Delphi Complete Works of Quintus Smyrnaeus

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Delphi Complete Works of Quintus Smyrnaeus Page 23

by Quintus Smyrnaeus


  The fearful Battle-queen, beheld of none, 60

  But cloaked in clouds blood-raining: on she stalked

  Swelling the mighty roar of battle, now

  Rushed through Troy’s squadrons, through Achaea’s now;

  Panic and Fear still waited on her steps

  To make their father’s sister glorious.

  From small to huge that Fury’s stature grew;

  Her arms of adamant were blood-besprent,

  The deadly lance she brandished reached the sky.

  Earth quaked beneath her feet: dread blasts of fire

  Flamed from her mouth: her voice pealed thunder-like 70

  Kindling strong men. Swift closed the fronts of fight

  Drawn by a dread Power to the mighty work.

  Loud as the shriek of winds that madly blow

  In early spring, when the tall woodland trees

  Put forth their leaves — loud as the roar of fire

  Blazing through sun-scorched brakes — loud as the voice

  Of many waters, when the wide sea raves

  Beneath the howling blast, with thunderous crash

  Of waves, when shake the fearful shipman’s knees;

  So thundered earth beneath their charging feet. 80

  Strife swooped on them: foe hurled himself on foe.

  First did Aeneas of the Danaans slay

  Harpalion, Arizelus’ scion, born

  In far Boeotia of Amphinome,

  Who came to Troy to help the Argive men

  With godlike Prothoenor. ‘Neath his waist

  Aeneas stabbed, and reft sweet life from him.

  Dead upon him he cast Thersander’s son,

  For the barbed javelin pierced through Hyllus’ throat

  Whom Arethusa by Lethaeus bare 90

  In Crete: sore grieved Idomeneus for his fall.

  By this Peleides’ son had swiftly slain

  Twelve Trojan warriors with his father’s spear.

  First Cebrus fell, Harmon, Pasitheus then,

  Hysminus, Schedius, and Imbrasius,

  Phleges, Mnesaeus, Ennomus, Amphinous,

  Phasis, Galenus last, who had his home

  By Gargarus’ steep — a mighty warrior he

  Among Troy’s mighties: with a countless host

  To Troy he came: for Priam Dardanus’ son 100

  Promised him many gifts and passing fair.

  Ah fool! his own doom never he foresaw,

  Whose weird was suddenly to fall in fight

  Ere he bore home King Priam’s glorious gifts.

  Doom the Destroyer against the Argives sped

  Valiant Aeneas’ friend, Eurymenes.

  Wild courage spurred him on, that he might slay

  Many — and then fill death’s cup for himself.

  Man after man he slew like some fierce beast,

  And foes shrank from the terrible rage that burned 110

  On his life’s verge, nor reeked of imminent doom.

  Yea, peerless deeds in that fight had he done,

  Had not his hands grown weary, his spear-head

  Bent utterly: his sword availed him not,

  Snapped at the hilt by Fate. Then Meges’ dart

  Smote ‘neath his ribs; blood spurted from his mouth,

  And in death’s agony Doom stood at his side.

  Even as he fell, Epeius’ henchmen twain,

  Deileon and Amphion, rushed to strip

  His armour; but Aeneas brave and strong 120

  Chilled their hot hearts in death beside the dead.

  As one in latter summer ‘mid his vines

  Kills wasps that dart about his ripening grapes,

  And so, ere they may taste the fruit, they die;

  So smote he them, ere they could seize the arms.

  Menon and Amphinous Tydeides slew,

  Both goodly men. Paris slew Hippasus’ son

  Demoleon, who in Laconia’s land

  Beside the outfall of Eurotas dwelt,

  The stream deep-flowing, and to Troy he came 130

  With Menelaus. Under his right breast

  The shaft of Paris smote him unto death,

  Driving his soul forth like a scattering breath.

