
"Light of the world," the trembling youth replies,
|
|
"Illustrious parent! since you don't despise
|
|
The parent's name, some certain token give,
|
|
That I may Clymene's proud boast believe,
|
|
Nor longer under false reproaches grieve."
|
|
The tender sire was touch'd with what he said,
|
|
And flung the blaze of glories from his head,
|
|
And bid the youth advance: "My son," said he,
|
|
"Come to thy father's arms! for Clymene
|
|
Has told thee true; a parent's name I own,
|
|
And deem thee worthy to be called my son.
|
|
As a sure proof, make some request, and I,
|
|
Whate'er it be, with that request comply;
|
|
By Styx I swear, whose waves are hid in night,
|
|
And roul impervious to my piercing sight."
|
|
The youth transported, asks, without delay,
|
|
To guide the sun's bright chariot for a day.
|
|
The God repented of the oath he took,
|
|
For anguish thrice his radiant head he shook;
|
|
"My son," says he, "some other proof require,
|
|
Rash was my promise, rash is thy desire.
|
|
I'd fain deny this wish, which thou hast made,
|
|
Or, what I can't deny, wou'd fain disswade.
|
|
Too vast and hazardous the task appears,
|
|
Nor suited to thy strength, nor to thy years.
|
|
Thy lot is mortal, but thy wishes fly
|
|
Beyond the province of mortality:
|
|
There is not one of all the Gods that dares
|
|
(However skill'd in other great affairs)
|
|
To mount the burning axle-tree, but I;
|
|
Not Jove himself, the ruler of the sky,
|
|
That hurles the three-fork'd thunder from above,
|
|
Dares try his strength: yet who so strong as Jove?
|
|
The steeds climb up the first ascent with pain,
|
|
And when the middle firmament they gain,
|
|
If downward from the Heav'ns my head I bow,
|
|
And see the Earth and Ocean hang below,
|
|
Ev'n I am seiz'd with horror and affright,
|
|
And my own heart misgives me at the sight.
|
|
A mighty downfal steeps the ev'ning stage,
|
|
And steddy reins must curb the horses' rage.
|
|
Tethys herself has fear'd to see me driv'n
|
|
Down headlong from the precipice of Heav'n.
|
|
Besides, consider what impetuous force
|
|
Turns stars and planets in a diff'rent course.
|
|
I steer against their motions; nor am I
|
|
Born back by all the current of the sky.
|
|
But how cou'd you resist the orbs that roul
|
|
In adverse whirls, and stem the rapid pole?
|
|
But you perhaps may hope for pleasing woods,
|
|
And stately dooms, and cities fill'd with Gods;
|
|
While through a thousand snares your progress lies,
|
|
Where forms of starry monsters stock the skies:
|
|
For, shou'd you hit the doubtful way aright,
|
|
The bull with stooping horns stands opposite;
|
|
Next him the bright Haemonian bow is strung,
|
|
And next, the lion's grinning visage hung:
|
|
The scorpion's claws, here clasp a wide extent;
|
|
And here the crab's in lesser clasps are bent.
|
|
Nor wou'd you find it easie to compose
|
|
The mettled steeds, when from their nostrils flows
|
|
The scorching fire, that in their entrails glows.
|
|
Ev'n I their head-strong fury scarce restrain,
|
|
When they grow warm and restif to the rein.
|
|
Let not my son a fatal gift require,
|
|
But, O! in time, recall your rash desire;
|
|
You ask a gift that may your parent tell,
|
|
Let these my fears your parentage reveal;
|
|
And learn a father from a father's care:
|
|
Look on my face; or if my heart lay bare,
|
|
Cou'd you but look, you'd read the father there.
|
|
Chuse out a gift from seas, or Earth, or skies,
|
|
For open to your wish all Nature lies,
|
|
Only decline this one unequal task,
|
|
For 'tis a mischief, not a gift, you ask.
|
|
You ask a real mischief, Phaeton:
|
|
Nay hang not thus about my neck, my son:
|
|
I grant your wish, and Styx has heard my voice,
|
|
Chuse what you will, but make a wiser choice."
|
|
Thus did the God th' unwary youth advise;
|
|
But he still longs to travel through the skies.
|
|
When the fond father (for in vain he pleads)
|
|
At length to the Vulcanian Chariot leads.
|
|
A golden axle did the work uphold,
|
|
Gold was the beam, the wheels were orb'd with gold.
|
|
The spokes in rows of silver pleas'd the sight,
|
|
The seat with party-colour'd gems was bright;
|
|
Apollo shin'd amid the glare of light.
|
|
The youth with secret joy the work surveys,
|
|
When now the moon disclos'd her purple rays;
|
|
The stars were fled, for Lucifer had chased
|
|
The stars away, and fled himself at last.
|
|
Soon as the father saw the rosy morn,
|
|
And the moon shining with a blunter horn,
|
|
He bid the nimble Hours, without delay,
|
|
Bring forth the steeds; the nimble Hours obey:
|
|
From their full racks the gen'rous steeds retire,
|
|
Dropping ambrosial foams, and snorting fire.
|
|
Still anxious for his son, the God of day,
|
|
To make him proof against the burning ray,
|
|
His temples with celestial ointment wet,
|
|
Of sov'reign virtue to repel the heat;
|
|
Then fix'd the beamy circle on his head,
|
|
And fetch'd a deep foreboding sigh, and said,
|
|
"Take this at least, this last advice, my son,
|
|
Keep a stiff rein, and move but gently on:
|
|
The coursers of themselves will run too fast,
|
|
Your art must be to moderate their haste.
|
|
Drive 'em not on directly through the skies,
|
|
But where the Zodiac's winding circle lies,
|
|
Along the midmost Zone; but sally forth
|
|
Nor to the distant south, nor stormy north.
|
|
The horses' hoofs a beaten track will show,
|
|
But neither mount too high, nor sink too low.
|
|
That no new fires, or Heav'n or Earth infest;
|
|
Keep the mid way, the middle way is best.
|
|
Nor, where in radiant folds the serpent twines,
|
|
Direct your course, nor where the altar shines.
|
|
Shun both extreams; the rest let Fortune guide,
|
|
And better for thee than thy self provide!
|
|
See, while I speak, the shades disperse away,
|
|
Aurora gives the promise of a day;
|
|
I'm call'd, nor can I make a longer stay.
|
|
Snatch up the reins; or still th' attempt forsake,
|
|
And not my chariot, but my counsel, take,
|
|
While yet securely on the Earth you stand;
|
|
Nor touch the horses with too rash a hand.
|
|
Let me alone to light the world, while you
|
|
Enjoy those beams which you may safely view."
|
|
He spoke in vain; the youth with active heat
|
|
And sprightly vigour vaults into the seat;
|
|
And joys to hold the reins, and fondly gives
|
|
Those thanks his father with remorse receives.
|
|
Mean-while the restless horses neigh'd aloud,
|
|
Breathing out fire, and pawing where they stood.
|
|
Tethys, not knowing what had past, gave way,
|
|
And all the waste of Heav'n before 'em lay.
|
|
They spring together out, and swiftly bear
|
|
The flying youth thro' clouds and yielding air;
|
|
With wingy speed outstrip the eastern wind,
|
|
And leave the breezes of the morn behind.
|
|
The youth was light, nor cou'd he fill the seat,
|
|
Or poise the chariot with its wonted weight:
|
|
But as at sea th' unballass'd vessel rides,
|
|
Cast to and fro, the sport of winds and tides;
|
|
So in the bounding chariot toss'd on high,
|
|
The youth is hurry'd headlong through the sky.
|
|
Soon as the steeds perceive it, they forsake
|
|
Their stated course, and leave the beaten track.
|
|
The youth was in a maze, nor did he know
|
|
Which way to turn the reins, or where to go;
|
|
Nor wou'd the horses, had he known, obey.
|
|
Then the sev'n stars first felt Apollo's ray,
|
|
And wish'd to dip in the forbidden sea.
|
|
The folded serpent next the frozen pole,
|
|
Stiff and benum'd before, began to rowle,
|
|
And raged with inward heat, and threaten'd war,
|
|
And shot a redder light from ev'ry star;
|
|
Nay, and 'tis said Bootes too, that fain
|
|
Thou woud'st have fled, tho' cumber'd with thy
|
|
wane.
|
|
Th' unhappy youth then, bending down his head,
|
|
Saw Earth and Ocean far beneath him spread.
|
|
His colour chang'd, he startled at the sight,
|
|
And his eyes darken'd by too great a light.
|
|
Now cou'd he wish the fiery steeds untry'd,
|
|
His birth obscure, and his request deny'd:
|
|
Now wou'd he Merops for his father own,
|
|
And quit his boasted kindred to the sun.
|
|
So fares the pilot, when his ship is tost
|
|
In troubled seas, and all its steerage lost,
|
|
He gives her to the winds, and in despair
|
|
Seeks his last refuge in the Gods and pray'r.
|
|
What cou'd he do? his eyes, if backward cast,
|
|
Find a long path he had already past;
|
|
If forward, still a longer path they find:
|
|
Both he compares, and measures in his mind;
|
|
And sometimes casts an eye upon the east,
|
|
And sometimes looks on the forbidden west,
|
|
The horses' names he knew not in the fright,
|
|
Nor wou'd he loose the reins, nor cou'd he hold 'em
|
|
right.
|
|
Now all the horrors of the Heav'ns he spies,
|
|
And monstrous shadows of prodigious size,
|
|
That, deck'd with stars, lye scatter'd o'er the
|
|
skies.
|
|
There is a place above, where Scorpio bent
|
|
In tail and arms surrounds a vast extent;
|
|
In a wide circuit of the Heav'ns he shines,
|
|
And fills the space of two coelestial signs.
|
|
Soon as the youth beheld him vex'd with heat
|
|
Brandish his sting, and in his poison sweat,
|
|
Half dead with sudden fear he dropt the reins;
|
|
The horses felt 'em loose upon their mains,
|
|
And, flying out through all the plains above,
|
|
Ran uncontroul'd where-e're their fury drove;
|
|
Rush'd on the stars, and through a pathless way
|
|
Of unknown regions hurry'd on the day.
|
|
And now above, and now below they flew,
|
|
And near the Earth the burning chariot drew.
|
|
The clouds disperse in fumes, the wond'ring Moon
|
|
Beholds her brother's steeds beneath her own;
|
|
The highlands smoak, cleft by the piercing rays,
|
|
Or, clad with woods, in their own fewel blaze.
|
|
Next o'er the plains, where ripen'd harvests grow,
|
|
The running conflagration spreads below.
|
|
But these are trivial ills: whole cities burn,
|
|
And peopled kingdoms into ashes turn.
|
|
The mountains kindle as the car draws near,
|
|
Athos and Tmolus red with fires appear;
|
|
Oeagrian Haemus (then a single name)
|
|
And virgin Helicon increase the flame;
|
|
Taurus and Oete glare amid the sky,
|
|
And Ida, spight of all her fountains, dry.
|
|
Eryx and Othrys, and Cithaeron, glow,
|
|
And Rhodope, no longer cloath'd in snow;
|
|
High Pindus, Mimas, and Parnassus, sweat,
|
|
And Aetna rages with redoubled heat.
|
|
Ev'n Scythia, through her hoary regions warm'd,
|
|
In vain with all her native frost was arm'd.
|
|
Cover'd with flames the tow'ring Appennine,
|
|
And Caucasus, and proud Olympus, shine;
|
|
And, where the long-extended Alpes aspire,
|
|
Now stands a huge continu'd range of fire.
|
|
Th' astonisht youth, where-e'er his eyes cou'd
|
|
turn,
|
|
Beheld the universe around him burn:
|
|
The world was in a blaze; nor cou'd he bear
|
|
The sultry vapours and the scorching air,
|
|
Which from below, as from a furnace, flow'd;
|
|
And now the axle-tree beneath him glow'd:
|
|
Lost in the whirling clouds that round him broke,
|
|
And white with ashes, hov'ring in the smoke.
|
|
He flew where-e'er the horses drove, nor knew
|
|
Whither the horses drove, or where he flew.
|
|
'Twas then, they say, the swarthy Moor begun
|
|
To change his hue, and blacken in the sun.
|
|
Then Libya first, of all her moisture drain'd,
|
|
Became a barren waste, a wild of sand.
|
|
The water-nymphs lament their empty urns,
|
|
Boeotia, robb's of silve Dirce, mourns,
|
|
Corinth Pyrene's wasted spring bewails,
|
|
And Argos grieves whilst Amymone fails.
|
|
The floods are drain'd from ev'ry distant coast,
|
|
Ev'n Tanais, tho' fix'd in ice, was lost.
|
|
Enrag'd Caicus and Lycormas roar,
|
|
And Xanthus, fated to be burnt once more.
|
|
The fam'd Maeander, that unweary'd strays
|
|
Through mazy windings, smoaks in ev'ry maze.
|
|
From his lov'd Babylon Euphrates flies;
|
|
The big-swoln Ganges and the Danube rise
|
|
In thick'ning fumes, and darken half the skies.
|
|
In flames Ismenos and the Phasis roul'd,
|
|
And Tagus floating in his melted gold.
|
|
The swans, that on Cayster often try'd
|
|
Their tuneful songs, now sung their last and dy'd.
|
|
The frighted Nile ran off, and under ground
|
|
Conceal'd his head, nor can it yet be found:
|
|
His sev'n divided currents all are dry,
|
|
And where they row'ld, sev'n gaping trenches lye:
|
|
No more the Rhine or Rhone their course maintain,
|
|
Nor Tiber, of his promis'd empire vain.
|
|
The ground, deep-cleft, admits the dazling ray,
|
|
And startles Pluto with the flash of day.
|
|
The seas shrink in, and to the sight disclose
|
|
Wide naked plains, where once their billows rose;
|
|
Their rocks are all discover'd, and increase
|
|
The number of the scatter'd Cyclades.
|
|
The fish in sholes about the bottom creep,
|
|
Nor longer dares the crooked dolphin leap
|
|
Gasping for breath, th' unshapen Phocae die,
|
|
And on the boiling wave extended lye.
|
|
Nereus, and Doris with her virgin train,
|
|
Seek out the last recesses of the main;
|
|
Beneath unfathomable depths they faint,
|
|
And secret in their gloomy caverns pant.
|
|
Stern Neptune thrice above the waves upheld
|
|
His face, and thrice was by the flames repell'd.
|
|
The Earth at length, on ev'ry side embrac'd
|
|
With scalding seas that floated round her waste,
|
|
When now she felt the springs and rivers come,
|
|
And crowd within the hollow of her womb,
|
|
Up-lifted to the Heav'ns her blasted head,
|
|
And clapt her hand upon her brows, and said
|
|
(But first, impatient of the sultry heat,
|
|
Sunk deeper down, and sought a cooler seat):
|
|
"If you, great king of Gods, my death approve,
|
|
And I deserve it, let me die by Jove;
|
|
If I must perish by the force of fire,
|
|
Let me transfix'd with thunder-bolts expire.
|
|
See, whilst I speak, my breath the vapours choak
|
|
(For now her face lay wrapt in clouds of smoak),
|
|
See my singe'd hair, behold my faded eye,
|
|
And wither'd face, where heaps of cinders lye!
|
|
And does the plow for this my body tear?
|
|
This the reward for all the fruits I bear,
|
|
Tortur'd with rakes, and harrass'd all the year?
|
|
That herbs for cattle daily I renew,
|
|
And food for Man, and frankincense for you?
|
|
But grant me guilty; what has Neptune done?
|
|
Why are his waters boiling in the sun?
|
|
The wavy empire, which by lot was giv'n,
|
|
Why does it waste, and further shrink from Heav'n?
|
|
If I nor he your pity can provoke,
|
|
See your own Heav'ns, the Heav'ns begin to smoke!
|
|
Shou'd once the sparkles catch those bright abodes,
|
|
Destruction seizes on the Heav'ns and Gods;
|
|
Atlas becomes unequal to his freight,
|
|
And almost faints beneath the glowing weight.
|
|
If Heav'n, and Earth, and sea, together burn,
|
|
All must again into their chaos turn.
|
|
Apply some speedy cure, prevent our fate,
|
|
And succour Nature, ere it be too late."
|
|
She cea'sd, for choak'd with vapours round her
|
|
spread,
|
|
Down to the deepest shades she sunk her head.
|
|
Jove call'd to witness ev'ry Pow'r above,
|
|
And ev'n the God, whose son the chariot drove,
|
|
That what he acts he is compell'd to do,
|
|
Or universal ruin must ensue.
|
|
Strait he ascends the high aetherial throne,
|
|
From whence he us'd to dart his thunder down,
|
|
From whence his show'rs and storms he us'd to pour,
|
|
But now cou'd meet with neither storm nor show'r.
|
|
Then, aiming at the youth, with lifted hand,
|
|
Full at his head he hurl'd the forky brand,
|
|
In dreadful thund'rings. Thus th' almighty sire
|
|
Suppress'd the raging of the fires with fire.
|
|
At once from life and from the chariot driv'n,
|
|
Th' ambitious boy fell thunder-struck from Heav'n.
|
|
The horses started with a sudden bound,
|
|
And flung the reins and chariot to the ground:
|
|
The studded harness from their necks they broke,
|
|
Here fell a wheel, and here a silver spoke,
|
|
Here were the beam and axle torn away;
|
|
And, scatter'd o'er the Earth, the shining
|
|
fragments lay.
|
|
The breathless Phaeton, with flaming hair,
|
|
Shot from the chariot, like a falling star,
|
|
That in a summer's ev'ning from the top
|
|
Of Heav'n drops down, or seems at least to drop;
|
|
'Till on the Po his blasted corps was hurl'd,
|
|
Far from his country, in the western world.
|
|
Phaeton's The Latian nymphs came round him, and, amaz'd,
|
|
Sisters On the dead youth, transfix'd with thunder, gaz'd;
|
|
transform'd And, whilst yet smoaking from the bolt he lay,
|
|
into Trees His shatter'd body to a tomb convey,
|
|
And o'er the tomb an epitaph devise:
|
|
"Here he, who drove the sun's bright chariot, lies;
|
|
His father's fiery steeds he cou'd not guide,
|
|
But in the glorious enterprize he dy'd."
|
|
Apollo hid his face, and pin'd for grief,
|
|
And, if the story may deserve belief,
|
|
The space of one whole day is said to run,
|
|
From morn to wonted ev'n, without a sun:
|
|
The burning ruins, with a fainter ray,
|
|
Supply the sun, and counterfeit a day,
|
|
A day, that still did Nature's face disclose:
|
|
This comfort from the mighty mischief rose.
|
|
But Clymene, enrag'd with grief, laments,
|
|
And as her grief inspires, her passion vents:
|
|
Wild for her son, and frantick in her woes,
|
|
With hair dishevel'd round the world she goes,
|
|
To seek where-e'er his body might be cast;
|
|
'Till, on the borders of the Po, at last
|
|
The name inscrib'd on the new tomb appears.
|
|
The dear dear name she bathes in flowing tears,
|
|
Hangs o'er the tomb, unable to depart,
|
|
And hugs the marble to her throbbing heart.
|
|
Her daughters too lament, and sigh, and mourn
|
|
(A fruitless tribute to their brother's urn),
|
|
And beat their naked bosoms, and complain,
|
|
And call aloud for Phaeton in vain:
|
|
All the long night their mournful watch they keep,
|
|
And all the day stand round the tomb, and weep.
|
|
Four times, revolving, the full moon return'd;
|
|
So long the mother and the daughters mourn'd:
|
|
When now the eldest, Phaethusa, strove
|
|
To rest her weary limbs, but could not move;
|
|
Lampetia wou'd have help'd her, but she found
|
|
Her self with-held, and rooted to the ground:
|
|
A third in wild affliction, as she grieves,
|
|
Wou'd rend her hair, but fills her hands with
|
|
leaves;
|
|
One sees her thighs transform'd, another views
|
|
Her arms shot out, and branching into boughs.
|
|
And now their legs, and breasts, and bodies stood
|
|
Crusted with bark, and hard'ning into wood;
|
|
But still above were female heads display'd,
|
|
And mouths, that call'd the mother to their aid.
|
|
What cou'd, alas! the weeping mother do?
|
|
From this to that with eager haste she flew,
|
|
And kiss'd her sprouting daughters as they grew.
|
|
She tears the bark that to each body cleaves,
|
|
And from their verdant fingers strips the leaves:
|
|
The blood came trickling, where she tore away
|
|
The leaves and bark: the maids were heard to say,
|
|
"Forbear, mistaken parent, oh! forbear;
|
|
A wounded daughter in each tree you tear;
|
|
Farewell for ever." Here the bark encreas'd,
|
|
Clos'd on their faces, and their words suppress'd.
|
|
The new-made trees in tears of amber run,
|
|
Which, harden'd into value by the sun,
|
|
Distill for ever on the streams below:
|
|
The limpid streams their radiant treasure show,
|
|
Mixt in the sand; whence the rich drops convey'd
|
|
Shine in the dress of the bright Latian maid.
|
|
The Cycnus beheld the nymphs transform'd, ally'd
|
|
Transformation To their dead brother on the mortal side,
|
|
of Cycnus into In friendship and affection nearer bound;
|
|
a Swan He left the cities and the realms he own'd,
|
|
Thro' pathless fields and lonely shores to range,
|
|
And woods made thicker by the sisters' change.
|
|
Whilst here, within the dismal gloom, alone,
|
|
The melancholy monarch made his moan,
|
|
His voice was lessen'd, as he try'd to speak,
|
|
And issu'd through a long-extended neck;
|
|
His hair transforms to down, his fingers meet
|
|
In skinny films, and shape his oary feet;
|
|
From both his sides the wings and feathers break;
|
|
And from his mouth proceeds a blunted beak:
|
|
All Cycnus now into a Swan was turn'd,
|
|
Who, still remembring how his kinsman burn'd,
|
|
To solitary pools and lakes retires,
|
|
And loves the waters as oppos'd to fires.
|
|
Mean-while Apollo in a gloomy shade
|
|
(The native lustre of his brows decay'd)
|
|
Indulging sorrow, sickens at the sight
|
|
Of his own sun-shine, and abhors the light;
|
|
The hidden griefs, that in his bosom rise,
|
|
Sadden his looks and over-cast his eyes,
|
|
As when some dusky orb obstructs his ray,
|
|
And sullies in a dim eclipse the day.
|
|
Now secretly with inward griefs he pin'd,
|
|
Now warm resentments to his griefs he joyn'd,
|
|
And now renounc'd his office to mankind.
|
|
"Ere since the birth of time," said he, "I've born
|
|
A long ungrateful toil, without return;
|
|
Let now some other manage, if he dare,
|
|
The fiery steeds, and mount the burning carr;
|
|
Or, if none else, let Jove his fortune try,
|
|
And learn to lay his murd'ring thunder by;
|
|
Then will he own, perhaps, but own too late,
|
|
My son deserv'd not so severe a fate."
|
|
The Gods stand round him, as he mourns, and pray
|
|
He would resume the conduct of the day,
|
|
Nor let the world be lost in endless night:
|
|
Jove too himself descending from his height,
|
|
Excuses what had happen'd, and intreats,
|
|
Majestically mixing pray'rs and threats.
|
|
Prevail'd upon at length, again he took
|
|
The harness'd steeds, that still with horror shook,
|
|
And plies 'em with the lash, and whips 'em on,
|
|
And, as he whips, upbraids 'em with his son.
|
|
The Story of The day was settled in its course; and Jove
|
|
Calisto Walk'd the wide circuit of the Heavens above,
|
|
To search if any cracks or flaws were made;
|
|
But all was safe: the Earth he then survey'd,
|
|
And cast an eye on ev'ry diff'rent coast,
|
|
And ev'ry land; but on Arcadia most.
|
|
Her fields he cloath'd, and chear'd her blasted
|
|
face
|
|
With running fountains, and with springing grass.
|
|
No tracks of Heav'n's destructive fire remain,
|
|
The fields and woods revive, and Nature smiles
|
|
again.
|
|
But as the God walk'd to and fro the Earth,
|
|
And rais'd the plants, and gave the spring its
|
|
birth,
|
|
By chance a fair Arcadian nymph he view'd,
|
|
And felt the lovely charmer in his blood.
|
|
The nymph nor spun, nor dress'd with artful pride,
|
|
Her vest was gather'd up, her hair was ty'd;
|
|
Now in her hand a slender spear she bore,
|
|
Now a light quiver on her shoulders wore;
|
|
To chaste Diana from her youth inclin'd,
|
|
The sprightly warriors of the wood she joyn'd.
|
|
Diana too the gentle huntress lov'd,
|
|
Nor was there one of all the nymphs that rov'd
|
|
O'er Maenalus, amid the maiden throng,
|
|
More favour'd once; but favour lasts not long.
|
|
The sun now shone in all its strength, and drove
|
|
The heated virgin panting to a grove;
|
|
The grove around a grateful shadow cast:
|
|
She dropt her arrows, and her bow unbrac'd;
|
|
She flung her self on the cool grassy bed;
|
|
And on the painted quiver rais'd her head,
|
|
Jove saw the charming huntress unprepar'd,
|
|
Stretch'd on the verdant turf, without a guard.
|
|
"Here I am safe," he cries, "from Juno's eye;
|
|
Or shou'd my jealous queen the theft descry,
|
|
Yet wou'd I venture on a theft like this,
|
|
And stand her rage for such, for such a bliss!"
|
|
Diana's shape and habit strait he took,
|
|
Soften'd his brows, and smooth'd his awful look,
|
|
And mildly in a female accent spoke.
|
|
"How fares my girl? How went the morning chase?"
|
|
To whom the virgin, starting from the grass,
|
|
"All hail, bright deity, whom I prefer
|
|
To Jove himself, tho' Jove himself were here."
|
|
The God was nearer than she thought, and heard
|
|
Well-pleas'd himself before himself preferr'd.
|
|
He then salutes her with a warm embrace;
|
|
And, e're she half had told the morning chase,
|
|
With love enflam'd, and eager on his bliss,
|
|
Smother'd her words, and stop'd her with a kiss;
|
|
His kisses with unwonted ardour glow'd,
|
|
Nor cou'd Diana's shape conceal the God.
|
|
The virgin did whate'er a virgin cou'd
|
|
(Sure Juno must have pardon'd, had she view'd);
|
|
With all her might against his force she strove;
|
|
But how can mortal maids contend with Jove?
|
|
Possest at length of what his heart desir'd,
|
|
Back to his Heav'ns, th' exulting God retir'd.
|
|
The lovely huntress, rising from the grass,
|
|
With down-cast eyes, and with a blushing face,
|
|
By shame confounded, and by fear dismay'd,
|
|
Flew from the covert of the guilty shade,
|
|
And almost, in the tumult of her mind,
|
|
Left her forgotten bow and shafts behind.
|
|
But now Diana, with a sprightly train
|
|
Of quiver'd virgins, bounding o'er the plain,
|
|
Call'd to the nymph; the nymph began to fear
|
|
A second fraud, a Jove disguis'd in her;
|
|
But, when she saw the sister nymphs, suppress'd
|
|
Her rising fears, and mingled with the rest.
|
|
How in the look does conscious guilt appear!
|
|
Slowly she mov'd, and loiter'd in the rear;
|
|
Nor lightly tripp'd, nor by the Goddess ran,
|
|
As once she us'd, the foremost of the train.
|
|
Her looks were flush'd, and sullen was her mien,
|
|
That sure the virgin Goddess (had she been
|
|
Aught but a virgin) must the guilt have seen.
|
|
'Tis said the nymphs saw all, and guess'd aright:
|
|
And now the moon had nine times lost her light,
|
|
When Dian, fainting in the mid-day beams,
|
|
Found a cool covert, and refreshing streams
|
|
That in soft murmurs through the forest flow'd,
|
|
And a smooth bed of shining gravel show'd.
|
|
A covert so obscure, and streams so clear,
|
|
The Goddess prais'd: "And now no spies are near
|
|
Let's strip, my gentle maids, and wash," she cries.
|
|
Pleas'd with the motion, every maid complies;
|
|
Only the blushing huntress stood confus'd,
|
|
And form'd delays, and her delays excus'd;
|
|
In vain excus'd: her fellows round her press'd,
|
|
And the reluctant nymph by force undress'd,
|
|
The naked huntress all her shame reveal'd,
|
|
In vain her hands the pregnant womb conceal'd;
|
|
"Begone!" the Goddess cries with stern disdain,
|
|
"Begone! nor dare the hallow'd stream to stain":
|
|
She fled, for ever banish'd from the train.
|
|
This Juno heard, who long had watch'd her time
|
|
To punish the detested rival's crime;
|
|
The time was come; for, to enrage her more,
|
|
A lovely boy the teeming rival bore.
|
|
The Goddess cast a furious look, and cry'd,
|
|
"It is enough! I'm fully satisfy'd!
|
|
This boy shall stand a living mark, to prove
|
|
My husband's baseness and the strumpet's love:
|
|
But vengeance shall awake: those guilty charms
|
|
That drew the Thunderer from Juno's arms,
|
|
No longer shall their wonted force retain,
|
|
Nor please the God, nor make the mortal vain."
|
|
This said, her hand within her hair she wound,
|
|
Swung her to Earth, and drag'd her on the ground:
|
|
The prostrate wretch lifts up her arms in pray'r;
|
|
Her arms grow shaggy, and deform'd with hair,
|
|
Her nails are sharpen'd into pointed claws,
|
|
Her hands bear half her weight, and turn to paws;
|
|
Her lips, that once cou'd tempt a God, begin
|
|
To grow distorted in an ugly grin.
|
|
And, lest the supplicating brute might reach
|
|
The ears of Jove, she was depriv'd of speech:
|
|
Her surly voice thro' a hoarse passage came
|
|
In savage sounds: her mind was still the same,
|
|
The furry monster fix'd her eyes above,
|
|
And heav'd her new unwieldy paws to Jove,
|
|
And beg'd his aid with inward groans; and tho'
|
|
She could not call him false, she thought him so.
|
|
How did she fear to lodge in woods alone,
|
|
And haunt the fields and meadows, once her own!
|
|
How often wou'd the deep-mouth'd dogs pursue,
|
|
Whilst from her hounds the frighted huntress flew!
|
|
How did she fear her fellow-brutes, and shun
|
|
The shaggy bear, tho' now her self was one!
|
|
How from the sight of rugged wolves retire,
|
|
Although the grim Lycaon was her sire!
|
|
But now her son had fifteen summers told,
|
|
Fierce at the chase, and in the forest bold;
|
|
When, as he beat the woods in quest of prey,
|
|
He chanc'd to rouze his mother where she lay.
|
|
She knew her son, and kept him in her sight,
|
|
And fondly gaz'd: the boy was in a fright,
|
|
And aim'd a pointed arrow at her breast,
|
|
And would have slain his mother in the beast;
|
|
But Jove forbad, and snatch'd 'em through the air
|
|
In whirlwinds up to Heav'n, and fix'd 'em there!
|
|
Where the new constellations nightly rise,
|
|
And add a lustre to the northern skies.
|
|
When Juno saw the rival in her height,
|
|
Spangled with stars, and circled round with light,
|
|
She sought old Ocean in his deep abodes,
|
|
And Tethys, both rever'd among the Gods.
|
|
They ask what brings her there: "Ne'er ask," says
|
|
she,
|
|
"What brings me here, Heav'n is no place for me.
|
|
You'll see, when night has cover'd all things o'er,
|
|
Jove's starry bastard and triumphant whore
|
|
Usurp the Heav'ns; you'll see 'em proudly rowle
|
|
And who shall now on Juno's altars wait,
|
|
When those she hates grow greater by her hate?
|
|
I on the nymph a brutal form impress'd,
|
|
Jove to a goddess has transform'd the beast;
|
|
This, this was all my weak revenge could do:
|
|
But let the God his chaste amours pursue,
|
|
And, as he acted after Io's rape,
|
|
Restore th' adultress to her former shape;
|
|
Then may he cast his Juno off, and lead
|
|
The great Lycaon's offspring to his bed.
|
|
But you, ye venerable Pow'rs, be kind,
|
|
And, if my wrongs a due resentment find,
|
|
Receive not in your waves their setting beams,
|
|
Nor let the glaring strumpet taint your streams."
|
|
The Goddess ended, and her wish was giv'n.
|
|
Back she return'd in triumph up to Heav'n;
|
|
Her gawdy peacocks drew her through the skies.
|
|
Their tails were spotted with a thousand eyes;
|
|
The eyes of Argus on their tails were rang'd,
|
|
At the same time the raven's colour chang'd.
|
|
The Story of The raven once in snowy plumes was drest,
|
|
Coronis, and White as the whitest dove's unsully'd breast,
|
|
Birth of Fair as the guardian of the Capitol,
|
|
Aesculapius Soft as the swan; a large and lovely fowl;
|
|
His tongue, his prating tongue had chang'd him
|
|
quite
|
|
To sooty blackness, from the purest white.
|
|
The story of his change shall here be told;
|
|
In Thessaly there liv'd a nymph of old,
|
|
Coronis nam'd; a peerless maid she shin'd,
|
|
Confest the fairest of the fairer kind.
|
|
Apollo lov'd her, 'till her guilt he knew,
|
|
While true she was, or whilst he thought her true.
|
|
But his own bird the raven chanc'd to find
|
|
The false one with a secret rival joyn'd.
|
|
Coronis begg'd him to suppress the tale,
|
|
But could not with repeated pray'rs prevail.
|
|
His milk-white pinions to the God he ply'd;
|
|
The busy daw flew with him, side by side,
|
|
And by a thousand teizing questions drew
|
|
Th' important secret from him as they flew.
|
|
The daw gave honest counsel, tho' despis'd,
|
|
And, tedious in her tattle, thus advis'd:
|
|
"Stay, silly bird, th' ill-natur'd task refuse,
|
|
Nor be the bearer of unwelcome news.
|
|
Be warn'd by my example: you discern
|
|
What now I am, and what I was shall learn.
|
|
My foolish honesty was all my crime;
|
|
Then hear my story. Once upon a time,
|
|
The two-shap'd Ericthonius had his birth
|
|
(Without a mother) from the teeming Earth;
|
|
Minerva nurs'd him, and the infant laid
|
|
Within a chest, of twining osiers made.
|
|
The daughters of king Cecrops undertook
|
|
To guard the chest, commanded not to look
|
|
On what was hid within. I stood to see
|
|
The charge obey'd, perch'd on a neighb'ring tree.
|
|
The sisters Pandrosos and Herse keep
|
|
The strict command; Aglauros needs would peep,
|
|
And saw the monstrous infant, in a fright,
|
|
And call'd her sisters to the hideous sight:
|
|
A boy's soft shape did to the waste prevail,
|
|
But the boy ended in a dragon's tail.
|
|
I told the stern Minerva all that pass'd;
|
|
But for my pains, discarded and disgrac'd,
|
|
The frowning Goddess drove me from her sight,
|
|
And for her fav'rite chose the bird of night.
|
|
Be then no tell-tale; for I think my wrong
|
|
Enough to teach a bird to hold her tongue.
|
|
But you, perhaps, may think I was remov'd,
|
|
As never by the heav'nly maid belov'd:
|
|
But I was lov'd; ask Pallas if I lye;
|
|
Tho' Pallas hate me now, she won't deny:
|
|
For I, whom in a feather'd shape you view,
|
|
Was once a maid (by Heav'n the story's true)
|
|
A blooming maid, and a king's daughter too.
|
|
A crowd of lovers own'd my beauty's charms;
|
|
My beauty was the cause of all my harms;
|
|
Neptune, as on his shores I wont to rove,
|
|
Observ'd me in my walks, and fell in love.
|
|
He made his courtship, he confess'd his pain,
|
|
And offer'd force, when all his arts were vain;
|
|
Swift he pursu'd: I ran along the strand,
|
|
'Till, spent and weary'd on the sinking sand,
|
|
I shriek'd aloud, with cries I fill'd the air
|
|
To Gods and men; nor God nor man was there:
|
|
A virgin Goddess heard a virgin's pray'r.
|
|
For, as my arms I lifted to the skies,
|
|
I saw black feathers from my fingers rise;
|
|
I strove to fling my garment on the ground;
|
|
My garment turn'd to plumes, and girt me round:
|
|
My hands to beat my naked bosom try;
|
|
Nor naked bosom now nor hands had I:
|
|
Lightly I tript, nor weary as before
|
|
Sunk in the sand, but skim'd along the shore;
|
|
'Till, rising on my wings, I was preferr'd
|
|
To be the chaste Minerva's virgin bird:
|
|
Preferr'd in vain! I am now in disgrace:
|
|
Nyctimene the owl enjoys my place.
|
|
On her incestuous life I need not dwell
|
|
(In Lesbos still the horrid tale they tell),
|
|
And of her dire amours you must have heard,
|
|
For which she now does penance in a bird,
|
|
That conscious of her shame, avoids the light,
|
|
And loves the gloomy cov'ring of the night;
|
|
The birds, where-e'er she flutters, scare away
|
|
The hooting wretch, and drive her from the day."
|
|
The raven, urg'd by such impertinence,
|
|
Grew passionate, it seems, and took offence,
|
|
And curst the harmless daw; the daw withdrew:
|
|
The raven to her injur'd patron flew,
|
|
And found him out, and told the fatal truth
|
|
Of false Coronis and the favour'd youth.
|
|
The God was wroth, the colour left his look,
|
|
The wreath his head, the harp his hand forsook:
|
|
His silver bow and feather'd shafts he took,
|
|
And lodg'd an arrow in the tender breast,
|
|
That had so often to his own been prest.
|
|
Down fell the wounded nymph, and sadly groan'd,
|
|
And pull'd his arrow reeking from the wound;
|
|
And weltring in her blood, thus faintly cry'd,
|
|
"Ah cruel God! tho' I have justly dy'd,
|
|
What has, alas! my unborn infant done,
|
|
That he should fall, and two expire in one?"
|
|
This said, in agonies she fetch'd her breath.
|
|
The God dissolves in pity at her death;
|
|
He hates the bird that made her falshood known,
|
|
And hates himself for what himself had done;
|
|
The feather'd shaft, that sent her to the Fates,
|
|
And his own hand, that sent the shaft, he hates.
|
|
Fain would he heal the wound, and ease her pain,
|
|
And tries the compass of his art in vain.
|
|
Soon as he saw the lovely nymph expire,
|
|
The pile made ready, and the kindling fire.
|
|
With sighs and groans her obsequies he kept,
|
|
And, if a God could weep, the God had wept.
|
|
Her corps he kiss'd, and heav'nly incense brought,
|
|
And solemniz'd the death himself had wrought.
|
|
But lest his offspring should her fate partake,
|
|
Spight of th' immortal mixture in his make,
|
|
He ript her womb, and set the child at large,
|
|
And gave him to the centaur Chiron's charge:
|
|
Then in his fury black'd the raven o'er,
|
|
And bid him prate in his white plumes no more.
|
|
Ocyrrhoe Old Chiron took the babe with secret joy,
|
|
transform'd Proud of the charge of the celestial boy.
|
|
into a Mare His daughter too, whom on the sandy shore
|
|
The nymph Charicle to the centaur bore,
|
|
With hair dishevel'd on her shoulders, came
|
|
To see the child, Ocyrrhoe was her name;
|
|
She knew her father's arts, and could rehearse
|
|
The depths of prophecy in sounding verse.
|
|
Once, as the sacred infant she survey'd,
|
|
The God was kindled in the raving maid,
|
|
And thus she utter'd her prophetick tale:
|
|
"Hail, great physician of the world, all-hail;
|
|
Hail, mighty infant, who in years to come
|
|
Shalt heal the nations, and defraud the tomb;
|
|
Swift be thy growth! thy triumphs unconfin'd!
|
|
Make kingdoms thicker, and increase mankind.
|
|
Thy daring art shall animate the dead,
|
|
And draw the thunder on thy guilty head:
|
|
Then shalt thou dye, but from the dark abode
|
|
Rise up victorious, and be twice a God.
|
|
And thou, my sire, not destin'd by thy birth
|
|
To turn to dust, and mix with common earth,
|
|
How wilt thou toss, and rave, and long to dye,
|
|
And quit thy claim to immortality;
|
|
When thou shalt feel, enrag'd with inward pains,
|
|
The Hydra's venom rankling in thy veins?
|
|
The Gods, in pity, shall contract thy date,
|
|
And give thee over to the pow'r of Fate."
|
|
Thus entring into destiny, the maid
|
|
The secrets of offended Jove betray'd:
|
|
More had she still to say; but now appears
|
|
Oppress'd with sobs and sighs, and drown'd in
|
|
tears.
|
|
"My voice," says she, "is gone, my language fails;
|
|
Through ev'ry limb my kindred shape prevails:
|
|
Why did the God this fatal gift impart,
|
|
And with prophetick raptures swell my heart!
|
|
What new desires are these? I long to pace
|
|
O'er flow'ry meadows, and to feed on grass;
|
|
I hasten to a brute, a maid no more;
|
|
But why, alas! am I transform'd all o'er?
|
|
My sire does half a human shape retain,
|
|
And in his upper parts preserve the man."
|
|
Her tongue no more distinct complaints affords,
|
|
But in shrill accents and mis-shapen words
|
|
Pours forth such hideous wailings, as declare
|
|
The human form confounded in the mare:
|
|
'Till by degrees accomplish'd in the beast,
|
|
She neigh'd outright, and all the steed exprest.
|
|
Her stooping body on her hands is born,
|
|
Her hands are turn'd to hoofs, and shod in horn,
|
|
Her yellow tresses ruffle in a mane,
|
|
And in a flowing tail she frisks her train,
|
|
The mare was finish'd in her voice and look,
|
|
And a new name from the new figure took.
|
|
The Sore wept the centuar, and to Phoebus pray'd;
|
|
Transformation But how could Phoebus give the centaur aid?
|
|
of Battus to a Degraded of his pow'r by angry Jove,
|
|
Touch stone In Elis then a herd of beeves he drove;
|
|
And wielded in his hand a staff of oak,
|
|
And o'er his shoulders threw the shepherd's cloak;
|
|
On sev'n compacted reeds he us'd to play,
|
|
And on his rural pipe to waste the day.
|
|
As once attentive to his pipe he play'd,
|
|
The crafty Hermes from the God convey'd
|
|
A drove, that sep'rate from their fellows stray'd.
|
|
The theft an old insidious peasant view'd
|
|
(They call'd him Battus in the neighbourhood),
|
|
Hir'd by a vealthy Pylian prince to feed
|
|
His fav'rite mares, and watch the gen'rous breed.
|
|
The thievish God suspected him, and took
|
|
The hind aside, and thus in whispers spoke:
|
|
"Discover not the theft, whoe'er thou be,
|
|
And take that milk-white heifer for thy fee."
|
|
"Go, stranger," cries the clown, "securely on,
|
|
That stone shall sooner tell," and show'd a stone.
|
|
The God withdrew, but strait return'd again,
|
|
In speech and habit like a country swain;
|
|
And cries out, "Neighbour, hast thou seen a stray
|
|
Of bullocks and of heifers pass this way?
|
|
In the recov'ry of my cattle join,
|
|
A bullock and a heifer shall be thine."
|
|
The peasant quick replies, "You'll find 'em there
|
|
In yon dark vale"; and in the vale they were.
|
|
The double bribe had his false heart beguil'd:
|
|
The God, successful in the tryal, smil'd;
|
|
"And dost thou thus betray my self to me?
|
|
Me to my self dost thou betray?" says he:
|
|
Then to a Touch stone turns the faithless spy;
|
|
And in his name records his infamy.
|
|
The Story of This done, the God flew up on high, and pass'd
|
|
Aglauros, O'er lofty Athens, by Minerva grac'd,
|
|
transform'd And wide Munichia, whilst his eyes survey
|
|
into a Statue All the vast region that beneath him lay.
|
|
'Twas now the feast, when each Athenian maid
|
|
Her yearly homage to Minerva paid;
|
|
In canisters, with garlands cover'd o'er,
|
|
High on their heads, their mystick gifts they bore:
|
|
And now, returning in a solemn train,
|
|
The troop of shining virgins fill'd the plain.
|
|
The God well pleas'd beheld the pompous show,
|
|
And saw the bright procession pass below;
|
|
Then veer'd about, and took a wheeling flight,
|
|
And hover'd o'er them: as the spreading kite,
|
|
That smells the slaughter'd victim from on high,
|
|
Flies at a distance, if the priests are nigh,
|
|
And sails around, and keeps it in her eye:
|
|
So kept the God the virgin quire in view,
|
|
And in slow winding circles round them flew.
|
|
As Lucifer excells the meanest star,
|
|
Or, as the full-orb'd Phoebe, Lucifer;
|
|
So much did Herse all the rest outvy,
|
|
And gave a grace to the solemnity.
|
|
Hermes was fir'd, as in the clouds he hung:
|
|
So the cold bullet, that with fury slung
|
|
From Balearick engines mounts on high,
|
|
Glows in the whirl, and burns along the sky.
|
|
At length he pitch'd upon the ground, and show'd
|
|
The form divine, the features of a God.
|
|
He knew their vertue o'er a female heart,
|
|
And yet he strives to better them by art.
|
|
He hangs his mantle loose, and sets to show
|
|
The golden edging on the seam below;
|
|
Adjusts his flowing curls, and in his hand
|
|
Waves, with an air, the sleep-procuring wand;
|
|
The glitt'ring sandals to his feet applies,
|
|
And to each heel the well-trim'd pinion ties.
|
|
His ornaments with nicest art display'd,
|
|
He seeks th' apartment of the royal maid.
|
|
The roof was all with polish'd iv'ry lin'd,
|
|
That richly mix'd, in clouds of tortoise shin'd.
|
|
Three rooms, contiguous, in a range were plac'd,
|
|
The midmost by the beauteous Herse grac'd;
|
|
Her virgin sisters lodg'd on either side.
|
|
Aglauros first th' approaching God descry'd,
|
|
And, as he cross'd her chamber, ask'd his name,
|
|
And what his business was, and whence he came.
|
|
"I come," reply'd the God, "from Heav'n, to woo
|
|
Your sister, and to make an aunt of you;
|
|
I am the son and messenger of Jove;
|
|
My name is Mercury, my bus'ness love;
|
|
Do you, kind damsel, take a lover's part,
|
|
And gain admittance to your sister's heart."
|
|
She star'd him in the face with looks amaz'd,
|
|
As when she on Minerva's secret gaz'd,
|
|
And asks a mighty treasure for her hire;
|
|
And, 'till he brings it, makes the God retire.
|
|
Minerva griev'd to see the nymph succeed;
|
|
And now remembring the late impious deed,
|
|
When, disobedient to her strict command,
|
|
She touch'd the chest with an unhallow'd hand;
|
|
In big-swoln sighs her inward rage express'd,
|
|
That heav'd the rising Aegis on her breast;
|
|
Then sought out Envy in her dark abode,
|
|
Defil'd with ropy gore and clots of blood:
|
|
Shut from the winds, and from the wholesome skies,
|
|
In a deep vale the gloomy dungeon lies,
|
|
Dismal and cold, where not a beam of light
|
|
Invades the winter, or disturbs the night.
|
|
Directly to the cave her course she steer'd;
|
|
Against the gates her martial lance she rear'd;
|
|
The gates flew open, and the fiend appear'd.
|
|
A pois'nous morsel in her teeth she chew'd,
|
|
And gorg'd the flesh of vipers for her food.
|
|
Minerva loathing turn'd away her eye;
|
|
The hideous monster, rising heavily,
|
|
Came stalking forward with a sullen pace,
|
|
And left her mangled offals on the place.
|
|
Soon as she saw the goddess gay and bright,
|
|
She fetch'd a groan at such a chearful sight.
|
|
Livid and meagre were her looks, her eye
|
|
In foul distorted glances turn'd awry;
|
|
A hoard of gall her inward parts possess'd,
|
|
And spread a greenness o'er her canker'd breast;
|
|
Her teeth were brown with rust, and from her
|
|
tongue,
|
|
In dangling drops, the stringy poison hung.
|
|
She never smiles but when the wretched weep,
|
|
Nor lulls her malice with a moment's sleep,
|
|
Restless in spite: while watchful to destroy,
|
|
She pines and sickens at another's joy;
|
|
Foe to her self, distressing and distrest,
|
|
She bears her own tormentor in her breast.
|
|
The Goddess gave (for she abhorr'd her sight)
|
|
A short command: "To Athens speed thy flight;
|
|
On curst Aglauros try thy utmost art,
|
|
And fix thy rankest venoms in her heart."
|
|
This said, her spear she push'd against the ground,
|
|
And mounting from it with an active bound,
|
|
Flew off to Heav'n: the hag with eyes askew
|
|
Look'd up, and mutter'd curses as she flew;
|
|
For sore she fretted, and began to grieve
|
|
At the success which she her self must give.
|
|
Then takes her staff, hung round with wreaths of
|
|
thorn,
|
|
And sails along, in a black whirlwind born,
|
|
O'er fields and flow'ry meadows: where she steers
|
|
Her baneful course, a mighty blast appears,
|
|
Mildews and blights; the meadows are defac'd,
|
|
The fields, the flow'rs, and the whole years laid
|
|
waste:
|
|
On mortals next, and peopled towns she falls,
|
|
And breathes a burning plague among their walls.
|
|
When Athens she beheld, for arts renown'd,
|
|
With peace made happy, and with plenty crown'd,
|
|
Scarce could the hideous fiend from tears forbear,
|
|
To find out nothing that deserv'd a tear.
|
|
Th' apartment now she enter'd, where at rest
|
|
Aglauros lay, with gentle sleep opprest.
|
|
To execute Minerva's dire command,
|
|
She stroak'd the virgin with her canker'd hand,
|
|
Then prickly thorns into her breast convey'd,
|
|
That stung to madness the devoted maid:
|
|
Her subtle venom still improves the smart,
|
|
Frets in the blood, and festers in the heart.
|
|
To make the work more sure, a scene she drew,
|
|
And plac'd before the dreaming virgin's view
|
|
Her sister's marriage, and her glorious fate:
|
|
Th' imaginary bride appears in state;
|
|
The bride-groom with unwonted beauty glows:
|
|
For envy magnifies what-e'er she shows.
|
|
Full of the dream, Aglauros pin'd away
|
|
In tears all night, in darkness all the day;
|
|
Consum'd like ice, that just begins to run,
|
|
When feebly smitten by the distant sun;
|
|
Or like unwholsome weeds, that set on fire
|
|
Are slowly wasted, and in smoke expire.
|
|
Giv'n up to envy (for in ev'ry thought
|
|
The thorns, the venom, and the vision wrought)
|
|
Oft did she call on death, as oft decreed,
|
|
Rather than see her sister's wish succeed,
|
|
To tell her awfull father what had past:
|
|
At length before the door her self she cast;
|
|
And, sitting on the ground with sullen pride,
|
|
A passage to the love-sick God deny'd.
|
|
The God caress'd, and for admission pray'd,
|
|
And sooth'd in softest words th' envenom'd maid.
|
|
In vain he sooth'd: "Begone!" the maid replies,
|
|
"Or here I keep my seat, and never rise."
|
|
"Then keep thy seat for ever," cries the God,
|
|
And touch'd the door, wide op'ning to his rod.
|
|
Fain would she rise, and stop him, but she found
|
|
Her trunk too heavy to forsake the ground;
|
|
Her joynts are all benum'd, her hands are pale,
|
|
And marble now appears in ev'ry nail.
|
|
As when a cancer in the body feeds,
|
|
And gradual death from limb to limb proceeds;
|
|
So does the chilness to each vital parte
|
|
Spread by degrees, and creeps into her heart;
|
|
'Till hard'ning ev'ry where, and speechless grown,
|
|
She sits unmov'd, and freezes to a stone.
|
|
But still her envious hue and sullen mien
|
|
Are in the sedentary figure seen.
|
|
Europa's Rape When now the God his fury had allay'd,
|
|
And taken vengeance of the stubborn maid,
|
|
From where the bright Athenian turrets rise
|
|
He mounts aloft, and re-ascends the skies.
|
|
Jove saw him enter the sublime abodes,
|
|
And, as he mix'd among the crowd of Gods,
|
|
Beckon'd him out, and drew him from the rest,
|
|
And in soft whispers thus his will exprest.
|
|
"My trusty Hermes, by whose ready aid
|
|
Thy sire's commands are through the world convey'd.
|
|
Resume thy wings, exert their utmost force,
|
|
And to the walls of Sidon speed thy course;
|
|
There find a herd of heifers wand'ring o'er
|
|
The neighb'ring hill, and drive 'em to the shore."
|
|
Thus spoke the God, concealing his intent.
|
|
The trusty Hermes, on his message went,
|
|
And found the herd of heifers wand'ring o'er
|
|
A neighb'ring hill, and drove 'em to the shore;
|
|
Where the king's daughter, with a lovely train
|
|
Of fellow-nymphs, was sporting on the plain.
|
|
The dignity of empire laid aside,
|
|
(For love but ill agrees with kingly pride)
|
|
The ruler of the skies, the thund'ring God,
|
|
Who shakes the world's foundations with a nod,
|
|
Among a herd of lowing heifers ran,
|
|
Frisk'd in a bull, and bellow'd o'er the plain.
|
|
Large rowles of fat about his shoulders clung,
|
|
And from his neck the double dewlap hung.
|
|
His skin was whiter than the snow that lies
|
|
Unsully'd by the breath of southern skies;
|
|
Small shining horns on his curl'd forehead stand,
|
|
As turn'd and polish'd by the work-man's hand;
|
|
His eye-balls rowl'd, not formidably bright,
|
|
But gaz'd and languish'd with a gentle light.
|
|
His ev'ry look was peaceful, and exprest
|
|
The softness of the lover in the beast.
|
|
Agenor's royal daughter, as she plaid
|
|
Among the fields, the milk-white bull survey'd,
|
|
And view'd his spotless body with delight,
|
|
And at a distance kept him in her sight.
|
|
At length she pluck'd the rising flow'rs, and fed
|
|
The gentle beast, and fondly stroak'd his head.
|
|
He stood well-pleas'd to touch the charming fair,
|
|
But hardly could confine his pleasure there.
|
|
And now he wantons o'er the neighb'ring strand,
|
|
Now rowls his body on the yellow sand;
|
|
And, now perceiving all her fears decay'd,
|
|
Comes tossing forward to the royal maid;
|
|
Gives her his breast to stroke, and downward turns
|
|
His grizly brow, and gently stoops his horns.
|
|
In flow'ry wreaths the royal virgin drest
|
|
His bending horns, and kindly clapt his breast.
|
|
'Till now grown wanton and devoid of fear,
|
|
Not knowing that she prest the Thunderer,
|
|
She plac'd her self upon his back, and rode
|
|
O'er fields and meadows, seated on the God.
|
|
He gently march'd along, and by degrees
|
|
Left the dry meadow, and approach'd the seas;
|
|
Where now he dips his hoofs and wets his thighs,
|
|
Now plunges in, and carries off the prize.
|
|
The frighted nymph looks backward on the shoar,
|
|
And hears the tumbling billows round her roar;
|
|
But still she holds him fast: one hand is born
|
|
Upon his back; the other grasps a horn:
|
|
Her train of ruffling garments flies behind,
|
|
Swells in the air, and hovers in the wind.
|
|
Through storms and tempests he the virgin bore,
|
|
And lands her safe on the Dictean shore;
|
|
Where now, in his divinest form array'd,
|
|
In his true shape he captivates the maid;
|
|
Who gazes on him, and with wond'ring eyes
|
|
Beholds the new majestick figure rise,
|
|
His glowing features, and celestial light,
|
|
And all the God discover'd to her sight.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Second Book.
|
|
BOOK THE THIRD
|
|
|
|
WHEN now Agenor had his daughter lost,
|
|
He sent his son to search on ev'ry coast;
|
|
And sternly bid him to his arms restore
|
|
The darling maid, or see his face no more,
|
|
But live an exile in a foreign clime;
|
|
Thus was the father pious to a crime.
|
|
The Story of The restless youth search'd all the world around;
|
|
of Cadmus But how can Jove in his amours be found?
|
|
When, tir'd at length with unsuccessful toil,
|
|
To shun his angry sire and native soil,
|
|
He goes a suppliant to the Delphick dome;
|
|
There asks the God what new appointed home
|
|
Should end his wand'rings, and his toils relieve.
|
|
The Delphick oracles this answer give.
|
|
"Behold among the fields a lonely cow,
|
|
Unworn with yokes, unbroken to the plow;
|
|
Mark well the place where first she lays her down,
|
|
There measure out thy walls, and build thy town,
|
|
And from thy guide Boeotia call the land,
|
|
In which the destin'd walls and town shall stand."
|
|
No sooner had he left the dark abode,
|
|
Big with the promise of the Delphick God,
|
|
When in the fields the fatal cow he view'd,
|
|
Nor gall'd with yokes, nor worn with servitude:
|
|
Her gently at a distance he pursu'd;
|
|
And as he walk'd aloof, in silence pray'd
|
|
To the great Pow'r whose counsels he obey'd.
|
|
Her way thro' flow'ry Panope she took,
|
|
And now, Cephisus, cross'd thy silver brook;
|
|
When to the Heav'ns her spacious front she rais'd,
|
|
And bellow'd thrice, then backward turning gaz'd
|
|
On those behind, 'till on the destin'd place
|
|
She stoop'd, and couch'd amid the rising grass.
|
|
Cadmus salutes the soil, and gladly hails
|
|
The new-found mountains, and the nameless vales,
|
|
And thanks the Gods, and turns about his eye
|
|
To see his new dominions round him lye;
|
|
Then sends his servants to a neighb'ring grove
|
|
For living streams, a sacrifice to Jove.
|
|
O'er the wide plain there rose a shady wood
|
|
Of aged trees; in its dark bosom stood
|
|
A bushy thicket, pathless and unworn,
|
|
O'er-run with brambles, and perplex'd with thorn:
|
|
Amidst the brake a hollow den was found,
|
|
With rocks and shelving arches vaulted round.
|
|
Deep in the dreary den, conceal'd from day,
|
|
Sacred to Mars, a mighty dragon lay,
|
|
Bloated with poison to a monstrous size;
|
|
Fire broke in flashes when he glanc'd his eyes:
|
|
His tow'ring crest was glorious to behold,
|
|
His shoulders and his sides were scal'd with gold;
|
|
Three tongues he brandish'd when he charg'd his
|
|
foes;
|
|
His teeth stood jaggy in three dreadful rowes.
|
|
The Tyrians in the den for water sought,
|
|
And with their urns explor'd the hollow vault:
|
|
From side to side their empty urns rebound,
|
|
And rowse the sleeping serpent with the sound.
|
|
Strait he bestirs him, and is seen to rise;
|
|
And now with dreadful hissings fills the skies,
|
|
And darts his forky tongues, and rowles his glaring
|
|
eyes.
|
|
The Tyrians drop their vessels in the fright,
|
|
All pale and trembling at the hideous sight.
|
|
Spire above spire uprear'd in air he stood,
|
|
And gazing round him over-look'd the wood:
|
|
Then floating on the ground in circles rowl'd;
|
|
Then leap'd upon them in a mighty fold.
|
|
Of such a bulk, and such a monstrous size
|
|
The serpent in the polar circle lyes,
|
|
That stretches over half the northern skies.
|
|
In vain the Tyrians on their arms rely,
|
|
In vain attempt to fight, in vain to fly:
|
|
All their endeavours and their hopes are vain;
|
|
Some die entangled in the winding train;
|
|
Some are devour'd, or feel a loathsom death,
|
|
Swoln up with blasts of pestilential breath.
|
|
And now the scorching sun was mounted high,
|
|
In all its lustre, to the noon-day sky;
|
|
When, anxious for his friends, and fill'd with
|
|
cares,
|
|
To search the woods th' impatient chief prepares.
|
|
A lion's hide around his loins he wore,
|
|
The well poiz'd javelin to the field he bore,
|
|
Inur'd to blood; the far-destroying dart;
|
|
And, the best weapon, an undaunted heart.
|
|
Soon as the youth approach'd the fatal place,
|
|
He saw his servants breathless on the grass;
|
|
The scaly foe amid their corps he view'd,
|
|
Basking at ease, and feasting in their blood.
|
|
"Such friends," he cries, "deserv'd a longer date;
|
|
But Cadmus will revenge or share their fate."
|
|
Then heav'd a stone, and rising to the throw,
|
|
He sent it in a whirlwind at the foe:
|
|
A tow'r, assaulted by so rude a stroke,
|
|
With all its lofty battlements had shook;
|
|
But nothing here th' unwieldy rock avails,
|
|
Rebounding harmless from the plaited scales,
|
|
That, firmly join'd, preserv'd him from a wound,
|
|
With native armour crusted all around.
|
|
With more success, the dart unerring flew,
|
|
Which at his back the raging warriour threw;
|
|
Amid the plaited scales it took its course,
|
|
And in the spinal marrow spent its force.
|
|
The monster hiss'd aloud, and rag'd in vain,
|
|
And writh'd his body to and fro with pain;
|
|
He bit the dart, and wrench'd the wood away;
|
|
The point still buried in the marrow lay.
|
|
And now his rage, increasing with his pain,
|
|
Reddens his eyes, and beats in ev'ry vein;
|
|
Churn'd in his teeth the foamy venom rose,
|
|
Whilst from his mouth a blast of vapours flows,
|
|
Such as th' infernal Stygian waters cast.
|
|
The plants around him wither in the blast.
|
|
Now in a maze of rings he lies enrowl'd,
|
|
Now all unravel'd, and without a fold;
|
|
Now, like a torrent, with a mighty force
|
|
Bears down the forest in his boist'rous course.
|
|
Cadmus gave back, and on the lion's spoil
|
|
Sustain'd the shock, then forc'd him to recoil;
|
|
The pointed jav'lin warded off his rage:
|
|
Mad with his pains, and furious to engage,
|
|
The serpent champs the steel, and bites the spear,
|
|
'Till blood and venom all the point besmear.
|
|
But still the hurt he yet receiv'd was slight;
|
|
For, whilst the champion with redoubled might
|
|
Strikes home the jav'lin, his retiring foe
|
|
Shrinks from the wound, and disappoints the blow.
|
|
The dauntless heroe still pursues his stroke,
|
|
And presses forward, 'till a knotty oak
|
|
Retards his foe, and stops him in the rear;
|
|
Full in his throat he plung'd the fatal spear,
|
|
That in th' extended neck a passage found,
|
|
And pierc'd the solid timber through the wound.
|
|
Fix'd to the reeling trunk, with many a stroke
|
|
Of his huge tail he lash'd the sturdy oak;
|
|
'Till spent with toil, and lab'ring hard for
|
|
breath,
|
|
He now lay twisting in the pangs of death.
|
|
Cadmus beheld him wallow in a flood
|
|
Of swimming poison, intermix'd with blood;
|
|
When suddenly a speech was heard from high
|
|
(The speech was heard, nor was the speaker nigh),
|
|
"Why dost thou thus with secret pleasure see,
|
|
Insulting man! what thou thy self shalt be?"
|
|
Astonish'd at the voice, he stood amaz'd,
|
|
And all around with inward horror gaz'd:
|
|
When Pallas swift descending from the skies,
|
|
Pallas, the guardian of the bold and wise,
|
|
Bids him plow up the field, and scatter round
|
|
The dragon's teeth o'er all the furrow'd ground;
|
|
Then tells the youth how to his wond'ring eyes
|
|
Embattled armies from the field should rise.
|
|
He sows the teeth at Pallas's command,
|
|
And flings the future people from his hand.
|
|
The clods grow warm, and crumble where he sows;
|
|
And now the pointed spears advance in rows;
|
|
Now nodding plumes appear, and shining crests,
|
|
Now the broad shoulders and the rising breasts;
|
|
O'er all the field the breathing harvest swarms,
|
|
A growing host, a crop of men and arms.
|
|
So through the parting stage a figure rears
|
|
Its body up, and limb by limb appears
|
|
By just degrees; 'till all the man arise,
|
|
And in his full proportion strikes the eyes.
|
|
Cadmus surpriz'd, and startled at the sight
|
|
Of his new foes, prepar'd himself for fight:
|
|
When one cry'd out, "Forbear, fond man, forbear
|
|
To mingle in a blind promiscuous war."
|
|
This said, he struck his brother to the ground,
|
|
Himself expiring by another's wound;
|
|
Nor did the third his conquest long survive,
|
|
Dying ere scarce he had begun to live.
|
|
The dire example ran through all the field,
|
|
'Till heaps of brothers were by brothers kill'd;
|
|
The furrows swam in blood: and only five
|
|
Of all the vast increase were left alive.
|
|
Echion one, at Pallas's command,
|
|
Let fall the guiltless weapon from his hand,
|
|
And with the rest a peaceful treaty makes,
|
|
Whom Cadmus as his friends and partners takes;
|
|
So founds a city on the promis'd earth,
|
|
And gives his new Boeotian empire birth.
|
|
Here Cadmus reign'd; and now one would have
|
|
guess'd
|
|
The royal founder in his exile blest:
|
|
Long did he live within his new abodes,
|
|
Ally'd by marriage to the deathless Gods;
|
|
And, in a fruitful wife's embraces old,
|
|
A long increase of children's children told:
|
|
But no frail man, however great or high,
|
|
Can be concluded blest before he die.
|
|
Actaeon was the first of all his race,
|
|
Who griev'd his grandsire in his borrow'd face;
|
|
Condemn'd by stern Diana to bemoan
|
|
The branching horns, and visage not his own;
|
|
To shun his once lov'd dogs, to bound away,
|
|
And from their huntsman to become their prey,
|
|
And yet consider why the change was wrought,
|
|
You'll find it his misfortune, not his fault;
|
|
Or, if a fault, it was the fault of chance:
|
|
For how can guilt proceed from ignorance?
|
|
The In a fair chace a shady mountain stood,
|
|
Transformation Well stor'd with game, and mark'd with trails of
|
|
of Actaeon blood;
|
|
into a Stag Here did the huntsmen, 'till the heat of day,
|
|
Pursue the stag, and load themselves with rey:
|
|
When thus Actaeon calling to the rest:
|
|
"My friends," said he, "our sport is at the best,
|
|
The sun is high advanc'd, and downward sheds
|
|
His burning beams directly on our heads;
|
|
Then by consent abstain from further spoils,
|
|
Call off the dogs, and gather up the toils,
|
|
And ere to-morrow's sun begins his race,
|
|
Take the cool morning to renew the chace."
|
|
They all consent, and in a chearful train
|
|
The jolly huntsmen, loaden with the slain,
|
|
Return in triumph from the sultry plain.
|
|
Down in a vale with pine and cypress clad,
|
|
Refresh'd with gentle winds, and brown with shade,
|
|
The chaste Diana's private haunt, there stood
|
|
Full in the centre of the darksome wood
|
|
A spacious grotto, all around o'er-grown
|
|
With hoary moss, and arch'd with pumice-stone.
|
|
From out its rocky clefts the waters flow,
|
|
And trickling swell into a lake below.
|
|
Nature had ev'ry where so plaid her part,
|
|
That ev'ry where she seem'd to vie with art.
|
|
Here the bright Goddess, toil'd and chaf'd with
|
|
heat,
|
|
Was wont to bathe her in the cool retreat.
|
|
Here did she now with all her train resort,
|
|
Panting with heat, and breathless from the sport;
|
|
Her armour-bearer laid her bow aside,
|
|
Some loos'd her sandals, some her veil unty'd;
|
|
Each busy nymph her proper part undrest;
|
|
While Crocale, more handy than the rest,
|
|
Gather'd her flowing hair, and in a noose
|
|
Bound it together, whilst her own hung loose.
|
|
Five of the more ignoble sort by turns
|
|
Fetch up the water, and unlade the urns.
|
|
Now all undrest the shining Goddess stood,
|
|
When young Actaeon, wilder'd in the wood,
|
|
To the cool grott by his hard fate betray'd,
|
|
The fountains fill'd with naked nymphs survey'd.
|
|
The frighted virgins shriek'd at the surprize
|
|
(The forest echo'd with their piercing cries).
|
|
Then in a huddle round their Goddess prest:
|
|
She, proudly eminent above the rest,
|
|
With blushes glow'd; such blushes as adorn
|
|
The ruddy welkin, or the purple morn;
|
|
And tho' the crowding nymphs her body hide,
|
|
Half backward shrunk, and view'd him from a side.
|
|
Surpriz'd, at first she would have snatch'd her
|
|
bow,
|
|
But sees the circling waters round her flow;
|
|
These in the hollow of her hand she took,
|
|
And dash'd 'em in his face, while thus she spoke:
|
|
"Tell, if thou can'st, the wond'rous sight
|
|
disclos'd,
|
|
A Goddess naked to thy view expos'd."
|
|
This said, the man begun to disappear
|
|
By slow degrees, and ended in a deer.
|
|
A rising horn on either brow he wears,
|
|
And stretches out his neck, and pricks his ears;
|
|
Rough is his skin, with sudden hairs o'er-grown,
|
|
His bosom pants with fears before unknown:
|
|
Transform'd at length, he flies away in haste,
|
|
And wonders why he flies away so fast.
|
|
But as by chance, within a neighb'ring brook,
|
|
He saw his branching horns and alter'd look.
|
|
Wretched Actaeon! in a doleful tone
|
|
He try'd to speak, but only gave a groan;
|
|
And as he wept, within the watry glass
|
|
He saw the big round drops, with silent pace,
|
|
Run trickling down a savage hairy face.
|
|
What should he do? Or seek his old abodes,
|
|
Or herd among the deer, and sculk in woods!
|
|
Here shame dissuades him, there his fear prevails,
|
|
And each by turns his aking heart assails.
|
|
As he thus ponders, he behind him spies
|
|
His op'ning hounds, and now he hears their cries:
|
|
A gen'rous pack, or to maintain the chace,
|
|
Or snuff the vapour from the scented grass.
|
|
He bounded off with fear, and swiftly ran
|
|
O'er craggy mountains, and the flow'ry plain;
|
|
Through brakes and thickets forc'd his way, and
|
|
flew
|
|
Through many a ring, where once he did pursue.
|
|
In vain he oft endeavour'd to proclaim
|
|
His new misfortune, and to tell his name;
|
|
Nor voice nor words the brutal tongue supplies;
|
|
From shouting men, and horns, and dogs he flies,
|
|
Deafen'd and stunn'd with their promiscuous cries.
|
|
When now the fleetest of the pack, that prest
|
|
Close at his heels, and sprung before the rest,
|
|
Had fasten'd on him, straight another pair,
|
|
Hung on his wounded haunch, and held him there,
|
|
'Till all the pack came up, and ev'ry hound
|
|
Tore the sad huntsman grov'ling on the ground,
|
|
Who now appear'd but one continu'd wound.
|
|
With dropping tears his bitter fate he moans,
|
|
And fills the mountain with his dying groans.
|
|
His servants with a piteous look he spies,
|
|
And turns about his supplicating eyes.
|
|
His servants, ignorant of what had chanc'd,
|
|
With eager haste and joyful shouts advanc'd,
|
|
And call'd their lord Actaeon to the game.
|
|
He shook his head in answer to the name;
|
|
He heard, but wish'd he had indeed been gone,
|
|
Or only to have stood a looker-on.
|
|
But to his grief he finds himself too near,
|
|
And feels his rav'nous dogs with fury tear
|
|
Their wretched master panting in a deer.
|
|
The Birth of Actaeon's suff'rings, and Diana's rage,
|
|
Bacchus Did all the thoughts of men and Gods engage;
|
|
Some call'd the evils which Diana wrought,
|
|
Too great, and disproportion'd to the fault:
|
|
Others again, esteem'd Actaeon's woes
|
|
Fit for a virgin Goddess to impose.
|
|
The hearers into diff'rent parts divide,
|
|
And reasons are produc'd on either side.
|
|
Juno alone, of all that heard the news,
|
|
Nor would condemn the Goddess, nor excuse:
|
|
She heeded not the justice of the deed,
|
|
But joy'd to see the race of Cadmus bleed;
|
|
For still she kept Europa in her mind,
|
|
And, for her sake, detested all her kind.
|
|
Besides, to aggravate her hate, she heard
|
|
How Semele, to Jove's embrace preferr'd,
|
|
Was now grown big with an immortal load,
|
|
And carry'd in her womb a future God.
|
|
Thus terribly incens'd, the Goddess broke
|
|
To sudden fury, and abruptly spoke.
|
|
"Are my reproaches of so small a force?
|
|
'Tis time I then pursue another course:
|
|
It is decreed the guilty wretch shall die,
|
|
If I'm indeed the mistress of the sky,
|
|
If rightly styl'd among the Pow'rs above
|
|
The wife and sister of the thund'ring Jove
|
|
(And none can sure a sister's right deny);
|
|
It is decreed the guilty wretch shall die.
|
|
She boasts an honour I can hardly claim,
|
|
Pregnant she rises to a mother's name;
|
|
While proud and vain she triumphs in her Jove,
|
|
And shows the glorious tokens of his love:
|
|
But if I'm still the mistress of the skies,
|
|
By her own lover the fond beauty dies."
|
|
This said, descending in a yellow cloud,
|
|
Before the gates of Semele she stood.
|
|
Old Beroe's decrepit shape she wears,
|
|
Her wrinkled visage, and her hoary hairs;
|
|
Whilst in her trembling gait she totters on,
|
|
And learns to tattle in the nurse's tone.
|
|
The Goddess, thus disguis'd in age, beguil'd
|
|
With pleasing stories her false foster-child.
|
|
Much did she talk of love, and when she came
|
|
To mention to the nymph her lover's name,
|
|
Fetching a sigh, and holding down her head,
|
|
"'Tis well," says she, "if all be true that's said.
|
|
But trust me, child, I'm much inclin'd to fear
|
|
Some counterfeit in this your Jupiter:
|
|
Many an honest well-designing maid
|
|
Has been by these pretended Gods betray'd,
|
|
But if he be indeed the thund'ring Jove,
|
|
Bid him, when next he courts the rites of love,
|
|
Descend triumphant from th' etherial sky,
|
|
In all the pomp of his divinity,
|
|
Encompass'd round by those celestial charms,
|
|
With which he fills th' immortal Juno's arms."
|
|
Th' unwary nymph, ensnar'd with what she said,
|
|
Desir'd of Jove, when next he sought her bed,
|
|
To grant a certain gift which she would chuse;
|
|
"Fear not," reply'd the God, "that I'll refuse
|
|
Whate'er you ask: may Styx confirm my voice,
|
|
Chuse what you will, and you shall have your
|
|
choice."
|
|
"Then," says the nymph, "when next you seek my
|
|
arms,
|
|
May you descend in those celestial charms,
|
|
With which your Juno's bosom you enflame,
|
|
And fill with transport Heav'n's immortal dame."
|
|
The God surpriz'd would fain have stopp'd her
|
|
voice,
|
|
But he had sworn, and she had made her choice.
|
|
To keep his promise he ascends, and shrowds
|
|
His awful brow in whirl-winds and in clouds;
|
|
Whilst all around, in terrible array,
|
|
His thunders rattle, and his light'nings play.
|
|
And yet, the dazling lustre to abate,
|
|
He set not out in all his pomp and state,
|
|
Clad in the mildest light'ning of the skies,
|
|
And arm'd with thunder of the smallest size:
|
|
Not those huge bolts, by which the giants slain
|
|
Lay overthrown on the Phlegrean plain.
|
|
'Twas of a lesser mould, and lighter weight;
|
|
They call it thunder of a second-rate,
|
|
For the rough Cyclops, who by Jove's command
|
|
Temper'd the bolt, and turn'd it to his hand,
|
|
Work'd up less flame and fury in its make,
|
|
And quench'd it sooner in the standing lake.
|
|
Thus dreadfully adorn'd, with horror bright,
|
|
Th' illustrious God, descending from his height,
|
|
Came rushing on her in a storm of light.
|
|
The mortal dame, too feeble to engage
|
|
The lightning's flashes, and the thunder's rage,
|
|
Consum'd amidst the glories she desir'd,
|
|
And in the terrible embrace expir'd.
|
|
But, to preserve his offspring from the tomb,
|
|
Jove took him smoaking from the blasted womb:
|
|
And, if on ancient tales we may rely,
|
|
Inclos'd th' abortive infant in his thigh.
|
|
Here when the babe had all his time fulfill'd,
|
|
Ino first took him for her foster-child;
|
|
Then the Niseans, in their dark abode,
|
|
Nurs'd secretly with milk the thriving God.
|
|
The 'Twas now, while these transactions past on
|
|
Transformation Earth,
|
|
of Tiresias And Bacchus thus procur'd a second birth,
|
|
When Jove, dispos'd to lay aside the weight
|
|
Of publick empire and the cares of state,
|
|
As to his queen in nectar bowls he quaff'd,
|
|
"In troth," says he, and as he spoke he laugh'd,
|
|
"The sense of pleasure in the male is far
|
|
More dull and dead, than what you females share."
|
|
Juno the truth of what was said deny'd;
|
|
Tiresias therefore must the cause decide,
|
|
For he the pleasure of each sex had try'd.
|
|
It happen'd once, within a shady wood,
|
|
Two twisted snakes he in conjunction view'd,
|
|
When with his staff their slimy folds he broke,
|
|
And lost his manhood at the fatal stroke.
|
|
But, after seven revolving years, he view'd
|
|
The self-same serpents in the self-same wood:
|
|
"And if," says he, "such virtue in you lye,
|
|
That he who dares your slimy folds untie
|
|
Must change his kind, a second stroke I'll try."
|
|
Again he struck the snakes, and stood again
|
|
New-sex'd, and strait recover'd into man.
|
|
Him therefore both the deities create
|
|
The sov'raign umpire, in their grand debate;
|
|
And he declar'd for Jove: when Juno fir'd,
|
|
More than so trivial an affair requir'd,
|
|
Depriv'd him, in her fury, of his sight,
|
|
And left him groping round in sudden night.
|
|
But Jove (for so it is in Heav'n decreed,
|
|
That no one God repeal another's deed)
|
|
Irradiates all his soul with inward light,
|
|
And with the prophet's art relieves the want of
|
|
sight.
|
|
The Fam'd far and near for knowing things to come,
|
|
Transformation From him th' enquiring nations sought their doom;
|
|
of Echo The fair Liriope his answers try'd,
|
|
And first th' unerring prophet justify'd.
|
|
This nymph the God Cephisus had abus'd,
|
|
With all his winding waters circumfus'd,
|
|
And on the Nereid got a lovely boy,
|
|
Whom the soft maids ev'n then beheld with joy.
|
|
The tender dame, sollicitous to know
|
|
Whether her child should reach old age or no,
|
|
Consults the sage Tiresias, who replies,
|
|
"If e'er he knows himself he surely dies."
|
|
Long liv'd the dubious mother in suspence,
|
|
'Till time unriddled all the prophet's sense.
|
|
Narcissus now his sixteenth year began,
|
|
Just turn'd of boy, and on the verge of man;
|
|
Many a friend the blooming youth caress'd,
|
|
Many a love-sick maid her flame confess'd:
|
|
Such was his pride, in vain the friend caress'd,
|
|
The love-sick maid in vain her flame confess'd.
|
|
Once, in the woods, as he pursu'd the chace,
|
|
The babbling Echo had descry'd his face;
|
|
She, who in others' words her silence breaks,
|
|
Nor speaks her self but when another speaks.
|
|
Echo was then a maid, of speech bereft,
|
|
Of wonted speech; for tho' her voice was left,
|
|
Juno a curse did on her tongue impose,
|
|
To sport with ev'ry sentence in the close.
|
|
Full often when the Goddess might have caught
|
|
Jove and her rivals in the very fault,
|
|
This nymph with subtle stories would delay
|
|
Her coming, 'till the lovers slip'd away.
|
|
The Goddess found out the deceit in time,
|
|
And then she cry'd, "That tongue, for this thy
|
|
crime,
|
|
Which could so many subtle tales produce,
|
|
Shall be hereafter but of little use."
|
|
Hence 'tis she prattles in a fainter tone,
|
|
With mimick sounds, and accents not her own.
|
|
This love-sick virgin, over-joy'd to find
|
|
The boy alone, still follow'd him behind:
|
|
When glowing warmly at her near approach,
|
|
As sulphur blazes at the taper's touch,
|
|
She long'd her hidden passion to reveal,
|
|
And tell her pains, but had not words to tell:
|
|
She can't begin, but waits for the rebound,
|
|
To catch his voice, and to return the sound.
|
|
The nymph, when nothing could Narcissus move,
|
|
Still dash'd with blushes for her slighted love,
|
|
Liv'd in the shady covert of the woods,
|
|
In solitary caves and dark abodes;
|
|
Where pining wander'd the rejected fair,
|
|
'Till harrass'd out, and worn away with care,
|
|
The sounding skeleton, of blood bereft,
|
|
Besides her bones and voice had nothing left.
|
|
Her bones are petrify'd, her voice is found
|
|
In vaults, where still it doubles ev'ry sound.
|
|
The Story of Thus did the nymphs in vain caress the boy,
|
|
Narcissus He still was lovely, but he still was coy;
|
|
When one fair virgin of the slighted train
|
|
Thus pray'd the Gods, provok'd by his disdain,
|
|
"Oh may he love like me, and love like me in vain!"
|
|
Rhamnusia pity'd the neglected fair,
|
|
And with just vengeance answer'd to her pray'r.
|
|
There stands a fountain in a darksom wood,
|
|
Nor stain'd with falling leaves nor rising mud;
|
|
Untroubled by the breath of winds it rests,
|
|
Unsully'd by the touch of men or beasts;
|
|
High bow'rs of shady trees above it grow,
|
|
And rising grass and chearful greens below.
|
|
Pleas'd with the form and coolness of the place,
|
|
And over-heated by the morning chace,
|
|
Narcissus on the grassie verdure lyes:
|
|
But whilst within the chrystal fount he tries
|
|
To quench his heat, he feels new heats arise.
|
|
For as his own bright image he survey'd,
|
|
He fell in love with the fantastick shade;
|
|
And o'er the fair resemblance hung unmov'd,
|
|
Nor knew, fond youth! it was himself he lov'd.
|
|
The well-turn'd neck and shoulders he descries,
|
|
The spacious forehead, and the sparkling eyes;
|
|
The hands that Bacchus might not scorn to show,
|
|
And hair that round Apollo's head might flow;
|
|
With all the purple youthfulness of face,
|
|
That gently blushes in the wat'ry glass.
|
|
By his own flames consum'd the lover lyes,
|
|
And gives himself the wound by which he dies.
|
|
To the cold water oft he joins his lips,
|
|
Oft catching at the beauteous shade he dips
|
|
His arms, as often from himself he slips.
|
|
Nor knows he who it is his arms pursue
|
|
With eager clasps, but loves he knows not who.
|
|
What could, fond youth, this helpless passion
|
|
move?
|
|
What kindled in thee this unpity'd love?
|
|
Thy own warm blush within the water glows,
|
|
With thee the colour'd shadow comes and goes,
|
|
Its empty being on thy self relies;
|
|
Step thou aside, and the frail charmer dies.
|
|
Still o'er the fountain's wat'ry gleam he stood,
|
|
Mindless of sleep, and negligent of food;
|
|
Still view'd his face, and languish'd as he view'd.
|
|
At length he rais'd his head, and thus began
|
|
To vent his griefs, and tell the woods his pain.
|
|
"You trees," says he, "and thou surrounding grove,
|
|
Who oft have been the kindly scenes of love,
|
|
Tell me, if e'er within your shades did lye
|
|
A youth so tortur'd, so perplex'd as I?
|
|
I, who before me see the charming fair,
|
|
Whilst there he stands, and yet he stands not
|
|
there:
|
|
In such a maze of love my thoughts are lost:
|
|
And yet no bulwark'd town, nor distant coast,
|
|
Preserves the beauteous youth from being seen,
|
|
No mountains rise, nor oceans flow between.
|
|
A shallow water hinders my embrace;
|
|
And yet the lovely mimick wears a face
|
|
That kindly smiles, and when I bend to join
|
|
My lips to his, he fondly bends to mine.
|
|
Hear, gentle youth, and pity my complaint,
|
|
Come from thy well, thou fair inhabitant.
|
|
My charms an easy conquest have obtain'd
|
|
O'er other hearts, by thee alone disdain'd.
|
|
But why should I despair? I'm sure he burns
|
|
With equal flames, and languishes by turns.
|
|
When-e'er I stoop, he offers at a kiss,
|
|
And when my arms I stretch, he stretches his.
|
|
His eye with pleasure on my face he keeps,
|
|
He smiles my smiles, and when I weep he weeps.
|
|
When e'er I speak, his moving lips appear
|
|
To utter something, which I cannot hear.
|
|
"Ah wretched me! I now begin too late
|
|
To find out all the long-perplex'd deceit;
|
|
It is my self I love, my self I see;
|
|
The gay delusion is a part of me.
|
|
I kindle up the fires by which I burn,
|
|
And my own beauties from the well return.
|
|
Whom should I court? how utter my complaint?
|
|
Enjoyment but produces my restraint,
|
|
And too much plenty makes me die for want.
|
|
How gladly would I from my self remove!
|
|
And at a distance set the thing I love.
|
|
My breast is warm'd with such unusual fire,
|
|
I wish him absent whom I most desire.
|
|
And now I faint with grief; my fate draws nigh;
|
|
In all the pride of blooming youth I die.
|
|
Death will the sorrows of my heart relieve.
|
|
Oh might the visionary youth survive,
|
|
I should with joy my latest breath resign!
|
|
But oh! I see his fate involv'd in mine."
|
|
This said, the weeping youth again return'd
|
|
To the clear fountain, where again he burn'd;
|
|
His tears defac'd the surface of the well,
|
|
With circle after circle, as they fell:
|
|
And now the lovely face but half appears,
|
|
O'er-run with wrinkles, and deform'd with tears.
|
|
"Ah whither," cries Narcissus, "dost thou fly?
|
|
Let me still feed the flame by which I die;
|
|
Let me still see, tho' I'm no further blest."
|
|
Then rends his garment off, and beats his breast:
|
|
His naked bosom redden'd with the blow,
|
|
In such a blush as purple clusters show,
|
|
Ere yet the sun's autumnal heats refine
|
|
Their sprightly juice, and mellow it to wine.
|
|
The glowing beauties of his breast he spies,
|
|
And with a new redoubled passion dies.
|
|
As wax dissolves, as ice begins to run,
|
|
And trickle into drops before the sun;
|
|
So melts the youth, and languishes away,
|
|
His beauty withers, and his limbs decay;
|
|
And none of those attractive charms remain,
|
|
To which the slighted Echo su'd in vain.
|
|
She saw him in his present misery,
|
|
Whom, spight of all her wrongs, she griev'd to see.
|
|
She answer'd sadly to the lover's moan,
|
|
Sigh'd back his sighs, and groan'd to ev'ry groan:
|
|
"Ah youth! belov'd in vain," Narcissus cries;
|
|
"Ah youth! belov'd in vain," the nymph replies.
|
|
"Farewel," says he; the parting sound scarce fell
|
|
From his faint lips, but she reply'd, "farewel."
|
|
Then on th' wholsome earth he gasping lyes,
|
|
'Till death shuts up those self-admiring eyes.
|
|
To the cold shades his flitting ghost retires,
|
|
And in the Stygian waves it self admires.
|
|
For him the Naiads and the Dryads mourn,
|
|
Whom the sad Echo answers in her turn;
|
|
And now the sister-nymphs prepare his urn:
|
|
When, looking for his corps, they only found
|
|
A rising stalk, with yellow blossoms crown'd.
|
|
The Story of This sad event gave blind Tiresias fame,
|
|
Pentheus Through Greece establish'd in a prophet's name.
|
|
Th' unhallow'd Pentheus only durst deride
|
|
The cheated people, and their eyeless guide.
|
|
To whom the prophet in his fury said,
|
|
Shaking the hoary honours of his head:
|
|
"'Twere well, presumptuous man, 'twere well for
|
|
thee
|
|
If thou wert eyeless too, and blind, like me:
|
|
For the time comes, nay, 'tis already here,
|
|
When the young God's solemnities appear:
|
|
Which, if thou dost not with just rites adorn,
|
|
Thy impious carcass, into pieces torn,
|
|
Shall strew the woods, and hang on ev'ry thorn.
