The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25
You’re reading novel The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25 online at LightNovelFree.com. Please use the follow button to get notification about the latest chapter next time when you visit LightNovelFree.com. Use F11 button to read novel in full-screen(PC only). Drop by anytime you want to read free – fast – latest novel. It’s great if you could leave a comment, share your opinion about the new chapters, new novel with others on the internet. We’ll do our best to bring you the finest, latest novel everyday. Enjoy!
So evenly they swam the sea, and sundered wave and wave, As many as the brazen beaks once by the sea-side lay; Afar they know their king, and round in dancing-wise they play; But one of them, Cymodocea, who speech-lore knew the best, Drew nigh astern and laid thereon her right hand, with her breast Above the flood, the while her left through quiet waves rowed on, And thus bespoke him all unware: "Wak'st thou, O G.o.dhead's son!
aeneas, wake! and loose the sheets and let all canvas fill!
We were the pine-trees on a time of Ida's holy hill, 230 Thy s.h.i.+p-host once, but sea-nymphs now: when that Rutulian lord Fell faithless, headlong, on our lives with firebrand and the sword, Unwillingly we brake our bonds and sought thee o'er the main.
The Mother in her pity thus hath wrought our shape again, And given us gift of G.o.dhead's life in house of ocean's ground.
Lo now, the boy Ascanius by d.y.k.e and wall is bound Amid the spears, the battle-wood that Latins forth have sent.
And now the horse of Arcady, with stout Etruscans blent, Holdeth due tryst. Now is the mind of Turnus firmly set To thrust between them, lest thy camp they succour even yet. 240 Wherefore arise, and when the dawn first climbs the heavenly sh.o.r.e Call on thy folk, and take thy s.h.i.+eld unconquered evermore, The Fire-lord's gift, who wrought its lips with circling gold about: Tomorrow's light, unless thou deem'st my words are all to doubt, Shall see Rutulian death in heaps a-lying on the land."
Therewith departing, forth she thrust the tall s.h.i.+p with her hand, As one who had good skill therein, and then across the seas Swifter than dart she fled, or shaft that matcheth well the breeze, And straight the others hastened on. All mazed was he of Troy, Anchises' seed, but yet the sign upraised his heart with joy, 250 And, looking to the hollow heaven, in few words prayed he thus
"Kind Ida-Mother of the G.o.ds, whose heart loves Dindymus And towered towns, and lions yoked and tamed to bear the bit, Be thou my battle-leader now, and do thou further it, This omen, and with favouring foot the Trojan folk draw nigh."
But while he spake, Day, come again, had run adown the sky, With light all utter perfect wrought, and driven away the night.
Then folk he biddeth follow on the banners of the fight, And make them ready for the play and shape their hearts for war.
But he, aloft upon the p.o.o.p, now sees them where they are, 260 His leaguered Teucrians, as his left uprears the blazing s.h.i.+eld; And then, the sons of Darda.n.u.s up to the starry field Send forth the cry, and hope is come to whet their battle-wrath.
Thick flies their spear-storm: 'tis as when the Strymon cranes give forth Their war-sign on the mirky rack, and down the heavens they run Sonorous, fleeing southern breeze with clamour following on.
But wondrous to Rutulian king and dukes of Italy That seemed, until they look about, and lo, the keels they see Turned sh.o.r.eward; yea, a sea of s.h.i.+ps onsetting toward the sh.o.r.e.
Yea, and the helm is all ablaze, beams from the crest outpour, 270 The golden s.h.i.+eld-boss wide about a world of flame doth shed.
E'en so, amid the clear of night, the comets b.l.o.o.d.y-red Blush woeful bright; nor otherwise is Sirius' burning wrought, When drought and plagues for weary men the birth of him hath wrought, And that unhappy light of his hath saddened all the heaven.