  Teucer slew Zechis, Medon’s war-famed son,

  Who dwelt in Phrygia, land of myriad flocks,

  Below that haunted cave of fair-haired Nymphs

  Where, as Endymion slept beside his kine,

  Divine Selene watched him from on high,

  And slid from heaven to earth; for passionate love

  Drew down the immortal stainless Queen of Night. 140

  And a memorial of her couch abides

  Still ‘neath the oaks; for mid the copses round

  Was poured out milk of kine; and still do men

  Marvelling behold its whiteness. Thou wouldst say

  Far off that this was milk indeed, which is

  A well-spring of white water: if thou draw

  A little nigher, lo, the stream is fringed

  As though with ice, for white stone rims it round.

  Rushed on Alcaeus Meges, Phyleus’ son,

  And drave his spear beneath his fluttering heart. 150

  Loosed were the cords of sweet life suddenly,

  And his sad parents longed in vain to greet

  That son returning from the woeful war

  To Margasus and Phyllis lovely-girt,

  Dwellers by lucent streams of Harpasus,

  Who pours the full blood of his clamorous flow

  Into Maeander madly rushing aye.

  With Glaucus’ warrior-comrade Scylaceus

  Odeus’ son closed in the fight, and stabbed

  Over the shield-rim, and the cruel spear 160

  Passed through his shoulder, and drenched his shield with

  blood.

  Howbeit he slew him not, whose day of doom

  Awaited him afar beside the wall

  Of his own city; for when Illium’s towers

  Were brought low by that swift avenging host

  Fleeing the war to Lycia then he came

  Alone; and when he drew nigh to the town,

  The thronging women met and questioned him

  Touching their sons and husbands; and he told

  How all were dead. They compassed him about, 170

  And stoned the man with great stones, that he died.

  So had he no joy of his winning home,

  But the stones muffled up his dying groans,

  And of the same his ghastly tomb was reared

  Beside Bellerophon’s grave and holy place

  In Tlos, nigh that far-famed Chimaera’s Crag.

  Yet, though he thus fulfilled his day of doom,

  As a God afterward men worshipped him

  By Phoebus’ hest, and never his honour fades.

  Now Poeas’ son the while slew Deioneus 180

  And Acamas, Antenor’s warrior son:

  Yea, a great host of strong men laid he low.

  On, like the War-god, through his foes he rushed,

  Or as a river roaring in full flood

  Breaks down long dykes, when, maddening round its rocks,

  Down from the mountains swelled by rain it pours

  An ever-flowing mightily-rushing stream

  Whose foaming crests over its forelands sweep;

  So none who saw him even from afar

  Dared meet renowned Poeas’ valiant son, 190

  Whose breast with battle-fury was fulfilled,

  Whose limbs were clad in mighty Hercules’ arms

  Of cunning workmanship; for on the belt

  Gleamed bears most grim and savage, jackals fell,

  And panthers, in whose eyes there seems to lurk

  A deadly smile. There were fierce-hearted wolves,

  And boars with flashing tusks, and mighty lions

  All seeming strangely alive; and, there portrayed

  Through all its breadth, were battles murder-rife.

&nb
sp; With all these marvels covered was the belt; 200

  And with yet more the quiver was adorned.

  There Hermes was, storm-footed Son of Zeus,

  Slaying huge Argus nigh to Inachus’ streams,

  Argus, whose sentinel eyes in turn took sleep.

  And there was Phaethon from the Sun-car hurled

  Into Eridanus. Earth verily seemed

  Ablaze, and black smoke hovered on the air.

  There Perseus slew Medusa gorgon-eyed

  By the stars’ baths and utmost bounds of earth

  And fountains of deep-flowing Ocean, where 210

  Night in the far west meets the setting sun.

  There was the Titan Iapetus’ great son

  Hung from the beetling crag of Caucasus

  In bonds of adamant, and the eagle tare

  His liver unconsumed — he seemed to groan!

  All these Hephaestus’ cunning hands had wrought

  For Hercules; and these to Poeas’ son,

  Most near of friends and dear, he gave to bear.

  So glorying in those arms he smote the foe.