|
|
Then, then, remember what I now foretel,
|
|
And own the blind Tiresias saw too well."
|
|
Still Pentheus scorns him, and derides his skill;
|
|
But time did all the prophet's threats fulfil.
|
|
For now through prostrate Greece young Bacchus
|
|
rode,
|
|
Whilst howling matrons celebrate the God:
|
|
All ranks and sexes to his Orgies ran,
|
|
To mingle in the pomps, and fill the train.
|
|
When Pentheus thus his wicked rage express'd:
|
|
"What madness, Thebans, has your souls possess'd?
|
|
Can hollow timbrels, can a drunken shout,
|
|
And the lewd clamours of a beastly rout,
|
|
Thus quell your courage; can the weak alarm
|
|
Of women's yells those stubborn souls disarm,
|
|
Whom nor the sword nor trumpet e'er could fright,
|
|
Nor the loud din and horror of a fight?
|
|
And you, our sires, who left your old abodes,
|
|
And fix'd in foreign earth your country Gods;
|
|
Will you without a stroak your city yield,
|
|
And poorly quit an undisputed field?
|
|
But you, whose youth and vigour should inspire
|
|
Heroick warmth, and kindle martial fire,
|
|
Whom burnish'd arms and crested helmets grace,
|
|
Not flow'ry garlands and a painted face;
|
|
Remember him to whom you stand ally'd:
|
|
The serpent for his well of waters dy'd.
|
|
He fought the strong; do you his courage show,
|
|
And gain a conquest o'er a feeble foe.
|
|
If Thebes must fall, oh might the fates afford
|
|
A nobler doom from famine, fire, or sword.
|
|
Then might the Thebans perish with renown:
|
|
But now a beardless victor sacks the town;
|
|
Whom nor the prancing steed, nor pond'rous shield,
|
|
Nor the hack'd helmet, nor the dusty field,
|
|
But the soft joys of luxury and ease,
|
|
The purple vests, and flow'ry garlands please.
|
|
Stand then aside, I'll make the counterfeit
|
|
Renounce his god-head, and confess the cheat.
|
|
Acrisius from the Grecian walls repell'd
|
|
This boasted pow'r; why then should Pentheus yield?
|
|
Go quickly drag th' impostor boy to me;
|
|
I'll try the force of his divinity."
|
|
Thus did th' audacious wretch those rites profane;
|
|
His friends dissuade th' audacious wretch in vain:
|
|
In vain his grandsire urg'd him to give o'er
|
|
His impious threats; the wretch but raves the more.
|
|
So have I seen a river gently glide,
|
|
In a smooth course, and inoffensive tide;
|
|
But if with dams its current we restrain,
|
|
It bears down all, and foams along the plain.
|
|
But now his servants came besmear'd with blood,
|
|
Sent by their haughty prince to seize the God;
|
|
The God they found not in the frantick throng,
|
|
But dragg'd a zealous votary along.
|
|
The Mariners Him Pentheus view'd with fury in his look,
|
|
transform'd to And scarce with-held his hands, whilst thus he
|
|
Dolphins spoke:
|
|
"Vile slave! whom speedy vengeance shall pursue,
|
|
And terrify thy base seditious crew:
|
|
Thy country and thy parentage reveal,
|
|
And, why thou joinest in these mad Orgies, tell."
|
|
The captive views him with undaunted eyes,
|
|
And, arm'd with inward innocence, replies,
|
|
"From high Meonia's rocky shores I came,
|
|
Of poor descent, Acoetes is my name:
|
|
My sire was meanly born; no oxen plow'd
|
|
His fruitful fields, nor in his pastures low'd.
|
|
His whole estate within the waters lay;
|
|
With lines and hooks he caught the finny prey,
|
|
His art was all his livelyhood; which he
|
|
Thus with his dying lips bequeath'd to me:
|
|
In streams, my boy, and rivers take thy chance;
|
|
There swims, said he, thy whole inheritance.
|
|
Long did I live on this poor legacy;
|
|
'Till tir'd with rocks, and my old native sky,
|
|
To arts of navigation I inclin'd;
|
|
Observ'd the turns and changes of the wind,
|
|
Learn'd the fit havens, and began to note
|
|
The stormy Hyades, the rainy Goat,
|
|
The bright Taygete, and the shining Bears,
|
|
With all the sailor's catalogue of stars.
|
|
"Once, as by chance for Delos I design'd,
|
|
My vessel, driv'n by a strong gust of wind,
|
|
Moor'd in a Chian Creek; a-shore I went,
|
|
And all the following night in Chios spent.
|
|
When morning rose, I sent my mates to bring
|
|
Supplies of water from a neighb'ring spring,
|
|
Whilst I the motion of the winds explor'd;
|
|
Then summon'd in my crew, and went aboard.
|
|
Opheltes heard my summons, and with joy
|
|
Brought to the shore a soft and lovely boy,
|
|
With more than female sweetness in his look,
|
|
Whom straggling in the neighb'ring fields he took.
|
|
With fumes of wine the little captive glows,
|
|
And nods with sleep, and staggers as he goes.
|
|
"I view'd him nicely, and began to trace
|
|
Each heav'nly feature, each immortal grace,
|
|
And saw divinity in all his face,
|
|
I know not who, said I, this God should be;
|
|
But that he is a God I plainly see:
|
|
And thou, who-e'er thou art, excuse the force
|
|
These men have us'd; and oh befriend our course!
|
|
Pray not for us, the nimble Dictys cry'd,
|
|
Dictys, that could the main-top mast bestride,
|
|
And down the ropes with active vigour slide.
|
|
To the same purpose old Epopeus spoke,
|
|
Who over-look'd the oars, and tim'd the stroke;
|
|
The same the pilot, and the same the rest;
|
|
Such impious avarice their souls possest.
|
|
Nay, Heav'n forbid that I should bear away
|
|
Within my vessel so divine a prey,
|
|
Said I; and stood to hinder their intent:
|
|
When Lycabas, a wretch for murder sent
|
|
From Tuscany, to suffer banishment,
|
|
With his clench'd fist had struck me over-board,
|
|
Had not my hands in falling grasp'd a cord.
|
|
"His base confederates the fact approve;
|
|
When Bacchus (for 'twas he) begun to move,
|
|
Wak'd by the noise and clamours which they rais'd;
|
|
And shook his drowsie limbs, and round him gaz'd:
|
|
What means this noise? he cries; am I betray'd?
|
|
Ah, whither, whither must I be convey'd?
|
|
Fear not, said Proreus, child, but tell us where
|
|
You wish to land, and trust our friendly care.
|
|
To Naxos then direct your course, said he;
|
|
Naxos a hospitable port shall be
|
|
To each of you, a joyful home to me.
|
|
By ev'ry God, that rules the sea or sky,
|
|
The perjur'd villains promise to comply,
|
|
And bid me hasten to unmoor the ship.
|
|
With eager joy I launch into the deep;
|
|
And, heedless of the fraud, for Naxos stand.
|
|
They whisper oft, and beckon with the hand,
|
|
And give me signs, all anxious for their prey,
|
|
To tack about, and steer another way.
|
|
Then let some other to my post succeed,
|
|
Said I, I'm guiltless of so foul a deed.
|
|
What, says Ethalion, must the ship's whole crew
|
|
Follow your humour, and depend on you?
|
|
And strait himself he seated at the prore,
|
|
And tack'd about, and sought another shore.
|
|
"The beauteous youth now found himself betray'd,
|
|
And from the deck the rising waves survey'd,
|
|
And seem'd to weep, and as he wept he said:
|
|
And do you thus my easy faith beguile?
|
|
Thus do you bear me to my native isle?
|
|
Will such a multitude of men employ
|
|
Their strength against a weak defenceless boy?
|
|
"In vain did I the God-like youth deplore,
|
|
The more I begg'd, they thwarted me the more.
|
|
And now by all the Gods in Heav'n that hear
|
|
This solemn oath, by Bacchus' self, I swear,
|
|
The mighty miracle that did ensue,
|
|
Although it seems beyond belief, is true.
|
|
The vessel, fix'd and rooted in the flood,
|
|
Unmov'd by all the beating billows stood.
|
|
In vain the mariners would plow the main
|
|
With sails unfurl'd, and strike their oars in vain;
|
|
Around their oars a twining ivy cleaves,
|
|
And climbs the mast, and hides the cords in leaves:
|
|
The sails are cover'd with a chearful green,
|
|
And berries in the fruitful canvass seen.
|
|
Amidst the waves a sudden forest rears
|
|
Its verdant head, and a new Spring appears.
|
|
"The God we now behold with open'd eyes;
|
|
A herd of spotted panthers round him lyes
|
|
In glaring forms; the grapy clusters spread
|
|
On his fair brows, and dangle on his head.
|
|
And whilst he frowns, and brandishes his spear,
|
|
My mates surpriz'd with madness or with fear,
|
|
Leap'd over board; first perjur'd Madon found
|
|
Rough scales and fins his stiff'ning sides
|
|
surround;
|
|
Ah what, cries one, has thus transform'd thy look?
|
|
Strait his own mouth grew wider as he spoke;
|
|
And now himself he views with like surprize.
|
|
Still at his oar th' industrious Libys plies;
|
|
But, as he plies, each busy arm shrinks in,
|
|
And by degrees is fashion'd to a fin.
|
|
Another, as he catches at a cord,
|
|
Misses his arms, and, tumbling over-board,
|
|
With his broad fins and forky tail he laves
|
|
The rising surge, and flounces in the waves.
|
|
Thus all my crew transform'd around the ship,
|
|
Or dive below, or on the surface leap,
|
|
And spout the waves, and wanton in the deep.
|
|
Full nineteen sailors did the ship convey,
|
|
A shole of nineteen dolphins round her play.
|
|
I only in my proper shape appear,
|
|
Speechless with wonder, and half dead with fear,
|
|
'Till Bacchus kindly bid me fear no more.
|
|
With him I landed on the Chian shore,
|
|
And him shall ever gratefully adore."
|
|
"This forging slave," says Pentheus, "would
|
|
prevail
|
|
O'er our just fury by a far-fetch'd tale:
|
|
Go, let him feel the whips, the swords, the fire,
|
|
And in the tortures of the rack expire."
|
|
Th' officious servants hurry him away,
|
|
And the poor captive in a dungeon lay.
|
|
But, whilst the whips and tortures are prepar'd,
|
|
The gates fly open, of themselves unbarr'd;
|
|
At liberty th' unfetter'd captive stands,
|
|
And flings the loosen'd shackles from his hands.
|
|
The Death of But Pentheus, grown more furious than before,
|
|
Pentheus Resolv'd to send his messengers no more,
|
|
But went himself to the distracted throng,
|
|
Where high Cithaeron echo'd with their song.
|
|
And as the fiery war-horse paws the ground,
|
|
And snorts and trembles at the trumpet's sound;
|
|
Transported thus he heard the frantick rout,
|
|
And rav'd and madden'd at the distant shout.
|
|
A spacious circuit on the hill there stood.
|
|
Level and wide, and skirted round with wood;
|
|
Here the rash Pentheus, with unhallow'd eyes,
|
|
The howling dames and mystick Orgies spies.
|
|
His mother sternly view'd him where he stood,
|
|
And kindled into madness as she view'd:
|
|
Her leafy jav'lin at her son she cast,
|
|
And cries, "The boar that lays our country waste!
|
|
The boar, my sisters! Aim the fatal dart,
|
|
And strike the brindled monster to the heart."
|
|
Pentheus astonish'd heard the dismal sound,
|
|
And sees the yelling matrons gath'ring round;
|
|
He sees, and weeps at his approaching fate,
|
|
And begs for mercy, and repents too late.
|
|
"Help, help! my aunt Autonoe," he cry'd;
|
|
"Remember, how your own Actaeon dy'd."
|
|
Deaf to his cries, the frantick matron crops
|
|
One stretch'd-out arm, the other Ino lops.
|
|
In vain does Pentheus to his mother sue,
|
|
And the raw bleeding stumps presents to view:
|
|
His mother howl'd; and, heedless of his pray'r,
|
|
Her trembling hand she twisted in his hair,
|
|
"And this," she cry'd, "shall be Agave's share,"
|
|
When from the neck his struggling head she tore,
|
|
And in her hands the ghastly visage bore.
|
|
With pleasure all the hideous trunk survey;
|
|
Then pull'd and tore the mangled limbs away,
|
|
As starting in the pangs of death it lay,
|
|
Soon as the wood its leafy honours casts,
|
|
Blown off and scatter'd by autumnal blasts,
|
|
With such a sudden death lay Pentheus slain,
|
|
And in a thousand pieces strow'd the plain.
|
|
By so distinguishing a judgment aw'd,
|
|
The Thebans tremble, and confess the God.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Third Book.
|
|
BOOK THE FOURTH
|
|
|
|
YET still Alcithoe perverse remains,
|
|
And Bacchus still, and all his rites, disdains.
|
|
Too rash, and madly bold, she bids him prove
|
|
Himself a God, nor owns the son of Jove.
|
|
Her sisters too unanimous agree,
|
|
Faithful associates in impiety.
|
|
The Story of Be this a solemn feast, the priest had said;
|
|
Alcithoe and Be, with each mistress, unemploy'd each maid.
|
|
her Sisters With skins of beasts your tender limbs enclose,
|
|
And with an ivy-crown adorn your brows,
|
|
The leafy Thyrsus high in triumph bear,
|
|
And give your locks to wanton in the air.
|
|
These rites profan'd, the holy seer foreshow'd
|
|
A mourning people, and a vengeful God.
|
|
Matrons and pious wives obedience show,
|
|
Distaffs, and wooll, half spun, away they throw:
|
|
Then incense burn, and, Bacchus, thee adore,
|
|
Or lov'st thou Nyseus, or Lyaeus more?
|
|
O! doubly got, O! doubly born, they sung,
|
|
Thou mighty Bromius, hail, from light'ning sprung!
|
|
Hail, Thyon, Eleleus! each name is thine:
|
|
Or, listen parent of the genial vine!
|
|
Iachus! Evan! loudly they repeat,
|
|
And not one Grecian attribute forget,
|
|
Which to thy praise, great Deity, belong,
|
|
Stil'd justly Liber in the Roman song.
|
|
Eternity of youth is thine! enjoy
|
|
Years roul'd on years, yet still a blooming boy.
|
|
In Heav'n thou shin'st with a superior grace;
|
|
Conceal thy horns, and 'tis a virgin's face.
|
|
Thou taught'st the tawny Indian to obey,
|
|
And Ganges, smoothly flowing, own'd thy sway.
|
|
Lycurgus, Pentheus, equally profane,
|
|
By thy just vengeance equally were slain.
|
|
By thee the Tuscans, who conspir'd to keep
|
|
Thee captive, plung'd, and cut with finns the deep.
|
|
With painted reins, all-glitt'ring from afar,
|
|
The spotted lynxes proudly draw thy car.
|
|
Around, the Bacchae, and the satyrs throng;
|
|
Behind, Silenus, drunk, lags slow along:
|
|
On his dull ass he nods from side to side,
|
|
Forbears to fall, yet half forgets to ride.
|
|
Still at thy near approach, applauses loud
|
|
Are heard, with yellings of the female crowd.
|
|
Timbrels, and boxen pipes, with mingled cries,
|
|
Swell up in sounds confus'd, and rend the skies.
|
|
Come, Bacchus, come propitious, all implore,
|
|
And act thy sacred orgies o'er and o'er.
|
|
But Mineus' daughters, while these rites were
|
|
pay'd,
|
|
At home, impertinently busie, stay'd.
|
|
Their wicked tasks they ply with various art,
|
|
And thro' the loom the sliding shuttle dart;
|
|
Or at the fire to comb the wooll they stand,
|
|
Or twirl the spindle with a dext'rous hand.
|
|
Guilty themselves, they force the guiltless in;
|
|
Their maids, who share the labour, share the sin.
|
|
At last one sister cries, who nimbly knew
|
|
To draw nice threads, and winde the finest clue,
|
|
While others idly rove, and Gods revere,
|
|
Their fancy'd Gods! they know not who, or where;
|
|
Let us, whom Pallas taught her better arts,
|
|
Still working, cheer with mirthful chat our hearts,
|
|
And to deceive the time, let me prevail
|
|
With each by turns to tell some antique tale.
|
|
She said: her sisters lik'd the humour well,
|
|
And smiling, bad her the first story tell.
|
|
But she a-while profoundly seem'd to muse,
|
|
Perplex'd amid variety to chuse:
|
|
And knew not, whether she should first relate
|
|
The poor Dircetis, and her wond'rous fate.
|
|
The Palestines believe it to a man,
|
|
And show the lake, in which her scales began.
|
|
Or if she rather should the daughter sing,
|
|
Who in the hoary verge of life took wing;
|
|
Who soar'd from Earth, and dwelt in tow'rs on high,
|
|
And now a dove she flits along the sky.
|
|
Or how lewd Nais, when her lust was cloy'd,
|
|
To fishes turn'd the youths, she had enjoy'd,
|
|
By pow'rful verse, and herbs; effect most strange!
|
|
At last the changer shar'd herself the change.
|
|
Or how the tree, which once white berries bore,
|
|
Still crimson bears, since stain'd with crimson
|
|
gore.
|
|
The tree was new; she likes it, and begins
|
|
To tell the tale, and as she tells, she spins.
|
|
The Story of In Babylon, where first her queen, for state
|
|
Pyramus and Rais'd walls of brick magnificently great,
|
|
Thisbe Liv'd Pyramus, and Thisbe, lovely pair!
|
|
He found no eastern youth his equal there,
|
|
And she beyond the fairest nymph was fair.
|
|
A closer neighbourhood was never known,
|
|
Tho' two the houses, yet the roof was one.
|
|
Acquaintance grew, th' acquaintance they improve
|
|
To friendship, friendship ripen'd into love:
|
|
Love had been crown'd, but impotently mad,
|
|
What parents could not hinder, they forbad.
|
|
For with fierce flames young Pyramus still burn'd,
|
|
And grateful Thisbe flames as fierce return'd.
|
|
Aloud in words their thoughts they dare not break,
|
|
But silent stand; and silent looks can speak.
|
|
The fire of love the more it is supprest,
|
|
The more it glows, and rages in the breast.
|
|
When the division-wall was built, a chink
|
|
Was left, the cement unobserv'd to shrink.
|
|
So slight the cranny, that it still had been
|
|
For centuries unclos'd, because unseen.
|
|
But oh! what thing so small, so secret lies,
|
|
Which scapes, if form'd for love, a lover's eyes?
|
|
Ev'n in this narrow chink they quickly found
|
|
A friendly passage for a trackless sound.
|
|
Safely they told their sorrows, and their joys,
|
|
In whisper'd murmurs, and a dying noise,
|
|
By turns to catch each other's breath they strove,
|
|
And suck'd in all the balmy breeze of love.
|
|
Oft as on diff'rent sides they stood, they cry'd,
|
|
Malicious wall, thus lovers to divide!
|
|
Suppose, thou should'st a-while to us give place
|
|
To lock, and fasten in a close embrace:
|
|
But if too much to grant so sweet a bliss,
|
|
Indulge at least the pleasure of a kiss.
|
|
We scorn ingratitude: to thee, we know,
|
|
This safe conveyance of our minds we owe.
|
|
Thus they their vain petition did renew
|
|
'Till night, and then they softly sigh'd adieu.
|
|
But first they strove to kiss, and that was all;
|
|
Their kisses dy'd untasted on the wall.
|
|
Soon as the morn had o'er the stars prevail'd,
|
|
And warm'd by Phoebus, flow'rs their dews exhal'd,
|
|
The lovers to their well-known place return,
|
|
Alike they suffer, and alike they mourn.
|
|
At last their parents they resolve to cheat
|
|
(If to deceive in love be call'd deceit),
|
|
To steal by night from home, and thence unknown
|
|
To seek the fields, and quit th' unfaithful town.
|
|
But, to prevent their wand'ring in the dark,
|
|
They both agree to fix upon a mark;
|
|
A mark, that could not their designs expose:
|
|
The tomb of Ninus was the mark they chose.
|
|
There they might rest secure beneath the shade,
|
|
Which boughs, with snowy fruit encumber'd, made:
|
|
A wide-spread mulberry its rise had took
|
|
Just on the margin of a gurgling brook.
|
|
Impatient for the friendly dusk they stay;
|
|
And chide the slowness of departing day;
|
|
In western seas down sunk at last the light,
|
|
From western seas up-rose the shades of night.
|
|
The loving Thisbe ev'n prevents the hour,
|
|
With cautious silence she unlocks the door,
|
|
And veils her face, and marching thro' the gloom
|
|
Swiftly arrives at th' assignation-tomb.
|
|
For still the fearful sex can fearless prove;
|
|
Boldly they act, if spirited by love.
|
|
When lo! a lioness rush'd o'er the plain,
|
|
Grimly besmear'd with blood of oxen slain:
|
|
And what to the dire sight new horrors brought,
|
|
To slake her thirst the neighb'ring spring she
|
|
sought.
|
|
Which, by the moon, when trembling Thisbe spies,
|
|
Wing'd with her fear, swift, as the wind, she
|
|
flies;
|
|
And in a cave recovers from her fright,
|
|
But drop'd her veil, confounded in her flight.
|
|
When sated with repeated draughts, again
|
|
The queen of beasts scour'd back along the plain,
|
|
She found the veil, and mouthing it all o'er,
|
|
With bloody jaws the lifeless prey she tore.
|
|
The youth, who could not cheat his guards so
|
|
soon,
|
|
Late came, and noted by the glimm'ring moon
|
|
Some savage feet, new printed on the ground,
|
|
His cheeks turn'd pale, his limbs no vigour found;
|
|
But when, advancing on, the veil he spied
|
|
Distain'd with blood, and ghastly torn, he cried,
|
|
One night shall death to two young lovers give,
|
|
But she deserv'd unnumber'd years to live!
|
|
'Tis I am guilty, I have thee betray'd,
|
|
Who came not early, as my charming maid.
|
|
Whatever slew thee, I the cause remain,
|
|
I nam'd, and fix'd the place where thou wast slain.
|
|
Ye lions from your neighb'ring dens repair,
|
|
Pity the wretch, this impious body tear!
|
|
But cowards thus for death can idly cry;
|
|
The brave still have it in their pow'r to die.
|
|
Then to th' appointed tree he hastes away,
|
|
The veil first gather'd, tho' all rent it lay:
|
|
The veil all rent yet still it self endears,
|
|
He kist, and kissing, wash'd it with his tears.
|
|
Tho' rich (he cry'd) with many a precious stain,
|
|
Still from my blood a deeper tincture gain.
|
|
Then in his breast his shining sword he drown'd,
|
|
And fell supine, extended on the ground.
|
|
As out again the blade lie dying drew,
|
|
Out spun the blood, and streaming upwards flew.
|
|
So if a conduit-pipe e'er burst you saw,
|
|
Swift spring the gushing waters thro' the flaw:
|
|
Then spouting in a bow, they rise on high,
|
|
And a new fountain plays amid the sky.
|
|
The berries, stain'd with blood, began to show
|
|
A dark complexion, and forgot their snow;
|
|
While fatten'd with the flowing gore, the root
|
|
Was doom'd for ever to a purple fruit.
|
|
Mean-time poor Thisbe fear'd, so long she stay'd,
|
|
Her lover might suspect a perjur'd maid.
|
|
Her fright scarce o'er, she strove the youth to
|
|
find
|
|
With ardent eyes, which spoke an ardent mind.
|
|
Already in his arms, she hears him sigh
|
|
At her destruction, which was once so nigh.
|
|
The tomb, the tree, but not the fruit she knew,
|
|
The fruit she doubted for its alter'd hue.
|
|
Still as she doubts, her eyes a body found
|
|
Quiv'ring in death, and gasping on the ground.
|
|
She started back, the red her cheeks forsook,
|
|
And ev'ry nerve with thrilling horrors shook.
|
|
So trembles the smooth surface of the seas,
|
|
If brush'd o'er gently with a rising breeze.
|
|
But when her view her bleeding love confest,
|
|
She shriek'd, she tore her hair, she beat her
|
|
breast.
|
|
She rais'd the body, and embrac'd it round,
|
|
And bath'd with tears unfeign'd the gaping wound.
|
|
Then her warm lips to the cold face apply'd,
|
|
And is it thus, ah! thus we meet, she cry'd!
|
|
My Pyramus! whence sprung thy cruel fate?
|
|
My Pyramus!- ah! speak, ere 'tis too late.
|
|
I, thy own Thisbe, but one word implore,
|
|
One word thy Thisbe never ask'd before.
|
|
At Thisbe's name, awak'd, he open'd wide
|
|
His dying eyes; with dying eyes he try'd
|
|
On her to dwell, but clos'd them slow, and dy'd.
|
|
The fatal cause was now at last explor'd,
|
|
Her veil she knew, and saw his sheathless sword:
|
|
From thy own hand thy ruin thou hast found,
|
|
She said, but love first taught that hand to wound,
|
|
Ev'n I for thee as bold a hand can show,
|
|
And love, which shall as true direct the blow.
|
|
I will against the woman's weakness strive,
|
|
And never thee, lamented youth, survive.
|
|
The world may say, I caus'd, alas! thy death,
|
|
But saw thee breathless, and resign'd my breath.
|
|
Fate, tho' it conquers, shall no triumph gain,
|
|
Fate, that divides us, still divides in vain.
|
|
Now, both our cruel parents, hear my pray'r;
|
|
My pray'r to offer for us both I dare;
|
|
Oh! see our ashes in one urn confin'd,
|
|
Whom love at first, and fate at last has join'd.
|
|
The bliss, you envy'd, is not our request;
|
|
Lovers, when dead, may sure together rest.
|
|
Thou, tree, where now one lifeless lump is laid,
|
|
Ere-long o'er two shalt cast a friendly shade.
|
|
Still let our loves from thee be understood,
|
|
Still witness in thy purple fruit our blood.
|
|
She spoke, and in her bosom plung'd the sword,
|
|
All warm and reeking from its slaughter'd lord.
|
|
The pray'r, which dying Thisbe had preferr'd,
|
|
Both Gods, and parents, with compassion heard.
|
|
The whiteness of the mulberry soon fled,
|
|
And rip'ning, sadden'd in a dusky red:
|
|
While both their parents their lost children mourn,
|
|
And mix their ashes in one golden urn.
|
|
Thus did the melancholy tale conclude,
|
|
And a short, silent interval ensu'd.
|
|
The next in birth unloos'd her artful tongue,
|
|
And drew attentive all the sister-throng.
|
|
The Story of The Sun, the source of light, by beauty's pow'r
|
|
Leucothoe and Once am'rous grew; then hear the Sun's amour.
|
|
the Sun Venus, and Mars, with his far-piercing eyes
|
|
This God first spy'd; this God first all things
|
|
spies.
|
|
Stung at the sight, and swift on mischief bent,
|
|
To haughty Juno's shapeless son he went:
|
|
The Goddess, and her God gallant betray'd,
|
|
And told the cuckold, where their pranks were
|
|
play'd.
|
|
Poor Vulcan soon desir'd to hear no more,
|
|
He drop'd his hammer, and he shook all o'er:
|
|
Then courage takes, and full of vengeful ire
|
|
He heaves the bellows, and blows fierce the fire:
|
|
From liquid brass, tho' sure, yet subtile snares
|
|
He forms, and next a wond'rous net prepares,
|
|
Drawn with such curious art, so nicely sly,
|
|
Unseen the mashes cheat the searching eye.
|
|
Not half so thin their webs the spiders weave,
|
|
Which the most wary, buzzing prey deceive.
|
|
These chains, obedient to the touch, he spread
|
|
In secret foldings o'er the conscious bed:
|
|
The conscious bed again was quickly prest
|
|
By the fond pair, in lawless raptures blest.
|
|
Mars wonder'd at his Cytherea's charms,
|
|
More fast than ever lock'd within her arms.
|
|
While Vulcan th' iv'ry doors unbarr'd with care,
|
|
Then call'd the Gods to view the sportive pair:
|
|
The Gods throng'd in, and saw in open day,
|
|
Where Mars, and beauty's queen, all naked, lay.
|
|
O! shameful sight, if shameful that we name,
|
|
Which Gods with envy view'd, and could not blame;
|
|
But, for the pleasure, wish'd to bear the shame.
|
|
Each Deity, with laughter tir'd, departs,
|
|
Yet all still laugh'd at Vulcan in their hearts.
|
|
Thro' Heav'n the news of this surprizal run,
|
|
But Venus did not thus forget the Sun.
|
|
He, who stol'n transports idly had betray'd,
|
|
By a betrayer was in kind repay'd.
|
|
What now avails, great God, thy piercing blaze,
|
|
That youth, and beauty, and those golden rays?
|
|
Thou, who can'st warm this universe alone,
|
|
Feel'st now a warmth more pow'rful than thy own:
|
|
And those bright eyes, which all things should
|
|
survey,
|
|
Know not from fair Leucothoe to stray.
|
|
The lamp of light, for human good design'd,
|
|
Is to one virgin niggardly confin'd.
|
|
Sometimes too early rise thy eastern beams,
|
|
Sometimes too late they set in western streams:
|
|
'Tis then her beauty thy swift course delays,
|
|
And gives to winter skies long summer days.
|
|
Now in thy face thy love-sick mind appears,
|
|
And spreads thro' impious nations empty fears:
|
|
For when thy beamless head is wrapt in night,
|
|
Poor mortals tremble in despair of light.
|
|
'Tis not the moon, that o'er thee casts a veil
|
|
'Tis love alone, which makes thy looks so pale.
|
|
Leucothoe is grown thy only care,
|
|
Not Phaeton's fair mother now is fair.
|
|
The youthful Rhodos moves no tender thought,
|
|
And beauteous Porsa is at last forgot.
|
|
Fond Clytie, scorn'd, yet lov'd, and sought thy
|
|
bed,
|
|
Ev'n then thy heart for other virgins bled.
|
|
Leucothoe has all thy soul possest,
|
|
And chas'd each rival passion from thy breast.
|
|
To this bright nymph Eurynome gave birth
|
|
In the blest confines of the spicy Earth.
|
|
Excelling others, she herself beheld
|
|
By her own blooming daughter far excell'd.
|
|
The sire was Orchamus, whose vast command,
|
|
The sev'nth from Belus, rul'd the Persian Land.
|
|
Deep in cool vales, beneath th' Hesperian sky,
|
|
For the Sun's fiery steeds the pastures lye.
|
|
Ambrosia there they eat, and thence they gain
|
|
New vigour, and their daily toils sustain.
|
|
While thus on heav'nly food the coursers fed,
|
|
And night, around, her gloomy empire spread,
|
|
The God assum'd the mother's shape and air,
|
|
And pass'd, unheeded, to his darling fair.
|
|
Close by a lamp, with maids encompass'd round,
|
|
The royal spinster, full employ'd, he found:
|
|
Then cry'd, A-while from work, my daughter, rest;
|
|
And, like a mother, scarce her lips he prest.
|
|
Servants retire!- nor secrets dare to hear,
|
|
Intrusted only to a daughter's ear.
|
|
They swift obey'd: not one, suspicious, thought
|
|
The secret, which their mistress would be taught.
|
|
Then he: since now no witnesses are near,
|
|
Behold! the God, who guides the various year!
|
|
The world's vast eye, of light the source serene,
|
|
Who all things sees, by whom are all things seen.
|
|
Believe me, nymph! (for I the truth have show'd)
|
|
Thy charms have pow'r to charm so great a God.
|
|
Confus'd, she heard him his soft passion tell,
|
|
And on the floor, untwirl'd, the spindle fell:
|
|
Still from the sweet confusion some new grace
|
|
Blush'd out by stealth, and languish'd in her face.
|
|
The lover, now inflam'd, himself put on,
|
|
And out at once the God, all-radiant, shone.
|
|
The virgin startled at his alter'd form,
|
|
Too weak to bear a God's impetuous storm:
|
|
No more against the dazling youth she strove,
|
|
But silent yielded, and indulg'd his love.
|
|
This Clytie knew, and knew she was undone,
|
|
Whose soul was fix'd, and doated on the Sun.
|
|
She rag'd to think on her neglected charms,
|
|
And Phoebus, panting in another's arms.
|
|
With envious madness fir'd, she flies in haste,
|
|
And tells the king, his daughter was unchaste.
|
|
The king, incens'd to hear his honour stain'd,
|
|
No more the father nor the man retain'd.
|
|
In vain she stretch'd her arms, and turn'd her eyes
|
|
To her lov'd God, th' enlightner of the skies.
|
|
In vain she own'd it was a crime, yet still
|
|
It was a crime not acted by her will.
|
|
The brutal sire stood deaf to ev'ry pray'r,
|
|
And deep in Earth entomb'd alive the fair.
|
|
What Phoebus could do, was by Phoebus done:
|
|
Full on her grave with pointed beams he shone:
|
|
To pointed beams the gaping Earth gave way;
|
|
Had the nymph eyes, her eyes had seen the day,
|
|
But lifeless now, yet lovely still, she lay.
|
|
Not more the God wept, when the world was fir'd,
|
|
And in the wreck his blooming boy expir'd.
|
|
The vital flame he strives to light again,
|
|
And warm the frozen blood in ev'ry vein:
|
|
But since resistless Fates deny'd that pow'r,
|
|
On the cold nymph he rain'd a nectar show'r.
|
|
Ah! undeserving thus (he said) to die,
|
|
Yet still in odours thou shalt reach the sky.
|
|
The body soon dissolv'd, and all around
|
|
Perfum'd with heav'nly fragrancies the ground,
|
|
A sacrifice for Gods up-rose from thence,
|
|
A sweet, delightful tree of frankincense.
|
|
The Tho' guilty Clytie thus the sun betray'd,
|
|
Transformation By too much passion she was guilty made.
|
|
of Clytie Excess of love begot excess of grief,
|
|
Grief fondly bad her hence to hope relief.
|
|
But angry Phoebus hears, unmov'd, her sighs,
|
|
And scornful from her loath'd embraces flies.
|
|
All day, all night, in trackless wilds, alone
|
|
She pin'd, and taught the list'ning rocks her moan.
|
|
On the bare earth she lies, her bosom bare,
|
|
Loose her attire, dishevel'd is her hair.
|
|
Nine times the morn unbarr'd the gates of light,
|
|
As oft were spread th' alternate shades of night,
|
|
So long no sustenance the mourner knew,
|
|
Unless she drunk her tears, or suck'd the dew.
|
|
She turn'd about, but rose not from the ground,
|
|
Turn'd to the Sun, still as he roul'd his round:
|
|
On his bright face hung her desiring eyes,
|
|
'Till fix'd to Earth, she strove in vain to rise.
|
|
Her looks their paleness in a flow'r retain'd,
|
|
But here, and there, some purple streaks they
|
|
gain'd.
|
|
Still the lov'd object the fond leafs pursue,
|
|
Still move their root, the moving Sun to view,
|
|
And in the Heliotrope the nymph is true.
|
|
The sisters heard these wonders with surprise,
|
|
But part receiv'd them as romantick lies;
|
|
And pertly rally'd, that they could not see
|
|
In Pow'rs divine so vast an energy.
|
|
Part own'd, true Gods such miracles might do,
|
|
But own'd not Bacchus, one among the true.
|
|
At last a common, just request they make,
|
|
And beg Alcithoe her turn to take.
|
|
I will (she said) and please you, if I can.
|
|
Then shot her shuttle swift, and thus began.
|
|
The fate of Daphnis is a fate too known,
|
|
Whom an enamour'd nymph transform'd to stone,
|
|
Because she fear'd another nymph might see
|
|
The lovely youth, and love as much as she:
|
|
So strange the madness is of jealousie!
|
|
Nor shall I tell, what changes Scython made,
|
|
And how he walk'd a man, or tripp'd a maid.
|
|
You too would peevish frown, and patience want
|
|
To hear, how Celmis grew an adamant.
|
|
He once was dear to Jove, and saw of old
|
|
Jove, when a child; but what he saw, he told.
|
|
Crocus, and Smilax may be turn'd to flow'rs,
|
|
And the Curetes spring from bounteous show'rs;
|
|
I pass a hundred legends stale, as these,
|
|
And with sweet novelty your taste will please.
|
|
The Story of How Salmacis, with weak enfeebling streams
|
|
Salmacis and Softens the body, and unnerves the limbs,
|
|
Hermaphroditus And what the secret cause, shall here be shown;
|
|
The cause is secret, but th' effect is known.
|
|
The Naids nurst an infant heretofore,
|
|
That Cytherea once to Hermes bore:
|
|
From both th' illustrious authors of his race
|
|
The child was nam'd, nor was it hard to trace
|
|
Both the bright parents thro' the infant's face.
|
|
When fifteen years in Ida's cool retreat
|
|
The boy had told, he left his native seat,
|
|
And sought fresh fountains in a foreign soil:
|
|
The pleasure lessen'd the attending toil,
|
|
With eager steps the Lycian fields he crost,
|
|
A river here he view'd so lovely bright,
|
|
It shew'd the bottom in a fairer light,
|
|
Nor kept a sand conceal'd from human sight.
|
|
The stream produc'd nor slimy ooze, nor weeds,
|
|
Nor miry rushes, nor the spiky reeds;
|
|
But dealt enriching moisture all around,
|
|
The fruitful banks with chearful verdure crown'd,
|
|
And kept the spring eternal on the ground.
|
|
A nymph presides, not practis'd in the chace,
|
|
Nor skilful at the bow, nor at the race;
|
|
Of all the blue-ey'd daughters of the main,
|
|
The only stranger to Diana's train:
|
|
Her sisters often, as 'tis said, wou'd cry,
|
|
"Fie Salmacis: what, always idle! fie.
|
|
Or take thy quiver, or thy arrows seize,
|
|
And mix the toils of hunting with thy ease."
|
|
Nor quiver she nor arrows e'er wou'd seize,
|
|
Nor mix the toils of hunting with her ease.
|
|
But oft would bathe her in the chrystal tide,
|
|
Oft with a comb her dewy locks divide;
|
|
Now in the limpid streams she views her face,
|
|
And drest her image in the floating glass:
|
|
On beds of leaves she now repos'd her limbs,
|
|
Now gather'd flow'rs that grew about her streams,
|
|
And then by chance was gathering, as he stood
|
|
To view the boy, and long'd for what she view'd.
|
|
Fain wou'd she meet the youth with hasty feet,
|
|
She fain wou'd meet him, but refus'd to meet
|
|
Before her looks were set with nicest care,
|
|
And well deserv'd to be reputed fair.
|
|
"Bright youth," she cries, "whom all thy features
|
|
prove
|
|
A God, and, if a God, the God of love;
|
|
But if a mortal, blest thy nurse's breast,
|
|
Blest are thy parents, and thy sisters blest:
|
|
But oh how blest! how more than blest thy bride,
|
|
Ally'd in bliss, if any yet ally'd.
|
|
If so, let mine the stoln enjoyments be;
|
|
If not, behold a willing bride in me."
|
|
The boy knew nought of love, and toucht with
|
|
shame,
|
|
He strove, and blusht, but still the blush became:
|
|
In rising blushes still fresh beauties rose;
|
|
The sunny side of fruit such blushes shows,
|
|
And such the moon, when all her silver white
|
|
Turns in eclipses to a ruddy light.
|
|
The nymph still begs, if not a nobler bliss,
|
|
A cold salute at least, a sister's kiss:
|
|
And now prepares to take the lovely boy
|
|
Between her arms. He, innocently coy,
|
|
Replies, "Or leave me to my self alone,
|
|
You rude uncivil nymph, or I'll be gone."
|
|
"Fair stranger then," says she, "it shall be so";
|
|
And, for she fear'd his threats, she feign'd to go:
|
|
But hid within a covert's neighbouring green,
|
|
She kept him still in sight, herself unseen.
|
|
The boy now fancies all the danger o'er,
|
|
And innocently sports about the shore,
|
|
Playful and wanton to the stream he trips,
|
|
And dips his foot, and shivers as he dips.
|
|
The coolness pleas'd him, and with eager haste
|
|
His airy garments on the banks he cast;
|
|
His godlike features, and his heav'nly hue,
|
|
And all his beauties were expos'd to view.
|
|
His naked limbs the nymph with rapture spies,
|
|
While hotter passions in her bosom rise,
|
|
Flush in her cheeks, and sparkle in her eyes.
|
|
She longs, she burns to clasp him in her arms,
|
|
And looks, and sighs, and kindles at his charms.
|
|
Now all undrest upon the banks he stood,
|
|
And clapt his sides, and leapt into the flood:
|
|
His lovely limbs the silver waves divide,
|
|
His limbs appear more lovely through the tide;
|
|
As lillies shut within a chrystal case,
|
|
Receive a glossy lustre from the glass.
|
|
He's mine, he's all my own, the Naid cries,
|
|
And flings off all, and after him she flies.
|
|
And now she fastens on him as he swims,
|
|
And holds him close, and wraps about his limbs.
|
|
The more the boy resisted, and was coy,
|
|
The more she clipt, and kist the strugling boy.
|
|
So when the wrigling snake is snatcht on high
|
|
In Eagle's claws, and hisses in the sky,
|
|
Around the foe his twirling tail he flings,
|
|
And twists her legs, and wriths about her wings.
|
|
The restless boy still obstinately strove
|
|
To free himself, and still refus'd her love.
|
|
Amidst his limbs she kept her limbs intwin'd,
|
|
"And why, coy youth," she cries, "why thus unkind!
|
|
Oh may the Gods thus keep us ever join'd!
|
|
Oh may we never, never part again!"
|
|
So pray'd the nymph, nor did she pray in vain:
|
|
For now she finds him, as his limbs she prest,
|
|
Grow nearer still, and nearer to her breast;
|
|
'Till, piercing each the other's flesh, they run
|
|
Together, and incorporate in one:
|
|
Last in one face are both their faces join'd,
|
|
As when the stock and grafted twig combin'd
|
|
Shoot up the same, and wear a common rind:
|
|
Both bodies in a single body mix,
|
|
A single body with a double sex.
|
|
The boy, thus lost in woman, now survey'd
|
|
The river's guilty stream, and thus he pray'd.
|
|
(He pray'd, but wonder'd at his softer tone,
|
|
Surpriz'd to hear a voice but half his own.)
|
|
You parent-Gods, whose heav'nly names I bear,
|
|
Hear your Hermaphrodite, and grant my pray'r;
|
|
Oh grant, that whomsoe'er these streams contain,
|
|
If man he enter'd, he may rise again
|
|
Supple, unsinew'd, and but half a man!
|
|
The heav'nly parents answer'd from on high,
|
|
Their two-shap'd son, the double votary
|
|
Then gave a secret virtue to the flood,
|
|
And ting'd its source to make his wishes good.
|
|
Alcithoe and But Mineus' daughters still their tasks pursue,
|
|
her Sisters To wickedness most obstinately true:
|
|
transform'd At Bacchus still they laugh, when all around,
|
|
to Bats Unseen, the timbrels hoarse were heard to sound.
|
|
Saffron and myrrh their fragrant odours shed,
|
|
And now the present deity they dread.
|
|
Strange to relate! Here ivy first was seen,
|
|
Along the distaff crept the wond'rous green.
|
|
Then sudden-springing vines began to bloom,
|
|
And the soft tendrils curl'd around the loom:
|
|
While purple clusters, dangling from on high,
|
|
Ting'd the wrought purple with a second die.
|
|
Now from the skies was shot a doubtful light,
|
|
The day declining to the bounds of night.
|
|
The fabrick's firm foundations shake all o'er,
|
|
False tigers rage, and figur'd lions roar.
|
|
Torches, aloft, seem blazing in the air,
|
|
And angry flashes of red light'nings glare.
|
|
To dark recesses, the dire sight to shun,
|
|
Swift the pale sisters in confusion run.
|
|
Their arms were lost in pinions, as they fled,
|
|
And subtle films each slender limb o'er-spread.
|
|
Their alter'd forms their senses soon reveal'd;
|
|
Their forms, how alter'd, darkness still conceal'd.
|
|
Close to the roof each, wond'ring, upwards springs,
|
|
Born on unknown, transparent, plumeless wings.
|
|
They strove for words; their little bodies found
|
|
No words, but murmur'd in a fainting sound.
|
|
In towns, not woods, the sooty bats delight,
|
|
And, never, 'till the dusk, begin their flight;
|
|
'Till Vesper rises with his ev'ning flame;
|
|
From whom the Romans have deriv'd their name.
|
|
The The pow'r of Bacchus now o'er Thebes had flown:
|
|
Transformation With awful rev'rence soon the God they own.
|
|
of Ino and Proud Ino, all around the wonder tells,
|
|
Melicerta to And on her nephew deity still dwells.
|
|
Sea-Gods Of num'rous sisters, she alone yet knew
|
|
No grief, but grief, which she from sisters drew.
|
|
Imperial Juno saw her with disdain,
|
|
Vain in her offspring, in her consort vain,
|
|
Who rul'd the trembling Thebans with a nod,
|
|
But saw her vainest in her foster-God.
|
|
Could then (she cry'd) a bastard-boy have pow'r
|
|
To make a mother her own son devour?
|
|
Could he the Tuscan crew to fishes change,
|
|
And now three sisters damn to forms so strange?
|
|
Yet shall the wife of Jove find no relief?
|
|
Shall she, still unreveng'd, disclose her grief?
|
|
Have I the mighty freedom to complain?
|
|
Is that my pow'r? is that to ease my pain?
|
|
A foe has taught me vengeance; and who ought
|
|
To scorn that vengeance, which a foe has taught?
|
|
What sure destruction frantick rage can throw,
|
|
The gaping wounds of slaughter'd Pentheus show.
|
|
Why should not Ino, fir'd with madness, stray,
|
|
Like her mad sisters her own kindred slay?
|
|
Why, she not follow, where they lead the way?
|
|
Down a steep, yawning cave, where yews display'd
|
|
In arches meet, and lend a baleful shade,
|
|
Thro' silent labyrinths a passage lies
|
|
To mournful regions, and infernal skies.
|
|
Here Styx exhales its noisome clouds, and here,
|
|
The fun'ral rites once paid, all souls appear.
|
|
Stiff cold, and horror with a ghastly face
|
|
And staring eyes, infest the dreary place.
|
|
Ghosts, new-arriv'd, and strangers to these plains,
|
|
Know not the palace, where grim Pluto reigns.
|
|
They journey doubtful, nor the road can tell,
|
|
Which leads to the metropolis of Hell.
|
|
A thousand avenues those tow'rs command,
|
|
A thousand gates for ever open stand.
|
|
As all the rivers, disembogu'd, find room
|
|
For all their waters in old Ocean's womb:
|
|
So this vast city worlds of shades receives,
|
|
And space for millions still of worlds she leaves.
|
|
Th' unbody'd spectres freely rove, and show
|
|
Whate'er they lov'd on Earth, they love below.
|
|
The lawyers still, or right, or wrong, support,
|
|
The courtiers smoothly glide to Pluto's court.
|
|
Still airy heroes thoughts of glory fire,
|
|
Still the dead poet strings his deathless lyre,
|
|
And lovers still with fancy'd darts expire.
|
|
The Queen of Heaven, to gratify her hate,
|
|
And sooth immortal wrath, forgets her state.
|
|
Down from the realms of day, to realms of night,
|
|
The Goddess swift precipitates her flight.
|
|
At Hell arriv'd, the noise Hell's porter heard,
|
|
Th' enormous dog his triple head up-rear'd:
|
|
Thrice from three grizly throats he howl'd
|
|
profound,
|
|
Then suppliant couch'd, and stretch'd along the
|
|
ground.
|
|
The trembling threshold, which Saturnia prest,
|
|
The weight of such divinity confest.
|
|
Before a lofty, adamantine gate,
|
|
Which clos'd a tow'r of brass, the Furies sate:
|
|
Mis-shapen forms, tremendous to the sight,
|
|
Th' implacable foul daughters of the night.
|
|
A sounding whip each bloody sister shakes,
|
|
Or from her tresses combs the curling snakes.
|
|
But now great Juno's majesty was known;
|
|
Thro' the thick gloom, all heav'nly bright, she
|
|
shone:
|
|
The hideous monsters their obedience show'd,
|
|
And rising from their seats, submissive bow'd.
|
|
This is the place of woe, here groan the dead;
|
|
Huge Tityus o'er nine acres here is spread.
|
|
Fruitful for pain th' immortal liver breeds,
|
|
Still grows, and still th' insatiate vulture feeds.
|
|
Poor Tantalus to taste the water tries,
|
|
But from his lips the faithless water flies:
|
|
Then thinks the bending tree he can command,
|
|
The tree starts backwards, and eludes his hand.
|
|
The labour too of Sisyphus is vain,
|
|
Up the steep mount he heaves the stone with pain,
|
|
Down from the summet rouls the stone again.
|
|
The Belides their leaky vessels still
|
|
Are ever filling, and yet never fill:
|
|
Doom'd to this punishment for blood they shed,
|
|
For bridegrooms slaughter'd in the bridal bed.
|
|
Stretch'd on the rolling wheel Ixion lies;
|
|
Himself he follows, and himself he flies.
|
|
Ixion, tortur'd, Juno sternly ey'd,
|
|
Then turn'd, and toiling Sisyphus espy'd:
|
|
And why (she said) so wretched is the fate
|
|
Of him, whose brother proudly reigns in state?
|
|
Yet still my altars unador'd have been
|
|
By Athamas, and his presumptuous queen.
|
|
What caus'd her hate, the Goddess thus confest,
|
|
What caus'd her journey now was more than guest.
|
|
That hate, relentless, its revenge did want,
|
|
And that revenge the Furies soon could grant:
|
|
They could the glory of proud Thebes efface,
|
|
And hide in ruin the Cadmean race.
|
|
For this she largely promises, entreats,
|
|
And to intreaties adds imperial threats.
|
|
Then fell Tisiphone with rage was stung,
|
|
And from her mouth th' untwisted serpents flung.
|
|
To gain this trifling boon, there is no need
|
|
(She cry'd) in formal speeches to proceed.
|
|
Whatever thou command'st to do, is done;
|
|
Believe it finish'd, tho' not yet begun.
|
|
But from these melancholly seats repair
|
|
To happier mansions, and to purer air.
|
|
She spoke: the Goddess, darting upwards, flies,
|
|
And joyous re-ascends her native skies:
|
|
Nor enter'd there, till 'round her Iris threw
|
|
Ambrosial sweets, and pour'd celestial dew.
|
|
The faithful Fury, guiltless of delays,
|
|
With cruel haste the dire command obeys.
|
|
Girt in a bloody gown, a torch she shakes,
|
|
And round her neck twines speckled wreaths of
|
|
snakes.
|
|
Fear, and dismay, and agonizing pain,
|
|
With frantick rage, compleat her loveless train.
|
|
To Thebes her flight she sped, and Hell forsook;
|
|
At her approach the Theban turrets shook:
|
|
The sun shrunk back, thick clouds the day
|
|
o'er-cast,
|
|
And springing greens were wither'd as she past.
|
|
Now, dismal yellings heard, strange spectres
|
|
seen,
|
|
Confound as much the monarch as the queen.
|
|
In vain to quit the palace they prepar'd,
|
|
Tisiphone was there, and kept the ward.
|
|
She wide extended her unfriendly arms,
|
|
And all the Fury lavish'd all her harms.
|
|
Part of her tresses loudly hiss, and part
|
|
Spread poyson, as their forky tongues they dart.
|
|
Then from her middle locks two snakes she drew,
|
|
Whose merit from superior mischief grew:
|
|
Th' envenom'd ruin, thrown with spiteful care,
|
|
Clung to the bosoms of the hapless pair.
|
|
The hapless pair soon with wild thoughts were
|
|
fir'd,
|
|
And madness, by a thousand ways inspir'd.
|
|
'Tis true, th' unwounded body still was sound,
|
|
But 'twas the soul which felt the deadly wound.
|
|
Nor did th' unsated monster here give o'er,
|
|
But dealt of plagues a fresh, unnumber'd store.
|
|
Each baneful juice too well she understood,
|
|
Foam, churn'd by Cerberus, and Hydra's blood.
|
|
Hot hemlock, and cold aconite she chose,
|
|
Delighted in variety of woes.
|
|
Whatever can untune th' harmonious soul,
|
|
And its mild, reas'ning faculties controul,
|
|
Give false ideas, raise desires profane,
|
|
And whirl in eddies the tumultuous brain,
|
|
Mix'd with curs'd art, she direfully around
|
|
Thro' all their nerves diffus'd the sad compound.
|
|
Then toss'd her torch in circles still the same,
|
|
Improv'd their rage, and added flame to flame.
|
|
The grinning Fury her own conquest spy'd,
|
|
And to her rueful shades return'd with pride,
|
|
And threw th' exhausted, useless snakes aside.
|
|
Now Athamas cries out, his reason fled,
|
|
Here, fellow-hunters, let the toils be spread.
|
|
I saw a lioness, in quest of food,
|
|
With her two young, run roaring in this wood.
|
|
Again the fancy'd savages were seen,
|
|
As thro' his palace still he chac'd his queen;
|
|
Then tore Learchus from her breast: the child
|
|
Stretch'd little arms, and on its father smil'd:
|
|
A father now no more, who now begun
|
|
Around his head to whirl his giddy son,
|
|
And, quite insensible to Nature's call,
|
|
The helpless infant flung against the wall.
|
|
The same mad poyson in the mother wrought,
|
|
Young Melicerta in her arms she caught,
|
|
And with disorder'd tresses, howling, flies,
|
|
O! Bacchus, Evoe, Bacchus! loud she cries.
|
|
The name of Bacchus Juno laugh'd to hear,
|
|
And said, Thy foster-God has cost thee dear.
|
|
A rock there stood, whose side the beating waves
|
|
Had long consum'd, and hollow'd into caves.
|
|
The head shot forwards in a bending steep,
|
|
And cast a dreadful covert o'er the deep.
|
|
The wretched Ino, on destruction bent,
|
|
Climb'd up the cliff; such strength her fury lent:
|
|
Thence with her guiltless boy, who wept in vain,
|
|
At one bold spring she plung'd into the main.
|
|
Her neice's fate touch'd Cytherea's breast,
|
|
And in soft sounds she Neptune thus addrest:
|
|
Great God of waters, whose extended sway
|
|
Is next to his, whom Heav'n and Earth obey:
|
|
Let not the suit of Venus thee displease,
|
|
Pity the floaters on th' Ionian seas.
|
|
Encrease thy Subject-Gods, nor yet disdain
|
|
To add my kindred to that glorious train.
|
|
If from the sea I may such honours claim,
|
|
If 'tis desert, that from the sea I came,
|
|
As Grecian poets artfully have sung,
|
|
And in the name confest, from whence I sprung.
|
|
Pleas'd Neptune nodded his assent, and free
|
|
Both soon became from frail mortality.
|
|
He gave them form, and majesty divine,
|
|
And bad them glide along the foamy brine.
|
|
For Melicerta is Palaemon known,
|
|
And Ino once, Leucothoe is grown.
|
|
The The Theban matrons their lov'd queen pursu'd,
|
|
Transformation And tracing to the rock, her footsteps view'd.
|
|
of the Theban Too certain of her fate, they rend the skies
|
|
Matrons With piteous shrieks, and lamentable cries.
|
|
All beat their breasts, and Juno all upbraid,
|
|
Who still remember'd a deluded maid:
|
|
Who, still revengeful for one stol'n embrace,
|
|
Thus wreak'd her hate on the Cadmean race.
|
|
This Juno heard: And shall such elfs, she cry'd,
|
|
Dispute my justice, or my pow'r deride?
|
|
You too shall feel my wrath not idly spent;
|
|
A Goddess never for insults was meant.
|
|
She, who lov'd most, and who most lov'd had been,
|
|
Said, Not the waves shall part me from my queen.
|
|
She strove to plunge into the roaring flood;
|
|
Fix'd to the stone, a stone her self she stood.
|
|
This, on her breast would fain her blows repeat,
|
|
Her stiffen'd hands refus'd her breast to beat.
|
|
That, stretch'd her arms unto the seas; in vain
|
|
Her arms she labour'd to unstretch again.
|
|
To tear her comely locks another try'd,
|
|
Both comely locks, and fingers petryfi'd.
|
|
Part thus; but Juno with a softer mind
|
|
Part doom'd to mix among the feather'd kind.
|
|
Transform'd, the name of Theban birds they keep,
|
|
And skim the surface of that fatal deep.
|
|
Cadmus Mean-time, the wretched Cadmus mourns, nor knows,
|
|
and his Queen That they who mortal fell, immortal rose.
|
|
transform'd to With a long series of new ills opprest,
|
|
Serpents He droops, and all the man forsakes his breast.
|
|
Strange prodigies confound his frighted eyes;
|
|
From the fair city, which he rais'd, he flies:
|
|
As if misfortune not pursu'd his race,
|
|
But only hung o'er that devoted place.
|
|
Resolv'd by sea to seek some distant land,
|
|
At last he safely gain'd th' Illyrian strand.
|
|
Chearless himself, his consort still he chears,
|
|
Hoary, and loaden'd both with woes and years.
|
|
Then to recount past sorrows they begin,
|
|
And trace them to the gloomy origin.
|
|
That serpent sure was hallow'd, Cadmus cry'd,
|
|
Which once my spear transfix'd with foolish pride;
|
|
When the big teeth, a seed before unknown,
|
|
By me along the wond'ring glebe were sown,
|
|
And sprouting armies by themselves o'erthrown.
|
|
If thence the wrath of Heav'n on me is bent,
|
|
May Heav'n conclude it with one sad event;
|
|
To an extended serpent change the man:
|
|
And while he spoke, the wish'd-for change began.
|
|
His skin with sea-green spots was vary'd 'round,
|
|
And on his belly prone he prest the ground.
|
|
He glitter'd soon with many a golden scale,
|
|
And his shrunk legs clos'd in a spiry tail.
|
|
Arms yet remain'd, remaining arms he spread
|
|
To his lov'd wife, and human tears yet shed.
|
|
Come, my Harmonia, come, thy face recline
|
|
Down to my face; still touch, what still is mine.
|
|
O! let these hands, while hands, be gently prest,
|
|
While yet the serpent has not all possest.
|
|
More he had spoke, but strove to speak in vain,
|
|
The forky tongue refus'd to tell his pain,
|
|
And learn'd in hissings only to complain.
|
|
Then shriek'd Harmonia, Stay, my Cadmus, stay,
|
|
Glide not in such a monstrous shape away!
|
|
Destruction, like impetuous waves, rouls on.
|
|
Where are thy feet, thy legs, thy shoulders gone?
|
|
Chang'd is thy visage, chang'd is all thy frame;
|
|
Cadmus is only Cadmus now in name.
|
|
Ye Gods, my Cadmus to himself restore,
|
|
Or me like him transform; I ask no more.
|
|
The husband-serpent show'd he still had thought,
|
|
With wonted fondness an embrace he sought;
|
|
Play'd 'round her neck in many a harmless twist,
|
|
And lick'd that bosom, which, a man, he kist.
|
|
The lookers-on (for lookers-on there were)
|
|
Shock'd at the sight, half-dy'd away with fear.
|
|
The transformation was again renew'd,
|
|
And, like the husband, chang'd the wife they
|
|
view'd.
|
|
Both, serpents now, with fold involv'd in fold,
|
|
To the next covert amicably roul'd.
|
|
There curl'd they lie, or wave along the green,
|
|
Fearless see men, by men are fearless seen,
|
|
Still mild, and conscious what they once have been.
|
|
The Story of Yet tho' this harsh, inglorious fate they found,
|
|
Perseus Each in the deathless grandson liv'd renown'd.
|
|
Thro' conquer'd India Bacchus nobly rode,
|
|
And Greece with temples hail'd the conqu'ring God.
|
|
In Argos only proud Acrisius reign'd,
|
|
Who all the consecrated rites profan'd.
|
|
Audacious wretch! thus Bacchus to deny,
|
|
And the great Thunderer's great son defie!
|
|
Nor him alone: thy daughter vainly strove,
|
|
Brave Perseus of celestial stem to prove,
|
|
And her self pregnant by a golden Jove.
|
|
Yet this was true, and truth in time prevails;
|
|
Acrisius now his unbelief bewails.
|
|
His former thought, an impious thought he found,
|
|
And both the heroe, and the God were own'd.
|
|
He saw, already one in Heav'n was plac'd,
|
|
And one with more than mortal triumphs grac'd,
|
|
The victor Perseus with the Gorgon-head,
|
|
O'er Libyan sands his airy journey sped.
|
|
The gory drops distill'd, as swift he flew,
|
|
And from each drop envenom'd serpents grew,
|
|
The mischiefs brooded on the barren plains,
|
|
And still th' unhappy fruitfulness remains.
|
|
Atlas Thence Perseus, like a cloud, by storms was
|
|
transform'd to driv'n,
|
|
a Mountain Thro' all th' expanse beneath the cope of Heaven.
|
|
The jarring winds unable to controul,
|
|
He saw the southern, and the northern pole:
|
|
And eastward thrice, and westward thrice was
|
|
whirl'd,
|
|
And from the skies survey'd the nether world.
|
|
But when grey ev'ning show'd the verge of night,
|
|
He fear'd in darkness to pursue his flight.
|
|
He pois'd his pinions, and forgot to soar,
|
|
And sinking, clos'd them on th' Hesperian shore:
|
|
Then beg'd to rest, 'till Lucifer begun
|
|
To wake the morn, the morn to wake the sun.
|
|
Here Atlas reign'd, of more than human size,
|
|
And in his kingdom the world's limit lies.
|
|
Here Titan bids his weary'd coursers sleep,
|
|
And cools the burning axle in the deep.
|
|
The mighty monarch, uncontrol'd, alone,
|
|
His sceptre sways: no neighb'ring states are known.
|
|
A thousand flocks on shady mountains fed,
|
|
A thousand herds o'er grassy plains were spread.
|
|
Here wond'rous trees their shining stores unfold,
|
|
Their shining stores too wond'rous to be told,
|
|
Their leafs, their branches, and their apples,
|
|
gold.
|
|
Then Perseus the gigantick prince addrest,
|
|
Humbly implor'd a hospitable rest.
|
|
If bold exploits thy admiration fire,
|
|
He said, I fancy, mine thou wilt admire.
|
|
Or if the glory of a race can move,
|
|
Not mean my glory, for I spring from Jove.
|
|
At this confession Atlas ghastly star'd,
|
|
Mindful of what an oracle declar'd,
|
|
That the dark womb of Time conceal'd a day,
|
|
Which should, disclos'd, the bloomy gold betray:
|
|
All should at once be ravish'd from his eyes,
|
|
And Jove's own progeny enjoy the prize.
|
|
For this, the fruit he loftily immur'd,
|
|
And a fierce dragon the strait pass secur'd.
|
|
For this, all strangers he forbad to land,
|
|
And drove them from th' inhospitable strand.
|
|
To Perseus then: Fly quickly, fly this coast,
|
|
Nor falsly dare thy acts and race to boast.
|
|
In vain the heroe for one night entreats,
|
|
Threat'ning he storms, and next adds force to
|
|
threats.
|
|
By strength not Perseus could himself defend,
|
|
For who in strength with Atlas could contend?
|
|
But since short rest to me thou wilt not give,
|
|
A gift of endless rest from me receive,
|
|
He said, and backward turn'd, no more conceal'd
|
|
The present, and Medusa's head reveal'd.
|
|
Soon the high Atlas a high mountain stood,
|
|
His locks, and beard became a leafy wood.
|
|
His hands, and shoulders, into ridges went,
|
|
The summit-head still crown'd the steep ascent.
|
|
His bones a solid, rocky hardness gain'd:
|
|
He, thus immensely grown (as fate ordain'd),
|
|
The stars, the Heav'ns, and all the Gods sustain'd.
|
|
Andromeda Now Aeolus had with strong chains confin'd,
|
|
rescu'd from And deep imprison'd e'vry blust'ring wind,
|
|
the Sea Monster The rising Phospher with a purple light
|
|
Did sluggish mortals to new toils invite.
|
|
His feet again the valiant Perseus plumes,
|
|
And his keen sabre in his hand resumes:
|
|
Then nobly spurns the ground, and upwards springs,
|
|
And cuts the liquid air with sounding wings.
|
|
O'er various seas, and various lands he past,
|
|
'Till Aethiopia's shore appear'd at last.
|
|
Andromeda was there, doom'd to attone
|
|
By her own ruin follies not her own:
|
|
And if injustice in a God can be,
|
|
Such was the Libyan God's unjust decree.
|
|
Chain'd to a rock she stood; young Perseus stay'd
|
|
His rapid flight, to view the beauteous maid.
|
|
So sweet her frame, so exquisitely fine,
|
|
She seem'd a statue by a hand divine,
|
|
Had not the wind her waving tresses show'd,
|
|
And down her cheeks the melting sorrows flow'd.
|
|
Her faultless form the heroe's bosom fires;
|
|
The more he looks, the more he still admires.
|
|
Th' admirer almost had forgot to fly,
|
|
And swift descended, flutt'ring from on high.
|
|
O! Virgin, worthy no such chains to prove,
|
|
But pleasing chains in the soft folds of love;
|
|
Thy country, and thy name (he said) disclose,
|
|
And give a true rehearsal of thy woes.
|
|
A quick reply her bashfulness refus'd,
|
|
To the free converse of a man unus'd.
|
|
Her rising blushes had concealment found
|
|
From her spread hands, but that her hands were
|
|
bound.
|
|
She acted to her full extent of pow'r,
|
|
And bath'd her face with a fresh, silent show'r.
|
|
But by degrees in innocence grown bold,
|
|
Her name, her country, and her birth she told:
|
|
And how she suffer'd for her mother's pride,
|
|
Who with the Nereids once in beauty vy'd.
|
|
Part yet untold, the seas began to roar,
|
|
And mounting billows tumbled to the shore.
|
|
Above the waves a monster rais'd his head,
|
|
His body o'er the deep was widely spread:
|
|
Onward he flounc'd; aloud the virgin cries;
|
|
Each parent to her shrieks in shrieks replies:
|
|
But she had deepest cause to rend the skies.
|
|
Weeping, to her they cling; no sign appears
|
|
Of help, they only lend their helpless tears.
|
|
Too long you vent your sorrows, Perseus said,
|
|
Short is the hour, and swift the time of aid,
|
|
In me the son of thund'ring Jove behold,
|
|
Got in a kindly show'r of fruitful gold.
|
|
Medusa's snaky head is now my prey,
|
|
And thro' the clouds I boldly wing my way.
|
|
If such desert be worthy of esteem,
|
|
And, if your daughter I from death redeem,
|
|
Shall she be mine? Shall it not then be thought,
|
|
A bride, so lovely, was too cheaply bought?
|
|
For her my arms I willingly employ,
|
|
If I may beauties, which I save, enjoy.
|
|
The parents eagerly the terms embrace:
|
|
For who would slight such terms in such a case?
|
|
Nor her alone they promise, but beside,
|
|
The dowry of a kingdom with the bride.
|
|
As well-rigg'd gallies, which slaves, sweating,
|
|
row,
|
|
With their sharp beaks the whiten'd ocean plough;
|
|
So when the monster mov'd, still at his back
|
|
The furrow'd waters left a foamy track.
|
|
Now to the rock he was advanc'd so nigh,
|
|
Whirl'd from a sling a stone the space would fly.
|
|
Then bounding, upwards the brave Perseus sprung,
|
|
And in mid air on hov'ring pinions hung.
|
|
His shadow quickly floated on the main;
|
|
The monster could not his wild rage restrain,
|
|
But at the floating shadow leap'd in vain.
|
|
As when Jove's bird, a speckl'd serpent spies,
|
|
Which in the shine of Phoebus basking lies,
|
|
Unseen, he souses down, and bears away,
|
|
Truss'd from behind, the vainly-hissing prey.
|
|
To writh his neck the labour nought avails,
|
|
Too deep th' imperial talons pierce his scales.
|
|
Thus the wing'd heroe now descends, now soars,
|
|
And at his pleasure the vast monster gores.
|
|
Full in his back, swift stooping from above,
|
|
The crooked sabre to its hilt he drove.
|
|
The monster rag'd, impatient of the pain,
|
|
First bounded high, and then sunk low again.
|
|
Now, like a savage boar, when chaf'd with wounds,
|
|
And bay'd with opening mouths of hungry hounds,
|
|
He on the foe turns with collected might,
|
|
Who still eludes him with an airy flight;
|
|
And wheeling round, the scaly armour tries
|
|
Of his thick sides; his thinner tall now plies:
|
|
'Till from repeated strokes out gush'd a flood,
|
|
And the waves redden'd with the streaming blood.
|
|
At last the dropping wings, befoam'd all o'er,
|
|
With flaggy heaviness their master bore:
|
|
A rock he spy'd, whose humble head was low,
|
|
Bare at an ebb, but cover'd at a flow.
|
|
A ridgy hold, he, thither flying, gain'd,
|
|
And with one hand his bending weight sustain'd;
|
|
With th' other, vig'rous blows he dealt around,
|
|
And the home-thrusts the expiring monster own'd.
|
|
In deaf'ning shouts the glad applauses rise,
|
|
And peal on peal runs ratling thro' the skies.
|
|
The saviour-youth the royal pair confess,
|
|
And with heav'd hands their daughter's bridegroom
|
|
bless.
|
|
The beauteous bride moves on, now loos'd from
|
|
chains,
|
|
The cause, and sweet reward of all the heroe's
|
|
pains,
|
|
Mean-time, on shore triumphant Perseus stood,
|
|
And purg'd his hands, smear'd with the monster's
|
|
blood:
|
|
Then in the windings of a sandy bed
|
|
Compos'd Medusa's execrable head.
|
|
But to prevent the roughness, leafs he threw,
|
|
And young, green twigs, which soft in waters grew,
|
|
There soft, and full of sap; but here, when lay'd,
|
|
Touch'd by the head, that softness soon decay'd.
|
|
The wonted flexibility quite gone,
|
|
The tender scyons harden'd into stone.
|
|
Fresh, juicy twigs, surpriz'd, the Nereids brought,
|
|
Fresh, juicy twigs the same contagion caught.
|
|
The nymphs the petrifying seeds still keep,
|
|
And propagate the wonder thro' the deep.
|
|
The pliant sprays of coral yet declare
|
|
Their stiff'ning Nature, when expos'd to air.
|
|
Those sprays, which did, like bending osiers, move,
|
|
Snatch'd from their element, obdurate prove,
|
|
And shrubs beneath the waves, grow stones above.
|
|
The great immortals grateful Perseus prais'd,
|
|
And to three Pow'rs three turfy altars rais'd.
|
|
To Hermes this; and that he did assign
|
|
To Pallas: the mid honours, Jove, were thine,
|
|
He hastes for Pallas a white cow to cull,
|
|
A calf for Hermes, but for Jove a bull.
|
|
Then seiz'd the prize of his victorious fight,
|
|
Andromeda, and claim'd the nuptial rite.
|
|
Andromeda alone he greatly sought,
|
|
The dowry kingdom was not worth his thought.
|
|
Pleas'd Hymen now his golden torch displays;
|
|
With rich oblations fragrant altars blaze,
|
|
Sweet wreaths of choicest flow'rs are hung on high,
|
|
And cloudless pleasure smiles in ev'ry eye.
|
|
The melting musick melting thoughts inspires,
|
|
And warbling songsters aid the warbling lyres.
|
|
The palace opens wide in pompous state,
|
|
And by his peers surrounded, Cepheus sate.
|
|
A feast was serv'd, fit for a king to give,
|
|
And fit for God-like heroes to receive.
|
|
The banquet ended, the gay, chearful bowl
|
|
Mov'd round, and brighten'd, and enlarg'd each
|
|
soul.
|
|
Then Perseus ask'd, what customs there obtain'd,
|
|
And by what laws the people were restrain'd.
|
|
Which told; the teller a like freedom takes,
|
|
And to the warrior his petition makes,
|
|
To know, what arts had won Medusa's snakes.
|
|
The Story of The heroe with his just request complies,
|
|
Medusa's Head Shows, how a vale beneath cold Atlas lies,
|
|
Where, with aspiring mountains fenc'd around,
|
|
He the two daughters of old Phorcus found.
|
|
Fate had one common eye to both assign'd,
|
|
Each saw by turns, and each by turns was blind.
|
|
But while one strove to lend her sister sight,
|
|
He stretch'd his hand, and stole their mutual
|
|
light,
|
|
And left both eyeless, both involv'd in night.
|
|
Thro' devious wilds, and trackless woods he past,
|
|
And at the Gorgon-seats arriv'd at last:
|
|
But as he journey'd, pensive he survey'd,
|
|
What wasteful havock dire Medusa made.
|
|
Here, stood still breathing statues, men before;
|
|
There, rampant lions seem'd in stone to roar.
|
|
Nor did he, yet affrighted, quit the field,
|
|
But in the mirror of his polish'd shield
|
|
Reflected saw Medusa slumbers take,
|
|
And not one serpent by good chance awake.
|
|
Then backward an unerring blow he sped,
|
|
And from her body lop'd at once her head.
|
|
The gore prolifick prov'd; with sudden force
|
|
Sprung Pegasus, and wing'd his airy course.
|
|
The Heav'n-born warrior faithfully went on,
|
|
And told the num'rous dangers which he run.
|
|
What subject seas, what lands he had in view,
|
|
And nigh what stars th' advent'rous heroe flew.
|
|
At last he silent sate; the list'ning throng
|
|
Sigh'd at the pause of his delightful tongue.
|
|
Some beg'd to know, why this alone should wear,
|
|
Of all the sisters, such destructive hair.
|
|
Great Perseus then: With me you shall prevail,
|
|
Worth the relation, to relate a tale.
|
|
Medusa once had charms; to gain her love
|
|
A rival crowd of envious lovers strove.
|
|
They, who have seen her, own, they ne'er did trace
|
|
More moving features in a sweeter face.
|
|
Yet above all, her length of hair, they own,
|
|
In golden ringlets wav'd, and graceful shone.
|
|
Her Neptune saw, and with such beauties fir'd,
|
|
Resolv'd to compass, what his soul desir'd.
|
|
In chaste Minerva's fane, he, lustful, stay'd,
|
|
And seiz'd, and rifled the young, blushing maid.
|
|
The bashful Goddess turn'd her eyes away,
|
|
Nor durst such bold impurity survey;
|
|
But on the ravish'd virgin vengeance takes,
|
|
Her shining hair is chang'd to hissing snakes.
|
|
These in her Aegis Pallas joys to bear,
|
|
The hissing snakes her foes more sure ensnare,
|
|
Than they did lovers once, when shining hair.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Fourth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE FIFTH
|
|
|
|
WHILE Perseus entertain'd with this report
|
|
His father Cepheus, and the list'ning court,
|
|
Within the palace walls was heard aloud
|
|
The roaring noise of some unruly crowd;
|
|
Not like the songs which chearful friends prepare
|
|
For nuptial days, but sounds that threaten'd war;
|
|
And all the pleasures of this happy feast,
|
|
To tumult turn'd, in wild disorder ceas'd:
|
|
So, when the sea is calm, we often find
|
|
A storm rais'd sudden by some furious wind.
|
|
The Story of Chief in the riot Phineus first appear'd,
|
|
Perseus The rash ringleader of this boist'rous herd,
|
|
continu'd And brandishing his brazen-pointed lance,
|
|
Behold, he said, an injur'd man advance,
|
|
Stung with resentment for his ravish'd wife,
|
|
Nor shall thy wings, o Perseus, save thy life;
|
|
Nor Jove himself; tho' we've been often told
|
|
Who got thee in the form of tempting gold.
|
|
His lance was aim'd, when Cepheus ran, and said,
|
|
Hold, brother, hold; what brutal rage has made
|
|
Your frantick mind so black a crime conceive?
|
|
Are these the thanks that you to Perseus give?
|
|
This the reward that to his worth you pay,
|
|
Whose timely valour sav'd Andromeda?
|
|
Nor was it he, if you would reason right,
|
|
That forc'd her from you, but the jealous spight
|
|
Of envious Nereids, and Jove's high decree;
|
|
And that devouring monster of the sea,
|
|
That ready with his jaws wide gaping stood
|
|
To eat my child, the fairest of my blood.
|
|
You lost her then, when she seem'd past relief,
|
|
And wish'd perhaps her death, to ease your grief
|
|
With my afflictions: not content to view
|
|
Andromeda in chains, unhelp'd by you,
|
|
Her spouse, and uncle; will you grieve that he
|
|
Expos'd his life the dying maid to free?
|
|
And shall you claim his merit? Had you thought
|
|
Her charms so great, you shou'd have bravely sought
|
|
That blessing on the rocks, where fix'd she lay:
|
|
But now let Perseus bear his prize away,
|
|
By service gain'd, by promis'd faith possess'd;
|
|
To him I owe it, that my age is bless'd
|
|
Still with a child: Nor think that I prefer
|
|
Perseus to thee, but to the loss of her.
|
|
Phineus on him, and Perseus, roul'd about
|
|
His eyes in silent rage, and seem'd to doubt
|
|
Which to destroy; 'till, resolute at length,
|
|
He threw his spear with the redoubled strength
|
|
His fury gave him, and at Perseus struck;
|
|
But missing Perseus, in his seat it stuck.
|
|
Who, springing nimbly up, return'd the dart,
|
|
And almost plung'd it in his rival's heart;
|
|
But he for safety to the altar ran,
|
|
Unfit protection for so vile a man;
|
|
Yet was the stroke not vain, as Rhaetus found,
|
|
Who in his brow receiv'd a mortal wound;
|
|
Headlong he tumbled, when his skull was broke,
|
|
From which his friends the fatal weapon took,
|
|
While he lay trembling, and his gushing blood
|
|
In crimson streams around the table flow'd.
|
|
But this provok'd th' unruly rabble worse,
|
|
They flung their darts, and some in loud discourse
|
|
To death young Perseus, and the monarch doom;
|
|
But Cepheus left before the guilty room,
|
|
With grief appealing to the Gods above,
|
|
Who laws of hospitality approve,
|
|
Who faith protect, and succour injur'd right,
|
|
That he was guiltless of this barb'rous fight.
|
|
Pallas her brother Perseus close attends,
|
|
And with her ample shield from harm defends,
|
|
Raising a sprightly courage in his heart:
|
|
But Indian Athis took the weaker part,
|
|
Born in the chrystal grottoes of the sea,
|
|
Limnate's son, a fenny nymph, and she
|
|
Daughter of Ganges; graceful was his mein,
|
|
His person lovely, and his age sixteen.
|
|
His habit made his native beauty more;
|
|
A purple mantle fring'd with gold he wore;
|
|
His neck well-turn'd with golden chains was grac'd,
|
|
His hair with myrrh perfum'd, was nicely dress'd.
|
|
Tho' with just aim he cou'd the javelin throw,
|
|
Yet with more skill he drew the bending bow;
|
|
And now was drawing it with artful hand,
|
|
When Perseus snatching up a flaming brand,
|
|
Whirl'd sudden at his face the burning wood,
|
|
Crush'd his eyes in, and quench'd the fire with
|
|
blood;
|
|
Thro' the soft skin the splinter'd bones appear,
|
|
And spoil'd the face that lately was so fair.
|
|
When Lycabas his Athis thus beheld,
|
|
How was his heart with friendly horror fill'd!
|
|
A youth so noble, to his soul so dear,
|
|
To see his shapeless look, his dying groans to
|
|
hear!
|
|
He snatch'd the bow the boy was us'd to bend,
|
|
And cry'd, With me, false traytor, dare contend;
|
|
Boast not a conquest o'er a child, but try
|
|
Thy strength with me, who all thy pow'rs defy;
|
|
Nor think so mean an act a victory.
|
|
While yet he spoke he flung the whizzing dart,
|
|
Which pierc'd the plaited robe, but miss'd his
|
|
heart:
|
|
Perseus defy'd, upon him fiercely press'd
|
|
With sword, unsheath'd, and plung'd it in his
|
|
breast;
|
|
His eyes o'erwhelm'd with night, he stumbling
|
|
falls,
|
|
And with his latest breath on Athis calls;
|
|
Pleas'd that so near the lovely youth he lies,
|
|
He sinks his head upon his friend, and dies.
|
|
Next eager Phorbas, old Methion's son,
|
|
Came rushing forward with Amphimedon;
|
|
When the smooth pavement, slippery made with gore,
|
|
Trip'd up their feet, and flung 'em on the floor;
|
|
The sword of Perseus, who by chance was nigh,
|
|
Prevents their rise, and where they fall, they lye:
|
|
Full in his ribs Amphimedon he smote,
|
|
And then stuck fiery Phorbas in the throat.
|
|
Eurythus lifting up his ax, the blow
|
|
Was thus prevented by his nimble foe;
|
|
A golden cup he seizes, high embost,
|
|
And at his head the massy goblet tost:
|
|
It hits, and from his forehead bruis'd rebounds,
|
|
And blood, and brains he vomits from his wounds;
|
|
With his slain fellows on the floor he lies,
|
|
And death for ever shuts his swimming eyes.
|
|
Then Polydaemon fell, a Goddess-born;
|
|
Phlegias, and Elycen with locks unshorn
|
|
Next follow'd; next, the stroke of death he gave
|
|
To Clytus, Abanis, and Lycetus brave;
|
|
While o'er unnumber'd heaps of ghastly dead,
|
|
The Argive heroe's feet triumphant tread.
|
|
But Phineus stands aloof, and dreads to feel
|
|
His rival's force, and flies his pointed steel:
|
|
Yet threw a dart from far; by chance it lights
|
|
On Idas, who for neither party fights;
|
|
But wounded, sternly thus to Phineus said,
|
|
Since of a neuter thou a foe hast made,
|
|
This I return thee, drawing from his side
|
|
The dart; which, as he strove to fling, he dy'd.
|
|
Odites fell by Clymenus's sword,
|
|
The Cephen court had not a greater lord.
|
|
Hypseus his blade does in Protenor sheath,
|
|
But brave Lyncides soon reveng'd his death.
|
|
Here too was old Emathion, one that fear'd
|
|
The Gods, and in the cause of Heav'n appear'd,
|
|
Who only wishing the success of right,
|
|
And, by his age, exempted from the fight,
|
|
Both sides alike condemns: This impious war
|
|
Cease, cease, he cries; these bloody broils
|
|
forbear.
|
|
This scarce the sage with high concern had said,
|
|
When Chromis at a blow struck off his head,
|
|
Which dropping, on the royal altar roul'd,
|
|
Still staring on the crowd with aspect bold;
|
|
And still it seem'd their horrid strife to blame,
|
|
In life and death, his pious zeal the same;
|
|
While clinging to the horns, the trunk expires,
|
|
The sever'd head consumes amidst the fires.
|
|
Then Phineus, who from far his javelin threw,
|
|
Broteas and Ammon, twins and brothers, slew;
|
|
For knotted gauntlets matchless in the field;
|
|
But gauntlets must to swords and javelins yield.
|
|
Ampycus next, with hallow'd fillets bound,
|
|
As Ceres' priest, and with a mitre crown'd,
|
|
His spear transfix'd, and struck him to the ground.
|
|
O Iapetides, with pain I tell
|
|
How you, sweet lyrist, in the riot fell;
|
|
What worse than brutal rage his breast could fill,
|
|
Who did thy blood, o bard celestial! spill?
|
|
Kindly you press'd amid the princely throng,
|
|
To crown the feast, and give the nuptial song:
|
|
Discord abhorr'd the musick of thy lyre,
|
|
Whose notes did gentle peace so well inspire;
|
|
Thee, when fierce Pettalus far off espy'd,
|
|
Defenceless with thy harp, he scoffing cry'd,
|
|
Go; to the ghosts thy soothing lessons play;
|
|
We loath thy lyre, and scorn thy peaceful lay:
|
|
And, as again he fiercely bid him go,
|
|
He pierc'd his temples with a mortal blow.
|
|
His harp he held, tho' sinking on the ground,
|
|
Whose strings in death his trembling fingers found
|
|
By chance, and tun'd by chance a dying sound.
|
|
With grief Lycormas saw him fall, from far,
|
|
And, wresting from the door a massy bar,
|
|
Full in his poll lays on a load of knocks,
|
|
Which stun him, and he falls like a devoted ox.
|
|
Another bar Pelates would have snach'd,
|
|
But Corynthus his motions slily watch'd;
|
|
He darts his weapon from a private stand,
|
|
And rivets to the post his veiny hand:
|
|
When strait a missive spear transfix'd his side,
|
|
By Abas thrown, and as he hung, he dy'd.
|
|
Melaneus on the prince's side was slain;
|
|
And Dorylas, who own'd a fertile plain,
|
|
Of Nasamonia's fields the wealthy lord,
|
|
Whose crowded barns, could scarce contain their
|
|
board.
|
|
A whizzing spear obliquely gave a blow,
|
|
Stuck in his groin, and pierc'd the nerves below;
|
|
His foe behld his eyes convulsive roul,
|
|
His ebbing veins, and his departing soul;
|
|
Then taunting said, Of all thy spacious plain,
|
|
This spot thy only property remains.
|
|
He left him thus; but had no sooner left,
|
|
Than Perseus in revenge his nostrils cleft;
|
|
From his friend's breast the murd'ring dart he
|
|
drew,
|
|
And the same weapon at the murderer threw;
|
|
His head in halves the darted javelin cut,
|
|
And on each side the brain came issuing out.
|
|
Fortune his friend, in deaths around he deals,
|
|
And this his lance, and that his faulchion feels:
|
|
Now Clytius dies; and by a diff'rent wound,
|
|
The twin, his brother Clanis, bites the ground.
|
|
In his rent jaw the bearded weapon sticks,
|
|
And the steel'd dart does Clytius' thigh transfix.
|
|
With these Mendesian Celadon he slew:
|
|
And Astreus next, whose mother was a Jew,
|
|
His sire uncertain: then by Perseus fell
|
|
Aethion, who cou'd things to come foretell;
|
|
But now he knows not whence the javelin flies
|
|
That wounds his breast, nor by whose arm he dies.
|
|
The squire to Phineus next his valour try'd,
|
|
And fierce Agyrtes stain'd with paricide.
|
|
As these are slain, fresh numbers still appear,
|
|
And wage with Perseus an unequal war;
|
|
To rob him of his right, the maid he won,
|
|
By honour, promise, and desert his own.
|
|
With him, the father of the beauteous bride,
|
|
The mother, and the frighted virgin side;
|
|
With shrieks, and doleful cries they rend the air:
|
|
Their shrieks confounded with the din of war,
|
|
With dashing arms, and groanings of the slain,
|
|
They grieve unpitied, and unheard complain.
|
|
The floor with ruddy streams Bellona stains,
|
|
And Phineus a new war with double rage maintains.
|
|
Perseus begirt, from all around they pour
|
|
Their lances on him, a tempestuous show'r,
|
|
Aim'd all at him; a cloud of darts, and spears,
|
|
Or blind his eyes, or whistle round his ears.
|
|
Their numbers to resist, against the wall
|
|
He guards his back secure, and dares them all.
|
|
Here from the left Molpeus renews the fight,
|
|
And bold Ethemon presses on the right:
|
|
As when a hungry tyger near him hears
|
|
Two lowing herds, a-while he both forbears;
|
|
Nor can his hopes of this, or that renounce,
|
|
So strong he lusts to prey on both at once;
|
|
Thus Perseus now with that, or this is loth
|
|
To war distinct:, but fain would fall on both.
|
|
And first Chaonian Molpeus felt his blow,
|
|
And fled, and never after fac'd his foe;
|
|
Then fierce Ethemon, as he turn'd his back,
|
|
Hurried with fury, aiming at his neck,
|
|
His brandish'd sword against the marble struck
|
|
With all his might; the brittle weapon broke,
|
|
And in his throat the point rebounding stuck.
|
|
Too slight the wound for life to issue thence,
|
|
And yet too great for battel, or defence;
|
|
His arms extended in this piteous state,
|
|
For mercy he wou'd sue, but sues too late;
|
|
Perseus has in his bosom plung'd the sword,
|
|
And, ere he speaks, the wound prevents the word.