But nought from Turnus' hardy heart was high hope ever driven To take the strand of them and thrust those comers from the sh.o.r.e: Eager he chid, hot-heart, with words men's courage he upbore:
"Lo, now your prayers have come about, that hand meet hand in strife, And Mars is in the brave man's hand: let each one's home and wife Be in his heart! Call ye to mind those mighty histories, 281 The praises of our father-folk! Come, meet them in the seas, Amid their tangle, while their feet yet totter on the earth: For Fortune helpeth them that dare."
So saying, he turneth in his mind with whom on these to fall, And unto whom to leave meanwhile the leaguering of the wall.
Meanwhile aeneas from his s.h.i.+ps high-built his folk doth speed Ash.o.r.e by bridges: many men no less the back-draught heed Of the spent seas, and, trusting shoals, they make the downward leap; And others slide adown the oars. Tarchon the sh.o.r.e doth sweep, 290 Espying where the waves break not, nor back the sea doth roar, But where the sea-flood harmlessly with full tide swims ash.o.r.e, And thither straight he lays his keels, and prays unto his folk:
"O chosen, on the stark oars lay! now up unto the stroke; Bear on the s.h.i.+ps, and with your beaks cleave ye this foeman's earth; And let the very keels themselves there furrow them their berth.
On such a haven nought I heed, though s.h.i.+p and all we break, If once we gain the land."
Therewith, as such a word he spake, His fellows rise together hard on every shaven tree, In mind to bear their s.h.i.+ps befoamed up on the Latin lea, 300 Until their tynes are high and dry, and fast is every keel Unhurt: save, Tarchon, thine alone, that winneth no such weal; For on the shallows driven aground, on evil ridge unmeet, She hangeth balanced a long while, and doth the waters beat; Then, breaking, droppeth down her men amidmost of the waves, Entangled in the wreck of oars, and floating thwarts and staves; And in the back-draught of the seas their feet are caught withal.
No dull delay holds Turnus back; but fiercely doth he fall, With all his host, on them of Troy, and meets them on the strand. 309 The war-horns sing. aeneas first breaks through the field-folk's band, --Fair omen of the fight--and lays the Latin folk alow.
Thero he slays, most huge of men, whose own heart bade him go Against aeneas: through the links of bra.s.s the sword doth fare, And through the kirtle's scaly gold, and wastes the side laid bare.
Then Lichas smites he, ripped erewhile from out his mother dead, And hallowed, Phoebus, unto thee, because his baby head Had 'scaped the steel: nor far from thence he casteth down to die Hard Cisseus, Gyas huge, who there beat down his company With might of clubs; nought then availed that Herculean gear, Nor their stark hands, nor yet their sire Melampus, though he were 320 Alcides' friend so long as he on earth wrought heavy toil.
Lo Pharo! while a deedless word he flingeth mid the broil, The whirring of the javelin stays within his shouting mouth.
Thou, Cydon, following lucklessly thy new delight, the youth Clytius, whose first of fallow down about his cheeks is spread Art well-nigh felled by Dardan hand, and there hadst thou lain dead, At peace from all the many loves wherein thy life would stray, Had not thy brethren's serried band now thrust across the way E'en Phorcus' seed: sevenfold of tale and sevenfold spears they wield: But some thereof fly harmless back from helm-side and from s.h.i.+eld, 330 The rest kind Venus turned aside, that grazing past they flew; But therewithal aeneas spake unto Achates true:
"Reach me my shafts: not one in vain my right hand now shall speed Against Rutulians, of all those that erst in Ilian mead Stood in the bodies of the Greeks."
Then caught he a great spear And cast it, and it flew its ways the brazen s.h.i.+eld to shear Of Maeon, breaking through his mail, breaking his breast withal: Alcanor is at hand therewith, to catch his brother's fall With his right hand; but through his arm the spear without a stay Flew hurrying on, and held no less its straight and b.l.o.o.d.y way, 340 And by the shoulder-nerves the hand hung down all dead and vain.
Then Numitor, his brother's spear caught from his brother slain, Falls on aeneas; yet to smite the mighty one in face No hap he had, but did the thigh of great Achates graze.