  But Paris at the last to meet him sprang 220

  Fearlessly, bearing in his hands his bow

  And deadly arrows — but his latest day

  Now met himself. A flying shaft he sped

  Forth from the string, which sang as leapt the dart,

  Which flew not vainly: yet the very mark

  It missed, for Philoctetes swerved aside

  A hair-breadth, and it smote above the breast

  Cleodorus war-renowned, and cleft a path

  Clear through his shoulder; for he had not now

  The buckler broad which wont to fence from death 230

  Its bearer, but was falling back from fight,

  Being shieldless; for Polydamas’ massy lance

  Had cleft the shoulder-belt whereby his targe

  Hung, and he gave back therefore, fighting still

  With stubborn spear. But now the arrow of death

  Fell on him, as from ambush leaping forth.

  For so Fate willed, I trow, to bring dread doom

  On noble-hearted Lernus’ scion, born

  Of Amphiale, in Rhodes the fertile land.

  But soon as Poeas’ battle-eager son 240

  Marked him by Paris’ deadly arrow slain,

  Swiftly he strained his bow, shouting aloud:

  “Dog! I will give thee death, will speed thee down

  To the Unseen Land, who darest to brave me!

  And so shall they have rest, who travail now

  For thy vile sake. Destruction shall have end

  When thou art dead, the author of our bane.”

  Then to his breast he drew the plaited cord.

  The great bow arched, the merciless shaft was aimed

  Straight, and the terrible point a little peered 250

  Above the bow, in that constraining grip.

  Loud sang the string, as the death-hissing shaft

  Leapt, and missed not: yet was not Paris’ heart

  Stilled, but his spirit yet was strong in him;

  For that first arrow was not winged with death:

  It did but graze the fair flesh by his wrist.

  Then once again the avenger drew the bow,

  And the barbed shaft of Poeas’ son had plunged,

  Ere he could swerve, ‘twixt flank and groin. No more

  He abode the fight, but swiftly hasted back 260

  As hastes a dog which on a lion rushed

  At first, then fleeth terror-stricken back.

  So he, his very heart with agony thrilled,

  Fled from the war. Still clashed the grappling hosts,

  Man slaying man: aye bloodier waxed the fray

  As rained the blows: corpse upon corpse was flung

  Confusedly, like thunder-drops, or flakes

  Of snow, or hailstones, by the wintry blast

  At Zeus’ behest strewn over the long hills

  And forest-boughs; so by a pitiless doom 270

  Slain, friends with foes in heaps on heaps were strown.

  Sorely groaned Paris; with the torturing wound

  Fainted his spirit. Leeches sought to allay

  His frenzy of pain. But now drew back to Troy

  The Trojans, and the Danaans to their ships

  Swiftly returned, for dark night put an end

  To strife, and stole from men’s limbs weariness,

  Pouring upon their eyes pain-healing sleep.

  But through the livelong night no sleep laid hold

  On Paris: for his help no leech availed, 280

  Though ne’er so willing, with his salves. His weird

  Was only by Oenone’s hands to escape

  Death’s doom, if so she willed. Now he obeyed

  The prophecy, and he went — exceeding loth,

  But grim necessity forced him thence, to face

  The wife forsaken. Evil-boding fowl

  Shrieked o’er his head, or darted past to left,

  Still as he went. Now, as he looked at them,

  His heart sank; now hope whispered, “Haply vain

  Their bodings are!” but on their wings were borne 290

  Visions of doom that blended with his pain.

  Into Oenone’s presence thus he came.

  Amazed her thronging handmaids looked on him

  As at the Nymph’s feet that pale suppliant fell

  Faint with the anguish of his wound, whose pangs

  Stabbed him through brain and heart, yea, quivered through

  His very bones, for that fierce venom crawled

  Through all his inwards with corrupting fangs;

  And his life fainted in him agony-thrilled.