|
|
The crowds encreasing, and his friends
|
|
distress'd,
|
|
Himself by warring multitudes oppress'd:
|
|
Since thus unequally you fight, 'tis time,
|
|
He cry'd, to punish your presumptuous crime;
|
|
Beware, my friends; his friends were soon prepar'd,
|
|
Their sight averting, high the head he rear'd,
|
|
And Gorgon on his foes severely star'd.
|
|
Vain shift! says Thescelus, with aspect bold,
|
|
Thee, and thy bugbear monster, I behold
|
|
With scorn; he lifts his arm, but ere he threw
|
|
The dart, the heroe to a statue grew.
|
|
In the same posture still the marble stands,
|
|
And holds the warrior's weapons in its hands.
|
|
Amphyx, whom yet this wonder can't alarm,
|
|
Heaves at Lyncides' breast his impious arm;
|
|
But, while thus daringly he presses on,
|
|
His weapon and his arm are turn'd to stone.
|
|
Next Nileus, he who vainly said he ow'd
|
|
His origin to Nile's prolifick flood;
|
|
Who on his shield seven silver rivers bore,
|
|
His birth to witness by the arms he wore;
|
|
Full of his sev'n-fold father, thus express'd
|
|
His boast to Perseus, and his pride confess'd:
|
|
See whence we sprung; let this thy comfort be
|
|
In thy sure death, that thou didst die by me.
|
|
While yet he spoke, the dying accents hung
|
|
In sounds imperfect on his marble tongue;
|
|
Tho' chang'd to stone, his lips he seem'd to
|
|
stretch,
|
|
And thro' th' insensate rock wou'd force a speech.
|
|
This Eryx saw, but seeing wou'd not own;
|
|
The mischief by your selves, he cries, is done,
|
|
'Tis your cold courage turns your hearts to stone.
|
|
Come, follow me; fall on the stripling boy,
|
|
Kill him, and you his magick arms destroy.
|
|
Then rushing on, his arm to strike he rear'd,
|
|
And marbled o'er his varied frame appear'd.
|
|
These for affronting Pallas were chastis'd,
|
|
And justly met the death they had despis'd.
|
|
But brave Aconteus, Perseus' friend, by chance
|
|
Look'd back, and met the Gorgon's fatal glance:
|
|
A statue now become, he ghastly stares,
|
|
And still the foe to mortal combat dares.
|
|
Astyages the living likeness knew,
|
|
On the dead stone with vengeful fury flew;
|
|
But impotent his rage, the jarring blade
|
|
No print upon the solid marble made:
|
|
Again, as with redoubled might he struck,
|
|
Himself astonish'd in the quarry stuck.
|
|
The vulgar deaths 'twere tedious to rehearse,
|
|
And fates below the dignity of verse;
|
|
Their safety in their flight two hundred found,
|
|
Two hundred, by Medusa's head were ston'd.
|
|
Fierce Phineus now repents the wrongful fight,
|
|
And views his varied friends, a dreadful sight;
|
|
He knows their faces, for their help he sues,
|
|
And thinks, not hearing him, that they refuse:
|
|
By name he begs their succour, one by one,
|
|
Then doubts their life, and feels the friendly
|
|
stone.
|
|
Struck with remorse, and conscious of his pride,
|
|
Convict of sin, he turn'd his eyes aside;
|
|
With suppliant mein to Perseus thus he prays,
|
|
Hence with the head, as far as winds and seas
|
|
Can bear thee; hence, o quit the Cephen shore,
|
|
And never curse us with Medusa more,
|
|
That horrid head, which stiffens into stone
|
|
Those impious men who, daring death, look on.
|
|
I warr'd not with thee out of hate or strife,
|
|
My honest cause was to defend my wife,
|
|
First pledg'd to me; what crime cou'd I suppose,
|
|
To arm my friends, and vindicate my spouse?
|
|
But vain, too late I see, was our design;
|
|
Mine was the title, but the merit thine.
|
|
Contending made me guilty, I confess;
|
|
But penitence shou'd make that guilt the less:
|
|
'Twas thine to conquer by Minerva's pow'r;
|
|
Favour'd of Heav'n, thy mercy I implore;
|
|
For life I sue; the rest to thee I yield;
|
|
In pity, from my sight remove the shield.
|
|
He suing said; nor durst revert his eyes
|
|
On the grim head: and Perseus thus replies:
|
|
Coward, what is in me to grant, I will,
|
|
Nor blood, unworthy of my valour spill:
|
|
Fear not to perish by my vengeful sword,
|
|
From that secure; 'tis all the Fates afford.
|
|
Where I now see thee, thou shalt still be seen,
|
|
A lasting monument to please our queen;
|
|
There still shall thy betroth'd behold her spouse,
|
|
And find his image in her father's house.
|
|
This said; where Phineus turn'd to shun the shield
|
|
Full in his face the staring head he held;
|
|
As here and there he strove to turn aside,
|
|
The wonder wrought, the man was petrify'd:
|
|
All marble was his frame, his humid eyes
|
|
Drop'd tears, which hung upon the stone like ice.
|
|
In suppliant posture, with uplifted hands,
|
|
And fearful look, the guilty statue stands.
|
|
Hence Perseus to his native city hies,
|
|
Victorious, and rewarded with his prize.
|
|
Conquest, o'er Praetus the usurper, won,
|
|
He re-instates his grandsire in the throne.
|
|
Praetus, his brother dispossess'd by might,
|
|
His realm enjoy'd, and still detain'd his right:
|
|
But Perseus pull'd the haughty tyrant down,
|
|
And to the rightful king restor'd the throne.
|
|
Weak was th' usurper, as his cause was wrong;
|
|
Where Gorgon's head appears, what arms are strong?
|
|
When Perseus to his host the monster held,
|
|
They soon were statues, and their king expell'd.
|
|
Thence, to Seriphus with the head he sails,
|
|
Whose prince his story treats as idle tales:
|
|
Lord of a little isle, he scorns to seem
|
|
Too credulous, but laughs at that, and him.
|
|
Yet did he not so much suspect the truth,
|
|
As out of pride, or envy, hate the youth.
|
|
The Argive prince, at his contempt enrag'd,
|
|
To force his faith by fatal proof engag'd.
|
|
Friends, shut your eyes, he cries; his shield he
|
|
takes,
|
|
And to the king expos'd Medusa's snakes.
|
|
The monarch felt the pow'r he wou'd not own,
|
|
And stood convict of folly in the stone.
|
|
Minerva's Thus far Minerva was content to rove
|
|
Interview with With Perseus, offspring of her father Jove:
|
|
the Muses Now, hid in clouds, Seriphus she forsook;
|
|
And to the Theban tow'rs her journey took.
|
|
Cythnos and Gyaros lying to the right,
|
|
She pass'd unheeded in her eager flight;
|
|
And chusing first on Helicon to rest,
|
|
The virgin Muses in these words address'd:
|
|
Me, the strange tidings of a new-found spring,
|
|
Ye learned sisters, to this mountain bring.
|
|
If all be true that Fame's wide rumours tell,
|
|
'Twas Pegasus discover'd first your well;
|
|
Whose piercing hoof gave the soft earth a blow,
|
|
Which broke the surface where these waters flow.
|
|
I saw that horse by miracle obtain
|
|
Life, from the blood of dire Medusa slain;
|
|
And now, this equal prodigy to view,
|
|
From distant isles to fam'd Boeotia flew.
|
|
The Muse Urania said, Whatever cause
|
|
So great a Goddess to this mansion draws;
|
|
Our shades are happy with so bright a guest,
|
|
You, Queen, are welcome, and we Muses blest.
|
|
What Fame has publish'd of our spring is true,
|
|
Thanks for our spring to Pegasus are due.
|
|
Then, with becoming courtesy, she led
|
|
The curious stranger to their fountain's head;
|
|
Who long survey'd, with wonder, and delight,
|
|
Their sacred water, charming to the sight;
|
|
Their ancient groves, dark grottos, shady bow'rs,
|
|
And smiling plains adorn'd with various flow'rs.
|
|
O happy Muses! she with rapture cry'd,
|
|
Who, safe from cares, on this fair hill reside;
|
|
Blest in your seat, and free your selves to please
|
|
With joys of study, and with glorious ease.
|
|
The Fate of Then one replies: O Goddess, fit to guide
|
|
Pyreneus Our humble works, and in our choir preside,
|
|
Who sure wou'd wisely to these fields repair,
|
|
To taste our pleasures, and our labours share,
|
|
Were not your virtue, and superior mind
|
|
To higher arts, and nobler deeds inclin'd;
|
|
Justly you praise our works, and pleasing seat,
|
|
Which all might envy in this soft retreat,
|
|
Were we secur'd from dangers, and from harms;
|
|
But maids are frighten'd with the least alarms,
|
|
And none are safe in this licentious time;
|
|
Still fierce Pyreneus, and his daring crime,
|
|
With lasting horror strikes my feeble sight,
|
|
Nor is my mind recover'd from the fright.
|
|
With Thracian arms this bold usurper gain'd
|
|
Daulis, and Phocis, where he proudly reign'd:
|
|
It happen'd once, as thro' his lands we went,
|
|
For the bright temple of Parnassus bent,
|
|
He met us there, and in his artful mind
|
|
Hiding the faithless action he design'd,
|
|
Confer'd on us (whom, oh! too well he knew)
|
|
All honours that to Goddesses are due.
|
|
Stop, stop, ye Muses, 'tis your friend who calls,
|
|
The tyrant said; behold the rain that falls
|
|
On ev'ry side, and that ill-boding sky,
|
|
Whose lowring face portends more storms are nigh.
|
|
Pray make my house your own, and void of fear,
|
|
While this bad weather lasts, take shelter here.
|
|
Gods have made meaner places their resort,
|
|
And, for a cottage, left their shining court.
|
|
Oblig'd to stop, by the united force
|
|
Of pouring rains, and complaisant discourse,
|
|
His courteous invitation we obey,
|
|
And in his hall resolve a-while to stay.
|
|
Soon it clear'd up; the clouds began to fly,
|
|
The driving north refin'd the show'ry sky;
|
|
Then to pursue our journey we began:
|
|
But the false traitor to his portal ran,
|
|
Stopt our escape, the door securely barr'd,
|
|
And to our honour, violence prepar'd.
|
|
But we, transform'd to birds, avoid his snare,
|
|
On pinions rising in the yielding air.
|
|
But he, by lust and indignation fir'd,
|
|
Up to his highest tow'r with speed retir'd,
|
|
And cries, In vain you from my arms withdrew,
|
|
The way you go your lover will pursue.
|
|
Then, in a flying posture wildly plac'd,
|
|
And daring from that height himself to cast,
|
|
The wretch fell headlong, and the ground bestrew'd
|
|
With broken bones, and stains of guilty blood.
|
|
The Story of The Muse yet spoke; when they began to hear
|
|
the Pierides A noise of wings that flutter'd in the air;
|
|
And strait a voice, from some high-spreading bough,
|
|
Seem'd to salute the company below.
|
|
The Goddess wonder'd, and inquir'd from whence
|
|
That tongue was heard, that spoke so plainly sense
|
|
(It seem'd to her a human voice to be,
|
|
But prov'd a bird's; for in a shady tree
|
|
Nine magpies perch'd lament their alter'd state,
|
|
And, what they hear, are skilful to repeat).
|
|
The sister to the wondring Goddess said,
|
|
These, foil'd by us, by us were thus repaid.
|
|
These did Evippe of Paeonia bring
|
|
With nine hard labour-pangs to Pella's king.
|
|
The foolish virgins of their number proud,
|
|
And puff'd with praises of the senseless crowd,
|
|
Thro' all Achaia, and th' Aemonian plains
|
|
Defy'd us thus, to match their artless strains;
|
|
No more, ye Thespian girls, your notes repeat,
|
|
Nor with false harmony the vulgar cheat;
|
|
In voice or skill, if you with us will vye,
|
|
As many we, in voice or skill will try.
|
|
Surrender you to us, if we excell,
|
|
Fam'd Aganippe, and Medusa's well.
|
|
The conquest yours, your prize from us shall be
|
|
The Aemathian plains to snowy Paeone;
|
|
The nymphs our judges. To dispute the field,
|
|
We thought a shame; but greater shame to yield.
|
|
On seats of living stone the sisters sit,
|
|
And by the rivers swear to judge aright.
|
|
The Song of Then rises one of the presumptuous throng,
|
|
the Pierides Steps rudely forth, and first begins the song;
|
|
With vain address describes the giants' wars,
|
|
And to the Gods their fabled acts prefers.
|
|
She sings, from Earth's dark womb how Typhon rose,
|
|
And struck with mortal fear his heav'nly foes.
|
|
How the Gods fled to Egypt's slimy soil,
|
|
And hid their heads beneath the banks of Nile:
|
|
How Typhon, from the conquer'd skies, pursu'd
|
|
Their routed godheads to the sev'n-mouth'd flood;
|
|
Forc'd every God, his fury to escape,
|
|
Some beastly form to take, or earthly shape.
|
|
Jove (so she sung) was chang'd into a ram,
|
|
From whence the horns of Libyan Ammon came.
|
|
Bacchus a goat, Apollo was a crow,
|
|
Phaebe a cat; die wife of Jove a cow,
|
|
Whose hue was whiter than the falling snow.
|
|
Mercury to a nasty Ibis turn'd,
|
|
The change obscene, afraid of Typhon, mourn'd;
|
|
While Venus from a fish protection craves,
|
|
And once more plunges in her native waves.
|
|
She sung, and to her harp her voice apply'd;
|
|
Then us again to match her they defy'd.
|
|
But our poor song, perhaps, for you to hear,
|
|
Nor leisure serves, nor is it worth your ear.
|
|
That causeless doubt remove, O Muse rehearse,
|
|
The Goddess cry'd, your ever-grateful verse.
|
|
Beneath a chequer'd shade she takes her seat,
|
|
And bids the sister her whole song repeat.
|
|
The sister thus: Calliope we chose
|
|
For the performance. The sweet virgin rose,
|
|
With ivy crown'd she tunes her golden strings,
|
|
And to her harp this composition sings.
|
|
The Song of First Ceres taught the lab'ring hind to plow
|
|
the Muses The pregnant Earth, and quickning seed to sow.
|
|
She first for Man did wholsome food provide,
|
|
And with just laws the wicked world supply'd:
|
|
All good from her deriv'd, to her belong
|
|
The grateful tributes of the Muse's song.
|
|
Her more than worthy of our verse we deem,
|
|
Oh! were our verse more worthy of the theme.
|
|
Jove on the giant fair Trinacria hurl'd,
|
|
And with one bolt reveng'd his starry world.
|
|
Beneath her burning hills Tiphaeus lies,
|
|
And, strugling always, strives in vain to rise.
|
|
Down does Pelorus his right hand suppress
|
|
Tow'rd Latium, on the left Pachyne weighs.
|
|
His legs are under Lilybaeum spread,
|
|
And Aetna presses hard his horrid head.
|
|
On his broad back he there extended lies,
|
|
And vomits clouds of ashes to the skies.
|
|
Oft lab'ring with his load, at last he tires,
|
|
And spews out in revenge a flood of fires.
|
|
Mountains he struggles to o'erwhelm, and towns;
|
|
Earth's inmost bowels quake, and Nature groans.
|
|
His terrors reach the direful king of Hell;
|
|
He fears his throws will to the day reveal
|
|
The realms of night, and fright his trembling
|
|
ghosts.
|
|
This to prevent, he quits the Stygian coasts,
|
|
In his black carr, by sooty horses drawn,
|
|
Fair Sicily he seeks, and dreads the dawn.
|
|
Around her plains he casts his eager eyes,
|
|
And ev'ry mountain to the bottom tries.
|
|
But when, in all the careful search, he saw
|
|
No cause of fear, no ill-suspected flaw;
|
|
Secure from harm, and wand'ring on at will,
|
|
Venus beheld him from her flow'ry hill:
|
|
When strait the dame her little Cupid prest
|
|
With secret rapture to her snowy breast,
|
|
And in these words the flutt'ring boy addrest.
|
|
O thou, my arms, my glory, and my pow'r,
|
|
My son, whom men, and deathless Gods adore;
|
|
Bend thy sure bow, whose arrows never miss'd,
|
|
No longer let Hell's king thy sway resist;
|
|
Take him, while stragling from his dark abodes
|
|
He coasts the kingdoms of superior Gods.
|
|
If sovereign Jove, if Gods who rule the waves,
|
|
And Neptune, who rules them, have been thy slaves;
|
|
Shall Hell be free? The tyrant strike, my son,
|
|
Enlarge thy mother's empire, and thy own.
|
|
Let not our Heav'n be made the mock of Hell,
|
|
But Pluto to confess thy pow'r compel.
|
|
Our rule is slighted in our native skies,
|
|
See Pallas, see Diana too defies
|
|
Thy darts, which Ceres' daughter wou'd despise.
|
|
She too our empire treats with aukward scorn;
|
|
Such insolence no longer's to be born.
|
|
Revenge our slighted reign, and with thy dart
|
|
Transfix the virgin's to the uncle's heart.
|
|
She said; and from his quiver strait he drew
|
|
A dart that surely wou'd the business do.
|
|
She guides his hand, she makes her touch the test,
|
|
And of a thousand arrows chose the best:
|
|
No feather better pois'd, a sharper head
|
|
None had, and sooner none, and surer sped.
|
|
He bends his bow, he draws it to his ear,
|
|
Thro' Pluto's heart it drives, and fixes there.
|
|
The Rape of Near Enna's walls a spacious lake is spread,
|
|
Proserpine Fam'd for the sweetly-singing swans it bred;
|
|
Pergusa is its name: and never more
|
|
Were heard, or sweeter on Cayster's shore.
|
|
Woods crown the lake; and Phoebus ne'er invades
|
|
The tufted fences, or offends the shades:
|
|
Fresh fragrant breezes fan the verdant bow'rs,
|
|
And the moist ground smiles with enamel'd flow'rs
|
|
The chearful birds their airy carols sing,
|
|
And the whole year is one eternal spring.
|
|
Here, while young Proserpine, among the maids,
|
|
Diverts herself in these delicious shades;
|
|
While like a child with busy speed and care
|
|
She gathers lillies here, and vi'lets there;
|
|
While first to fill her little lap she strives,
|
|
Hell's grizly monarch at the shade arrives;
|
|
Sees her thus sporting on the flow'ry green,
|
|
And loves the blooming maid, as soon as seen.
|
|
His urgent flame impatient of delay,
|
|
Swift as his thought he seiz'd the beauteous prey,
|
|
And bore her in his sooty carr away.
|
|
The frighted Goddess to her mother cries,
|
|
But all in vain, for now far off she flies;
|
|
Far she behind her leaves her virgin train;
|
|
To them too cries, and cries to them in vain,
|
|
And, while with passion she repeats her call,
|
|
The vi'lets from her lap, and lillies fall:
|
|
She misses 'em, poor heart! and makes new moan;
|
|
Her lillies, ah! are lost, her vi'lets gone.
|
|
O'er hills, the ravisher, and vallies speeds,
|
|
By name encouraging his foamy steeds;
|
|
He rattles o'er their necks the rusty reins,
|
|
And ruffles with the stroke their shaggy manes.
|
|
O'er lakes he whirls his flying wheels, and comes
|
|
To the Palici breathing sulph'rous fumes.
|
|
And thence to where the Bacchiads of renown
|
|
Between unequal havens built their town;
|
|
Where Arethusa, round th' imprison'd sea,
|
|
Extends her crooked coast to Cyane;
|
|
The nymph who gave the neighb'ring lake a name,
|
|
Of all Sicilian nymphs the first in fame,
|
|
She from the waves advanc'd her beauteous head,
|
|
The Goddess knew, and thus to Pluto said:
|
|
Farther thou shalt not with the virgin run;
|
|
Ceres unwilling, canst thou be her son?
|
|
The maid shou'd be by sweet perswasion won.
|
|
Force suits not with the softness of the fair;
|
|
For, if great things with small I may compare,
|
|
Me Anapis once lov'd; a milder course
|
|
He took, and won me by his words, not force.
|
|
Then, stretching out her arms, she stopt his way;
|
|
But he, impatient of the shortest stay,
|
|
Throws to his dreadful steeds the slacken'd rein,
|
|
And strikes his iron sceptre thro' the main;
|
|
The depths profound thro' yielding waves he
|
|
cleaves,
|
|
And to Hell's center a free passage leaves;
|
|
Down sinks his chariot, and his realms of night
|
|
The God soon reaches with a rapid flight.
|
|
Cyane dissolves But still does Cyane the rape bemoan,
|
|
to a Fountain And with the Goddess' wrongs laments her own;
|
|
For the stoln maid, and for her injur'd spring,
|
|
Time to her trouble no relief can bring.
|
|
In her sad heart a heavy load she bears,
|
|
'Till the dumb sorrow turns her all to tears.
|
|
Her mingling waters with that fountain pass,
|
|
Of which she late immortal Goddess was;
|
|
Her varied members to a fluid melt,
|
|
A pliant softness in her bones is felt;
|
|
Her wavy locks first drop away in dew,
|
|
And liquid next her slender fingers grew.
|
|
The body's change soon seizes its extreme,
|
|
Her legs dissolve, and feet flow off in stream.
|
|
Her arms, her back, her shoulders, and her side,
|
|
Her swelling breasts in little currents glide,
|
|
A silver liquor only now remains
|
|
Within the channel of her purple veins;
|
|
Nothing to fill love's grasp; her husband chaste
|
|
Bathes in that bosom he before embrac'd.
|
|
A Boy Thus, while thro' all the Earth, and all the
|
|
transform'd to main,
|
|
an Eft Her daughter mournful Ceres sought in vain;
|
|
Aurora, when with dewy looks she rose,
|
|
Nor burnish'd Vesper found her in repose,
|
|
At Aetna's flaming mouth two pitchy pines
|
|
To light her in her search at length she tines.
|
|
Restless, with these, thro' frosty night she goes,
|
|
Nor fears the cutting winds, nor heeds the snows;
|
|
And, when the morning-star the day renews,
|
|
From east to west her absent child pursues.
|
|
Thirsty at last by long fatigue she grows,
|
|
But meets no spring, no riv'let near her flows.
|
|
Then looking round, a lowly cottage spies,
|
|
Smoaking among the trees, and thither hies.
|
|
The Goddess knocking at the little door,
|
|
'Twas open'd by a woman old and poor,
|
|
Who, when she begg'd for water, gave her ale
|
|
Brew'd long, but well preserv'd from being stale.
|
|
The Goddess drank; a chuffy lad was by,
|
|
Who saw the liquor with a grutching eye,
|
|
And grinning cries, She's greedy more than dry.
|
|
Ceres, offended at his foul grimace,
|
|
Flung what she had not drunk into his face,
|
|
The sprinklings speckle where they hit the skin,
|
|
And a long tail does from his body spin;
|
|
His arms are turn'd to legs, and lest his size
|
|
Shou'd make him mischievous, and he might rise
|
|
Against mankind, diminutives his frame,
|
|
Less than a lizzard, but in shape the same.
|
|
Amaz'd the dame the wondrous sight beheld,
|
|
And weeps, and fain wou'd touch her quondam child.
|
|
Yet her approach th' affrighted vermin shuns,
|
|
And fast into the greatest crevice runs.
|
|
A name they gave him, which the spots exprest,
|
|
That rose like stars, and varied all his breast.
|
|
What lands, what seas the Goddess wander'd o'er,
|
|
Were long to tell; for there remain'd no more.
|
|
Searching all round, her fruitless toil she mourns,
|
|
And with regret to Sicily returns.
|
|
At length, where Cyane now flows, she came,
|
|
Who cou'd have told her, were she still the same
|
|
As when she saw her daughter sink to Hell;
|
|
But what she knows she wants a tongue to tell.
|
|
Yet this plain signal manifestly gave,
|
|
The virgin's girdle floating on a wave,
|
|
As late she dropt it from her slender waste,
|
|
When with her uncle thro' the deep she past.
|
|
Ceres the token by her grief confest,
|
|
And tore her golden hair, and beat her breast.
|
|
She knows not on what land her curse shou'd fall,
|
|
But, as ingrate, alike upbraids them all,
|
|
Unworthy of her gifts; Trinacria most,
|
|
Where the last steps she found of what she lost.
|
|
The plough for this the vengeful Goddess broke,
|
|
And with one death the ox, and owner struck,
|
|
In vain the fallow fields the peasant tills,
|
|
The seed, corrupted ere 'tis sown, she kills.
|
|
The fruitful soil, that once such harvests bore,
|
|
Now mocks the farmer's care, and teems no more.
|
|
And the rich grain which fills the furrow'd glade,
|
|
Rots in the seed, or shrivels in the blade;
|
|
Or too much sun burns up, or too much rain
|
|
Drowns, or black blights destroy the blasted plain;
|
|
Or greedy birds the new-sown seed devour,
|
|
Or darnel, thistles, and a crop impure
|
|
Of knotted grass along the acres stand,
|
|
And spread their thriving roots thro' all the land.
|
|
Then from the waves soft Arethusa rears
|
|
Her head, and back she flings her dropping hairs.
|
|
O mother of the maid, whom thou so far
|
|
Hast sought, of whom thou canst no tidings hear;
|
|
O thou, she cry'd, who art to life a friend,
|
|
Cease here thy search, and let thy labour end.
|
|
Thy faithful Sicily's a guiltless clime,
|
|
And shou'd not suffer for another's crime;
|
|
She neither knew, nor cou'd prevent the deed;
|
|
Nor think that for my country thus I plead;
|
|
My country's Pisa, I'm an alien here,
|
|
Yet these abodes to Elis I prefer,
|
|
No clime to me so sweet, no place so dear.
|
|
These springs I Arethusa now possess,
|
|
And this my seat, o gracious Goddess, bless:
|
|
This island why I love, and why I crost
|
|
Such spacious seas to reach Ortygia's coast,
|
|
To you I shall impart, when, void of care,
|
|
Your heart's at ease, and you're more fit to hear;
|
|
When on your brow no pressing sorrow sits,
|
|
For gay content alone such tales admits.
|
|
When thro' Earth's caverns I a-while have roul'd
|
|
My waves, I rise, and here again behold
|
|
The long-lost stars; and, as I late did glide
|
|
Near Styx, Proserpina there I espy'd.
|
|
Fear still with grief might in her face be seen;
|
|
She still her rape laments; yet, made a queen,
|
|
Beneath those gloomy shades her sceptre sways,
|
|
And ev'n th' infernal king her will obeys.
|
|
This heard, the Goddess like a statue stood,
|
|
Stupid with grief; and in that musing mood
|
|
Continu'd long; new cares a-while supprest
|
|
The reigning of her immortal breast.
|
|
At last to Jove her daughter's sire she flies,
|
|
And with her chariot cuts the chrystal skies;
|
|
She comes in clouds, and with dishevel'd hair,
|
|
Standing before his throne, prefers her pray'r.
|
|
King of the Gods, defend my blood and thine,
|
|
And use it not the worse for being mine.
|
|
If I no more am gracious in thy sight,
|
|
Be just, o Jove, and do thy daughter right.
|
|
In vain I sought her the wide world around,
|
|
And, when I most despair'd to find her, found.
|
|
But how can I the fatal finding boast,
|
|
By which I know she is for ever lost?
|
|
Without her father's aid, what other Pow'r
|
|
Can to my arms the ravish'd maid restore?
|
|
Let him restore her, I'll the crime forgive;
|
|
My child, tho' ravish'd, I'd with joy receive.
|
|
Pity, your daughter with a thief shou'd wed,
|
|
Tho' mine, you think, deserves no better bed.
|
|
Jove thus replies: It equally belongs
|
|
To both, to guard our common pledge from wrongs.
|
|
But if to things we proper names apply,
|
|
This hardly can be call'd an injury.
|
|
The theft is love; nor need we blush to own
|
|
The thief, if I can judge, to be our son.
|
|
Had you of his desert no other proof,
|
|
To be Jove's brother is methinks enough.
|
|
Nor was my throne by worth superior got,
|
|
Heav'n fell to me, as Hell to him, by lot:
|
|
If you are still resolv'd her loss to mourn,
|
|
And nothing less will serve than her return;
|
|
Upon these terms she may again be yours
|
|
(Th' irrevocable terms of fate, not ours),
|
|
Of Stygian food if she did never taste,
|
|
Hell's bounds may then, and only then, be past.
|
|
The The Goddess now, resolving to succeed,
|
|
Transformation Down to the gloomy shades descends with speed;
|
|
of Ascalaphus But adverse fate had otherwise decreed.
|
|
into an Owl For, long before, her giddy thoughtless child
|
|
Had broke her fast, and all her projects spoil'd.
|
|
As in the garden's shady walk she stray'd,
|
|
A fair pomegranate charm'd the simple maid,
|
|
Hung in her way, and tempting her to taste,
|
|
She pluck'd the fruit, and took a short repast.
|
|
Seven times, a seed at once, she eat the food;
|
|
The fact Ascalaphus had only view'd;
|
|
Whom Acheron begot in Stygian shades
|
|
On Orphne, fam'd among Avernal maids;
|
|
He saw what past, and by discov'ring all,
|
|
Detain'd the ravish'd nymph in cruel thrall.
|
|
But now a queen, she with resentment heard,
|
|
And chang'd the vile informer to a bird.
|
|
In Phlegeton's black stream her hand she dips,
|
|
Sprinkles his head, and wets his babling lips.
|
|
Soon on his face, bedropt with magick dew,
|
|
A change appear'd, and gawdy feathers grew.
|
|
A crooked beak the place of nose supplies,
|
|
Rounder his head, and larger are his eyes.
|
|
His arms and body waste, but are supply'd
|
|
With yellow pinions flagging on each side.
|
|
His nails grow crooked, and are turn'd to claws,
|
|
And lazily along his heavy wings he draws.
|
|
Ill-omen'd in his form, the unlucky fowl,
|
|
Abhorr'd by men, and call'd a scrieching owl.
|
|
The Daughters Justly this punishment was due to him,
|
|
of Achelous And less had been too little for his crime;
|
|
transform'd to But, o ye nymphs that from the flood descend,
|
|
Sirens What fault of yours the Gods cou'd so offend,
|
|
With wings and claws your beauteous forms to spoil,
|
|
Yet save your maiden face, and winning smile?
|
|
Were you not with her in Pergusa's bow'rs,
|
|
When Proserpine went forth to gather flow'rs?
|
|
Since Pluto in his carr the Goddess caught,
|
|
Have you not for her in each climate sought?
|
|
And when on land you long had search'd in vain,
|
|
You wish'd for wings to cross the pathless main;
|
|
That Earth and Sea might witness to your care:
|
|
The Gods were easy, and return'd your pray'r;
|
|
With golden wing o'er foamy waves you fled,
|
|
And to the sun your plumy glories spread.
|
|
But, lest the soft enchantment of your songs,
|
|
And the sweet musick of your flat'ring tongues
|
|
Shou'd quite be lost (as courteous fates ordain),
|
|
Your voice and virgin beauty still remain.
|
|
Jove some amends for Ceres lost to make,
|
|
Yet willing Pluto shou'd the joy partake,
|
|
Gives 'em of Proserpine an equal share,
|
|
Who, claim'd by both, with both divides the year.
|
|
The Goddess now in either empire sways,
|
|
Six moons in Hell, and six with Ceres stays.
|
|
Her peevish temper's chang'd; that sullen mind,
|
|
Which made ev'n Hell uneasy, now is kind,
|
|
Her voice refines, her mein more sweet appears,
|
|
Her forehead free from frowns, her eyes from tears,
|
|
As when, with golden light, the conqu'ring day
|
|
Thro' dusky exhalations clears a way.
|
|
Ceres her daughter's rape no longer mourn'd,
|
|
But back to Arethusa's spring return'd;
|
|
And sitting on the margin, bid her tell
|
|
From whence she came, and why a sacred well.
|
|
The Story of Still were the purling waters, and the maid
|
|
Arethusa From the smooth surface rais'd her beauteous head,
|
|
Wipes off the drops that from her tresses ran,
|
|
And thus to tell Alpheus' loves began.
|
|
In Elis first I breath'd the living air,
|
|
The chase was all my pleasure, all my care.
|
|
None lov'd like me the forest to explore,
|
|
To pitch the toils, and drive the bristled boar.
|
|
Of fair, tho' masculine, I had the name,
|
|
But gladly wou'd to that have quitted claim:
|
|
It less my pride than indignation rais'd,
|
|
To hear the beauty I neglected, prais'd;
|
|
Such compliments I loath'd, such charms as these
|
|
I scorn'd, and thought it infamy to please.
|
|
Once, I remember, in the summer's heat,
|
|
Tir'd with the chase, I sought a cool retreat;
|
|
And, walking on, a silent current found,
|
|
Which gently glided o'er the grav'ly ground.
|
|
The chrystal water was so smooth, so clear,
|
|
My eye distinguish'd ev'ry pebble there.
|
|
So soft its motion, that I scarce perceiv'd
|
|
The running stream, or what I saw believ'd.
|
|
The hoary willow, and the poplar, made
|
|
Along the shelving bank a grateful shade.
|
|
In the cool rivulet my feet I dipt,
|
|
Then waded to the knee, and then I stript;
|
|
My robe I careless on an osier threw,
|
|
That near the place commodiously grew;
|
|
Nor long upon the border naked stood,
|
|
But plung'd with speed into the silver flood.
|
|
My arms a thousand ways I mov'd, and try'd
|
|
To quicken, if I cou'd, the lazy tide;
|
|
Where, while I play'd my swimming gambols o'er,
|
|
I heard a murm'ring voice, and frighted sprung to
|
|
shore.
|
|
Oh! whither, Arethusa, dost thou fly?
|
|
From the brook's bottom did Alpheus cry;
|
|
Again, I heard him, in a hollow tone,
|
|
Oh! whither, Arethusa, dost thou run?
|
|
Naked I flew, nor cou'd I stay to hide
|
|
My limbs, my robe was on the other side;
|
|
Alpheus follow'd fast, th' inflaming sight
|
|
Quicken'd his speed, and made his labour light;
|
|
He sees me ready for his eager arms,
|
|
And with a greedy glance devours my charms.
|
|
As trembling doves from pressing danger fly,
|
|
When the fierce hawk comes sousing from the sky;
|
|
And, as fierce hawks the trembling doves pursue,
|
|
From him I fled, and after me he flew.
|
|
First by Orchomenus I took my flight,
|
|
And soon had Psophis and Cyllene in sight;
|
|
Behind me then high Maenalus I lost,
|
|
And craggy Erimanthus scal'd with frost;
|
|
Elis was next; thus far the ground I trod
|
|
With nimble feet, before the distanc'd God.
|
|
But here I lagg'd, unable to sustain
|
|
The labour longer, and my flight maintain;
|
|
While he more strong, more patient of the toil,
|
|
And fir'd with hopes of beauty's speedy spoil,
|
|
Gain'd my lost ground, and by redoubled pace,
|
|
Now left between us but a narrow space.
|
|
Unweary'd I 'till now o'er hills, and plains,
|
|
O'er rocks, and rivers ran, and felt no pains:
|
|
The sun behind me, and the God I kept,
|
|
But, when I fastest shou'd have run, I stept.
|
|
Before my feet his shadow now appear'd;
|
|
As what I saw, or rather what I fear'd.
|
|
Yet there I could not be deceiv'd by fear,
|
|
Who felt his breath pant on my braided hair,
|
|
And heard his sounding tread, and knew him to be
|
|
near.
|
|
Tir'd, and despairing, O celestial maid,
|
|
I'm caught, I cry'd, without thy heav'nly aid.
|
|
Help me, Diana, help a nymph forlorn,
|
|
Devoted to the woods, who long has worn
|
|
Thy livery, and long thy quiver born.
|
|
The Goddess heard; my pious pray'r prevail'd;
|
|
In muffling clouds my virgin head was veil'd,
|
|
The am'rous God, deluded of his hopes,
|
|
Searches the gloom, and thro' the darkness gropes;
|
|
Twice, where Diana did her servant hide
|
|
He came, and twice, O Arethusa! cry'd.
|
|
How shaken was my soul, how sunk my heart!
|
|
The terror seiz'd on ev'ry trembling part.
|
|
Thus when the wolf about the mountain prowls
|
|
For prey, the lambkin hears his horrid howls:
|
|
The tim'rous hare, the pack approaching nigh,
|
|
Thus hearkens to the hounds, and trembles at the
|
|
cry;
|
|
Nor dares she stir, for fear her scented breath
|
|
Direct the dogs, and guide the threaten'd death.
|
|
Alpheus in the cloud no traces found
|
|
To mark my way, yet stays to guard the ground,
|
|
The God so near, a chilly sweat possest
|
|
My fainting limbs, at ev'ry pore exprest;
|
|
My strength distill'd in drops, my hair in dew,
|
|
My form was chang'd, and all my substance new.
|
|
Each motion was a stream, and my whole frame
|
|
Turn'd to a fount, which still preserves my name.
|
|
Resolv'd I shou'd not his embrace escape,
|
|
Again the God resumes his fluid shape;
|
|
To mix his streams with mine he fondly tries,
|
|
But still Diana his attempt denies.
|
|
She cleaves the ground; thro' caverns dark I run
|
|
A diff'rent current, while he keeps his own.
|
|
To dear Ortygia she conducts my way,
|
|
And here I first review the welcome day.
|
|
Here Arethusa stopt; then Ceres takes
|
|
Her golden carr, and yokes her fiery snakes;
|
|
With a just rein, along mid-heaven she flies
|
|
O'er Earth, and seas, and cuts the yielding skies.
|
|
She halts at Athens, dropping like a star,
|
|
And to Triptolemus resigns her carr.
|
|
Parent of seed, she gave him fruitful grain,
|
|
And bad him teach to till and plough the plain;
|
|
The seed to sow, as well in fallow fields,
|
|
As where the soil manur'd a richer harvest yields.
|
|
The The youth o'er Europe and o'er Asia drives,
|
|
Transformation 'Till at the court of Lyncus he arrives.
|
|
of Lyncus The tyrant Scythia's barb'rous empire sway'd;
|
|
And, when he saw Triptolemus, he said,
|
|
How cam'st thou, stranger, to our court, and why?
|
|
Thy country, and thy name? The youth did thus
|
|
reply:
|
|
Triptolemus my name; my country's known
|
|
O'er all the world, Minerva's fav'rite town,
|
|
Athens, the first of cities in renown.
|
|
By land I neither walk'd, nor sail'd by sea,
|
|
But hither thro' the Aether made my way.
|
|
By me, the Goddess who the fields befriends,
|
|
These gifts, the greatest of all blessings, sends.
|
|
The grain she gives if in your soil you sow,
|
|
Thence wholsom food in golden crops shall grow.
|
|
Soon as the secret to the king was known,
|
|
He grudg'd the glory of the service done,
|
|
And wickedly resolv'd to make it all his own.
|
|
To hide his purpose, he invites his guest,
|
|
The friend of Ceres, to a royal feast,
|
|
And when sweet sleep his heavy eyes had seiz'd,
|
|
The tyrant with his steel attempts his breast.
|
|
Him strait a lynx's shape the Goddess gives,
|
|
And home the youth her sacred dragons drives.
|
|
The Pierides The chosen Muse here ends her sacred lays;
|
|
transform'd to The nymphs unanimous decree the bays,
|
|
Magpies And give the Heliconian Goddesses the praise.
|
|
Then, far from vain that we shou'd thus prevail,
|
|
But much provok'd to hear the vanquish'd rail,
|
|
Calliope resumes: Too long we've born
|
|
Your daring taunts, and your affronting scorn;
|
|
Your challenge justly merited a curse,
|
|
And this unmanner'd railing makes it worse.
|
|
Since you refuse us calmly to enjoy
|
|
Our patience, next our passions we'll employ;
|
|
The dictates of a mind enrag'd pursue,
|
|
And, what our just resentment bids us, do.
|
|
The railers laugh, our threats and wrath despise,
|
|
And clap their hands, and make a scolding noise:
|
|
But in the fact they're seiz'd; beneath their nails
|
|
Feathers they feel, and on their faces scales;
|
|
Their horny beaks at once each other scare,
|
|
Their arms are plum'd, and on their backs they bear
|
|
Py'd wings, and flutter in the fleeting air.
|
|
Chatt'ring, the scandal of the woods they fly,
|
|
And there continue still their clam'rous cry:
|
|
The same their eloquence, as maids, or birds,
|
|
Now only noise, and nothing then but words.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Fifth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE SIXTH
|
|
|
|
PALLAS, attending to the Muse's song,
|
|
Approv'd the just resentment of their wrong;
|
|
And thus reflects: While tamely I commend
|
|
Those who their injur'd deities defend,
|
|
My own divinity affronted stands,
|
|
And calls aloud for justice at my hands;
|
|
Then takes the hint, asham'd to lag behind,
|
|
And on Arachne' bends her vengeful mind;
|
|
One at the loom so excellently skill'd,
|
|
That to the Goddess she refus'd to yield.
|
|
The Low was her birth, and small her native town,
|
|
Transformation She from her art alone obtain'd renown.
|
|
of Arachne Idmon, her father, made it his employ,
|
|
into a Spider To give the spungy fleece a purple dye:
|
|
Of vulgar strain her mother, lately dead,
|
|
With her own rank had been content to wed;
|
|
Yet she their daughter, tho' her time was spent
|
|
In a small hamlet, and of mean descent,
|
|
Thro' the great towns of Lydia gain'd a name,
|
|
And fill'd the neighb'ring countries with her fame.
|
|
Oft, to admire the niceness of her skill,
|
|
The Nymphs would quit their fountain, shade, or
|
|
hill:
|
|
Thither, from green Tymolus, they repair,
|
|
And leave the vineyards, their peculiar care;
|
|
Thither, from fam'd Pactolus' golden stream,
|
|
Drawn by her art, the curious Naiads came.
|
|
Nor would the work, when finish'd, please so much,
|
|
As, while she wrought, to view each graceful touch;
|
|
Whether the shapeless wool in balls she wound,
|
|
Or with quick motion turn'd the spindle round,
|
|
Or with her pencil drew the neat design,
|
|
Pallas her mistress shone in every line.
|
|
This the proud maid with scornful air denies,
|
|
And ev'n the Goddess at her work defies;
|
|
Disowns her heav'nly mistress ev'ry hour,
|
|
Nor asks her aid, nor deprecates her pow'r.
|
|
Let us, she cries, but to a tryal come,
|
|
And, if she conquers, let her fix my doom.
|
|
The Goddess then a beldame's form put on,
|
|
With silver hairs her hoary temples shone;
|
|
Prop'd by a staff, she hobbles in her walk,
|
|
And tott'ring thus begins her old wives' talk.
|
|
Young maid attend, nor stubbornly despise
|
|
The admonitions of the old, and wise;
|
|
For age, tho' scorn'd, a ripe experience bears,
|
|
That golden fruit, unknown to blooming years:
|
|
Still may remotest fame your labours crown,
|
|
And mortals your superior genius own;
|
|
But to the Goddess yield, and humbly meek
|
|
A pardon for your bold presumption seek;
|
|
The Goddess will forgive. At this the maid,
|
|
With passion fir'd, her gliding shuttle stay'd;
|
|
And, darting vengeance with an angry look,
|
|
To Pallas in disguise thus fiercely spoke.
|
|
Thou doating thing, whose idle babling tongue
|
|
But too well shews the plague of living long;
|
|
Hence, and reprove, with this your sage advice,
|
|
Your giddy daughter, or your aukward neice;
|
|
Know, I despise your counsel, and am still
|
|
A woman, ever wedded to my will;
|
|
And, if your skilful Goddess better knows,
|
|
Let her accept the tryal I propose.
|
|
She does, impatient Pallas strait replies,
|
|
And, cloath'd with heavenly light, sprung from her
|
|
odd disguise.
|
|
The Nymphs, and virgins of the plain adore
|
|
The awful Goddess, and confess her pow'r;
|
|
The maid alone stood unappall'd; yet show'd
|
|
A transient blush, that for a moment glow'd,
|
|
Then disappear'd; as purple streaks adorn
|
|
The opening beauties of the rosy morn;
|
|
Till Phoebus rising prevalently bright,
|
|
Allays the tincture with his silver light.
|
|
Yet she persists, and obstinately great,
|
|
In hopes of conquest hurries on her fate.
|
|
The Goddess now the challenge waves no more,
|
|
Nor, kindly good, advises as before.
|
|
Strait to their posts appointed both repair,
|
|
And fix their threaded looms with equal care:
|
|
Around the solid beam the web is ty'd,
|
|
While hollow canes the parting warp divide;
|
|
Thro' which with nimble flight the shuttles play,
|
|
And for the woof prepare a ready way;
|
|
The woof and warp unite, press'd by the toothy
|
|
slay.
|
|
Thus both, their mantles button'd to their
|
|
breast,
|
|
Their skilful fingers ply with willing haste,
|
|
And work with pleasure; while they chear the eye
|
|
With glowing purple of the Tyrian dye:
|
|
Or, justly intermixing shades with light,
|
|
Their colourings insensibly unite.
|
|
As when a show'r transpierc'd with sunny rays,
|
|
Its mighty arch along the heav'n displays;
|
|
From whence a thousand diff'rent colours rise,
|
|
Whose fine transition cheats the clearest eyes;
|
|
So like the intermingled shading seems,
|
|
And only differs in the last extreams.
|
|
Then threads of gold both artfully dispose,
|
|
And, as each part in just proportion rose,
|
|
Some antique fable in their work disclose.
|
|
Pallas in figures wrought the heav'nly Pow'rs,
|
|
And Mars's hill among th' Athenian tow'rs.
|
|
On lofty thrones twice six celestials sate,
|
|
Jove in the midst, and held their warm debate;
|
|
The subject weighty, and well-known to fame,
|
|
From whom the city shou'd receive its name.
|
|
Each God by proper features was exprest,
|
|
Jove with majestick mein excell'd the rest.
|
|
His three-fork'd mace the dewy sea-God shook,
|
|
And, looking sternly, smote the ragged rock;
|
|
When from the stone leapt forth a spritely steed,
|
|
And Neptune claims the city for the deed.
|
|
Herself she blazons, with a glitt'ring spear,
|
|
And crested helm that veil'd her braided hair,
|
|
With shield, and scaly breast-plate, implements of
|
|
war.
|
|
Struck with her pointed launce, the teeming Earth
|
|
Seem'd to produce a new surprizing birth;
|
|
When, from the glebe, the pledge of conquest
|
|
sprung,
|
|
A tree pale-green with fairest olives hung.
|
|
And then, to let her giddy rival learn
|
|
What just rewards such boldness was to earn,
|
|
Four tryals at each corner had their part,
|
|
Design'd in miniature, and touch'd with art.
|
|
Haemus in one, and Rodope of Thrace
|
|
Transform'd to mountains, fill'd the foremost
|
|
place;
|
|
Who claim'd the titles of the Gods above,
|
|
And vainly us'd the epithets of Jove.
|
|
Another shew'd, where the Pigmaean dame,
|
|
Profaning Juno's venerable name,
|
|
Turn'd to an airy crane, descends from far,
|
|
And with her Pigmy subjects wages war.
|
|
In a third part, the rage of Heav'n's great queen,
|
|
Display'd on proud Antigone, was seen:
|
|
Who with presumptuous boldness dar'd to vye,
|
|
For beauty with the empress of the sky.
|
|
Ah! what avails her ancient princely race,
|
|
Her sire a king, and Troy her native place:
|
|
Now, to a noisy stork transform'd, she flies,
|
|
And with her whiten'd pinions cleaves the skies.
|
|
And in the last remaining part was drawn
|
|
Poor Cinyras that seem'd to weep in stone;
|
|
Clasping the temple steps, he sadly mourn'd
|
|
His lovely daughters, now to marble turn'd.
|
|
With her own tree the finish'd piece is crown'd,
|
|
And wreaths of peaceful olive all the work
|
|
surround.
|
|
Arachne drew the fam'd intrigues of Jove,
|
|
Chang'd to a bull to gratify his love;
|
|
How thro' the briny tide all foaming hoar,
|
|
Lovely Europa on his back he bore.
|
|
The sea seem'd waving, and the trembling maid
|
|
Shrunk up her tender feet, as if afraid;
|
|
And, looking back on the forsaken strand,
|
|
To her companions wafts her distant hand.
|
|
Next she design'd Asteria's fabled rape,
|
|
When Jove assum'd a soaring eagle's shape:
|
|
And shew'd how Leda lay supinely press'd,
|
|
Whilst the soft snowy swan sate hov'ring o'er her
|
|
breast,
|
|
How in a satyr's form the God beguil'd,
|
|
When fair Antiope with twins he fill'd.
|
|
Then, like Amphytrion, but a real Jove,
|
|
In fair Alcmena's arms he cool'd his love.
|
|
In fluid gold to Danae's heart he came,
|
|
Aegina felt him in a lambent flame.
|
|
He took Mnemosyne in shepherd's make,
|
|
And for Deois was a speckled snake.
|
|
She made thee, Neptune, like a wanton steer,
|
|
Pacing the meads for love of Arne dear;
|
|
Next like a stream, thy burning flame to slake,
|
|
And like a ram, for fair Bisaltis' sake.
|
|
Then Ceres in a steed your vigour try'd,
|
|
Nor cou'd the mare the yellow Goddess hide.
|
|
Next, to a fowl transform'd, you won by force
|
|
The snake-hair'd mother of the winged horse;
|
|
And, in a dolphin's fishy form, subdu'd
|
|
Melantho sweet beneath the oozy flood.
|
|
All these the maid with lively features drew,
|
|
And open'd proper landskips to the view.
|
|
There Phoebus, roving like a country swain,
|
|
Attunes his jolly pipe along the plain;
|
|
For lovely Isse's sake in shepherd's weeds,
|
|
O'er pastures green his bleating flock he feeds,
|
|
There Bacchus, imag'd like the clust'ring grape,
|
|
Melting bedrops Erigone's fair lap;
|
|
And there old Saturn, stung with youthful heat,
|
|
Form'd like a stallion, rushes to the feat.
|
|
Fresh flow'rs, which twists of ivy intertwine,
|
|
Mingling a running foliage, close the neat design.
|
|
This the bright Goddess passionately mov'd,
|
|
With envy saw, yet inwardly approv'd.
|
|
The scene of heav'nly guilt with haste she tore,
|
|
Nor longer the affront with patience bore;
|
|
A boxen shuttle in her hand she took,
|
|
And more than once Arachne's forehead struck.
|
|
Th' unhappy maid, impatient of the wrong,
|
|
Down from a beam her injur'd person hung;
|
|
When Pallas, pitying her wretched state,
|
|
At once prevented, and pronounc'd her fate:
|
|
Live; but depend, vile wretch, the Goddess cry'd,
|
|
Doom'd in suspence for ever to be ty'd;
|
|
That all your race, to utmost date of time,
|
|
May feel the vengeance, and detest the crime.
|
|
Then, going off, she sprinkled her with juice,
|
|
Which leaves of baneful aconite produce.
|
|
Touch'd with the pois'nous drug, her flowing hair
|
|
Fell to the ground, and left her temples bare;
|
|
Her usual features vanish'd from their place,
|
|
Her body lessen'd all, but most her face.
|
|
Her slender fingers, hanging on each side
|
|
With many joynts, the use of legs supply'd:
|
|
A spider's bag the rest, from which she gives
|
|
A thread, and still by constant weaving lives.
|
|
The Story of Swift thro' the Phrygian towns the rumour flies,
|
|
Niobe And the strange news each female tongue employs:
|
|
Niobe, who before she married knew
|
|
The famous nymph, now found the story true;
|
|
Yet, unreclaim'd by poor Arachne's fate,
|
|
Vainly above the Gods assum'd a state.
|
|
Her husband's fame, their family's descent,
|
|
Their pow'r, and rich dominion's wide extent,
|
|
Might well have justify'd a decent pride;
|
|
But not on these alone the dame rely'd.
|
|
Her lovely progeny, that far excell'd,
|
|
The mother's heart with vain ambition swell'd:
|
|
The happiest mother not unjustly styl'd,
|
|
Had no conceited thoughts her tow'ring fancy
|
|
fill'd.
|
|
For once a prophetess with zeal inspir'd,
|
|
Their slow neglect to warm devotion fir'd;
|
|
Thro' ev'ry street of Thebes who ran possess'd,
|
|
And thus in accents wild her charge express'd:
|
|
Haste, haste, ye Theban matrons, and adore,
|
|
With hallow'd rites, Latona's mighty pow'r;
|
|
And, to the heav'nly twins that from her spring,
|
|
With laurel crown'd, your smoaking incense bring.
|
|
Strait the great summons ev'ry dame obey'd,
|
|
And due submission to the Goddess paid:
|
|
Graceful, with laurel chaplets dress'd, they came,
|
|
And offer'd incense in the sacred flame.
|
|
Mean-while, surrounded with a courtly guard,
|
|
The royal Niobe in state appear'd;
|
|
Attir'd in robes embroider'd o'er with gold,
|
|
And mad with rage, yet lovely to behold:
|
|
Her comely tresses, trembling as she stood,
|
|
Down her fine neck with easy motion flow'd;
|
|
Then, darting round a proud disdainful look,
|
|
In haughty tone her hasty passion broke,
|
|
And thus began: What madness this, to court
|
|
A Goddess, founded meerly on report?
|
|
Dare ye a poor pretended Pow'r invoke,
|
|
While yet no altars to my godhead smoke?
|
|
Mine, whose immediate lineage stands confess'd
|
|
From Tantalus, the only mortal guest
|
|
That e'er the Gods admitted to their feast.
|
|
A sister of the Pleiads gave me birth;
|
|
And Atlas, mightiest mountain upon Earth,
|
|
Who bears the globe of all the stars above,
|
|
My grandsire was, and Atlas sprung from Jove.
|
|
The Theban towns my majesty adore,
|
|
And neighb'ring Phrygia trembles at my pow'r:
|
|
Rais'd by my husband's lute, with turrets crown'd,
|
|
Our lofty city stands secur'd around.
|
|
Within my court, where-e'er I turn my eyes,
|
|
Unbounded treasures to my prospect rise:
|
|
With these my face I modestly may name,
|
|
As not unworthy of so high a claim;
|
|
Seven are my daughters, of a form divine,
|
|
With seven fair sons, an indefective line.
|
|
Go, fools! consider this; and ask the cause
|
|
From which my pride its strong presumption draws;
|
|
Consider this; and then prefer to me
|
|
Caeus the Titan's vagrant progeny;
|
|
To whom, in travel, the whole spacious Earth
|
|
No room afforded for her spurious birth.
|
|
Not the least part in Earth, in Heav'n, or seas,
|
|
Would grant your out-law'd Goddess any ease:
|
|
'Till pitying hers, from his own wand'ring case,
|
|
Delos, the floating island, gave a place.
|
|
There she a mother was, of two at most;
|
|
Only the seventh part of what I boast.
|
|
My joys all are beyond suspicion fix'd;
|
|
With no pollutions of misfortune mix'd;
|
|
Safe on the Basis of my pow'r I stand,
|
|
Above the reach of Fortune's fickle hand.
|
|
Lessen she may my inexhausted store,
|
|
And much destroy, yet still must leave me more.
|
|
Suppose it possible that some may dye
|
|
Of this my num'rous lovely progeny;
|
|
Still with Latona I might safely vye.
|
|
Who, by her scanty breed, scarce fit to name,
|
|
But just escapes the childless woman's shame.
|
|
Go then, with speed your laurel'd heads uncrown,
|
|
And leave the silly farce you have begun.
|
|
The tim'rous throng their sacred rites forbore,
|
|
And from their heads the verdant laurel tore;
|
|
Their haughty queen they with regret obey'd,
|
|
And still in gentle murmurs softly pray'd.
|
|
High, on the top of Cynthus' shady mount,
|
|
With grief the Goddess saw the base affront;
|
|
And, the abuse revolving in her breast,
|
|
The mother her twin-offspring thus addrest.
|
|
Lo I, my children, who with comfort knew
|
|
Your God-like birth, and thence my glory drew;
|
|
And thence have claim'd precedency of place
|
|
From all but Juno of the heav'nly race,
|
|
Must now despair, and languish in disgrace.
|
|
My godhead question'd, and all rites divine,
|
|
Unless you succour, banish'd from my shrine.
|
|
Nay more, the imp of Tantalus has flung
|
|
Reflections with her vile paternal tongue;
|
|
Has dar'd prefer her mortal breed to mine,
|
|
And call'd me childless; which, just fate, may she
|
|
repine!
|
|
When to urge more the Goddess was prepar'd,
|
|
Phoebus in haste replies, Too much we've heard,
|
|
And ev'ry moment's lost, while vengeance is
|
|
defer'd.
|
|
Diana spoke the same. Then both enshroud
|
|
Their heav'nly bodies in a sable cloud;
|
|
And to the Theban tow'rs descending light,
|
|
Thro' the soft yielding air direct their flight.
|
|
Without the wall there lies a champian ground
|
|
With even surface, far extending round,
|
|
Beaten and level'd, while it daily feels
|
|
The trampling horse, and chariot's grinding wheels.
|
|
Part of proud Niobe's young rival breed,
|
|
Practising there to ride the manag'd steed,
|
|
Their bridles boss'd with gold, were mounted high
|
|
On stately furniture of Tyrian dye.
|
|
Of these, Ismenos, who by birth had been
|
|
The first fair issue of the fruitful queen,
|
|
Just as he drew the rein to guide his horse,
|
|
Around the compass of the circling course,
|
|
Sigh'd deeply, and the pangs of smart express'd,
|
|
While the shaft stuck, engor'd within his breast:
|
|
And, the reins dropping from his dying hand,
|
|
He sunk quite down, and tumbled on the sand.
|
|
Sipylus next the rattling quiver heard,
|
|
And with full speed for his escape prepar'd;
|
|
As when the pilot from the black'ning skies
|
|
A gath'ring storm of wintry rain descries,
|
|
His sails unfurl'd, and crowded all with wind,
|
|
He strives to leave the threat'ning cloud behind:
|
|
So fled the youth; but an unerring dart
|
|
O'ertook him, quick discharg'd, and sped with art;
|
|
Fix'd in his neck behind, it trembling stood,
|
|
And at his throat display'd the point besmear'd
|
|
with blood
|
|
Prone, as his posture was, he tumbled o'er,
|
|
And bath'd his courser's mane with steaming gore.
|
|
Next at young Phaedimus they took their aim,
|
|
And Tantalus who bore his grandsire's name:
|
|
These, when their other exercise was done,
|
|
To try the wrestler's oily sport begun;
|
|
And, straining ev'ry nerve, their skill express'd
|
|
In closest grapple, joining breast to breast:
|
|
When from the bending bow an arrow sent,
|
|
Joyn'd as they were, thro' both their bodies went:
|
|
Both groan'd, and writhing both their limbs with
|
|
pain,
|
|
They fell together bleeding on the plain;
|
|
Then both their languid eye-balls faintly roul,
|
|
And thus together breathe away their soul.
|
|
With grief Alphenor saw their doleful plight,
|
|
And smote his breast, and sicken'd at the sight;
|
|
Then to their succour ran with eager haste,
|
|
And, fondly griev'd, their stiff'ning limbs
|
|
embrac'd;
|
|
But in the action falls: a thrilling dart,
|
|
By Phoebus guided, pierc'd him to the heart.
|
|
This, as they drew it forth, his midriff tore,
|
|
Its barbed point the fleshy fragments bore,
|
|
And let the soul gush out in streams of purple
|
|
gore.
|
|
But Damasichthon, by a double wound,
|
|
Beardless, and young, lay gasping on the ground.
|
|
Fix'd in his sinewy ham, the steely point
|
|
Stuck thro' his knee, and pierc'd the nervous
|
|
joint:
|
|
And, as he stoop'd to tug the painful dart,
|
|
Another struck him in a vital part;
|
|
Shot thro' his wezon, by the wing it hung.
|
|
The life-blood forc'd it out, and darting upward
|
|
sprung,
|
|
Ilioneus, the last, with terror stands,
|
|
Lifting in pray'r his unavailing hands;
|
|
And, ignorant from whom his griefs arise,
|
|
Spare me, o all ye heav'nly Pow'rs, he cries:
|
|
Phoebus was touch'd too late, the sounding bow
|
|
Had sent the shaft, and struck the fatal blow;
|
|
Which yet but gently gor'd his tender side,
|
|
So by a slight and easy wound he dy'd.
|
|
Swift to the mother's ears the rumour came,
|
|
And doleful sighs the heavy news proclaim;
|
|
With anger and surprize inflam'd by turns,
|
|
In furious rage her haughty stomach burns:
|
|
First she disputes th' effects of heav'nly pow'r,
|
|
Then at their daring boldness wonders more;
|
|
For poor Amphion with sore grief distrest,
|
|
Hoping to sooth his cares by endless rest,
|
|
Had sheath'd a dagger in his wretched breast.
|
|
And she, who toss'd her high disdainful head,
|
|
When thro' the streets in solemn pomp she led
|
|
The throng that from Latona's altar fled,
|
|
Assuming state beyond the proudest queen;
|
|
Was now the miserablest object seen.
|
|
Prostrate among the clay-cold dead she fell,
|
|
And kiss'd an undistinguish'd last farewel.
|
|
Then her pale arms advancing to the skies,
|
|
Cruel Latona! triumph now, she cries.
|
|
My grieving soul in bitter anguish drench,
|
|
And with my woes your thirsty passion quench;
|
|
Feast your black malice at a price thus dear,
|
|
While the sore pangs of sev'n such deaths I bear.
|
|
Triumph, too cruel rival, and display
|
|
Your conqu'ring standard; for you've won the day.
|
|
Yet I'll excel; for yet, tho' sev'n are slain,
|
|
Superior still in number I remain.
|
|
Scarce had she spoke; the bow-string's twanging
|
|
sound
|
|
Was heard, and dealt fresh terrors all around;
|
|
Which all, but Niobe alone, confound.
|
|
Stunn'd, and obdurate by her load of grief,
|
|
Insensible she sits, nor hopes relief.
|
|
Before the fun'ral biers, all weeping sad,
|
|
Her daughters stood, in vests of sable clad,
|
|
When one, surpriz'd, and stung with sudden smart,
|
|
In vain attempts to draw the sticking dart:
|
|
But to grim death her blooming youth resigns,
|
|
And o'er her brother's corpse her dying head
|
|
reclines.
|
|
This, to asswage her mother's anguish tries,
|
|
And, silenc'd in the pious action, dies;
|
|
Shot by a secret arrow, wing'd with death,
|
|
Her fault'ring lips but only gasp'd for breath.
|
|
One, on her dying sister, breathes her last;
|
|
Vainly in flight another's hopes are plac'd:
|
|
This hiding, from her fate a shelter seeks;
|
|
That trembling stands, and fills the air with
|
|
shrieks.
|
|
And all in vain; for now all six had found
|
|
Their way to death, each by a diff'rent wound.
|
|
The last, with eager care the mother veil'd,
|
|
Behind her spreading mantle close conceal'd,
|
|
And with her body guarded, as a shield.
|
|
Only for this, this youngest, I implore,
|
|
Grant me this one request, I ask no more;
|
|
O grant me this! she passionately cries:
|
|
But while she speaks, the destin'd virgin dies.
|
|
The Widow'd, and childless, lamentable state!
|
|
Transformation A doleful sight, among the dead she sate;
|
|
of Niobe Harden'd with woes, a statue of despair,
|
|
To ev'ry breath of wind unmov'd her hair;
|
|
Her cheek still red'ning, but its colour dead,
|
|
Faded her eyes, and set within her head.
|
|
No more her pliant tongue its motion keeps,
|
|
But stands congeal'd within her frozen lips.
|
|
Stagnate, and dull, within her purple veins,
|
|
Its current stop'd, the lifeless blood remains.
|
|
Her feet their usual offices refuse,
|
|
Her arms, and neck their graceful gestures lose:
|
|
Action, and life from ev'ry part are gone,
|
|
And ev'n her entrails turn to solid stone;
|
|
Yet still she weeps, and whirl'd by stormy winds,
|
|
Born thro' the air, her native country finds;
|
|
There fix'd, she stands upon a bleaky hill,
|
|
There yet her marble cheeks eternal tears distil.
|
|
The Peasants Then all, reclaim'd by this example, show'd
|
|
of Lycia A due regard for each peculiar God:
|
|
transform'd to Both men, and women their devoirs express'd,
|
|
Frogs And great Latona's awful pow'r confess'd.
|
|
Then, tracing instances of older time,
|
|
To suit the nature of the present crime,
|
|
Thus one begins his tale.- Where Lycia yields
|
|
A golden harvest from its fertile fields,
|
|
Some churlish peasants, in the days of yore,
|
|
Provok'd the Goddess to exert her pow'r.
|
|
The thing indeed the meanness of the place
|
|
Has made obscure, surprizing as it was;
|
|
But I my self once happen'd to behold
|
|
This famous lake of which the story's told.
|
|
My father then, worn out by length of days,
|
|
Nor able to sustain the tedious ways,
|
|
Me with a guide had sent the plains to roam,
|
|
And drive his well-fed stragling heifers home.
|
|
Here, as we saunter'd thro' the verdant meads,
|
|
We spy'd a lake o'er-grown with trembling reeds,
|
|
Whose wavy tops an op'ning scene disclose,
|
|
From which an antique smoaky altar rose.
|
|
I, as my susperstitious guide had done,
|
|
Stop'd short, and bless'd my self, and then went
|
|
on;
|
|
Yet I enquir'd to whom the altar stood,
|
|
Faunus, the Naids, or some native God?
|
|
No silvan deity, my friend replies,
|
|
Enshrin'd within this hallow'd altar lies.
|
|
For this, o youth, to that fam'd Goddess stands,
|
|
Whom, at th' imperial Juno's rough commands,
|
|
Of ev'ry quarter of the Earth bereav'd,
|
|
Delos, the floating isle, at length receiv'd.
|
|
Who there, in spite of enemies, brought forth,
|
|
Beneath an olive's shade, her great twin-birth.
|
|
Hence too she fled the furious stepdame's pow'r,
|
|
And in her arms a double godhead bore;
|
|
And now the borders of fair Lycia gain'd,
|
|
Just when the summer solstice parch'd the land.
|
|
With thirst the Goddess languishing, no more
|
|
Her empty'd breast would yield its milky store;
|
|
When, from below, the smiling valley show'd
|
|
A silver lake that in its bottom flow'd:
|
|
A sort of clowns were reaping, near the bank,
|
|
The bending osier, and the bullrush dank;
|
|
The cresse, and water-lilly, fragrant weed,
|
|
Whose juicy stalk the liquid fountains feed.
|
|
The Goddess came, and kneeling on the brink,
|
|
Stoop'd at the fresh repast, prepar'd to drink.
|
|
Then thus, being hinder'd by the rabble race,
|
|
In accents mild expostulates the case.
|
|
Water I only ask, and sure 'tis hard
|
|
From Nature's common rights to be debar'd:
|
|
This, as the genial sun, and vital air,
|
|
Should flow alike to ev'ry creature's share.
|
|
Yet still I ask, and as a favour crave,
|
|
That which, a publick bounty, Nature gave.
|
|
Nor do I seek my weary limbs to drench;
|
|
Only, with one cool draught, my thirst I'd quench.
|
|
Now from my throat the usual moisture dries,
|
|
And ev'n my voice in broken accents dies:
|
|
One draught as dear as life I should esteem,
|
|
And water, now I thirst, would nectar seem.
|
|
Oh! let my little babes your pity move,
|
|
And melt your hearts to charitable love;
|
|
They (as by chance they did) extend to you
|
|
Their little hands, and my request pursue.
|
|
Whom would these soft perswasions not subdue,
|
|
Tho' the most rustick, and unmanner'd crew?
|
|
Yet they the Goddess's request refuse,
|
|
And with rude words reproachfully abuse:
|
|
Nay more, with spiteful feet the villains trod
|
|
O'er the soft bottom of the marshy flood,
|
|
And blacken'd all the lake with clouds of rising
|
|
mud.
|
|
Her thirst by indignation was suppress'd;
|
|
Bent on revenge, the Goddess stood confess'd.
|
|
Her suppliant hands uplifting to the skies,
|
|
For a redress, to Heav'n she now applies.
|
|
And, May you live, she passionately cry'd,
|
|
Doom'd in that pool for ever to abide.
|
|
The Goddess has her wish; for now they chuse
|
|
To plunge, and dive among the watry ooze;
|
|
Sometimes they shew their head above the brim,
|
|
And on the glassy surface spread to swim;
|
|
Often upon the bank their station take,
|
|
Then spring, and leap into the cooly lake.
|
|
Still, void of shame, they lead a clam'rous life,
|
|
And, croaking, still scold on in endless strife;
|
|
Compell'd to live beneath the liquid stream,
|
|
Where still they quarrel, and attempt to skream.
|
|
Now, from their bloated throat, their voice puts on
|
|
Imperfect murmurs in a hoarser tone;
|
|
Their noisy jaws, with bawling now grown wide,
|
|
An ugly sight! extend on either side:
|
|
Their motly back, streak'd with a list of green,
|
|
Joyn'd to their head, without a neck is seen;
|
|
And, with a belly broad and white, they look
|
|
Meer frogs, and still frequent the muddy brook.
|
|
The Fate of Scarce had the man this famous story told,
|
|
Marsyas Of vengeance on the Lycians shown of old,
|
|
When strait another pictures to their view
|
|
The Satyr's fate, whom angry Phoebus slew;
|
|
Who, rais'd with high conceit, and puff'd with
|
|
pride,
|
|
At his own pipe the skilful God defy'd.
|
|
Why do you tear me from my self, he cries?
|
|
Ah cruel! must my skin be made the prize?
|
|
This for a silly pipe? he roaring said,
|
|
Mean-while the skin from off his limbs was flay'd.
|
|
All bare, and raw, one large continu'd wound,
|
|
With streams of blood his body bath'd the ground.
|
|
The blueish veins their trembling pulse disclos'd,
|
|
The stringy nerves lay naked, and expos'd;
|
|
His guts appear'd, distinctly each express'd,
|
|
With ev'ry shining fibre of his breast.
|
|
The Fauns, and Silvans, with the Nymphs that rove
|
|
Among the Satyrs in the shady grove;
|
|
Olympus, known of old, and ev'ry swain
|
|
That fed, or flock, or herd upon the plain,
|
|
Bewail'd the loss; and with their tears that
|
|
flow'd,
|
|
A kindly moisture on the earth bestow'd;
|
|
That soon, conjoyn'd, and in a body rang'd,
|
|
Sprung from the ground, to limpid water chang'd;
|
|
Which, down thro' Phrygia's rocks, a mighty stream,
|
|
Comes tumbling to the sea, and Marsya is its name.
|
|
The Story of From these relations strait the people turn
|
|
Pelops To present truths, and lost Amphion mourn:
|
|
The mother most was blam'd, yet some relate
|
|
That Pelops pity'd, and bewail'd her fate,
|
|
And stript his cloaths, and laid his shoulder bare,
|
|
And made the iv'ry miracle appear.
|
|
This shoulder, from the first, was form'd of flesh,
|
|
As lively as the other, and as fresh;
|
|
But, when the youth was by his father slain,
|
|
The Gods restor'd his mangled limbs again;
|
|
Only that place which joins the neck and arm,
|
|
The rest untouch'd, was found to suffer harm:
|
|
The loss of which an iv'ry piece sustain'd;
|
|
And thus the youth his limbs, and life regain'd.
|
|
The Story of To Thebes the neighb'ring princes all repair,
|
|
Tereus, Procne, And with condolance the misfortune share.
|
|
and Philomela Each bord'ring state in solemn form address'd,
|
|
And each betimes a friendly grief express'd.
|
|
Argos, with Sparta's, and Mycenae's towns,
|
|
And Calydon, yet free from fierce Diana's frowns.
|
|
Corinth for finest brass well fam'd of old,
|
|
Orthomenos for men of courage bold:
|
|
Cleonae lying in the lowly dale,
|
|
And rich Messene with its fertile vale:
|
|
Pylos, for Nestor's City after fam'd,
|
|
And Troezen, not as yet from Pittheus nam'd.
|
|
And those fair cities, which are hem'd around
|
|
By double seas within the Isthmian ground;
|
|
And those, which farther from the sea-coast stand,
|
|
Lodg'd in the bosom of the spacious land.
|
|
Who can believe it? Athens was the last:
|
|
Tho' for politeness fam'd for ages past.
|
|
For a strait siege, which then their walls
|
|
enclos'd,
|
|
Such acts of kind humanity oppos'd:
|
|
And thick with ships, from foreign nations bound,
|
|
Sea-ward their city lay invested round.
|
|
These, with auxiliar forces led from far,
|
|
Tereus of Thrace, brave, and inur'd to war,
|
|
Had quite defeated, and obtain'd a name,
|
|
The warrior's due, among the sons of Fame.
|
|
This, with his wealth, and pow'r, and ancient line,
|
|
From Mars deriv'd, Pandions's thoughts incline
|
|
His daughter Procne with the prince to joyn.
|
|
Nor Hymen, nor the Graces here preside,
|
|
Nor Juno to befriend the blooming bride;
|
|
But Fiends with fun'ral brands the process led,
|
|
And Furies waited at the Genial bed:
|
|
And all night long the scrieching owl aloof,
|
|
With baleful notes, sate brooding o'er the roof.
|
|
With such ill Omens was the match begun,
|
|
That made them parents of a hopeful son.
|
|
Now Thrace congratulates their seeming joy,
|
|
And they, in thankful rites, their minds employ.
|
|
If the fair queen's espousals pleas'd before,
|
|
Itys, the new-born prince, now pleases more;
|
|
And each bright day, the birth, and bridal feast,
|
|
Were kept with hallow'd pomp above the rest.
|
|
So far true happiness may lye conceal'd,
|
|
When, by false lights, we fancy 'tis reveal'd!
|
|
Now, since their nuptials, had the golden sun
|
|
Five courses round his ample zodiac run;
|
|
When gentle Procne thus her lord address'd,
|
|
And spoke the secret wishes of her breast:
|
|
If I, she said, have ever favour found,
|
|
Let my petition with success be crown'd:
|
|
Let me at Athens my dear sister see,
|
|
Or let her come to Thrace, and visit me.
|
|
And, lest my father should her absence mourn,
|
|
Promise that she shall make a quick return.
|
|
With thanks I'd own the obligation due
|
|
Only, o Tereus, to the Gods, and you.
|
|
Now, ply'd with oar, and sail at his command,
|
|
The nimble gallies reach'd th' Athenian land,
|
|
And anchor'd in the fam'd Piraean bay,
|
|
While Tereus to the palace takes his way;
|
|
The king salutes, and ceremonies past,
|
|
Begins the fatal embassy at last;
|
|
The occasion of his voyage he declares,
|
|
And, with his own, his wife's request prefers:
|
|
Asks leave that, only for a little space,
|
|
Their lovely sister might embark for Thrace.
|
|
Thus while he spoke, appear'd the royal maid,
|
|
Bright Philomela, splendidly array'd;
|
|
But most attractive in her charming face,
|
|
And comely person, turn'd with ev'ry grace:
|
|
Like those fair Nymphs, that are describ'd to rove
|
|
Across the glades, and op'nings of the grove;
|
|
Only that these are dress'd for silvan sports,
|
|
And less become the finery of courts.
|
|
Tereus beheld the virgin, and admir'd,
|
|
And with the coals of burning lust was fir'd:
|
|
Like crackling stubble, or the summer hay,
|
|
When forked lightnings o'er the meadows play.
|
|
Such charms in any breast might kindle love,
|
|
But him the heats of inbred lewdness move;
|
|
To which, tho' Thrace is naturally prone,
|
|
Yet his is still superior, and his own.
|
|
Strait her attendants he designs to buy,
|
|
And with large bribes her governess would try:
|
|
Herself with ample gifts resolves to bend,
|
|
And his whole kingdom in th' attempt expend:
|
|
Or, snatch'd away by force of arms, to bear,
|
|
And justify the rape with open war.
|
|
The boundless passion boils within his breast,
|
|
And his projecting soul admits no rest.
|
|
And now, impatient of the least delay,
|
|
By pleading Procne's cause, he speeds his way:
|
|
The eloquence of love his tongue inspires,
|
|
And, in his wife's, he speaks his own desires;
|
|
Hence all his importunities arise,
|
|
And tears unmanly trickle from his eyes.
|
|
Ye Gods! what thick involving darkness blinds
|
|
The stupid faculties of mortal minds!
|
|
Tereus the credit of good-nature gains
|
|
From these his crimes; so well the villain feigns.
|
|
And, unsuspecting of his base designs,
|
|
In the request fair Philomela joyns;
|
|
Her snowy arms her aged sire embrace,
|
|
And clasp his neck with an endearing grace:
|
|
Only to see her sister she entreats,
|
|
A seeming blessing, which a curse compleats.
|
|
Tereus surveys her with a luscious eye,
|
|
And in his mind forestalls the blissful joy:
|
|
Her circling arms a scene of lust inspire,
|
|
And ev'ry kiss foments the raging fire.
|
|
Fondly he wishes for the father's place,
|
|
To feel, and to return the warm embrace;
|
|
Since not the nearest ties of filial blood
|
|
Would damp his flame, and force him to be good.
|
|
At length, for both their sakes, the king agrees;
|
|
And Philomela, on her bended knees,
|
|
Thanks him for what her fancy calls success,
|
|
When cruel fate intends her nothing less.
|
|
Now Phoebus, hastning to ambrosial rest,
|
|
His fiery steeds drove sloping down the west:
|
|
The sculptur'd gold with sparkling wines was
|
|
fill'd,
|
|
And, with rich meats, each chearful table smil'd.
|
|
Plenty, and mirth the royal banquet close,
|
|
Then all retire to sleep, and sweet repose.
|
|
But the lewd monarch, tho' withdrawn apart,
|
|
Still feels love's poison rankling in his heart:
|
|
Her face divine is stamp'd within his breast,
|
|
Fancy imagines, and improves the rest:
|
|
And thus, kept waking by intense desire,
|
|
He nourishes his own prevailing fire.
|
|
Next day the good old king for Tereus sends,
|
|
And to his charge the virgin recommends;
|
|
His hand with tears th' indulgent father press'd,
|
|
Then spoke, and thus with tenderness address'd.
|
|
Since the kind instances of pious love,
|
|
Do all pretence of obstacle remove;
|
|
Since Procne's, and her own, with your request,
|
|
O'er-rule the fears of a paternal breast;
|
|
With you, dear son, my daughter I entrust,
|
|
And by the Gods adjure you to be just;
|
|
By truth, and ev'ry consanguineal tye,
|
|
To watch, and guard her with a father's eye.
|
|
And, since the least delay will tedious prove,
|
|
In keeping from my sight the child I love,
|
|
With speed return her, kindly to asswage
|
|
The tedious troubles of my lingring age.
|
|
And you, my Philomel, let it suffice,
|
|
To know your sister's banish'd from my eyes;
|
|
If any sense of duty sways your mind,
|
|
Let me from you the shortest absence find.
|
|
He wept; then kiss'd his child; and while he
|
|
speaks,
|
|
The tears fall gently down his aged cheeks.
|
|
Next, as a pledge of fealty, he demands,
|
|
And, with a solemn charge, conjoyns their hands;
|
|
Then to his daughter, and his grandson sends,
|
|
And by their mouth a blessing recommends;
|
|
While, in a voice with dire forebodings broke,
|
|
Sobbing, and faint, the last farewel was spoke.
|
|
Now Philomela, scarce receiv'd on board,
|
|
And in the royal gilded bark secur'd,
|
|
Beheld the dashes of the bending oar,
|
|
The ruffled sea, and the receding shore;
|
|
When strait (his joy impatient of disguise)
|
|
We've gain'd our point, the rough Barbarian cries;
|
|
Now I possess the dear, the blissful hour,
|
|
And ev'ry wish subjected to my pow'r.
|
|
Transports of lust his vicious thoughts employ,
|
|
And he forbears, with pain, th' expected joy.
|
|
His gloting eyes incessantly survey'd
|
|
The virgin beauties of the lovely maid:
|
|
As when the bold rapacious bird of Jove,
|
|
With crooked talons stooping from above,
|
|
Has snatcht, and carry'd to his lofty nest
|
|
A captive hare, with cruel gripes opprest;
|
|
Secure, with fix'd, and unrelenting eyes,
|
|
He sits, and views the helpless, trembling prize.
|
|
Their vessels now had made th' intended land,
|
|
And all with joy descend upon the strand;
|
|
When the false tyrant seiz'd the princely maid,
|
|
And to a lodge in distant woods convey'd;
|
|
Pale, sinking, and distress'd with jealous fears,
|
|
And asking for her sister all in tears.
|
|
The letcher, for enjoyment fully bent,
|
|
No longer now conceal'd his base intent;
|
|
But with rude haste the bloomy girl deflow'r'd,
|
|
Tender, defenceless, and with ease o'erpower'd.
|
|
Her piercing accents to her sire complain,
|
|
And to her absent sister, but in vain:
|
|
In vain she importunes, with doleful cries,
|
|
Each unattentive godhead of the skies.
|
|
She pants and trembles, like the bleating prey,
|
|
From some close-hunted wolf just snatch'd away;
|
|
That still, with fearful horror, looks around,
|
|
And on its flank regards the bleeding wound.
|
|
Or, as the tim'rous dove, the danger o'er,
|
|
Beholds her shining plumes besmear'd with gore,
|
|
And, tho' deliver'd from the faulcon's claw,
|
|
Yet shivers, and retains a secret awe.
|
|
But when her mind a calm reflection shar'd,
|
|
And all her scatter'd spirits were repair'd:
|
|
Torn, and disorder'd while her tresses hung,
|
|
Her livid hands, like one that mourn'd, she wrung;
|
|
Then thus, with grief o'erwhelm'd her languid eyes,
|
|
Savage, inhumane, cruel wretch! she cries;
|
|
Whom not a parent's strict commands could move,
|
|
Tho' charg'd, and utter'd with the tears of love;
|
|
Nor virgin innocence, nor all that's due
|
|
To the strong contract of the nuptial vow:
|
|
Virtue, by this, in wild confusion's laid,
|
|
And I compell'd to wrong my sister's bed;
|
|
Whilst you, regardless of your marriage oath,
|
|
With stains of incest have defil'd us both.
|
|
Tho' I deserv'd some punishment to find,
|
|
This was, ye Gods! too cruel, and unkind.
|
|
Yet, villain, to compleat your horrid guilt,
|
|
Stab here, and let my tainted blood be spilt.
|
|
Oh happy! had it come, before I knew
|
|
The curs'd embrace of vile perfidious you;
|
|
Then my pale ghost, pure from incestuous love,
|
|
Had wander'd spotless thro' th' Elysian grove.
|
|
But, if the Gods above have pow'r to know,
|
|
And judge those actions that are done below;
|
|
Unless the dreaded thunders of the sky,
|
|
Like me, subdu'd, and violated lye;
|
|
Still my revenge shall take its proper time,
|
|
And suit the baseness of your hellish crime.
|
|
My self, abandon'd, and devoid of shame,
|
|
Thro' the wide world your actions will proclaim;
|
|
Or tho' I'm prison'd in this lonely den,
|
|
Obscur'd, and bury'd from the sight of men,
|
|
My mournful voice the pitying rocks shall move,
|
|
And my complainings eccho thro' the grove.
|
|
Hear me, o Heav'n! and, if a God be there,
|
|
Let him regard me, and accept my pray'r.
|
|
Struck with these words, the tyrant's guilty
|
|
breast
|
|
With fear, and anger, was, by turns, possest;
|
|
Now, with remorse his conscience deeply stung,
|
|
He drew the faulchion that beside her hung,
|
|
And first her tender arms behind her bound,
|
|
Then drag'd her by the hair along the ground.
|
|
The princess willingly her throat reclin'd,
|
|
And view'd the steel with a contented mind;
|
|
But soon her tongue the girding pinchers strain,
|
|
With anguish, soon she feels the piercing pain:
|
|
Oh father! father! would fain have spoke,
|
|
But the sharp torture her intention broke;
|
|
In vain she tries, for now the blade has cut
|
|
Her tongue sheer off, close to the trembling root.
|
|
The mangled part still quiver'd on the ground,
|
|
Murmuring with a faint imperfect sound:
|
|
And, as a serpent writhes his wounded train,
|
|
Uneasy, panting, and possess'd with pain;
|
|
The piece, while life remain'd, still trembled
|
|
fast,
|
|
And to its mistress pointed to the last.
|
|
Yet, after this so damn'd, and black a deed,
|
|
Fame (which I scarce can credit) has agreed,
|
|
That on her rifled charms, still void of shame,
|
|
He frequently indulg'd his lustful flame,
|
|
At last he ventures to his Procne's sight,
|
|
Loaded with guilt, and cloy'd with long delight;
|
|
There, with feign'd grief, and false, dissembled
|
|
sighs,
|
|
Begins a formal narrative of lies;
|
|
Her sister's death he artfully declares,
|
|
Then weeps, and raises credit from his tears.
|
|
Her vest, with flow'rs of gold embroider'd o'er,
|
|
With grief distress'd, the mournful matron tore,
|
|
And a beseeming suit of gloomy sable wore.
|
|
With cost, an honorary tomb she rais'd,
|
|
And thus th' imaginary ghost appeas'd.
|
|
Deluded queen! the fate of her you love,
|
|
Nor grief, nor pity, but revenge should move.
|
|
Thro' the twelve signs had pass'd the circling
|
|
sun,
|
|
And round the compass of the Zodiac run;
|
|
What must unhappy Philomela do,
|
|
For ever subject to her keeper's view?
|
|
Huge walls of massy stone the lodge surround,
|
|
From her own mouth no way of speaking's found.
|
|
But all our wants by wit may be supply'd,
|
|
And art makes up, what fortune has deny'd:
|
|
With skill exact a Phrygian web she strung,
|
|
Fix'd to a loom that in her chamber hung,
|
|
Where in-wrought letters, upon white display'd,
|
|
In purple notes, her wretched case betray'd:
|
|
The piece, when finish'd, secretly she gave
|
|
Into the charge of one poor menial slave;
|
|
And then, with gestures, made him understand,
|
|
It must be safe convey'd to Procne's hand.
|
|
The slave, with speed, the queen's apartment
|
|
sought,
|
|
And render'd up his charge, unknowing what he
|
|
brought.
|
|
But when the cyphers, figur'd in each fold,
|
|
Her sister's melancholy story told
|
|
(Strange that she could!) with silence, she
|
|
survey'd
|
|
The tragick piece, and without weeping read:
|
|
In such tumultuous haste her passions sprung,
|
|
They choak'd her voice, and quite disarm'd her
|
|
tongue.
|
|
No room for female tears; the Furies rise,
|
|
Darting vindictive glances from her eyes;
|
|
And, stung with rage, she bounds from place to
|
|
place,
|
|
While stern revenge sits low'ring in her face.
|
|
Now the triennial celebration came,
|
|
Observ'd to Bacchus by each Thracian dame;
|
|
When, in the privacies of night retir'd,
|
|
They act his rites, with sacred rapture fir'd:
|
|
By night, the tinkling cymbals ring around,
|
|
While the shrill notes from Rhodope resound;
|
|
By night, the queen, disguis'd, forsakes the court,
|
|
To mingle in the festival resort.
|
|
Leaves of the curling vine her temples shade,
|
|
And, with a circling wreath, adorn her head:
|
|
Adown her back the stag's rough spoils appear,
|
|
Light on her shoulder leans a cornel spear.
|
|
Thus, in the fury of the God conceal'd,
|
|
Procne her own mad headstrong passion veil'd;
|
|
Now, with her gang, to the thick wood she flies,
|
|
And with religious yellings fills the skies;
|
|
The fatal lodge, as 'twere by chance, she seeks,
|
|
And, thro' the bolted doors, an entrance breaks;
|
|
From thence, her sister snatching by the hand,
|
|
Mask'd like the ranting Bacchanalian band,
|
|
Within the limits of the court she drew,
|
|
Shading, with ivy green, her outward hue.
|
|
But Philomela, conscious of the place,
|
|
Felt new reviving pangs of her disgrace;
|
|
A shiv'ring cold prevail'd in ev'ry part,
|
|
And the chill'd blood ran trembling to her heart.