Clausus of Cures, trusting well in his young body's might, Now cometh, and with stiff-wrought spear from far doth Dryops smite Beneath the chin; home went its weight, and midst his shouting's birth From rent throat s.n.a.t.c.hed both voice and life, and p.r.o.ne he smote the ear And from his mouth abundantly shed forth the flood of gore.
Three Thracians also, men whose stem from Boreas came of yore, 350 Three whom their father Idas sent, and Ismara their land, In various wise he fells. And now Halesus comes to hand, And his Aruncans: Neptune's seed now cometh thrusting in, Messapus, excellent of horse. Hard strife the field to win!
On this side and on that they play about Ausonia's door.
As whiles within the mighty heaven the winds are making war, And equal heart they have thereto, and equal might they wield: Yields none to none, nor yields the rack, nor aught the waters yield; Long hangs the battle; locked they stand, all things are striving then: Not otherwise the Trojan host and host of Latin men 360 Meet foot to foot, and man to man, close pressing in the fray.
But in another place, where erst the torrent in its way Had driven the rolling rocks along and torn trees of the banks, Did Pallas see the Arcadian folk, unused to fight in ranks Of footmen, turn their backs before the Latins in the chase, Since they forsooth had left their steeds for roughness of the place: Wherefore he did the only deed that failing Fortune would, Striving with prayers and bitter words to make their valour good:
"Where flee ye, fellows? Ah, I pray, by deeds that once were bold, By name of King Evander dear, by glorious wars of old, 370 By my own hope of praise that springs to mate my father's praise, Trust not your feet! with point and edge ye needs must cleave your ways Amidst the foe. Where yon array of men doth thickest wend, Thither our holy fatherland doth you and Pallas send: No G.o.ds weigh on us; mortal foes meet mortal men today; As many hands we have to use, as many lives to pay.
Lo, how the ocean shuts us in with yonder watery wall!
Earth fails for flight--what! seaward then, or Troyward shall we fall?"
Thus said, forthwith he breaketh in amid the foeman's press, Whom Lagus met the first of all, by Fate's unrighteousness 380 Drawn thitherward: him, while a stone huge weighted he upheaves, He pierceth with a whirling shaft just where the backbone cleaves The ribs atwain, and back again he wrencheth forth the spear Set mid the bones: nor him the more did Hisbo take unware, Though that he hoped; for Pallas next withstood him, rus.h.i.+ng on All heedless-wild at that ill death his fellow fair had won, And buried all his sword deep down amid his wind-swelled lung.
Then Sthenelus he meets, and one from ancient Rhoetus sprung, Anchemolus, who dared defile his own stepmother's bed.
Ye also on Rutulian lea twin Daucus' sons lay dead, 390 Larides, Thymber; so alike, O children, that by nought Your parents knew you each from each, and sweet the error thought.
But now to each did Pallas give a cruel marking-sign; For, Thymber, the Evandrian sword smote off that head of thine: And thy lopped right, Larides, seeks for that which was its lord, The half-dead fingers quiver still and grip unto the sword.
But now the Arcadians cheered by words, beholding his great deed, The mingled shame and sorrow arm and 'gainst the foeman lead.
Then Pallas thrusteth Rhoeteus through a-flitting by in wain; And so much s.p.a.ce, so much delay, thereby did Ilus gain, 400 For 'twas at Ilus from afar that he his spear had cast But Rhoeteus met it on the road fleeing from you full fast, Best brethren, Teuthras, Tyres there: down from the car rolled he, And with the half-dead heel of him beat the Rutulian lea.
As when amidst the summer-tide he gains the wished-for breeze, The shepherd sets the sparkled flame amid the thicket trees, The wood's heart catches suddenly, the flames spread into one, And fearful o'er the meadows wide doth Vulcan's army run, While o'er the flames the victor sits and on their joy looks down.