  As one with sickness and tormenting thirst 300

  Consumed, lies parched, with heart quick-shuddering,

  With liver seething as in flame, the soul,

  Scarce conscious, fluttering at his burning lips,

  Longing for life, for water longing sore;

  So was his breast one fire of torturing pain.

  Then in exceeding feebleness he spake:

  “O reverenced wife, turn not from me in hate

  For that I left thee widowed long ago!

  Not of my will I did it: the strong Fates

  Dragged me to Helen — oh that I had died 310

  Ere I embraced her — in thine arms had died!

  All, by the Gods I pray, the Lords of Heaven,

  By all the memories of our wedded love,

  Be merciful! Banish my bitter pain:

  Lay on my deadly wound those healing salves

  Which only can, by Fate’s decree, remove

  This torment, if thou wilt. Thine heart must speak

  My sentence, to be saved from death or no.

  Pity me — oh, make haste to pity me!

  This venom’s might is swiftly bringing death! 320

  Heal me, while life yet lingers in my limbs!

  Remember not those pangs of jealousy,

  Nor leave me by a cruel doom to die

  Low fallen at thy feet! This should offend

  The Prayers, the Daughters of the Thunderer Zeus,

  Whose anger followeth unrelenting pride

  With vengeance, and the Erinnys executes

  Their wrath. My queen, I sinned, in folly sinned;

  Yet from death save me — oh, make haste to save!”

  So prayed he; but her darkly-brooding heart 330

  Was steeled, and her words mocked his agony:

  “Thou comest unto me! — thou, who didst leave

  Erewhile a wailing wife in a desolate home! —

  Didst leave her for thy Tyndarid darling! Go,

  Lie laughing in her arms for bliss! She is better

  Than thy true wife — is, rumour saith, immortal!

  Make haste to kneel to her but not to me!

  Weep not to me, nor whimper pitiful prayers!

  Oh that mine
heart beat with a tigress’ strength,

  That I might tear thy flesh and lap thy blood 340

  For all the pain thy folly brought on me!

  Vile wretch! where now is Love’s Queen glory-crowned?

  Hath Zeus forgotten his daughter’s paramour?

  Have them for thy deliverers! Get thee hence

  Far from my dwelling, curse of Gods and men!

  Yea, for through thee, thou miscreant, sorrow came

  On deathless Gods, for sons and sons’ sons slain.

  Hence from my threshold! — to thine Helen go!

  Agonize day and night beside her bed:

  There whimper, pierced to the heart with cruel pangs, 350

  Until she heal thee of thy grievous pain.”

  So from her doors she drave that groaning man —

  Ah fool! not knowing her own doom, whose weird

  Was straightway after him to tread the path

  Of death! So Fate had spun her destiny-thread.

  Then, as he stumbled down through Ida’s brakes,

  Where Doom on his death-path was leading him

  Painfully halting, racked with heart-sick pain,

  Hera beheld him, with rejoicing soul

  Throned in the Olympian palace-court of Zeus. 360

  And seated at her side were handmaids four

  Whom radiant-faced Selene bare to the Sun

  To be unwearying ministers in Heaven,

  In form and office diverse each from each;

  For of these Seasons one was summer’s queen,

  And one of winter and his stormy star,

  Of spring the third, of autumn-tide the fourth.

  So in four portions parted is man’s year

  Ruled by these Queens in turn — but of all this

  Be Zeus himself the Overseer in heaven. 370

  And of those issues now these spake with her

  Which baleful Fate in her all-ruining heart

  Was shaping to the birth the new espousals

  Of Helen, fatal to Deiphobus —

  The wrath of Helenus, who hoped in vain

  For that fair bride, and how, when he had fled,

  Wroth with the Trojans, to the mountain-height,

  Achaea’s sons would seize him and would hale

  Unto their ships — how, by his counselling

  Strong Tydeus’ son should with Odysseus scale 380

  The great wall, and should slay Alcathous

  The temple-warder, and should bear away

  Pallas the Gracious, with her free consent,

  Whose image was the sure defence of Troy; —

  Yea, for not even a God, how wroth soe’er,

 

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