|
|
Soon as the queen a fit retirement found,
|
|
Stript of the garlands that her temples crown'd,
|
|
She strait unveil'd her blushing sister's face,
|
|
And fondly clasp'd her with a close embrace:
|
|
But, in confusion lost, th' unhappy maid,
|
|
With shame dejected, hung her drooping head,
|
|
As guilty of a crime that stain'd her sister's bed.
|
|
That speech, that should her injur'd virtue clear,
|
|
And make her spotless innocence appear,
|
|
Is now no more; only her hands, and eyes
|
|
Appeal, in signals, to the conscious skies.
|
|
In Procne's breast the rising passions boil,
|
|
And burst in anger with a mad recoil;
|
|
Her sister's ill-tim'd grief, with scorn, she
|
|
blames,
|
|
Then, in these furious words her rage proclaims.
|
|
Tears, unavailing, but defer our time,
|
|
The stabbing sword must expiate the crime;
|
|
Or worse, if wit, on bloody vengeance bent,
|
|
A weapon more tormenting can invent.
|
|
O sister! I've prepar'd my stubborn heart,
|
|
To act some hellish, and unheard-of part;
|
|
Either the palace to surround with fire,
|
|
And see the villain in the flames expire;
|
|
Or, with a knife, dig out his cursed eyes,
|
|
Or, his false tongue with racking engines seize;
|
|
Or, cut away the part that injur'd you,
|
|
And, thro' a thousand wounds, his guilty soul
|
|
pursue.
|
|
Tortures enough my passion has design'd,
|
|
But the variety distracts my mind.
|
|
A-while, thus wav'ring, stood the furious dame,
|
|
When Itys fondling to his mother came;
|
|
From him the cruel fatal hint she took,
|
|
She view'd him with a stern remorseless look:
|
|
Ah! but too like thy wicked sire, she said,
|
|
Forming the direful purpose in her head.
|
|
At this a sullen grief her voice supprest,
|
|
While silent passions struggle in her breast.
|
|
Now, at her lap arriv'd, the flatt'ring boy
|
|
Salutes his parent with a smiling joy:
|
|
About her neck his little arms are thrown,
|
|
And he accosts her in a pratling tone.
|
|
Then her tempestuous anger was allay'd,
|
|
And in its full career her vengeance stay'd;
|
|
While tender thoughts, in spite of passion, rise,
|
|
And melting tears disarm her threat'ning eyes.
|
|
But when she found the mother's easy heart,
|
|
Too fondly swerving from th' intended part;
|
|
Her injur'd sister's face again she view'd:
|
|
And, as by turns surveying both she stood,
|
|
While this fond boy (she said) can thus express
|
|
The moving accents of his fond address;
|
|
Why stands my sister of her tongue bereft,
|
|
Forlorn, and sad, in speechless silence left?
|
|
O Procne, see the fortune of your house!
|
|
Such is your fate, when match'd to such a spouse!
|
|
Conjugal duty, if observ'd to him,
|
|
Would change from virtue, and become a crime;
|
|
For all respect to Tereus must debase
|
|
The noble blood of great Pandion's race.
|
|
Strait at these words, with big resentment
|
|
fill'd,
|
|
Furious her look, she flew, and seiz'd her child;
|
|
Like a fell tigress of the savage kind,
|
|
That drags the tender suckling of the hind
|
|
Thro' India's gloomy groves, where Ganges laves
|
|
The shady scene, and rouls his streamy waves.
|
|
Now to a close apartment they were come,
|
|
Far off retir'd within the spacious dome;
|
|
When Procne, on revengeful mischief bent,
|
|
Home to his heart a piercing ponyard sent.
|
|
Itys, with rueful cries, but all too late,
|
|
Holds out his hands, and deprecates his fate;
|
|
Still at his mother's neck he fondly aims,
|
|
And strives to melt her with endearing names;
|
|
Yet still the cruel mother perseveres,
|
|
Nor with concern his bitter anguish hears.
|
|
This might suffice; but Philomela too
|
|
Across his throat a shining curtlass drew.
|
|
Then both, with knives, dissect each quiv'ring
|
|
part,
|
|
And carve the butcher'd limbs with cruel art;
|
|
Which, whelm'd in boiling cauldrons o'er the fire,
|
|
Or turn'd on spits, in steamy smoak aspire:
|
|
While the long entries, with their slipp'ry floor,
|
|
Run down in purple streams of clotted gore.
|
|
Ask'd by his wife to this inhuman feast,
|
|
Tereus unknowingly is made a guest:
|
|
Whilst she her plot the better to disguise,
|
|
Styles it some unknown mystick sacrifice;
|
|
And such the nature of the hallow'd rite,
|
|
The wife her husband only could invite,
|
|
The slaves must all withdraw, and be debarr'd the
|
|
sight.
|
|
Tereus, upon a throne of antique state,
|
|
Loftily rais'd, before the banquet sate;
|
|
And glutton like, luxuriously pleas'd,
|
|
With his own flesh his hungry maw appeas'd.
|
|
Nay, such a blindness o'er his senses falls,
|
|
That he for Itys to the table calls.
|
|
When Procne, now impatient to disclose
|
|
The joy that from her full revenge arose,
|
|
Cries out, in transports of a cruel mind,
|
|
Within your self your Itys you may find.
|
|
Still, at this puzzling answer, with surprise,
|
|
Around the room he sends his curious eyes;
|
|
And, as he still inquir'd, and call'd aloud,
|
|
Fierce Philomela, all besmear'd with blood,
|
|
Her hands with murder stain'd, her spreading hair
|
|
Hanging dishevel'd with a ghastly air,
|
|
Stept forth, and flung full in the tyrant's face
|
|
The head of Itys, goary as it was:
|
|
Nor ever so much to use her tongue,
|
|
And with a just reproach to vindicate her wrong.
|
|
The Thracian monarch from the table flings,
|
|
While with his cries the vaulted parlour rings;
|
|
His imprecations eccho down to Hell,
|
|
And rouze the snaky Furies from their Stygian cell.
|
|
One while he labours to disgorge his breast,
|
|
And free his stomach from the cursed feast;
|
|
Then, weeping o'er his lamentable doom,
|
|
He styles himself his son's sepulchral tomb.
|
|
Now, with drawn sabre, and impetuous speed,
|
|
In close pursuit he drives Pandion's breed;
|
|
Whose nimble feet spring with so swift a force
|
|
Across the fields, they seem to wing their course.
|
|
And now, on real wings themselves they raise,
|
|
And steer their airy flight by diff'rent ways;
|
|
One to the woodland's shady covert hies,
|
|
Around the smoaky roof the other flies;
|
|
Whose feathers yet the marks of murder stain,
|
|
Where stampt upon her breast, the crimson spots
|
|
remain.
|
|
Tereus, through grief, and haste to be reveng'd,
|
|
Shares the like fate, and to a bird is chang'd:
|
|
Fix'd on his head, the crested plumes appear,
|
|
Long is his beak, and sharpen'd like a spear;
|
|
Thus arm'd, his looks his inward mind display,
|
|
And, to a lapwing turn'd, he fans his way.
|
|
Exceeding trouble, for his children's fate,
|
|
Shorten'd Pandion's days, and chang'd his date;
|
|
Down to the shades below, with sorrow spent,
|
|
An earlier, unexpected ghost he went.
|
|
Boreas in Love Erechtheus next th' Athenian sceptre sway'd,
|
|
Whose rule the state with joynt consent obey'd;
|
|
So mix'd his justice with his valour flow'd,
|
|
His reign one scene of princely goodness shew'd.
|
|
Four hopeful youths, as many females bright,
|
|
Sprung from his loyns, and sooth'd him with
|
|
delight.
|
|
Two of these sisters, of a lovelier air,
|
|
Excell'd the rest, tho' all the rest were fair.
|
|
Procris, to Cephalus in wedlock ty'd,
|
|
Bless'd the young silvan with a blooming bride:
|
|
For Orithyia Boreas suffer'd pain,
|
|
For the coy maid sued long, but sued in vain;
|
|
Tereus his neighbour, and his Thracian blood,
|
|
Against the match a main objection stood;
|
|
Which made his vows, and all his suppliant love,
|
|
Empty as air and ineffectual prove.
|
|
But when he found his soothing flatt'ries fail,
|
|
Nor saw his soft addresses cou'd avail;
|
|
Blust'ring with ire, he quickly has recourse
|
|
To rougher arts, and his own native force.
|
|
'Tis well, he said; such usage is my due,
|
|
When thus disguis'd by foreign ways I sue;
|
|
When my stern airs, and fierceness I disclaim,
|
|
And sigh for love, ridiculously tame;
|
|
When soft addresses foolishly I try,
|
|
Nor my own stronger remedies apply.
|
|
By force and violence I chiefly live,
|
|
By them the lowring stormy tempests drive;
|
|
In foaming billows raise the hoary deep,
|
|
Writhe knotted oaks, and sandy desarts sweep;
|
|
Congeal the falling flakes of fleecy snow,
|
|
And bruise, with ratling hall, the plains below.
|
|
I, and my brother-winds, when joyn'd above,
|
|
Thro' the waste champian of the skies we rove,
|
|
With such a boist'rous full career engage,
|
|
That Heav'n's whole concave thunders at our rage.
|
|
While, struck from nitrous clouds, fierce
|
|
lightnings play,
|
|
Dart thro' the storm, and gild the gloomy day.
|
|
Or when, in subterraneous caverns pent,
|
|
My breath, against the hollow Earth, is bent,
|
|
The quaking world above, and ghosts below,
|
|
My mighty pow'r, by dear experience, know,
|
|
Tremble with fear, and dread the fatal blow.
|
|
This is the only cure to be apply'd,
|
|
Thus to Erechtheus I should be ally'd;
|
|
And thus the scornful virgin should be woo'd,
|
|
Not by intreaty, but by force subdu'd.
|
|
Boreas, in passion, spoke these huffing things,
|
|
And, as he spoke, he shook his dreadful wings;
|
|
At which, afar the shiv'ring sea was fan'd,
|
|
And the wide surface of the distant land:
|
|
His dusty mantle o'er the hills he drew,
|
|
And swept the lowly vallies, as he flew;
|
|
Then, with his yellow wings, embrac'd the maid,
|
|
And, wrapt in dusky clouds, far off convey'd.
|
|
The sparkling blaze of Love's prevailing fire
|
|
Shone brighter as he flew, and flam'd the higher.
|
|
And now the God, possess'd of his delight,
|
|
To northern Thrace pursu'd his airy flight,
|
|
Where the young ravish'd nymph became his bride,
|
|
And soon the luscious sweets of wedlock try'd.
|
|
Two lovely twins, th' effect of this embrace,
|
|
Crown their soft labours, and their nuptials grace;
|
|
Who, like their mother, beautiful, and fair,
|
|
Their father's strength, and feather'd pinions
|
|
share:
|
|
Yet these, at first, were wanting, as 'tis said,
|
|
And after, as they grew, their shoulders spread.
|
|
Zethes and Calais, the pretty twins,
|
|
Remain'd unfledg'd, while smooth their beardless
|
|
chins;
|
|
But when, in time, the budding silver down
|
|
Shaded their face, and on their cheeks was grown,
|
|
Two sprouting wings upon their shoulders sprung,
|
|
Like those in birds, that veil the callow young.
|
|
Then as their age advanc'd, and they began
|
|
From greener youth to ripen into man,
|
|
With Jason's Argonauts they cross'd the seas,
|
|
Embark'd in quest of the fam'd golden fleece;
|
|
There, with the rest, the first frail vessel try'd,
|
|
And boldly ventur'd on the swelling tide.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Sixth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE SEVENTH
|
|
|
|
THE Argonauts now stemm'd the foaming tide,
|
|
And to Arcadia's shore their course apply'd;
|
|
Where sightless Phineus spent his age in grief,
|
|
But Boreas' sons engage in his relief;
|
|
And those unwelcome guests, the odious race
|
|
Of Harpyes, from the monarch's table chase.
|
|
With Jason then they greater toils sustain,
|
|
And Phasis' slimy banks at last they gain,
|
|
Here boldly they demand the golden prize
|
|
Of Scythia's king, who sternly thus replies:
|
|
That mighty labours they must first o'ercome,
|
|
Or sail their Argo thence unfreighted home.
|
|
The Story of Meanwhile Medea, seiz'd with fierce desire,
|
|
Medea and By reason strives to quench the raging fire;
|
|
Jason But strives in vain!- Some God (she said)
|
|
withstands,
|
|
And reason's baffl'd council countermands.
|
|
What unseen Pow'r does this disorder move?
|
|
'Tis love,- at least 'tis like, what men call love.
|
|
Else wherefore shou'd the king's commands appear
|
|
To me too hard?- But so indeed they are.
|
|
Why shou'd I for a stranger fear, lest he
|
|
Shou'd perish, whom I did but lately see?
|
|
His death, or safety, what are they to me?
|
|
Wretch, from thy virgin-breast this flame expel,
|
|
And soon- Oh cou'd I, all wou'd then be well!
|
|
But love, resistless love, my soul invades;
|
|
Discretion this, affection that perswades.
|
|
I see the right, and I approve it too,
|
|
Condemn the wrong- and yet the wrong pursue.
|
|
Why, royal maid, shou'dst thou desire to wed
|
|
A wanderer, and court a foreign bed?
|
|
Thy native land, tho' barb'rous, can present
|
|
A bridegroom worth a royal bride's content:
|
|
And whether this advent'rer lives, or dies,
|
|
In Fate, and Fortune's fickle pleasure lies.
|
|
Yet may be live! for to the Pow'rs above,
|
|
A virgin, led by no impulse of love,
|
|
So just a suit may, for the guiltless, move.
|
|
Whom wou'd not Jason's valour, youth and blood
|
|
Invite? or cou'd these merits be withstood,
|
|
At least his charming person must encline
|
|
The hardest heart- I'm sure 'tis so with mine!
|
|
Yet, if I help him not, the flaming breath
|
|
Of bulls, and earth-born foes, must be his death.
|
|
Or, should he through these dangers force his way,
|
|
At last he must be made the dragon's prey.
|
|
If no remorse for such distress I feel,
|
|
I am a tigress, and my breast is steel.
|
|
Why do I scruple then to see him slain,
|
|
And with the tragick scene my eyes prophane?
|
|
My magick's art employ, not to asswage
|
|
The Salvages, but to enflame their rage?
|
|
His earth-born foes to fiercer fury move,
|
|
And accessary to his murder prove?
|
|
The Gods forbid- But pray'rs are idle breath,
|
|
When action only can prevent his death.
|
|
Shall I betray my father, and the state,
|
|
To intercept a rambling hero's fate;
|
|
Who may sail off next hour, and sav'd from harms
|
|
By my assistance, bless another's arms?
|
|
Whilst I, not only of my hopes bereft,
|
|
But to unpity'd punishment am left.
|
|
If he is false, let the ingrateful bleed!
|
|
But no such symptom in his looks I read.
|
|
Nature wou'd ne'er have lavish'd so much grace
|
|
Upon his person, if his soul were base.
|
|
Besides, he first shall plight his faith, and swear
|
|
By all the Gods; what therefore can'st thou fear?
|
|
Medea haste, from danger set him free,
|
|
Jason shall thy eternal debtor be.
|
|
And thou, his queen, with sov'raign state
|
|
enstall'd,
|
|
By Graecian dames the Kind Preserver call'd.
|
|
Hence idle dreams, by love-sick fancy bred!
|
|
Wilt thou, Medea, by vain wishes led,
|
|
To sister, brother, father bid adieu?
|
|
Forsake thy country's Gods, and country too?
|
|
My father's harsh, my brother but a child,
|
|
My sister rivals me, my country's wild;
|
|
And for its Gods, the greatest of 'em all
|
|
Inspires my breast, and I obey his call.
|
|
That great endearments I forsake, is true,
|
|
But greater far the hopes that I pursue:
|
|
The pride of having sav'd the youths of Greece
|
|
(Each life more precious than our golden fleece);
|
|
A nobler soil by me shall be possest,
|
|
I shall see towns with arts and manners blest;
|
|
And, what I prize above the world beside,
|
|
Enjoy my Jason- and when once his bride,
|
|
Be more than mortal, and to Gods ally'd.
|
|
They talk of hazards I must first sustain,
|
|
Of floating islands justling in the main;
|
|
Our tender barque expos'd to dreadful shocks
|
|
Of fierce Charybdis' gulf, and Scylla's rocks,
|
|
Where breaking waves in whirling eddies rowl,
|
|
And rav'nous dogs that in deep caverns howl:
|
|
Amidst these terrors, while I lye possest
|
|
Of him I love, and lean on Jason's breast,
|
|
In tempests unconcern'd I will appear,
|
|
Or, only for my husband's safety fear.
|
|
Didst thou say husband?- canst thou so deceive
|
|
Thy self, fond maid, and thy own cheat believe?
|
|
In vain thou striv'st to varnish o'er thy shame,
|
|
And grace thy guilt with wedlock's sacred name.
|
|
Pull off the coz'ning masque, and oh! in time
|
|
Discover and avoid the fatal crime.
|
|
She ceas'd- the Graces now, with kind surprize,
|
|
And virtue's lovely train, before her eyes
|
|
Present themselves, and vanquish'd Cupid flies.
|
|
She then retires to Hecate's shrine, that stood
|
|
Far in the covert of a shady wood:
|
|
She finds the fury of her flames asswag'd,
|
|
But, seeing Jason there, again they rag'd.
|
|
Blushes, and paleness did by turns invade
|
|
Her tender cheeks, and secret grief betray'd.
|
|
As fire, that sleeping under ashes lyes,
|
|
Fresh-blown, and rous'd, does up in blazes rise,
|
|
So flam'd the virgin's breast-
|
|
New kindled by her lover's sparkling eyes.
|
|
For chance, that day, had with uncommon grace
|
|
Adorn'd the lovely youth, and through his face
|
|
Display'd an air so pleasing as might charm
|
|
A Goddess, and a Vestal's bosom warm.
|
|
Her ravish'd eyes survey him o'er and o'er,
|
|
As some gay wonder never seen before;
|
|
Transported to the skies she seems to be,
|
|
And thinks she gazes on a deity.
|
|
But when he spoke, and prest her trembling hand,
|
|
And did with tender words her aid demand,
|
|
With vows, and oaths to make her soon his bride,
|
|
She wept a flood of tears, and thus reply'd:
|
|
I see my error, yet to ruin move,
|
|
Nor owe my fate to ignorance, but love:
|
|
Your life I'll guard, and only crave of you
|
|
To swear once more- and to your oath be true.
|
|
He swears by Hecate he would all fulfil,
|
|
And by her grandfather's prophetick skill,
|
|
By ev'ry thing that doubting love cou'd press,
|
|
His present danger, and desir'd success.
|
|
She credits him, and kindly does produce
|
|
Enchanted herbs, and teaches him their use:
|
|
Their mystick names, and virtues he admires,
|
|
And with his booty joyfully retires.
|
|
The Impatient for the wonders of the day,
|
|
Dragon's Teeth Aurora drives the loyt'ring stars away.
|
|
transform'd to Now Mars's mount the pressing people fill,
|
|
Men The crowd below, the nobles crown the hill;
|
|
The king himself high-thron'd above the rest,
|
|
With iv'ry scepter, and in purple drest.
|
|
Forthwith the brass-hoof'd bulls are set at
|
|
large,
|
|
Whose furious nostrils sulph'rous flame discharge:
|
|
The blasted herbage by their breath expires;
|
|
As forges rumble with excessive fires,
|
|
And furnaces with fiercer fury glow,
|
|
When water on the panting mass ye throw;
|
|
With such a noise, from their convulsive breast,
|
|
Thro' bellowing throats, the struggling vapour
|
|
prest.
|
|
Yet Jason marches up without concern,
|
|
While on th' advent'rous youth the monsters turn
|
|
Their glaring eyes, and, eager to engage,
|
|
Brandish their steel-tipt horns in threatning rage:
|
|
With brazen hoofs they beat the ground, and choak
|
|
The ambient air with clouds of dust and smoak:
|
|
Each gazing Graecian for his champion shakes,
|
|
While bold advances he securely makes
|
|
Thro' sindging blasts; such wonders magick art
|
|
Can work, when love conspires, and plays his part.
|
|
The passive savages like statues stand,
|
|
While he their dew-laps stroaks with soothing hand;
|
|
To unknown yokes their brawny necks they yield,
|
|
And, like tame oxen, plow the wond'ring field.
|
|
The Colchians stare; the Graecians shout, and raise
|
|
Their champion's courage with inspiring praise.
|
|
Embolden'd now, on fresh attempts he goes,
|
|
With serpent's teeth the fertile furrows sows;
|
|
The glebe, fermenting with inchanted juice,
|
|
Makes the snake's teeth a human crop produce.
|
|
For as an infant, pris'ner to the womb,
|
|
Contented sleeps, 'till to perfection come,
|
|
Then does the cell's obscure confinement scorn,
|
|
He tosses, throbs, and presses to be born;
|
|
So from the lab'ring Earth no single birth,
|
|
But a whole troop of lusty youths rush forth;
|
|
And, what's more strange, with martial fury warm'd,
|
|
And for encounter all compleatly arm'd;
|
|
In rank and file, as they were sow'd, they stand,
|
|
Impatient for the signal of command.
|
|
No foe but the Aemonian youth appears;
|
|
At him they level their steel-pointed spears;
|
|
His frighted friends, who triumph'd, just before,
|
|
With peals of sighs his desp'rate case deplore:
|
|
And where such hardy warriors are afraid,
|
|
What must the tender, and enamour'd maid?
|
|
Her spirits sink, the blood her cheek forsook;
|
|
She fears, who for his safety undertook:
|
|
She knew the vertue of the spells she gave,
|
|
She knew the force, and knew her lover brave;
|
|
But what's a single champion to an host?
|
|
Yet scorning thus to see him tamely lost,
|
|
Her strong reserve of secret arts she brings,
|
|
And last, her never-failing song she sings.
|
|
Wonders ensue; among his gazing foes
|
|
The massy fragment of a rock he throws;
|
|
This charm in civil war engag'd 'em all;
|
|
By mutual wounds those Earth-born brothers fall.
|
|
The Greeks, transported with the strange success,
|
|
Leap from their seats the conqu'ror to caress;
|
|
Commend, and kiss, and clasp him in their arms:
|
|
So would the kind contriver of the charms;
|
|
But her, who felt the tenderest concern,
|
|
Honour condemns in secret flames to burn;
|
|
Committed to a double guard of fame,
|
|
Aw'd by a virgin's, and a princess' name.
|
|
But thoughts are free, and fancy unconfin'd,
|
|
She kisses, courts, and hugs him in her mind;
|
|
To fav'ring Pow'rs her silent thanks she gives,
|
|
By whose indulgence her lov'd hero lives.
|
|
One labour more remains, and, tho' the last,
|
|
In danger far surmounting all the past;
|
|
That enterprize by Fates in store was kept,
|
|
To make the dragon sleep that never slept,
|
|
Whose crest shoots dreadful lustre; from his jaws
|
|
A tripple tire of forked stings he draws,
|
|
With fangs, and wings of a prodigious size:
|
|
Such was the guardian of the golden prize.
|
|
Yet him, besprinkled with Lethaean dew,
|
|
The fair inchantress into slumber threw;
|
|
And then, to fix him, thrice she did repeat
|
|
The rhyme, that makes the raging winds retreat,
|
|
In stormy seas can halcyon seasons make,
|
|
Turn rapid streams into a standing lake;
|
|
While the soft guest his drowzy eye-lids seals,
|
|
Th' ungarded golden fleece the stranger steals;
|
|
Proud to possess the purchase of his toil,
|
|
Proud of his royal bride, the richer spoil;
|
|
To sea both prize, and patroness he bore,
|
|
And lands triumphant on his native shore.
|
|
Old Aeson Aemonian matrons, who their absence mourn'd,
|
|
restor'd to Rejoyce to see their prosp'rous sons return'd:
|
|
Youth Rich curling fumes of incense feast the skies,
|
|
An hecatomb of voted victims dies,
|
|
With gilded horns, and garlands on their head,
|
|
And all the pomp of death, to th' altar led.
|
|
Congratulating bowls go briskly round,
|
|
Triumphant shouts in louder musick drown'd.
|
|
Amidst these revels, why that cloud of care
|
|
On Jason's brow? (to whom the largest share
|
|
Of mirth was due)- His father was not there.
|
|
Aeson was absent, once the young, and brave,
|
|
Now crush'd with years, and bending to the grave.
|
|
At last withdrawn, and by the crowd unseen,
|
|
Pressing her hand (with starting sighs between),
|
|
He supplicates his kind, and skilful queen.
|
|
O patroness! preserver of my life!
|
|
(Dear when my mistress, and much dearer wife)
|
|
Your favours to so vast a sum amount,
|
|
'Tis past the pow'r of numbers to recount;
|
|
Or cou'd they be to computation brought,
|
|
The history would a romance be thought:
|
|
And yet, unless you add one favour more,
|
|
Greater than all that you conferr'd before,
|
|
But not too hard for love and magick skill,
|
|
Your past are thrown away, and Jason's wretched
|
|
still.
|
|
The morning of my life is just begun,
|
|
But my declining father's race is run;
|
|
From my large stock retrench the long arrears,
|
|
And add 'em to expiring Aeson's years.
|
|
Thus spake the gen'rous youth, and wept the rest.
|
|
Mov'd with the piety of his request,
|
|
To his ag'd sire such filial duty shown,
|
|
So diff'rent from her treatment of her own,
|
|
But still endeav'ring her remorse to hide,
|
|
She check'd her rising sighs, and thus reply'd.
|
|
How cou'd the thought of such inhuman wrong
|
|
Escape (said she) from pious Jason's tongue?
|
|
Does the whole world another Jason bear,
|
|
Whose life Medea can to yours prefer?
|
|
Or cou'd I with so dire a change dispence,
|
|
Hecate will never join in that offence:
|
|
Unjust is the request you make, and I
|
|
In kindness your petition shall deny;
|
|
Yet she that grants not what you do implore,
|
|
Shall yet essay to give her Jason more;
|
|
Find means t' encrease the stock of Aeson's years,
|
|
Without retrenchment of your life's arrears;
|
|
Provided that the triple Goddess join
|
|
A strong confed'rate in my bold design.
|
|
Thus was her enterprize resolv'd; but still
|
|
Three tedious nights are wanting to fulfil
|
|
The circling crescents of th' encreasing moon;
|
|
Then, in the height of her nocturnal noon,
|
|
Medea steals from court; her ankles bare,
|
|
Her garments closely girt, but loose her hair;
|
|
Thus sally'd, like a solitary sprite,
|
|
She traverses the terrors of the night.
|
|
Men, beasts, and birds in soft repose lay
|
|
charm'd,
|
|
No boistrous wind the mountain-woods alarm'd;
|
|
Nor did those walks of love, the myrtle-trees,
|
|
Of am'rous Zephir hear the whisp'ring breeze;
|
|
All elements chain'd in unactive rest,
|
|
No sense but what the twinkling stars exprest;
|
|
To them (that only wak'd) she rears her arm,
|
|
And thus commences her mysterious charms.
|
|
She turn'd her thrice about, as oft she threw
|
|
On her pale tresses the nocturnal dew;
|
|
Then yelling thrice a most enormous sound,
|
|
Her bare knee bended on the flinty ground.
|
|
O night (said she) thou confident and guide
|
|
Of secrets, such as darkness ought to hide;
|
|
Ye stars and moon, that, when the sun retires,
|
|
Support his empire with succeeding fires;
|
|
And thou, great Hecate, friend to my design;
|
|
Songs, mutt'ring spells, your magick forces join;
|
|
And thou, O Earth, the magazine that yields
|
|
The midnight sorcerer drugs; skies, mountains,
|
|
fields;
|
|
Ye wat'ry Pow'rs of fountain, stream, and lake;
|
|
Ye sylvan Gods, and Gods of night, awake,
|
|
And gen'rously your parts in my adventure take.
|
|
Oft by your aid swift currents I have led
|
|
Thro' wand'ring banks, back to their fountain head;
|
|
Transformed the prospect of the briny deep,
|
|
Made sleeping billows rave, and raving billows
|
|
sleep;
|
|
Made clouds, or sunshine; tempests rise, or fall;
|
|
And stubborn lawless winds obey my call:
|
|
With mutter'd words disarm'd the viper's jaw;
|
|
Up by the roots vast oaks, and rocks cou'd draw,
|
|
Make forests dance, and trembling mountains come,
|
|
Like malefactors, to receive their doom;
|
|
Earth groan, and frighted ghosts forsake their
|
|
tomb.
|
|
Thee, Cynthia, my resistless rhymes drew down,
|
|
When tinkling cymbals strove my voice to drown;
|
|
Nor stronger Titan could their force sustain,
|
|
In full career compell'd to stop his wain:
|
|
Nor could Aurora's virgin blush avail,
|
|
With pois'nous herbs I turn'd her roses pale;
|
|
The fury of the fiery bulls I broke,
|
|
Their stubborn necks submitting to my yoke;
|
|
And when the sons of Earth with fury burn'd,
|
|
Their hostile rage upon themselves I turn'd;
|
|
The brothers made with mutual wounds to bleed,
|
|
And by their fatal strife my lover freed;
|
|
And, while the dragon slept, to distant Greece,
|
|
Thro' cheated guards, convey'd the golden fleece.
|
|
But now to bolder action I proceed,
|
|
Of such prevailing juices now have need,
|
|
That wither'd years back to their bloom can bring,
|
|
And in dead winter raise a second spring.
|
|
And you'll perform't-
|
|
You will; for lo! the stars, with sparkling fires,
|
|
Presage as bright success to my desires:
|
|
And now another happy omen see!
|
|
A chariot drawn by dragons waits for me.
|
|
With these last words he leaps into the wain,
|
|
Stroaks the snakes' necks, and shakes the golden
|
|
rein;
|
|
That signal giv'n, they mount her to the skies,
|
|
And now beneath her fruitful Tempe lies,
|
|
Whose stories she ransacks, then to Crete she
|
|
flies;
|
|
There Ossa, Pelion, Othrys, Pindus, all
|
|
To the fair ravisher, a booty fall;
|
|
The tribute of their verdure she collects,
|
|
Nor proud Olympus' height his plants protects.
|
|
Some by the roots she plucks; the tender tops
|
|
Of others with her culling sickle crops.
|
|
Nor could the plunder of the hills suffice,
|
|
Down to the humble vales, and meads she flies;
|
|
Apidanus, Amphrysus, the next rape
|
|
Sustain, nor could Enipeus' bank escape;
|
|
Thro' Beebe's marsh, and thro' the border rang'd
|
|
Whose pasture Glaucus to a Triton chang'd.
|
|
Now the ninth day, and ninth successive night,
|
|
Had wonder'd at the restless rover's flight;
|
|
Mean-while her dragons, fed with no repast,
|
|
But her exhaling simples od'rous blast,
|
|
Their tarnish'd scales, and wrinkled skins had
|
|
cast.
|
|
At last return'd before her palace gate,
|
|
Quitting her chariot, on the ground she sate;
|
|
The sky her only canopy of state.
|
|
All conversation with her sex she fled,
|
|
Shun'd the caresses of the nuptial bed:
|
|
Two altars next of grassy turf she rears,
|
|
This Hecate's name, that Youth's inscription bears;
|
|
With forest-boughs, and vervain these she crown'd;
|
|
Then delves a double trench in lower ground,
|
|
And sticks a black-fleec'd ram, that ready stood,
|
|
And drench'd the ditches with devoted blood:
|
|
New wine she pours, and milk from th' udder warm,
|
|
With mystick murmurs to compleat the charm,
|
|
And subterranean deities alarm.
|
|
To the stern king of ghosts she next apply'd,
|
|
And gentle Proserpine, his ravish'd bride,
|
|
That for old Aeson with the laws of Fate
|
|
They would dispense, and lengthen his short date;
|
|
Thus with repeated pray'rs she long assails
|
|
Th' infernal tyrant and at last prevails;
|
|
Then calls to have decrepit Aeson brought,
|
|
And stupifies him with a sleeping draught;
|
|
On Earth his body, like a corpse, extends,
|
|
Then charges Jason and his waiting friends
|
|
To quit the place, that no unhallow'd eye
|
|
Into her art's forbidden secrets pry.
|
|
This done, th' inchantress, with her locks unbound,
|
|
About her altars trips a frantick round;
|
|
Piece-meal the consecrated wood she splits,
|
|
And dips the splinters in the bloody pits,
|
|
Then hurles 'em on the piles; the sleeping sire
|
|
She lustrates thrice, with sulphur, water, fire.
|
|
In a large cauldron now the med'cine boils,
|
|
Compounded of her late-collected spoils,
|
|
Blending into the mesh the various pow'rs
|
|
Of wonder-working juices, roots, and flow'rs;
|
|
With gems i' th' eastern ocean's cell refin'd,
|
|
And such as ebbing tides had left behind;
|
|
To them the midnight's pearly dew she flings,
|
|
A scretch-owl's carcase, and ill boding wings;
|
|
Nor could the wizard wolf's warm entrails scape
|
|
(That wolf who counterfeits a human shape).
|
|
Then, from the bottom of her conj'ring bag,
|
|
Snakes' skins, and liver of a long-liv'd stag;
|
|
Last a crow's head to such an age arriv'd,
|
|
That he had now nine centuries surviv'd;
|
|
These, and with these a thousand more that grew
|
|
In sundry soils, into her pot she threw;
|
|
Then with a wither'd olive-bough she rakes
|
|
The bubling broth; the bough fresh verdure takes;
|
|
Green leaves at first the perish'd plant surround,
|
|
Which the next minute with ripe fruit were crown'd.
|
|
The foaming juices now the brink o'er-swell;
|
|
The barren heath, where-e'er the liquor fell,
|
|
Sprang out with vernal grass, and all the pride
|
|
Of blooming May- When this Medea spy'd,
|
|
She cuts her patient's throat; th' exhausted blood
|
|
Recruiting with her new enchanted flood;
|
|
While at his mouth, and thro' his op'ning wound,
|
|
A double inlet her infusion found;
|
|
His feeble frame resumes a youthful air,
|
|
A glossy brown his hoary beard and hair.
|
|
The meager paleness from his aspect fled,
|
|
And in its room sprang up a florid red;
|
|
Thro' all his limbs a youthful vigour flies,
|
|
His empty'd art'ries swell with fresh supplies:
|
|
Gazing spectators scarce believe their eyes.
|
|
But Aeson is the most surpriz'd to find
|
|
A happy change in body and in mind;
|
|
In sense and constitution the same man,
|
|
As when his fortieth active year began.
|
|
Bacchus, who from the clouds this wonder view'd,
|
|
Medea's method instantly pursu'd,
|
|
And his indulgent nurse's youth renew'd.
|
|
The Death of Thus far obliging love employ'd her art,
|
|
Pelias But now revenge must act a tragick part;
|
|
Medea feigns a mortal quarrel bred
|
|
Betwixt her, and the partner of her bed;
|
|
On this pretence to Pelias' court she flies,
|
|
Who languishing with age and sickness lies:
|
|
His guiltless daughters, with inveigling wiles,
|
|
And well dissembled friendship, she beguiles:
|
|
The strange achievements of her art she tells,
|
|
With Aeson's cure, and long on that she dwells,
|
|
'Till them to firm perswasion she has won,
|
|
The same for their old father may be done:
|
|
For him they court her to employ her skill,
|
|
And put upon the cure what price she will.
|
|
At first she's mute, and with a grave pretence
|
|
Of difficulty, holds 'em in suspense;
|
|
Then promises, and bids 'em, from the fold
|
|
Chuse out a ram, the most infirm and old;
|
|
That so by fact their doubts may be remov'd,
|
|
And first on him the operation prov'd.
|
|
A wreath-horn'd ram is brought, so far o'er-grown
|
|
With years, his age was to that age unknown
|
|
Of sense too dull the piercing point to feel,
|
|
And scarce sufficient blood to stain the steel.
|
|
His carcass she into a cauldron threw,
|
|
With drugs whose vital qualities she knew;
|
|
His limbs grow less, he casts his horns, and years,
|
|
And tender bleatings strike their wond'ring ears.
|
|
Then instantly leaps forth a frisking lamb,
|
|
That seeks (too young to graze) a suckling dam.
|
|
The sisters, thus confirm'd with the success,
|
|
Her promise with renew'd entreaty press;
|
|
To countenance the cheat, three nights and days
|
|
Before experiment th' inchantress stays;
|
|
Then into limpid water, from the springs,
|
|
Weeds, and ingredients of no force she flings;
|
|
With antique ceremonies for pretence
|
|
And rambling rhymes without a word of sense.
|
|
Mean-while the king with all his guards lay bound
|
|
In magick sleep, scarce that of death so sound;
|
|
The daughters now are by the sorc'ress led
|
|
Into his chamber, and surround his bed.
|
|
Your father's health's concern'd, and can ye stay?
|
|
Unnat'ral nymphs, why this unkind delay?
|
|
Unsheath your swords, dismiss his lifeless blood,
|
|
And I'll recruit it with a vital flood:
|
|
Your father's life and health is in your hand,
|
|
And can ye thus like idle gazers stand?
|
|
Unless you are of common sense bereft,
|
|
If yet one spark of piety is left,
|
|
Dispatch a father's cure, and disengage
|
|
The monarch from his toilsome load of age:
|
|
Come- drench your weapons in his putrid gore;
|
|
'Tis charity to wound, when wounding will restore.
|
|
Thus urg'd, the poor deluded maids proceed,
|
|
Betray'd by zeal, to an inhumane deed,
|
|
And, in compassion, make a father bleed.
|
|
Yes, she who had the kindest, tend'rest heart,
|
|
Is foremost to perform the bloody part.
|
|
Yet, tho' to act the butchery betray'd,
|
|
They could not bear to see the wounds they made;
|
|
With looks averted, backward they advance,
|
|
Then strike, and stab, and leave the blows to
|
|
chance.
|
|
Waking in consternation, he essays
|
|
(Weltring in blood) his feeble arms to raise:
|
|
Environ'd with so many swords- From whence
|
|
This barb'rous usage? what is my offence?
|
|
What fatal fury, what infernal charm,
|
|
'Gainst a kind father does his daughters arm?
|
|
Hearing his voice, as thunder-struck they stopt,
|
|
Their resolution, and their weapons dropt:
|
|
Medea then the mortal blow bestows,
|
|
And that perform'd, the tragick scene to close,
|
|
His corpse into the boiling cauldron throws.
|
|
Then, dreading the revenge that must ensue,
|
|
High mounted on her dragon-coach she flew;
|
|
And in her stately progress thro' the skies,
|
|
Beneath her shady Pelion first she spies,
|
|
With Othrys, that above the clouds did rise;
|
|
With skilful Chiron's cave, and neighb'ring ground,
|
|
For old Cerambus' strange escape renown'd,
|
|
By nymphs deliver'd, when the world was drown'd;
|
|
Who him with unexpected wings supply'd,
|
|
When delug'd hills a safe retreat deny'd.
|
|
Aeolian Pitane on her left hand
|
|
She saw, and there the statu'd dragon stand;
|
|
With Ida's grove, where Bacchus, to disguise
|
|
His son's bold theft, and to secure the prize,
|
|
Made the stoln steer a stag to represent;
|
|
Cocytus' father's sandy monument;
|
|
And fields that held the murder'd sire's remains,
|
|
Where howling Moera frights the startled plains.
|
|
Euryphilus' high town, with tow'rs defac'd
|
|
By Hercules, and matrons more disgrac'd
|
|
With sprouting horns, in signal punishment,
|
|
From Juno, or resenting Venus sent.
|
|
Then Rhodes, which Phoebus did so dearly prize,
|
|
And Jove no less severely did chastize;
|
|
For he the wizard native's pois'ning sight,
|
|
That us'd the farmer's hopeful crops to blight,
|
|
In rage o'erwhelm'd with everlasting night.
|
|
Cartheia's ancient walls come next in view,
|
|
Where once the sire almost a statue grew
|
|
With wonder, which a strange event did move,
|
|
His daughter turn'd into a turtle-dove.
|
|
Then Hyrie's lake, and Tempe's field o'er-ran,
|
|
Fam'd for the boy who there became a swan;
|
|
For there enamour'd Phyllius, like a slave,
|
|
Perform'd what tasks his paramour would crave.
|
|
For presents he had mountain-vultures caught,
|
|
And from the desart a tame lion brought;
|
|
Then a wild bull commanded to subdue,
|
|
The conquer'd savage by the horns he drew;
|
|
But, mock'd so oft, the treatment he disdains,
|
|
And from the craving boy this prize detains.
|
|
Then thus in choler the resenting lad:
|
|
Won't you deliver him?- You'll wish you had:
|
|
Nor sooner said, but, in a peevish mood,
|
|
Leapt from the precipice on which he stood:
|
|
The standers-by were struck with fresh surprize,
|
|
Instead of falling, to behold him rise
|
|
A snowy swan, and soaring to the skies.
|
|
But dearly the rash prank his mother cost,
|
|
Who ignorantly gave her son for lost;
|
|
For his misfortune wept, 'till she became
|
|
A lake, and still renown'd with Hyrie's name.
|
|
Thence to Latona's isle, where once were seen,
|
|
Transform'd to birds, a monarch, and his queen.
|
|
Far off she saw how old Cephisus mourn'd
|
|
His son, into a seele by Phoebus turn'd;
|
|
And where, astonish'd at a stranger sight,
|
|
Eumelus gaz'd on his wing'd daughter's flight.
|
|
Aetolian Pleuron she did next survey,
|
|
Where sons a mother's murder did essay,
|
|
But sudden plumes the matron bore away.
|
|
On her right hand, Cyllene, a fair soil,
|
|
Fair, 'till Menephron there the beauteous hill
|
|
Attempted with foul incest to defile.
|
|
Her harness'd dragons now direct she drives
|
|
For Corinth, and at Corinth she arrives;
|
|
Where, if what old tradition tells, be true,
|
|
In former ages men from mushrooms grew.
|
|
But here Medea finds her bed supply'd,
|
|
During her absence, by another bride;
|
|
And hopeless to recover her lost game,
|
|
She sets both bride and palace in a flame.
|
|
Nor could a rival's death her wrath asswage,
|
|
Nor stopt at Creon's family her rage,
|
|
She murders her own infants, in despight
|
|
To faithless Jason, and in Jason's sight;
|
|
Yet e'er his sword could reach her, up she springs,
|
|
Securely mounted on her dragon's wings.
|
|
The Story of From hence to Athens she directs her flight,
|
|
Aegeus Where Phineus, so renown'd for doing right;
|
|
Where Periphas, and Polyphemon's neece,
|
|
Soaring with sudden plumes amaz'd the towns of
|
|
Greece.
|
|
Here Aegeus so engaging she addrest,
|
|
That first he treats her like a royal guest;
|
|
Then takes the sorc'ress for his wedded wife;
|
|
The only blemish of his prudent life.
|
|
Mean-while his son, from actions of renown,
|
|
Arrives at court, but to his sire unknown.
|
|
Medea, to dispatch a dang'rous heir
|
|
(She knew him), did a pois'nous draught prepare;
|
|
Drawn from a drug, was long reserv'd in store
|
|
For desp'rate uses, from the Scythian shore;
|
|
That from the Echydnaean monster's jaws
|
|
Deriv'd its origin, and this the cause.
|
|
Thro' a dark cave a craggy passage lies,
|
|
To ours, ascending from the nether skies;
|
|
Thro' which, by strength of hand, Alcides drew
|
|
Chain'd Cerberus, who lagg'd, and restive grew,
|
|
With his blear'd eyes our brighter day to view.
|
|
Thrice he repeated his enormous yell,
|
|
With which he scares the ghosts, and startles Hell;
|
|
At last outragious (tho' compell'd to yield)
|
|
He sheds his foam in fury on the field,-
|
|
Which, with its own, and rankness of the ground,
|
|
Produc'd a weed, by sorcerers renown'd,
|
|
The strongest constitution to confound;
|
|
Call'd Aconite, because it can unlock
|
|
All bars, and force its passage thro' a rock.
|
|
The pious father, by her wheedles won,
|
|
Presents this deadly potion to his son;
|
|
Who, with the same assurance takes the cup,
|
|
And to the monarch's health had drank it up,
|
|
But in the very instant he apply'd
|
|
The goblet to his lips, old Aegeus spy'd
|
|
The iv'ry hilted sword that grac'd his side.
|
|
That certain signal of his son he knew,
|
|
And snatcht the bowl away; the sword he drew,
|
|
Resolv'd, for such a son's endanger'd life,
|
|
To sacrifice the most perfidious wife.
|
|
Revenge is swift, but her more active charms
|
|
A whirlwind rais'd, that snatch'd her from his
|
|
arms.
|
|
While conjur'd clouds their baffled sense surprize,
|
|
She vanishes from their deluded eyes,
|
|
And thro' the hurricane triumphant flies.
|
|
The gen'rous king, altho' o'er-joy'd to find
|
|
His son was safe, yet bearing still in mind
|
|
The mischief by his treach'rous queen design'd;
|
|
The horrour of the deed, and then how near
|
|
The danger drew, he stands congeal'd with fear.
|
|
But soon that fear into devotion turns,
|
|
With grateful incense ev'ry altar burns;
|
|
Proud victims, and unconscious of their fate,
|
|
Stalk to the temple, there to die in state.
|
|
In Athens never had a day been found
|
|
For mirth, like that grand festival, renown'd.
|
|
Promiscuously the peers, and people dine,
|
|
Promiscuously their thankful voices join,
|
|
In songs of wit, sublim'd by spritely wine.
|
|
To list'ning spheres their joint applause they
|
|
raise,
|
|
And thus resound their matchless Theseus' praise.
|
|
Great Theseus! Thee the Marathonian plain
|
|
Admires, and wears with pride the noble stain
|
|
Of the dire monster's blood, by valiant Theseus
|
|
slain.
|
|
That now Cromyon's swains in safety sow,
|
|
And reap their fertile field, to thee they owe.
|
|
By thee th' infested Epidaurian coast
|
|
Was clear'd, and now can a free commerce boast.
|
|
The traveller his journey can pursue,
|
|
With pleasure the late dreadful valley view,
|
|
And cry, Here Theseus the grand robber slew.
|
|
Cephysus' cries to his rescu'd shore,
|
|
The merciless Procrustes is no more.
|
|
In peace, Eleusis, Ceres' rites renew,
|
|
Since Theseus' sword the fierce Cercyon slew.
|
|
By him the tort'rer Sinis was destroy'd,
|
|
Of strength (but strength to barb'rous use
|
|
employ'd)
|
|
That tops of tallest pines to Earth could bend,
|
|
And thus in pieces wretched captives rend.
|
|
Inhuman Scyron now has breath'd his last,
|
|
And now Alcatho's roads securely past;
|
|
By Theseus slain, and thrown into the deep:
|
|
But Earth nor Sea his scatter'd bones wou'd keep,
|
|
Which, after floating long, a rock became,
|
|
Still infamous with Scyron's hated name.
|
|
When Fame to count thy acts and years proceeds,
|
|
Thy years appear but cyphers to thy deeds.
|
|
For thee, brave youth, as for our common-wealth,
|
|
We pray; and drink, in yours, the publick health.
|
|
Your praise the senate, and plebeians sing,
|
|
With your lov'd name the court, and cottage ring.
|
|
You make our shepherds and our sailors glad,
|
|
And not a house in this vast city's sad.
|
|
But mortal bliss will never come sincere,
|
|
Pleasure may lead, but grief brings up the rear;
|
|
While for his sons' arrival, rev'ling joy
|
|
Aegeus, and all his subjects does employ;
|
|
While they for only costly feasts prepare,
|
|
His neighb'ring monarch, Minos, threatens war:
|
|
Weak in land-forces, nor by sea more strong,
|
|
But pow'rful in a deep resented wrong
|
|
For a son's murder, arm'd with pious rage;
|
|
Yet prudently before he would engage,
|
|
To raise auxiliaries resolv'd to sail,
|
|
And with the pow'rful princes to prevail.
|
|
First Anaphe, then proud Astypalaea gains,
|
|
By presents that, and this by threats obtains:
|
|
Low Mycone, Cymolus, chalky soil,
|
|
Tall Cythnos, Scyros, flat Seriphos' isle;
|
|
Paros, with marble cliffs afar display'd;
|
|
Impregnable Sithonia; yet betray'd
|
|
To a weak foe by a gold-admiring maid,
|
|
Who, chang'd into a daw of sable hue,
|
|
Still hoards up gold, and hides it from the view.
|
|
But as these islands chearfully combine,
|
|
Others refuse t' embark in his design.
|
|
Now leftward with an easy sail he bore,
|
|
And prosp'rous passage to Oenopia's shore;
|
|
Oenopia once, but now Aegina call'd,
|
|
And with his royal mother's name install'd
|
|
By Aeacus, under whose reign did spring
|
|
The Myrmidons, and now their reigning king.
|
|
Down to the port, amidst the rabble, run
|
|
The princes of the blood; with Telamon,
|
|
Peleus the next, and Phocus the third son:
|
|
Then Aeacus, altho' opprest with years,
|
|
To ask the cause of their approach appears.
|
|
That question does the Gnossian's grief renew,
|
|
And sighs from his afflicted bosom drew;
|
|
Yet after a short solemn respite made,
|
|
The ruler of the hundred cities said:
|
|
Assist our arms, rais'd for a murder'd son,
|
|
In this religious war no risque you'll run:
|
|
Revenge the dead- for who refuse to give
|
|
Rest to their urns, unworthy are to live.
|
|
What you request, thus Aeacus replies,
|
|
Not I, but truth and common faith denies;
|
|
Athens and we have long been sworn allies:
|
|
Our leagues are fix'd, confed'rate are our pow'rs,
|
|
And who declare themselves their foes, are ours.
|
|
Minos rejoins, Your league shall dearly cost
|
|
(Yet, mindful how much safer 'twas to boast,
|
|
Than there to waste his forces, and his fame,
|
|
Before in field with his grand foe he came),
|
|
Parts without blows- nor long had left the shore,
|
|
E're into port another navy bore,
|
|
With Cephalus, and all his jolly crew;
|
|
Th' Aeacides their old acquaintance knew:
|
|
The princes bid him welcome, and in state
|
|
Conduct the heroe to their palace gate;
|
|
Who entr'ring, seem'd the charming mein to wear,
|
|
As when in youth he paid his visit there.
|
|
In his right hand an olive-branch he holds,
|
|
And, salutation past, the chief unfolds
|
|
His embassy from the Athenian state,
|
|
Their mutual friendship, leagues of ancient date;
|
|
Their common danger, ev'ry thing cou'd wake
|
|
Concern, and his address successful make:
|
|
Strength'ning his plea with all the charms of
|
|
sense,
|
|
And those, with all the charms of eloquence.
|
|
Then thus the king: Like suitors do you stand
|
|
For that assistance which you may command?
|
|
Athenians, all our listed forces use
|
|
(They're such as no bold service will refuse);
|
|
And when y' ave drawn them off, the Gods be
|
|
prais'd,
|
|
Fresh legions can within our isle be rais'd:
|
|
So stock'd with people, that we can prepare
|
|
Both for domestick, and for distant war,
|
|
Ours, or our friends' insulters to chastize.
|
|
Long may ye flourish thus, the prince replies.
|
|
Strange transport seiz'd me as I pass'd along,
|
|
To meet so many troops, and all so young,
|
|
As if your army did of twins consist;
|
|
Yet amongst them my late acquaintance miss'd:
|
|
Ev'n all that to your palace did resort,
|
|
When first you entertain'd me at your court;
|
|
And cannot guess the cause from whence cou'd spring
|
|
So vast a change- Then thus the sighing king:
|
|
Illustrious guest, to my strange tale attend,
|
|
Of sad beginning, but a joyful end:
|
|
The whole to a vast history wou'd swell,
|
|
I shall but half, and that confus'dly, tell.
|
|
That race whom so deserv'dly you admir'd,
|
|
Are all into their silent tombs retir'd:
|
|
They fell; and falling, how they shook my state,
|
|
Thought may conceive, but words can ne'er relate.
|
|
The Story of A dreadful plague from angry Juno came,
|
|
Ants chang'd To scourge the land, that bore her rival's name;
|
|
to Men Before her fatal anger was reveal'd,
|
|
And teeming malice lay as yet conceal'd,
|
|
All remedies we try, all med'cines use,
|
|
Which Nature cou'd supply, or art produce;
|
|
Th' unconquer'd foe derides the vain design,
|
|
And art, and Nature foil'd, declare the cause
|
|
divine.
|
|
At first we only felt th' oppressive weight
|
|
Of gloomy clouds, then teeming with our fate,
|
|
And lab'ring to discarge unactive heat:
|
|
But ere four moons alternate changes knew,
|
|
With deadly blasts the fatal South-wind blew,
|
|
Infected all the air, and poison'd as it flew.
|
|
Our fountains too a dire infection yield,
|
|
For crowds of vipers creep along the field,
|
|
And with polluted gore, and baneful steams,
|
|
Taint all the lakes, and venom all the streams.
|
|
The young disease with milder force began,
|
|
And rag'd on birds, and beasts, excusing Man.
|
|
The lab'ring oxen fall before the plow,
|
|
Th' unhappy plow-men stare, and wonder how:
|
|
The tabid sheep, with sickly bleatings, pines;
|
|
Its wool decreasing, as its strength declines:
|
|
The warlike steed, by inward foes compell'd,
|
|
Neglects his honours, and deserts the field;
|
|
Unnerv'd, and languid, seeks a base retreat,
|
|
And at the manger groans, but wish'd a nobler fate:
|
|
The stags forget their speed, the boars their rage,
|
|
Nor can the bears the stronger herds engage:
|
|
A gen'ral faintness does invade 'em all,
|
|
And in the woods, and fields, promiscuously they
|
|
fall.
|
|
The air receives the stench, and (strange to say)
|
|
The rav'nous birds and beasts avoid the prey:
|
|
Th' offensive bodies rot upon the ground,
|
|
And spread the dire contagion all around.
|
|
But now the plague, grown to a larger size,
|
|
Riots on Man, and scorns a meaner prize.
|
|
Intestine heats begin the civil war,
|
|
And flushings first the latent flame declare,
|
|
And breath inspir'd, which seem'd like fiery air.
|
|
Their black dry tongues are swell'd, and scarce can
|
|
move,
|
|
And short thick sighs from panting lung are drove.
|
|
They gape for air, with flatt'ring hopes t' abate
|
|
Their raging flames, but that augments their heat.
|
|
No bed, no cov'ring can the wretches bear,
|
|
But on the ground, expos'd to open air,
|
|
They lye, and hope to find a pleasing coolness
|
|
there.
|
|
The suff'ring Earth with that oppression curst,
|
|
Returns the heat which they imparted first.
|
|
In vain physicians would bestow their aid,
|
|
Vain all their art, and useless all their trade;
|
|
And they, ev'n they, who fleeting life recall,
|
|
Feel the same Pow'rs, and undistinguish'd fall.
|
|
If any proves so daring to attend
|
|
His sick companion, or his darling friend,
|
|
Th' officious wretch sucks in contagious breath,
|
|
And with his friend does sympathize in death.
|
|
And now the care and hopes of life are past,
|
|
They please their fancies, and indulge their taste;
|
|
At brooks and streams, regardless of their shame,
|
|
Each sex, promiscuous, strives to quench their
|
|
flame;
|
|
Nor do they strive in vain to quench it there,
|
|
For thirst, and life at once extinguish'd are.
|
|
Thus in the brooks the dying bodies sink,
|
|
But heedless still the rash survivors drink.
|
|
So much uneasy down the wretches hate,
|
|
They fly their beds, to struggle with their fate;
|
|
But if decaying strength forbids to rise,
|
|
The victim crawls and rouls, 'till on the ground he
|
|
lies.
|
|
Each shuns his bed, as each wou'd shun his tomb,
|
|
And thinks th' infection only lodg'd at home.
|
|
Here one, with fainting steps, does slowly creep
|
|
O'er heaps of dead, and strait augments the heap;
|
|
Another, while his strength and tongue prevail'd,
|
|
Bewails his friend, and falls himself bewail'd:
|
|
This with imploring looks surveys the skies,
|
|
The last dear office of his closing eyes,
|
|
But finds the Heav'ns implacable, and dies.
|
|
What now, ah! what employ'd my troubled mind?
|
|
But only hopes my subjects' fate to find.
|
|
What place soe'er my weeping eyes survey,
|
|
There in lamented heaps the vulgar lay;
|
|
As acorns scatter when the winds prevail,
|
|
Or mellow fruit from shaken branches fall.
|
|
You see that dome which rears its front so high:
|
|
'Tis sacred to the monarch of the sky:
|
|
How many there, with unregarded tears,
|
|
And fruitless vows, sent up successless pray'rs?
|
|
There fathers for expiring sons implor'd,
|
|
And there the wife bewail'd her gasping lord;
|
|
With pious off'rings they'd appease the skies,
|
|
But they, ere yet th' attoning vapours rise,
|
|
Before the altars fall, themselves a sacrifice:
|
|
They fall, while yet their hands the gums contain,
|
|
The gums surviving, but their off'rers slain.
|
|
The destin'd ox, with holy garlands crown'd,
|
|
Prevents the blow, and feels th' expected wound:
|
|
When I my self invok'd the Pow'rs divine,
|
|
To drive the fatal pest from me and mine;
|
|
When now the priest with hands uplifted stood,
|
|
Prepar'd to strike, and shed the sacred blood,
|
|
The Gods themselves the mortal stroke bestow,
|
|
The victim falls, but they impart the blow:
|
|
Scarce was the knife with the pale purple stain'd,
|
|
And no presages cou'd be then obtain'd,
|
|
From putrid entrails, where th' infection reign'd.
|
|
Death stalk'd around with such resistless sway,
|
|
The temples of the Gods his force obey,
|
|
And suppliants feel his stroke, while yet they
|
|
pray.
|
|
Go now, said he, your deities implore
|
|
For fruitless aid, for I defie their pow'r.
|
|
Then with a curst malicious joy survey'd
|
|
The very altars, stain'd with trophies of the dead.
|
|
The rest grown mad, and frantick with despair,
|
|
Urge their own fate, and so prevent the fear.
|
|
Strange madness that, when Death pursu'd so fast,
|
|
T' anticipate the blow with impious haste.
|
|
No decent honours to their urns are paid,
|
|
Nor cou'd the graves receive the num'rous dead;
|
|
For, or they lay unbury'd on the ground,
|
|
Or unadorn'd a needy fun'ral found:
|
|
All rev'rence past, the fainting wretches fight
|
|
For fun'ral piles which were another's right.
|
|
Unmourn'd they fall: for, who surviv'd to mourn?
|
|
And sires, and mothers unlamented burn:
|
|
Parents, and sons sustain an equal fate,
|
|
And wand'ring ghosts their kindred shadows meet.
|
|
The dead a larger space of ground require,
|
|
Nor are the trees sufficient for the fire.
|
|
Despairing under grief's oppressive weight,
|
|
And sunk by these tempestuous blasts of Fate,
|
|
O Jove, said I, if common fame says true,
|
|
If e'er Aegina gave those joys to you,
|
|
If e'er you lay enclos'd in her embrace,
|
|
Fond of her charms, and eager to possess;
|
|
O father, if you do not yet disclaim
|
|
Paternal care, nor yet disown the name;
|
|
Grant my petitions, and with speed restore
|
|
My subjects num'rous as they were before,
|
|
Or make me partner of the fate they bore.
|
|
I spoke, and glorious lightning shone around,
|
|
And ratling thunder gave a prosp'rous sound;
|
|
So let it be, and may these omens prove
|
|
A pledge, said I, of your returning love.
|
|
By chance a rev'rend oak was near the place,
|
|
Sacred to Jove, and of Dodona's race,
|
|
Where frugal ants laid up their winter meat,
|
|
Whose little bodies bear a mighty weight:
|
|
We saw them march along, and hide their store,
|
|
And much admir'd their number, and their pow'r;
|
|
Admir'd at first, but after envy'd more.
|
|
Full of amazement, thus to Jove I pray'd,
|
|
O grant, since thus my subjects are decay'd,
|
|
As many subjects to supply the dead.
|
|
I pray'd, and strange convulsions mov'd the oak,
|
|
Which murmur'd, tho' by ambient winds unshook:
|
|
My trembling hands, and stiff-erected hair,
|
|
Exprest all tokens of uncommon fear;
|
|
Yet both the earth and sacred oak I kist,
|
|
And scarce cou'd hope, yet still I hop'd the best;
|
|
For wretches, whatsoe'er the Fates divine,
|
|
Expound all omens to their own design.
|
|
But now 'twas night, when ev'n distraction wears
|
|
A pleasing look, and dreams beguile our cares,
|
|
Lo! the same oak appears before my eyes,
|
|
Nor alter'd in his shape, nor former size;
|
|
As many ants the num'rous branches bear,
|
|
The same their labour, and their frugal care;
|
|
The branches too a like commotion sound,
|
|
And shook th' industrious creatures on the ground,
|
|
Who, by degrees (what's scarce to be believ'd)
|
|
A nobler form, and larger bulk receiv'd,
|
|
And on the earth walk'd an unusual pace,
|
|
With manly strides, and an erected face-
|
|
Their num'rous legs, and former colour lost,
|
|
The insects cou'd a human figure boast.
|
|
I wake, and waking find my cares again,
|
|
And to the unperforming Gods complain,
|
|
And call their promise, and pretences, vain.
|
|
Yet in my court I heard the murm'ring voice
|
|
Of strangers, and a mixt uncommon noise:
|
|
But I suspected all was still a dream,
|
|
'Till Telamon to my apartment came,
|
|
Op'ning the door with an impetuous haste,
|
|
O come, said he, and see your faith and hopes
|
|
surpast:
|
|
I follow, and, confus'd with wonder, view
|
|
Those shapes which my presaging slumbers drew:
|
|
I saw, and own'd, and call'd them subjects; they
|
|
Confest my pow'r, submissive to my sway.
|
|
To Jove, restorer of my race decay'd,
|
|
My vows were first with due oblations paid,
|
|
I then divide with an impartial hand
|
|
My empty city, and my ruin'd land,
|
|
To give the new-born youth an equal share,
|
|
And call them Myrmidons, from what they were.
|
|
You saw their persons, and they still retain
|
|
The thrift of ants, tho' now transform'd to men.
|
|
A frugal people, and inur'd to sweat,
|
|
Lab'ring to gain, and keeping what they get.
|
|
These, equal both in strength and years, shall join
|
|
Their willing aid, and follow your design,
|
|
With the first southern gale that shall present
|
|
To fill your sails, and favour your intent.
|
|
With such discourse they entertain the day;
|
|
The ev'ning past in banquets, sport, and play:
|
|
Then, having crown'd the night with sweet repose,
|
|
Aurora (with the wind at east) arose.
|
|
Now Pallas' sons to Cephalus resort,
|
|
And Cephalus with Pallas' sons to court,
|
|
To the king's levee; him sleep's silken chain,
|
|
And pleasing dreams, beyond his hour detain;
|
|
But then the princes of the blood, in state,
|
|
Expect, and meet 'em at the palace gate.
|
|
The Story of To th' inmost courts the Grecian youths were led,
|
|
Cephalus And plac'd by Phocus on a Tyrian bed;
|
|
and Procris Who, soon observing Cephalus to hold
|
|
A dart of unknown wood, but arm'd with gold:
|
|
None better loves (said he) the huntsman's sport,
|
|
Or does more often to the woods resort;
|
|
Yet I that jav'lin's stem with wonder view,
|
|
Too brown for box, too smooth a grain for yew.
|
|
I cannot guess the tree; but never art
|
|
Did form, or eyes behold so fair a dart!
|
|
The guest then interrupts him- 'Twou'd produce
|
|
Still greater wonder, if you knew its use.
|
|
It never fails to strike the game, and then
|
|
Comes bloody back into your hand again.
|
|
Then Phocus each particular desires,
|
|
And th' author of the wond'rous gift enquires.
|
|
To which the owner thus, with weeping eyes,
|
|
And sorrow for his wife's sad fate, replies,
|
|
This weapon here (o prince!) can you believe
|
|
This dart the cause for which so much I grieve;
|
|
And shall continue to grieve on, 'till Fate
|
|
Afford such wretched life no longer date.
|
|
Would I this fatal gift had ne'er enjoy'd,
|
|
This fatal gift my tender wife destroy'd:
|
|
Procris her name, ally'd in charms and blood
|
|
To fair Orythia courted by a God.
|
|
Her father seal'd my hopes with rites divine,
|
|
But firmer love before had made her mine.
|
|
Men call'd me blest, and blest I was indeed.
|
|
The second month our nuptials did succeed;
|
|
When (as upon Hymettus' dewy head,
|
|
For mountain stags my net betimes I spread)
|
|
Aurora spy'd, and ravish'd me away,
|
|
With rev'rence to the Goddess, I must say,
|
|
Against my will, for Procris had my heart,
|
|
Nor wou'd her image from my thoughts depart.
|
|
At last, in rage she cry'd, Ingrateful boy
|
|
Go to your Procris, take your fatal joy;
|
|
And so dismiss'd me: musing, as I went,
|
|
What those expressions of the Goddess meant,
|
|
A thousand jealous fears possess me now,
|
|
Lest Procris had prophan'd her nuptial vow:
|
|
Her youth and charms did to my fancy paint
|
|
A lewd adultress, but her life a saint.
|
|
Yet I was absent long, the Goddess too
|
|
Taught me how far a woman cou'd be true.
|
|
Aurora's treatment much suspicion bred;
|
|
Besides, who truly love, ev'n shadows dread.
|
|
I strait impatient for the tryal grew,
|
|
What courtship back'd with richest gifts cou'd do.
|
|
Aurora's envy aided my design,
|
|
And lent me features far unlike to mine.
|
|
In this disguise to my own house I came,
|
|
But all was chaste, no conscious sign of blame:
|
|
With thousand arts I scarce admittance found,
|
|
And then beheld her weeping on the ground
|
|
For her lost husband; hardly I retain'd
|
|
My purpose, scarce the wish'd embrace refrain'd.
|
|
How charming was her grief! Then, Phocus, guess
|
|
What killing beauties waited on her dress.
|
|
Her constant answer, when my suit I prest,
|
|
Forbear, my lord's dear image guards this breast;
|
|
Where-e'er he is, whatever cause detains,
|
|
Who-e'er has his, my heart unmov'd remains.
|
|
What greater proofs of truth than these cou'd be?
|
|
Yet I persist, and urge my destiny.
|
|
At length, she found, when my own form return'd,
|
|
Her jealous lover there, whose loss she mourn'd.
|
|
Enrag'd with my suspicion, swift as wind,
|
|
She fled at once from me and all mankind;
|
|
And so became, her purpose to retain,
|
|
A nymph, and huntress in Diana's train:
|
|
Forsaken thus, I found my flames encrease,
|
|
I own'd my folly, and I su'd for peace.
|
|
It was a fault, but not of guilt, to move
|
|
Such punishment, a fault of too much love.
|
|
Thus I retriev'd her to my longing arms,
|
|
And many happy days possess'd her charms.
|
|
But with herself she kindly did confer,
|
|
What gifts the Goddess had bestow'd on her;
|
|
The fleetest grey-hound, with this lovely dart,
|
|
And I of both have wonders to impart.
|
|
Near Thebes a savage beast, of race unknown,
|
|
Laid waste the field, and bore the vineyards down;
|
|
The swains fled from him, and with one consent
|
|
Our Grecian youth to chase the monster went;
|
|
More swift than light'ning he the toils surpast,
|
|
And in his course spears, men, and trees o'er-cast.
|
|
We slipt our dogs, and last my Lelaps too,
|
|
When none of all the mortal race wou'd do:
|
|
He long before was struggling from my hands,
|
|
And, e're we cou'd unloose him, broke his bands.
|
|
That minute where he was, we cou'd not find,
|
|
And only saw the dust he left behind.
|
|
I climb'd a neighb'ring hill to view the chase,
|
|
While in the plain they held an equal race;
|
|
The savage now seems caught, and now by force
|
|
To quit himself, nor holds the same strait course;
|
|
But running counter, from the foe withdraws,
|
|
And with short turning cheats his gaping jaws:
|
|
Which he retrieves, and still so closely prest,
|
|
You'd fear at ev'ry stretch he were possess'd;
|
|
Yet for the gripe his fangs in vain prepare;
|
|
The game shoots from him, and he chops the air.
|
|
To cast my jav'lin then I took my stand;
|
|
But as the thongs were fitting to my hand,
|
|
While to the valley I o'er-look'd the wood,
|
|
Before my eyes two marble statues stood;
|
|
That, as pursu'd appearing at full stretch,
|
|
This barking after, and at point to catch:
|
|
Some God their course did with this wonder grace,
|
|
That neither might be conquer'd in the chase.
|
|
A sudden silence here his tongue supprest,
|
|
He here stops short, and fain wou'd wave the rest.
|
|
The eager prince then urg'd him to impart,
|
|
The Fortune that attended on the dart.
|
|
First then (said he) past joys let me relate,
|
|
For bliss was the foundation of my fate.
|
|
No language can those happy hours express,
|
|
Did from our nuptials me, and Procris bless:
|
|
The kindest pair! What more cou'd Heav'n confer?
|
|
For she was all to me, and I to her.
|
|
Had Jove made love, great Jove had been despis'd;
|
|
And I my Procris more than Venus priz'd:
|
|
Thus while no other joy we did aspire,
|
|
We grew at last one soul, and one desire.
|
|
Forth to the woods I went at break of day
|
|
(The constant practice of my youth) for prey:
|
|
Nor yet for servant, horse, or dog did call,
|
|
I found this single dart to serve for all.
|
|
With slaughter tir'd, I sought the cooler shade,
|
|
And winds that from the mountains pierc'd the
|
|
glade:
|
|
Come, gentle air (so was I wont to say)
|
|
Come, gentle air, sweet Aura come away.
|
|
This always was the burden of my song,
|
|
Come 'swage my flames, sweet Aura come along.
|
|
Thou always art most welcome to my breast;
|
|
I faint; approach, thou dearest, kindest guest!
|
|
These blandishments, and more than these, I said
|
|
(By Fate to unsuspected ruin led),
|
|
Thou art my joy, for thy dear sake I love
|
|
Each desart hill, and solitary grove;
|
|
When (faint with labour) I refreshment need,
|
|
For cordials on thy fragrant breath I feed.
|
|
At last a wand'ring swain in hearing came,
|
|
And cheated with the sound of Aura's name,
|
|
He thought I some assignation made;
|
|
And to my Procris' ear the news convey'd.
|
|
Great love is soonest with suspicion fir'd:
|
|
She swoon'd, and with the tale almost expir'd.
|
|
Ah! wretched heart! (she cry'd) ah! faithless man.
|
|
And then to curse th' imagin'd nymph began:
|
|
Yet oft she doubts, oft hopes she is deceiv'd,
|
|
And chides herself, that ever she believ'd
|
|
Her lord to such injustice cou'd proceed,
|
|
'Till she her self were witness of the deed.
|
|
Next morn I to the woods again repair,
|
|
And, weary with the chase, invoke the air:
|
|
Approach, dear Aura, and my bosom chear:
|
|
At which a mournful sound did strike my ear;
|
|
Yet I proceeded, 'till the thicket by,
|
|
With rustling noise and motion, drew my eye:
|
|
I thought some beast of prey was shelter'd there,
|
|
And to the covert threw my certain spear;
|
|
From whence a tender sigh my soul did wound,
|
|
Ah me! it cry'd, and did like Procris sound.
|
|
Procris was there, too well the voice I knew,
|
|
And to the place with headlong horror flew;
|
|
Where I beheld her gasping on the ground,
|
|
In vain attempting from the deadly wound
|
|
To draw the dart, her love's dear fatal gift!
|
|
My guilty arms had scarce the strength to lift
|
|
The beauteous load; my silks, and hair I tore
|
|
(If possible) to stanch the pressing gore;
|
|
For pity beg'd her keep her flitting breath,
|
|
And not to leave me guilty of her death.
|
|
While I intreat she fainted fast away,
|
|
And these few words had only strength to say:
|
|
By all the sacred bonds of plighted love,
|
|
By all your rev'rence to the Pow'rs above,
|
|
By all the truth for which you held me dear,
|
|
And last by love, the cause through which I bleed,
|
|
Let Aura never to my bed succeed.
|
|
I then perceiv'd the error of our fate,
|
|
And told it her, but found and told too late!
|
|
I felt her lower to my bosom fall,
|
|
And while her eyes had any sight at all,
|
|
On mine she fix'd them; in her pangs still prest
|
|
My hand, and sigh'd her soul into my breast;
|
|
Yet, being undeceiv'd, resign'd her breath
|
|
Methought more chearfully, and smil'd in death.
|
|
With such concern the weeping heroe told
|
|
This tale, that none who heard him cou'd with-hold
|
|
From melting into sympathizing tears,
|
|
'Till Aeacus with his two sons appears;
|
|
Whom he commits, with their new-levy'd bands,
|
|
To Fortune's, and so brave a gen'ral's hands.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Seventh Book.
|
|
BOOK THE EIGHTH
|
|
|
|
NOW shone the morning star in bright array,
|
|
To vanquish night, and usher in the day:
|
|
The wind veers southward, and moist clouds arise,
|
|
That blot with shades the blue meridian skies.
|
|
Cephalus feels with joy the kindly gales,
|
|
His new allies unfurl the swelling sails;
|
|
Steady their course, they cleave the yielding main,
|
|
And, with a wish, th' intended harbour gain.
|
|
The Story of Mean-while King Minos, on the Attick strand,
|
|
Nisus and Displays his martial skill, and wastes the land.
|
|
Scylla His army lies encampt upon the plains,
|
|
Before Alcathoe's walls, where Nisus reigns;
|
|
On whose grey head a lock of purple hue,
|
|
The strength, and fortune of his kingdom, grew.
|
|
Six moons were gone, and past, when still from
|
|
far
|
|
Victoria hover'd o'er the doubtful war.
|
|
So long, to both inclin'd, th' impartial maid
|
|
Between 'em both her equal wings display'd.
|
|
High on the walls, by Phoebus vocal made,
|
|
A turret of the palace rais'd its head;
|
|
And where the God his tuneful harp resign'd.
|
|
The sound within the stones still lay enshrin'd:
|
|
Hither the daughter of the purple king
|
|
Ascended oft, to hear its musick ring;
|
|
And, striking with a pebble, wou'd release
|
|
Th' enchanted notes, in times of happy peace.
|
|
But now, from thence, the curious maid beheld
|
|
Rough feats of arms, and combats of the field:
|
|
And, since the siege was long, had learnt the name
|
|
Of ev'ry chief, his character, and fame;
|
|
Their arms, their horse, and quiver she descry'd,
|
|
Nor cou'd the dress of war the warriour hide.
|
|
Europa's son she knew above the rest,
|
|
And more, than well became a virgin breast:
|
|
In vain the crested morion veils his face,
|
|
She thinks it adds a more peculiar grace:
|
|
His ample shield, embost with burnish'd gold,
|
|
Still makes the bearer lovelier to behold:
|
|
When the tough jav'lin, with a whirl, he sends,
|
|
His strength and skill the sighing maid commends;
|
|
Or, when he strains to draw the circling bow,
|
|
And his fine limbs a manly posture show,
|
|
Compar'd with Phoebus, he performs so well,
|
|
Let her be judge, and Minos shall excell.
|
|
But when the helm put off, display'd to sight,
|
|
And set his features in an open light;
|
|
When, vaulting to his seat, his steed he prest,
|
|
Caparison'd in gold, and richly drest;
|
|
Himself in scarlet sumptuously array'd,
|
|
New passions rise, and fire the frantick maid.
|
|
O happy spear! she cries, that feels his touch;
|
|
Nay, ev'n the reins he holds are blest too much.
|
|
Oh! were it lawful, she cou'd wing her way
|
|
Thro' the stern hostile troops without dismay;
|
|
Or throw her body to the distant ground,
|
|
And in the Cretans happy camp be found.
|
|
Wou'd Minos but desire it! she'd expose
|
|
Her native country to her country's foes;
|
|
Unbar the gates, the town with flames infest,
|
|
Or any thing that Minos shou'd request.
|
|
And as she sate, and pleas'd her longing sight,
|
|
Viewing the king's pavilion veil'd with white,
|
|
Shou'd joy, or grief, she said, possess my breast,
|
|
To see my country by a war opprest?
|
|
I'm in suspense! For, tho' 'tis grief to know
|
|
I love a man that is declar'd my foe;
|
|
Yet, in my own despite, I must approve
|
|
That lucky war, which brought the man I love.
|
|
Yet, were I tender'd as a pledge of peace,
|
|
The cruelties of war might quickly cease.
|
|
Oh! with what joy I'd wear the chains he gave!
|
|
A patient hostage, and a willing slave.
|
|
Thou lovely object! if the nymph that bare
|
|
Thy charming person, were but half so fair;
|
|
Well might a God her virgin bloom desire,
|
|
And with a rape indulge his amorous fire.
|
|
Oh! had I wings to glide along the air,
|
|
To his dear tent I'd fly, and settle there:
|
|
There tell my quality, confess my flame,
|
|
And grant him any dowry that he'd name.
|
|
All, all I'd give; only my native land,
|
|
My dearest country, shou'd excepted stand,
|
|
For, perish love, and all expected joys,
|
|
E're, with so base a thought, my soul complies.
|
|
Yet, oft the vanquish'd some advantage find,
|
|
When conquer'd by a noble, gen'rous mind.
|
|
Brave Minos justly has the war begun,
|
|
Fir'd with resentment for his murder'd son:
|
|
The righteous Gods a righteous cause regard,
|
|
And will, with victory, his arms reward:
|
|
We must be conquer'd; and the captive's fate
|
|
Will surely seize us, tho' it seize us late.
|
|
Why then shou'd love be idle, and neglect
|
|
What Mars, by arms and perils, will effect?
|
|
Oh! Prince, I dye, with anxious fear opprest,
|
|
Lest some rash hand shou'd wound my charmer's
|
|
breast:
|
|
For, if they saw, no barb'rous mind cou'd dare
|
|
Against that lovely form to raise a spear.
|
|
But I'm resolv'd, and fix'd in this decree,
|
|
My father's country shall my dowry be.
|
|
Thus I prevent the loss of life and blood,
|
|
And, in effect, the action must be good.
|
|
Vain resolution! for, at ev'ry gate
|
|
The trusty centinels, successive, wait:
|
|
The keys my father keeps; ah! there's my grief;
|
|
'Tis he obstructs all hopes of my relief.
|
|
Gods! that this hated light I'd never seen!
|
|
Or, all my life, without a father been!
|
|
But Gods we all may be; for those that dare,
|
|
Are Gods, and Fortune's chiefest favours share.
|
|
The ruling Pow'rs a lazy pray'r detest,
|
|
The bold adventurer succeeds the best.
|
|
What other maid, inspir'd with such a flame,
|
|
But wou'd take courage, and abandon shame?
|
|
But wou'd, tho' ruin shou'd ensue, remove
|
|
Whate'er oppos'd, and clear the way to love?
|
|
This, shall another's feeble passion dare?
|
|
While I sit tame, and languish in despair:
|
|
No; for tho' fire and sword before me lay,
|
|
Impatient love thro' both shou'd force its way.
|
|
Yet I have no such enemies to fear,
|
|
My sole obstruction is my father's hair;
|
|
His purple lock my sanguine hope destroys,
|
|
And clouds the prospect of my rising joys.
|
|
Whilst thus she spoke, amid the thick'ning air
|
|
Night supervenes, the greatest nurse of care:
|
|
And, as the Goddess spreads her sable wings,
|
|
The virgin's fears decay, and courage springs.
|
|
The hour was come, when Man's o'er-labour'd breast
|
|
Surceas'd its care, by downy sleep possest:
|
|
All things now hush'd, Scylla with silent tread
|
|
Urg'd her approach to Nisus' royal bed:
|
|
There, of the fatal lock (accursed theft!)
|
|
She her unwitting father's head bereft.
|
|
In safe possession of her impious prey,
|
|
Out at a postern gate she takes her way.
|
|
Embolden'd, by the merit of the deed
|
|
She traverses the adverse camp with speed,
|
|
'Till Minos' tent she reach'd: the righteous king
|
|
She thus bespoke, who shiver'd at the thing.
|
|
Behold th' effect of love's resistless sway!
|
|
I, Nisus' royal seed, to thee betray
|
|
My country, and my Gods. For this strange task,
|
|
Minos, no other boon but thee I ask.
|
|
This purple lock, a pledge of love, receive;
|
|
No worthless present, since in it I give
|
|
My father's head.- Mov'd at a crime so new,
|
|
And with abhorrence fill'd, back Minos drew,
|
|
Nor touch'd th' unhallow'd gift; but thus exclaim'd
|
|
(With mein indignant, and with eyes inflam'd),
|
|
Perdition seize thee, thou, thy kind's disgrace!
|
|
May thy devoted carcass find no place
|
|
In earth, or air, or sea, by all out-cast!
|
|
Shall Minos, with so foul a monster, blast
|
|
His Cretan world, where cradled Jove was nurst?
|
|
Forbid it Heav'n!- away, thou most accurst!
|
|
And now Alcathoe, its lord exchang'd,
|
|
Was under Minos' domination rang'd.
|
|
While the most equal king his care applies
|
|
To curb the conquer'd, and new laws devise,
|
|
The fleet, by his command, with hoisted sails,
|
|
And ready oars, invites the murm'ring gales.
|
|
At length the Cretan hero anchor weigh'd,
|
|
Repaying, with neglect, th' abandon'd maid.
|
|
Deaf to her cries, he furrows up the main:
|
|
In vain she prays, sollicits him in vain.
|
|
And now she furious grows in wild despair,
|
|
She wrings her hands, and throws aloft her hair.
|
|
Where run'st thou? (thus she vents her deep
|
|
distress)
|
|
Why shun'st thou her that crown'd thee with
|
|
success?
|
|
Her, whose fond love to thee cou'd sacrifice
|
|
Her country, and her parent, sacred ties!
|
|
Can nor my love, nor proffer'd presents find
|
|
A passage to thy heart, and make thee kind?
|
|
Can nothing move thy pity? O ingrate,
|
|
Can'st thou behold my lost, forlorn estate,
|
|
And not be soften'd? Can'st thou throw off one
|
|
Who has no refuge left but thee alone?
|
|
Where shall I seek for comfort? whither fly?
|
|
My native country does in ashes lye:
|
|
Or were't not so, my treason bars me there,
|
|
And bids me wander. Shall I next repair
|
|
To a wrong'd father, by my guilt undone?-
|
|
Me all Mankind deservedly will shun.
|
|
I, out of all the world, my self have thrown,
|
|
To purchase an access to Crete alone;
|
|
Which, since refus'd, ungen'rous man, give o'er
|
|
To boast thy race; Europa never bore
|
|
A thing so savage. Thee some tygress bred,
|
|
On the bleak Syrt's inhospitable bed;
|
|
Or where Charybdis pours its rapid tide
|
|
Tempestuous. Thou art not to Jove ally'd;
|
|
Nor did the king of Gods thy mother meet
|
|
Beneath a bull's forg'd shape, and bear to Crete.
|
|
That fable of thy glorious birth is feign'd;
|
|
Some wild outrageous bull thy dam sustain'd.
|
|
O father Nisus, now my death behold;
|
|
Exult, o city, by my baseness sold:
|
|
Minos, obdurate, has aveng'd ye all;
|
|
But 'twere more just by those I wrong'd to fall:
|
|
For why shou'dst thou, who only didst subdue
|
|
By my offending, my offence pursue?
|
|
Well art thou matcht to one whose am'rous flame
|
|
Too fiercely rag'd, for human-kind to tame;
|
|
One who, within a wooden heifer thrust,
|
|
Courted a low'ring bull's mistaken lust;
|
|
And, from whose monster-teeming womb, the Earth
|
|
Receiv'd, what much it mourn'd, a bi-form birth.
|
|
But what avails my plaints? the whistling wind,
|
|
Which bears him far away, leaves them behind.
|
|
Well weigh'd Pasiphae, when she prefer'd
|
|
A bull to thee, more brutish than the herd.
|
|
But ah! Time presses, and the labour'd oars
|
|
To distance drive the fleet, and lose the less'ning
|
|
shores.
|
|
Think not, ungrateful man, the liquid way
|
|
And threat'ning billows shall inforce my stay.
|
|
I'll follow thee in spite: My arms I'll throw
|
|
Around thy oars, or grasp thy crooked prow,
|
|
And drag thro' drenching seas. Her eager tongue
|
|
Had hardly clos'd the speech, when forth she sprung
|
|
And prov'd the deep. Cupid with added force
|
|
Recruits each nerve, and aids her wat'ry course.
|
|
Soon she the ship attains, unwelcome guest;
|
|
And, as with close embrace its sides she prest,
|
|
A hawk from upper air came pouring down
|
|
('Twas Nisus cleft the sky with wings new grown).
|
|
At Scylla's head his horny bill he aims;
|
|
She, fearful of the blow, the ship disclaims,
|
|
Quitting her hold: and yet she fell not far,
|
|
But wond'ring, finds her self sustain'd in air.
|
|
Chang'd to a lark, she mottled pinions shook,
|
|
And, from the ravish'd lock, the name of Ciris
|
|
took.
|
|
The Now Minos, landed on the Cretan shore,
|
|
Labyrinth Performs his vows to Jove's protecting pow'r;
|
|
A hundred bullocks of the largest breed,
|
|
With flowrets crown'd, before his altar bleed:
|
|
While trophies of the vanquish'd, brought from far
|
|
Adorn the palace with the spoils of war.
|
|
Mean-while the monster of a human-beast,
|
|
His family's reproach, and stain, increas'd.
|
|
His double kind the rumour swiftly spread,
|
|
And evidenc'd the mother's beastly deed.
|
|
When Minos, willing to conceal the shame
|
|
That sprung from the reports of tatling Fame,
|
|
Resolves a dark inclosure to provide,
|
|
And, far from sight, the two-form'd creature hide.
|
|
Great Daedalus of Athens was the man
|
|
That made the draught, and form'd the wondrous
|
|
plan;
|
|
Where rooms within themselves encircled lye,
|
|
With various windings, to deceive the eye.
|
|
As soft Maeander's wanton current plays,
|
|
When thro' the Phrygian fields it loosely strays;
|
|
Backward and forward rouls the dimpl'd tide,
|
|
Seeming, at once, two different ways to glide:
|
|
While circling streams their former banks survey,
|
|
And waters past succeeding waters see:
|
|
Now floating to the sea with downward course,
|
|
Now pointing upward to its ancient source,
|
|
Such was the work, so intricate the place,
|
|
That scarce the workman all its turns cou'd trace;
|
|
And Daedalus was puzzled how to find
|
|
The secret ways of what himself design'd.
|
|
These private walls the Minotaur include,
|
|
Who twice was glutted with Athenian blood:
|
|
But the third tribute more successful prov'd,
|
|
Slew the foul monster, and the plague remov'd.
|
|
When Theseus, aided by the virgin's art,
|
|
Had trac'd the guiding thread thro' ev'ry part,
|
|
He took the gentle maid, that set him free,
|
|
And, bound for Dias, cut the briny sea.
|
|
There, quickly cloy'd, ungrateful, and unkind,
|
|
Left his fair consort in the isle behind,
|
|
Whom Bacchus saw, and straining in his arms
|
|
Her rifled bloom, and violated charms,
|
|
Resolves, for this, the dear engaging dame
|
|
Shou'd shine for ever in the rolls of Fame;
|
|
And bids her crown among the stars be plac'd,
|
|
With an eternal constellation grac'd.
|
|
The golden circlet mounts; and, as it flies,
|
|
Its diamonds twinkle in the distant skies;
|
|
There, in their pristin form, the gemmy rays
|
|
Between Alcides, and the dragon blaze.
|
|
The Story of In tedious exile now too long detain'd,
|
|
Daedalus and Daedalus languish'd for his native land:
|
|
Icarus The sea foreclos'd his flight; yet thus he said:
|
|
Tho' Earth and water in subjection laid,
|
|
O cruel Minos, thy dominion be,
|
|
We'll go thro' air; for sure the air is free.