No less the valour of thy folk unto a head was grown 410 To help thee, Pallas: but behold, Halesus, fierce in field, Turns on the foe, and gathers him 'neath cover of his s.h.i.+eld.
Ladon, Pheres, Demodocus, all these he slaughtered there; With gleaming sword he lopped the hand Strymonius did uprear Against his throat: in Thoas' face withal a stone he sent, And drave apart the riven bones with blood and brains all blent Halesus' sire, the wise of Fate, in woods had hidden him; But when that elder's whitening eyes at last in death did swim, Fate took Halesus, hallowing him to King Evander's blade: For Pallas aimeth at him now, when such wise he had prayed: 420
"O Father Tiber, grant this spear, that herewithal I shake, Through hard Halesus' breast forthwith a happy way may take; So shall thine oak-tree have the arms, the warrior's battle-spoil."
The G.o.d heard: while Halesus s.h.i.+elds Imaon in the broil, To that Arcadian shaft he gives his luckless body bared.
But nought would Lausus, lord of war, let all his host be scared, E'en at the death of such a man: first Abas doth he slay, Who faces him, the very knot and holdfast of the play.
Then fall Arcadia's sons to field; felled is Etruria's host, And ye, O Teucrian bodies, erst by Grecian death unlost. 430 Then meet the hosts with lords well-matched and equal battle-might; The outskirts of the battle close, nor 'mid the press of fight May hand or spear move: busy now is Pallas on this side, Lausus on that; nor is the s.p.a.ce between their ages wide, Those n.o.ble bodies: and both they were clean forbid of Fate Return unto their lands: but he who rules Olympus great Would nowise suffer them to meet themselves to end the play, The doom of each from mightier foe abideth each today.
But Turnus' sister warneth him to succour Lausus' war, The gracious G.o.ddess: straight he cleaves the battle in his car, 440 And when he sees his folk, cries out: "'Tis time to leave the fight!
Lone against Pallas do I fare, Pallas is mine of right; I would his sire himself were here to look upon the field."
He spake, and from the s.p.a.ce forbid his fellow-folk did yield, But when the Rutuli were gone, at such a word of pride Amazed, the youth on Turnus stares, and lets his gaze go wide O'er the huge frame, and from afar with stern eyes meets it all, And 'gainst the words the tyrant spake such words from him there fall:
"Now shall I win me praise of men for spoiling of a King, Or for a glorious death: my sire may outface either thing: 450 Forbear thy threats."
He spake, and straight amid the war-field drew; But cold in that Arcadian folk therewith the heart-blood grew; While Turnus from his war-wain leapt to go afoot to fight: And as a lion sees afar from off his watch burg's height A bull at gaze amid the mead with battle in his thought, And flies thereto, so was the shape of coming Turnus wrought.
But now, when Pallas deemed him come within the cast of spear, He would be first, if Fate perchance should help him swift to dare, And his less might, and thus he speaks unto the boundless sky: "Now by my father's guesting-tide and board thou drew'st anigh, 460 A stranger, O Alcides, help this great deed I begin!
His b.l.o.o.d.y gear from limbs half-dead let Turnus see me win; And on the dying eyes of him be victor's image pressed."
Alcides heard the youth, and 'neath the inmost of his breast He thrust aback a heavy groan, and empty tears he shed: But to his son in kindly wise such words the Father said: "His own day bideth every man; short s.p.a.ce that none may mend Is each man's life: but yet by deeds wide-spreading fame to send, Man's valour hath this work to do: 'neath Troy's high-builded wall How many sons of G.o.d there died: yea there he died withal, 470 Sarpedon my own progeny. Yea too and Turnus' Fates Are calling him: he draweth nigh his life's departing-gates."
He spake and turned his eyes away from fields of Rutuli: But Pallas with great gathered strength the spear from him let fly, And drew therewith from hollow sheath his sword all eager-bright.
The spear flew gleaming where the arms rise o'er the shoulder's height, Smote home, and won its way at last through the s.h.i.+eld's outer rim, And Turnus' mighty body reached and grazed the flesh of him.