|
|
Then to new arts his cunning thought applies,
|
|
And to improve the work of Nature tries.
|
|
A row of quils in gradual order plac'd,
|
|
Rise by degrees in length from first to last;
|
|
As on a cliff th' ascending thicket grows,
|
|
Or, different reeds the rural pipe compose.
|
|
Along the middle runs a twine of flax,
|
|
The bottom stems are joyn'd by pliant wax.
|
|
Thus, well compact, a hollow bending brings
|
|
The fine composure into real wings.
|
|
His boy, young Icarus, that near him stood,
|
|
Unthinking of his fate, with smiles pursu'd
|
|
The floating feathers, which the moving air
|
|
Bore loosely from the ground, and wasted here and
|
|
there.
|
|
Or with the wax impertinently play'd,
|
|
And with his childish tricks the great design
|
|
delay'd.
|
|
The final master-stroke at last impos'd,
|
|
And now, the neat machine compleatly clos'd;
|
|
Fitting his pinions on, a flight he tries,
|
|
And hung self-ballanc'd in the beaten skies.
|
|
Then thus instructs his child: My boy, take care
|
|
To wing your course along the middle air;
|
|
If low, the surges wet your flagging plumes;
|
|
If high, the sun the melting wax consumes:
|
|
Steer between both: nor to the northern skies,
|
|
Nor south Orion turn your giddy eyes;
|
|
But follow me: let me before you lay
|
|
Rules for the flight, and mark the pathless way.
|
|
Then teaching, with a fond concern, his son,
|
|
He took the untry'd wings, and fix'd 'em on;
|
|
But fix'd with trembling hands; and as he speaks,
|
|
The tears roul gently down his aged cheeks.
|
|
Then kiss'd, and in his arms embrac'd him fast,
|
|
But knew not this embrace must be the last.
|
|
And mounting upward, as he wings his flight,
|
|
Back on his charge he turns his aking sight;
|
|
As parent birds, when first their callow care
|
|
Leave the high nest to tempt the liquid air.
|
|
Then chears him on, and oft, with fatal art,
|
|
Reminds the stripling to perform his part.
|
|
These, as the angler at the silent brook,
|
|
Or mountain-shepherd leaning on his crook,
|
|
Or gaping plowman, from the vale descries,
|
|
They stare, and view 'em with religious eyes,
|
|
And strait conclude 'em Gods; since none, but they,
|
|
Thro' their own azure skies cou'd find a way.
|
|
Now Delos, Paros on the left are seen,
|
|
And Samos, favour'd by Jove's haughty queen;
|
|
Upon the right, the isle Lebynthos nam'd,
|
|
And fair Calymne for its honey fam'd.
|
|
When now the boy, whose childish thoughts aspire
|
|
To loftier aims, and make him ramble high'r,
|
|
Grown wild, and wanton, more embolden'd flies
|
|
Far from his guide, and soars among the skies.
|
|
The soft'ning wax, that felt a nearer sun,
|
|
Dissolv'd apace, and soon began to run.
|
|
The youth in vain his melting pinions shakes,
|
|
His feathers gone, no longer air he takes:
|
|
Oh! Father, father, as he strove to cry,
|
|
Down to the sea he tumbled from on high,
|
|
And found his Fate; yet still subsists by fame,
|
|
Among those waters that retain his name.
|
|
The father, now no more a father, cries,
|
|
Ho Icarus! where are you? as he flies;
|
|
Where shall I seek my boy? he cries again,
|
|
And saw his feathers scatter'd on the main.
|
|
Then curs'd his art; and fun'ral rites confer'd,
|
|
Naming the country from the youth interr'd.
|
|
A partridge, from a neighb'ring stump, beheld
|
|
The sire his monumental marble build;
|
|
Who, with peculiar call, and flutt'ring wing,
|
|
Chirpt joyful, and malicious seem'd to sing:
|
|
The only bird of all its kind, and late
|
|
Transform'd in pity to a feather'd state:
|
|
From whence, O Daedalus, thy guilt we date.
|
|
His sister's son, when now twelve years were
|
|
past,
|
|
Was, with his uncle, as a scholar plac'd;
|
|
The unsuspecting mother saw his parts,
|
|
And genius fitted for the finest arts.
|
|
This soon appear'd; for when the spiny bone
|
|
In fishes' backs was by the stripling known,
|
|
A rare invention thence he learnt to draw,
|
|
Fil'd teeth in ir'n, and made the grating saw.
|
|
He was the first, that from a knob of brass
|
|
Made two strait arms with widening stretch to pass;
|
|
That, while one stood upon the center's place,
|
|
The other round it drew a circling space.
|
|
Daedalus envy'd this, and from the top
|
|
Of fair Minerva's temple let him drop;
|
|
Feigning, that, as he lean'd upon the tow'r,
|
|
Careless he stoop'd too much, and tumbled o'er.
|
|
The Goddess, who th' ingenious still befriends,
|
|
On this occasion her asssistance lends;
|
|
His arms with feathers, as he fell, she veils,
|
|
And in the air a new made bird he sails.
|
|
The quickness of his genius, once so fleet,
|
|
Still in his wings remains, and in his feet:
|
|
Still, tho' transform'd, his ancient name he keeps,
|
|
And with low flight the new-shorn stubble sweeps,
|
|
Declines the lofty trees, and thinks it best
|
|
To brood in hedge-rows o'er its humble nest;
|
|
And, in remembrance of the former ill,
|
|
Avoids the heights, and precipices still.
|
|
At length, fatigu'd with long laborious flights,
|
|
On fair Sicilia's plains the artist lights;
|
|
Where Cocalus the king, that gave him aid,
|
|
Was, for his kindness, with esteem repaid.
|
|
Athens no more her doleful tribute sent,
|
|
That hardship gallant Theseus did prevent;
|
|
Their temples hung with garlands, they adore
|
|
Each friendly God, but most Minerva's pow'r:
|
|
To her, to Jove, to all, their altars smoak,
|
|
They each with victims, and perfumes invoke.
|
|
Now talking Fame, thro' every Grecian town,
|
|
Had spread, immortal Theseus, thy renown.
|
|
From him the neighb'ring nations in distress,
|
|
In suppliant terms implore a kind redress.
|
|
The Story of From him the Caledonians sought relief;
|
|
Meleager and Though valiant Meleagros was their chief.
|
|
Atalanta The cause, a boar, who ravag'd far and near:
|
|
Of Cynthia's wrath, th' avenging minister.
|
|
For Oeneus with autumnal plenty bless'd,
|
|
By gifts to Heav'n his gratitude express'd:
|
|
Cull'd sheafs, to Ceres; to Lyaeus, wine;
|
|
To Pan, and Pales, offer'd sheep and kine;
|
|
And fat of olives, to Minerva's shrine.
|
|
Beginning from the rural Gods, his hand
|
|
Was lib'ral to the Pow'rs of high command:
|
|
Each deity in ev'ry kind was bless'd,
|
|
'Till at Diana's fane th' invidious honour ceas'd.
|
|
Wrath touches ev'n the Gods; the Queen of Night,
|
|
Fir'd with disdain, and jealous of her right,
|
|
Unhonour'd though I am, at least, said she,
|
|
Not unreveng'd that impious act shall be.
|
|
Swift as the word, she sped the boar away,
|
|
With charge on those devoted fields to prey.
|
|
No larger bulls th' Aegyptian pastures feed,
|
|
And none so large Sicilian meadows breed:
|
|
His eye-balls glare with fire suffus'd with blood;
|
|
His neck shoots up a thick-set thorny wood;
|
|
His bristled back a trench impal'd appears,
|
|
And stands erected, like a field of spears;
|
|
Froth fills his chaps, he sends a grunting sound,
|
|
And part he churns, and part befoams the ground,
|
|
For tusks with Indian elephants he strove,
|
|
And Jove's own thunder from his mouth he drove.
|
|
He burns the leaves; the scorching blast invades
|
|
The tender corn, and shrivels up the blades:
|
|
Or suff'ring not their yellow beards to rear,
|
|
He tramples down the spikes, and intercepts the
|
|
year:
|
|
In vain the barns expect their promis'd load,
|
|
Nor barns at home, nor recks are heap'd abroad:
|
|
In vain the hinds the threshing-floor prepare,
|
|
And exercise their flail in empty air.
|
|
With olives ever-green the ground is strow'd,
|
|
And grapes ungather'd shed their gen'rous blood.
|
|
Amid the fold he rages, nor the sheep
|
|
Their shepherds, nor the grooms their bulls can
|
|
keep.
|
|
From fields to walls the frighted rabble run,
|
|
Nor think themselves secure within the town:
|
|
'Till Meleagros, and his chosen crew,
|
|
Contemn the danger, and the praise pursue.
|
|
Fair Leda's twins (in time to stars decreed)
|
|
One fought on foot, one curb'd the fiery steed;
|
|
Then issu'd forth fam'd Jason after these,
|
|
Who mann'd the foremost ship that sail'd the seas;
|
|
Then Theseus join'd with bold Perithous came;
|
|
A single concord in a double name:
|
|
The Thestian sons, Idas who swiftly ran,
|
|
And Ceneus, once a woman, now a man.
|
|
Lynceus, with eagle's eyes, and lion's heart;
|
|
Leucippus, with his never-erring dart;
|
|
Acastus, Phileus, Phoenix, Telamon,
|
|
Echion, Lelix, and Eurytion,
|
|
Achilles' father, and great Phocus' son;
|
|
Dryas the fierce, and Hippasus the strong;
|
|
With twice old Iolas, and Nestor then but young.
|
|
Laertes active, and Ancaeus bold;
|
|
Mopsus the sage, who future things foretold;
|
|
And t' other seer, yet by his wife unsold.
|
|
A thousand others of immortal fame;
|
|
Among the rest, fair Atalanta came,
|
|
Grace of the woods: a diamond buckle bound
|
|
Her vest behind, that else had flow'd upon the
|
|
ground,
|
|
And shew'd her buskin'd legs; her head was bare,
|
|
But for her native ornament of hair;
|
|
Which in a simple knot was ty'd above,
|
|
Sweet negligence! unheeded bait of love!
|
|
Her sounding quiver, on her shoulder ty'd,
|
|
One hand a dart, and one a bow supply'd.
|
|
Such was her face, as in a nymph display'd
|
|
A fair fierce boy, or in a boy betray'd
|
|
The blushing beauties of a modest maid.
|
|
The Caledonian chief at once the dame
|
|
Beheld, at once his heart receiv'd the flame,
|
|
With Heav'ns averse. O happy youth, he cry'd;
|
|
For whom thy fates reserve so fair a bride!
|
|
He sigh'd, and had no leisure more to say;
|
|
His honour call'd his eyes another way,
|
|
And forc'd him to pursue the now-neglected prey.
|
|
There stood a forest on a mountain's brow,
|
|
Which over-look'd the shaded plains below.
|
|
No sounding ax presum'd those trees to bite;
|
|
Coeval with the world, a venerable sight.
|
|
The heroes there arriv'd, some spread around
|
|
The toils; some search the footsteps on the ground:
|
|
Some from the chains the faithful dogs unbound.
|
|
Of action eager, and intent in thought,
|
|
The chiefs their honourable danger sought:
|
|
A valley stood below; the common drain
|
|
Of waters from above, and falling rain:
|
|
The bottom was a moist, and marshy ground,
|
|
Whose edges were with bending oziers crown'd:
|
|
The knotty bulrush next in order stood,
|
|
And all within of reeds a trembling wood.
|
|
From hence the boar was rous'd, and sprung amain,
|
|
Like lightning sudden, on the warrior train;
|
|
Beats down the trees before him, shakes the ground.
|
|
The forest echoes to the crackling sound;
|
|
Shout the fierce youth, and clamours ring around.
|
|
All stood with their protended spears prepar'd,
|
|
With broad steel heads the brandish'd weapons
|
|
glar'd.
|
|
The beast impetuous with his tusks aside
|
|
Deals glancing wounds; the fearful dogs divide:
|
|
All spend their mouths aloof, but none abide.
|
|
Echion threw the first, but miss'd his mark,
|
|
And stuck his boar-spear on a maple's bark.
|
|
Then Jason; and his javelin seem'd to take,
|
|
But fail'd with over-force, and whiz'd above his
|
|
back.
|
|
Mopsus was next; but e'er he threw, address'd
|
|
To Phoebus, thus: O patron, help thy priest:
|
|
If I adore, and ever have ador'd
|
|
Thy pow'r divine, thy present aid afford;
|
|
That I may reach the beast. The God allow'd
|
|
His pray'r, and smiling, gave him what he cou'd:
|
|
He reach'd the savage, but no blood he drew:
|
|
Dian unarm'd the javelin, as it flew.
|
|
This chaf'd the boar, his nostrils flames expire,
|
|
And his red eye-balls roul with living fire.
|
|
Whirl'd from a sling, or from an engine thrown,
|
|
Amid the foes, so flies a mighty stone,
|
|
As flew the beast: the left wing put to flight,
|
|
The chiefs o'er-born, he rushes on the right.
|
|
Eupalamos and Pelagon he laid
|
|
In dust, and next to death, but for their fellows'
|
|
aid.
|
|
Onesimus far'd worse, prepar'd to fly,
|
|
The fatal fang drove deep within his thigh,
|
|
And cut the nerves: the nerves no more sustain
|
|
The bulk; the bulk unprop'd, falls headlong on the
|
|
plain.
|
|
Nestor had fail'd the fall of Troy to see,
|
|
But leaning on his lance, he vaulted on a tree;
|
|
Then gath'ring up his feet, look'd down with fear,
|
|
And thought his monstrous foe was still too near.
|
|
Against a stump his tusk the monster grinds,
|
|
And in the sharpen'd edge new vigour finds;
|
|
Then, trusting to his arms, young Othrys found,
|
|
And ranch'd his hips with one continu'd wound.
|
|
Now Leda's twins, the future stars, appear;
|
|
White were their habits, white their horses were:
|
|
Conspicuous both, and both in act to throw,
|
|
Their trembling lances brandish'd at the foe:
|
|
Nor had they miss'd; but he to thickets fled,
|
|
Conceal'd from aiming spears, not pervious to the
|
|
steed.
|
|
But Telamon rush'd in, and happ'd to meet
|
|
A rising root, that held his fastned feet;
|
|
So down he fell, whom, sprawling on the ground,
|
|
His brother from the wooden gyves unbound.
|
|
Mean-time the virgin-huntress was not slow
|
|
T' expel the shaft from her contracted bow:
|
|
Beneath his ear the fastned arrow stood,
|
|
And from the wound appear'd the trickling blood.
|
|
She blush'd for joy: but Meleagros rais'd
|
|
His voice with loud applause, and the fair archer
|
|
prais'd.
|
|
He was the first to see, and first to show
|
|
His friends the marks of the successful blow.
|
|
Nor shall thy valour want the praises due,
|
|
He said; a virtuous envy seiz'd the crew.
|
|
They shout; the shouting animates their hearts,
|
|
And all at once employ their thronging darts:
|
|
But out of order thrown, in air they joyn,
|
|
And multitude makes frustrate the design.
|
|
With both his hands the proud Ancaeus takes,
|
|
And flourishes his double-biting ax:
|
|
Then, forward to his fate, he took a stride
|
|
Before the rest, and to his fellows cry'd,
|
|
Give place, and mark the diff'rence, if you can,
|
|
Between a woman warrior, and a man,
|
|
The boar is doom'd; nor though Diana lend
|
|
Her aid, Diana can her beast defend.
|
|
Thus boasted he; then stretch'd, on tiptoe stood,
|
|
Secure to make his empty promise good.
|
|
But the more wary beast prevents the blow,
|
|
And upward rips the groin of his audacious foe.
|
|
Ancaeus falls; his bowels from the wound
|
|
Rush out, and clotted blood distains the ground.
|
|
Perithous, no small portion of the war,
|
|
Press'd on, and shook his lance: to whom from far
|
|
Thus Theseus cry'd; O stay, my better part,
|
|
My more than mistress; of my heart, the heart.
|
|
The strong may fight aloof; Ancaeus try'd
|
|
His force too near, and by presuming dy'd:
|
|
He said, and while he spake his javelin threw,
|
|
Hissing in air th' unerring weapon flew;
|
|
But on an arm of oak, that stood betwixt
|
|
The marks-man and the mark, his lance he fixt.
|
|
Once more bold Jason threw, but fail'd to wound
|
|
The boar, and slew an undeserving hound,
|
|
And thro' the dog the dart was nail'd to ground.
|
|
Two spears from Meleager's hand were sent,
|
|
With equal force, but various in th' event:
|
|
The first was fix'd in earth, the second stood
|
|
On the boar's bristled back, and deeply drank his
|
|
blood.
|
|
Now while the tortur'd savage turns around,
|
|
And flings about his foam, impatient of the wound,
|
|
The wound's great author close at hand provokes
|
|
His rage, and plies him with redoubled strokes;
|
|
Wheels, as he wheels; and with his pointed dart
|
|
Explores the nearest passage to his heart.
|
|
Quick, and more quick he spins in giddy gires,
|
|
Then falls, and in much foam his soul expires.
|
|
This act with shouts heav'n-high the friendly band
|
|
Applaud, and strain in theirs the victor's hand.
|
|
Then all approach the slain with vast surprize,
|
|
Admire on what a breadth of earth he lies,
|
|
And scarce secure, reach out their spears afar,
|
|
And blood their points, to prove their partnership
|
|
of war.
|
|
But he, the conqu'ring chief, his foot impress'd
|
|
On the strong neck of that destructive beast;
|
|
And gazing on the nymph with ardent eyes,
|
|
Accept, said he, fair Nonacrine, my prize,
|
|
And, though inferior, suffer me to join
|
|
My labours, and my part of praise, with thine:
|
|
At this presents her with the tusky head
|
|
And chine, with rising bristles roughly spread.
|
|
Glad she receiv'd the gift; and seem'd to take
|
|
With double pleasure, for the giver's sake.
|
|
The rest were seiz'd with sullen discontent,
|
|
And a deaf murmur through the squadron went:
|
|
All envy'd; but the Thestyan brethren show'd
|
|
The least respect, and thus they vent their spleen
|
|
aloud:
|
|
Lay down those honour'd spoils, nor think to share,
|
|
Weak woman as thou art, the prize of war:
|
|
Ours is the title, thine a foreign claim,
|
|
Since Meleagrus from our lineage came.
|
|
Trust not thy beauty; but restore the prize,
|
|
Which he, besotted on that face, and eyes,
|
|
Would rend from us: at this, enflam'd with spite,
|
|
From her they snatch the gift, from him the giver's
|
|
right.
|
|
But soon th' impatient prince his fauchion drew,
|
|
And cry'd, Ye robbers of another's due,
|
|
Now learn the diff'rence, at your proper cost,
|
|
Betwixt true valour, and an empty boast.
|
|
At this advanc'd, and sudden as the word,
|
|
In proud Plexippus' bosom plung'd the sword:
|
|
Toxeus amaz'd, and with amazement slow,
|
|
Or to revenge, or ward the coming blow,
|
|
Stood doubting; and while doubting thus he stood,
|
|
Receiv'd the steel bath'd in his brother's blood.
|
|
Pleas'd with the first, unknown the second news;
|
|
Althaea to the temples pays their dues
|
|
For her son's conquest; when at length appear
|
|
Her grisly brethren stretch'd upon the bier:
|
|
Pale at the sudden sight, she chang'd her cheer,
|
|
And with her cheer her robes; but hearing tell
|
|
The cause, the manner, and by whom they fell,
|
|
'Twas grief no more, or grief and rage were one
|
|
Within her soul; at last 'twas rage alone;
|
|
Which burning upwards in succession, dries
|
|
The tears, that stood consid'ring in her eyes.
|
|
There lay a log unlighted on the hearth,
|
|
When she was lab'ring in the throws of birth
|
|
For th' unborn chief; the fatal sisters came,
|
|
And rais'd it up, and toss'd it on the flame:
|
|
Then on the rock a scanty measure place
|
|
Of vital flax, and turn'd the wheel apace;
|
|
And turning sung, To this red brand and thee,
|
|
O new born babe, we give an equal destiny;
|
|
So vanish'd out of view. The frighted dame
|
|
Sprung hasty from her bed, and quench'd the flame:
|
|
The log, in secret lock'd, she kept with care,
|
|
And that, while thus preserv'd, preserv'd her heir.
|
|
This brand she now produc'd; and first she strows
|
|
The hearth with heaps of chips, and after blows;
|
|
Thrice heav'd her hand, and heav'd, she thrice
|
|
repress'd:
|
|
The sister and the mother long contest,
|
|
Two doubtful titles, in one tender breast:
|
|
And now her eyes, and cheeks with fury glow,
|
|
Now pale her cheeks, her eyes with pity flow:
|
|
Now low'ring looks presage approaching storms,
|
|
And now prevailing love her face reforms:
|
|
Resolv'd, she doubts again; the tears she dry'd
|
|
With burning rage, are by new tears supply'd;
|
|
And as a ship, which winds and waves assail
|
|
Now with the current drives, now with the gale,
|
|
Both opposite, and neither long prevail:
|
|
She feels a double force, by turns obeys
|
|
Th' imperious tempest, and th' impetuous seas:
|
|
So fares Althaea's mind, she first relents
|
|
With pity, of that pity then repents:
|
|
Sister, and mother long the scales divide,
|
|
But the beam nodded on the sister's side.
|
|
Sometimes she softly sigh'd, then roar'd aloud;
|
|
But sighs were stifled in the cries of blood.
|
|
The pious, impious wretch at length decreed,
|
|
To please her brothers' ghost, her son should
|
|
bleed:
|
|
And when the fun'ral flames began to rise,
|
|
Receive, she said, a sister's sacrifice;
|
|
A mother's bowels burn: high in her hand,
|
|
Thus while she spoke, she held the fatal brand;
|
|
Then thrice before the kindled pile she bow'd,
|
|
And the three Furies thrice invok'd aloud:
|
|
Come, come, revenging sisters, come, and view
|
|
A sister paying her dead brothers due:
|
|
A crime I punish, and a crime commit;
|
|
But blood for blood, and death for death is fit:
|
|
Great crimes must be with greater crimes repaid,
|
|
And second fun'rals on the former laid.
|
|
Let the whole houshold in one ruin fall,
|
|
And may Diana's curse o'ertake us all.
|
|
Shall Fate to happy Oenus still allow
|
|
One son, while Thestius stands depriv'd of two?
|
|
Better three lost, than one unpunish'd go.
|
|
Take then, dear ghosts (while yet admitted new
|
|
In Hell you wait my duty), take your due:
|
|
A costly off'ring on your tomb is laid,
|
|
When with my blood the price of yours is paid.
|
|
Ah! whither am I hurry'd? Ah! forgive,
|
|
Ye shades, and let your sister's issue live;
|
|
A mother cannot give him death; tho' he
|
|
Deserves it, he deserves it not from me.
|
|
Then shall th' unpunish'd wretch insult the
|
|
slain,
|
|
Triumphant live, nor only live, but reign?
|
|
While you, thin shades, the sport of winds, are
|
|
tost
|
|
O'er dreary plains, or tread the burning coast.
|
|
I cannot, cannot bear; 'tis past, 'tis done;
|
|
Perish this impious, this detested son:
|
|
Perish his sire, and perish I withal;
|
|
And let the house's heir, and the hop'd kingdom
|
|
fall.
|
|
Where is the mother fled, her pious love,
|
|
And where the pains with which ten months I strove!
|
|
Ah! had'st thou dy'd, my son, in infant years,
|
|
Thy little herse had been bedew'd with tears.
|
|
Thou liv'st by me; to me thy breath resign;
|
|
Mine is the merit, the demerit thine.
|
|
Thy life by double title I require;
|
|
Once giv'n at birth, and once preserv'd from fire:
|
|
One murder pay, or add one murder more,
|
|
And me to them who fell by thee restore.
|
|
I would, but cannot: my son's image stands
|
|
Before my sight; and now their angry hands
|
|
My brothers hold, and vengeance these exact;
|
|
This pleads compassion, and repents the fact.
|
|
He pleads in vain, and I pronounce his doom:
|
|
My brothers, though unjustly, shall o'ercome.
|
|
But having paid their injur'd ghosts their due,
|
|
My son requires my death, and mine shall his
|
|
pursue.
|
|
At this, for the last time, she lifts her hand,
|
|
Averts her eyes, and, half unwilling, drops the
|
|
brand.
|
|
The brand, amid the flaming fewel thrown,
|
|
Or drew, or seem'd to draw, a dying groan;
|
|
The fires themselves but faintly lick'd their prey,
|
|
Then loath'd their impious food, and would have
|
|
shrunk away.
|
|
Just then the heroe cast a doleful cry,
|
|
And in those absent flames began to fry:
|
|
The blind contagion rag'd within his veins;
|
|
But he with manly patience bore his pains:
|
|
He fear'd not Fate, but only griev'd to die
|
|
Without an honest wound, and by a death so dry.
|
|
Happy Ancaeus, thrice aloud he cry'd,
|
|
With what becoming fate in arms he dy'd!
|
|
Then call'd his brothers, sisters, sire around,
|
|
And, her to whom his nuptial vows were bound,
|
|
Perhaps his mother; a long sigh she drew,
|
|
And his voice failing, took his last adieu.
|
|
For as the flames augment, and as they stay
|
|
At their full height, then languish to decay,
|
|
They rise and sink by fits; at last they soar
|
|
In one bright blaze, and then descend no more:
|
|
Just so his inward heats, at height, impair,
|
|
'Till the last burning breath shoots out the soul
|
|
in air.
|
|
Now lofty Calidon in ruins lies;
|
|
All ages, all degrees unsluice their eyes,
|
|
And Heav'n, and Earth resound with murmurs, groans,
|
|
and cries.
|
|
Matrons and maidens beat their breasts, and tear
|
|
Their habits, and root up their scatter'd hair:
|
|
The wretched father, father now no more,
|
|
With sorrow sunk, lies prostrate on the floor,
|
|
Deforms his hoary locks with dust obscene,
|
|
And curses age, and loaths a life prolong'd with
|
|
pain.
|
|
By steel her stubborn soul his mother freed,
|
|
And punish'd on her self her impious deed.
|
|
Had I a hundred tongues, a wit so large
|
|
As could their hundred offices discharge;
|
|
Had Phoebus all his Helicon bestow'd
|
|
In all the streams, inspiring all the God;
|
|
Those tongues, that wit, those streams, that God in
|
|
vain
|
|
Would offer to describe his sisters' pain:
|
|
They beat their breasts with many a bruizing blow,
|
|
'Till they turn livid, and corrupt the snow.
|
|
The corps they cherish, while the corps remains,
|
|
And exercise, and rub with fruitless pains;
|
|
And when to fun'ral flames 'tis born away,
|
|
They kiss the bed on which the body lay:
|
|
And when those fun'ral flames no longer burn
|
|
(The dust compos'd within a pious urn),
|
|
Ev'n in that urn their brother they confess,
|
|
And hug it in their arms, and to their bosoms
|
|
press.
|
|
His tomb is rais'd; then, stretch'd along the
|
|
ground,
|
|
Those living monuments his tomb surround:
|
|
Ev'n to his name, inscrib'd, their tears they pay,
|
|
'Till tears, and kisses wear his name away.
|
|
But Cynthia now had all her fury spent,
|
|
Not with less ruin than a race content:
|
|
Excepting Gorge, perish'd all the seed,
|
|
And her whom Heav'n for Hercules decreed.
|
|
Satiate at last, no longer she pursu'd
|
|
The weeping sisters; but With Wings endu'd,
|
|
And horny beaks, and sent to flit in air;
|
|
Who yearly round the tomb in feather'd flocks
|
|
repair.
|
|
The Theseus mean-while acquitting well his share
|
|
Transformation In the bold chace confed'rate like a war,
|
|
of the Naiads To Athens' lofty tow'rs his march ordain'd,
|
|
By Pallas lov'd, and where Erectheus reign'd.
|
|
But Achelous stop'd him on the way,
|
|
By rains a deluge, and constrain'd his stay.
|
|
O fam'd for glorious deeds, and great by blood,
|
|
Rest here, says he, nor trust the rapid flood;
|
|
It solid oaks has from its margin tore,
|
|
And rocky fragments down its current bore,
|
|
The murmur hoarse, and terrible the roar.
|
|
Oft have I seen herds with their shelt'ring fold
|
|
Forc'd from the banks, and in the torrent roul'd;
|
|
Nor strength the bulky steer from ruin freed,
|
|
Nor matchless swiftness sav'd the racing steed.
|
|
In cataracts when the dissolving snow
|
|
Falls from the hills, and floods the plains below;
|
|
Toss'd by the eddies with a giddy round,
|
|
Strong youths are in the sucking whirlpools
|
|
drown'd.
|
|
'Tis best with me in safety to abide,
|
|
'Till usual bounds restrain the ebbing tide,
|
|
And the low waters in their channel glide.
|
|
Theseus perswaded, in compliance bow'd:
|
|
So kind an offer, and advice so good,
|
|
O Achelous, cannot be refus'd;
|
|
I'll use them both, said he; and both he us'd.
|
|
The grot he enter'd, pumice built the hall,
|
|
And tophi made the rustick of the wall;
|
|
The floor, soft moss, an humid carpet spread,
|
|
And various shells the chequer'd roof inlaid.
|
|
'Twas now the hour when the declining sun
|
|
Two thirds had of his daily journey run;
|
|
At the spread table Theseus took his place,
|
|
Next his companions in the daring chace;
|
|
Perithous here, there elder Lelex lay,
|
|
His locks betraying age with sprinkled grey.
|
|
Acharnia's river-God dispos'd the rest,
|
|
Grac'd with the equal honour of the feast,
|
|
Elate with joy, and proud of such a guest.
|
|
The nymphs were waiters, and with naked feet
|
|
In order serv'd the courses of the meat.
|
|
The banquet done, delicious wine they brought,
|
|
Of one transparent gem the cup was wrought.
|
|
Then the great heroe of this gallant train,
|
|
Surveying far the prospect of the main:
|
|
What is that land, says he, the waves embrace?
|
|
(And with his finger pointed at the place);
|
|
Is it one parted isle which stands alone?
|
|
How nam'd? and yet methinks it seems not one.
|
|
To whom the watry God made this reply;
|
|
'Tis not one isle, but five; distinct they lye;
|
|
'Tis distance which deceives the cheated eye.
|
|
But that Diana's act may seem less strange,
|
|
These once proud Naiads were, before their change.
|
|
'Twas on a day more solemn than the rest,
|
|
Ten bullocks slain, a sacrificial feast:
|
|
The rural Gods of all the region near
|
|
They bid to dance, and taste the hallow'd cheer.
|
|
Me they forgot: affronted with the slight,
|
|
My rage, and stream swell'd to the greatest height;
|
|
And with the torrent of my flooding store,
|
|
Large woods from woods, and fields from fields I
|
|
tore.
|
|
The guilty nymphs, oh! then, remembring me,
|
|
I, with their country, wash'd into the sea;
|
|
And joining waters with the social main,
|
|
Rent the gross land, and split the firm champagne.
|
|
Since, the Echinades, remote from shore
|
|
Are view'd as many isles, as nymphs before.
|
|
Perimele But yonder far, lo, yonder does appear
|
|
turn'd into An isle, a part to me for ever dear.
|
|
an Island From that (it sailors Perimele name)
|
|
I doating, forc'd by rape a virgin's fame.
|
|
Hippodamas's passion grew so strong,
|
|
Gall'd with th' abuse, and fretted at the wrong,
|
|
He cast his pregnant daughter from a rock;
|
|
I spread my waves beneath, and broke the shock;
|
|
And as her swimming weight my stream convey'd,
|
|
I su'd for help divine, and thus I pray'd:
|
|
O pow'rful thou, whose trident does command
|
|
The realm of waters, which surround the land;
|
|
We sacred rivers, wheresoe'er begun,
|
|
End in thy lot, and to thy empire run.
|
|
With favour hear, and help with present aid;
|
|
Her whom I bear 'twas guilty I betray'd.
|
|
Yet if her father had been just, or mild,
|
|
He would have been less impious to his child;
|
|
In her, have pity'd force in the abuse;
|
|
In me, admitted love for my excuse.
|
|
O let relief for her hard case be found,
|
|
Her, whom paternal rage expell'd from ground,
|
|
Her, whom paternal rage relentless drown'd.
|
|
Grant her some place, or change her to a place,
|
|
Which I may ever clasp with my embrace.
|
|
His nodding head the sea's great ruler bent,
|
|
And all his waters shook with his assent.
|
|
The nymph still swam, tho' with the fright
|
|
distrest,
|
|
I felt her heart leap trembling in her breast;
|
|
But hardning soon, whilst I her pulse explore,
|
|
A crusting Earth cas'd her stiff body o'er;
|
|
And as accretions of new-cleaving soil
|
|
Inlarg'd the mass, the nymph became an isle.
|
|
The Story of Thus Achelous ends: his audience hear
|
|
Baucis and With admiration, and admiring, fear
|
|
Philemon The Pow'rs of Heav'n; except Ixion's Son,
|
|
Who laugh'd at all the Gods, believ'd in none:
|
|
He shook his impious head, and thus replies.
|
|
These legends are no more than pious lies:
|
|
You attribute too much to heav'nly sway,
|
|
To think they give us forms, and take away.
|
|
The rest of better minds, their sense declar'd
|
|
Against this doctrine, and with horror heard.
|
|
Then Lelex rose, an old experienc'd man,
|
|
And thus with sober gravity began;
|
|
Heav'n's pow'r is infinite: Earth, Air, and Sea,
|
|
The manufacture mass, the making Pow'r obey:
|
|
By proof to clear your doubt; in Phrygian ground
|
|
Two neighb'ring trees, with walls encompass'd
|
|
round,
|
|
Stand on a mod'rate rise, with wonder shown,
|
|
One a hard oak, a softer linden one:
|
|
I saw the place, and them, by Pittheus sent
|
|
To Phrygian realms, my grandsire's government.
|
|
Not far from thence is seen a lake, the haunt
|
|
Of coots, and of the fishing cormorant:
|
|
Here Jove with Hermes came; but in disguise
|
|
Of mortal men conceal'd their deities;
|
|
One laid aside his thunder, one his rod;
|
|
And many toilsome steps together trod:
|
|
For harbour at a thousand doors they knock'd,
|
|
Not one of all the thousand but was lock'd.
|
|
At last an hospitable house they found,
|
|
A homely shed; the roof, not far from ground,
|
|
Was thatch'd with reeds, and straw, together bound.
|
|
There Baucis and Philemon liv'd, and there
|
|
Had liv'd long marry'd, and a happy pair:
|
|
Now old in love, though little was their store,
|
|
Inur'd to want, their poverty they bore,
|
|
Nor aim'd at wealth, professing to be poor.
|
|
For master, or for servant here to call,
|
|
Was all alike, where only two were all.
|
|
Command was none, where equal love was paid,
|
|
Or rather both commanded, both obey'd.
|
|
From lofty roofs the Gods repuls'd before,
|
|
Now stooping, enter'd through the little door:
|
|
The man (their hearty welcome first express'd)
|
|
A common settle drew for either guest,
|
|
Inviting each his weary limbs to rest.
|
|
But ere they sate, officious Baucis lays
|
|
Two cushions stuff'd with straw, the seat to raise;
|
|
Coarse, but the best she had; then rakes the load
|
|
Of ashes from the hearth, and spreads abroad
|
|
The living coals; and, lest they should expire,
|
|
With leaves, and bark she feeds her infant fire:
|
|
It smoaks; and then with trembling breath she
|
|
blows,
|
|
'Till in a chearful blaze the flames arose.
|
|
With brush-wood, and with chips she strengthens
|
|
these,
|
|
And adds at last the boughs of rotten trees.
|
|
The fire thus form'd, she sets the kettle on
|
|
(Like burnish'd gold the little seether shone),
|
|
Next took the coleworts which her husband got
|
|
From his own ground (a small well-water'd spot);
|
|
She stripp'd the stalks of all their leaves; the
|
|
best
|
|
She cull'd, and them with handy care she drest.
|
|
High o'er the hearth a chine of bacon hung;
|
|
Good old Philemon seiz'd it with a prong,
|
|
And from the sooty rafter drew it down,
|
|
Then cut a slice, but scarce enough for one;
|
|
Yet a large portion of a little store,
|
|
Which for their sakes alone he wish'd were more.
|
|
This in the pot he plung'd without delay,
|
|
To tame the flesh, and drain the salt away.
|
|
The time beween, before the fire they sat,
|
|
And shorten'd the delay by pleasing chat.
|
|
A beam there was, on which a beechen pail
|
|
Hung by the handle, on a driven nail:
|
|
This fill'd with water, gently warm'd, they set
|
|
Before their guests; in this they bath'd their
|
|
feet,
|
|
And after with clean towels dry'd their sweat.
|
|
This done, the host produc'd the genial bed,
|
|
Sallow the feet, the borders, and the sted,
|
|
Which with no costly coverlet they spread,
|
|
But coarse old garments; yet such robes as these
|
|
They laid alone, at feasts, on holidays.
|
|
The good old housewife, tucking up her gown,
|
|
The table sets; th' invited Gods lie down.
|
|
The trivet-table of a foot was lame,
|
|
A blot which prudent Baucis overcame,
|
|
Who thrusts beneath the limping leg a sherd,
|
|
So was the mended board exactly rear'd:
|
|
Then rubb'd it o'er with newly gather'd mint,
|
|
A wholsom herb, that breath'd a grateful scent.
|
|
Pallas began the feast, where first was seen
|
|
The party-colour'd olive, black, and green:
|
|
Autumnal cornels next in order serv'd,
|
|
In lees of wine well pickled, and preserv'd.
|
|
A garden-sallad was the third supply,
|
|
Of endive, radishes, and succory:
|
|
Then curds, and cream, the flow'r of country fare,
|
|
And new-laid eggs, which Baucis' busie care
|
|
Turn'd by a gentle fire, and roasted rare.
|
|
All these in earthen ware were serv'd to board;
|
|
And next in place, an earthen pitcher stor'd,
|
|
With liquor of the best the cottage could afford.
|
|
This was the table's ornament and pride,
|
|
With figures wrought: like pages at his side
|
|
Stood beechen bowls; and these were shining clean,
|
|
Varnish'd with wax without, and lin'd within.
|
|
By this the boiling kettle had prepar'd,
|
|
And to the table sent the smoaking lard;
|
|
On which with eager appetite they dine,
|
|
A sav'ry bit, that serv'd to relish wine:
|
|
The wine itself was suiting to the rest,
|
|
Still working in the must, and lately press'd.
|
|
The second course succeeds like that before,
|
|
Plums, apples, nuts, and of their wintry store
|
|
Dry figs, and grapes, and wrinkled dates were set
|
|
In canisters, t' enlarge the little treat:
|
|
All these a milk-white honey-comb surround,
|
|
Which in the midst the country-banquet crown'd:
|
|
But the kind hosts their entertainment grace
|
|
With hearty welcome, and an open face:
|
|
In all they did, you might discern with ease,
|
|
A willing mind, and a desire to please.
|
|
Mean-time the beechen bowls went round, and
|
|
still,
|
|
Though often empty'd, were observ'd to fill;
|
|
Fill'd without hands, and of their own accord
|
|
Ran without feet, and danc'd about the board.
|
|
Devotion seiz'd the pair, to see the feast
|
|
With wine, and of no common grape, increas'd;
|
|
And up they held their hands, and fell to pray'r,
|
|
Excusing, as they could, their country fare.
|
|
One goose they had ('twas all they could allow),
|
|
A wakeful centry, and on duty now,
|
|
Whom to the Gods for sacrifice they vow:
|
|
Her with malicious zeal the couple view'd;
|
|
She ran for life, and limping they pursu'd:
|
|
Full well the fowl perceiv'd their bad intent,
|
|
And would not make her master's compliment;
|
|
But persecuted, to the Pow'rs she flies,
|
|
And close between the legs of Jove she lies:
|
|
He with a gracious ear the suppliant heard,
|
|
And sav'd her life; then what he has declar'd,
|
|
And own'd the God. The neighbourhood, said he,
|
|
Shall justly perish for impiety:
|
|
You stand alone exempted; but obey
|
|
With speed, and follow where we lead the way:
|
|
Leave these accurs'd; and to the mountain's height
|
|
Ascend; nor once look backward in your flight.
|
|
They haste, and what their tardy feet deny'd,
|
|
The trusty staff (their better leg) supply'd.
|
|
An arrow's flight they wanted to the top,
|
|
And there secure, but spent with travel, stop;
|
|
Then turn their now no more forbidden eyes;
|
|
Lost in a lake the floated level lies:
|
|
A watry desart covers all the plains,
|
|
Their cot alone, as in an isle, remains.
|
|
Wondring, with weeping eyes, while they deplore
|
|
Their neighbours' fate, and country now no more,
|
|
Their little shed, scarce large enough for two,
|
|
Seems, from the ground increas'd, in height and
|
|
bulk to grow.
|
|
A stately temple shoots within the skies,
|
|
The crotches of their cot in columns rise:
|
|
The pavement polish'd marble they behold,
|
|
The gates with sculpture grac'd, the spires and
|
|
tiles of gold.
|
|
Then thus the sire of Gods, with looks serene,
|
|
Speak thy desire, thou only just of men;
|
|
And thou, o woman, only worthy found
|
|
To be with such a man in marriage bound.
|
|
A-while they whisper; then, to Jove address'd,
|
|
Philemon thus prefers their joint request:
|
|
We crave to serve before your sacred shrine,
|
|
And offer at your altars rites divine:
|
|
And since not any action of our life
|
|
Has been polluted with domestick strife;
|
|
We beg one hour of death, that neither she
|
|
With widow's tears may live to bury me,
|
|
Nor weeping I, with wither'd arms may bear
|
|
My breathless Baucis to the sepulcher.
|
|
The Godheads sign their suit. They run their race
|
|
In the same tenour all th' appointed space:
|
|
Then, when their hour was come, while they relate
|
|
These past adventures at the temple gate,
|
|
Old Baucis is by old Philemon seen
|
|
Sprouting with sudden leaves of spritely green:
|
|
Old Baucis look'd where old Philemon stood,
|
|
And saw his lengthen'd arms a sprouting wood:
|
|
New roots their fasten'd feet begin to bind,
|
|
Their bodies stiffen in a rising rind:
|
|
Then, ere the bark above their shoulders grew,
|
|
They give, and take at once their last adieu.
|
|
At once, Farewell, o faithful spouse, they said;
|
|
At once th' incroaching rinds their closing lips
|
|
invade.
|
|
Ev'n yet, an ancient Tyanaean shows
|
|
A spreading oak, that near a linden grows;
|
|
The neighbourhood confirm the prodigy,
|
|
Grave men, not vain of tongue, or like to lie.
|
|
I saw my self the garlands on their boughs,
|
|
And tablets hung for gifts of granted vows;
|
|
And off'ring fresher up, with pious pray'r,
|
|
The good, said I, are God's peculiar care,
|
|
And such as honour Heav'n, shall heav'nly honour
|
|
share.
|
|
The Changes of He ceas'd in his relation to proceed,
|
|
Proteus Whilst all admir'd the author, and the deed;
|
|
But Theseus most, inquisitive to know
|
|
From Gods what wondrous alterations grow.
|
|
Whom thus the Calydonian stream address'd,
|
|
Rais'd high to speak, the couch his elbow press'd.
|
|
Some, when transform'd, fix in the lasting change;
|
|
Some with more right, thro' various figures range.
|
|
Proteus, thus large thy privilege was found,
|
|
Thou inmate of the seas, which Earth surround.
|
|
Sometimes a bloming youth you grac'd the shore;
|
|
Oft a fierce lion, or a furious boar:
|
|
With glist'ning spires now seem'd an hissing snake,
|
|
The bold would tremble in his hands to take:
|
|
With horns assum'd a bull; sometimes you prov'd
|
|
A tree by roots, a stone by weight unmov'd:
|
|
Sometimes two wav'ring contraries became,
|
|
Flow'd down in water, or aspir'd in flame.
|
|
The Story of In various shapes thus to deceive the eyes,
|
|
Erisichthon Without a settled stint of her disguise,
|
|
Rash Erisichthon's daughter had the pow'r,
|
|
And brought it to Autolicus in dow'r.
|
|
Her atheist sire the slighted Gods defy'd,
|
|
And ritual honours to their shrines deny'd.
|
|
As fame reports, his hand an ax sustain'd,
|
|
Which Ceres' consecrated grove prophan'd;
|
|
Which durst the venerable gloom invade,
|
|
And violate with light the awful shade.
|
|
An ancient oak in the dark center stood,
|
|
The covert's glory, and itself a wood:
|
|
Garlands embrac'd its shaft, and from the boughs
|
|
Hung tablets, monuments of prosp'rous vows.
|
|
In the cool dusk its unpierc'd verdure spread,
|
|
The Dryads oft their hallow'd dances led;
|
|
And oft, when round their gaging arms they cast,
|
|
Full fifteen ells it measu'rd in the waste:
|
|
Its height all under standards did surpass,
|
|
As they aspir'd above the humbler grass.
|
|
These motives, which would gentler minds
|
|
restrain,
|
|
Could not make Triope's bold son abstain;
|
|
He sternly charg'd his slaves with strict decree,
|
|
To fell with gashing steel the sacred tree.
|
|
But whilst they, lingring, his commands delay'd,
|
|
He snatch'd an Ax, and thus blaspheming said:
|
|
Was this no oak, nor Ceres' favourite care,
|
|
But Ceres' self, this arm, unaw'd, shou'd dare
|
|
Its leafy honours in the dust to spread,
|
|
And level with the earth its airy head.
|
|
He spoke, and as he poiz'd a slanting stroak,
|
|
Sighs heav'd, and tremblings shook the frighted
|
|
oak;
|
|
Its leaves look'd sickly, pale its acorns grew,
|
|
And its long branches sweat a chilly dew.
|
|
But when his impious hand a wound bestow'd,
|
|
Blood from the mangled bark in currents flow'd.
|
|
When a devoted bull of mighty size,
|
|
A sinning nation's grand atonement, dies;
|
|
With such a plenty from the spouting veins,
|
|
A crimson stream the turfy altars stains.
|
|
The wonder all amaz'd; yet one more bold,
|
|
The fact dissuading, strove his ax to hold.
|
|
But the Thessalian, obstinately bent,
|
|
Too proud to change, too harden'd to repent,
|
|
On his kind monitor, his eyes, which burn'd
|
|
With rage, and with his eyes his weapon turn'd;
|
|
Take the reward, says he, of pious dread:
|
|
Then with a blow lopp'd off his parted head.
|
|
No longer check'd, the wretch his crime pursu'd,
|
|
Doubled his strokes, and sacrilege renew'd;
|
|
When from the groaning trunk a voice was heard,
|
|
A Dryad I, by Ceres' love preferr'd,
|
|
Within the circle of this clasping rind
|
|
Coeval grew, and now in ruin join'd;
|
|
But instant vengeance shall thy sin pursue,
|
|
And death is chear'd with this prophetick view.
|
|
At last the oak with cords enforc'd to bow,
|
|
Strain'd from the top, and sap'd with wounds below,
|
|
The humbler wood, partaker of its fate,
|
|
Crush'd with its fall, and shiver'd with its
|
|
weight.
|
|
The grove destroy'd, the sister Dryads moan,
|
|
Griev'd at its loss, and frighted at their own.
|
|
Strait, suppliants for revenge to Ceres go,
|
|
In sable weeds, expressive of their woe.
|
|
The beauteous Goddess with a graceful air
|
|
Bow'd in consent, and nodded to their pray'r.
|
|
The awful motion shook the fruitful ground,
|
|
And wav'd the fields with golden harvests crown'd.
|
|
Soon she contriv'd in her projecting mind
|
|
A plague severe, and piteous in its kind
|
|
(If plagues for crimes of such presumptuous height
|
|
Could pity in the softest breast create).
|
|
With pinching want, and hunger's keenest smart,
|
|
To tear his vitals, and corrode his heart.
|
|
But since her near approach by Fate's deny'd
|
|
To famine, and broad climes their pow'rs divide,
|
|
A nymph, the mountain's ranger, she address'd,
|
|
And thus resolv'd, her high commands express'd.
|
|
The Description Where frozen Scythia's utmost bound is plac'd,
|
|
of Famine A desart lies, a melancholy waste:
|
|
In yellow crops there Nature never smil'd,
|
|
No fruitful tree to shade the barren wild.
|
|
There sluggish cold its icy station makes,
|
|
There paleness, frights, and aguish trembling
|
|
shakes,
|
|
Of pining famine this the fated seat,
|
|
To whom my orders in these words repeat:
|
|
Bid her this miscreant with her sharpest pains
|
|
Chastise, and sheath herself into his veins;
|
|
Be unsubdu'd by plenty's baffled store,
|
|
Reject my empire, and defeat my pow'r.
|
|
And lest the distance, and the tedious way,
|
|
Should with the toil, and long fatigue dismay,
|
|
Ascend my chariot, and convey'd on high,
|
|
Guide the rein'd dragons thro' the parting sky.
|
|
The nymph, accepting of the granted carr,
|
|
Sprung to the seat, and posted thro' the air;
|
|
Nor stop'd 'till she to a bleak mountain came
|
|
Of wondrous height, and Caucasus its name.
|
|
There in a stony field the fiend she found,
|
|
Herbs gnawing, and roots scratching from the
|
|
ground.
|
|
Her elfelock hair in matted tresses grew,
|
|
Sunk were her eyes, and pale her ghastly hue,
|
|
Wan were her lips, and foul with clammy glew.
|
|
Her throat was furr'd, her guts appear'd within
|
|
With snaky crawlings thro' her parchment skin.
|
|
Her jutting hips seem'd starting from their place,
|
|
And for a belly was a belly's space,
|
|
Her dugs hung dangling from her craggy spine,
|
|
Loose to her breast, and fasten'd to her chine.
|
|
Her joints protuberant by leanness grown,
|
|
Consumption sunk the flesh, and rais'd the bone.
|
|
Her knees large orbits bunch'd to monstrous size,
|
|
And ancles to undue proportion rise.
|
|
This plague the nymph, not daring to draw near,
|
|
At distance hail'd, and greeted from afar.
|
|
And tho' she told her charge without delay,
|
|
Tho' her arrival late, and short her stay,
|
|
She felt keen famine, or she seem'd to feel,
|
|
Invade her blood, and on her vitals steal.
|
|
She turn'd, from the infection to remove,
|
|
And back to Thessaly the serpents drove.
|
|
The fiend obey'd the Goddess' command
|
|
(Tho' their effects in opposition stand),
|
|
She cut her way, supported by the wind,
|
|
And reach'd the mansion by the nymph assign'd.
|
|
'Twas night, when entring Erisichthon's room,
|
|
Dissolv'd in sleep, and thoughtless of his doom,
|
|
She clasp'd his limbs, by impious labour tir'd,
|
|
With battish wings, but her whole self inspir'd;
|
|
Breath'd on his throat and chest a tainting blast,
|
|
And in his veins infus'd an endless fast.
|
|
The task dispatch'd, away the Fury flies
|
|
From plenteous regions, and from rip'ning skies;
|
|
To her old barren north she wings her speed,
|
|
And cottages distress'd with pinching need.
|
|
Still slumbers Erisichthon's senses drown,
|
|
And sooth his fancy with their softest down.
|
|
He dreams of viands delicate to eat,
|
|
And revels on imaginary meat,
|
|
Chaws with his working mouth, but chaws in vain,
|
|
And tires his grinding teeth with fruitless pain;
|
|
Deludes his throat with visionary fare,
|
|
Feasts on the wind, and banquets on the air.
|
|
The morning came, the night, and slumbers past,
|
|
But still the furious pangs of hunger last;
|
|
The cank'rous rage still gnaws with griping pains,
|
|
Stings in his throat, and in his bowels reigns.
|
|
Strait he requires, impatient in demand,
|
|
Provisions from the air, the seas, the land.
|
|
But tho' the land, air, seas, provisions grant,
|
|
Starves at full tables, and complains of want.
|
|
What to a people might in dole be paid,
|
|
Or victual cities for a long blockade,
|
|
Could not one wolfish appetite asswage;
|
|
For glutting nourishment increas'd its rage.
|
|
As rivers pour'd from ev'ry distant shore,
|
|
The sea insatiate drinks, and thirsts for more;
|
|
Or as the fire, which all materials burns,
|
|
And wasted forests into ashes turns,
|
|
Grows more voracious, as the more it preys,
|
|
Recruits dilate the flame, and spread the blaze:
|
|
So impious Erisichthon's hunger raves,
|
|
Receives refreshments, and refreshments craves.
|
|
Food raises a desire for food, and meat
|
|
Is but a new provocative to eat.
|
|
He grows more empty, as the more supply'd,
|
|
And endless cramming but extends the void.
|
|
The Now riches hoarded by paternal care
|
|
Transformations Were sunk, the glutton swallowing up the heir.
|
|
of Yet the devouring flame no stores abate,
|
|
Erisichthon's Nor less his hunger grew with his estate.
|
|
Daughter One daughter left, as left his keen desire,
|
|
A daughter worthy of a better sire:
|
|
Her too he sold, spent Nature to sustain;
|
|
She scorn'd a lord with generous disdain,
|
|
And flying, spread her hand upon the main.
|
|
Then pray'd: Grant, thou, I bondage may escape,
|
|
And with my liberty reward thy rape;
|
|
Repay my virgin treasure with thy aid
|
|
('Twas Neptune who deflower'd the beauteous maid).
|
|
The God was mov'd, at what the fair had su'd,
|
|
When she so lately by her master view'd
|
|
In her known figure, on a sudden took
|
|
A fisher's habit, and a manly look.
|
|
To whom her owner hasted to enquire;
|
|
O thou, said he, whose baits hide treach'rous wire;
|
|
Whose art can manage, and experienc'd skill
|
|
The taper angle, and the bobbing quill,
|
|
So may the sea be ruffled with no storm,
|
|
But smooth with calms, as you the truth inform;
|
|
So your deceit may no shy fishes feel,
|
|
'Till struck, and fasten'd on the bearded steel.
|
|
Did not you standing view upon the strand,
|
|
A wand'ring maid? I'm sure I saw her stand;
|
|
Her hair disorder'd, and her homely dress
|
|
Betray'd her want, and witness'd her distress.
|
|
Me heedless, she reply'd, whoe'er you are,
|
|
Excuse, attentive to another care.
|
|
I settled on the deep my steady eye;
|
|
Fix'd on my float, and bent on my employ.
|
|
And that you may not doubt what I impart,
|
|
So may the ocean's God assist my art,
|
|
If on the beach since I my sport pursu'd,
|
|
Or man, or woman but my self I view'd.
|
|
Back o'er the sands, deluded, he withdrew,
|
|
Whilst she for her old form put off her new.
|
|
Her sire her shifting pow'r to change perceiv'd;
|
|
And various chapmen by her sale deceiv'd.
|
|
A fowl with spangled plumes, a brinded steer,
|
|
Sometimes a crested mare, or antler'd deer:
|
|
Sold for a price, she parted, to maintain
|
|
Her starving parent with dishonest gain.
|
|
At last all means, as all provisions, fail'd;
|
|
For the disease by remedies prevail'd;
|
|
His muscles with a furious bite he tore,
|
|
Gorg'd his own tatter'd flesh, and gulph'd his
|
|
gore.
|
|
Wounds were his feast, his life to life a prey,
|
|
Supporting Nature by its own decay.
|
|
But foreign stories why shou'd I relate?
|
|
I too my self can to new forms translate,
|
|
Tho' the variety's not unconfin'd,
|
|
But fix'd, in number, and restrain'd in kind:
|
|
For often I this present shape retain,
|
|
Oft curl a snake the volumes of my train.
|
|
Sometimes my strength into my horns transfer'd,
|
|
A bull I march, the captain of the herd.
|
|
But whilst I once those goring weapons wore,
|
|
Vast wresting force one from my forehead tore.
|
|
Lo, my maim'd brows the injury still own;
|
|
He ceas'd; his words concluding with a groan.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Eighth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE NINTH
|
|
|
|
Theseus requests the God to tell his woes,
|
|
Whence his maim'd brow, and whence his groans arose
|
|
Whence thus the Calydonian stream reply'd,
|
|
With twining reeds his careless tresses ty'd:
|
|
Ungrateful is the tale; for who can bear,
|
|
When conquer'd, to rehearse the shameful war?
|
|
Yet I'll the melancholy story trace;
|
|
So great a conqu'ror softens the disgrace:
|
|
Nor was it still so mean the prize to yield,
|
|
As great, and glorious to dispute the field.
|
|
The Story of Perhaps you've heard of Deianira's name,
|
|
Achelous and For all the country spoke her beauty's fame.
|
|
Hercules Long was the nymph by num'rous suitors woo'd,
|
|
Each with address his envy'd hopes pursu'd:
|
|
I joyn'd the loving band; to gain the fair,
|
|
Reveal'd my passion to her father's ear.
|
|
Their vain pretensions all the rest resign,
|
|
Alcides only strove to equal mine;
|
|
He boasts his birth from Jove, recounts his spoils,
|
|
His step-dame's hate subdu'd, and finish'd toils.
|
|
Can mortals then (said I), with Gods compare?
|
|
Behold a God; mine is the watry care:
|
|
Through your wide realms I take my mazy way,
|
|
Branch into streams, and o'er the region stray:
|
|
No foreign guest your daughter's charms adores,
|
|
But one who rises in your native shores.
|
|
Let not his punishment your pity move;
|
|
Is Juno's hate an argument for love?
|
|
Though you your life from fair Alcmena drew,
|
|
Jove's a feign'd father, or by fraud a true.
|
|
Chuse then; confess thy mother's honour lost,
|
|
Or thy descent from Jove no longer boast.
|
|
While thus I spoke, he look'd with stern disdain,
|
|
Nor could the sallies of his wrath restrain,
|
|
Which thus break forth. This arm decides our right;
|
|
Vanquish in words, be mine the prize in fight.
|
|
Bold he rush'd on. My honour to maintain,
|
|
I fling my verdant garments on the plain,
|
|
My arms stretch forth, my pliant limbs prepare,
|
|
And with bent hands expect the furious war.
|
|
O'er my sleek skin now gather'd dust he throws,
|
|
And yellow sand his mighty muscles strows.
|
|
Oft he my neck, and nimble legs assails,
|
|
He seems to grasp me, but as often fails.
|
|
Each part he now invades with eager hand;
|
|
Safe in my bulk, immoveable I stand.
|
|
So when loud storms break high, and foam and roar
|
|
Against some mole that stretches from the shore;
|
|
The firm foundation lasting tempests braves,
|
|
Defies the warring winds, and driving waves.
|
|
A-while we breathe, then forward rush amain,
|
|
Renew the combat, and our ground maintain;
|
|
Foot strove with foot, I prone extend my breast,
|
|
Hands war with hands, and forehead forehead prest.
|
|
Thus have I seen two furious bulls engage,
|
|
Inflam'd with equal love, and equal rage;
|
|
Each claims the fairest heifer of the grove,
|
|
And conquest only can decide their love:
|
|
The trembling herds survey the fight from far,
|
|
'Till victory decides th' important war.
|
|
Three times in vain he strove my joints to wrest,
|
|
To force my hold, and throw me from his breast;
|
|
The fourth he broke my gripe, that clasp'd him
|
|
round,
|
|
Then with new force he stretch'd me on the ground;
|
|
Close to my back the mighty burthen clung,
|
|
As if a mountain o'er my limbs were flung.
|
|
Believe my tale; nor do I, boastful, aim
|
|
By feign'd narration to extol my fame.
|
|
No sooner from his grasp I freedom get,
|
|
Unlock my arms, that flow'd with trickling sweat,
|
|
But quick he seized me, and renew'd the strife,
|
|
As my exhausted bosom pants for life:
|
|
My neck he gripes, my knee to earth he strains;
|
|
I fall, and bite the sand with shame, and pains.
|
|
O'er-match'd in strength, to wiles, and arts I
|
|
take,
|
|
And slip his hold, in form of speckled snake;
|
|
Who, when I wreath'd in spires my body round,
|
|
Or show'd my forky tongue with hissing sound,
|
|
Smiles at my threats: Such foes my cradle knew,
|
|
He cries, dire snakes my infant hand o'erthrew;
|
|
A dragon's form might other conquests gain,
|
|
To war with me you take that shape in vain.
|
|
Art thou proportion'd to the Hydra's length,
|
|
Who by his wounds receiv'd augmented strength?
|
|
He rais'd a hundred hissing heads in air;
|
|
When one I lopt, up-sprung a dreadful pair.
|
|
By his wounds fertile, and with slaughter strong,
|
|
Singly I quell'd him, and stretch'd dead along.
|
|
What canst thou do, a form precarious, prone,
|
|
To rouse my rage with terrors not thy own?
|
|
He said; and round my neck his hands he cast,
|
|
And with his straining fingers wrung me fast;
|
|
My throat he tortur'd, close as pincers clasp,
|
|
In vain I strove to loose the forceful grasp.
|
|
Thus vanquish'd too, a third form still remains,
|
|
Chang'd to a bull, my lowing fills the plains.
|
|
Strait on the left his nervous arms were thrown
|
|
Upon my brindled neck, and tugg'd it down;
|
|
Then deep he struck my horn into the sand,
|
|
And fell'd my bulk among the dusty land.
|
|
Nor yet his fury cool'd; 'twixt rage and scorn,
|
|
From my maim'd front he tore the stubborn horn:
|
|
This, heap'd with flow'rs, and fruits, the Naiads
|
|
bear,
|
|
Sacred to plenty, and the bounteous year.
|
|
He spoke; when lo, a beauteous nymph appears,
|
|
Girt like Diana's train, with flowing hairs;
|
|
The horn she brings in which all Autumn's stor'd,
|
|
And ruddy apples for the second board.
|
|
Now morn begins to dawn, the sun's bright fire
|
|
Gilds the high mountains, and the youths retire;
|
|
Nor stay'd they, 'till the troubled stream
|
|
subsides,
|
|
And in its bounds with peaceful current glides.
|
|
But Achelous in his oozy bed
|
|
Deep hides his brow deform'd, and rustick head:
|
|
No real wound the victor's triumph show'd,
|
|
But his lost honours griev'd the watry God;
|
|
Yet ev'n that loss the willow's leaves o'erspread,
|
|
And verdant reeds, in garlands, bind his head.
|
|
The Death of This virgin too, thy love, O Nessus, found,
|
|
Nessus the To her alone you owe the fatal wound.
|
|
Centaur As the strong son of Jove his bride conveys,
|
|
Where his paternal lands their bulwarks raise;
|
|
Where from her slopy urn, Evenus pours
|
|
Her rapid current, swell'd by wintry show'rs,
|
|
He came. The frequent eddies whirl'd the tide,
|
|
And the deep rolling waves all pass deny'd.
|
|
As for himself, he stood unmov'd by fears,
|
|
For now his bridal charge employ'd his cares,
|
|
The strong-limb'd Nessus thus officious cry'd
|
|
(For he the shallows of the stream had try'd),
|
|
Swim thou, Alcides, all thy strength prepare,
|
|
On yonder bank I'll lodge thy nuptial care.
|
|
Th' Aonian chief to Nessus trusts his wife,
|
|
All pale, and trembling for her heroe's life:
|
|
Cloath'd as he stood in the fierce lion's hide,
|
|
The laden quiver o'er his shoulder ty'd
|
|
(For cross the stream his bow and club were cast),
|
|
Swift he plung'd in: These billows shall be past,
|
|
He said, nor sought where smoother waters glide,
|
|
But stem'd the rapid dangers of the tide.
|
|
The bank he reach'd; again the bow he bears;
|
|
When, hark! his bride's known voice alarms his
|
|
ears.
|
|
Nessus, to thee I call (aloud he cries)
|
|
Vain is thy trust in flight, be timely wise:
|
|
Thou monster double-shap'd, my right set free;
|
|
If thou no rev'rence owe my fame and me,
|
|
Yet kindred should thy lawless lust deny;
|
|
Think not, perfidious wretch, from me to fly,
|
|
Tho' wing'd with horse's speed; wounds shall
|
|
pursue;
|
|
Swift as his words the fatal arrow flew:
|
|
The centaur's back admits the feather'd wood,
|
|
And thro' his breast the barbed weapon stood;
|
|
Which when, in anguish, thro' the flesh he tore,
|
|
From both the wounds gush'd forth the spumy gore
|
|
Mix'd with Lernaean venom; this he took,
|
|
Nor dire revenge his dying breast forsook.
|
|
His garment, in the reeking purple dy'd,
|
|
To rouse love's passion, he presents the bride.
|
|
The Death of Now a long interval of time succeeds,
|
|
Hercules When the great son of Jove's immortal deeds,
|
|
And step-dame's hate, had fill'd Earth's utmost
|
|
round;
|
|
He from Oechalia, with new lawrels crown'd,
|
|
In triumph was return'd. He rites prepares,
|
|
And to the King of Gods directs his pray'rs;
|
|
When Fame (who falshood cloaths in truth's
|
|
disguise,
|
|
And swells her little bulk with growing lies)
|
|
Thy tender ear, o Deianira, mov'd,
|
|
That Hercules the fair Iole lov'd.
|
|
Her love believes the tale; the truth she fears
|
|
Of his new passion, and gives way to tears.
|
|
The flowing tears diffus'd her wretched grief,
|
|
Why seek I thus, from streaming eyes, relief?
|
|
She cries; indulge not thus these fruitless cares,
|
|
The harlot will but triumph in thy tears:
|
|
Let something be resolv'd, while yet there's time;
|
|
My bed not conscious of a rival's crime.
|
|
In silence shall I mourn, or loud complain?
|
|
Shall I seek Calydon, or here remain?
|
|
What tho', ally'd to Meleager's fame,
|
|
I boast the honours of a sister's name?
|
|
My wrongs, perhaps, now urge me to pursue
|
|
Some desp'rate deed, by which the world shall view
|
|
How far revenge, and woman's rage can rise,
|
|
When weltring in her blood the harlot dies.
|
|
Thus various passions rul'd by turns her breast,
|
|
She now resolves to send the fatal vest,
|
|
Dy'd with Lernaean gore, whose pow'r might move
|
|
His soul anew, and rouse declining love.
|
|
Nor knew she what her sudden rage bestows,
|
|
When she to Lychas trusts her future woes;
|
|
With soft endearments she the boy commands,
|
|
To bear the garment to her husband's hands.
|
|
Th' unwitting hero takes the gift in haste,
|
|
And o'er his shoulders Lerna's poison cast,
|
|
As first the fire with frankincense he strows,
|
|
And utters to the Gods his holy vows;
|
|
And on the marble altar's polish'd frame
|
|
Pours forth the grapy stream; the rising flame
|
|
Sudden dissolves the subtle pois'nous juice,
|
|
Which taints his blood, and all his nerves bedews.
|
|
With wonted fortitude he bore the smart,
|
|
And not a groan confess'd his burning heart.
|
|
At length his patience was subdu'd by pain,
|
|
He rends the sacred altar from the plain;
|
|
Oete's wide forests echo with his cries:
|
|
Now to rip off the deathful robe he tries.
|
|
Where-e'er he plucks the vest, the skin he tears,
|
|
The mangled muscles, and huge bones he bares
|
|
(A ghastful sight!), or raging with his pain,
|
|
To rend the sticking plague he tugs in vain.
|
|
As the red iron hisses in the flood,
|
|
So boils the venom in his curdling blood.
|
|
Now with the greedy flame his entrails glow,
|
|
And livid sweats down all his body flow;
|
|
The cracking nerves burnt up are burst in twain,
|
|
The lurking venom melts his swimming brain.
|
|
Then, lifting both his hands aloft, he cries,
|
|
Glut thy revenge, dread Empress of the skies;
|
|
Sate with my death the rancour of thy heart,
|
|
Look down with pleasure, and enjoy my smart.
|
|
Or, if e'er pity mov'd a hostile breast
|
|
(For here I stand thy enemy profest),
|
|
Take hence this hateful life, with tortures torn,
|
|
Inur'd to trouble, and to labours born.
|
|
Death is the gift most welcome to my woe,
|
|
And such a gift a stepdame may bestow.
|
|
Was it for this Busiris was subdu'd,
|
|
Whose barb'rous temples reek'd with strangers'
|
|
blood?
|
|
Press'd in these arms his fate Antaeus found,
|
|
Nor gain'd recruited vigour from the ground.
|
|
Did I not triple-form'd Geryon fell?
|
|
Or did I fear the triple dog of Hell?
|
|
Did not these hands the bull's arm'd forehead hold?
|
|
Are not our mighty toils in Elis told?
|
|
Do not Stymphalian lakes proclaim thy fame?
|
|
And fair Parthenian woods resound thy name?
|
|
Who seiz'd the golden belt of Thermodon?
|
|
And who the dragon-guarded apples won?
|
|
Could the fierce centaur's strength my force
|
|
withstand,
|
|
Or the fell boar that spoil'd th' Arcadian land?
|
|
Did not these arms the Hydra's rage subdue,
|
|
Who from his wounds to double fury grew?
|
|
What if the Thracian horses, fat with gore,
|
|
Who human bodies in their mangers tore,
|
|
I saw, and with their barb'rous lord o'erthrew?
|
|
What if these hands Nemaea's lion slew?
|
|
Did not this neck the heav'nly globe sustain?
|
|
The female partner of the Thunderer's reign
|
|
Fatigu'd, at length suspends her harsh commands,
|
|
Yet no fatigue hath slack'd these valiant hands.
|
|
But now new plagues pursue me, neither force,
|
|
Nor arms, nor darts can stop their raging course.
|
|
Devouring flame thro' my rack'd entrails strays,
|
|
And on my lungs and shrivel'd muscles preys.
|
|
Yet still Eurystheus breathes the vital air.
|
|
What mortal now shall seek the Gods with pray'r?
|
|
The The hero said; and with the torture stung,
|
|
Transformation Furious o'er Oete's lofty hills he sprung.
|
|
of Lychas Stuck with the shaft, thus scours the tyger round,
|
|
into a Rock And seeks the flying author of his wound.
|
|
Now might you see him trembling, now he vents
|
|
His anguish'd soul in groans, and loud laments;
|
|
He strives to tear the clinging vest in vain,
|
|
And with up-rooted forests strows the plain;
|
|
Now kindling into rage, his hands he rears,
|
|
And to his kindred Gods directs his pray'rs.
|
|
When Lychas, lo, he spies; who trembling flew,
|
|
And in a hollow rock conceal'd from view,
|
|
Had shun'd his wrath. Now grief renew'd his pain,
|
|
His madness chaf'd, and thus he raves again.
|
|
Lychas, to thee alone my fate I owe,
|
|
Who bore the gift, the cause of all my woe.
|
|
The youth all pale, with shiv'ring fear was stung,
|
|
And vain excuses falter'd on his tongue.
|
|
Alcides snatch'd him, as with suppliant face
|
|
He strove to clasp his knees, and beg for grace:
|
|
He toss'd him o'er his head with airy course,
|
|
And hurl'd with more than with an engine's force;
|
|
Far o'er th' Eubaean main aloof he flies,
|
|
And hardens by degrees amid the skies.
|
|
So showry drops, when chilly tempests blow,
|
|
Thicken at first, then whiten into snow,
|
|
In balls congeal'd the rolling fleeces bound,
|
|
In solid hail result upon the ground.
|
|
Thus, whirl'd with nervous force thro' distant air,
|
|
The purple tide forsook his veins, with fear;
|
|
All moisture left his limbs. Transform'd to stone,
|
|
In ancient days the craggy flint was known;
|
|
Still in the Eubaean waves his front he rears,
|
|
Still the small rock in human form appears,
|
|
And still the name of hapless Lychas bears.
|
|
The Apotheosis But now the hero of immortal birth
|
|
of Hercules Fells Oete's forests on the groaning Earth;
|
|
A pile he builds; to Philoctetes' care
|
|
He leaves his deathful instruments of war;
|
|
To him commits those arrows, which again
|
|
Shall see the bulwarks of the Trojan reign.
|
|
The son of Paean lights the lofty pyre,
|
|
High round the structure climbs the greedy fire;
|
|
Plac'd on the top, thy nervous shoulders spread
|
|
With the Nemaean spoils, thy careless head
|
|
Rais'd on a knotty club, with look divine,
|
|
Here thou, dread hero, of celestial line,
|
|
Wert stretch'd at ease; as when a chearful guest,
|
|
Wine crown'd thy bowls, and flow'rs thy temples
|
|
drest.
|
|
Now on all sides the potent flames aspire,
|
|
And crackle round those limbs that mock the fire
|
|
A sudden terror seiz'd th' immortal host,
|
|
Who thought the world's profess'd defender lost.
|
|
This when the Thund'rer saw, with smiles he cries,
|
|
'Tis from your fears, ye Gods, my pleasures rise;
|
|
Joy swells my breast, that my all-ruling hand
|
|
O'er such a grateful people boasts command,
|
|
That you my suff'ring progeny would aid;
|
|
Tho' to his deeds this just respect be paid,
|
|
Me you've oblig'd. Be all your fears forborn,
|
|
Th' Oetean fires do thou, great hero, scorn.
|
|
Who vanquish'd all things, shall subdue the flame.
|
|
That part alone of gross maternal frame
|
|
Fire shall devour; while what from me he drew
|
|
Shall live immortal, and its force subdue;
|
|
That, when he's dead, I'll raise to realms above;
|
|
May all the Pow'rs the righteous act approve.
|
|
If any God dissent, and judge too great
|
|
The sacred honours of the heav'nly seat,
|
|
Ev'n he shall own his deeds deserve the sky,
|
|
Ev'n he reluctant, shall at length comply.
|
|
Th' assembled Pow'rs assent. No frown 'till now
|
|
Had mark'd with passion vengeful Juno's brow,
|
|
Mean-while whate'er was in the pow'r of flame
|
|
Was all consum'd; his body's nervous frame
|
|
No more was known, of human form bereft,
|
|
Th' eternal part of Jove alone was left.
|
|
As an old serpent casts his scaly vest,
|
|
Wreathes in the sun, in youthful glory drest;
|
|
So when Alcides mortal mold resign'd,
|
|
His better part enlarg'd, and grew refin'd;
|
|
August his visage shone; almighty Jove
|
|
In his swift carr his honour'd offspring drove;
|
|
High o'er the hollow clouds the coursers fly,
|
|
And lodge the hero in the starry sky.
|
|
The Atlas perceiv'd the load of Heav'n's new guest.
|
|
Transformation Revenge still rancour'd in Eurystheus' breast
|
|
of Galanthis Against Alcides' race. Alcmena goes
|
|
To Iole, to vent maternal woes;
|
|
Here she pours forth her grief, recounts the spoils
|
|
Her son had bravely reap'd in glorious toils.
|
|
This Iole, by Hercules' commands,
|
|
Hyllus had lov'd, and joyn'd in nuptial bands.
|
|
Her swelling womb the teeming birth confess'd,
|
|
To whom Alcmena thus her speech address'd.
|
|
O, may the Gods protect thee, in that hour,
|
|
When, 'midst thy throws, thou call'st th' Ilithyan
|
|
Pow'r!
|
|
May no delays prolong thy racking pain,
|
|
As when I su'd for Juno's aid in vain.
|
|
When now Alcides' mighty birth drew nigh,
|
|
And the tenth sign roll'd forward on the sky,
|
|
My womb extends with such a mighty load,
|
|
As Jove the parent of the burthen show'd.
|
|
I could no more th' encreasing smart sustain,
|
|
My horror kindles to recount the pain;
|
|
Cold chills my limbs while I the tale pursue,
|
|
And now methinks I feel my pangs anew.
|
|
Seven days and nights amidst incessant throws,
|
|
Fatigu'd with ills I lay, nor knew repose;
|
|
When lifting high my hands, in shrieks I pray'd,
|
|
Implor'd the Gods, and call'd Lucina's aid.
|
|
She came, but prejudic'd, to give my Fate
|
|
A sacrifice to vengeful Juno's hate.
|
|
She hears the groaning anguish of my fits,
|
|
And on the altar at my door she sits.
|
|
O'er her left knee her crossing leg she cast,
|
|
Then knits her fingers close, and wrings them fast:
|
|
This stay'd the birth; in mutt'ring verse she
|
|
pray'd,
|
|
The mutt'ring verse th' unfinish'd birth delay'd.
|
|
Now with fierce struggles, raging with my pain,
|
|
At Jove's ingratitude I rave in vain.
|
|
How did I wish for death! such groans I sent,
|
|
As might have made the flinty heart relent.
|
|
Now the Cadmeian matrons round me press,
|
|
Offer their vows, and seek to bring redress;
|
|
Among the Theban dames Galanthis stands,
|
|
Strong limb'd, red hair'd, and just to my commands:
|
|
She first perceiv'd that all these racking woes
|
|
From the persisting hate of Juno rose.
|
|
As here and there she pass'd, by chance she sees
|
|
The seated Goddess; on her close-press'd knees
|
|
Her fast-knit hands she leans; with chearful voice
|
|
Galanthis cries, Whoe'er thou art, rejoyce,
|
|
Congratulate the dame, she lies at rest,
|
|
At length the Gods Alcmena's womb have blest.
|
|
Swift from her seat the startled Goddess springs,
|
|
No more conceal'd, her hands abroad she flings;
|
|
The charm unloos'd, the birth my pangs reliev'd;
|
|
Galanthis' laughter vex'd the Pow'r deceiv'd.
|
|
Fame says, the Goddess dragg'd the laughing maid
|
|
Fast by the hair; in vain her force essay'd
|
|
Her grov'ling body from the ground to rear;
|
|
Chang'd to fore-feet her shrinking arms appear:
|
|
Her hairy back her former hue retains,
|
|
The form alone is lost; her strength remains;
|
|
Who, since the lye did from her mouth proceed,
|
|
Shall from her pregnant mouth bring forth her
|
|
breed;
|
|
Nor shall she quit her long-frequented home,
|
|
But haunt those houses where she lov'd to roam.
|
|
The Fable of She said, and for her lost Galanthis sighs;
|
|
Dryope When the fair consort of her son replies;
|
|
Since you a servant's ravish'd form bemoan,
|
|
And kindly sigh for sorrows not your own,
|
|
Let me (if tears and grief permit) relate
|
|
A nearer woe, a sister's stranger fate.
|
|
No nymph of all Oechaloa could compare
|
|
For beauteous form with Dryope the fair;
|
|
Her tender mother's only hope and pride
|
|
(My self the offspring of a second bride),
|
|
This nymph, compress'd by him who rules the day,
|
|
Whom Delphi, and the Delian isle obey,
|
|
Andraemon lov'd; and blest in all those charms
|
|
That pleas'd a God, succeeded to her arms.
|
|
A lake there was, with shelving banks around,
|
|
Whose verdant summit fragrant myrtles crown'd.
|
|
Those shades, unknowing of the fates, she sought;
|
|
And to the Naiads flow'ry garlands brought;
|
|
Her smiling babe (a pleasing charge) she prest
|
|
Between her arms, and nourish'd at her breast.
|
|
Not distant far a watry lotos grows;
|
|
The Spring was new, and all the verdant boughs,
|
|
Acorn'd with blossoms, promis'd fruits that vye
|
|
In glowing colours with the Tyrian dye.
|
|
Of these she cropt, to please her infant son,
|
|
And I my self the same rash act had done,
|
|
But, lo! I saw (as near her side I stood)
|
|
The violated blossoms drop with blood;
|
|
Upon the tree I cast a frightful look,
|
|
The trembling tree with sudden horror shook.
|
|
Lotis the nymph (if rural tales be true)
|
|
As from Priapus' lawless lust she flew,
|
|
Forsook her form; and fixing here became
|
|
A flow'ry plant, which still preserves her name.
|
|
This change unknown, astonish'd at the sight,
|
|
My trembling sister strove to urge her flight;
|
|
Yet first the pardon of the Nymphs implor'd,
|
|
And those offended Sylvan pow'rs ador'd:
|
|
But when she backward would have fled, she found
|
|
Her stiff'ning feet were rooted to the ground:
|
|
In vain to free her fasten'd feet she strove,
|
|
And as she struggles only moves above;
|
|
She feels th' incroaching bark around her grow,
|
|
By slow degrees, and cover all below:
|
|
Surpriz'd at this, her trembling hand she heaves
|
|
To rend her hair; her hand is fill'd with leaves;
|
|
Where late was hair, the shooting leaves are seen
|
|
To rise, and shade her with a sudden green.
|
|
The Child Amphisus, to her bosom prest,
|
|
Perceiv'd a colder and a harder breast,
|
|
And found the springs, that n'er 'till then deny'd
|
|
Their milky moisture, on a sudden dry'd.
|
|
I saw, unhappy, what I now relate,
|
|
And stood the helpless witness of thy fate;
|
|
Embrac'd thy boughs, the rising bark delay'd,
|
|
There wish'd to grow, and mingle shade with shade.
|
|
Behold Andraemon, and th' unhappy sire
|
|
Appear, and for their Dryope enquire;
|
|
A springing tree for Dryope they find,
|
|
And print warm kisses on the panting rind;
|
|
Prostrate, with tears their kindred plant bedew,
|
|
And close embrac'd, as to the roots they grew;
|
|
The face was all that now remain'd of thee;
|
|
No more a woman, nor yet quite a tree:
|
|
Thy branches hung with humid pearls appear,
|
|
From ev'ry leaf distills a trickling tear;
|
|
And strait a voice, while yet a voice remains,
|
|
Thus thro' the trembling boughs in sighs complains.
|
|
If to the wretched any faith be giv'n,
|
|
I swear by all th' unpitying Pow'rs of Heav'n,
|
|
No wilful crime this heavy vengeance bred,
|
|
In mutual innocence our lives we led.
|
|
If this be false, let these new greens decay,
|
|
Let sounding axes lop my limbs away,
|
|
And crackling flames on all my honours prey.
|
|
Now from my branching arms this infant bear,
|
|
Let some kind nurse supply a mother's care;
|
|
Yet to his mother let him oft be led,
|
|
Sport in her shades, and in her shades be fed;
|
|
Teach him, when first his infant voice shall frame
|
|
Imperfect words, and lisp his mother's name,
|
|
To hail this tree, and say with weeping eyes,
|
|
Within this plant my hapless parent lies;
|
|
And when in youth he seeks the shady woods,
|
|
Oh, let him fly the chrystal lakes and floods,
|
|
Nor touch the fatal flow'rs; but warn'd by me,
|
|
Believe a Goddess shrin'd in ev'ry tree.
|
|
My sire, my sister, and my spouse farewel!
|
|
If in your breasts or love, or pity, dwell,
|
|
Protect your plant, nor let my branches feel
|
|
The browzing cattle, or the piercing steel.
|
|
Farewel! and since I cannot bend to join
|
|
My lips to yours, advance at least to mine.
|
|
My son, thy mother's parting kiss receive,
|
|
While yet thy mother has a kiss to give.
|
|
I can no more; the creeping rind invades
|
|
My closing lips, and hides my head in shades:
|
|
Remove your hands; the bark shall soon suffice,
|
|
Without their aid, to seal these dying eyes.
|
|
She ceas'd at once to speak, and ceas'd to be;
|
|
And all the nymph was lost within the tree:
|
|
Yet latent life thro' her new branches reign'd,
|
|
And long the plant a human heat retain'd.
|
|
Iolaus restor'd While Iole the fatal change declares,
|
|
to Youth Alcmena's pitying hand oft wip'd her tears.
|
|
Grief too stream'd down her cheeks; soon sorrow
|
|
flies,
|
|
And rising joy the trickling moisture dries,
|
|
Lo Iolaus stands before their eyes.
|
|
A youth he stood; and the soft down began
|
|
O'er his smooth chin to spread, and promise man.
|
|
Hebe submitted to her husband's pray'rs,
|
|
Instill'd new vigour, and restor'd his years.
|
|
The Prophecy of Now from her lips a solemn oath had past,
|
|
Themis That Iolaus this gift alone shou'd taste,
|
|
Had not just Themis thus maturely said
|
|
(Which check'd her vow, and aw'd the blooming
|
|
maid).
|
|
Thebes is embroil'd in war. Capaneus stands
|
|
Invincible, but by the Thund'rer's hands.
|
|
Ambition shall the guilty brothers fire,
|
|
Both rush to mutual wounds, and both expire.
|
|
The reeling Earth shall ope her gloomy womb,
|
|
Where the yet breathing bard shall find his tomb.
|
|
The son shall bath his hands in parents' blood,
|
|
And in one act be both unjust, and good.
|
|
Of home, and sense depriv'd, where-e'er he flies,
|
|
The Furies, and his mother's ghost he spies.
|
|
His wife the fatal bracelet shall implore,
|
|
And Phegeus stain his sword in kindred gore.
|
|
Callirhoe shall then with suppliant pray'r
|
|
Prevail on Jupiter's relenting ear.
|
|
Jove shall with youth her infant sons inspire,
|
|
And bid their bosoms glow with manly fire.
|
|
The Debate of When Themis thus with prescient voice had spoke,
|
|
the Gods Among the Gods a various murmur broke;
|
|
Dissention rose in each immortal breast,
|
|
That one should grant, what was deny'd the rest.
|
|
Aurora for her aged spouse complains,
|
|
And Ceres grieves for Jason's freezing veins;
|
|
Vulcan would Erichthonius' years renew,
|
|
Her future race the care of Venus drew,
|
|
She would Anchises' blooming age restore;
|
|
A diff'rent care employ'd each heav'nly Pow'r:
|
|
Thus various int'rests did their jars encrease,
|
|
'Till Jove arose; he spoke, their tumults cease.
|
|
Is any rev'rence to our presence giv'n,
|
|
Then why this discord 'mong the Pow'rs of Heav'n?
|
|
Who can the settled will of Fate subdue?
|
|
'Twas by the Fates that Iolaus knew
|
|
A second youth. The Fates' determin'd doom
|
|
Shall give Callirhoe's race a youthful bloom.
|
|
Arms, nor ambition can this pow'r obtain;
|
|
Quell your desires; ev'n me the Fates restrain.
|
|
Could I their will controul, no rolling years
|
|
Had Aeacus bent down with silver hairs;
|
|
Then Rhadamanthus still had youth possess'd,
|
|
And Minos with eternal bloom been bless'd.
|
|
Jove's words the synod mov'd; the Pow'rs give o'er,
|
|
And urge in vain unjust complaint no more.
|
|
Since Rhadamanthus' veins now slowly flow'd,
|
|
And Aeacus, and Minos bore the load;
|
|
Minos, who in the flow'r of youth, and fame,
|
|
Made mighty nations tremble at his name,
|
|
Infirm with age, the proud Miletus fears,
|
|
Vain of his birth, and in the strength of years,
|
|
And now regarding all his realms as lost,
|
|
He durst not force him from his native coast.
|
|
But you by choice, Miletus, fled his reign,
|
|
And thy swift vessel plow'd th' Aegean main;
|
|
On Asiatick shores a town you frame,
|
|
Which still is honour'd with the founder's name.
|
|
Here you Cyanee knew, the beauteous maid,
|
|
As on her father's winding banks she stray'd:
|
|
Caunus and Byblis hence their lineage trace,
|
|
The double offspring of your warm embrace.
|
|
The Passion of Let the sad fate of wretched Byblis prove
|
|
of Byblis A dismal warning to unlawful love;
|
|
One birth gave being to the hapless pair,
|
|
But more was Caunus than a sister's care;
|
|
Unknown she lov'd, for yet the gentle fire
|
|
Rose not in flames, nor kindled to desire,
|
|
'Twas thought no sin to wonder at his charms,
|
|
Hang on his neck, and languish in his arms;
|
|
Thus wing'd with joy, fled the soft hours away,
|
|
And all the fatal guilt on harmless Nature lay.
|
|
But love (too soon from piety declin'd)
|
|
Insensibly deprav'd her yielding mind.
|
|
Dress'd she appears, with nicest art adorn'd,
|
|
And ev'ry youth, but her lov'd brother, scorn'd;
|
|
For him alone she labour'd to be fair,
|
|
And curst all charms that might with hers compare.
|
|
'Twas she, and only she, must Caunus please,
|
|
Sick at her heart, yet knew not her disease:
|
|
She call'd him lord, for brother was a name
|
|
Too cold, and dull for her aspiring flame;
|
|
And when he spoke, if sister he reply'd,
|
|
For Byblis change that frozen word, she cry'd.
|
|
Yet waking still she watch'd her strugling breast,
|
|
And love's approaches were in vain address'd,
|
|
'Till gentle sleep an easy conquest made,
|
|
And in her soft embrace the conqueror was laid.
|
|
But oh too soon the pleasing vision fled,
|
|
And left her blushing on the conscious bed:
|
|
Ah me! (she cry'd) how monstrous do I seem?
|
|
Why these wild thoughts? and this incestuous dream?
|
|
Envy herself ('tis true) must own his charms,
|
|
But what is beauty in a sister's arms?
|
|
Oh were I not that despicable she,
|
|
How bless'd, how pleas'd, how happy shou'd I be!
|
|
But unregarded now must bear my pain,
|
|
And but in dreams, my wishes can obtain.
|
|
O sea-born Goddess! with thy wanton boy!
|
|
Was ever such a charming scene of joy?
|
|
Such perfect bliss! such ravishing delight!
|
|
Ne'er hid before in the kind shades of night.
|
|
How pleas'd my heart! in what sweet raptures tost!
|
|
Ev'n life it self in the soft combat lost,
|
|
While breathless he on my heav'd bosom lay,
|
|
And snatch'd the treasures of my soul away.
|
|
If the bare fancy so affects my mind,
|
|
How shou'd I rave if to the substance join'd?
|
|
Oh, gentle Caunus! quit thy hated line,
|
|
Or let thy parents be no longer mine!
|
|
Oh that in common all things were enjoy'd,
|
|
But those alone who have our hopes destroy'd.
|
|
Were I a princess, thou an humble swain,
|
|
The proudest kings shou'd rival thee in vain.
|
|
It cannot be, alas! the dreadful ill
|
|
Is fix'd by Fate, and he's my brother still.
|
|
Hear me, ye Gods! I must have friends in Heav'n,
|
|
For Jove himself was to a sister giv'n:
|
|
But what are their prerogatives above,
|
|
To the short liberties of human love?
|
|
Fantastick thoughts! down, down, forbidden fires,
|
|
Or instant death extinguish my desires.
|
|
Strict virtue, then, with thy malicious leave,
|
|
Without a crime I may a kiss receive:
|
|
But say shou'd I in spight of laws comply,
|
|
Yet cruel Caunus might himself deny,
|
|
No pity take of an afflicted maid
|
|
(For love's sweet game must be by couples play'd).
|
|
Yet why shou'd youth, and charms like mine,
|
|
despair?
|
|
Such fears ne'er startled the Aeolian pair;
|
|
No ties of blood could their full hopes destroy,
|
|
They broke thro' all, for the prevailing joy;
|
|
And who can tell but Caunus too may be
|
|
Rack'd and tormented in his breast for me?
|
|
Like me, to the extreamest anguish drove,
|
|
Like me, just waking from a dream of love?
|
|
But stay! Oh whither wou'd my fury run!
|
|
What arguments I urge to be undone!
|
|
Away fond Byblis, quench these guilty flames;
|
|
Caunus thy love but as brother claims;
|
|
Yet had he first been touch'd with love of me,
|
|
The charming youth cou'd I despairing see?
|
|
Oppress'd with grief, and dying by disdain?
|
|
Ah no! too sure I shou'd have eas'd his pain!
|
|
Since then, if Caunus ask'd me, it were done;
|
|
Asking my self, what dangers can I run?
|
|
But canst thou ask? and see that right betray'd,
|
|
From Pyrrha down to thy whole sex convey'd?
|
|
That self-denying gift we all enjoy,
|
|
Of wishing to be won, yet seeming to be coy.
|
|
Well then, for once, let a fond mistress woo;
|
|
The force of love no custom can subdue;
|
|
This frantick passion he by words shall know,
|
|
Soft as the melting heart from whence they flow.
|
|
The pencil then in her fair hand she held,
|
|
By fear discourag'd, but by love compell'd
|
|
She writes, then blots, writes on, and blots again,
|
|
Likes it as fit, then razes it as vain:
|
|
Shame, and assurance in her face appear,
|
|
And a faint hope just yielding to despair;
|
|
Sister was wrote, and blotted as a word
|
|
Which she, and Caunus too (she hop'd) abhorr'd;
|
|
But now resolv'd to be no more controul'd
|
|
By scrup'lous virtue, thus her grief she told.
|
|
Thy lover (gentle Caunus) wishes thee
|
|
That health, which thou alone canst give to me.
|
|
O charming youth! the gift I ask bestow,
|
|
Ere thou the name of the fond writer know;
|
|
To thee without a name I would be known,
|
|
Since knowing that, my frailty I must own.
|
|
Yet why shou'd I my wretched name conceal?
|
|
When thousand instances my flames reveal:
|
|
Wan looks, and weeping eyes have spoke my pain,
|
|
And sighs discharg'd from my heav'd heart in vain;
|
|
Had I not wish'd my passion might be seen,
|
|
What cou'd such fondness and embraces mean?
|
|
Such kisses too! (Oh heedless lovely boy)
|
|
Without a crime no sister cou'd enjoy:
|
|
Yet (tho' extreamest rage has rack'd my soul,
|
|
And raging fires in my parch'd bosom roul)
|
|
Be witness, Gods! how piously I strove,
|
|
To rid my thoughts of this enchanting love.
|
|
But who cou'd scape so fierce, and sure a dart,
|
|
Aim'd at a tender, and defenceless heart?
|
|
Alas! what maid cou'd suffer, I have born,
|
|
Ere the dire secret from my breast was torn;
|
|
To thee a helpless vanquish'd wretch I come,
|
|
'Tis you alone can save, or give my doom;
|
|
My life, or death this moment you may chuse.
|
|
Yet think, oh think, no hated stranger sues,
|
|
No foe; but one, alas! too near ally'd,
|
|
And wishing still much nearer to be ty'd.
|
|
The forms of decency let age debate,
|
|
And virtue's rules by their cold morals state;
|
|
Their ebbing joys give leisure to enquire,
|
|
And blame those noble flights our youth inspire:
|
|
Where Nature kindly summons let us go,
|
|
Our sprightly years no bounds in love shou'd know,
|
|
Shou'd feel no check of guilt, and fear no ill;
|
|
Lovers, and Gods act all things at their will:
|
|
We gain one blessing from our hated kin,
|
|
Since our paternal freedom hides the sin;
|
|
Uncensur'd in each other's arms we lye,
|
|
Think then how easie to compleat our joy.
|
|
Oh, pardon and oblige a blushing maid,
|
|
Whose rage the pride of her vain sex betray'd;
|
|
Nor let my tomb thus mournfully complain,
|
|
Here Byblis lies, by her lov'd Caunus slain.
|
|
Forc'd here to end, she with a falling tear
|
|
Temper'd the pliant wax, which did the signet bear:
|
|
The curious cypher was impress'd by art,
|
|
But love had stamp'd one deeper in her heart;
|
|
Her page, a youth of confidence, and skill,
|
|
(Secret as night) stood waiting on her will;
|
|
Sighing (she cry'd): Bear this, thou faithful boy,
|
|
To my sweet partner in eternal joy:
|
|
Here a long pause her secret guilt confess'd,
|
|
And when at length she would have spoke the rest,
|
|
Half the dear name lay bury'd in her breast.
|
|
Thus as he listned to her vain command,
|
|
Down fell the letter from her trembling hand.
|
|
The omen shock'd her soul. Yet go, she cry'd;
|
|
Can a request from Byblis be deny'd?
|
|
To the Maeandrian youth this message's born,
|
|
The half-read lines by his fierce rage were torn;
|
|
Hence, hence, he cry'd, thou pandar to her lust,
|
|
Bear hence the triumph of thy impious trust:
|
|
Thy instant death will but divulge her shame,
|
|
Or thy life's blood shou'd quench the guilty flame.
|
|
Frighted, from threatning Caunus he withdrew,
|
|
And with the dreadful news to his lost mistress
|
|
flew.
|
|
The sad repulse so struck the wounded fair,
|
|
Her sense was bury'd in her wild despair;
|
|
Pale was her visage, as the ghastly dead;
|
|
And her scar'd soul from the sweet mansion fled;
|
|
Yet with her life renew'd, her love returns,
|
|
And faintly thus her cruel fate she mourns:
|
|
'Tis just, ye Gods! was my false reason blind?
|
|
To write a secret of this tender kind?
|
|
With female craft I shou'd at first have strove,
|
|
By dubious hints to sound his distant love;
|
|
And try'd those useful, tho' dissembled, arts,
|
|
Which women practise on disdainful hearts:
|
|
I shou'd have watch'd whence the black storm might
|
|
rise;
|
|
Ere I had trusted the unfaithful skies.
|
|
Now on the rouling billows I am tost,
|
|
And with extended sails, on the blind shelves am
|
|
lost.
|
|
Did not indulgent Heav'n my doom foretell,
|
|
When from my hand the fatal letter fell?
|
|
What madness seiz'd my soul? and urg'd me on
|
|
To take the only course to be undone?
|
|
I cou'd my self have told the moving tale
|
|
With such alluring grace as must prevail;
|
|
Then had his eyes beheld my blushing fears,
|
|
My rising sighs, and my descending tears;
|
|
Round his dear neck these arms I then had spread,
|
|
And, if rejected, at his feet been dead:
|
|
If singly these had not his thoughts inclin'd,
|
|
Yet all united would have shock'd his mind.
|
|
Perhaps, my careless page might be in fault,
|
|
And in a luckless hour the fatal message brought;
|
|
Business, and worldly thoughts might fill his
|
|
breast,
|
|
Sometimes ev'n love itself may be an irksome guest:
|
|
He cou'd not else have treated me with scorn,
|
|
For Caunus was not of a tygress born;
|
|
Nor steel, nor adamant has fenc'd his heart;
|
|
Like mine, 'tis naked to the burning dart.
|
|
Away false fears! he must, he shall be mine;
|
|
In death alone I will my claim resign;
|
|
'Tis vain to wish my written crime unknown,
|
|
And for my guilt much vainer to atone.
|
|
Repuls'd and baffled, fiercer still she burns,
|
|
And Caunus with disdain her impious love returns.
|
|
He saw no end of her injurious flame,
|
|
And fled his country to avoid the shame.
|
|
Forsaken Byblis, who had hopes no more;
|
|
Burst out in rage, and her loose robes she tore;
|
|
With her fair hands she smote her tender breast,
|
|
And to the wond'ring world her love confess'd;
|
|
O'er hills and dales, o'er rocks and streams she
|
|
flew,
|
|
But still in vain did her wild lust pursue:
|
|
Wearied at length, on the cold earth she fell,
|
|
And now in tears alone could her sad story tell.
|
|
Relenting Gods in pity fix'd her there,
|
|
And to a fountain turn'd the weeping fair.
|
|
The Fable of The fame of this, perhaps, thro' Crete had flown:
|
|
Iphis and But Crete had newer wonders of her own,
|
|
Ianthe In Iphis chang'd; for, near the Gnossian bounds
|
|
(As loud report the miracle resounds),
|
|
At Phaestus dwelt a man of honest blood,
|
|
But meanly born, and not so rich as good;
|
|
Esteem'd, and lov'd by all the neighbourhood;
|
|
Who to his wife, before the time assign'd
|
|
For child-birth came, thus bluntly spoke his mind.
|
|
If Heav'n, said Lygdus, will vouchsafe to hear,
|
|
I have but two petitions to prefer;
|
|
Short pains for thee, for me a son and heir.
|
|
Girls cost as many throes in bringing forth;
|
|
Beside, when born, the titts are little worth;
|
|
Weak puling things, unable to sustain
|
|
Their share of labour, and their bread to gain.
|
|
If, therefore, thou a creature shalt produce,
|
|
Of so great charges, and so little use
|
|
(Bear witness, Heav'n, with what reluctancy),
|
|
Her hapless innocence I doom to die.
|
|
He said, and common tears the common grief display,
|
|
Of him who bad, and her who must obey.
|
|
Yet Telethusa still persists, to find
|
|
Fit arguments to move a father's mind;
|
|
T' extend his wishes to a larger scope,
|
|
And in one vessel not confine his hope.
|
|
Lygdus continues hard: her time drew near,
|
|
And she her heavy load could scarcely bear;
|
|
When slumbring, in the latter shades of night,
|
|
Before th' approaches of returning light,
|
|
She saw, or thought she saw, before her bed,
|
|
A glorious train, and Isis at their head:
|
|
Her moony horns were on her forehead plac'd,
|
|
And yellow shelves her shining temples grac'd:
|
|
A mitre, for a crown, she wore on high;
|
|
The dog, and dappl'd bull were waiting by;
|
|
Osyris, sought along the banks of Nile;
|
|
The silent God: the sacred crocodile;
|
|
And, last, a long procession moving on,
|
|
With timbrels, that assist the lab'ring moon.
|
|
Her slumbers seem'd dispell'd, and, broad awake,
|
|
She heard a voice, that thus distinctly spake.
|
|
My votary, thy babe from death defend,
|
|
Nor fear to save whate'er the Gods will send.
|
|
Delude with art thy husband's dire decree:
|
|
When danger calls, repose thy trust on me:
|
|
And know thou hast not serv'd a thankless deity.
|
|
This promise made, with night the Goddess fled;
|
|
With joy the woman wakes, and leaves her bed;
|
|
Devoutly lifts her spotless hands on high,
|
|
And prays the Pow'rs their gift to ratifie.
|
|
Now grinding pains proceed to bearing throes,
|
|
'Till its own weight the burden did disclose.
|
|
'Twas of the beauteous kind, and brought to light
|
|
With secrecy, to shun the father's sight.
|
|
Th' indulgent mother did her care employ,
|
|
And past it on her husband for a boy.
|
|
The nurse was conscious of the fact alone;
|
|
The father paid his vows as for a son;
|
|
And call'd him Iphis, by a common name,
|
|
Which either sex with equal right may claim.
|
|
Iphis his grandsire was; the wife was pleas'd,
|
|
Of half the fraud by Fortune's favour eas'd:
|
|
The doubtful name was us'd without deceit,
|
|
And truth was cover'd with a pious cheat.
|
|
The habit show'd a boy, the beauteous face
|
|
With manly fierceness mingled female grace.
|
|
Now thirteen years of age were swiftly run,
|
|
When the fond father thought the time drew on
|
|
Of settling in the world his only son.
|
|
Ianthe was his choice; so wondrous fair,
|
|
Her form alone with Iphis cou'd compare;
|
|
A neighbour's daughter of his own degree,
|
|
And not more bless'd with Fortune's goods than he.
|
|
They soon espous'd; for they with ease were
|
|
join'd,
|
|
Who were before contracted in the mind.
|
|
Their age the same, their inclinations too;
|
|
And bred together, in one school they grew.
|
|
Thus, fatally dispos'd to mutual fires,
|
|
They felt, before they knew, the same desires.
|
|
Equal their flame, unequal was their care;
|
|
One lov'd with hope, one languish'd in despair.
|
|
The maid accus'd the lingring day alone:
|
|
For whom she thought a man, she thought her own.
|
|
But Iphis bends beneath a greater grief;
|
|
As fiercely burns, but hopes for no relief.
|
|
Ev'n her despair adds fuel to her fire;
|
|
A maid with madness does a maid desire.
|
|
And, scarce refraining tears, Alas, said she,
|
|
What issue of my love remains for me!
|
|
How wild a passion works within my breast,
|
|
With what prodigious flames am I possest!
|
|
Could I the care of Providence deserve,
|
|
Heav'n must destroy me, if it would preserve.
|
|
And that's my fate, or sure it would have sent
|
|
Some usual evil for my punishment:
|
|
Not this unkindly curse; to rage, and burn,
|
|
Where Nature shews no prospect of return.
|
|
Nor cows for cows consume with fruitless fire;
|
|
Nor mares, when hot, their fellow-mares desire:
|
|
The father of the fold supplies his ewes;
|
|
The stag through secret woods his hind pursues;
|
|
And birds for mates the males of their own species
|
|
chuse.
|
|
Her females Nature guards from female flame,
|
|
And joins two sexes to preserve the game:
|
|
Wou'd I were nothing, or not what I am!
|
|
Crete, fam'd for monsters, wanted of her store,
|
|
'Till my new love produc'd one monster more.
|
|
The daughter of the sun a bull desir'd,
|
|
And yet ev'n then a male a female fir'd:
|
|
Her passion was extravagantly new,
|
|
But mine is much the madder of the two.
|
|
To things impossible she was not bent,
|
|
But found the means to compass her intent.
|
|
To cheat his eyes she took a different shape;
|
|
Yet still she gain'd a lover, and a leap.
|
|
Shou'd all the wit of all the world conspire,
|
|
Shou'd Daedalus assist my wild desire,
|
|
What art can make me able to enjoy,
|
|
Or what can change Ianthe to a boy?
|
|
Extinguish then thy passion, hopeless maid,
|
|
And recollect thy reason for thy aid.
|
|
Know what thou art, and love as maidens ought,
|
|
And drive these golden wishes from thy thought.
|
|
Thou canst not hope thy fond desires to gain;
|
|
Where hope is wanting, wishes are in vain.
|
|
And yet no guards against our joys conspire;
|
|
No jealous husband hinders our desire;
|
|
My parents are propitious to my wish,
|
|
And she herself consenting to the bliss.
|
|
All things concur to prosper our design;
|
|
All things to prosper any love but mine.
|
|
And yet I never can enjoy the fair;
|
|
'Tis past the pow'r of Heav'n to grant my pray'r.
|
|
Heav'n has been kind, as far as Heav'n can be;
|
|
Our parents with our own desires agree;
|
|
But Nature, stronger than the Gods above,
|
|
Refuses her assistance to my love;
|
|
She sets the bar that causes all my pain;
|
|
One gift refus'd, makes all their bounty vain.
|
|
And now the happy day is just at hand,
|
|
To bind our hearts in Hymen's holy band:
|
|
Our hearts, but not our bodies: thus accurs'd,
|
|
In midst of water I complain of thirst.
|
|
Why com'st thou, Juno, to these barren rites,
|
|
To bless a bed defrauded of delights?
|
|
But why shou'd Hymen lift his torch on high,
|
|
To see two brides in cold embraces lye?
|
|
Thus love-sick Iphis her vain passion mourns;
|
|
With equal ardour fair Ianthe burns,
|
|
Invoking Hymen's name, and Juno's pow'r,
|
|
To speed the work, and haste the happy hour.
|
|
She hopes, while Telethusa fears the day,
|
|
And strives to interpose some new delay:
|
|
Now feigns a sickness, now is in a fright
|
|
For this bad omen, or that boding sight.
|
|
But having done whate'er she could devise,
|
|
And empty'd all her magazine of lies,
|
|
The time approach'd; the next ensuing day
|
|
The fatal secret must to light betray.
|
|
Then Telethusa had recourse to pray'r,
|
|
She, and her daughter with dishevel'd hair;
|
|
Trembling with fear, great Isis they ador'd,
|
|
Embrac'd her altar, and her aid implor'd.
|
|
Fair queen, who dost on fruitful Egypt smile,
|
|
Who sway'st the sceptre of the Pharian isle,
|
|
And sev'n-fold falls of disemboguing Nile,
|
|
Relieve, in this our last distress, she said,
|
|
A suppliant mother, and a mournful maid.
|
|
Thou, Goddess, thou wert present to my sight;
|
|
Reveal'd I saw thee by thy own fair light:
|
|
I saw thee in my dream, as now I see,
|
|
With all thy marks of awful majesty:
|
|
The glorious train that compass'd thee around;
|
|
And heard the hollow timbrels holy sound.
|
|
Thy words I noted, which I still retain;
|
|
Let not thy sacred oracles be vain.
|
|
That Iphis lives, that I myself am free
|
|
From shame, and punishment, I owe to thee.
|
|
On thy protection all our hopes depend.
|
|
Thy counsel sav'd us, let thy pow'r defend.
|
|
Her tears pursu'd her words; and while she spoke,
|
|
The Goddess nodded, and her altar shook:
|
|
The temple doors, as with a blast of wind,
|
|
Were heard to clap; the lunar horns that bind
|
|
The brows of Isis cast a blaze around;
|
|
The trembling timbrel made a murm'ring sound.
|
|
Some hopes these happy omens did impart;
|
|
Forth went the mother with a beating heart:
|
|
Not much in fear, nor fully satisfy'd;
|
|
But Iphis follow'd with a larger stride:
|
|
The whiteness of her skin forsook her face;
|
|
Her looks embolden'd with an awful grace;
|
|
Her features, and her strength together grew,
|
|
And her long hair to curling locks withdrew.
|
|
Her sparkling eyes with manly vigour shone,
|
|
Big was her voice, audacious was her tone.
|
|
The latent parts, at length reveal'd, began
|
|
To shoot, and spread, and burnish into man.
|
|
The maid becomes a youth; no more delay
|
|
Your vows, but look, and confidently pay.
|
|
Their gifts the parents to the temple bear:
|
|
The votive tables this inscription wear;
|
|
Iphis the man, has to the Goddess paid
|
|
The vows, that Iphis offer'd when a maid.
|
|
Now when the star of day had shewn his face,
|
|
Venus and Juno with their presence grace
|
|
The nuptial rites, and Hymen from above
|
|
Descending to compleat their happy love;
|
|
The Gods of marriage lend their mutual aid;
|
|
And the warm youth enjoys the lovely maid.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Ninth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE TENTH
|
|
|
|
THENCE, in his saffron robe, for distant Thrace,
|
|
Hymen departs, thro' air's unmeasur'd space;
|
|
By Orpheus call'd, the nuptial Pow'r attends,
|
|
But with ill-omen'd augury descends;
|
|
Nor chearful look'd the God, nor prosp'rous spoke,
|
|
Nor blaz'd his torch, but wept in hissing smoke.
|
|
In vain they whirl it round, in vain they shake,
|
|
No rapid motion can its flames awake.
|
|
The Story of With dread these inauspicious signs were view'd,
|
|
Orpheus And soon a more disastrous end ensu'd;
|
|
and Eurydice For as the bride, amid the Naiad train,
|
|
Ran joyful, sporting o'er the flow'ry plain,
|
|
A venom'd viper bit her as she pass'd;
|
|
Instant she fell, and sudden breath'd her last.
|
|
When long his loss the Thracian had deplor'd,
|
|
Not by superior Pow'rs to be restor'd;
|
|
Inflam'd by love, and urg'd by deep despair,
|
|
He leaves the realms of light, and upper air;
|
|
Daring to tread the dark Tenarian road,
|
|
And tempt the shades in their obscure abode;
|
|
Thro' gliding spectres of th' interr'd to go,
|
|
And phantom people of the world below:
|
|
Persephone he seeks, and him who reigns
|
|
O'er ghosts, and Hell's uncomfortable plains.
|
|
Arriv'd, he, tuning to his voice his strings,
|
|
Thus to the king and queen of shadows sings.
|
|
Ye Pow'rs, who under Earth your realms extend,
|
|
To whom all mortals must one day descend;
|
|
If here 'tis granted sacred truth to tell:
|
|
I come not curious to explore your Hell;
|
|
Nor come to boast (by vain ambition fir'd)
|
|
How Cerberus at my approach retir'd.
|
|
My wife alone I seek; for her lov'd sake
|
|
These terrors I support, this journey take.
|
|
She, luckless wandring, or by fate mis-led,
|
|
Chanc'd on a lurking viper's crest to tread;
|
|
The vengeful beast, enflam'd with fury, starts,
|
|
And thro' her heel his deathful venom darts.
|
|
Thus was she snatch'd untimely to her tomb;
|
|
Her growing years cut short, and springing bloom.
|
|
Long I my loss endeavour'd to sustain,
|
|
And strongly strove, but strove, alas, in vain:
|
|
At length I yielded, won by mighty love;
|
|
Well known is that omnipotence above!
|
|
But here, I doubt, his unfelt influence fails;
|
|
And yet a hope within my heart prevails.
|
|
That here, ev'n here, he has been known of old;
|
|
At least if truth be by tradition told;
|
|
If fame of former rapes belief may find,
|
|
You both by love, and love alone, were join'd.
|
|
Now, by the horrors which these realms surround;
|
|
By the vast chaos of these depths profound;
|
|
By the sad silence which eternal reigns
|
|
O'er all the waste of these wide-stretching plains;
|
|
Let me again Eurydice receive,
|
|
Let Fate her quick-spun thread of life re-weave.
|
|
All our possessions are but loans from you,
|
|
And soon, or late, you must be paid your due;
|
|
Hither we haste to human-kind's last seat,
|
|
Your endless empire, and our sure retreat.
|
|
She too, when ripen'd years she shall attain,
|
|
Must, of avoidless right, be yours again:
|
|
I but the transient use of that require,
|
|
Which soon, too soon, I must resign entire.
|
|
But if the destinies refuse my vow,
|
|
And no remission of her doom allow;
|
|
Know, I'm determin'd to return no more;
|
|
So both retain, or both to life restore.
|
|
Thus, while the bard melodiously complains,
|
|
And to his lyre accords his vocal strains,
|
|
The very bloodless shades attention keep,
|
|
And silent, seem compassionate to weep;
|
|
Ev'n Tantalus his flood unthirsty views,
|
|
Nor flies the stream, nor he the stream pursues;
|
|
Ixion's wond'ring wheel its whirl suspends,
|
|
And the voracious vulture, charm'd, attends;
|
|
No more the Belides their toil bemoan,
|
|
And Sisiphus reclin'd, sits list'ning on his stone.
|
|
Then first ('tis said) by sacred verse subdu'd,
|
|
The Furies felt their cheeks with tears bedew'd:
|
|
Nor could the rigid king, or queen of Hell,
|
|
Th' impulse of pity in their hearts repell.
|
|
Now, from a troop of shades that last arriv'd,
|
|
Eurydice was call'd, and stood reviv'd:
|
|
Slow she advanc'd, and halting seem to feel
|
|
The fatal wound, yet painful in her heel.
|
|
Thus he obtains the suit so much desir'd,
|
|
On strict observance of the terms requir'd:
|
|
For if, before he reach the realms of air,
|
|
He backward cast his eyes to view the fair,
|
|
The forfeit grant, that instant, void is made,
|
|
And she for ever left a lifeless shade.
|
|
Now thro' the noiseless throng their way they
|
|
bend,
|
|
And both with pain the rugged road ascend;
|
|
Dark was the path, and difficult, and steep,
|
|
And thick with vapours from the smoaky deep.
|
|
They well-nigh now had pass'd the bounds of night,
|
|
And just approach'd the margin of the light,
|
|
When he, mistrusting lest her steps might stray,
|
|
And gladsome of the glympse of dawning day,
|
|
His longing eyes, impatient, backward cast
|
|
To catch a lover's look, but look'd his last;
|
|
For, instant dying, she again descends,
|
|
While he to empty air his arms extends.
|
|
Again she dy'd, nor yet her lord reprov'd;
|
|
What could she say, but that too well he lov'd?
|
|
One last farewell she spoke, which scarce he heard;
|
|
So soon she drop'd, so sudden disappear'd.
|
|
All stunn'd he stood, when thus his wife he
|
|
view'd
|
|
By second Fate, and double death subdu'd:
|
|
Not more amazement by that wretch was shown,
|
|
Whom Cerberus beholding, turn'd to stone;
|
|
Nor Olenus cou'd more astonish'd look,
|
|
When on himself Lethaea's fault he took,
|
|
His beauteous wife, who too secure had dar'd
|
|
Her face to vye with Goddesses compar'd:
|
|
Once join'd by love, they stand united still,
|
|
Turn'd to contiguous rocks on Ida's hill.
|
|
Now to repass the Styx in vain he tries,
|
|
Charon averse, his pressing suit denies.
|
|
Sev'n days entire, along th' infernal shores,
|
|
Disconsolate, the bard Eurydice deplores;
|
|
Defil'd with filth his robe, with tears his cheeks,
|
|
No sustenance but grief, and cares, he seeks:
|
|
Of rigid Fate incessant he complains,
|
|
And Hell's inexorable Gods arraigns.
|
|
This ended, to high Rhodope he hastes,
|
|
And Haemus' mountain, bleak with northern blasts.
|
|
And now his yearly race the circling sun
|
|
Had thrice compleat thro' wat'ry Pisces run,
|
|
Since Orpheus fled the face of womankind,
|
|
And all soft union with the sex declin'd.
|
|
Whether his ill success this change had bred,
|
|
Or binding vows made to his former bed;
|
|
Whate'er the cause, in vain the nymphs contest,
|
|
With rival eyes to warm his frozen breast:
|
|
For ev'ry nymph with love his lays inspir'd,
|
|
But ev'ry nymph repuls'd, with grief retir'd.
|
|
A hill there was, and on that hill a mead,
|
|
With verdure thick, but destitute of shade.
|
|
Where, now, the Muse's son no sooner sings,
|
|
No sooner strikes his sweet resounding strings.
|
|
But distant groves the flying sounds receive,
|
|
And list'ning trees their rooted stations leave;
|
|
Themselves transplanting, all around they grow,
|
|
And various shades their various kinds bestow.
|
|
Here, tall Chaonian oaks their branches spread,
|
|
While weeping poplars there erect their head.
|
|
The foodful Esculus here shoots his leaves,
|
|
That turf soft lime-tree, this, fat beach receives;
|
|
Here, brittle hazels, lawrels here advance,
|
|
And there tough ash to form the heroe's lance;
|
|
Here silver firs with knotless trunks ascend,
|
|
There, scarlet oaks beneath their acorns bend.
|
|
That spot admits the hospitable plane,
|
|
On this, the maple grows with clouded grain;
|
|
Here, watry willows are with Lotus seen;
|
|
There, tamarisk, and box for ever green.
|
|
With double hue here mirtles grace the ground,
|
|
And laurestines, with purple berries crown'd.
|
|
With pliant feet, now, ivies this way wind,
|
|
Vines yonder rise, and elms with vines entwin'd.
|
|
Wild Ornus now, the pitch-tree next takes root,
|
|
And Arbutus adorn'd with blushing fruit.
|
|
Then easy-bending palms, the victor's prize,
|
|
And pines erect with bristly tops arise.
|
|
For Rhea grateful still the pine remains,
|
|
For Atys still some favour she retains;
|
|
He once in human shape her breast had warm'd,
|
|
And now is cherish'd, to a tree transform'd.
|
|
The Fable of Amid the throng of this promiscuous wood,
|
|
Cyparissus With pointed top, the taper cypress stood;
|
|
A tree, which once a youth, and heav'nly fair,
|
|
Was of that deity the darling care,
|
|
Whose hand adapts, with equal skill, the strings
|
|
To bows with which he kills, and harps to which he
|
|
sings.
|
|
For heretofore, a mighty stag was bred,
|
|
Which on the fertile fields of Caea fed;
|
|
In shape and size he all his kind excell'd,
|
|
And to Carthaean nymphs was sacred held.
|
|
His beamy head, with branches high display'd,
|
|
Afforded to itself an ample shade;
|
|
His horns were gilt, and his smooth neck was grac'd
|
|
With silver collars thick with gems enchas'd:
|
|
A silver boss upon his forehead hung,
|
|
And brazen pendants in his ear-rings rung.
|
|
Frequenting houses, he familiar grew,
|
|
And learnt by custom, Nature to subdue;
|
|
'Till by degrees, of fear, and wildness, broke,
|
|
Ev'n stranger hands his proffer'd neck might
|
|
stroak.
|
|
Much was the beast by Caea's youth caress'd,
|
|
But thou, sweet Cyparissus, lov'dst him best:
|
|
By thee, to pastures fresh, he oft was led,
|
|
By thee oft water'd at the fountain's head:
|
|
His horns with garlands, now, by thee were ty'd,
|
|
And, now, thou on his back wou'dst wanton ride;
|
|
Now here, now there wou'dst bound along the plains,
|
|
Ruling his tender mouth with purple reins.
|
|
'Twas when the summer sun, at noon of day,
|
|
Thro' glowing Cancer shot his burning ray,
|
|
'Twas then, the fav'rite stag, in cool retreat,
|
|
Had sought a shelter from the scorching heat;
|
|
Along the grass his weary limbs he laid,
|
|
Inhaling freshness from the breezy shade:
|
|
When Cyparissus with his pointed dart,
|
|
Unknowing, pierc'd him to the panting heart.
|
|
But when the youth, surpriz'd, his error found,
|
|
And saw him dying of the cruel wound,
|
|
Himself he would have slain thro' desp'rate grief:
|
|
What said not Phoebus, that might yield relief!
|
|
To cease his mourning, he the boy desir'd,
|
|
Or mourn no more than such a loss requir'd.
|
|
But he, incessant griev'd: at length address'd
|
|
To the superior Pow'rs a last request;
|
|
Praying, in expiation of his crime,
|
|
Thenceforth to mourn to all succeeding time.
|
|
And now, of blood exhausted he appears,
|
|
Drain'd by a torrent of continual tears;
|
|
The fleshy colour in his body fades,
|
|
And a green tincture all his limbs invades;
|
|
From his fair head, where curling locks late hung,
|
|
A horrid bush with bristled branches sprung,
|
|
Which stiffning by degrees, its stem extends,
|
|
'Till to the starry skies the spire ascends.
|
|
Apollo sad look'd on, and sighing, cry'd,
|
|
Then, be for ever, what thy pray'r imply'd:
|
|
Bemoan'd by me, in others grief excite;
|
|
And still preside at ev'ry fun'ral rite.
|
|
Thus the sweet artist in a wondrous shade
|
|
Of verdant trees, which harmony had made,
|
|
Encircled sate, with his own triumphs crown'd,
|
|
Of listning birds, and savages around.
|
|
Again the trembling strings he dext'rous tries,
|
|
Again from discord makes soft musick rise.
|
|
Then tunes his voice: O Muse, from whom I sprung,
|
|
Jove be my theme, and thou inspire my song.
|
|
To Jove my grateful voice I oft have rais'd,
|
|
Oft his almighty pow'r with pleasure prais'd.
|
|
I sung the giants in a solemn strain,
|
|
Blasted, and thunder-struck on Phlegra's plain.
|
|
Now be my lyre in softer accents mov'd,
|
|
To sing of blooming boys by Gods belov'd;
|
|
And to relate what virgins, void of shame,
|
|
Have suffer'd vengeance for a lawless flame.
|
|
The King of Gods once felt the burning joy,
|
|
And sigh'd for lovely Ganimede of Troy:
|
|
Long was he puzzled to assume a shape
|
|
Most fit, and expeditious for the rape;
|
|
A bird's was proper, yet he scorns to wear
|
|
Any but that which might his thunder bear.
|
|
Down with his masquerading wings he flies,
|
|
And bears the little Trojan to the skies;
|
|
Where now, in robes of heav'nly purple drest,
|
|
He serves the nectar at th' Almighty's feast,
|
|
To slighted Juno an unwelcome guest.
|
|
Hyacinthus Phoebus for thee too, Hyacinth, design'd
|
|
transform'd A place among the Gods, had Fate been kind:
|
|
into a Flower Yet this he gave; as oft as wintry rains
|
|
Are past, and vernal breezes sooth the plains,
|
|
From the green turf a purple flow'r you rise,
|
|
And with your fragrant breath perfume the skies.
|
|
You when alive were Phoebus' darling boy;
|
|
In you he plac'd his Heav'n, and fix'd his joy:
|
|
Their God the Delphic priests consult in vain;
|
|
Eurotas now he loves, and Sparta's plain:
|
|
His hands the use of bow and harp forget,
|
|
And hold the dogs, or bear the corded net;
|
|
O'er hanging cliffs swift he pursues the game;
|
|
Each hour his pleasure, each augments his flame.
|
|
The mid-day sun now shone with equal light
|
|
Between the past, and the succeeding night;
|
|
They strip, then, smooth'd with suppling oyl, essay
|
|
To pitch the rounded quoit, their wonted play:
|
|
A well-pois'd disk first hasty Phoebus threw,
|
|
It cleft the air, and whistled as it flew;
|
|
It reach'd the mark, a most surprizing length;
|
|
Which spoke an equal share of art, and strength.
|
|
Scarce was it fall'n, when with too eager hand
|
|
Young Hyacinth ran to snatch it from the sand;
|
|
But the curst orb, which met a stony soil,
|
|
Flew in his face with violent recoil.
|
|
Both faint, both pale, and breathless now appear,
|
|
The boy with pain, the am'rous God with fear.
|
|
He ran, and rais'd him bleeding from the ground,
|
|
Chafes his cold limbs, and wipes the fatal wound:
|
|
Then herbs of noblest juice in vain applies;
|
|
The wound is mortal, and his skill defies.
|
|
As in a water'd garden's blooming walk,
|
|
When some rude hand has bruis'd its tender stalk,
|
|
A fading lilly droops its languid head,
|
|
And bends to earth, its life, and beauty fled:
|
|
So Hyacinth, with head reclin'd, decays,
|
|
And, sickning, now no more his charms displays.
|
|
O thou art gone, my boy, Apollo cry'd,
|
|
Defrauded of thy youth in all its pride!
|
|
Thou, once my joy, art all my sorrow now;
|
|
And to my guilty hand my grief I owe.
|
|
Yet from my self I might the fault remove,
|
|
Unless to sport, and play, a fault should prove,
|
|
Unless it too were call'd a fault to love.
|
|
Oh cou'd I for thee, or but with thee, dye!
|
|
But cruel Fates to me that pow'r deny.
|
|
Yet on my tongue thou shalt for ever dwell;
|
|
Thy name my lyre shall sound, my verse shall tell;
|
|
And to a flow'r transform'd, unheard-of yet,
|
|
Stamp'd on thy leaves my cries thou shalt repeat.
|
|
The time shall come, prophetick I foreknow,
|
|
When, joyn'd to thee, a mighty chief shall grow,
|
|
And with my plaints his name thy leaf shall show.
|
|
While Phoebus thus the laws of Fate reveal'd,
|
|
Behold, the blood which stain'd the verdant field,
|
|
Is blood no longer; but a flow'r full blown,
|
|
Far brighter than the Tyrian scarlet shone.
|
|
A lilly's form it took; its purple hue
|
|
Was all that made a diff'rence to the view,
|
|
Nor stop'd he here; the God upon its leaves
|
|
The sad expression of his sorrow weaves;
|
|
And to this hour the mournful purple wears
|
|
Ai, Ai, inscrib'd in funeral characters.
|
|
Nor are the Spartans, who so much are fam'd
|
|
For virtue, of their Hyacinth asham'd;
|
|
But still with pompous woe, and solemn state,
|
|
The Hyacinthian feasts they yearly celebrate
|
|
The Enquire of Amathus, whose wealthy ground
|
|
Transformations With veins of every metal does abound,
|
|
of the Cerastae If she to her Propoetides wou'd show,
|
|
and Propoetides The honour Sparta does to him allow?
|
|
Nor more, she'd say, such wretches wou'd we grace,
|
|
Than those whose crooked horns deform'd their face,
|
|
From thence Cerastae call'd, an impious race:
|
|
Before whose gates a rev'rend altar stood,
|
|
To Jove inscrib'd, the hospitable God:
|
|
This had some stranger seen with gore besmear'd,
|
|
The blood of lambs, and bulls it had appear'd:
|
|
Their slaughter'd guests it was; nor flock nor
|
|
herd.
|
|
Venus these barb'rous sacrifices view'd
|
|
With just abhorrence, and with wrath pursu'd:
|
|
At first, to punish such nefarious crimes,
|
|
Their towns she meant to leave, her once-lov'd
|
|
climes:
|
|
But why, said she, for their offence shou'd I
|
|
My dear delightful plains, and cities fly?
|
|
No, let the impious people, who have sinn'd,
|
|
A punishment in death, or exile, find:
|
|
If death, or exile too severe be thought,
|
|
Let them in some vile shape bemoan their fault.
|
|
While next her mind a proper form employs,
|
|
Admonish'd by their horns, she fix'd her choice.
|
|
Their former crest remains upon their heads,
|
|
And their strong limbs an ox's shape invades.
|
|
The blasphemous Propoetides deny'd
|
|
Worship of Venus, and her pow'r defy'd:
|
|
But soon that pow'r they felt, the first that sold
|
|
Their lewd embraces to the world for gold.
|
|
Unknowing how to blush, and shameless grown,
|
|
A small transition changes them to stone.
|
|
The Story of Pygmalion loathing their lascivious life,
|
|
Pygmalion and Abhorr'd all womankind, but most a wife:
|
|
the Statue So single chose to live, and shunn'd to wed,
|
|
Well pleas'd to want a consort of his bed.
|
|
Yet fearing idleness, the nurse of ill,
|
|
In sculpture exercis'd his happy skill;
|
|
And carv'd in iv'ry such a maid, so fair,
|
|
As Nature could not with his art compare,
|
|
Were she to work; but in her own defence
|
|
Must take her pattern here, and copy hence.
|
|
Pleas'd with his idol, he commends, admires,
|
|
Adores; and last, the thing ador'd, desires.
|
|
A very virgin in her face was seen,
|
|
And had she mov'd, a living maid had been:
|
|
One wou'd have thought she cou'd have stirr'd, but
|
|
strove
|
|
With modesty, and was asham'd to move.
|
|
Art hid with art, so well perform'd the cheat,
|
|
It caught the carver with his own deceit:
|
|
He knows 'tis madness, yet he must adore,
|
|
And still the more he knows it, loves the more:
|
|
The flesh, or what so seems, he touches oft,
|
|
Which feels so smooth, that he believes it soft.
|
|
Fir'd with this thought, at once he strain'd the
|
|
breast,
|
|
And on the lips a burning kiss impress'd.
|
|
'Tis true, the harden'd breast resists the gripe,
|
|
And the cold lips return a kiss unripe:
|
|
But when, retiring back, he look'd again,
|
|
To think it iv'ry, was a thought too mean:
|
|
So wou'd believe she kiss'd, and courting more,
|
|
Again embrac'd her naked body o'er;
|
|
And straining hard the statue, was afraid
|
|
His hands had made a dint, and hurt his maid:
|
|
Explor'd her limb by limb, and fear'd to find
|
|
So rude a gripe had left a livid mark behind:
|
|
With flatt'ry now he seeks her mind to move,
|
|
And now with gifts (the pow'rful bribes of love),
|
|
He furnishes her closet first; and fills
|
|
The crowded shelves with rarities of shells;
|
|
Adds orient pearls, which from the conchs he drew,
|
|
And all the sparkling stones of various hue:
|
|
And parrots, imitating human tongue,
|
|
And singing-birds in silver cages hung:
|
|
And ev'ry fragrant flow'r, and od'rous green,
|
|
Were sorted well, with lumps of amber laid between:
|
|
Rich fashionable robes her person deck,
|
|
Pendants her ears, and pearls adorn her neck:
|
|
Her taper'd fingers too with rings are grac'd,
|
|
And an embroider'd zone surrounds her slender
|
|
waste.
|
|
Thus like a queen array'd, so richly dress'd,
|
|
Beauteous she shew'd, but naked shew'd the best.
|
|
Then, from the floor, he rais'd a royal bed,
|
|
With cov'rings of Sydonian purple spread:
|
|
The solemn rites perform'd, he calls her bride,
|
|
With blandishments invites her to his side;
|
|
And as she were with vital sense possess'd,
|
|
Her head did on a plumy pillow rest.
|
|
The feast of Venus came, a solemn day,
|
|
To which the Cypriots due devotion pay;
|
|
With gilded horns the milk-white heifers led,
|
|
Slaughter'd before the sacred altars, bled.
|
|
Pygmalion off'ring, first approach'd the shrine,
|
|
And then with pray'rs implor'd the Pow'rs divine:
|
|
Almighty Gods, if all we mortals want,
|
|
If all we can require, be yours to grant;
|
|
Make this fair statue mine, he wou'd have said,
|
|
But chang'd his words for shame; and only pray'd,
|
|
Give me the likeness of my iv'ry maid.
|
|
The golden Goddess, present at the pray'r,
|
|
Well knew he meant th' inanimated fair,
|
|
And gave the sign of granting his desire;
|
|
For thrice in chearful flames ascends the fire.
|
|
The youth, returning to his mistress, hies,
|
|
And impudent in hope, with ardent eyes,
|
|
And beating breast, by the dear statue lies.
|
|
He kisses her white lips, renews the bliss,
|
|
And looks, and thinks they redden at the kiss;
|
|
He thought them warm before: nor longer stays,
|
|
But next his hand on her hard bosom lays:
|
|
Hard as it was, beginning to relent,
|
|
It seem'd, the breast beneath his fingers bent;
|
|
He felt again, his fingers made a print;
|
|
'Twas flesh, but flesh so firm, it rose against the
|
|
dint:
|
|
The pleasing task he fails not to renew;
|
|
Soft, and more soft at ev'ry touch it grew;
|
|
Like pliant wax, when chasing hands reduce
|
|
The former mass to form, and frame for use.
|
|
He would believe, but yet is still in pain,
|
|
And tries his argument of sense again,
|
|
Presses the pulse, and feels the leaping vein.
|
|
Convinc'd, o'erjoy'd, his studied thanks, and
|
|
praise,
|
|
To her, who made the miracle, he pays:
|
|
Then lips to lips he join'd; now freed from fear,
|
|
He found the savour of the kiss sincere:
|
|
At this the waken'd image op'd her eyes,
|
|
And view'd at once the light, and lover with
|
|
surprize.
|
|
The Goddess, present at the match she made,
|
|
So bless'd the bed, such fruitfulness convey'd,
|
|
That ere ten months had sharpen'd either horn,
|
|
To crown their bliss, a lovely boy was born;
|
|
Paphos his name, who grown to manhood, wall'd
|
|
The city Paphos, from the founder call'd.
|
|
The Story of Nor him alone produc'd the fruitful queen;
|
|
of Cinyras and But Cinyras, who like his sire had been
|
|
Myrrha A happy prince, had he not been a sire.
|
|
Daughters, and fathers, from my song retire;
|
|
I sing of horror; and could I prevail,
|
|
You shou'd not hear, or not believe my tale.
|
|
Yet if the pleasure of my song be such,
|
|
That you will hear, and credit me too much,
|
|
Attentive listen to the last event,
|
|
And, with the sin, believe the punishment:
|
|
Since Nature cou'd behold so dire a crime,
|
|
I gratulate at least my native clime,
|
|
That such a land, which such a monster bore,
|
|
So far is distant from our Thracian shore.
|
|
Let Araby extol her happy coast,
|
|
Her cinamon, and sweet Amomum boast,
|
|
Her fragrant flow'rs, her trees with precious
|
|
tears,
|
|
Her second harvests, and her double years;
|
|
How can the land be call'd so bless'd, that Myrrha
|
|
bears?
|
|
Nor all her od'rous tears can cleanse her crime;
|
|
Her Plant alone deforms the happy clime:
|
|
Cupid denies to have inflam'd thy heart,
|
|
Disowns thy love, and vindicates his dart:
|
|
Some Fury gave thee those infernal pains,
|
|
And shot her venom'd vipers in thy veins.
|
|
To hate thy sire, had merited a curse;
|
|
But such an impious love deserv'd a worse.
|
|
The neighb'ring monarchs, by thy beauty led,
|
|
Contend in crowds, ambitious of thy bed:
|
|
The world is at thy choice; except but one,
|
|
Except but him, thou canst not chuse, alone.
|
|
She knew it too, the miserable maid,
|
|
Ere impious love her better thoughts betray'd,
|
|
And thus within her secret soul she said:
|
|
Ah Myrrha! whither wou'd thy wishes tend?
|
|
Ye Gods, ye sacred laws, my soul defend
|
|
From such a crime as all mankind detest,
|
|
And never lodg'd before in human breast!
|
|
But is it sin? Or makes my mind alone
|
|
Th' imagin'd sin? For Nature makes it none.
|
|
What tyrant then these envious laws began,
|
|
Made not for any other beast, but Man!
|
|
The father-bull his daughter may bestride,
|
|
The horse may make his mother-mare a bride;
|
|
What piety forbids the lusty ram,
|
|
Or more salacious goat, to rut their dam?
|
|
The hen is free to wed the chick she bore,
|
|
And make a husband, whom she hatch'd before.
|
|
All creatures else are of a happier kind,
|
|
Whom nor ill-natur'd laws from pleasure bind,
|
|
Nor thoughts of sin disturb their peace of mind.
|
|
But Man a slave of his own making lives;
|
|
The fool denies himself what Nature gives:
|
|
Too-busie senates, with an over-care,
|
|
To make us better than our kind can bear,
|
|
Have dash'd a spice of envy in the laws,
|
|
And straining up too high, have spoil'd the cause.
|
|
Yet some wise nations break their cruel chains,
|
|
And own no laws, but those which love ordains;
|
|
Where happy daughters with their sires are join'd,
|
|
And piety is doubly paid in kind.
|
|
O that I had been born in such a clime,
|
|
Not here, where 'tis the country makes the crime!
|
|
But whither wou'd my impious fancy stray?
|
|
Hence hopes, and ye forbidden thoughts away!
|
|
His worth deserves to kindle my desires,
|
|
But with the love, that daughters bear to sires.
|
|
Then had not Cinyras my father been,
|
|
What hinder'd Myrrha's hopes to be his queen?
|
|
But the perverseness of my fate is such,
|
|
That he's not mine, because he's mine too much:
|
|
Our kindred-blood debars a better tie;
|
|
He might be nearer, were he not so nigh.
|
|
Eyes, and their objects, never must unite;
|
|
Some distance is requir'd to help the sight:
|
|
Fain wou'd I travel to some foreign shore,
|
|
Never to see my native country more,
|
|
So might I to my self my self restore;
|
|
So might my mind these impious thoughts remove,
|
|
And ceasing to behold, might cease to love.
|
|
But stay I must, to feed my famish'd sight,
|
|
To talk, to kiss, and more, if more I might:
|
|
More, impious maid! What more canst thou design?
|
|
To make a monstrous mixture in thy line,
|
|
And break all statutes human and divine!
|
|
Can'st thou be call'd (to save thy wretched life)
|
|
Thy mother's rival, and thy father's wife?
|
|
Confound so many sacred names in one,
|
|
Thy brother's mother! Sister to thy son!
|
|
And fear'st thou not to see th' infernal bands,
|
|
Their heads with snakes; with torches arm'd their
|
|
hands
|
|
Full at thy face th' avenging brands to bear,
|
|
And shake the serpents from their hissing hair;
|
|
But thou in time th' increasing ill controul,
|
|
Nor first debauch the body by the soul;
|
|
Secure the sacred quiet of thy mind,
|
|
And keep the sanctions Nature has design'd.
|
|
Suppose I shou'd attempt, th' attempt were vain,
|
|
No thoughts like mine, his sinless soul profane;
|
|
Observant of the right: and o that he
|
|
Cou'd cure my madness, or be mad like me!
|
|
Thus she: but Cinyras, who daily sees
|
|
A crowd of noble suitors at his knees,
|
|
Among so many, knew not whom to chuse,
|
|
Irresolute to grant, or to refuse.
|
|
But having told their names, enquir'd of her
|
|
Who pleas'd her best, and whom she would prefer.
|
|
The blushing maid stood silent with surprize,
|
|
And on her father fix'd her ardent eyes,
|
|
And looking sigh'd, and as she sigh'd, began
|
|
Round tears to shed, that scalded as they ran.
|
|
The tender sire, who saw her blush, and cry,
|
|
Ascrib'd it all to maiden modesty,
|
|
And dry'd the falling drops, and yet more kind,
|
|
He stroak'd her cheeks, and holy kisses join'd.
|
|
She felt a secret venom fire her blood,
|
|
And found more pleasure, than a daughter shou'd;
|
|
And, ask'd again what lover of the crew
|
|
She lik'd the best, she answer'd, One like you.
|
|
Mistaking what she meant, her pious will
|
|
He prais'd, and bid her so continue still:
|
|
The word of pious heard, she blush'd with shame
|
|
Of secret guilt, and cou'd not bear the name.
|
|
'Twas now the mid of night, when slumbers close
|
|
Our eyes, and sooth our cares with soft repose;
|
|
But no repose cou'd wretched Myrrha find,
|
|
Her body rouling, as she roul'd her mind:
|
|
Mad with desire, she ruminates her sin,
|
|
And wishes all her wishes o'er again:
|
|
Now she despairs, and now resolves to try;
|
|
Wou'd not, and wou'd again, she knows not why;
|
|
Stops, and returns; makes, and retracts the vow;
|
|
Fain wou'd begin, but understands not how.
|
|
As when a pine is hew'd upon the plains,
|
|
And the last mortal stroke alone remains,
|
|
Lab'ring in pangs of death, and threatning all,
|
|
This way, and that she nods, consid'ring where to
|
|
fall:
|
|
So Myrrha's mind, impell'd on either side,
|
|
Takes ev'ry bent, but cannot long abide;
|
|
Irresolute on which she shou'd relie,
|
|
At last, unfix'd in all, is only fix'd to die.
|
|
On that sad thought she rests, resolv'd on death,
|
|
She rises, and prepares to choak her breath:
|
|
Then while about the beam her zone she ties,
|
|
Dear Cinyras farewell, she softly cries;
|
|
For thee I die, and only wish to be
|
|
Not hated, when thou know'st die I for thee:
|
|
Pardon the crime, in pity to the cause:
|
|
This said, about her neck the noose she draws.
|
|
The nurse, who lay without, her faithful guard,
|
|
Though not the words, the murmurs over-heard;
|
|
And sighs, and hollow sounds: surpriz'd with
|
|
fright,
|
|
She starts, and leaves her bed, and springs a
|
|
light;
|
|
Unlocks the door, and entring out of breath,
|
|
The dying saw, and instruments of death;
|
|
She shrieks, she cuts the zone with trembling
|
|
haste,
|
|
And in her arms her fainting charge embrac'd:
|
|
Next (for she now had leisure for her tears),
|
|
She weeping ask'd, in these her blooming years,
|
|
What unforeseen misfortune caus'd her care,
|
|
To loath her life, and languish in despair!
|
|
The maid, with down-cast eyes, and mute with grief
|
|
For death unfinish'd, and ill-tim'd relief,
|
|
Stood sullen to her suit: the beldame press'd
|
|
The more to know, and bar'd her wither'd breast,
|
|
Adjur'd her by the kindly food she drew
|
|
From those dry founts, her secret ill to shew.
|
|
Sad Myrrha sigh'd, and turn'd her eyes aside:
|
|
The nurse still urg'd, and wou'd not be deny'd:
|
|
Nor only promis'd secresie, but pray'd
|
|
She might have leave to give her offer'd aid.
|
|
Good-will, she said, my want of strength supplies,
|
|
And diligence shall give what age denies:
|
|
If strong desires thy mind to fury move,
|
|
With charms and med'cines I can cure thy love:
|
|
If envious eyes their hurtuful rays have cast,
|
|
More pow'rful verse shall free thee from the blast:
|
|
If Heav'n offended sends thee this disease,
|
|
Offended Heav'n with pray'rs we can appease.
|
|
What then remains, that can these cares procure?
|
|
Thy house is flourishing, thy fortune sure:
|
|
Thy careful mother yet in health survives,
|
|
And, to thy comfort, thy kind father lives.
|
|
The virgin started at her father's name,
|
|
And sigh'd profoundly, conscious of the shame
|
|
Nor yet the nurse her impious love divin'd,
|
|
But yet surmis'd that love disturb'd her mind:
|
|
Thus thinking, she pursu'd her point, and laid,
|
|
And lull'd within her lap the mourning maid;
|
|
Then softly sooth'd her thus; I guess your grief:
|
|
You love, my child; your love shall find relief.
|
|
My long-experienc'd age shall be your guide;
|
|
Rely on that, and lay distrust aside.
|
|
No breath of air shall on the secret blow,
|
|
Nor shall (what most you fear) your father know.
|
|
Struck once again, as with a thunder-clap,
|
|
The guilty virgin bounded from her lap,
|
|
And threw her body prostrate on the bed.
|
|
And, to conceal her blushes, hid her head;
|
|
There silent lay, and warn'd her with her hand
|
|
To go: but she receiv'd not the command;
|
|
Remaining still importunate to know:
|
|
Then Myrrha thus: Or ask no more, or go;
|
|
I pr'ythee go, or staying spare my shame;
|
|
What thou would'st hear, is impious ev'n to name.
|
|
At this, on high the beldame holds her hands,
|
|
And trembling both with age, and terror stands;
|
|
Adjures, and falling at her feet intreats,
|
|
Sooths her with blandishments, and frights with
|
|
threats,
|
|
To tell the crime intended, or disclose
|
|
What part of it she knew, if she no farther knows.
|
|
And last, if conscious to her counsel made,
|
|
Confirms anew the promise of her aid.
|
|
Now Myrrha rais'd her head; but soon oppress'd
|
|
With shame, reclin'd it on her nurse's breast;
|
|
Bath'd it with tears, and strove to have confess'd:
|
|
Twice she began, and stopp'd; again she try'd;
|
|
The falt'ring tongue its office still deny'd.
|
|
At last her veil before her face she spread,
|
|
And drew a long preluding sigh, and said,
|
|
O happy mother, in thy marriage-bed!
|
|
Then groan'd, and ceas'd. The good old woman shook,
|
|
Stiff were her eyes, and ghastly was her look:
|
|
Her hoary hair upright with horror stood,
|
|
Made (to her grief) more knowing than she wou'd.
|
|
Much she reproach'd, and many things she said,
|
|
To cure the madness of th' unhappy maid,
|
|
In vain: for Myrrha stood convict of ill;
|
|
Her reason vanquish'd, but unchang'd her will:
|
|
Perverse of mind, unable to reply;
|
|
She stood resolv'd, or to possess, or die.
|
|
At length the fondness of a nurse prevail'd
|
|
Against her better sense, and virtue fail'd:
|
|
Enjoy, my child, since such is thy desire,
|
|
Thy love, she said; she durst not say, thy sire:
|
|
Live, though unhappy, live on any terms;
|
|
Then with a second oath her faith confirms.
|
|
The solemn feast of Ceres now was near,
|
|
When long white linnen stoles the matrons wear;
|
|
Rank'd in procession walk the pious train,
|
|
Off'ring first-fruits, and spikes of yellow grain:
|
|
For nine long nights the nuptial-bed they shun,
|
|
And sanctifying harvest, lie alone.
|
|
Mix'd with the crowd, the queen forsook her lord,
|
|
And Ceres' pow'r with secret rites ador'd:
|
|
The royal couch, now vacant for a time,
|
|
The crafty crone, officious in her crime,
|
|
The first occasion took: the king she found
|
|
Easie with wine, and deep in pleasures drown'd,
|
|
Prepar'd for love: the beldame blew the flame,
|
|
Confess'd the passion, but conceal'd the name.
|
|
Her form she prais'd; the monarch ask'd her years;
|
|
And she reply'd, The same thy Myrrha bears.
|
|
Wine, and commended beauty fir'd his thought;
|
|
Impatient, he commands her to be brought.
|
|
Pleas'd with her charge perform'd, she hies her
|
|
home,
|
|
And gratulates the nymph, the task was overcome.
|
|
Myrrha was joy'd the welcome news to hear;
|
|
But clog'd with guilt, the joy was unsincere:
|
|
So various, so discordant is the mind,
|
|
That in our will a diff'rent will we find.
|
|
Ill she presag'd, and yet pursu'd her lust;
|
|
For guilty pleasures give a double gust.
|
|
'Twas depth of night: Arctophylax had driv'n
|
|
His lazy wain half round the northern Heav'n,
|
|
When Myrrha hasten'd to the crime desir'd:
|
|
The moon beheld her first, and first retir'd:
|
|
The stars amaz'd, ran backward from the sight,
|
|
And (shrunk within their sockets) lost their light.
|
|
Icarius first withdraws his holy flame:
|
|
The virgin sign, in Heav'n the second name,
|
|
Slides down the belt, and from her station flies,
|
|
And night with sable clouds involves the skies.
|
|
Bold Myrrha still pursues her black intent;
|
|
She stumbled thrice (an omen of th' event);
|
|
Thrice shriek'd the fun'ral owl, yet on she went,
|
|
Secure of shame, because secure of sight;
|
|
Ev'n bashful sins are impudent by night.
|
|
Link'd hand in hand, th' accomplice, and the dame,
|
|
Their way exploring, to the chamber came:
|
|
The door was ope; they blindly grope their way,
|
|
Where dark in bed th' expecting monarch lay.
|
|
Thus far her courage held, but here forsakes;
|
|
Her faint knees knock at ev'ry step she makes.
|
|
The nearer to her crime, the more within
|
|
She feels remorse, and horror of her sin;
|
|
Repents too late her criminal desire,
|
|
And wishes, that unknown she could retire.
|
|
Her lingring thus, the nurse (who fear'd delay
|
|
The fatal secret might at length betray)
|
|
Pull'd forward, to compleat the work begun,
|
|
And said to Cinyras, Receive thy own.
|
|
Thus saying, she deliver'd kind to kind,
|
|
Accurs'd, and their devoted bodies join'd.
|
|
The sire, unknowing of the crime, admits
|
|
His bowels, and prophanes the hallow'd sheets;
|
|
He found she trembled, but believ'd she strove
|
|
With maiden modesty against her love,
|
|
And sought with flatt'ring words vain fancies to
|
|
remove.
|
|
Perhaps he said, My daughter, cease thy fears
|
|
(Because the title suited with her years);
|
|
And, Father, she might whisper him again,
|
|
That names might not be wanting to the sin.
|
|
Full of her sire, she left th' incestuous bed,
|
|
And carry'd in her womb the crime she bred.
|
|
Another, and another night she came;
|
|
For frequent sin had left no sense of shame:
|
|
'Till Cinyras desir'd to see her face,
|
|
Whose body he had held in close embrace,
|
|
And brought a taper; the revealer, light,
|
|
Expos'd both crime, and criminal to sight.
|
|
Grief, rage, amazement, could no speech afford,
|
|
But from the sheath he drew th' avenging sword:
|
|
The guilty fled: the benefit of night,
|
|
That favour'd first the sin, secur'd the flight.
|
|
Long wand'ring thro' the spacious fields, she bent
|
|
Her voyage to th' Arabian continent;
|
|
Then pass'd the region which Panchaea join'd,
|
|
And flying, left the palmy plains behind.
|
|
Nine times the moon had mew'd her horns; at length
|
|
With travel weary, unsupply'd with strength,
|
|
And with the burden of her womb oppress'd,
|
|
Sabaean fields afford her needful rest:
|
|
There, loathing life, and yet of death afraid,
|
|
In anguish of her spirit, thus she pray'd:
|
|
Ye Pow'rs, if any so propitious are
|
|
T' accept my penitence, and hear my pray'r;
|
|
Your judgments, I confess, are justly sent;
|
|
Great sins deserve as great a punishment:
|
|
Yet since my life the living will profane,
|
|
And since my death the happy dead will stain,
|
|
A middle state your mercy may bestow,
|
|
Betwixt the realms above, and those below:
|
|
Some other form to wretched Myrrha give,
|
|
Nor let her wholly die, nor wholly live.
|
|
The pray'rs of penitents are never vain;
|
|
At least she did her last request obtain:
|
|
For while she spoke, the ground began to rise,
|
|
And gather'd round her feet, her legs, and thighs;
|
|
Her toes in roots descend, and spreading wide,
|
|
A firm foundation for the trunk provide:
|
|
Her solid bones convert to solid wood,
|
|
To pith her marrow, and to sap her blood:
|
|
Her arms are boughs, her fingers change their kind,
|
|
Her tender skin is harden'd into rind.
|
|
And now the rising tree her womb invests,
|
|
Now shooting upwards still, invades her breasts,
|
|
And shades the neck; when weary with delay,
|
|
She sunk her head within, and met it half the way.
|
|
And tho' with outward shape she lost her sense,
|
|
With bitter tears she wept her last offence;
|
|
And still she weeps, nor sheds her tears in vain;
|
|
For still the precious drops her name retain.
|
|
Mean-time the mis-begotten infant grows,
|
|
And ripe for birth, distends with deadly throes
|
|
The swelling rind, with unavailing strife,
|
|
To leave the wooden womb, and pushes into life.
|
|
The mother-tree, as if oppress'd with pain,
|
|
Writhes here, and there, to break the bark, in
|
|
vain;
|
|
And, like a lab'ring woman, wou'd have pray'd,
|
|
But wants a voice to call Lucina's aid:
|
|
The bending bole sends out a hollow sound,
|
|
And trickling tears fall thicker on the ground.
|
|
The mild Lucina came uncall'd, and stood
|
|
Beside the struggling boughs, and heard the
|
|
groaning wood;
|
|
Then reach'd her midwife-hand to speed the throes,
|
|
And spoke the pow'rful spells, that babes to birth
|
|
disclose.
|
|
The bark divides, the living load to free,
|
|
And safe delivers the convulsive tree.
|
|
The ready nymphs receive the crying child,
|
|
And wash him in the tears the parent plant
|
|
distill'd.
|
|
They swath'd him with their scarfs; beneath him
|
|
spread
|
|
The ground with herbs; with roses rais'd his head.
|
|
The lovely babe was born with ev'ry grace,
|
|
Ev'n envy must have prais'd so fair a face:
|
|
Such was his form, as painters when they show
|
|
Their utmost art, on naked loves bestow:
|
|
And that their arms no diff'rence might betray,
|
|
Give him a bow, or his from Cupid take away.
|
|
Time glides along with undiscover'd haste,
|
|
The future but a length behind the past;
|
|
So swift are years. The babe, whom just before
|
|
His grandsire got, and whom his sister bore;
|
|
The drop, the thing, which late the tree inclos'd,
|
|
And late the yawning bark to life expos'd;
|
|
A babe, a boy, a beauteous youth appears,
|
|
And lovelier than himself at riper years.
|
|
Now to the queen of love he gave desires,
|
|
And, with her pains, reveng'd his mother's fires.
|
|
The Story of For Cytherea's lips while Cupid prest,
|
|
Venus and He with a heedless arrow raz'd her breast,
|
|
Adonis The Goddess felt it, and with fury stung,
|
|
The wanton mischief from her bosom flung:
|
|
Yet thought at first the danger slight, but found
|
|
The dart too faithful, and too deep the wound.
|
|
Fir'd with a mortal beauty, she disdains
|
|
To haunt th' Idalian mount, or Phrygian plains.
|
|
She seeks not Cnidos, nor her Paphian shrines,
|
|
Nor Amathus, that teems with brazen mines:
|
|
Ev'n Heav'n itself with all its sweets unsought,
|
|
Adonis far a sweeter Heav'n is thought.
|
|
On him she hangs, and fonds with ev'ry art,
|
|
And never, never knows from him to part.
|
|
She, whose soft limbs had only been display'd
|
|
On rosie beds beneath the myrtle shade,
|
|
Whose pleasing care was to improve each grace,
|
|
And add more charms to an unrival'd face,
|
|
Now buskin'd, like the virgin huntress, goes
|
|
Thro' woods, and pathless wilds, and mountain-snows
|
|
With her own tuneful voice she joys to cheer
|
|
The panting hounds, that chace the flying deer.
|
|
She runs the labyrinth of fearful hares,
|
|
But fearless beasts, and dang'rous prey forbears,
|
|
Hunts not the grinning wolf, or foamy boar,
|
|
And trembles at the lion's hungry roar.
|
|
Thee too, Adonis, with a lover's care
|
|
She warns, if warn'd thou wou'dst avoid the snare,
|
|
To furious animals advance not nigh,
|
|
Fly those that follow, follow those that fly;
|
|
'Tis chance alone must the survivors save,
|
|
Whene'er brave spirits will attempt the brave.
|
|
O! lovely youth! in harmless sports delight;
|
|
Provoke not beasts, which, arm'd by Nature, fight.
|
|
For me, if not thy self, vouchsafe to fear;
|
|
Let not thy thirst of glory cost me dear.
|
|
Boars know not bow to spare a blooming age;
|
|
No sparkling eyes can sooth the lion's rage.
|
|
Not all thy charms a savage breast can move,
|
|
Which have so deeply touch'd the queen of love.
|
|
When bristled boars from beaten thickets spring,
|
|
In grinded tusks a thunderbolt they bring.
|
|
The daring hunters lions rouz'd devour,
|
|
Vast is their fury, and as vast their pow'r:
|
|
Curst be their tawny race! If thou would'st hear
|
|
What kindled thus my hate, then lend an ear:
|
|
The wond'rous tale I will to thee unfold,
|
|
How the fell monsters rose from crimes of old.
|
|
But by long toils I faint: see! wide-display'd,
|
|
A grateful poplar courts us with a shade.
|
|
The grassy turf, beneath, so verdant shows,
|
|
We may secure delightfully repose.
|
|
With her Adonis here be Venus blest;
|
|
And swift at once the grass and him she prest.
|
|
Then sweetly smiling, with a raptur'd mind,
|
|
On his lov'd bosom she her head reclin'd,
|
|
And thus began; but mindful still of bliss,
|
|
Seal'd the soft accents with a softer kiss.
|
|
Perhaps thou may'st have heard a virgin's name,
|
|
Who still in swiftness swiftest youths o'ercame.
|
|
Wondrous! that female weakness should outdo
|
|
A manly strength; the wonder yet is true.
|
|
'Twas doubtful, if her triumphs in the field
|
|
Did to her form's triumphant glories yield;
|
|
Whether her face could with more ease decoy
|
|
A crowd of lovers, or her feet destroy.
|
|
For once Apollo she implor'd to show
|
|
If courteous Fates a consort would allow:
|
|
A consort brings thy ruin, he reply'd;
|
|
O! learn to want the pleasures of a bride!
|
|
Nor shalt thou want them to thy wretched cost,
|
|
And Atalanta living shall be lost.
|
|
With such a rueful Fate th' affrighted maid
|
|
Sought green recesses in the wood-land glade.
|
|
Nor sighing suiters her resolves could move,
|
|
She bad them show their speed, to show their love.
|
|
He only, who could conquer in the race,
|
|
Might hope the conquer'd virgin to embrace;
|
|
While he, whose tardy feet had lagg'd behind,
|
|
Was doom'd the sad reward of death to find.
|
|
Tho' great the prize, yet rigid the decree,
|
|
But blind with beauty, who can rigour see?
|
|
Ev'n on these laws the fair they rashly sought,
|
|
And danger in excess of love forgot.
|
|
There sat Hippomenes, prepar'd to blame
|
|
In lovers such extravagance of flame.
|
|
And must, he said, the blessing of a wife
|
|
Be dearly purchas'd by a risk of life?
|
|
But when he saw the wonders of her face,
|
|
And her limbs naked, springing to the race,
|
|
Her limbs, as exquisitely turn'd, as mine,
|
|
Or if a woman thou, might vie with thine,
|
|
With lifted hands, he cry'd, forgive the tongue
|
|
Which durst, ye youths, your well-tim'd courage
|
|
wrong.
|
|
I knew not that the nymph, for whom you strove,
|
|
Deserv'd th' unbounded transports of your love.
|
|
He saw, admir'd, and thus her spotless frame
|
|
He prais'd, and praising, kindled his own flame.
|
|
A rival now to all the youths who run,
|
|
Envious, he fears they should not be undone.
|
|
But why (reflects he) idly thus is shown
|
|
The fate of others, yet untry'd my own?
|
|
The coward must not on love's aid depend;
|
|
The God was ever to the bold a friend.
|
|
Mean-time the virgin flies, or seems to fly,
|
|
Swift as a Scythian arrow cleaves the sky:
|
|
Still more and more the youth her charms admires.
|
|
The race itself t' exalt her charms conspires.
|
|
The golden pinions, which her feet adorn,
|
|
In wanton flutt'rings by the winds are born.
|
|
Down from her head, the long, fair tresses flow,
|
|
And sport with lovely negligence below.
|
|
The waving ribbands, which her buskins tie,
|
|
Her snowy skin with waving purple die;
|
|
As crimson veils in palaces display'd,
|
|
To the white marble lend a blushing shade.
|
|
Nor long he gaz'd, yet while he gaz'd, she gain'd
|
|
The goal, and the victorious wreath obtain'd.
|
|
The vanquish'd sigh, and, as the law decreed,
|
|
Pay the dire forfeit, and prepare to bleed.
|
|
Then rose Hippomenes, not yet afraid,
|
|
And fix'd his eyes full on the beauteous maid.
|
|
Where is (he cry'd) the mighty conquest won,
|
|
TO distance those, who want the nerves to run?
|
|
Here prove superior strength, nor shall it be
|
|
Thy loss of glory, if excell'd by me.
|
|
High my descent, near Neptune I aspire,
|
|
For Neptune was grand-parent to my sire.
|
|
From that great God the fourth my self I trace,
|
|
Nor sink my virtues yet beneath my race.
|
|
Thou from Hippomenes, o'ercome, may'st claim
|
|
An envy'd triumph, and a deathless fame.
|
|
While thus the youth the virgin pow'r defies,
|
|
Silent she views him still with softer eyes.
|
|
Thoughts in her breast a doubtful strife begin,
|
|
If 'tis not happier now to lose, than win.
|
|
What God, a foe to beauty, would destroy
|
|
The promis'd ripeness of this blooming boy?
|
|
With his life's danger does he seek my bed?
|
|
Scarce am I half so greatly worth, she said.
|
|
Nor has his beauty mov'd my breast to love,
|
|
And yet, I own, such beauty well might move:
|
|
'Tis not his charms, 'tis pity would engage
|
|
My soul to spare the greenness of his age.
|
|
What, that heroick conrage fires his breast,
|
|
And shines thro' brave disdain of Fate confest?
|
|
What, that his patronage by close degrees
|
|
Springs from th' imperial ruler of the seas?
|
|
Then add the love, which bids him undertake
|
|
The race, and dare to perish for my sake.
|
|
Of bloody nuptials, heedless youth, beware!
|
|
Fly, timely fly from a too barb'rous fair.
|
|
At pleasure chuse; thy love will be repaid
|
|
By a less foolish, and more beauteous maid.
|
|
But why this tenderness, before unknown?
|
|
Why beats, and pants my breast for him alone?
|
|
His eyes have seen his num'rous rivals yield;
|
|
Let him too share the rigour of the field,
|
|
Since, by their fates untaught, his own he courts,
|
|
And thus with ruin insolently sports.
|
|
Yet for what crime shall he his death receive?
|
|
Is it a crime with me to wish to live?
|
|
Shall his kind passion his destruction prove?
|
|
Is this the fatal recompence of love?
|
|
So fair a youth, destroy'd, would conquest shame,
|
|
Aud nymphs eternally detest my fame.
|
|
Still why should nymphs my guiltless fame upbraid?
|
|
Did I the fond adventurer persuade?
|
|
Alas! I wish thou would'st the course decline,
|
|
Or that my swiftness was excell'd by thine.
|
|
See! what a virgin's bloom adorns the boy!
|
|
Why wilt thou run, and why thy self destroy?
|
|
Hippomenes! O that I ne'er had been
|
|
By those bright eyes unfortunately seen!
|
|
Ah! tempt not thus a swift, untimely Fate;
|
|
Thy life is worthy of the longest date.
|
|
Were I less wretched, did the galling chain
|
|
Of rigid Gods not my free choice restrain,
|
|
By thee alone I could with joy be led
|
|
To taste the raptures of a nuptial bed.
|
|
Thus she disclos'd the woman's secret heart,
|
|
Young, innocent, and new to Cupid's dart.
|
|
Her thoughts, her words, her actions wildly rove,
|
|
With love she burns, yet knows not that 'tis love.
|
|
Her royal sire now with the murm'ring crowd
|
|
Demands the race impatiently aloud.
|
|
Hippomenes then with true fervour pray'd,
|
|
My bold attempt let Venus kindly aid.
|
|
By her sweet pow'r I felt this am'rous fire,
|
|
Still may she succour, whom she did inspire.
|
|
A soft, unenvious wind, with speedy care,
|
|
Wafted to Heav'n the lover's tender pray'r.
|
|
Pity, I own, soon gain'd the wish'd consent,
|
|
And all th' assistance he implor'd I lent.
|
|
The Cyprian lands, tho' rich, in richness yield
|
|
To that, surnam'd the Tamasenian field.
|
|
That field of old was added to my shrine,
|
|
And its choice products consecrated mine.
|
|
A tree there stands, full glorious to behold,
|
|
Gold are the leafs, the crackling branches gold.
|
|
It chanc'd, three apples in my hand I bore,
|
|
Which newly from the tree I sportive tore;
|
|
Seen by the youth alone, to him I brought
|
|
The fruit, and when, and how to use it, taught.
|
|
The signal sounding by the king's command,
|
|
Both start at once, and sweep th' imprinted sand.
|
|
So swiftly mov'd their feet, they might with ease,
|
|
Scarce moisten'd, skim along the glassy seas;
|
|
Or with a wondrous levity be born
|
|
O'er yellow harvests of unbending corn.
|
|
Now fav'ring peals resound from ev'ry part,
|
|
Spirit the youth, and fire his fainting heart.
|
|
Hippomenes! (they cry'd) thy life preserve,
|
|
Intensely labour, and stretch ev'ry nerve.
|
|
Base fear alone can baffle thy design,
|
|
Shoot boldly onward, and the goal is thine.
|
|
'Tis doubtful whether shouts, like these, convey'd
|
|
More pleasures to the youth, or to the maid.
|
|
When a long distance oft she could have gain'd,
|
|
She check'd her swiftness, and her feet restrain'd:
|
|
She sigh'd, and dwelt, and languish'd on his face,
|
|
Then with unwilling speed pursu'd the race.
|
|
O'er-spent with heat, his breath he faintly drew,
|
|
Parch'd was his mouth, nor yet the goal in view,
|
|
And the first apple on the plain he threw.
|
|
The nymph stop'd sudden at th' unusual sight,
|
|
Struck with the fruit so beautifully bright.
|
|
Aside she starts, the wonder to behold,
|
|
And eager stoops to catch the rouling gold.
|
|
Th' observant youth past by, and scour'd along,
|
|
While peals of joy rung from th' applauding throng.
|
|
Unkindly she corrects the short delay,
|
|
And to redeem the time fleets swift away,
|
|
Swift, as the lightning, or the northern wind,
|
|
And far she leaves the panting youth behind.
|
|
Again he strives the flying nymph to hold
|
|
With the temptation of the second gold:
|
|
The bright temptation fruitlessly was tost,
|
|
So soon, alas! she won the distance lost.
|
|
Now but a little interval of space
|
|
Remain'd for the decision of the race.
|
|
Fair author of the precious gift, he said,
|
|
Be thou, O Goddess, author of my aid!
|
|
Then of the shining fruit the last he drew,
|
|
And with his full-collected vigour threw:
|
|
The virgin still the longer to detain,
|
|
Threw not directly, but a-cross the plain.
|
|
She seem'd a-while perplex'd in dubious thought,
|
|
If the far-distant apple should be sought:
|
|
I lur'd her backward mind to seize the bait,
|
|
And to the massie gold gave double weight.
|
|
My favour to my votary was show'd,
|
|
Her speed I lessen'd, and encreas'd her load.
|
|
But lest, tho' long, the rapid race be run,
|
|
Before my longer, tedious tale is done,
|
|
The youth the goal, and so the virgin won.
|
|
Might I, Adonis, now not hope to see
|
|
His grateful thanks pour'd out for victory?
|
|
His pious incense on my altars laid?
|
|
But he nor grateful thanks, nor incense paid.
|
|
Enrag'd I vow'd, that with the youth the fair,
|
|
For his contempt, should my keen vengeance share;
|
|
That future lovers might my pow'r revere,
|
|
And, from their sad examples, learn to fear.
|
|
The silent fanes, the sanctify'd abodes,
|
|
Of Cybele, great mother of the Gods,
|
|
Rais'd by Echion in a lonely wood,
|
|
And full of brown, religious horror stood.
|
|
By a long painful journey faint, they chose!
|
|
Their weary limbs here secret to repose.
|
|
But soon my pow'r inflam'd the lustful boy,
|
|
Careless of rest he sought untimely joy.
|
|
A hallow'd gloomy cave, with moss o'er-grown,
|
|
The temple join'd, of native pumice-stone,
|
|
Where antique images by priests were kept.
|
|
And wooden deities securely slept.
|
|
Thither the rash Hippomenes retires,
|
|
And gives a loose to all his wild desires,
|
|
And the chaste cell pollutes with wanton fires.
|
|
The sacred statues trembled with surprize,
|
|
The tow'ry Goddess, blushing, veil'd her eyes;
|
|
And the lewd pair to Stygian sounds had sent,
|
|
But unrevengeful seem'd that punishment,
|
|
A heavier doom such black prophaneness draws,
|
|
Their taper figures turn to crooked paws.
|
|
No more their necks the smoothness can retain,
|
|
Now cover'd sudden with a yellow mane.
|
|
Arms change to legs: each finds the hard'ning
|
|
breast
|
|
Of rage unknown, and wond'rous strength possest.
|
|
Their alter'd looks with fury grim appear,
|
|
And on the ground their brushing tails they hear.
|
|
They haunt the woods: their voices, which before
|
|
Were musically sweet, now hoarsly roar.
|
|
Hence lions, dreadful to the lab'ring swains,
|
|
Are tam'd by Cybele, and curb'd with reins,
|
|
And humbly draw her car along the plains.
|
|
But thou, Adonis, my delightful care,
|
|
Of these, and beasts, as fierce as these, beware!
|
|
The savage, which not shuns thee, timely shun,
|
|
For by rash prowess should'st thou be undone,
|
|
A double ruin is contain'd in one.
|
|
Thus cautious Venus school'd her fav'rite boy;
|
|
But youthful heat all cautions will destroy.
|
|
His sprightly soul beyond grave counsels flies,
|
|
While with yok'd swans the Goddess cuts the skies.
|
|
His faithful hounds, led by the tainted wind,
|
|
Lodg'd in thick coverts chanc'd a boar to find.
|
|
The callow hero show'd a manly heart,
|
|
And pierc'd the savage with a side-long dart.
|
|
The flying savage, wounded, turn'd again,
|
|
Wrench'd out the gory dart, and foam'd with pain.
|
|
The trembling boy by flight his safety sought,
|
|
And now recall'd the lore, which Venus taught;
|
|
But now too late to fly the boar he strove,
|
|
Who in the groin his tusks impetuous drove,
|
|
On the discolour'd grass Adonis lay,
|
|
The monster trampling o'er his beauteous prey.
|
|
Fair Cytherea, Cyprus scarce in view,
|
|
Heard from afar his groans, and own'd them true,
|
|
And turn'd her snowy swans, and backward flew.
|
|
But as she saw him gasp his latest breath,
|
|
And quiv'ring agonize in pangs of death,
|
|
Down with swift flight she plung'd, nor rage
|
|
forbore,
|
|
At once her garments, and her hair she tore.
|
|
With cruel blows she beat her guiltless breast,
|
|
The Fates upbraided, and her love confest.
|
|
Nor shall they yet (she cry'd) the whole devour
|
|
With uncontroul'd, inexorable pow'r:
|
|
For thee, lost youth, my tears, and restless pain
|
|
Shall in immortal monuments remain,
|
|
With solemn pomp in annual rites return'd,
|
|
Be thou for ever, my Adonis, mourn'd,
|
|
Could Pluto's queen with jealous fury storm,
|
|
And Menthe to a fragrant herb transform?
|
|
Yet dares not Venus with a change surprise,
|
|
And in a flow'r bid her fall'n heroe rise?
|
|
Then on the blood sweet nectar she bestows,
|
|
The scented blood in little bubbles rose:
|
|
Little as rainy drops, which flutt'ring fly,
|
|
Born by the winds, along a low'ring sky.
|
|
Short time ensu'd, 'till where the blood was shed,
|
|
A flow'r began to rear its purple head:
|
|
Such, as on Punick apples is reveal'd,
|
|
Or in the filmy rind but half conceal'd.
|
|
Still here the Fate of lovely forms we see,
|
|
So sudden fades the sweet Anemonie.
|
|
The feeble stems, to stormy blasts a prey,
|
|
Their sickly beauties droop, and pine away.
|
|
The winds forbid the flow'rs to flourish long,
|
|
Which owe to winds their names in Grecian song.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Tenth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE ELEVENTH
|
|
|
|
HERE, while the Thracian bard's enchanting strain
|
|
Sooths beasts, and woods, and all the listn'ing
|
|
plain,
|
|
The female Bacchanals, devoutly mad,
|
|
In shaggy skins, like savage creatures, clad,
|
|
Warbling in air perceiv'd his lovely lay,
|
|
And from a rising ground beheld him play.
|
|
When one, the wildest, with dishevel'd hair,
|
|
That loosely stream'd, and ruffled in the air;
|
|
Soon as her frantick eye the lyrist spy'd,
|
|
See, see! the hater of our sex, she cry'd.
|
|
Then at his face her missive javelin sent,
|
|
Which whiz'd along, and brusht him as it went;
|
|
But the soft wreathes of ivy twisted round,
|
|
Prevent a deep impression of the wound.
|
|
Another, for a weapon, hurls a stone,
|
|
Which, by the sound subdu'd as soon as thrown,
|
|
Falls at his feet, and with a seeming sense
|
|
Implores his pardon for its late offence.
|
|
The Death of But now their frantick rage unbounded grows,
|
|
Orpheus Turns all to madness, and no measure knows:
|
|
Yet this the charms of musick might subdue,
|
|
But that, with all its charms, is conquer'd too;
|
|
In louder strains their hideous yellings rise,
|
|
And squeaking horn-pipes eccho thro' the skies,
|
|
Which, in hoarse consort with the drum, confound
|
|
The moving lyre, and ev'ry gentle sound:
|
|
Then 'twas the deafen'd stones flew on with speed,
|
|
And saw, unsooth'd, their tuneful poet bleed.
|
|
The birds, the beasts, and all the savage crew
|
|
Which the sweet lyrist to attention drew,
|
|
Now, by the female mob's more furious rage,
|
|
Are driv'n, and forc'd to quit the shady stage.
|
|
Next their fierce hands the bard himself assail,
|
|
Nor can his song against their wrath prevail:
|
|
They flock, like birds, when in a clustring flight,
|
|
By day they chase the boding fowl of night.
|
|
So crowded amphitheatres survey
|
|
The stag, to greedy dogs a future prey.
|
|
Their steely javelins, which soft curls entwine
|
|
Of budding tendrils from the leafy vine,
|
|
For sacred rites of mild religion made,
|
|
Are flung promiscuous at the poet's head.
|
|
Those clods of earth or flints discharge, and these
|
|
Hurl prickly branches sliver'd from the trees.
|
|
And, lest their passion shou'd be unsupply'd,
|
|
The rabble crew, by chance, at distance spy'd
|
|
Where oxen, straining at the heavy yoke,
|
|
The fallow'd field with slow advances broke;
|
|
Nigh which the brawny peasants dug the soil,
|
|
Procuring food with long laborious toil.
|
|
These, when they saw the ranting throng draw near,
|
|
Quitted their tools, and fled, possest with fear.
|
|
Long spades, and rakes of mighty size were found,
|
|
Carelesly left upon the broken ground.
|
|
With these the furious lunaticks engage,
|
|
And first the lab'ring oxen feel their rage;
|
|
Then to the poet they return with speed,
|
|
Whose fate was, past prevention, now decreed:
|
|
In vain he lifts his suppliant hands, in vain
|
|
He tries, before, his never-failing strain.
|
|
And, from those sacred lips, whose thrilling sound
|
|
Fierce tygers, and insensate rocks cou'd wound,
|
|
Ah Gods! how moving was the mournful sight!
|
|
To see the fleeting soul now take its flight.
|
|
Thee the soft warblers of the feather'd kind
|
|
Bewail'd; for thee thy savage audience pin'd;
|
|
Those rocks and woods that oft thy strain had led,
|
|
Mourn for their charmer, and lament him dead;
|
|
And drooping trees their leafy glories shed.