Long Turnus shook the oak that bore the bitter iron head, Then cast at Pallas, and withal a word he cast and said: 480 "Let see now if this shaft of mine may better win a pa.s.s!"
He spake; for all its iron skin and all its plates of bra.s.s, For all the swathing of bull-hides that round about it went, The quivering spear smote through the s.h.i.+eld and through its midmost rent And through the mailcoat's staying fence the mighty breast did gain.
Then at the spear his heart-blood warmed did Pallas clutch in vain; By one way and the same his blood and life, away they fare; But down upon the wound he rolled, and o'er him clashed his gear, And dying there his b.l.o.o.d.y mouth sought out the foeman's sod: Whom Turnus overstrides and says: 490
"Hearken Arcadians, bear ye back Evander words well learned: Pallas I send him back again, dealt with as he hath earned, If there be honour in a tomb, or solace in the earth, I grudge it not--aenean guests shall cost him things of worth."
So spake he, and his left foot then he set upon the dead, And tore the girdle thence away full heavy fas.h.i.+oned, And wrought with picture of a guilt; that youthful company Slain foully on one wedding-night: b.l.o.o.d.y the bride-beds lie.
This Clonus son of Eurytus had wrought in plenteous gold, Now Turnus wears it triumphing, merry such spoil to hold.-- 500 --O heart of man, unlearned in Fate and what the days may hide, Unlearned to be of measure still when swelled with happy tide!
The time shall come when Turnus wealth abundantly would pay For Pallas whole, when he shall loathe that spoil, that conquering day.
But Pallas' folk with plenteous groans and tears about him throng, And laid upon his battle-s.h.i.+eld they bear the dead along.
O thou, returning to thy sire, great grief and glory great, Whom one same day gave unto war and swept away to fate, Huge heaps of death Rutulian thou leav'st the meadow still.
And now no rumour, but sure word of such a mighty ill 510 Flies to aeneas, how his folk within the deathgrip lie, And how time pressed that he should aid the Teucrians turned to fly.
So all things near with sword he reaps, and wide he drives the road Amid the foe with fiery steel, seeking thee, Turnus proud, Through death new wrought; and Pallas now, Evander, all things there Live in his eyes: the boards whereto that day he first drew near, A stranger, and those plighted hands. Four youths of Sulmo wrought, And the like tale that Ufens erst into the world's life brought, He takes alive to slay them--gifts for that great ghost's avail, And with a shower of captive blood to slake the dead men's bale. 520 Then next at Magus from afar the shaft of bane he sent; Deftly he cowered, and on above the quivering weapon went, And clasping both aeneas' knees thus spake the suppliant one:
"O by thy father's ghost, by hope Iulus hath begun, I pray thee for my sire and son my life yet let me win: I have a high house, silver wrought is dug adown therein, A talent's weight, and store therewith of wrought and unwrought gold: This will not s.n.a.t.c.h the victory from out the Teucrian's hold, Nor can the life of one alone such mighty matter make."
The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25
You're reading novel The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25 online at LightNovelFree.com. You can use the follow function to bookmark your favorite novel ( Only for registered users ). If you find any errors ( broken links, can't load photos, etc.. ), Please let us know so we can fix it as soon as possible. And when you start a conversation or debate about a certain topic with other people, please do not offend them just because you don't like their opinions.
The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25 summary
You're reading The Aeneids of Virgil Part 25. This novel has been translated by Updating. Author: Virgil already has 702 views.
It's great if you read and follow any novel on our website. We promise you that we'll bring you the latest, hottest novel everyday and FREE.
LightNovelFree.com is a most smartest website for reading novel online, it can automatic resize images to fit your pc screen, even on your mobile. Experience now by using your smartphone and access to LightNovelFree.com
- Related chapter:
- The Aeneids of Virgil Part 24
- The Aeneids of Virgil Part 26