|
|
Naids and Dryads with dishevel'd hair
|
|
Promiscuous weep, and scarfs of sable wear;
|
|
Nor cou'd the river-Gods conceal their moan,
|
|
But with new floods of tears augment their own.
|
|
His mangled limbs lay scatter'd all around,
|
|
His head, and harp a better fortune found;
|
|
In Hebrus' streams they gently roul'd along,
|
|
And sooth'd the waters with a mournful song.
|
|
Soft deadly notes the lifeless tongue inspire,
|
|
A doleful tune sounds from the floating lyre;
|
|
The hollows banks in solemn consort mourn,
|
|
And the sad strain in ecchoing groans return.
|
|
Now with the current to the sea they glide,
|
|
Born by the billows of the briny tide;
|
|
And driv'n where waves round rocky Lesbos roar,
|
|
They strand, and lodge upon Methymna's shore.
|
|
But here, when landed on the foreign soil,
|
|
A venom'd snake, the product of the isle
|
|
Attempts the head, and sacred locks embru'd
|
|
With clotted gore, and still fresh-dropping blood.
|
|
Phoebus, at last, his kind protection gives,
|
|
And from the fact the greedy monster drives:
|
|
Whose marbled jaws his impious crime atone,
|
|
Still grinning ghastly, tho' transform'd to stone.
|
|
His ghost flies downward to the Stygian shore,
|
|
And knows the places it had seen before:
|
|
Among the shadows of the pious train
|
|
He finds Eurydice, and loves again;
|
|
With pleasure views the beauteous phantom's charms,
|
|
And clasps her in his unsubstantial arms.
|
|
There side by side they unmolested walk,
|
|
Or pass their blissful hours in pleasing talk;
|
|
Aft or before the bard securely goes,
|
|
And, without danger, can review his spouse.
|
|
The Thracian Bacchus, resolving to revenge the wrong,
|
|
Women Of Orpheus murder'd, on the madding throng,
|
|
transform'd to Decreed that each accomplice dame should stand
|
|
Trees Fix'd by the roots along the conscious land.
|
|
Their wicked feet, that late so nimbly ran
|
|
To wreak their malice on the guiltless man,
|
|
Sudden with twisted ligatures were bound,
|
|
Like trees, deep planted in the turfy ground.
|
|
And, as the fowler with his subtle gins,
|
|
His feather'd captives by the feet entwines,
|
|
That flutt'ring pant, and struggle to get loose,
|
|
Yet only closer draw the fatal noose;
|
|
So these were caught; and, as they strove in vain
|
|
To quit the place, they but encreas'd their pain.
|
|
They flounce and toil, yet find themselves
|
|
controul'd;
|
|
The root, tho' pliant, toughly keeps its hold.
|
|
In vain their toes and feet they look to find,
|
|
For ev'n their shapely legs are cloath'd with rind.
|
|
One smites her thighs with a lamenting stroke,
|
|
And finds the flesh transform'd to solid oak;
|
|
Another, with surprize, and grief distrest,
|
|
Lays on above, but beats a wooden breast.
|
|
A rugged bark their softer neck invades,
|
|
Their branching arms shoot up delightful shades;
|
|
At once they seem, and are, a real grove,
|
|
With mossy trunks below, and verdant leaves above.
|
|
The Fable of Nor this suffic'd; the God's disgust remains,
|
|
Midas And he resolves to quit their hated plains;
|
|
The vineyards of Tymole ingross his care,
|
|
And, with a better choir, he fixes there;
|
|
Where the smooth streams of clear Pactolus roll'd,
|
|
Then undistinguish'd for its sands of gold.
|
|
The satyrs with the nymphs, his usual throng,
|
|
Come to salute their God, and jovial danc'd along.
|
|
Silenus only miss'd; for while he reel'd,
|
|
Feeble with age, and wine, about the field,
|
|
The hoary drunkard had forgot his way,
|
|
And to the Phrygian clowns became a prey;
|
|
Who to king Midas drag the captive God,
|
|
While on his totty pate the wreaths of ivy nod.
|
|
Midas from Orpheus had been taught his lore,
|
|
And knew the rites of Bacchus long before.
|
|
He, when he saw his venerable guest,
|
|
In honour of the God ordain'd a feast.
|
|
Ten days in course, with each continu'd night,
|
|
Were spent in genial mirth, and brisk delight:
|
|
Then on th' eleventh, when with brighter ray
|
|
Phosphor had chac'd the fading stars away,
|
|
The king thro' Lydia's fields young Bacchus sought,
|
|
And to the God his foster-father brought.
|
|
Pleas'd with the welcome sight, he bids him soon
|
|
But name his wish, and swears to grant the boon.
|
|
A glorious offer! yet but ill bestow'd
|
|
On him whose choice so little judgment show'd.
|
|
Give me, says he (nor thought he ask'd too much),
|
|
That with my body whatsoe'er I touch,
|
|
Chang'd from the nature which it held of old,
|
|
May be converted into yellow gold.
|
|
He had his wish; but yet the God repin'd,
|
|
To think the fool no better wish could find.
|
|
But the brave king departed from the place,
|
|
With smiles of gladness sparkling in his face:
|
|
Nor could contain, but, as he took his way,
|
|
Impatient longs to make the first essay.
|
|
Down from a lowly branch a twig he drew,
|
|
The twig strait glitter'd with a golden hue:
|
|
He takes a stone, the stone was turn'd to gold;
|
|
A clod he touches, and the crumbling mold
|
|
Acknowledg'd soon the great transforming pow'r,
|
|
In weight and substance like a mass of ore.
|
|
He pluck'd the corn, and strait his grasp appears
|
|
Fill'd with a bending tuft of golden ears.
|
|
An apple next he takes, and seems to hold
|
|
The bright Hesperian vegetable gold.
|
|
His hand he careless on a pillar lays.
|
|
With shining gold the fluted pillars blaze:
|
|
And while he washes, as the servants pour,
|
|
His touch converts the stream to Danae's show'r.
|
|
To see these miracles so finely wrought,
|
|
Fires with transporting joy his giddy thought.
|
|
The ready slaves prepare a sumptuous board,
|
|
Spread with rich dainties for their happy lord;
|
|
Whose pow'rful hands the bread no sooner hold,
|
|
But its whole substance is transform'd to gold:
|
|
Up to his mouth he lifts the sav'ry meat,
|
|
Which turns to gold as he attempts to eat:
|
|
His patron's noble juice of purple hue,
|
|
Touch'd by his lips, a gilded cordial grew;
|
|
Unfit for drink, and wondrous to behold,
|
|
It trickles from his jaws a fluid gold.
|
|
The rich poor fool, confounded with surprize,
|
|
Starving in all his various plenty lies:
|
|
Sick of his wish, he now detests the pow'r,
|
|
For which he ask'd so earnestly before;
|
|
Amidst his gold with pinching famine curst;
|
|
And justly tortur'd with an equal thirst.
|
|
At last his shining arms to Heav'n he rears,
|
|
And in distress, for refuge, flies to pray'rs.
|
|
O father Bacchus, I have sinn'd, he cry'd,
|
|
And foolishly thy gracious gift apply'd;
|
|
Thy pity now, repenting, I implore;
|
|
Oh! may I feel the golden plague no more.
|
|
The hungry wretch, his folly thus confest,
|
|
Touch'd the kind deity's good-natur'd breast;
|
|
The gentle God annull'd his first decree,
|
|
And from the cruel compact set him free.
|
|
But then, to cleanse him quite from further harm,
|
|
And to dilute the relicks of the charm,
|
|
He bids him seek the stream that cuts the land
|
|
Nigh where the tow'rs of Lydian Sardis stand;
|
|
Then trace the river to the fountain head,
|
|
And meet it rising from its rocky bed;
|
|
There, as the bubling tide pours forth amain,
|
|
To plunge his body in, and wash away the stain.
|
|
The king instructed to the fount retires,
|
|
But with the golden charm the stream inspires:
|
|
For while this quality the man forsakes,
|
|
An equal pow'r the limpid water takes;
|
|
Informs with veins of gold the neighb'ring land,
|
|
And glides along a bed of golden sand.
|
|
Now loathing wealth, th' occasion of his woes,
|
|
Far in the woods he sought a calm repose;
|
|
In caves and grottos, where the nymphs resort,
|
|
And keep with mountain Pan their sylvan court.
|
|
Ah! had he left his stupid soul behind!
|
|
But his condition alter'd not his mind.
|
|
For where high Tmolus rears his shady brow,
|
|
And from his cliffs surveys the seas below,
|
|
In his descent, by Sardis bounded here,
|
|
By the small confines of Hypaepa there,
|
|
Pan to the nymphs his frolick ditties play'd,
|
|
Tuning his reeds beneath the chequer'd shade.
|
|
The nymphs are pleas'd, the boasting sylvan plays,
|
|
And speaks with slight of great Apollo's lays.
|
|
Tmolus was arbiter; the boaster still
|
|
Accepts the tryal with unequal skill.
|
|
The venerable judge was seated high
|
|
On his own hill, that seem'd to touch the sky.
|
|
Above the whisp'ring trees his head he rears,
|
|
From their encumbring boughs to free his ears;
|
|
A wreath of oak alone his temples bound,
|
|
The pendant acorns loosely dangled round.
|
|
In me your judge, says he, there's no delay:
|
|
Then bids the goatherd God begin, and play.
|
|
Pan tun'd the pipe, and with his rural song
|
|
Pleas'd the low taste of all the vulgar throng;
|
|
Such songs a vulgar judgment mostly please,
|
|
Midas was there, and Midas judg'd with these.
|
|
The mountain sire with grave deportment now
|
|
To Phoebus turns his venerable brow:
|
|
And, as he turns, with him the listning wood
|
|
In the same posture of attention stood.
|
|
The God his own Parnassian laurel crown'd,
|
|
And in a wreath his golden tresses bound,
|
|
Graceful his purple mantle swept the ground.
|
|
High on the left his iv'ry lute he rais'd,
|
|
The lute, emboss'd with glitt'ring jewels, blaz'd
|
|
In his right hand he nicely held the quill,
|
|
His easy posture spoke a master's skill.
|
|
The strings he touch'd with more than human art,
|
|
Which pleas'd the judge's ear, and sooth'd his
|
|
heart;
|
|
Who soon judiciously the palm decreed,
|
|
And to the lute postpon'd the squeaking reed.
|
|
All, with applause, the rightful sentence heard,
|
|
Midas alone dissatisfy'd appear'd;
|
|
To him unjustly giv'n the judgment seems,
|
|
For Pan's barbarick notes he most esteems.
|
|
The lyrick God, who thought his untun'd ear
|
|
Deserv'd but ill a human form to wear,
|
|
Of that deprives him, and supplies the place
|
|
With some more fit, and of an ampler space:
|
|
Fix'd on his noddle an unseemly pair,
|
|
Flagging, and large, and full of whitish hair;
|
|
Without a total change from what he was,
|
|
Still in the man preserves the simple ass.
|
|
He, to conceal the scandal of the deed,
|
|
A purple turbant folds about his head;
|
|
Veils the reproach from publick view, and fears
|
|
The laughing world would spy his monstrous ears.
|
|
One trusty barber-slave, that us'd to dress
|
|
His master's hair, when lengthen'd to excess,
|
|
The mighty secret knew, but knew alone,
|
|
And, tho' impatient, durst not make it known.
|
|
Restless, at last, a private place he found,
|
|
Then dug a hole, and told it to the ground;
|
|
In a low whisper he reveal'd the case,
|
|
And cover'd in the earth, and silent left the
|
|
place.
|
|
In time, of trembling reeds a plenteous crop
|
|
From the confided furrow sprouted up;
|
|
Which, high advancing with the ripening year,
|
|
Made known the tiller, and his fruitless care:
|
|
For then the rustling blades, and whisp'ring wind,
|
|
To tell th' important secret, both combin'd.
|
|
The Building of Phoebus, with full revenge, from Tmolus flies,
|
|
Troy Darts thro' the air, and cleaves the liquid skies;
|
|
Near Hellespont he lights, and treads the plains
|
|
Where great Laomedon sole monarch reigns;
|
|
Where, built between the two projecting strands,
|
|
To Panomphaean Jove an altar stands.
|
|
Here first aspiring thoughts the king employ,
|
|
To found the lofty tow'rs of future Troy.
|
|
The work, from schemes magnificent begun,
|
|
At vast expence was slowly carry'd on:
|
|
Which Phoebus seeing, with the trident God
|
|
Who rules the swelling surges with his nod,
|
|
Assuming each a mortal shape, combine
|
|
At a set price to finish his design.
|
|
The work was built; the king their price denies,
|
|
And his injustice backs with perjuries.
|
|
This Neptune cou'd not brook, but drove the main,
|
|
A mighty deluge, o'er the Phrygian plain:
|
|
'Twas all a sea; the waters of the deep
|
|
From ev'ry vale the copious harvest sweep;
|
|
The briny billows overflow the soil,
|
|
Ravage the fields, and mock the plowman's toil.
|
|
Nor this appeas'd the God's revengeful mind,
|
|
For still a greater plague remains behind;
|
|
A huge sea-monster lodges on the sands,
|
|
And the king's daughter for his prey demands.
|
|
To him that sav'd the damsel, was decreed
|
|
A set of horses of the Sun's fine breed:
|
|
But when Alcides from the rock unty'd
|
|
The trembling fair, the ransom was deny'd.
|
|
He, in revenge, the new-built walls attack'd,
|
|
And the twice-perjur'd city bravely sack'd.
|
|
Telamon aided, and in justice shar'd
|
|
Part of the plunder as his due reward:
|
|
The princess, rescu'd late, with all her charms,
|
|
Hesione, was yielded to his arms;
|
|
For Peleus, with a Goddess-bride, was more
|
|
Proud of his spouse, than of his birth before:
|
|
Grandsons to Jove there might be more than one,
|
|
But he the Goddess had enjoy'd alone.
|
|
The Story of For Proteus thus to virgin Thetis said,
|
|
Thetis and Fair Goddess of the waves, consent to wed,
|
|
Peleus And take some spritely lover to your bed.
|
|
A son you'll have, the terror of the field,
|
|
To whom in fame, and pow'r his sire shall yield.
|
|
Jove, who ador'd the nymph with boundless love,
|
|
Did from his breast the dangerous flame remove.
|
|
He knew the Fates, nor car'd to raise up one,
|
|
Whose fame and greatness should eclipse his own,
|
|
On happy Peleus he bestow'd her charms,
|
|
And bless'd his grandson in the Goddess' arms:
|
|
A silent creek Thessalia's coast can show;
|
|
Two arms project, and shape it like a bow;
|
|
'Twould make a bay, but the transparent tide
|
|
Does scarce the yellow-gravell'd bottom hide;
|
|
For the quick eye may thro' the liquid wave
|
|
A firm unweedy level beach perceive.
|
|
A grove of fragrant myrtle near it grows,
|
|
Whose boughs, tho' thick, a beauteous grot
|
|
disclose;
|
|
The well-wrought fabrick, to discerning eyes,
|
|
Rather by art than Nature seems to rise.
|
|
A bridled dolphin oft fair Thetis bore
|
|
To this her lov'd retreat, her fav'rite shore.
|
|
Here Peleus seiz'd her, slumbring while she lay,
|
|
And urg'd his suit with all that love could say:
|
|
But when he found her obstinately coy,
|
|
Resolv'd to force her, and command the joy;
|
|
The nymph, o'erpowr'd, to art for succour flies
|
|
And various shapes the eager youth surprize:
|
|
A bird she seems, but plies her wings in vain,
|
|
His hands the fleeting substance still detain:
|
|
A branchy tree high in the air she grew;
|
|
About its bark his nimble arms he threw:
|
|
A tyger next she glares with flaming eyes;
|
|
The frighten'd lover quits his hold, and flies:
|
|
The sea-Gods he with sacred rites adores,
|
|
Then a libation on the ocean pours;
|
|
While the fat entrails crackle in the fire,
|
|
And sheets of smoak in sweet perfume aspire;
|
|
'Till Proteus rising from his oozy bed,
|
|
Thus to the poor desponding lover said:
|
|
No more in anxious thoughts your mind employ,
|
|
For yet you shall possess the dear expected joy.
|
|
You must once more th' unwary nymph surprize,
|
|
As in her cooly grot she slumbring lies;
|
|
Then bind her fast with unrelenting hands,
|
|
And strain her tender limbs with knotted bands.
|
|
Still hold her under ev'ry different shape,
|
|
'Till tir'd she tries no longer to escape.
|
|
Thus he: then sunk beneath the glassy flood,
|
|
And broken accents flutter'd, where he stood.
|
|
Bright Sol had almost now his journey done,
|
|
And down the steepy western convex run;
|
|
When the fair Nereid left the briny wave,
|
|
And, as she us'd, retreated to her cave.
|
|
He scarce had bound her fast, when she arose,
|
|
And into various shapes her body throws:
|
|
She went to move her arms, and found 'em ty'd;
|
|
Then with a sigh, Some God assists ye, cry'd,
|
|
And in her proper shape stood blushing by his side.
|
|
About her waiste his longing arms he flung,
|
|
From which embrace the great Achilles sprung.
|
|
The Peleus unmix'd felicity enjoy'd
|
|
Transformation (Blest in a valiant son, and virtuous bride),
|
|
of Daedalion 'Till Fortune did in blood his hands imbrue,
|
|
And his own brother by curst chance he slew:
|
|
Then driv'n from Thessaly, his native clime,
|
|
Trachinia first gave shelter to his crime;
|
|
Where peaceful Ceyx mildly fill'd the throne,
|
|
And like his sire, the morning planet, shone;
|
|
But now, unlike himself, bedew'd with tears,
|
|
Mourning a brother lost, his brow appears.
|
|
First to the town with travel spent, and care,
|
|
Peleus, and his small company repair:
|
|
His herds, and flocks the while at leisure feed,
|
|
On the rich pasture of a neighb'ring mead.
|
|
The prince before the royal presence brought,
|
|
Shew'd by the suppliant olive what he sought;
|
|
Then tells his name, and race, and country right,
|
|
But hides th' unhappy reason of his flight.
|
|
He begs the king some little town to give,
|
|
Where they may safe his faithful vassals live.
|
|
Ceyx reply'd: To all my bounty flows,
|
|
A hospitable realm your suit has chose.
|
|
Your glorious race, and far-resounding fame,
|
|
And grandsire Jove, peculiar favours claim.
|
|
All you can wish, I grant; entreaties spare;
|
|
My kingdom (would 'twere worth the sharing) share.
|
|
Tears stop'd his speech: astonish'd Peleus pleads
|
|
To know the cause from whence his grief proceeds.
|
|
The prince reply'd: There's none of ye but deems
|
|
This hawk was ever such as now it seems;
|
|
Know 'twas a heroe once, Daedalion nam'd,
|
|
For warlike deeds, and haughty valour fam'd;
|
|
Like me to that bright luminary born,
|
|
Who wakes Aurora, and brings on the morn.
|
|
His fierceness still remains, and love of blood,
|
|
Now dread of birds, and tyrant of the wood.
|
|
My make was softer, peace my greatest care;
|
|
But this my brother wholly bent on war;
|
|
Late nations fear'd, and routed armies fled
|
|
That force, which now the tim'rous pigeons dread.
|
|
A daughter he possess'd, divinely fair,
|
|
And scarcely yet had seen her fifteenth year;
|
|
Young Chione: a thousand rivals strove
|
|
To win the maid, and teach her how to love.
|
|
Phoebus, and Mercury by chance one day
|
|
From Delphi, and Cyllene past this way;
|
|
Together they the virgin saw: desire
|
|
At once warm'd both their breasts with am'rous
|
|
fire.
|
|
Phoebus resolv'd to wait 'till close of day;
|
|
But Mercury's hot love brook'd no delay;
|
|
With his entrancing rod the maid he charms,
|
|
And unresisted revels in her arms.
|
|
'Twas night, and Phoebus in a beldam's dress,
|
|
To the late rifled beauty got access.
|
|
Her time compleat nine circling moons had run;
|
|
To either God she bore a lovely son:
|
|
To Mercury Autolycus she brought,
|
|
Who turn'd to thefts and tricks his subtle thought;
|
|
Possess'd he was of all his father's slight,
|
|
At will made white look black, and black look
|
|
white.
|
|
Philammon born to Phoebus, like his sire,
|
|
The Muses lov'd, and finely struck the lyre,
|
|
And made his voice, and touch in harmony conspire.
|
|
In vain, fond maid, you boast this double birth,
|
|
The love of Gods, and royal father's worth,
|
|
And Jove among your ancestors rehearse!
|
|
Could blessings such as these e'er prove a curse?
|
|
To her they did, who with audacious pride,
|
|
Vain of her own, Diana's charms decry'd.
|
|
Her taunts the Goddess with resentment fill;
|
|
My face you like not, you shall try my skill.
|
|
She said; and strait her vengeful bow she strung,
|
|
And sent a shaft that pierc'd her guilty tongue:
|
|
The bleeding tongue in vain its accents tries;
|
|
In the red stream her soul reluctant flies.
|
|
With sorrow wild I ran to her relief,
|
|
And try'd to moderate my brother's grief.
|
|
He, deaf as rocks by stormy surges beat,
|
|
Loudly laments, and hears me not intreat.
|
|
When on the fun'ral pile he saw her laid,
|
|
Thrice he to rush into the flames assay'd,
|
|
Thrice with officious care by us was stay'd.
|
|
Now, mad with grief, away he fled amain,
|
|
Like a stung heifer that resents the pain,
|
|
And bellowing wildly bounds along the plain.
|
|
O'er the most rugged ways so fast he ran,
|
|
He seem'd a bird already, not a man:
|
|
He left us breathless all behind; and now
|
|
In quest of death had gain'd Parnassus' brow:
|
|
But when from thence headlong himself he threw,
|
|
He fell not, but with airy pinions flew.
|
|
Phoebus in pity chang'd him to a fowl,
|
|
Whose crooked beak and claws the birds controul,
|
|
Little of bulk, but of a warlike soul.
|
|
A hawk become, the feather'd race's foe,
|
|
He tries to case his own by other's woe.
|
|
A Wolf turn'd While they astonish'd heard the king relate
|
|
into Marble These wonders of his hapless brother's fate;
|
|
The prince's herdsman at the court arrives,
|
|
And fresh surprize to all the audience gives.
|
|
O Peleus, Peleus! dreadful news I bear,
|
|
He said; and trembled as he spoke for fear.
|
|
The worst, affrighted Peleus bid him tell,
|
|
Whilst Ceyx too grew pale with friendly zeal.
|
|
Thus he began: When Sol mid-heav'n had gain'd,
|
|
And half his way was past, and half remain'd,
|
|
I to the level shore my cattle drove,
|
|
And let them freely in the meadows rove.
|
|
Some stretch'd at length admire the watry plain,
|
|
Some crop'd the herb, some wanton swam the main.
|
|
A temple stands of antique make hard by,
|
|
Where no gilt domes, nor marble lure the eye;
|
|
Unpolish'd rafters bear its lowly height,
|
|
Hid by a grove, as ancient, from the sight.
|
|
Here Nereus, and the Nereids they adore;
|
|
I learnt it from the man who thither bore
|
|
His net, to dry it on the sunny shore.
|
|
Adjoyns a lake, inclos'd with willows round,
|
|
Where swelling waves have overflow'd the mound,
|
|
And, muddy, stagnate on the lower ground.
|
|
From thence a russling noise increasing flies,
|
|
Strikes the still shore; and frights us with
|
|
surprize,
|
|
Strait a huge wolf rush'd from the marshy wood,
|
|
His jaws besmear'd with mingled foam, and blood,
|
|
Tho' equally by hunger urg'd, and rage,
|
|
His appetite he minds not to asswage;
|
|
Nought that he meets, his rabid fury spares,
|
|
But the whole herd with mad disorder tears.
|
|
Some of our men who strove to drive him thence,
|
|
Torn by his teeth, have dy'd in their defence.
|
|
The echoing lakes, the sea, and fields, and shore,
|
|
Impurpled blush with streams of reeking gore.
|
|
Delay is loss, nor have we time for thought;
|
|
While yet some few remain alive, we ought
|
|
To seize our arms, and with confederate force
|
|
Try if we so can stop his bloody course.
|
|
But Peleus car'd not for his ruin'd herd;
|
|
His crime he call'd to mind, and thence inferr'd,
|
|
That Psamathe's revenge this havock made,
|
|
In sacrifice to murder'd Phocus' shade.
|
|
The king commands his servants to their arms;
|
|
Resolv'd to go; but the loud noise alarms
|
|
His lovely queen, who from her chamber flew,
|
|
And her half-plaited hair behind her threw:
|
|
About his neck she hung with loving fears,
|
|
And now with words, and now with pleading tears,
|
|
Intreated that he'd send his men alone,
|
|
And stay himself, to save two lives in one.
|
|
Then Peleus: Your just fears, o queen, forget;
|
|
Too much the offer leaves me in your debt.
|
|
No arms against the monster I shall bear,
|
|
But the sea nymphs appease with humble pray'r.
|
|
The citadel's high turrets pierce the sky,
|
|
Which home-bound vessels, glad, from far descry;
|
|
This they ascend, and thence with sorrow ken
|
|
The mangled heifers lye, and bleeding men;
|
|
Th' inexorable ravager they view,
|
|
With blood discolour'd, still the rest pursue:
|
|
There Peleus pray'd submissive tow'rds the sea,
|
|
And deprecates the ire of injur'd Psamathe.
|
|
But deaf to all his pray'rs the nymph remain'd,
|
|
'Till Thetis for her spouse the boon obtain'd.
|
|
Pleas'd with the luxury, the furious beast,
|
|
Unstop'd, continues still his bloody feast:
|
|
While yet upon a sturdy bull he flew,
|
|
Chang'd by the nymph, a marble block he grew.
|
|
No longer dreadful now the wolf appears,
|
|
Bury'd in stone, and vanish'd like their fears.
|
|
Yet still the Fates unhappy Peleus vex'd;
|
|
To the Magnesian shore he wanders next.
|
|
Acastus there, who rul'd the peaceful clime,
|
|
Grants his request, and expiates his crime.
|
|
The Story of These prodigies affect the pious prince,
|
|
Ceyx and But more perplex'd with those that happen'd since,
|
|
Alcyone He purposes to seek the Clarian God,
|
|
Avoiding Delphi, his more fam'd abode,
|
|
Since Phlegyan robbers made unsafe the road.
|
|
Yet could he not from her he lov'd so well,
|
|
The fatal voyage, he resolv'd, conceal;
|
|
But when she saw her lord prepar'd to part,
|
|
A deadly cold ran shiv'ring to her heart;
|
|
Her faded cheeks are chang'd to boxen hue,
|
|
And in her eyes the tears are ever new.
|
|
She thrice essay'd to speak; her accents hung,
|
|
And falt'ring dy'd unfinish'd on her tongue,
|
|
And vanish'd into sighs: with long delay
|
|
Her voice return'd, and found the wonted way.
|
|
Tell me, my lord, she said, what fault unknown
|
|
Thy once belov'd Alcyone has done?
|
|
Whither, ah, whither, is thy kindness gone!
|
|
Can Ceyx then sustain to leave his wife,
|
|
And unconcern'd forsake the sweets of life?
|
|
What can thy mind to this long journey move?
|
|
Or need'st thou absence to renew thy love?
|
|
Yet, if thou go'st by land, tho' grief possess
|
|
My soul ev'n then, my fears will be the less.
|
|
But ah! be warn'd to shun the watry way,
|
|
The face is frightful of the stormy sea:
|
|
For late I saw a-drift disjointed planks,
|
|
And empty tombs erected on the banks.
|
|
Nor let false hopes to trust betray thy mind,
|
|
Because my sire in caves constrains the wind,
|
|
Can with a breath their clam'rous rage appease,
|
|
They fear his whistle, and forsake the seas:
|
|
Not so; for once indulg'd, they sweep the main;
|
|
Deaf to the call, or hearing, hear in vain;
|
|
But bent on mischief bear the waves before,
|
|
And not content with seas, insult the shore,
|
|
When ocean, air, and Earth, at once ingage,
|
|
And rooted forests fly before their rage:
|
|
At once the clashing clouds to battel move,
|
|
And lightnings run across the fields above:
|
|
I know them well, and mark'd their rude comport,
|
|
While yet a child within my father's court:
|
|
In times of tempest they command alone,
|
|
And he but sits precarious on the throne:
|
|
The more I know, the more my fears augment;
|
|
And fears are oft prophetick of th' event.
|
|
But if not fears, or reasons will prevail,
|
|
If Fate has fix'd thee obstinate to sail,
|
|
Go not without thy wife, but let me bear
|
|
My part of danger with an equal share,
|
|
And present, what I suffer only fear:
|
|
Then o'er the bounding billows shall we fly,
|
|
Secure to live together, or to die.
|
|
These reasons mov'd her warlike husband's heart,
|
|
But still he held his purpose to depart:
|
|
For as he lov'd her equal to his life,
|
|
He would not to the seas expose his wife;
|
|
Nor could be wrought his voyage to refrain,
|
|
But sought by arguments to sooth her pain:
|
|
Nor these avail'd; at length he lights on one,
|
|
With which so difficult a cause he won:
|
|
My love, so short an absence cease to fear,
|
|
For by my father's holy flame I swear,
|
|
Before two moons their orb with light adorn,
|
|
If Heav'n allow me life, I will return.
|
|
This promise of so short a stay prevails;
|
|
He soon equips the ship, supplies the sails,
|
|
And gives the word to launch; she trembling views
|
|
This pomp of death, and parting tears renews:
|
|
Last with a kiss, she took a long farewel,
|
|
Sigh'd with a sad presage, and swooning fell:
|
|
While Ceyx seeks delays, the lusty crew,
|
|
Rais'd on their banks, their oars in order drew
|
|
To their broad breasts, the ship with fury flew.
|
|
The queen recover'd, rears her humid eyes,
|
|
And first her husband on the poop espies,
|
|
Shaking his hand at distance on the main;
|
|
She took the sign, and shook her hand again.
|
|
Still as the ground recedes, contracts her view
|
|
With sharpen'd sight, 'till she no longer knew
|
|
The much-lov'd face; that comfort lost supplies
|
|
With less, and with the galley feeds her eyes;
|
|
The galley born from view by rising gales,
|
|
She follow'd with her sight the flying sails:
|
|
When ev'n the flying sails were seen no more,
|
|
Forsaken of all sight she left the shore.
|
|
Then on her bridal bed her body throws,
|
|
And sought in sleep her wearied eyes to close:
|
|
Her husband's pillow, and the widow'd part
|
|
Which once he press'd, renew'd the former smart.
|
|
And now a breeze from shoar began to blow,
|
|
The sailors ship their oars, and cease to row;
|
|
Then hoist their yards a-trip, and all their sails
|
|
Let fall, to court the wind, and catch the gales:
|
|
By this the vessel half her course had run,
|
|
Both shoars were lost to sight, when at the close
|
|
Of day a stiffer gale at east arose:
|
|
The sea grew white, the rouling waves from far,
|
|
Like heralds, first denounce the watry war.
|
|
This seen, the master soon began to cry,
|
|
Strike, strike the top-sail; let the main-sheet
|
|
fly,
|
|
And furl your sails: the winds repel the sound,
|
|
And in the speaker's mouth the speech is drown'd.
|
|
Yet of their own accord, as danger taught
|
|
Each in his way, officiously they wrought;
|
|
Some stow their oars, or stop the leaky sides,
|
|
Another bolder, yet the yard bestrides,
|
|
And folds the sails; a fourth with labour laves
|
|
Th' intruding seas, and waves ejects on waves.
|
|
In this confusion while their work they ply,
|
|
The winds augment the winter of the sky,
|
|
And wage intestine wars; the suff'ring seas
|
|
Are toss'd, and mingled, as their tyrants please.
|
|
The master would command, but in despair
|
|
Of safety, stands amaz'd with stupid care,
|
|
Nor what to bid, or what forbid he knows,
|
|
Th' ungovern'd tempest to such fury grows:
|
|
Vain is his force, and vainer is his skill;
|
|
With such a concourse comes the flood of ill;
|
|
The cries of men are mix'd with rattling shrowds;
|
|
Seas dash on seas, and clouds encounter clouds:
|
|
At once from east to west, from pole to pole,
|
|
The forky lightnings flash, the roaring thunders
|
|
roul.
|
|
Now waves on waves ascending scale the skies,
|
|
And in the fires above the water fries:
|
|
When yellow sands are sifted from below,
|
|
The glittering billows give a golden show:
|
|
And when the fouler bottom spews the black
|
|
The Stygian dye the tainted waters take:
|
|
Then frothy white appear the flatted seas,
|
|
And change their colour, changing their disease,
|
|
Like various fits the Trachin vessel finds,
|
|
And now sublime, she rides upon the winds;
|
|
As from a lofty summit looks from high,
|
|
And from the clouds beholds the nether sky;
|
|
Now from the depth of Hell they lift their sight,
|
|
And at a distance see superior light;
|
|
The lashing billows make a loud report,
|
|
And beat her sides, as batt'ring rams a fort:
|
|
Or as a lion bounding in his way,
|
|
With force augmented, bears against his prey,
|
|
Sidelong to seize; or unapal'd with fear,
|
|
Springs on the toils, and rushes on the spear:
|
|
So seas impell'd by winds, with added pow'r
|
|
Assault the sides, and o'er the hatches tow'r.
|
|
The planks (their pitchy cov'ring wash'd away)
|
|
Now yield; and now a yawning breach display:
|
|
The roaring waters with a hostile tide
|
|
Rush through the ruins of her gaping side.
|
|
Mean-time in sheets of rain the sky descends,
|
|
And ocean swell'd with waters upwards tends;
|
|
One rising, falling one, the Heav'ns and sea
|
|
Meet at their confines, in the middle way:
|
|
The sails are drunk with show'rs, and drop with
|
|
rain,
|
|
Sweet waters mingle with the briny main.
|
|
No star appears to lend his friendly light;
|
|
Darkness, and tempest make a double night;
|
|
But flashing fires disclose the deep by turns,
|
|
And while the lightnings blaze, the water burns.
|
|
Now all the waves their scatter'd force unite,
|
|
And as a soldier foremost in the fight,
|
|
Makes way for others, and an host alone
|
|
Still presses on, and urging gains the town;
|
|
So while th' invading billows come a-breast,
|
|
The hero tenth advanc'd before the rest,
|
|
Sweeps all before him with impetuous sway,
|
|
And from the walls descends upon the prey;
|
|
Part following enter, part remain without,
|
|
With envy hear their fellows' conqu'ring shout,
|
|
And mount on others' backs, in hopes to share
|
|
The city, thus become the seat of war.
|
|
An universal cry resounds aloud,
|
|
The sailors run in heaps, a helpless crowd;
|
|
Art fails, and courage falls, no succour near;
|
|
As many waves, as many deaths appear.
|
|
One weeps, and yet despairs of late relief;
|
|
One cannot weep, his fears congeal his grief,
|
|
But stupid, with dry eyes expects his fate:
|
|
One with loud shrieks laments his lost estate,
|
|
And calls those happy whom their fun'rals wait.
|
|
This wretch with pray'rs and vows the Gods
|
|
implores,
|
|
And ev'n the skies he cannot see, adores.
|
|
That other on his friends his thoughts bestows,
|
|
His careful father, and his faithful spouse.
|
|
The covetous worldling in his anxious mind,
|
|
Thinks only on the wealth he left behind.
|
|
All Ceyx his Alcyone employs,
|
|
For her he grieves, yet in her absence joys:
|
|
His wife he wishes, and would still be near,
|
|
Not her with him, but wishes him with her:
|
|
Now with last looks he seeks his native shoar,
|
|
Which Fate has destin'd him to see no more;
|
|
He sought, but in the dark tempestuous night
|
|
He knew not whither to direct his sight.
|
|
So whirl the seas, such darkness blinds the sky,
|
|
That the black night receives a deeper dye.
|
|
The giddy ship ran round; the tempest tore
|
|
Her mast, and over-board the rudder bore.
|
|
One billow mounts, and with a scornful brow,
|
|
Proud of her conquest gain'd, insults the waves
|
|
below;
|
|
Nor lighter falls, than if some giant tore
|
|
Pindus and Athos with the freight they bore,
|
|
And toss'd on seas; press'd with the pond'rous
|
|
blow,
|
|
Down sinks the ship within th' abyss below:
|
|
Down with the vessel sink into the main
|
|
The many, never more to rise again.
|
|
Some few on scatter'd planks, with fruitless care,
|
|
Lay hold, and swim; but while they swim, despair.
|
|
Ev'n he who late a scepter did command,
|
|
Now grasps a floating fragment in his hand;
|
|
And while he struggles on the stormy main,
|
|
Invokes his father, and his wife's, in vain.
|
|
But yet his consort is his greatest care,
|
|
Alcyone he names amidst his pray'r;
|
|
Names as a charm against the waves and wind;
|
|
Most in his mouth, and ever in his mind.
|
|
Tir'd with his toil, all hopes of safety past,
|
|
From pray'rs to wishes he descends at last;
|
|
That his dead body, wafted to the sands,
|
|
Might have its burial from her friendly hands,
|
|
As oft as he can catch a gulp of air,
|
|
And peep above the seas, he names the fair;
|
|
And ev'n when plung'd beneath, on her he raves,
|
|
Murm'ring Alcyone below the waves:
|
|
At last a falling billow stops his breath,
|
|
Breaks o'er his head, and whelms him underneath.
|
|
That night, his heav'nly form obscur'd with tears,
|
|
And since he was forbid to leave the skies,
|
|
He muffled with a cloud his mournful eyes.
|
|
Mean-time Alcyone (his fate unknown)
|
|
Computes how many nights he had been gone.
|
|
Observes the waining moon with hourly view,
|
|
Numbers her age, and wishes for a new;
|
|
Against the promis'd time provides with care,
|
|
And hastens in the woof the robes he was to wear:
|
|
And for her self employs another loom,
|
|
New-dress'd to meet her lord returning home,
|
|
Flatt'ring her heart with joys, that never were to
|
|
come:
|
|
She fum'd the temples with an od'rous flame,
|
|
And oft before the sacred altars came,
|
|
To pray for him, who was an empty name.
|
|
All Pow'rs implor'd, but far above the rest
|
|
To Juno she her pious vows address'd,
|
|
Her much-lov'd lord from perils to protect,
|
|
And safe o'er seas his voyage to direct:
|
|
Then pray'd, that she might still possess his
|
|
heart,
|
|
And no pretending rival share a part;
|
|
This last petition heard of all her pray'r,
|
|
The rest, dispers'd by winds, were lost in air.
|
|
But she, the Goddess of the nuptial bed,
|
|
Tir'd with her vain devotions for the dead,
|
|
Resolv'd the tainted hand should be repell'd,
|
|
Which incense offer'd, and her altar held:
|
|
Then Iris thus bespoke: Thou faithful maid,
|
|
By whom thy queen's commands are well convey'd,
|
|
Haste to the house of sleep, and bid the God
|
|
Who rules the night by visions with a nod,
|
|
Prepare a dream, in figure, and in form
|
|
Resembling him, who perish'd in the storm;
|
|
This form before Alcyone present,
|
|
To make her certain of the sad event.
|
|
Indu'd with robes of various hue she flies,
|
|
And flying draws an arch (a segment of the skies):
|
|
Then leaves her bending bow, and from the steep
|
|
Descends, to search the silent house of sleep.
|
|
The House of Near the Cymmerians, in his dark abode,
|
|
Sleep Deep in a cavern, dwells the drowzy God;
|
|
Whose gloomy mansion nor the rising sun,
|
|
Nor setting, visits, nor the lightsome noon;
|
|
But lazy vapours round the region fly,
|
|
Perpetual twilight, and a doubtful sky:
|
|
No crowing cock does there his wings display,
|
|
Nor with his horny bill provoke the day;
|
|
Nor watchful dogs, nor the more wakeful geese,
|
|
Disturb with nightly noise the sacred peace;
|
|
Nor beast of Nature, nor the tame are nigh,
|
|
Nor trees with tempests rock'd, nor human cry;
|
|
But safe repose without an air of breath
|
|
Dwells here, and a dumb quiet next to death.
|
|
An arm of Lethe, with a gentle flow
|
|
Arising upwards from the rock below,
|
|
The palace moats, and o'er the pebbles creeps,
|
|
And with soft murmurs calls the coming sleeps.
|
|
Around its entry nodding poppies grow,
|
|
And all cool simples that sweet rest bestow;
|
|
Night from the plants their sleepy virtue drains,
|
|
And passing, sheds it on the silent plains:
|
|
No door there was th' unguarded house to keep,
|
|
On creaking hinges turn'd, to break his sleep.
|
|
But in the gloomy court was rais'd a bed,
|
|
Stuff'd with black plumes, and on an ebon-sted:
|
|
Black was the cov'ring too, where lay the God,
|
|
And slept supine, his limbs display'd abroad:
|
|
About his head fantastick visions fly,
|
|
Which various images of things supply,
|
|
And mock their forms; the leaves on trees not more,
|
|
Nor bearded ears in fields, nor sands upon the
|
|
shore.
|
|
The virgin ent'ring bright, indulg'd the day
|
|
To the brown cave, and brush'd the dreams away:
|
|
The God disturb'd with this new glare of light,
|
|
Cast sudden on his face, unseal'd his sight,
|
|
And rais'd his tardy head, which sunk again,
|
|
And sinking, on his bosom knock'd his chin;
|
|
At length shook off himself, and ask'd the dame,
|
|
(And asking yawn'd) for what intent she came.
|
|
To whom the Goddess thus: O sacred rest,
|
|
Sweet pleasing sleep, of all the Pow'rs the best!
|
|
O peace of mind, repairer of decay,
|
|
Whose balms renew the limbs to labours of the day,
|
|
Care shuns thy soft approach, and sullen flies
|
|
away!
|
|
Adorn a dream, expressing human form,
|
|
The shape of him who suffer'd in the storm,
|
|
And send it flitting to the Trachin court,
|
|
The wreck of wretched Ceyx to report:
|
|
Before his queen bid the pale spectre stand,
|
|
Who begs a vain relief at Juno's hand.
|
|
She said, and scarce awake her eyes could keep,
|
|
Unable to support the fumes of sleep;
|
|
But fled, returning by the way she went,
|
|
And swerv'd along her bow with swift ascent.
|
|
The God, uneasy 'till he slept again,
|
|
Resolv'd at once to rid himself of pain;
|
|
And, tho' against his custom, call'd aloud,
|
|
Exciting Morpheus from the sleepy crowd:
|
|
Morpheus, of all his numerous train, express'd
|
|
The shape of man, and imitated best;
|
|
The walk, the words, the gesture could supply,
|
|
The habit mimick, and the mein bely;
|
|
Plays well, but all his action is confin'd,
|
|
Extending not beyond our human kind.
|
|
Another, birds, and beasts, and dragons apes,
|
|
And dreadful images, and monster shapes:
|
|
This demon, Icelos, in Heav'n's high hall
|
|
The Gods have nam'd; but men Phobetor call.
|
|
A third is Phantasus, whose actions roul
|
|
On meaner thoughts, and things devoid of soul;
|
|
Earth, fruits, and flow'rs he represents in dreams,
|
|
And solid rocks unmov'd, and running streams.
|
|
These three to kings, and chiefs their scenes
|
|
display,
|
|
The rest before th' ignoble commons play.
|
|
Of these the chosen Morpheus is dispatch'd;
|
|
Which done, the lazy monarch, over-watch'd,
|
|
Down from his propping elbow drops his head,
|
|
Dissolv'd in sleep, and shrinks within his bed.
|
|
Darkling the demon glides, for flight prepar'd,
|
|
So soft, that scarce his fanning wings are heard.
|
|
To Trachin, swift as thought, the flitting shade,
|
|
Thro' air his momentary journey made:
|
|
Then lays aside the steerage of his wings,
|
|
Forsakes his proper form, assumes the king's;
|
|
And pale, as death, despoil'd of his array,
|
|
Into the queen's apartment takes his way,
|
|
And stands before the bed at dawn of day:
|
|
Unmov'd his eyes, and wet his beard appears;
|
|
And shedding vain, but seeming real tears;
|
|
The briny waters dropping from his hairs.
|
|
Then staring on her with a ghastly look,
|
|
And hollow voice, he thus the queen bespoke.
|
|
Know'st thou not me? Not yet, unhappy wife?
|
|
Or are my features perish'd with my life?
|
|
Look once again, and for thy husband lost,
|
|
Lo all that's left of him, thy husband's ghost!
|
|
Thy vows for my return were all in vain,
|
|
The stormy south o'ertook us in the main,
|
|
And never shalt thou see thy living lord again.
|
|
Bear witness, Heav'n, I call'd on thee in death,
|
|
And while I call'd, a billow stop'd my breath.
|
|
Think not, that flying fame reports my fate;
|
|
I present, I appear, and my own wreck relate.
|
|
Rise, wretched widow, rise; nor undeplor'd
|
|
Permit my soul to pass the Stygian ford;
|
|
But rise, prepar'd in black, to mourn thy perish'd
|
|
lord.
|
|
Thus said the player-God; and adding art
|
|
Of voice and gesture, so perform'd his part,
|
|
She thought (so like her love the shade appears)
|
|
That Ceyx spake the words, and Ceyx shed the tears;
|
|
She groan'd, her inward soul with grief opprest,
|
|
She sigh'd, she wept, and sleeping beat her breast;
|
|
Then stretch'd her arms t' embrace his body bare;
|
|
Her clasping arms inclose but empty air:
|
|
At this, not yet awake, she cry'd, O stay;
|
|
One is our fate, and common is our way!
|
|
So dreadful was the dream, so loud she spoke,
|
|
That starting sudden up, the slumber broke:
|
|
Then cast her eyes around, in hope to view
|
|
Her vanish'd lord, and find the vision true:
|
|
For now the maids, who waited her commands,
|
|
Ran in with lighted tapers in their hands.
|
|
Tir'd with the search, not finding what she seeks,
|
|
With cruel blows she pounds her blubber'd cheeks;
|
|
Then from her beaten breast the linnen tare,
|
|
And cut the golden caul that bound her hair.
|
|
Her nurse demands the cause; with louder cries
|
|
She prosecutes her griefs, and thus replies.
|
|
No more Alcyone; she suffer'd death
|
|
With her lov'd lord, when Ceyx lost his breath:
|
|
No flatt'ry, no false comfort, give me none,
|
|
My shipwreck'd Ceyx is for ever gone:
|
|
I saw, I saw him manifest in view,
|
|
His voice, his figure, and his gestures knew:
|
|
His lustre lost, and ev'ry living grace,
|
|
Yet I retain'd the features of his face;
|
|
Tho' with pale cheeks, wet beard, and dropping
|
|
hair,
|
|
None but my Ceyx could appear so fair:
|
|
I would have strain'd him with a strict embrace,
|
|
But thro' my arms he slipt, and vanish'd from the
|
|
place:
|
|
There, ev'n just there he stood; and as she spoke,
|
|
Where last the spectre was she cast her look:
|
|
Fain would she hope, and gaz'd upon the ground,
|
|
If any printed footsteps might be found.
|
|
Then sigh'd, and said: This I too well foreknew,
|
|
And my prophetick fears presag'd too true:
|
|
'Twas what I begg'd, when with a bleeding heart
|
|
I took my leave, and suffer'd thee to part;
|
|
Or I to go along, or thou to stay,
|
|
Never, ah never to divide our way!
|
|
Happier for me, that all our hours assign'd
|
|
Together we had liv'd; ev'n not in death disjoin'd!
|
|
So had my Ceyx still been living here,
|
|
Or with my Ceyx I had perish'd there:
|
|
Now I die absent, in the vast profound;
|
|
And me, without my self, the seas have drown'd.
|
|
The storms were not so cruel: should I strive
|
|
To lengthen life, and such a grief survive;
|
|
But neither will I strive, nor wretched thee
|
|
In death forsake, but keep thee company.
|
|
If not one common sepulchre contains
|
|
Our bodies, or one urn our last remains,
|
|
Yet Ceyx and Alcyone shall join,
|
|
Their names remember'd in one common line.
|
|
No farther voice her mighty grief affords,
|
|
For sighs come rushing in betwixt her words,
|
|
And stop'd her tongue; but what her tongue deny'd,
|
|
Soft tears, and groans, and dumb complaints
|
|
supply'd.
|
|
'Twas morning; to the port she takes her way,
|
|
And stands upon the margin of the sea:
|
|
That place, that very spot of ground she sought,
|
|
Or thither by her destiny was brought,
|
|
Where last he stood: and while she sadly said,
|
|
'Twas here he left me, lingring here delay'd
|
|
His parting kiss, and there his anchors weigh'd.
|
|
Thus speaking, while her thoughts past actions
|
|
trace,
|
|
And call to mind, admonish'd by the place,
|
|
Sharp at her utmost ken she cast her eyes,
|
|
And somewhat floating from afar descries:
|
|
It seems a corps a-drift to distant sight,
|
|
But at a distance who could judge aright?
|
|
It wafted nearer yet, and then she knew,
|
|
That what before she but surmis'd, was true:
|
|
A corps it was, but whose it was, unknown,
|
|
Yet mov'd, howe'er, she made the cause her own.
|
|
Took the bad omen of a shipwreck'd man,
|
|
As for a stranger wept, and thus began.
|
|
Poor wretch, on stormy seas to lose thy life,
|
|
Unhappy thou, but more thy widow'd wife;
|
|
At this she paus'd: for now the flowing tide
|
|
Had brought the body nearer to the side:
|
|
The more she looks, the more her fears increase,
|
|
At nearer sight; and she's her self the less:
|
|
Now driv'n ashore, and at her feet it lies,
|
|
She knows too much in knowing whom she sees:
|
|
Her husband's corps; at this she loudly shrieks,
|
|
'Tis he, 'tis he, she cries, and tears her cheeks,
|
|
Her hair, and vest; and stooping to the sands,
|
|
About his neck she cast her trembling hands.
|
|
And is it thus, o dearer than my life,
|
|
Thus, thus return'st thou to thy longing wife!
|
|
She said, and to the neighbouring mole she strode,
|
|
(Rais'd there to break th' incursions of the
|
|
flood).
|
|
Headlong from hence to plunge her self she
|
|
springs,
|
|
But shoots along, supported on her wings;
|
|
A bird new-made, about the banks she plies,
|
|
Not far from shore, and short excursions tries;
|
|
Nor seeks in air her humble flight to raise,
|
|
Content to skim the surface of the seas:
|
|
Her bill tho' slender, sends a creaking noise,
|
|
And imitates a lamentable voice.
|
|
Now lighting where the bloodless body lies,
|
|
She with a fun'ral note renews her cries:
|
|
At all her stretch, her little wings she spread,
|
|
And with her feather'd arms embrac'd the dead:
|
|
Then flick'ring to his palid lips, she strove
|
|
To print a kiss, the last essay of love.
|
|
Whether the vital touch reviv'd the dead,
|
|
Or that the moving waters rais'd his head
|
|
To meet the kiss, the vulgar doubt alone;
|
|
For sure a present miracle was shown.
|
|
The Gods their shapes to winter-birds translate,
|
|
But both obnoxious to their former fate.
|
|
Their conjugal affection still is ty'd,
|
|
And still the mournful race is multiply'd:
|
|
They bill, they tread; Alcyone compress'd,
|
|
Sev'n days sits brooding on her floating nest:
|
|
A wintry queen: her sire at length is kind,
|
|
Calms ev'ry storm, and hushes ev'ry wind;
|
|
Prepares his empire for his daughter's ease,
|
|
And for his hatching nephews smooths the seas.
|
|
Aesacus These some old man sees wanton in the air,
|
|
transform'd And praises the unhappy constant pair.
|
|
into a Then to his friend the long-neck'd corm'rant shows,
|
|
Cormorant The former tale reviving others' woes:
|
|
That sable bird, he cries, which cuts the flood
|
|
With slender legs, was once of royal blood;
|
|
His ancestors from mighty Tros proceed,
|
|
The brave Laomedon, and Ganymede
|
|
(Whose beauty tempted Jove to steal the boy),
|
|
And Priam, hapless prince! who fell with Troy:
|
|
Himself was Hector's brother, and (had Fate
|
|
But giv'n this hopeful youth a longer date)
|
|
Perhaps had rival'd warlike Hector's worth,
|
|
Tho' on the mother's side of meaner birth;
|
|
Fair Alyxothoe, a country maid,
|
|
Bare Aesacus by stealth in Ida's shade.
|
|
He fled the noisy town, and pompous court,
|
|
Lov'd the lone hills, and simple rural sport.
|
|
And seldom to the city would resort.
|
|
Yet he no rustick clownishness profest,
|
|
Nor was soft love a stranger to his breast:
|
|
The youth had long the nymph Hesperie woo'd,
|
|
Oft thro' the thicket, or the mead pursu'd:
|
|
Her haply on her father's bank he spy'd,
|
|
While fearless she her silver tresses dry'd;
|
|
Away she fled: not stags with half such speed,
|
|
Before the prowling wolf, scud o'er the mead;
|
|
Not ducks, when they the safer flood forsake,
|
|
Pursu'd by hawks, so swift regain the lake.
|
|
As fast he follow'd in the hot career;
|
|
Desire the lover wing'd, the virgin fear.
|
|
A snake unseen now pierc'd her heedless foot;
|
|
Quick thro' the veins the venom'd juices shoot:
|
|
She fell, and 'scap'd by death his fierce pursuit;
|
|
Her lifeless body, frighted, he embrac'd,
|
|
And cry'd, Not this I dreaded, but thy haste:
|
|
O had my love been less, or less thy fear!
|
|
The victory, thus bought, is far too dear.
|
|
Accursed snake! yet I more curs'd than he!
|
|
He gave the wound; the cause was given by me.
|
|
Yet none shall say, that unreveng'd you dy'd.
|
|
He spoke; then climb'd a cliff's o'er-hanging side,
|
|
And, resolute, leap'd on the foaming tide.
|
|
Tethys receiv'd him gently on the wave;
|
|
The death he sought deny'd, and feathers gave.
|
|
Debarr'd the surest remedy of grief,
|
|
And forc'd to live, he curst th' unask'd relief.
|
|
Then on his airy pinions upward flies,
|
|
And at a second fall successless tries;
|
|
The downy plume a quick descent denies.
|
|
Enrag'd, he often dives beneath the wave,
|
|
And there in vain expects to find a grave.
|
|
His ceaseless sorrow for th' unhappy maid,
|
|
Meager'd his look, and on his spirits prey'd.
|
|
Still near the sounding deep he lives; his name
|
|
From frequent diving and emerging came.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Eleventh Book.
|
|
BOOK THE TWELFTH
|
|
|
|
PRIAM, to whom the story was unknown,
|
|
As dead, deplor'd his metamorphos'd son:
|
|
A cenotaph his name, and title kept,
|
|
And Hector round the tomb, with all his brothers,
|
|
wept.
|
|
This pious office Paris did not share;
|
|
Absent alone; and author of the war,
|
|
Which, for the Spartan queen, the Grecians drew
|
|
T' avenge the rape; and Asia to subdue.
|
|
The A thousand ships were mann'd, to sail the sea:
|
|
Trojan War Nor had their just resentments found delay,
|
|
Had not the winds, and waves oppos'd their way.
|
|
At Aulis, with united pow'rs they meet,
|
|
But there, cross-winds or calms detain'd the fleet.
|
|
Now, while they raise an altar on the shore,
|
|
And Jove with solemn sacrifice adore;
|
|
A boding sign the priests and people see:
|
|
A snake of size immense ascends a tree,
|
|
And, in the leafie summit, spy'd a nest,
|
|
Which o'er her callow young, a sparrow press'd.
|
|
Eight were the birds unfledg'd; their mother flew,
|
|
And hover'd round her care; but still in view:
|
|
'Till the fierce reptile first devour'd the brood,
|
|
Then seiz'd the flutt'ring dam, and drunk her
|
|
blood.
|
|
This dire ostent, the fearful people view;
|
|
Calchas alone, by Phoebus taught, foreknew
|
|
What Heav'n decreed; and with a smiling glance,
|
|
Thus gratulates to Greece her happy chance:
|
|
O Argives, we shall conquer: Troy is ours,
|
|
But long delays shall first afflict our pow'rs:
|
|
Nine years of labour, the nine birds portend;
|
|
The tenth shall in the town's destruction end.
|
|
The serpent, who his maw obscene had fill'd,
|
|
The branches in his curl'd embraces held:
|
|
But, as in spires he stood, he turn'd to stone:
|
|
The stony snake retain'd the figure still his own.
|
|
Yet, not for this, the wind-bound navy weigh'd;
|
|
Slack were their sails; and Neptune disobey'd.
|
|
Some thought him loth the town should be destroy'd,
|
|
Whose building had his hands divine employ'd:
|
|
Not so the seer; who knew, and known foreshow'd,
|
|
The virgin Phoebe, with a virgin's blood
|
|
Must first be reconcil'd: the common cause
|
|
Prevail'd; and pity yielding to the laws,
|
|
Fair Iphigenia the devoted maid
|
|
Was, by the weeping priests, in linnen-robes
|
|
array'd;
|
|
All mourn her fate; but no relief appear'd;
|
|
The royal victim bound, the knife already rear'd:
|
|
When that offended Pow'r, who caus'd their woe,
|
|
Relenting ceas'd her wrath; and stop'd the coming
|
|
blow.
|
|
A mist before the ministers she cast,
|
|
And, in the virgin's room, a hind she plac'd.
|
|
Th' oblation slain, and Phoebe, reconcil'd,
|
|
The storm was hush'd, and dimpled ocean smil'd:
|
|
A favourable gale arose from shore,
|
|
Which to the port desir'd, the Graecian gallies
|
|
bore.
|
|
The House of Full in the midst of this created space,
|
|
Fame Betwixt Heav'n, Earth, and skies, there stands a
|
|
place,
|
|
Confining on all three, with triple bound;
|
|
Whence all things, tho' remote, are view'd around;
|
|
And thither bring their undulating sound.
|
|
The palace of loud Fame, her seat of pow'r,
|
|
Plac'd on the summet of a lofty tow'r;
|
|
A thousand winding entries long and wide,
|
|
Receive of fresh reports a flowing tide.
|
|
A thousand crannies in the walls are made;
|
|
Nor gate, nor bars exclude the busie trade.
|
|
'Tis built of brass, the better to diffuse
|
|
The spreading sounds, and multiply the news:
|
|
Where eccho's in repeated eccho's play:
|
|
A mart for ever full, and open night and day.
|
|
Nor silence is within, nor voice express,
|
|
But a deaf noise of sounds, that never cease.
|
|
Confus'd and chiding, like the hollow roar
|
|
Of tides, receding from th' insulted shore,
|
|
Or like the broken thunder heard from far,
|
|
When Jove at distance drives the rouling war.
|
|
The courts are fill'd with a tumultuous din
|
|
Of crouds, or issuing forth, or entring in:
|
|
A thorough-fare of news: where some devise
|
|
Things never heard, some mingle truth with lies;
|
|
The troubled air with empty sounds they beat,
|
|
Intent to hear, and eager to repeat.
|
|
Error sits brooding there, with added train
|
|
Of vain credulity, and joys as vain:
|
|
Suspicion, with sedition join'd, are near,
|
|
And rumours rais'd, and murmurs mix'd, and panique
|
|
fear.
|
|
Fame sits aloft, and sees the subject ground,
|
|
And seas about, and skies above; enquiring all
|
|
around.
|
|
The Goddess gives th' alarm; and soon is known
|
|
The Grecian fleet descending on the town.
|
|
Fix'd on defence, the Trojans are not slow
|
|
To guard their shore, from an expected foe.
|
|
They meet in fight: by Hector's fatal hand
|
|
Protesilaus falls, and bites the strand:
|
|
Which with expence of blood the Grecians won;
|
|
And prov'd the strength unknown of Priam's son.
|
|
And to their cost the Trojan leaders felt
|
|
The Grecian heroes; and what deaths they dealt.
|
|
The Story of From these first onsets, the Sigaean shore
|
|
Cygnus Was strew'd with carcasses, and stain'd with gore:
|
|
Neptunian Cygnus troops of Greeks had slain;
|
|
Achilles in his carr had scour'd the plain,
|
|
And clear'd the Trojan ranks: where-e'er he fought,
|
|
Cygnus, or Hector, through the fields he sought:
|
|
Cygnus he found; on him his force essay'd:
|
|
For Hector was to the tenth year delay'd.
|
|
His white-main'd steeds, that bow'd beneath the
|
|
yoke,
|
|
He chear'd to courage, with a gentle stroke;
|
|
Then urg'd his fiery chariot on the foe;
|
|
And rising shook his lance; in act to throw.
|
|
But first he cry'd, O youth, be proud to bear
|
|
Thy death, ennobled by Pelides' spear.
|
|
The lance pursu'd the voice without delay,
|
|
Nor did the whizzing weapon miss the way;
|
|
But pierc'd his cuirass, with such fury sent,
|
|
And sign'd his bosom with a purple dint.
|
|
At this the seed of Neptune: Goddess-born,
|
|
For ornament, not use, these arms are worn;
|
|
This helm, and heavy buckler, I can spare;
|
|
As only decorations of the war:
|
|
So Mars is arm'd for glory, not for need.
|
|
'Tis somewhat more from Neptune to proceed,
|
|
Than from a daughter of the sea to spring:
|
|
Thy sire is mortal; mine is ocean's king.
|
|
Secure of death, I shou'd contemn thy dart,
|
|
Tho' naked; and impassible depart:
|
|
He said, and threw: the trembling weapon pass'd
|
|
Through nine bull-hides, each under other plac'd,
|
|
On his broad shield; and stuck within the last.
|
|
Achilles wrench'd it out; and sent again
|
|
The hostile gift: the hostile gift was vain.
|
|
He try'd a third, a tough well-chosen spear;
|
|
Th' inviolable body stood sincere,
|
|
Though Cygnus then did no defence provide,
|
|
But scornful offer'd his unshielded side.
|
|
Not otherwise th' impatient hero far'd,
|
|
Than as a bull incompass'd with a guard,
|
|
Amid the Circus roars, provok'd from far
|
|
By sight of scarlet, and a sanguine war:
|
|
They quit their ground, his bended horns elude;
|
|
In vain pursuing, and in vain pursu'd:
|
|
Before to farther fight he wou'd advance,
|
|
He stood considering, and survey'd his lance.
|
|
Doubts if he wielded not a wooden spear
|
|
Without a point: he look'd, the point was there.
|
|
This is my hand, and this my lance, he said;
|
|
By which so many thousand foes are dead,
|
|
O whither is their usual virtue fled!
|
|
I had it once; and the Lyrnessian wall,
|
|
And Tenedos, confess'd it in their fall.
|
|
Thy streams, Caicus, rowl'd a crimson-flood;
|
|
And Thebes ran red with her own natives' blood.
|
|
Twice Telephus employ'd their piercing steel,
|
|
To wound him first, and afterward to heal.
|
|
The vigour of this arm was never vain:
|
|
And that my wonted prowess I retain,
|
|
Witness these heaps of slaughter on the plain.
|
|
He said; and, doubtful of his former deeds,
|
|
To some new tryal of his force proceeds.
|
|
He chose Menoetes from among the rest;
|
|
At him he launch'd his spear, and pierc'd his
|
|
breast:
|
|
On the hard earth the Lycian knock'd his head,
|
|
And lay supine; and forth the spirit fled.
|
|
Then thus the hero: Neither can I blame
|
|
The hand, or jav'lin; both are still the same.
|
|
The same I will employ against this foe,
|
|
And wish but with the same success to throw.
|
|
So spoke the chief; and while he spoke he threw;
|
|
The weapon with unerring fury flew,
|
|
At his left shoulder aim'd: nor entrance found;
|
|
But back, as from a rock, with swift rebound
|
|
Harmless return'd: a bloody mark appear'd,
|
|
Which with false joy the flatter'd hero chear'd.
|
|
Wound there was none; the blood that was in view,
|
|
The lance before from slain Menoetes drew.
|
|
Headlong he leaps from off his lofty car,
|
|
And in close fight on foot renews the war.
|
|
Raging with high disdain, repeats his blows;
|
|
Nor shield, nor armour can their force oppose;
|
|
Huge cantlets of his buckler strew the ground,
|
|
And no defence in his bor'd arms is found,
|
|
But on his flesh, no wound or blood is seen;
|
|
The sword it self is blunted on the skin.
|
|
This vain attempt the chief no longer bears;
|
|
But round his hollow temples and his ears
|
|
His buckler beats: the son of Neptune, stunn'd
|
|
With these repeated buffets, quits his ground;
|
|
A sickly sweat succeeds, and shades of night;
|
|
Inverted Nature swims before his sight:
|
|
Th' insulting victor presses on the more,
|
|
And treads the steps the vanquish'd trod before,
|
|
Nor rest, nor respite gives. A stone there lay
|
|
Behind his trembling foe, and stopp'd his way:
|
|
Achilles took th' advantage which he found,
|
|
O'er-turn'd, and push'd him backward on the ground,
|
|
His buckler held him under, while he press'd,
|
|
With both his knees, above his panting breast.
|
|
Unlac'd his helm: about his chin the twist
|
|
He ty'd; and soon the strangled soul dismiss'd.
|
|
With eager haste he went to strip the dead:
|
|
The vanish'd body from his arms was fled.
|
|
His sea-God sire, t' immortalize his frame,
|
|
Had turn'd it to a bird that bears his name.
|
|
A truce succeeds the labours of this day,
|
|
And arms suspended with a long delay.
|
|
While Trojan walls are kept with watch and ward;
|
|
The Greeks before their trenches mount the guard;
|
|
The feast approach'd; when to the blue-ey'd maid
|
|
His vows for Cygnus slain the victor paid,
|
|
And a white heyfer on her altar laid.
|
|
The reeking entrails on the fire they threw,
|
|
And to the Gods the grateful odour flew.
|
|
Heav'n had its part in sacrifice: the rest
|
|
Was broil'd, and roasted for the future feast.
|
|
The chief-invited guests were set around!
|
|
And hunger first asswag'd, the bowls were crown'd,
|
|
Which in deep draughts their cares, and labours
|
|
drown'd.
|
|
The mellow harp did not their ears employ:
|
|
And mute was all the warlike symphony:
|
|
Discourse, the food of souls, was their delight,
|
|
And pleasing chat prolong'd the summer's night.
|
|
The subject, deeds of arms; and valour shown,
|
|
Or on the Trojan side, or on their own.
|
|
Of dangers undertaken, fame atchiev'd,
|
|
They talk'd by turns; the talk by turns reliev'd.
|
|
What things but these could fierce Achilles tell,
|
|
Or what cou'd fierce Achilles hear so well?
|
|
The last great act perform'd, of Cygnus slain,
|
|
Did most the martial audience entertain:
|
|
Wondring to find a body free by Fate
|
|
From steel; and which cou'd ev'n that steel rebate:
|
|
Amaz'd, their admiration they renew;
|
|
And scarce Pelides cou'd believe it true.
|
|
The Story of Then Nestor thus: what once this age has known,
|
|
Caeneus In fated Cygnus, and in him alone,
|
|
These eyes have seen in Caeneus long before;
|
|
Whose body not a thousand swords cou'd bore.
|
|
Caeneus, in courage, and in strength, excell'd;
|
|
And still his Othrys with his fame is fill'd:
|
|
But what did most his martial deeds adorn
|
|
(Though since he chang'd his sex) a woman born.
|
|
A novelty so strange, and full of Fate,
|
|
His list'ning audience ask'd him to relate.
|
|
Achilles thus commends their common sute:
|
|
O father, first for prudence in repute,
|
|
Tell, with that eloquence, so much thy own,
|
|
What thou hast heard, or what of Caeneus known:
|
|
What was he, whence his change of sex begun,
|
|
What trophies, join'd in wars with thee, he won?
|
|
Who conquer'd him, and in what fatal strife
|
|
The youth, without a wound, cou'd lose his life?
|
|
Neleides then: Though tardy age, and time,
|
|
Have shrunk my sinews, and decay'd my prime;
|
|
Though much I have forgotten of my store,
|
|
Yet not exhausted, I remember more.
|
|
Of all that arms atchiev'd, or peace design'd,
|
|
That action still is fresher in my mind,
|
|
Than ought beside. If reverend age can give
|
|
To faith a sanction, in my third I live.
|
|
'Twas in my second cent'ry, I survey'd
|
|
Young Caenis, then a fair Thessalian maid:
|
|
Caenis the bright, was born to high command;
|
|
A princess, and a native of thy land,
|
|
Divine Achilles; every tongue proclaim'd
|
|
Her beauty, and her eyes all hearts inflam'd.
|
|
Peleus, thy sire, perhaps had sought her bed,
|
|
Among the rest; but he had either led
|
|
Thy mother then; or was by promise ty'd;
|
|
But she to him, and all, alike her love deny'd.
|
|
It was her fortune once to take her way
|
|
Along the sandy margin of the sea:
|
|
The Pow'r of ocean view'd her as she pass'd,
|
|
And, lov'd as soon as seen, by force embrac'd.
|
|
So Fame reports. Her virgin-treasure seiz'd,
|
|
And his new joys, the ravisher so pleas'd,
|
|
That thus, transported, to the nymph he cry'd;
|
|
Ask what thou wilt, no pray'r shall be deny'd.
|
|
This also Fame relates: the haughty fair,
|
|
Who not the rape ev'n of a God cou'd bear,
|
|
This answer, proud, return'd: To mighty wrongs
|
|
A mighty recompence, of right, belongs.
|
|
Give me no more to suffer such a shame;
|
|
But change the woman, for a better name;
|
|
One gift for all: she said; and while she spoke,
|
|
A stern, majestick, manly tone she took.
|
|
A man she was: and as the Godhead swore,
|
|
To Caeneus turn'd, who Caenis was before.
|
|
To this the lover adds, without request,
|
|
No force of steel shou'd violate his breast.
|
|
Glad of the gift, the new-made warrior goes;
|
|
And arms among the Greeks, and longs for equal
|
|
foes.
|
|
The Skirmish Now brave Perithous, bold Ixion's son,
|
|
between the The love of fair Hippodame had won.
|
|
Centaurs and The cloud-begotten race, half men, half beast,
|
|
Lapithites Invited, came to grace the nuptial feast:
|
|
In a cool cave's recess the treat was made,
|
|
Whose entrance, trees with spreading boughs
|
|
o'er-shade
|
|
They sate: and summon'd by the bridegroom, came,
|
|
To mix with those, the Lapythaean name:
|
|
Nor wanted I: the roofs with joy resound:
|
|
And Hymen, Io Hymen, rung around.
|
|
Rais'd altars shone with holy fires; the bride,
|
|
Lovely her self (and lovely by her side
|
|
A bevy of bright nymphs, with sober grace),
|
|
Came glitt'ring like a star, and took her place.
|
|
Her heav'nly form beheld, all wish'd her joy;
|
|
And little wanted; but in vain, their wishes all
|
|
employ.
|
|
For one, most brutal, of the brutal brood,
|
|
Or whether wine, or beauty fir'd his blood,
|
|
Or both at once, beheld with lustful eyes
|
|
The bride; at once resolv'd to make his prize.
|
|
Down went the board; and fastning on her hair,
|
|
He seiz'd with sudden force the frighted fair.
|
|
'Twas Eurytus began: his bestial kind
|
|
His crime pursu'd; and each as pleas'd his mind,
|
|
Or her, whom chance presented, took: the feast
|
|
An image of a taken town express'd.
|
|
The cave resounds with female shrieks; we rise,
|
|
Mad with revenge to make a swift reprise:
|
|
And Theseus first, What phrenzy has possess'd,
|
|
O Eurytus, he cry'd, thy brutal breast,
|
|
To wrong Perithous, and not him alone,
|
|
But while I live, two friends conjoyn'd in one?
|
|
To justifie his threat, he thrusts aside
|
|
The crowd of centaurs; and redeems the bride:
|
|
The monster nought reply'd: for words were vain,
|
|
And deeds cou'd only deeds unjust maintain;
|
|
But answers with his hand, and forward press'd,
|
|
With blows redoubled, on his face, and breast.
|
|
An ample goblet stood, of antick mold,
|
|
And rough with figures of the rising gold;
|
|
The hero snatch'd it up, and toss'd in air
|
|
Full at the front of the foul ravisher.
|
|
He falls; and falling vomits forth a flood
|
|
Of wine, and foam, and brains, and mingled blood.
|
|
Half roaring, and half neighing through the hall,
|
|
Arms, arms, the double-form'd with fury call;
|
|
To wreak their brother's death: a medley-flight
|
|
Of bowls, and jars, at first supply the fight,
|
|
Once instruments of feasts; but now of Fate;
|
|
Wine animates their rage, and arms their hate.
|
|
Bold Amycus, from the robb'd vestry brings
|
|
The chalices of Heav'n; and holy things
|
|
Of precious weight: a sconce that hung on high,
|
|
With tapers fill'd, to light the sacristy,
|
|
Torn from the cord, with his unhallow'd hand
|
|
He threw amid the Lapythaean band.
|
|
On Celadon the ruin fell; and left
|
|
His face of feature, and of form bereft:
|
|
So, when some brawny sacrificer knocks,
|
|
Before an altar led, an offer'd ox,
|
|
His eyes-balls rooted out, are thrown to ground;
|
|
His nose, dismantled, in his mouth is found;
|
|
His jaws, cheeks, front, one undistinguish'd wound.
|
|
This, Belates, th' avenger, cou'd not brook;
|
|
But, by the foot, a maple board he took;
|
|
And hurl'd at Amycus; his chin it bent
|
|
Against his chest, and down the centaur sent:
|
|
Whom sputtring bloody teeth, the second blow
|
|
Of his drawn sword, dispatch'd to shades below.
|
|
Grineus was near; and cast a furious look
|
|
On the side-altar, cens'd with sacred smoke,
|
|
And bright with flaming fires; The Gods, he cry'd,
|
|
Have with their holy trade our hands supply'd:
|
|
Why use we not their gifts? Then from the floor
|
|
An altar stone he heav'd, with all the load it
|
|
bore:
|
|
Altar, and altar's freight together slew,
|
|
Where thickest throng'd the Lapythaean crew:
|
|
And, at once, Broteas and Oryus flew.
|
|
Oryus' mother, Mycale, was known
|
|
Down from her sphere to draw the lab'ring moon.
|
|
Exadius cry'd, Unpunish'd shall not go
|
|
This fact, if arms are found against the foe.
|
|
He look'd about, where on a pine were spread
|
|
The votive horns of a stag's branching head:
|
|
At Grineus these he throws; so just they fly,
|
|
That the sharp antlers stuck in either eye:
|
|
Breathless, and blind he fell; with blood
|
|
besmear'd;
|
|
His eye-balls beaten out, hung dangling on his
|
|
beard.
|
|
Fierce Rhoetus, from the hearth a burning brand
|
|
Selects, and whirling waves; 'till, from his hand
|
|
The fire took flame; then dash'd it from the right,
|
|
On fair Charaxus' temples, near the sight:
|
|
The whistling pest came on, and pierc'd the bone,
|
|
And caught the yellow hair, that shrivel'd while it
|
|
shone.
|
|
Caught, like dry stubble fir'd; or like seerwood;
|
|
Yet from the wound ensu'd no purple flood;
|
|
But look'd a bubbling mass of frying blood.
|
|
His blazing locks sent forth a crackling sound;
|
|
And hiss'd, like red hot ir'n within the smithy
|
|
drown'd.
|
|
The wounded warrior shook his flaming hair,
|
|
Then (what a team of horse could hardly rear)
|
|
He heaves the threshold stone, but could not throw;
|
|
The weight itself forbad the threaten'd blow;
|
|
Which dropping from his lifted arms, came down
|
|
Full on Cometes' head; and crush'd his crown.
|
|
Nor Rhoetus then retain'd his joy; but said,
|
|
So by their fellows may our foes be sped;
|
|
Then, with redoubled strokes he plies his head:
|
|
The burning lever not deludes his pains:
|
|
But drives the batter'd skull within the brains.
|
|
Thus flush'd, the conqueror, with force renew'd,
|
|
Evagrus, Dryas, Corythus, pursu'd:
|
|
First, Corythus, with downy cheeks, he slew;
|
|
Whose fall, when fierce Evagrus had in view,
|
|
He cry'd, What palm is from a beardless prey?
|
|
Rhoetus prevents what more he had to say;
|
|
And drove within his mouth the fi'ry death,
|
|
Which enter'd hissing in, and choak'd his breath.
|
|
At Dryas next he flew: but weary chance,
|
|
No longer wou'd the same success advance.
|
|
For while he whirl'd in fiery circles round
|
|
The brand, a sharpen'd stake strong Dryas found;
|
|
And in the shoulder's joint inflicts the wound.
|
|
The weapon stuck; which, roaring out with pain,
|
|
He drew; nor longer durst the fight maintain,
|
|
But turn'd his back, for fear; and fled amain.
|
|
With him fled Orneus, with like dread possess'd,
|
|
Thaumas, and Medon wounded in the breast;
|
|
And Mermeros, in the late race renown'd,
|
|
Now limping ran, and tardy with his wound.
|
|
Pholus, and Melaneus from fight withdrew,
|
|
And Abas maim'd, who boars encountring slew:
|
|
And Augur Asbolos, whose art in vain,
|
|
From fight dissuaded the four-footed train,
|
|
Now beat the hoof with Nessus on the plain;
|
|
But to his fellow cry'd, Be safely slow,
|
|
Thy death deferr'd is due to great Alcides' bow.
|
|
Mean-time strong Dryas urg'd his chance so well,
|
|
That Lycidas, Areos, Imbreus fell;
|
|
All, one by one, and fighting face to face:
|
|
Crenaeus fled, to fall with more disgrace:
|
|
For, fearful, while he look'd behind, he bore,
|
|
Betwixt his nose, and front, the blow before.
|
|
Amid the noise, and tumult of the fray,
|
|
Snoring, and drunk with wine, Aphidas lay.
|
|
Ev'n then the bowl within his hand he kept,
|
|
And on a bear's rough hide securely slept.
|
|
Him Phorbas with his flying dart transfix'd;
|
|
Take thy next draught, with Stygian waters mix'd,
|
|
And sleep thy fill, th' insulting victor cry'd;
|
|
Surpriz'd with death unfelt, the centaur dy'd;
|
|
The ruddy vomit, as he breath'd his soul
|
|
Repass'd his throat, and fill'd his empty bowl.
|
|
I saw Petraeus' arms employ'd around
|
|
A well-grown oak, to root it from the ground.
|
|
This way, and that, he wrench'd the fibrous bands;
|
|
The trunk was like a sappling, in his hands,
|
|
And still obey'd the bent: while thus he stood,
|
|
Perithous' dart drove on; and nail'd him to the
|
|
wood;
|
|
Lycus, and Chromis fell, by him oppress'd:
|
|
Helops, and Dictis added to the rest
|
|
A nobler palm: Helops, through either ear
|
|
Transfix'd, receiv'd the penetrating spear.
|
|
This Dictis saw; and, seiz'd with sudden fright,
|
|
Leapt headlong from the hill of steepy height;
|
|
And crush'd an ash beneath, that cou'd not bear his
|
|
weight.
|
|
The shatter'd tree receives his fall; and strikes,
|
|
Within his full-blown paunch, the sharpen'd spikes.
|
|
Strong Aphareus had heav'd a mighty stone,
|
|
The fragment of a rock; and wou'd have thrown;
|
|
But Theseus, with a club of harden'd oak,
|
|
The cubit-bone of the bold centaur broke;
|
|
And left him maim'd; nor seconded the stroke.
|
|
Then leapt on tall Bianor's back (who bore
|
|
No mortal burden but his own, before);
|
|
Press'd with his knees his sides; the double man,
|
|
His speed with spurs increas'd, unwilling ran.
|
|
One hand the hero fastn'd on his locks;
|
|
His other ply'd him with repeated strokes.
|
|
The club rung round his ears, and batter'd brows;
|
|
He falls; and lashing up his heels, his rider
|
|
throws.
|
|
The same Herculean arms, Nedymnus wound;
|
|
And lay by him Lycotas on the ground,
|
|
And Hippasus, whose beard his breast invades;
|
|
And Ripheus, haunter of the woodland shades:
|
|
And Thereus, us'd with mountain-bears to strive,
|
|
And from their dens to draw th' indignant beasts
|
|
alive.
|
|
Demoleon cou'd not bear this hateful sight,
|
|
Or the long fortune of th' Athenian knight:
|
|
But pull'd with all his force, to disengage
|
|
From Earth a pine, the product of an age:
|
|
The root stuck fast: the broken trunk he sent
|
|
At Theseus; Theseus frustrates his intent,
|
|
And leaps aside; by Pallas warn'd, the blow
|
|
To shun (for so he said; and we believ'd it so).
|
|
Yet not in vain th' enormous weight was cast;
|
|
Which Crantor's body sunder'd at the waist:
|
|
Thy father's 'squire, Achilles, and his care;
|
|
Whom conquer'd in the Polopeian war,
|
|
Their king, his present ruin to prevent,
|
|
A pledge of peace implor'd, to Peleus sent.
|
|
Thy sire, with grieving eyes, beheld his Fate;
|
|
And cry'd, Not long, lov'd Crantor, shalt thou wait
|
|
Thy vow'd revenge. At once he said, and threw
|
|
His ashen-spear; which quiver'd, as it flew;
|
|
With all his force, and all his soul apply'd;
|
|
The sharp point enter'd in the centaur's side:
|
|
Both hands, to wrench it out, the monster join'd;
|
|
And wrench'd it out; but left the steel behind;
|
|
Stuck in his lungs it stood: inrag'd he rears
|
|
His hoofs, and down to ground thy father bears.
|
|
Thus trampled under foot, his shield defends
|
|
His head; his other hand the lance portends.
|
|
Ev'n while he lay extended on the dust,
|
|
He sped the centaur, with one single thrust.
|
|
Two more his lance before transfix'd from far;
|
|
And two, his sword had slain, in closer war.
|
|
To these was added Dorylas, who spread
|
|
A bull's two goring horns around his head.
|
|
With these he push'd; in blood already dy'd,
|
|
Him fearless, I approach'd; and thus defy'd:
|
|
Now, monster, now, by proof it shall appear,
|
|
Whether thy horns are sharper, or my spear.
|
|
At this, I threw: for want of other ward,
|
|
He lifted up his hand, his front to guard.
|
|
His hand it pass'd; and fix'd it to his brow:
|
|
Loud shouts of ours attend the lucky blow.
|
|
Him Peleus finish'd, with a second wound,
|
|
Which thro' the navel pierc'd: he reel'd around;
|
|
And dragg'd his dangling bowels on the ground.
|
|
Trod what he drag'd; and what he trod, he crush'd:
|
|
And to his mother-Earth, with empty belly, rush'd.
|
|
The Story of Nor cou'd thy form, o Cyllarus, foreflow
|
|
Cyllarus and Thy Fate (if form to monsters men allow):
|
|
Hylonome Just bloom'd thy beard: thy beard of golden hue:
|
|
Thy locks, in golden waves, about thy shoulders
|
|
flew.
|
|
Sprightly thy look: thy shapes in ev'ry part
|
|
So clean, as might instruct the sculptor's art;
|
|
As far as man extended: where began
|
|
The beast, the beast was equal to the man.
|
|
Add but a horse's head and neck; and he,
|
|
O Castor, was a courser worthy thee.
|
|
So was his back proportion'd for the seat:
|
|
So rose his brawny chest; so swiftly mov'd his
|
|
feet.
|
|
Coal-black his colour, but like jett it shone;
|
|
His legs, and flowing tail were white alone.
|
|
Belov'd by many maidens of his kind;
|
|
But fair Hylonome possess'd his mind;
|
|
Hylonome, for features, and for face,
|
|
Excelling all the nymphs of double race:
|
|
Nor less her blandishments, than beauty, move;
|
|
At once both loving, and confessing love.
|
|
For him she dress'd: for him, with female care
|
|
She comb'd, and set in curls, her auburn hair.
|
|
Of roses, violets, and lillies mix'd,
|
|
And sprigs of flowing rosemary betwixt,
|
|
She form'd the chaplet, that adorn'd her front:
|
|
In waters of the Pegasaean fount,
|
|
And in the streams that from the fountain play,
|
|
She wash'd her face; and bath'd her twice a-day.
|
|
The scarf of furs, that hung below her side,
|
|
Was ermin, or the panther's spotted pride;
|
|
Spoils of no common beast: with equal flame
|
|
They lov'd: their silvan pleasures were the same:
|
|
All day they hunted: and when day expir'd,
|
|
Together to some shady cave retir'd:
|
|
Invited to the nuptials, both repair:
|
|
And, side by side, they both engage in war.
|
|
Uncertain from what hand, a flying dart
|
|
At Cyllarus was sent; which pierc'd his heart.
|
|
The jav'lin drawn from out the mortal wound,
|
|
He faints with stagg'ring steps; and seeks the
|
|
ground:
|
|
The fair within her arms receiv'd his fall,
|
|
And strove his wand'ring spirits to recall:
|
|
And while her hand the streaming blood oppos'd,
|
|
Join'd face to face, his lips with hers she clos'd.
|
|
Stifled with kisses, a sweet death he dies;
|
|
She fills the fields with undistinguish'd cries;
|
|
At least her words were in her clamour drown'd;
|
|
For my stunn'd ears receiv'd no vocal sound.
|
|
In madness of her grief, she seiz'd the dart
|
|
New-drawn, and reeking from her lover's heart;
|
|
To her bare bosom the sharp point apply'd;
|
|
And wounded fell; and falling by his side,
|
|
Embrac'd him in her arms; and thus embracing dy'd.
|
|
Ev'n still methinks, I see Phaeocomes;
|
|
Strange was his habit, and as odd his dress.
|
|
Six lions' hides, with thongs together fast,
|
|
His upper part defended to his waist:
|
|
And where man ended, the continued vest,
|
|
Spread on his back, the houss and trappings of a
|
|
beast.
|
|
A stump too heavy for a team to draw
|
|
(It seems a fable, tho' the fact I saw);
|
|
He threw at Pholon; the descending blow
|
|
Divides the skull, and cleaves his head in two.
|
|
The brains, from nose, and mouth, and either ear,
|
|
Came issuing out, as through a colendar
|
|
The curdled milk; or from the press the whey,
|
|
Driv'n down by weight above, is drain'd away.
|
|
But him, while stooping down to spoil the slain,
|
|
Pierc'd through the paunch, I tumbled on the plain.
|
|
Then Chthonyus, and Teleboas I slew:
|
|
A fork the former arm'd; a dart his fellow threw.
|
|
The jav'lin wounded me (behold the scar,
|
|
Then was my time to seek the Trojan war;
|
|
Then I was Hector's match in open field;
|
|
But he was then unborn; at least a child:
|
|
Now, I am nothing). I forbear to tell
|
|
By Periphantas how Pyretus fell;
|
|
The centaur by the knight: nor will I stay
|
|
On Amphix, or what deaths he dealt that day:
|
|
What honour, with a pointless lance, he won,
|
|
Stuck in the front of a four-footed man.
|
|
What fame young Macareus obtain'd in fight:
|
|
Or dwell on Nessus, now return'd from flight.
|
|
How prophet Mopsus not alone divin'd,
|
|
Whose valour equal'd his foreseeing mind.
|
|
Caeneus Already Caeneus, with his conquering hand,
|
|
transform'd to Had slaughter'd five the boldest of their band.
|
|
an Eagle Pyrachmus, Helymus, Antimachus,
|
|
Bromus the brave, and stronger Stiphelus,
|
|
Their names I number'd, and remember well,
|
|
No trace remaining, by what wounds they fell.
|
|
Laitreus, the bulki'st of the double race,
|
|
Whom the spoil'd arms of slain Halesus grace,
|
|
In years retaining still his youthful might,
|
|
Though his black hairs were interspers'd with
|
|
white,
|
|
Betwixt th' imbattled ranks began to prance,
|
|
Proud of his helm, and Macedonian lance;
|
|
And rode the ring around; that either hoast
|
|
Might hear him, while he made this empty boast:
|
|
And from a strumpet shall we suffer shame?
|
|
For Caenis still, not Caeneus, is thy name:
|
|
And still the native softness of thy kind
|
|
Prevails; and leaves the woman in thy mind;
|
|
Remember what thou wert; what price was paid
|
|
To change thy sex; to make thee not a maid:
|
|
And but a man in shew; go, card and spin;
|
|
And leave the business of the war to men.
|
|
While thus the boaster exercis'd his pride,
|
|
The fatal spear of Caeneus reach'd his side:
|
|
Just in the mixture of the kinds it ran;
|
|
Betwixt the neather beast, and upper man:
|
|
The monster mad with rage, and stung with smart,
|
|
His lance directed at the hero's heart:
|
|
It struck; but bounded from his harden'd breast,
|
|
Like hail from tiles, which the safe house invest.
|
|
Nor seem'd the stroke with more effect to come,
|
|
Than a small pebble falling on a drum.
|
|
He next his fauchion try'd, in closer fight;
|
|
But the keen fauchion had no pow'r to bite.
|
|
He thrust; the blunted point return'd again:
|
|
Since downright blows, he cry'd, and thrusts are
|
|
vain,
|
|
I'll prove his side; in strong embraces held
|
|
He prov'd his side; his side the sword repell'd:
|
|
His hollow belly eccho'd to the stroke,
|
|
Untouch'd his body, as a solid rock;
|
|
Aim'd at his neck at last, the blade in shivers
|
|
broke.
|
|
Th' impassive knight stood idle, to deride
|
|
His rage, and offer'd oft his naked side;
|
|
At length, Now monster, in thy turn, he cry'd,
|
|
Try thou the strength of Caeneus: at the word
|
|
He thrust; and in his shoulder plung'd the sword.
|
|
Then writh'd his hand; and as he drove it down,
|
|
Deep in his breast, made many wounds in one.
|
|
The centaurs saw, inrag'd, th' unhop'd success;
|
|
And rushing on in crowds, together press;
|
|
At him, and him alone, their darts they threw:
|
|
Repuls'd they from his fated body flew.
|
|
Amaz'd they stood; 'till Monichus began,
|
|
O shame, a nation conquer'd by a man!
|
|
A woman-man! yet more a man is he,
|
|
Than all our race; and what he was, are we.
|
|
Now, what avail our nerves? th' united force,
|
|
Of two the strongest creatures, man and horse;
|
|
Nor Goddess-born; nor of Ixion's seed
|
|
We seem (a lover built for Juno's bed);
|
|
Master'd by this half man. Whole mountains throw
|
|
With woods at once, and bury him below.
|
|
This only way remains. Nor need we doubt
|
|
To choak the soul within; though not to force it
|
|
out:
|
|
Heap weights, instead of wounds. He chanc'd to see
|
|
Where southern storms had rooted up a tree;
|
|
This, rais'd from Earth, against the foe he threw;
|
|
Th' example shewn, his fellow-brutes pursue.
|
|
With forest-loads the warrior they invade;
|
|
Othrys, and Pelion soon were void of shade;
|
|
And spreading groves were naked mountains made.
|
|
Press'd with the burden, Caeneus pants for breath;
|
|
And on his shoulders bears the wooden death.
|
|
To heave th' intolerable weight he tries;
|
|
At length it rose above his mouth and eyes:
|
|
Yet still he heaves; and, strugling with despair,
|
|
Shakes all aside, and gains a gulp of air:
|
|
A short relief, which but prolongs his pain;
|
|
He faints by fits; and then respires again:
|
|
At last, the burden only nods above,
|
|
As when an earthquake stirs th' Idaean grove.
|
|
Doubtful his death: he suffocated seem'd,
|
|
To most; but otherwise our Mopsus deem'd,
|
|
Who said he saw a yellow bird arise
|
|
From out the piles, and cleave the liquid skies:
|
|
I saw it too, with golden feathers bright;
|
|
Nor e'er before beheld so strange a sight.
|
|
Whom Mopsus viewing, as it soar'd around
|
|
Our troop, and heard the pinions' rattling sound,
|
|
All hail, he cry'd, thy country's grace and love!
|
|
Once first of men below, now first of birds above.
|
|
Its author to the story gave belief:
|
|
For us, our courage was increas'd by grief:
|
|
Asham'd to see a single man, pursu'd
|
|
With odds, to sink beneath a multitude,
|
|
We push'd the foe: and forc'd to shameful flight,
|
|
Part fell, and part escap'd by favour of the night.
|
|
The Fate of This tale, by Nestor told, did much displease
|
|
Periclymenos Tlepolemus, the seed of Hercules:
|
|
For, often he had heard his father say,
|
|
That he himself was present at the fray;
|
|
And more than shar'd the glories of the day.
|
|
Old Chronicle, he said, among the rest,
|
|
You might have nam'd Alcides at the least:
|
|
Is he not worth your praise? The Pylian prince
|
|
Sigh'd ere he spoke; then made this proud defence.
|
|
My former woes in long oblivion drown'd,
|
|
I wou'd have lost; but you renew the wound:
|
|
Better to pass him o'er, than to relate
|
|
The cause I have your mighty sire to hate.
|
|
His fame has fill'd the world, and reach'd the sky
|
|
(Which, oh, I wish, with truth, I cou'd deny!);
|
|
We praise not Hector; though his name, we know,
|
|
Is great in arms; 'tis hard to praise a foe.
|
|
He, your great father, levell'd to the ground
|
|
Messenia's tow'rs: nor better fortune found
|
|
Elis, and Pylos; that a neighb'ring state,
|
|
And this my own: both guiltless of their fate.
|
|
To pass the rest, twelve, wanting one, he slew;
|
|
My brethren, who their birth from Neleus drew,
|
|
All youths of early promise, had they liv'd;
|
|
By him they perish'd: I alone surviv'd.
|
|
The rest were easie conquest: but the fate
|
|
Of Periclymenos, is wondrous to relate.
|
|
To him, our common grandsire of the main
|
|
Had giv'n to change his form, and chang'd, resume
|
|
again.
|
|
Vary'd at pleasure, every shape he try'd;
|
|
And in all beasts, Alcides still defy'd:
|
|
Vanquish'd on Earth, at length he soar'd above;
|
|
Chang'd to the bird, that bears the bolt of Jove:
|
|
The new-dissembled eagle, now endu'd
|
|
With beak, and pounces, Hercules pursu'd,
|
|
And cuff'd his manly cheeks, and tore his face;
|
|
Then, safe retir'd, and tour'd in empty space.
|
|
Alcides bore not long his flying foe;
|
|
But bending his inevitable bow,
|
|
Reach'd him in air, suspended as he stood;
|
|
And in his pinion fix'd the feather'd wood.
|
|
Light was the wound; but in the sinew hung
|
|
The point, and his disabled wing unstrung.
|
|
He wheel'd in air, and stretch'd his vans in vain;
|
|
His vans no longer cou'd his flight sustain:
|
|
For while one gather'd wind, one unsupply'd
|
|
Hung drooping down, nor pois'd his other side.
|
|
He fell: the shaft that slightly was impress'd,
|
|
Now from his heavy fall with weight increas'd,
|
|
Drove through his neck, aslant, he spurns the
|
|
ground,
|
|
And the soul issues through the weazon's wound.
|
|
Now, brave commander of the Rhodian seas,
|
|
What praise is due from me, to Hercules?
|
|
Silence is all the vengeance I decree
|
|
For my slain brothers; but 'tis peace with thee.
|
|
Thus with a flowing tongue old Nestor spoke:
|
|
Then, to full bowls each other they provoke:
|
|
At length, with weariness, and wine oppress'd,
|
|
They rise from table; and withdraw to rest.
|
|
The Death of The sire of Cygnus, monarch of the main,
|
|
Achilles Mean-time, laments his son, in battel slain,
|
|
And vows the victor's death; nor vows in vain.
|
|
For nine long years the smother'd pain he bore
|
|
(Achilles was not ripe for Fate before):
|
|
Then when he saw the promis'd hour was near,
|
|
He thus bespoke the God, that guides the year:
|
|
Immortal offspring of my brother Jove;
|
|
My brightest nephew, and whom best I love,
|
|
Whose hands were join'd with mine, to raise the
|
|
wall
|
|
Of tott'ring Troy, now nodding to her fall,
|
|
Dost thou not mourn our pow'r employ'd in vain;
|
|
And the defenders of our city slain?
|
|
To pass the rest, could noble Hector lie
|
|
Unpity'd, drag'd around his native Troy?
|
|
And yet the murd'rer lives: himself by far
|
|
A greater plague, than all the wasteful war:
|
|
He lives; the proud Pelides lives, to boast
|
|
Our town destroy'd, our common labour lost.
|
|
O, could I meet him! But I wish too late:
|
|
To prove my trident is not in his Fate!
|
|
But let him try (for that's allow'd) thy dart,
|
|
And pierce his only penetrable part.
|
|
Apollo bows to the superior throne;
|
|
And to his uncle's anger, adds his own.
|
|
Then in a cloud involv'd, he takes his flight,
|
|
Where Greeks, and Trojans mix'd in mortal fight;
|
|
And found out Paris, lurking where he stood,
|
|
And stain'd his arrows with plebeian blood:
|
|
Phoebus to him alone the God confess'd,
|
|
Then to the recreant knight, he thus address'd.
|
|
Dost thou not blush, to spend thy shafts in vain
|
|
On a degenerate, and ignoble train?
|
|
If fame, or better vengeance be thy care,
|
|
There aim: and, with one arrow, end the war.
|
|
He said; and shew'd from far the blazing shield
|
|
And sword, which, but Achilles, none cou'd wield;
|
|
And how he mov'd a God, and mow'd the standing
|
|
field.
|
|
The deity himself directs aright
|
|
Th' invenom'd shaft; and wings the fatal flight.
|
|
Thus fell the foremost of the Grecian name;
|
|
And he, the base adult'rer, boasts the fame.
|
|
A spectacle to glad the Trojan train;
|
|
And please old Priam, after Hector slain.
|
|
If by a female hand he had foreseen
|
|
He was to die, his wish had rather been
|
|
The lance, and double ax of the fair warriour
|
|
queen.
|
|
And now the terror of the Trojan field,
|
|
The Grecian honour, ornament, and shield,
|
|
High on a pile, th' unconquer'd chief is plac'd,
|
|
The God that arm'd him first, consum'd at last.
|
|
Of all the mighty man, the small remains
|
|
A little urn, and scarcely fill'd, contains.
|
|
Yet great in Homer, still Achilles lives;
|
|
And equal to himself, himself survives.
|
|
His buckler owns its former lord; and brings
|
|
New cause of strife, betwixt contending kings;
|
|
Who worthi'st after him, his sword to wield,
|
|
Or wear his armour, or sustain his shield.
|
|
Ev'n Diomede sat mute, with down-cast eyes;
|
|
Conscious of wanted worth to win the prize:
|
|
Nor Menelaus presum'd these arms to claim,
|
|
Nor he the king of men, a greater name.
|
|
Two rivals only rose: Laertes' son,
|
|
And the vast bulk of Ajax Telamon:
|
|
The king, who cherish'd each with equal love,
|
|
And from himself all envy wou'd remove,
|
|
Left both to be determin'd by the laws;
|
|
And to the Graecian chiefs transferr'd the cause.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Twelfth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE THIRTEENTH
|
|
|
|
THE chiefs were set; the soldiers crown'd the
|
|
field:
|
|
To these the master of the seven-fold shield
|
|
Upstarted fierce: and kindled with disdain.
|
|
Eager to speak, unable to contain
|
|
His boiling rage, he rowl'd his eyes around
|
|
The shore, and Graecian gallies hall'd a-ground.
|
|
The Then stretching out his hands, O Jove, he cry'd,
|
|
Speeches of Must then our cause before the fleet be try'd?
|
|
Ajax and And dares Ulysses for the prize contend,
|
|
Ulysses In sight of what he durst not once defend?
|
|
But basely fled that memorable day,
|
|
When I from Hector's hands redeem'd the flaming
|
|
prey.
|
|
So much 'tis safer at the noisie bar
|
|
With words to flourish, than ingage in war.
|
|
By diff'rent methods we maintain our right,
|
|
Nor am I made to talk, nor he to fight.
|
|
In bloody fields I labour to be great;
|
|
His arms are a smooth tongue, and soft deceit:
|
|
Nor need I speak my deeds, for those you see,
|
|
The sun, and day are witnesses for me.
|
|
Let him who fights unseen, relate his own,
|
|
And vouch the silent stars, and conscious moon.
|
|
Great is the prize demanded, I confess,
|
|
But such an abject rival makes it less;
|
|
That gift, those honours, he but hop'd to gain,
|
|
Can leave no room for Ajax to be vain:
|
|
Losing he wins, because his name will be
|
|
Ennobled by defeat, who durst contend with me.
|
|
Were my known valour question'd, yet my blood
|
|
Without that plea wou'd make my title good:
|
|
My sire was Telamon, whose arms, employ'd
|
|
With Hercules, these Trojan walls destroy'd;
|
|
And who before with Jason sent from Greece,
|
|
In the first ship brought home the golden fleece.
|
|
Great Telamon from Aeacus derives
|
|
His birth (th' inquisitor of guilty lives
|
|
In shades below; where Sisyphus, whose son
|
|
This thief is thought, rouls up the restless heavy
|
|
stone),
|
|
Just Aeacus, the king of Gods above
|
|
Begot: thus Ajax is the third from Jove.
|
|
Nor shou'd I seek advantage from my line,
|
|
Unless (Achilles) it was mix'd with thine:
|
|
As next of kin, Achilles' arms I claim;
|
|
This fellow wou'd ingraft a foreign name
|
|
Upon our stock, and the Sisyphian seed
|
|
By fraud, and theft asserts his father's breed:
|
|
Then must I lose these arms, because I came
|
|
To fight uncall'd, a voluntary name,
|
|
Nor shunn'd the cause, but offer'd you my aid?
|
|
While he long lurking was to war betray'd:
|
|
Forc'd to the field he came, but in the reer;
|
|
And feign'd distraction to conceal his fear:
|
|
'Till one more cunning caught him in the snare
|
|
(Ill for himself); and dragg'd him into war.
|
|
Now let a hero's arms a coward vest,
|
|
And he who shunn'd all honours, gain the best:
|
|
And let me stand excluded from my right,
|
|
Robb'd of my kinsman's arms, who first appear'd in
|
|
fight,
|
|
Better for us, at home had he remain'd,
|
|
Had it been true the madness which he feign'd,
|
|
Or so believ'd; the less had been our shame,
|
|
The less his counsell'd crime, which brands the
|
|
Grecian name;
|
|
Nor Philoctetes had been left inclos'd
|
|
In a bare isle, to wants and pains expos'd,
|
|
Where to the rocks, with solitary groans,
|
|
His suff'rings, and our baseness he bemoans:
|
|
And wishes (so may Heav'n his wish fulfill)
|
|
The due reward to him, who caus'd his ill.
|
|
Now he, with us to Troy's destruction sworn,
|
|
Our brother of the war, by whom are born
|
|
Alcides' arrows, pent in narrow bounds,
|
|
With cold and hunger pinch'd, and pain'd with
|
|
wounds,
|
|
To find him food and cloathing, must employ
|
|
Against the birds the shafts due to the fate of
|
|
Troy.
|
|
Yet still he lives, and lives from treason free,
|
|
Because he left Ulysses' company;
|
|
Poor Palamede might wish, so void of aid,
|
|
Rather to have been left, than so to death
|
|
betray'd.
|
|
The coward bore the man immortal spight,
|
|
Who sham'd him out of madness into fight:
|
|
Nor daring otherwise to vent his hate,
|
|
Accus'd him first of treason to the state;
|
|
And then for proof produc'd the golden store,
|
|
Himself had hidden in his tent before:
|
|
Thus of two champions he depriv'd our host,
|
|
By exile one, and one by treason lost.
|
|
Thus fights Ulysses, thus his fame extends,
|
|
A formidable man, but to his friends:
|
|
Great, for what greatness is in words, and sound,
|
|
Ev'n faithful Nestor less in both is found:
|
|
But that he might without a rival reign,
|
|
He left this faithful Nestor on the plain;
|
|
Forsook his friend ev'n at his utmost need,
|
|
Who tir'd, and tardy with his wounded steed,
|
|
Cry'd out for aid, and call'd him by his name;
|
|
But cowardice has neither ears nor shame;
|
|
Thus fled the good old man, bereft of aid,
|
|
And, for as much as lay in him, betray'd:
|
|
That this is not a fable forg'd by me,
|
|
Like one of his, an Ulyssean lie,
|
|
I vouch ev'n Diomede, who tho' his friend,
|
|
Cannot that act excuse, much less defend:
|
|
He call'd him back aloud, and tax'd his fear;
|
|
And sure enough he heard, but durst not hear.
|
|
The Gods with equal eyes on mortal look,
|
|
He justly was forsaken, who forsook:
|
|
Wanted that succour, he refus'd to lend,
|
|
Found ev'ry fellow such another friend:
|
|
No wonder, if he roar'd that all might hear;
|
|
His elocution was increas'd by fear:
|
|
I heard, I ran, I found him out of breath,
|
|
Pale, trembling, and half dead with fear of death.
|
|
Though he had judg'd himself by his own laws,
|
|
And stood condemn'd, I help'd the common cause:
|
|
With my broad buckler hid him from the foe
|
|
(Ev'n the shield trembled as he lay below);
|
|
And from impending Fate the coward freed:
|
|
Good Heav'n forgive me for so bad a deed!
|
|
If still he will persist, and urge the strife,
|
|
First let him give me back his forfeit life:
|
|
Let him return to that opprobrious field;
|
|
Again creep under my protecting shield:
|
|
Let him lie wounded, let the foe be near,
|
|
And let his quiv'ring heart confess his fear;
|
|
There put him in the very jaws of Fate;
|
|
And let him plead his cause in that estate:
|
|
And yet when snatch'd from death, when from below
|
|
My lifted shield I loos'd, and let him go;
|
|
Good Heav'ns, how light he rose, with what a bound
|
|
He sprung from earth, forgetful of his wound;
|
|
How fresh, how eager then his feet to ply;
|
|
Who had not strength to stand, had speed to fly!
|
|
Hector came on, and brought the Gods along;
|
|
Fear seiz'd alike the feeble, and the strong:
|
|
Each Greek was an Ulysses; such a dread
|
|
Th' approach, and ev'n the sound of Hector bred:
|
|
Him, flesh'd with slaughter, and with conquest
|
|
crown'd,
|
|
I met, and over-turn'd him to the ground;
|
|
When after, matchless as he deem'd in might,
|
|
He challeng'd all our host to single fight;
|
|
All eyes were fix'd on me: the lots were thrown;
|
|
But for your champion I was wish'd alone:
|
|
Your vows were heard; we fought, and neither yield;
|
|
Yet I return'd unvanquish'd from the field.
|
|
With Jove to friend, th' insulting Trojan came,
|
|
And menac'd us with force, our fleet with flame.
|
|
Was it the strength of this tongue-valiant lord,
|
|
In that black hour, that sav'd you from the sword?
|
|
Or was my breast expos'd alone, to brave
|
|
A thousand swords, a thousand ships to save?
|
|
The hopes of your return! And can you yield,
|
|
For a sav'd fleet, less than a single shield?
|
|
Think it no boast, o Grecians, if I deem
|
|
These arms want Ajax, more than Ajax them:
|
|
Or, I with them an equal honour share;
|
|
They honour'd to be worn, and I to wear.
|
|
Will he compare my courage with his sleight?
|
|
As well he may compare the day with night.
|
|
Night is indeed the province of his reign:
|
|
Yet all his dark exploits no more contain
|
|
Than a spy taken, and a sleeper slain;
|
|
A priest made pris'ner, Pallas made a prey:
|
|
But none of all these actions done by day:
|
|
Nor ought of these was done, and Diomede away.
|
|
If on such petty merits you confer
|
|
So vast a prize, let each his portion share;
|
|
Make a just dividend; and if not all,
|
|
The greater part to Diomede will fall.
|
|
But why for Ithacus such arms as those,
|
|
Who naked, and by night invades his foes?
|
|
The glitt'ring helm by moonlight will proclaim
|
|
The latent robber, and prevent his game:
|
|
Nor cou'd he hold his tott'ring head upright
|
|
Beneath that morion, or sustain the weight;
|
|
Nor that right arm cou'd toss the beamy lance;
|
|
Much less the left that ampler shield advance;
|
|
Pond'rous with precious weight, and rough with cost
|
|
Of the round world in rising gold emboss'd.
|
|
That orb would ill become his hand to wield,
|
|
And look as for the gold he stole the shield;
|
|
Which, shou'd your error on the wretch bestow,
|
|
It would not frighten, but allure the foe:
|
|
Why asks he, what avails him not in fight,
|
|
And wou'd but cumber, and retard his flight,
|
|
In which his only excellence is plac'd?
|
|
You give him death, that intercept his haste.
|
|
Add, that his own is yet a maiden-shield,
|
|
Nor the least dint has suffer'd in the field,
|
|
Guiltless of fight: mine batter'd, hew'd, and
|
|
bor'd,
|
|
Worn out of service, must forsake his lord,
|
|
What farther need of words our right to scan?
|
|
My arguments are deeds, let action speak the man.
|
|
Since from a champion's arms the strife arose,
|
|
Go cast the glorious prize amid the foes;
|
|
Then send us to redeem both arms, and shield,
|
|
And let him wear, who wins 'em in the field.
|
|
He said: a murmur from a multitude,
|
|
Or somewhat like a stifled shout, ensu'd:
|
|
'Till from his seat arose Laertes' son,
|
|
Look'd down a while, and paus'd, e'er he begun;
|
|
Then, to th' expecting audience, rais'd his look,
|
|
And not without prepar'd attention spoke:
|
|
Soft was his tone, and sober was his face;
|
|
Action his words, and words his action grace.
|
|
If Heav'n, my lords, had heard our common pray'r,
|
|
These arms had caus'd no quarrel for an heir;
|
|
Still great Achilles had his own possess'd,
|
|
And we with great Achilles had been bless'd;
|
|
But since hard Fate, and Heav'n's severe decree,
|
|
Have ravish'd him away from you, and me
|
|
(At this he sigh'd, and wip'd his eyes, and drew,
|
|
Or seem'd to draw, some drops of kindly dew),
|
|
Who better can succeed Achilles lost,
|
|
Than he, who gave Achilles to your hoast?
|
|
This only I request, that neither he
|
|
May gain, by being what he seems to be,
|
|
A stupid thing; nor I may lose the prize,
|
|
By having sense, which Heav'n to him denies:
|
|
Since great or small, the talent I enjoy'd
|
|
Was ever in the common cause employ'd;
|
|
Nor let my wit, and wonted eloquence,
|
|
Which often has been us'd in your defense,
|
|
And in my own, this only time be brought
|
|
To bear against my self, and deem'd a fault.
|
|
Make not a crime, where Nature made it none;
|
|
For ev'ry man may freely use his own.
|
|
The deeds of long-descended ancestors
|
|
Are but by grace of imputation ours,
|
|
Theirs in effect; but since he draws his line
|
|
From Jove, and seems to plead a right divine;
|
|
From Jove, like him, I claim my pedigree,
|
|
And am descended in the same degree:
|
|
My sire Laertes was Arcesius' heir,
|
|
Arcesius was the son of Jupiter:
|
|
No parricide, no banish'd man, is known
|
|
In all my line: let him excuse his own.
|
|
Hermes ennobles too my mother's side,
|
|
By both my parents to the Gods ally'd.
|
|
But not because that on the female part
|
|
My blood is better, dare I claim desert,
|
|
Or that my sire from parricide is free;
|
|
But judge by merit betwixt him, and me:
|
|
The prize be to the best; provided yet
|
|
That Ajax for a while his kin forget,
|
|
And his great sire, and greater uncle's name,
|
|
To fortifie by them his feeble claim:
|
|
Be kindred and relation laid aside,
|
|
And honour's cause by laws of honour try'd:
|
|
For if he plead proximity of blood;
|
|
That empty title is with ease withstood.
|
|
Peleus, the hero's sire, more nigh than he,
|
|
And Pyrrhus, his undoubted progeny,
|
|
Inherit first these trophies of the field;
|
|
To Scyros, or to Pthia, send the shield:
|
|
And Teucer has an uncle's right; yet he
|
|
Waves his pretensions, nor contends with me.
|
|
Then since the cause on pure desert is plac'd,
|
|
Whence shall I take my rise, what reckon last?
|
|
I not presume on ev'ry act to dwell,
|
|
But take these few, in order as they fell.
|
|
Thetis, who knew the Fates, apply'd her care
|
|
To keep Achilles in disguise from war;
|
|
And 'till the threatning influence was past,
|
|
A woman's habit on the hero cast:
|
|
All eyes were cozen'd by the borrow'd vest,
|
|
And Ajax (never wiser than the rest)
|
|
Found no Pelides there: at length I came
|
|
With proffer'd wares to this pretended dame;
|
|
She, not discover'd by her mien, or voice,
|
|
Betray'd her manhood by her manly choice;
|
|
And while on female toys her fellows look,
|
|
Grasp'd in her warlike hand, a javelin shook;
|
|
Whom, by this act reveal'd, I thus bespoke:
|
|
O Goddess-born! resist not Heav'n's decree,
|
|
The fall of Ilium is reserv'd for thee;
|
|
Then seiz'd him, and produc'd in open light,
|
|
Sent blushing to the field the fatal knight.
|
|
Mine then are all his actions of the war;
|
|
Great Telephus was conquer'd by my spear,
|
|
And after cur'd: to me the Thebans owe,
|
|
Lesbos, and Tenedos, their overthrow;
|
|
Syros and Cylla: not on all to dwell,
|
|
By me Lyrnesus, and strong Chrysa fell:
|
|
And since I sent the man who Hector slew,
|
|
To me the noble Hector's death is due:
|
|
Those arms I put into his living hand,
|
|
Those arms, Pelides dead, I now demand.
|
|
When Greece was injur'd in the Spartan prince,
|
|
And met at Aulis to avenge th' offence,
|
|
'Twas a dead calm, or adverse blasts, that reign'd,
|
|
And in the port the wind-bound fleet detain'd:
|
|
Bad signs were seen, and oracles severe
|
|
Were daily thunder'd in our gen'ral's ear;
|
|
That by his daughter's blood we must appease
|
|
Diana's kindled wrath, and free the seas.
|
|
Affection, int'rest, fame, his heart assail'd:
|
|
But soon the father o'er the king prevail'd:
|
|
Bold, on himself he took the pious crime,
|
|
As angry with the Gods, as they with him.
|
|
No subject cou'd sustain their sov'reign's look,
|
|
'Till this hard enterprize I undertook:
|
|
I only durst th' imperial pow'r controul,
|
|
And undermin'd the parent in his soul;
|
|
Forc'd him t' exert the king for common good,
|
|
And pay our ransom with his daughter's blood.
|
|
Never was cause more difficult to plead,
|
|
Than where the judge against himself decreed:
|
|
Yet this I won by dint of argument;
|
|
The wrongs his injur'd brother underwent,
|
|
And his own office, sham'd him to consent.
|
|
'Tis harder yet to move the mother's mind,
|
|
And to this heavy task was I design'd:
|
|
Reasons against her love I knew were vain;
|
|
I circumvented whom I could not gain:
|
|
Had Ajax been employ'd, our slacken'd sails
|
|
Had still at Aulis waited happy gales.
|
|
Arriv'd at Troy, your choice was fix'd on me,
|
|
A fearless envoy, fit for a bold embassy:
|
|
Secure, I enter'd through the hostile court,
|
|
Glitt'ring with steel, and crowded with resort:
|
|
There, in the midst of arms, I plead our cause,
|
|
Urge the foul rape, and violated laws;
|
|
Accuse the foes, as authors of the strife,
|
|
Reproach the ravisher, demand the wife.
|
|
Priam, Antenor, and the wiser few,
|
|
I mov'd; but Paris, and his lawless crew
|
|
Scarce held their hands, and lifted swords; but
|
|
stood
|
|
In act to quench their impious thirst of blood:
|
|
This Menelaus knows; expos'd to share
|
|
With me the rough preludium of the war.
|
|
Endless it were to tell, what I have done,
|
|
In arms, or council, since the siege begun:
|
|
The first encounter's past, the foe repell'd,
|
|
They skulk'd within the town, we kept the field.
|
|
War seem'd asleep for nine long years; at length
|
|
Both sides resolv'd to push, we try'd our strength
|
|
Now what did Ajax, while our arms took breath,
|
|
Vers'd only in the gross mechanick trade of death?
|
|
If you require my deeds, with ambush'd arms
|
|
I trapp'd the foe, or tir'd with false alarms;
|
|
Secur'd the ships, drew lines along the plain,
|
|
The fainting chear'd, chastis'd the rebel-train,
|
|
Provided forage, our spent arms renew'd;
|
|
Employ'd at home, or sent abroad, the common cause
|
|
pursu'd.
|
|
The king, deluded in a dream by Jove,
|
|
Despair'd to take the town, and order'd to remove.
|
|
What subject durst arraign the Pow'r supream,
|
|
Producing Jove to justifie his dream?
|
|
Ajax might wish the soldiers to retain
|
|
From shameful flight, but wishes were in vain:
|
|
As wanting of effect had been his words,
|
|
Such as of course his thundring tongue affords.
|
|
But did this boaster threaten, did he pray,
|
|
Or by his own example urge their stay?
|
|
None, none of these: but ran himself away.
|
|
I saw him run, and was asham'd to see;
|
|
Who ply'd his feet so fast to get aboard, as he?
|
|
Then speeding through the place, I made a stand,
|
|
And loudly cry'd, O base degenerate band,
|
|
To leave a town already in your hand!
|
|
After so long expence of blood, for fame,
|
|
To bring home nothing, but perpetual shame!
|
|
These words, or what I have forgotten since
|
|
(For grief inspir'd me then with eloquence),
|
|
Reduc'd their minds; they leave the crowded port,
|
|
And to their late forsaken camp resort:
|
|
Dismay'd the council met: this man was there,
|
|
But mute, and not recover'd of his fear:
|
|
Thersites tax'd the king, and loudly rail'd,
|
|
But his wide opening mouth with blows I seal'd.
|
|
Then, rising, I excite their souls to fame,
|
|
And kindle sleeping virtue into flame.
|
|
From thence, whatever he perform'd in fight
|
|
Is justly mine, who drew him back from flight.
|
|
Which of the Grecian chiefs consorts with thee?
|
|
But Diomede desires my company,
|
|
And still communicates his praise with me.
|
|
As guided by a God, secure he goes,
|
|
Arm'd with my fellowship, amid the foes:
|
|
And sure no little merit I may boast,
|
|
Whom such a man selects from such an hoast;
|
|
Unforc'd by lots I went without affright,
|
|
To dare with him the dangers of the night:
|
|
On the same errand sent, we met the spy
|
|
Of Hector, double-tongu'd, and us'd to lie;
|
|
Him I dispatch'd, but not 'till undermin'd,
|
|
I drew him first to tell, what treach'rous Troy
|
|
design'd:
|
|
My task perform'd, with praise I had retir'd,
|
|
But not content with this, to greater praise
|
|
aspir'd:
|
|
Invaded Rhesus, and his Thracian crew,
|
|
And him, and his, in their own strength I slew;
|
|
Return'd a victor, all my vows compleat,
|
|
With the king's chariot, in his royal seat:
|
|
Refuse me now his arms, whose fiery steeds
|
|
Were promis'd to the spy for his nocturnal deeds:
|
|
Yet let dull Ajax bear away my right,
|
|
When all his days out-balance this one night.
|
|
Nor fought I darkling still: the sun beheld
|
|
With slaughter'd Lycians when I strew'd the field:
|
|
You saw, and counted as I pass'd along,
|
|
Alastor, Chromius, Ceranos the strong,
|
|
Alcander, Prytanis, and Halius,
|
|
Noemon, Charopes, and Ennomus;
|
|
Coon, Chersidamas; and five beside,
|
|
Men of obscure descent, but courage try'd:
|
|
All these this hand laid breathless on the ground;
|
|
Nor want I proofs of many a manly wound:
|
|
All honest, all before: believe not me;
|
|
Words may deceive, but credit what you see.
|
|
At this he bar'd his breast, and show'd his
|
|
scars,
|
|
As of a furrow'd field, well plow'd with wars;
|
|
Nor is this part unexercis'd, said he;
|
|
That gyant-bulk of his from wounds is free:
|
|
Safe in his shield he fears no foe to try,
|
|
And better manages his blood, than I:
|
|
But this avails me not; our boaster strove
|
|
Not with our foes alone, but partial Jove,
|
|
To save the fleet: this I confess is true
|
|
(Nor will I take from any man his due):
|
|
But thus assuming all, he robs from you.
|
|
Some part of honour to your share will fall,
|
|
He did the best indeed, but did not all.
|
|
Patroclus in Achilles' arms, and thought
|
|
The chief he seem'd, with equal ardour fought;
|
|
Preserv'd the fleet, repell'd the raging fire,
|
|
And forc'd the fearful Trojans to retire.
|
|
But Ajax boasts, that he was only thought
|
|
A match for Hector, who the combat sought:
|
|
Sure he forgets the king, the chiefs, and me:
|
|
All were as eager for the fight, as he:
|
|
He but the ninth, and not by publick voice,
|
|
Or ours preferr'd, was only Fortune's choice:
|
|
They fought; nor can our hero boast th' event,
|
|
For Hector from the field unwounded went.
|
|
Why am I forc'd to name that fatal day,
|
|
That snatch'd the prop and pride of Greece away?
|
|
I saw Pelides sink, with pious grief,
|
|
And ran in vain, alas! to his relief;
|
|
For the brave soul was fled: full of my friend
|
|
I rush'd amid the war, his relicks to defend:
|
|
Nor ceas'd my toil, 'till I redeem'd the prey,
|
|
And, loaded with Achilles, march'd away:
|
|
Those arms, which on these shoulders then I bore,
|
|
'Tis just you to these shoulders should restore.
|
|
You see I want not nerves, who cou'd sustain
|
|
The pond'rous ruins of so great a man:
|
|
Or if in others equal force you find,
|
|
None is endu'd with a more grateful mind.
|
|
Did Thetis then, ambitious in her care,
|
|
These arms thus labour'd for her son prepare;
|
|
That Ajax after him the heav'nly gift shou'd wear!
|
|
For that dull soul to stare with stupid eyes,
|
|
On the learn'd unintelligible prize!
|
|
What are to him the sculptures of the shield,
|
|
Heav'n's planets, Earth, and Ocean's watry field?
|
|
The Pleiads, Hyads; less, and greater Bear,
|
|
Undipp'd in seas; Orion's angry star;
|
|
Two diff'ring cities, grav'd on either hand;
|
|
Would he wear arms he cannot understand?
|
|
Beside, what wise objections he prepares
|
|
Against my late accession to the wars?
|
|
Does not the fool perceive his argument
|
|
Is with more force against Achilles bent?
|
|
For if dissembling be so great a crime,
|
|
The fault is common, and the same in him:
|
|
And if he taxes both of long delay,
|
|
My guilt is less, who sooner came away.
|
|
His pious mother, anxious for his life,
|
|
Detain'd her son; and me, my pious wife.
|
|
To them the blossoms of our youth were due,
|
|
Our riper manhood we reserv'd for you.
|
|
But grant me guilty, 'tis not much my care,
|
|
When with so great a man my guilt I share:
|
|
My wit to war the matchless hero brought,
|
|
But by this fool I never had been caught.
|
|
Nor need I wonder, that on me he threw
|
|
Such foul aspersions, when he spares not you:
|
|
If Palamede unjustly fell by me,
|
|
Your honour suffer'd in th' unjust decree:
|
|
I but accus'd, you doom'd: and yet he dy'd,
|
|
Convinc'd of treason, and was fairly try'd:
|
|
You heard not he was false; your eyes beheld
|
|
The traytor manifest; the bribe reveal'd.
|
|
That Philoctetes is on Lemnos left,
|
|
Wounded, forlorn, of human aid bereft,
|
|
Is not my crime, or not my crime alone;
|
|
Defend your justice, for the fact's your own:
|
|
'Tis true, th' advice was mine; that staying there
|
|
He might his weary limbs with rest repair,
|
|
From a long voyage free, and from a longer war.
|
|
He took the counsl, and he lives at least;
|
|
Th' event declares I counsell'd for the best:
|
|
Though faith is all in ministers of state;
|
|
For who can promise to be fortunate?
|
|
Now since his arrows are the Fate of Troy,
|
|
Do not my wit, or weak address, employ;
|
|
Send Ajax there, with his persuasive sense,
|
|
To mollifie the man, and draw him thence:
|
|
But Xanthus shall run backward; Ida stand
|
|
A leafless mountain; and the Grecian band
|
|
Shall fight for Troy; if, when my councils fail,
|
|
The wit of heavy Ajax can prevail.
|
|
Hard Philoctetes, exercise thy spleen
|
|
Against thy fellows, and the king of men;
|
|
Curse my devoted head, above the rest,
|
|
And wish in arms to meet me breast to breast:
|
|
Yet I the dang'rous task will undertake,
|
|
And either die my self, or bring thee back.
|
|
Nor doubt the same success, as when before
|
|
The Phrygian prophet to these tents I bore,
|
|
Surpriz'd by night, and forc'd him to declare
|
|
In what was plac'd the fortune of the war,
|
|
Heav'n's dark decrees, and answers to display,
|
|
And how to take the town, and where the secret lay:
|
|
Yet this I compass'd, and from Troy convey'd
|
|
The fatal image of their guardian-maid;
|
|
That work was mine; for Pallas, though our friend,
|
|
Yet while she was in Troy, did Troy defend.
|
|
Now what has Ajax done, or what design'd?
|
|
A noisie nothing, and an empty wind.
|
|
If he be what he promises in show,
|
|
Why was I sent, and why fear'd he to go?
|
|
Our boasting champion thought the task not light
|
|
To pass the guards, commit himself to night;
|
|
Not only through a hostile town to pass,
|
|
But scale, with steep ascent, the sacred place;
|
|
With wand'ring steps to search the cittadel,
|
|
And from the priests their patroness to steal:
|
|
Then through surrounding foes to force my way,
|
|
And bear in triumph home the heavn'ly prey;
|
|
Which had I not, Ajax in vain had held,
|
|
Before that monst'rous bulk, his sev'nfold shield.
|
|
That night to conquer Troy I might be said,
|
|
When Troy was liable to conquest made.
|
|
Why point'st thou to my partner of the war?
|
|
Tydides had indeed a worthy share
|
|
In all my toil, and praise; but when thy might
|
|
Our ships protected, did'st thou singly fight?
|
|
All join'd, and thou of many wert but one;
|
|
I ask'd no friend, nor had, but him alone:
|
|
Who, had he not been well assur'd, that art,
|
|
And conduct were of war the better part,
|
|
And more avail'd than strength, my valiant friend
|
|
Had urg'd a better right, than Ajax can pretend:
|
|
As good at least Eurypilus may claim,
|
|
And the more mod'rate Ajax of the name:
|
|
The Cretan king, and his brave charioteer,
|
|
And Menelaus bold with sword, and spear:
|
|
All these had been my rivals in the shield,
|
|
And yet all these to my pretensions yield.
|
|
Thy boist'rous hands are then of use, when I
|
|
With this directing head those hands apply.
|
|
Brawn without brain is thine: my prudent care
|
|
Foresees, provides, administers the war:
|
|
Thy province is to fight; but when shall be
|
|
The time to fight, the king consults with me:
|
|
No dram of judgment with thy force is join'd:
|
|
Thy body is of profit, and my mind.
|
|
By how much more the ship her safety owes
|
|
To him who steers, than him that only rows;
|
|
By how much more the captain merits praise,
|
|
Than he who fights, and fighting but obeys;
|
|
By so much greater is my worth than thine,
|
|
Who canst but execute, what I design.
|
|
What gain'st thou, brutal man, if I confess
|
|
Thy strength superior, when thy wit is less?
|
|
Mind is the man: I claim my whole desert,
|
|
From the mind's vigour, and th' immortal part.
|
|
But you, o Grecian chiefs, reward my care,
|
|
Be grateful to your watchman of the war:
|
|
For all my labours in so long a space,
|
|
Sure I may plead a title to your grace:
|
|
Enter the town, I then unbarr'd the gates,
|
|
When I remov'd their tutelary Fates.
|
|
By all our common hopes, if hopes they be
|
|
Which I have now reduc'd to certainty;
|
|
By falling Troy, by yonder tott'ring tow'rs,
|
|
And by their taken Gods, which now are ours;
|
|
Or if there yet a farther task remains,
|
|
To be perform'd by prudence, or by pains;
|
|
If yet some desp'rate action rests behind,
|
|
That asks high conduct, and a dauntless mind;
|
|
If ought be wanting to the Trojan doom,
|
|
Which none but I can manage, and o'ercome,
|
|
Award, those arms I ask, by your decree:
|
|
Or give to this, what you refuse to me.
|
|
He ceas'd: and ceasing with respect he bow'd,
|
|
And with his hand at once the fatal statue show'd.
|
|
Heav'n, air and ocean rung, with loud applause,
|
|
And by the gen'ral vote he gain'd his cause.
|
|
Thus conduct won the prize, when courage fail'd,
|
|
And eloquence o'er brutal force prevail'd.
|
|
The Death of He who cou'd often, and alone, withstand
|
|
Ajax The foe, the fire, and Jove's own partial hand,
|
|
Now cannot his unmaster'd grief sustain,
|
|
But yields to rage, to madness, and disdain;
|
|
Then snatching out his fauchion, Thou, said he,
|
|
Art mine; Ulysses lays no claim to thee.
|
|
O often try'd, and ever-trusty sword,
|
|
Now do thy last kind office to thy lord:
|
|
'Tis Ajax who requests thy aid, to show
|
|
None but himself, himself cou'd overthrow:
|
|
He said, and with so good a will to die,
|
|
Did to his breast the fatal point apply,
|
|
It found his heart, a way 'till then unknown,
|
|
Where never weapon enter'd, but his own.
|
|
No hands cou'd force it thence, so fix'd it stood,
|
|
'Till out it rush'd, expell'd by streams of
|
|
spouting blood.
|
|
The fruitful blood produc'd a flow'r, which grew
|
|
On a green stem; and of a purple hue:
|
|
Like his, whom unaware Apollo slew:
|
|
Inscrib'd in both, the letters are the same,
|
|
But those express the grief, and these the name.
|
|
The Story of The victor with full sails for Lemnos stood
|
|
Polyxena and (Once stain'd by matrons with their husbands'
|
|
Hecuba blood),
|
|
Thence great Alcides' fatal shafts to bear,
|
|
Assign'd to Philoctetes' secret care.
|
|
These with their guardian to the Greeks convey'd,
|
|
Their ten years' toil with wish'd success repaid.
|
|
With Troy old Priam falls: his queen survives;
|
|
'Till all her woes compleat, transform'd she
|
|
grieves
|
|
In borrow'd sounds, nor with an human face,
|
|
Barking tremendous o'er the plains of Thrace.
|
|
Still Ilium's flames their pointed columns raise,
|
|
And the red Hellespont reflects the blaze.
|
|
Shed on Jove's altar are the poor remains
|
|
Of blood, which trickl'd from old Priam's veins.
|
|
Cassandra lifts her hands to Heav'n in vain,
|
|
Drag'd by her sacred hair; the trembling train
|
|
Of matrons to their burning temples fly:
|
|
There to their Gods for kind protection cry;
|
|
And to their statues cling 'till forc'd away,
|
|
The victor Greeks bear off th' invidious prey.
|
|
From those high tow'rs Astyanax is thrown,
|
|
Whence he was wont with pleasure to look down.
|
|
When oft his mother with a fond delight
|
|
Pointed to view his father's rage in fight,
|
|
To win renown, and guard his country's right.
|
|
The winds now call to sea; brisk northern gales
|
|
Sing in the shrowds, and court the spreading sails.
|
|
Farewel, dear Troy, the captive matrons cry;
|
|
Yes, we must leave our long-lov'd native sky.
|
|
Then prostrate on the shore they kiss the sand,
|
|
And quit the smoking ruines of the land.
|
|
Last Hecuba on board, sad sight! appears;
|
|
Found weeping o'er her children's sepulchres:
|
|
Drag'd by Ulysses from her slaughter'd sons,
|
|
Whilst yet she graspt their tombs, and kist their
|
|
mouldring bones.
|
|
Yet Hector's ashes from his urn she bore,
|
|
And in her bosom the sad relique wore:
|
|
Then scatter'd on his tomb her hoary hairs,
|
|
A poor oblation mingled with her tears.
|
|
Oppos'd to Ilium lye the Thracian plains,
|
|
Where Polymestor safe in plenty reigns.
|
|
King Priam to his care commits his son,
|
|
Young Polydore, the chance of war to shun.
|
|
A wise precaution! had not gold, consign'd
|
|
For the child's use, debauch'd the tyrant's mind.
|
|
When sinking Troy to its last period drew,
|
|
With impious hands his royal charge he slew;
|
|
Then in the sea the lifeless coarse is thrown;
|
|
As with the body he the guilt could drown.
|
|
The Greeks now riding on the Thracian shore,
|
|
'Till kinder gales invite, their vessels moor.
|
|
Here the wide-op'ning Earth to sudden view
|
|
Disclos'd Achilles, great as when he drew
|
|
The vital air, but fierce with proud disdain,
|
|
As when he sought Briseis to regain;
|
|
When stern debate, and rash injurious strife
|
|
Unsheath'd his sword, to reach Atrides' life.
|
|
And will ye go? he said. Is then the name
|
|
Of the once great Achilles lost to fame?
|
|
Yet stay, ungrateful Greeks; nor let me sue
|
|
In vain for honours to my Manes due.
|
|
For this just end, Polyxena I doom
|
|
With victim-rites to grace my slighted tomb.
|
|
The phantom spoke; the ready Greeks obey'd,
|
|
And to the tomb led the devoted maid
|
|
Snatch'd from her mother, who with pious care
|
|
Cherish'd this last relief of her despair.
|
|
Superior to her sex, the fearless maid,
|
|
Approach'd the altar, and around survey'd
|
|
The cruel rites, and consecrated knife,
|
|
Which Pyrrhus pointed at her guiltless life,
|
|
Then as with stern amaze intent he stood,
|
|
"Now strike," she said; "now spill my genr'ous
|
|
blood;
|
|
Deep in my breast, or throat, your dagger sheath,
|
|
Whilst thus I stand prepar'd to meet my death.
|
|
For life on terms of slav'ry I despise:
|
|
Yet sure no God approves this sacrifice.
|
|
O cou'd I but conceal this dire event
|
|
From my sad mother, I should dye content.
|
|
Yet should she not with tears my death deplore,
|
|
Since her own wretched life demands them more.
|
|
But let not the rude touch of man pollute
|
|
A virgin-victim; 'tis a modest suit.
|
|
It best will please, whoe'er demands my blood,
|
|
That I untainted reach the Stygian flood.
|
|
Yet let one short, last, dying prayer be heard;
|
|
To Priam's daughter pay this last regard;
|
|
'Tis Priam's daughter, not a captive, sues;
|
|
Do not the rites of sepulture refuse.
|
|
To my afflicted mother, I implore,
|
|
Free without ransom my dead corpse restore:
|
|
Nor barter me for gain, when I am cold;
|
|
But be her tears the price, if I am sold:
|
|
Time was she could have ransom'd me with gold".
|
|
Thus as she pray'd, one common shower of tears
|
|
Burst forth, and stream'd from ev'ry eye but hers.
|
|
Ev'n the priest wept, and with a rude remorse
|
|
Plung'd in her heart the steel's resistless force.
|
|
Her slacken'd limbs sunk gently to the ground,
|
|
Dauntless her looks, unalter'd by the wound.
|
|
And as she fell, she strove with decent pride
|
|
To hide, what suits a virgin's care to hide.
|
|
The Trojan matrons the pale corpse receive,
|
|
And the whole slaughter'd race of Priam grieve,
|
|
Sad they recount the long disastrous tale;
|
|
Then with fresh tears, thee, royal maid, bewail;
|
|
Thy widow'd mother too, who flourish'd late
|
|
The royal pride of Asia's happier state:
|
|
A captive lot now to Ulysses born;
|
|
Whom yet the victor would reject with scorn,
|
|
Were she not Hector's mother: Hector's fame
|
|
Scarce can a master for his mother claim!
|
|
With strict embrace the lifeless coarse she view'd;
|
|
And her fresh grief that flood of tears renew'd,
|
|
With which she lately mourn'd so many dead;
|
|
Tears for her country, sons, and husband shed.
|
|
With the thick gushing stream she bath'd the wound;
|
|
Kiss'd her pale lips; then weltring on the ground,
|
|
With wonted rage her frantick bosom tore;
|
|
Sweeping her hair amidst the clotted gore;
|
|
Whilst her sad accents thus her loss deplore.
|
|
"Behold a mother's last dear pledge of woe!
|
|
Yes, 'tis the last I have to suffer now.
|
|
Thou, my Polyxena, my ills must crown:
|
|
Already in thy Fate, I feel my own.
|
|
'Tis thus, lest haply of my numerous seed
|
|
One should unslaughter'd fall, even thou must
|
|
bleed:
|
|
And yet I hop'd thy sex had been thy guard;
|
|
But neither has thy tender sex been spar'd.
|
|
The same Achilles, by whose deadly hate
|
|
Thy brothers fell, urg'd thy untimely fate!
|
|
The same Achilles, whose destructive rage
|
|
Laid waste my realms, has robb'd my childless age.
|
|
When Paris' shafts with Phoebus' certain aid
|
|
At length had pierc'd this dreaded chief, I said,
|
|
Secure of future ills, he can no more:
|
|
But see, he still pursues me as before.
|
|
With rage rekindled his dead ashes burn;
|
|
And his yet murd'ring ghost my wretched house must
|
|
mourn.
|
|
This tyrant's lust of slaughter I have fed
|
|
With large supplies from my too-fruitful bed.
|
|
Troy's tow'rs lye waste; and the wide ruin ends
|
|
The publick woe; but me fresh woe attends.
|
|
Troy still survives to me; to none but me;
|
|
And from its ills I never must be free.
|
|
I, who so late had power, and wealth, and ease,
|
|
Bless'd with my husband, and a large encrease,
|
|
Must now in poverty an exile mourn;
|
|
Ev'n from the tombs of my dead offspring torn:
|
|
Giv'n to Penelope, who proud of spoil,
|
|
Allots me to the loom's ungrateful toil;
|
|
Points to her dames, and crys with scorning mien:
|
|
See Hector's mother, and great Priam's queen!
|
|
And thou, my child, sole hope of all that's lost,
|
|
Thou now art slain, to sooth this hostile ghost.
|
|
Yes, my child falls an offering to my foe!
|
|
Then what am I, who still survive this woe?
|
|
Say, cruel Gods! for what new scenes of death
|
|
Must a poor aged wretch prolong this hated breath?
|
|
Troy fal'n, to whom could Priam happy seem?
|
|
Yet was he so; and happy must I deem
|
|
His death; for O! my child, he saw not thine,
|
|
When he his life did with his Troy resign.
|
|
Yet sure due obsequies thy tomb might grace;
|
|
And thou shalt sleep amidst thy kingly race.
|
|
Alas! my child, such fortune does not wait
|
|
Our suffering house in this abandon'd state.
|
|
A foreign grave, and thy poor mother's tears
|
|
Are all the honours that attend thy herse.
|
|
All now is lost!- Yet no; one comfort more
|
|
Of life remains, my much-lov'd Polydore.
|
|
My youngest hope: here on this coast he lives,
|
|
Nurs'd by the guardian-king, he still survives.
|
|
Then let me hasten to the cleansing flood,
|
|
And wash away these stains of guiltless blood."
|
|
Streit to the shore her feeble steps repair
|
|
With limping pace, and torn dishevell'd hair
|
|
Silver'd with age. "Give me an urn," she cry'd,
|
|
"To bear back water from this swelling tide":
|
|
When on the banks her son in ghastly hue
|
|
Transfix'd with Thracian arrows strikes her view.
|
|
The matrons shriek'd; her big-swoln grief surpast
|
|
The pow'r of utterance; she stood aghast;
|
|
She had nor speech, nor tears to give relief;
|
|
Excess of woe suppress'd the rising grief.
|
|
Lifeless as stone, on Earth she fix'd her eyes;
|
|
And then look'd up to Heav'n with wild surprise.
|
|
Now she contemplates o'er with sad delight
|
|
Her son's pale visage; then her aking sight
|
|
Dwells on his wounds: she varys thus by turns,
|
|
Wild as the mother-lion, when among
|
|
The haunts of prey she seeks her ravish'd young:
|
|
Swift flies the ravisher; she marks his trace,
|
|
And by the print directs her anxious chase.
|
|
So Hecuba with mingled grief, and rage
|
|
Pursues the king, regardless of her age.
|
|
She greets the murd'rer with dissembled joy
|
|
Of secret treasure hoarded for her boy.
|
|
The specious tale th' unwary king betray'd.
|
|
Fir'd with the hopes of prey: "Give quick," he said
|
|
With soft enticing speech, "the promis'd store:
|
|
Whate'er you give, you give to Polydore.
|
|
Your son, by the immortal Gods I swear,
|
|
Shall this with all your former bounty share."
|
|
She stands attentive to his soothing lyes,
|
|
And darts avenging horrour from her eyes.
|
|
Then full resentment fires her boyling blood:
|
|
She springs upon him, 'midst the captive crowd
|
|
(Her thirst of vengeance want of strength
|
|
supplies):
|
|
Fastens her forky fingers in his eyes:
|
|
Tears out the rooted balls; her rage pursues,
|
|
And in the hollow orbs her hand imbrews.
|
|
The Thracians, fir'd, at this inhuman scene,
|
|
With darts, and stones assail the frantick queen.
|
|
She snarls, and growls, nor in an human tone;
|
|
Then bites impatient at the bounding stone;
|
|
Extends her jaws, as she her voice would raise
|
|
To keen invectives in her wonted phrase;
|
|
But barks, and thence the yelping brute betrays.
|
|
Still a sad monument the place remains,
|
|
And from this monstrous change its name obtains:
|
|
Where she, in long remembrance of her ills,
|
|
With plaintive howlings the wide desart fills.
|
|
Greeks, Trojans, friends, and foes, and Gods
|
|
above
|
|
Her num'rous wrongs to just compassion move.
|
|
Ev'n Juno's self forgets her ancient hate,
|
|
And owns, she had deserv'd a milder fate.
|
|
The Funeral of Yet bright Aurora, partial as she was
|
|
Memnon To Troy, and those that lov'd the Trojan cause,
|
|
Nor Troy, nor Hecuba can now bemoan,
|
|
But weeps a sad misfortune, more her own.
|
|
Her offspring Memnon, by Achilles slain,
|
|
She saw extended on the Phrygian plain:
|
|
She saw, and strait the purple beams, that grace
|
|
The rosie morning, vanish'd from her face;
|
|
A deadly pale her wonted bloom invades,
|
|
And veils the lowring skies with mournful shades.
|
|
But when his limbs upon the pile were laid,
|
|
The last kind duty that by friends is paid,
|
|
His mother to the skies directs her flight,
|
|
Nor cou'd sustain to view the doleful sight:
|
|
But frantick, with her loose neglected hair,
|
|
Hastens to Jove, and falls a suppliant there.
|
|
O king of Heav'n, o father of the skies,
|
|
The weeping Goddess passionately cries,
|
|
Tho' I the meanest of immortals am,
|
|
And fewest temples celebrate my fame,
|
|
Yet still a Goddess, I presume to come
|
|
Within the verge of your etherial dome:
|
|
Yet still may plead some merit, if my light
|
|
With purple dawn controuls the Pow'rs of night;
|
|
If from a female hand that virtue springs,
|
|
Which to the Gods, and men such pleasure brings.
|
|
Yet I nor honours seek, nor rites divine,
|
|
Nor for more altars, or more fanes repine;
|
|
Oh! that such trifles were the only cause,
|
|
From whence Aurora's mind its anguish draws!
|
|
For Memnon lost, my dearest only child,
|
|
With weightier grief my heavy heart is fill'd;
|
|
My warrior son! that liv'd but half his time,
|
|
Nipt in the bud, and blasted in his prime;
|
|
Who for his uncle early took the field,
|
|
And by Achilles' fatal spear was kill'd.
|
|
To whom but Jove shou'd I for succour come?
|
|
For Jove alone cou'd fix his cruel doom.
|
|
O sov'reign of the Gods accept my pray'r,
|
|
Grant my request, and sooth a mother's care;
|
|
On the deceas'd some solemn boon bestow,
|
|
To expiate the loss, and ease my woe.
|
|
Jove, with a nod, comply'd with her desire;
|
|
Around the body flam'd the fun'ral fire;
|
|
The pile decreas'd, that lately seem'd so high,
|
|
And sheets of smoak roll'd upward to the sky:
|
|
As humid vapours from a marshy bog,
|
|
Rise by degrees, condensing into fog,
|
|
That intercept the sun's enliv'ning ray,
|
|
And with a cloud infect the chearful day.
|
|
The sooty ashes wafted by the air,
|
|
Whirl round, and thicken in a body there;
|
|
Then take a form, which their own heat, and fire
|
|
With active life, and energy inspire.
|
|
Its lightness makes it seem to fly, and soon
|
|
It skims on real wings, that are its own;
|
|
A real bird, it beats the breezy wind,
|
|
Mix'd with a thousand sisters of the kind,
|
|
That, from the same formation newly sprung,
|
|
Up-born aloft on plumy pinions hung.
|
|
Thrice round the pile advanc'd the circling throng.
|
|
Thrice, with their wings, a whizzing consort rung.
|
|
In the fourth flight their squadron they divide,
|
|
Rank'd in two diff'rent troops, on either side:
|
|
Then two, and two, inspir'd with martial rage,
|
|
From either troop in equal pairs engage.
|
|
Each combatant with beak, and pounces press'd,
|
|
In wrathful ire, his adversary's breast;
|
|
Each falls a victim, to preserve the fame
|
|
Of that great hero, whence their being came.
|
|
From him their courage, and their name they take,
|
|
And, as they liv'd, they dye for Memnon's sake.
|
|
Punctual to time, with each revolving year,
|
|
In fresh array the champion birds appear;
|
|
Again, prepar'd with vengeful minds, they come
|
|
To bleed, in honour of the souldier's tomb.
|
|
Therefore in others it appear'd not strange,
|
|
To grieve for Hecuba's unhappy change:
|
|
But poor Aurora had enough to do
|
|
With her own loss, to mind another's woe;
|
|
Who still in tears, her tender nature shews,
|
|
Besprinkling all the world with pearly dews.
|
|
The Voyage of Troy thus destroy'd, 'twas still deny'd by Fate,
|
|
Aeneas The hopes of Troy should perish with the state.
|
|
His sire, the son of Cytherea bore,
|
|
And household-Gods from burning Ilium's shore,
|
|
The pious prince (a double duty paid)
|
|
Each sacred burthen thro' the flames convey'd.
|
|
With young Ascanius, and this only prize,
|
|
Of heaps of wealth, he from Antandros flies;
|
|
But struck with horror, left the Thracian shore,
|
|
Stain'd with the blood of murder'd Polydore.
|
|
The Delian isle receives the banish'd train,
|
|
Driv'n by kind gales, and favour'd by the main.
|
|
Here pious Anius, priest, and monarch reign'd,
|
|
And either charge, with equal care sustain'd,
|
|
His subjects rul'd, to Phoebus homage pay'd,
|
|
His God obeying, and by those obey'd.
|
|
The priest displays his hospitable gate,
|
|
And shows the riches of his church, and state
|
|
The sacred shrubs, which eas'd Latona's pain,
|
|
The palm, and olive, and the votive fane.
|
|
Here grateful flames with fuming incense fed,
|
|
And mingled wine, ambrosial odours shed;
|
|
Of slaughter'd steers the crackling entrails
|
|
burn'd:
|
|
And then the strangers to the court return'd.
|
|
On beds of tap'stry plac'd aloft, they dine
|
|
With Ceres' gift, and flowing bowls of wine;
|
|
When thus Anchises spoke, amidst the feast:
|
|
Say, mitred monarch, Phoebus' chosen priest,
|
|
Or (e'er from Troy by cruel Fate expell'd)
|
|
When first mine eyes these sacred walls beheld,
|
|
A son, and twice two daughters crown'd thy bliss?
|
|
Or errs my mem'ry, and I judge amiss?
|
|
The royal prophet shook his hoary head,
|
|
With snowy fillets bound, and sighing, said:
|
|
Thy mem'ry errs not, prince; thou saw'st me then,
|
|
The happy father of so large a train;
|
|
Behold me now (such turns of chance befall
|
|
The race of man!), almost bereft of all.
|
|
For (ah!) what comfort can my son bestow,
|
|
What help afford, to mitigate my woe!
|
|
While far from hence, in Andros' isle he reigns,
|
|
(From him so nam'd) and there my place sustains.
|
|
Him Delius praescience gave; the twice-born God
|
|
A boon more wond'rous on the maids bestow'd.
|
|
Whate'er they touch'd, he gave them to transmute
|
|
(A gift past credit, and above their suit)
|
|
To Ceres, Bacchus, and Minerva's fruit.
|
|
How great their value, and how rich their use,
|
|
Whose only touch such treasures could produce!
|
|
The dire destroyer of the Trojan reign,
|
|
Fierce Agamemnon, such a prize to gain
|
|
(A proof we also were design'd by Fate
|
|
To feel the tempest, that o'erturn'd your state),
|
|
With force superior, and a ruffian crew,
|
|
From these weak arms, the helpless virgins drew:
|
|
And sternly bad them use the grant divine,
|
|
To keep the fleet in corn, and oil, and wine.
|
|
Each, as they could, escap'd: two strove to gain
|
|
Euboea's isle, and two their brother's reign.
|
|
The soldier follows, and demands the dames;
|
|
If held by force, immediate war proclaims.
|
|
Fear conquer'd Nature in their brother's mind,
|
|
And gave them up to punishment assign'd.
|
|
Forgive the deed; nor Hector's arm was there,
|
|
Nor thine, Aeneas, to maintain the war;
|
|
Whose only force upheld your Ilium's tow'rs,
|
|
For ten long years, against the Grecian pow'rs.
|
|
Prepar'd to bind their captive arms in bands,
|
|
To Heav'n they rear'd their yet unfetter'd hands,
|
|
Help, Bacchus, author of the gift, they pray'd;
|
|
The gift's great author gave immediate aid;
|
|
If such destruction of their human frame
|
|
By ways so wond'rous, may deserve the name;
|
|
Nor could I hear, nor can I now relate
|
|
Exact, the manner of their alter'd state;
|
|
But this in gen'ral of my loss I knew,
|
|
Transform'd to doves, on milky plumes they flew,
|
|
Such as on Ida's mount thy consort's chariot drew.
|
|
With such discourse, they entertain'd the feast;
|
|
Then rose from table, and withdrew to rest.
|
|
The following morn, ere Sol was seen to shine,
|
|
Th' inquiring Trojans sought the sacred shrine;
|
|
The mystick Pow'r commands them to explore
|
|
Their ancient mother, and a kindred shore.
|
|
Attending to the sea, the gen'rous prince
|
|
Dismiss'd his guests with rich munificence,
|
|
In old Anchises' hand a sceptre plac'd,
|
|
A vest, and quiver young Ascanius grac'd,
|
|
His sire, a cup; which from th' Aonian coast,
|
|
Ismenian Therses sent his royal host.
|
|
Alcon of Myle made what Therses sent,
|
|
And carv'd thereon this ample argument.
|
|
A town with sev'n distinguish'd gates was shown,
|
|
Which spoke its name, and made the city known;
|
|
Before it, piles, and tombs, and rising flames,
|
|
The rites of death, and quires of mourning dames,
|
|
Who bar'd their breasts, and gave their hair to
|
|
flow,
|
|
The signs of grief, and marks of publick woe.
|
|
Their fountains dry'd, the weeping Naiads mourn'd,
|
|
The trees stood bare, with searing cankers burn'd,
|
|
No herbage cloath'd the ground, a ragged flock
|
|
Of goats half-famish'd, lick'd the naked rock,
|
|
Of manly courage, and with mind serene,
|
|
Orion's daughters in the town were seen;
|
|
One heav'd her chest to meet the lifted knife,
|
|
One plung'd the poyniard thro' the seat of life,
|
|
Their country's victims; mourns the rescu'd state,
|
|
The bodies burns, and celebrates their Fate.
|
|
To save the failure of th' illustrious line,
|
|
From the pale ashes rose, of form divine,
|
|
Two gen'rous youths; these, fame Coronae calls,
|
|
Who join the pomp, and mourn their mother's falls.
|
|
These burnish'd figures form'd of antique mold,
|
|
Shone on the brass, with rising sculpture bold;
|
|
A wreath of gilt Acanthus round the brim was
|
|
roll'd.
|
|
Nor less expence the Trojan gifts express'd;
|
|
A fuming censer for the royal priest,
|
|
A chalice, and a crown of princely cost,
|
|
With ruddy gold, and sparkling gems emboss'd.
|
|
Now hoisting sail, to Crete the Trojans stood,
|
|
Themselves remembring sprung from Teucer's blood;
|
|
But Heav'n forbids, and pestilential Jove
|
|
From noxious skies, the wand'ring navy drove.
|
|
Her hundred cities left, from Crete they bore,
|
|
And sought the destin'd land, Ausonia's shore;
|
|
But toss'd by storms at either Strophas lay,
|
|
'Till scar'd by Harpies from the faithless bay.
|
|
Then passing onward with a prosp'rous wind,
|
|
Left sly Ulysses' spacious realms behind;
|
|
Ambracia's state, in former ages known.
|
|
The strife of Gods, the judge transform'd to stone
|
|
They saw; for Actian Phoebus since renown'd,
|
|
Who Caesar's arms with naval conquest crown'd;
|
|
Next pass'd Dodona, wont of old to boast
|
|
Her vocal forest; and Chaonia's coast,
|
|
Where king Molossus' sons on wings aspir'd,
|
|
And saw secure the harmless fewel fir'd.
|
|
Now to Phaeacia's happy isle they came,
|
|
For fertile orchards known to early fame;
|
|
Epirus past, they next beheld with joy
|
|
A second Ilium, and fictitious Troy;
|
|
Here Trojan Helenus the sceptre sway'd,
|
|
Who show'd their fate and mystick truths display'd.
|
|
By him confirm'd Sicilia's isle they reach'd,
|
|
Whose sides to sea three promontories stretch'd,
|
|
Pachynos to the stormy south is plac'd,
|
|
On Lilybaeum blows the gentle west,
|
|
Peloro's cliffs the northern bear survey,
|
|
Who rolls above, and dreads to touch the sea.
|
|
By this they steer, and favour'd by the tide,
|
|
Secure by night in Zancle's harbour ride.
|
|
Here cruel Scylla guards the rocky shore,
|
|
And there the waves of loud Charybdis roar:
|
|
This sucks, and vomits ships, and bodies drown'd;
|
|
And rav'nous dogs the womb of that surround,
|
|
In face a virgin; and (if ought be true
|
|
By bards recorded) once a virgin too.
|
|
A train of youths in vain desir'd her bed;
|
|
By sea-nymphs lov'd, to nymphs of seas she fled;
|
|
The maid to these, with female pride, display'd
|
|
Their baffled courtship, and their love betray'd.
|
|
When Galatea thus bespoke the fair
|
|
(But first she sigh'd), while Scylla comb'd her
|
|
hair:
|
|
You, lovely maid, a gen'rous race pursues,
|
|
Whom safe you may (as now you do) refuse;
|
|
To me, tho' pow'rful in a num'rous train
|
|
Of sisters, sprung from Gods, who rule the main,
|
|
My native seas could scarce a refuge prove,
|
|
To shun the fury of the Cyclops' love,
|
|
Tears choak'd her utt'rance here; the pity'ng
|
|
maid
|
|
With marble fingers wip'd them off, and said:
|
|
My dearest Goddess, let thy Scylla know,
|
|
(For I am faithful) whence these sorrows flow.
|
|
The maid's intreaties o'er the nymph prevail,
|
|
Who thus to Scylla tells the mournful tale.
|
|
The Story of Acis, the lovely youth, whose loss I mourn,
|
|
Acis, From Faunus, and the nymph Symethis born,
|
|
Polyphemus Was both his parents' pleasure; but, to me
|
|
and Galatea Was all that love could make a lover be.
|
|
The Gods our minds in mutual bands did join:
|
|
I was his only joy, and he was mine.
|
|
Now sixteen summers the sweet youth had seen;
|
|
And doubtful down began to shade his chin:
|
|
When Polyphemus first disturb'd our joy;
|
|
And lov'd me fiercely, as I lov'd the boy.
|
|
Ask not which passion in my soul was high'r,
|
|
My last aversion, or my first desire:
|
|
Nor this the greater was, nor that the less;
|
|
Both were alike, for both were in excess.
|
|
Thee, Venus, thee both Heav'n, and Earth obey;
|
|
Immense thy pow'r, and boundless is thy sway.
|
|
The Cyclops, who defy'd th' aetherial throne,
|
|
And thought no thunder louder than his own,
|
|
The terror of the woods, and wilder far
|
|
Than wolves in plains, or bears in forests are,
|
|
Th' inhuman host, who made his bloody feasts
|
|
On mangl'd members of his butcher'd guests,
|
|
Yet felt the force of love, and fierce desire,
|
|
And burnt for me, with unrelenting fire.
|
|
Forgot his caverns, and his woolly care,
|
|
Assum'd the softness of a lover's air;
|
|
And comb'd, with teeth of rakes, his rugged hair.
|
|
Now with a crooked scythe his beard he sleeks;
|
|
And mows the stubborn stubble of his cheeks:
|
|
Now in the crystal stream he looks, to try
|
|
His simagres, and rowls his glaring eye.
|
|
His cruelty, and thirst of blood are lost;
|
|
And ships securely sail along the coast.
|
|
The prophet Telemus (arriv'd by chance
|
|
Where Aetna's summets to the seas advance,
|
|
Who mark'd the tracts of every bird that flew,
|
|
And sure presages from their flying drew)
|
|
Foretold the Cyclops, that Ulysses' hand
|
|
In his broad eye shou'd thrust a flaming brand.
|
|
The giant, with a scornful grin, reply'd,
|
|
Vain augur, thou hast falsely prophesy'd;
|
|
Already love his flaming brand has tost;
|
|
Looking on two fair eyes, my sight I lost,
|
|
Thus, warn'd in vain, with stalking pace he strode,
|
|
And stamp'd the margin of the briny flood
|
|
With heavy steps; and weary, sought agen
|
|
The cool retirement of his gloomy den.
|
|
A promontory, sharp'ning by degrees,
|
|
Ends in a wedge, and overlooks the seas:
|
|
On either side, below, the water flows;
|
|
This airy walk the giant lover chose.
|
|
Here on the midst he sate; his flocks, unled,
|
|
Their shepherd follow'd, and securely fed.
|
|
A pine so burly, and of length so vast,
|
|
That sailing ships requir'd it for a mast,
|
|
He wielded for a staff, his steps to guide:
|
|
But laid it by, his whistle while he try'd.
|
|
A hundred reeds of a prodigious growth,
|
|
Scarce made a pipe, proportion'd to his mouth:
|
|
Which when he gave it wind, the rocks around,
|
|
And watry plains, the dreadful hiss resound.
|
|
I heard the ruffian-shepherd rudely blow,
|
|
Where, in a hollow cave, I sat below;
|
|
On Acis' bosom I my head reclin'd:
|
|
And still preserve the poem in my mind.
|
|
Oh lovely Galatea, whiter far
|
|
Than falling snows, and rising lillies are;
|
|
More flowry than the meads, as chrystal bright:
|
|
Erect as alders, and of equal height:
|
|
More wanton than a kid, more sleek thy skin,
|
|
Than orient shells, that on the shores are seen,
|
|
Than apples fairer, when the boughs they lade;
|
|
Pleasing, as winter suns, or summer shade:
|
|
More grateful to the sight, than goodly plains;
|
|
And softer to the touch, than down of swans;
|
|
Or curds new turn'd; and sweeter to the taste
|
|
Than swelling grapes, that to the vintage haste:
|
|
More clear than ice, or running streams, that stray
|
|
Through garden plots, but ah! more swift than they.
|
|
Yet, Galatea, harder to be broke
|
|
Than bullocks, unreclaim'd, to bear the yoke,
|
|
And far more stubborn, than the knotted oak:
|
|
Like sliding streams, impossible to hold;
|
|
Like them, fallacious, like their fountains, cold.
|
|
More warping, than the willow, to decline
|
|
My warm embrace, more brittle, than the vine;
|
|
Immovable, and fixt in thy disdain:
|
|
Tough, as these rocks, and of a harder grain.
|
|
More violent, than is the rising flood;
|
|
And the prais'd peacock is not half so proud.
|
|
Fierce, as the fire, and sharp, as thistles are,
|
|
And more outragious, than a mother-bear:
|
|
Deaf, as the billows to the vows I make;
|
|
And more revengeful, than a trodden snake.
|
|
In swiftness fleeter, than the flying hind,
|
|
Or driven tempests, or the driving wind.
|
|
All other faults, with patience I can bear;
|
|
But swiftness is the vice I only fear.
|
|
Yet if you knew me well, you wou'd not shun
|
|
My love, but to my wish'd embraces run:
|
|
Wou'd languish in your turn, and court my stay;
|
|
And much repent of your unwise delay.
|
|
My palace, in the living rock, is made
|
|
By Nature's hand; a spacious pleasing shade:
|
|
Which neither heat can pierce, nor cold invade.
|
|
My garden fill'd with fruits you may behold,
|
|
And grapes in clusters, imitating gold;
|
|
Some blushing bunches of a purple hue:
|
|
And these, and those, are all reserv'd for you.
|
|
Red strawberries, in shades, expecting stand,
|
|
Proud to be gather'd by so white a hand.
|
|
Autumnal cornels latter fruit provide;
|
|
And plumbs, to tempt you, turn their glossy side:
|
|
Not those of common kinds; but such alone,
|
|
As in Phaeacian orchards might have grown:
|
|
Nor chestnuts shall be wanting to your food,
|
|
Nor garden-fruits, nor wildings of the wood;
|
|
The laden boughs for you alone shall bear;
|
|
And yours shall be the product of the year.
|
|
The flocks you see, are all my own; beside
|
|
The rest that woods, and winding vallies hide;
|
|
And those that folded in the caves abide.
|
|
Ask not the numbers of my growing store;
|
|
Who knows how many, knows he has no more.
|
|
Nor will I praise my cattle; trust not me,
|
|
But judge your self, and pass your own decree:
|
|
Behold their swelling dugs; the sweepy weight
|
|
Of ewes, that sink beneath the milky freight;
|
|
In the warm folds their tender lambkins lye;
|
|
Apart from kids, that call with human cry.
|
|
New milk in nut-brown bowls is duely serv'd
|
|
For daily drink; the rest for cheese reserv'd.
|
|
Nor are these household dainties all my store:
|
|
The fields, and forests will afford us more;
|
|
The deer, the hare, the goat, the savage boar.
|
|
All sorts of ven'son; and of birds the best;
|
|
A pair of turtles taken from the nest.
|
|
I walk'd the mountains, and two cubs I found
|
|
(Whose dam had left 'em on the naked ground),
|
|
So like, that no distinction could be seen:
|
|
So pretty, they were presents for a queen;
|
|
And so they shall; I took them both away;
|
|
And keep, to be companions of your play.
|
|
Oh raise, fair nymph, your beauteous face above
|
|
The waves; nor scorn my presents, and my love.
|
|
Come, Galatea, come, and view my face;
|
|
I late beheld it, in the watry glass;
|
|
And found it lovelier, than I fear'd it was.
|
|
Survey my towring stature, and my size:
|
|
Not Jove, the Jove you dream, that rules the skies,
|
|
Bears such a bulk, or is so largely spread:
|
|
My locks (the plenteous harvest of my head)
|
|
Hang o'er my manly face; and dangling down,
|
|
As with a shady grove, my shoulders crown.
|
|
Nor think, because my limbs and body bear
|
|
A thick-set underwood of bristling hair,
|
|
My shape deform'd; what fouler sight can be,
|
|
Than the bald branches of a leafless tree?
|
|
Foul is the steed without a flowing mane:
|
|
And birds, without their feathers, and their train.
|
|
Wool decks the sheep; and Man receives a grace
|
|
From bushy limbs, and from a bearded face.
|
|
My forehead with a single eye is fill'd,
|
|
Round, as a ball, and ample, as a shield.
|
|
The glorious lamp of Heav'n, the radiant sun,
|
|
Is Nature's eye; and she's content with one.
|
|
Add, that my father sways your seas, and I,
|
|
Like you, am of the watry family.
|
|
I make you his, in making you my own;
|
|
You I adore; and kneel to you alone:
|
|
Jove, with his fabled thunder, I despise,
|
|
And only fear the lightning of your eyes.
|
|
Frown not, fair nymph; yet I cou'd bear to be
|
|
Disdain'd, if others were disdain'd with me.
|
|
But to repulse the Cyclops, and prefer
|
|
The love of Acis (Heav'ns!) I cannot bear.
|
|
But let the stripling please himself; nay more,
|
|
Please you, tho' that's the thing I most abhor;
|
|
The boy shall find, if e'er we cope in fight,
|
|
These giant limbs, endu'd with giant might.
|
|
His living bowels from his belly torn,
|
|
And scatter'd limbs shall on the flood be born:
|
|
Thy flood, ungrateful nymph; and fate shall find,
|
|
That way for thee, and Acis to be join'd.
|
|
For oh! I burn with love, and thy disdain
|
|
Augments at once my passion, and my pain.
|
|
Translated Aetna flames within my heart,
|
|
And thou, inhuman, wilt not ease my smart.
|
|
Lamenting thus in vain, he rose, and strode
|
|
With furious paces to the neighb'ring wood:
|
|
Restless his feet, distracted was his walk;
|
|
Mad were his motions, and confus'd his talk.
|
|
Mad, as the vanquish'd bull, when forc'd to yield
|
|
His lovely mistress, and forsake the field.
|
|
Thus far unseen I saw: when fatal chance,
|
|
His looks directing, with a sudden glance,
|
|
Acis and I were to his sight betray'd;
|
|
Where, nought suspecting, we securely play'd.
|
|
From his wide mouth a bellowing cry he cast,
|
|
I see, I see; but this shall be your last:
|
|
A roar so loud made Aetna to rebound:
|
|
And all the Cyclops labour'd in the sound.
|
|
Affrighted with his monstrous voice, I fled,
|
|
And in the neighbouring ocean plung'd my head.
|
|
Poor Acis turn'd his back, and Help, he cry'd,
|
|
Help, Galatea, help, my parent Gods,
|
|
And take me dying to your deep abodes.
|
|
The Cyclops follow'd; but he sent before
|
|
A rib, which from the living rock he tore:
|
|
Though but an angle reach'd him of the stone,
|
|
The mighty fragment was enough alone,
|
|
To crush all Acis; 'twas too late to save,
|
|
But what the Fates allow'd to give, I gave:
|
|
That Acis to his lineage should return;
|
|
And rowl, among the river Gods, his urn.
|
|
Straight issu'd from the stone a stream of blood;
|
|
Which lost the purple, mingling with the flood,
|
|
Then, like a troubled torrent, it appear'd:
|
|
The torrent too, in little space, was clear'd.
|
|
The stone was cleft, and through the yawning chink
|
|
New reeds arose, on the new river's brink.
|
|
The rock, from out its hollow womb, disclos'd
|
|
A sound like water in its course oppos'd,
|
|
When (wond'rous to behold), full in the flood,
|
|
Up starts a youth, and navel high he stood.
|
|
Horns from his temples rise; and either horn
|
|
Thick wreaths of reeds (his native growth) adorn.
|
|
Were not his stature taller than before,
|
|
His bulk augmented, and his beauty more,
|
|
His colour blue; for Acis he might pass:
|
|
And Acis chang'd into a stream he was,
|
|
But mine no more; he rowls along the plains
|
|
With rapid motion, and his name retains.
|
|
The Story of Here ceas'd the nymph; the fair assembly broke,
|
|
Glaucus and The sea-green Nereids to the waves betook:
|
|
Scylla While Scylla, fearful of the wide-spread main,
|
|
Swift to the safer shore returns again.
|
|
There o'er the sandy margin, unarray'd,
|
|
With printless footsteps flies the bounding maid;
|
|
Or in some winding creek's secure retreat
|
|
She baths her weary limbs, and shuns the noonday's
|
|
heat.
|
|
Her Glaucus saw, as o'er the deep he rode,
|
|
New to the seas, and late receiv'd a God.
|
|
He saw, and languish'd for the virgin's love;
|
|
With many an artful blandishment he strove
|
|
Her flight to hinder, and her fears remove.
|
|
The more he sues, the more she wings her flight,
|
|
And nimbly gains a neighb'ring mountain's height.
|
|
Steep shelving to the margin of the flood,
|
|
A neighb'ring mountain bare, and woodless stood;
|
|
Here, by the place secur'd, her steps she stay'd,
|
|
And, trembling still, her lover's form survey'd.
|
|
His shape, his hue, her troubled sense appall,
|
|
And dropping locks that o'er his shoulders fall;
|
|
She sees his face divine, and manly brow,
|
|
End in a fish's wreathy tail below:
|
|
She sees, and doubts within her anxious mind,
|
|
Whether he comes of God, or monster kind.
|
|
This Glaucus soon perceiv'd; and, Oh! forbear
|
|
(His hand supporting on a rock lay near),
|
|
Forbear, he cry'd, fond maid, this needless fear.
|
|
Nor fish am I, nor monster of the main,
|
|
But equal with the watry Gods I reign;
|
|
Nor Proteus, nor Palaemon me excell,
|
|
Nor he whose breath inspires the sounding shell.
|
|
My birth, 'tis true, I owe to mortal race,
|
|
And I my self but late a mortal was:
|
|
Ev'n then in seas, and seas alone, I joy'd;
|
|
The seas my hours, and all my cares employ'd,
|
|
In meshes now the twinkling prey I drew;
|
|
Now skilfully the slender line I threw,
|
|
And silent sat the moving float to view.
|
|
Not far from shore, there lies a verdant mead,
|
|
With herbage half, and half with water spread:
|
|
There, nor the horned heifers browsing stray,
|
|
Nor shaggy kids, nor wanton lambkins play;
|
|
There, nor the sounding bees their nectar cull,
|
|
Nor rural swains their genial chaplets pull,
|
|
Nor flocks, nor herds, nor mowers haunt the place,
|
|
To crop the flow'rs, or cut the bushy grass:
|
|
Thither, sure first of living race came I,
|
|
And sat by chance, my dropping nets to dry.
|
|
My scaly prize, in order all display'd,
|
|
By number on the greensward there I lay'd,
|
|
My captives, whom or in my nets I took,
|
|
Or hung unwary on my wily hook.
|
|
Strange to behold! yet what avails a lye?
|
|
I saw 'em bite the grass, as I sate by;
|
|
Then sudden darting o'er the verdant plain,
|
|
They spread their finns, as in their native main:
|
|
I paus'd, with wonder struck, while all my prey
|
|
Left their new master, and regain'd the sea.
|
|
Amaz'd, within my secret self I sought,
|
|
What God, what herb the miracle had wrought:
|
|
But sure no herbs have pow'r like this, I cry'd;
|
|
And strait I pluck'd some neighb'ring herbs, and
|
|
try'd.
|
|
Scarce had I bit, and prov'd the wond'rous taste,
|
|
When strong convulsions shook my troubled breast;
|
|
I felt my heart grow fond of something strange,
|
|
And my whole Nature lab'ring with a change.
|
|
Restless I grew, and ev'ry place forsook,
|
|
And still upon the seas I bent my look.
|
|
Farewel for ever! farewel, land! I said;
|
|
And plung'd amidst the waves my sinking head.
|
|
The gentle Pow'rs, who that low empire keep,
|
|
Receiv'd me as a brother of the deep;
|
|
To Tethys, and to Ocean old, they pray
|
|
To purge my mortal earthy parts away.
|
|
The watry parents to their suit agreed,
|
|
And thrice nine times a secret charm they read,
|
|
Then with lustrations purify my limbs,
|
|
And bid me bathe beneath a hundred streams:
|
|
A hundred streams from various fountains run,
|
|
And on my head at once come rushing down.
|
|
Thus far each passage I remember well,
|
|
And faithfully thus far the tale I tell;
|
|
But then oblivion dark, on all my senses fell.
|
|
Again at length my thought reviving came,
|
|
When I no longer found my self the same;
|
|
Then first this sea-green beard I felt to grow,
|
|
And these large honours on my spreading brow;
|
|
My long-descending locks the billows sweep,
|
|
And my broad shoulders cleave the yielding deep;
|
|
My fishy tail, my arms of azure hue,
|
|
And ev'ry part divinely chang'd, I view.
|
|
But what avail these useless honours now?
|
|
What joys can immortality bestow?
|
|
What, tho' our Nereids all my form approve?
|
|
What boots it, while fair Scylla scorns my love?
|
|
Thus far the God; and more he wou'd have said;
|
|
When from his presence flew the ruthless maid.
|
|
Stung with repulse, in such disdainful sort,
|
|
He seeks Titanian Circe's horrid court.
|
|
|
|
The End of the Thirteenth Book.
|
|
BOOK THE FOURTEENTH
|
|
|
|
NOW Glaucus, with a lover's haste, bounds o'er
|
|
The swelling waves, and seeks the Latian shore.
|
|
Messena, Rhegium, and the barren coast
|
|
Of flaming Aetna, to his sight are lost:
|
|
At length he gains the Tyrrhene seas, and views
|
|
The hills where baneful philters Circe brews;
|
|
Monsters, in various forms, around her press;
|
|
As thus the God salutes the sorceress.
|
|
The O Circe, be indulgent to my grief,
|
|
Transformation And give a love-sick deity relief.
|
|
of Scylla Too well the mighty pow'r of plants I know,
|
|
To those my figure, and new Fate I owe.
|
|
Against Messena, on th' Ausonian coast,
|
|
I Scylla view'd, and from that hour was lost.
|
|
In tend'rest sounds I su'd; but still the fair
|
|
Was deaf to vows, and pityless to pray'r.
|
|
If numbers can avail, exert their pow'r;
|
|
Or energy of plants, if plants have more.
|
|
I ask no cure; let but the virgin pine
|
|
With dying pangs, or agonies, like mine.
|
|
No longer Circe could her flame disguise,
|
|
But to the suppliant God marine, replies:
|
|
When maids are coy, have manlier aims in view;
|
|
Leave those that fly, but those that like, pursue.
|
|
If love can be by kind compliance won;
|
|
See, at your feet, the daughter of the Sun.
|
|
Sooner, said Glaucus, shall the ash remove
|
|
From mountains, and the swelling surges love;
|
|
Or humble sea-weed to the hills repair;
|
|
E'er I think any but my Scylla fair.
|
|
Strait Circe reddens with a guilty shame,
|
|
And vows revenge for her rejected flame.
|
|
Fierce liking oft a spight as fierce creates;
|
|
For love refus'd, without aversion, hates.
|
|
To hurt her hapless rival she proceeds;
|
|
And, by the fall of Scylla, Glaucus bleeds.
|
|
Some fascinating bev'rage now she brews;
|
|
Compos'd of deadly drugs, and baneful juice.
|
|
At Rhegium she arrives; the ocean braves,
|
|
And treads with unwet feet the boiling waves.
|
|
Upon the beach a winding bay there lies,
|
|
Shelter'd from seas, and shaded from the skies:
|
|
This station Scylla chose: a soft retreat
|
|
From chilling winds, and raging Cancer's heat.
|
|
The vengeful sorc'ress visits this recess;
|
|
Her charm infuses, and infects the place.
|
|
Soon as the nymph wades in, her nether parts
|
|
Turn into dogs; then at her self she starts.
|
|
A ghastly horror in her eyes appears;
|
|
But yet she knows not, who it is she fears;
|
|
In vain she offers from her self to run,
|
|
And drags about her what she strives to shun.
|