Complete Works of Virgil

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Complete Works of Virgil Page 204

by Virgil


  so vast a shock of arms should interpose

  ‘twixt nations destined to perpetual bond?

  Aeneas met the Rutule Sucro — thus

  staying the Trojan charge — and with swift blow

  struck at him sidewise, where the way of death

  is quickest, cleaving ribs and rounded side

  with reeking sword. Turnus met Amycus,

  unhorsed him, though himself afoot, and slew

  Diores, his fair brother (one was pierced

  fronting the spear, the other felled to earth

  by strike of sword), and both their severed heads

  he hung all dripping to his chariot’s rim.

  But Talon, Tanais, and Cethegus brave,

  three in one onset, unto death went down

  at great Aeneas’ hand; and he dispatched

  ill-starred Onites of Echion’s line,

  fair Peridia’s child. Then Turnus slew

  two Lycian brothers unto Phoebus dear,

  and young Menoetes, an Arcadian,

  who hated war (though vainly) when he plied

  his native fisher-craft in Lerna’s streams,

  where from his mean abode he ne’er went forth

  to wait at great men’s doors, but with his sire

  reaped the scant harvest of a rented glebe.

  as from two sides two conflagrations sweep

  dry woodlands or full copse of crackling bay,

  or as, swift-leaping from the mountain-vales,

  two flooded, foaming rivers seaward roar,

  each on its path of death, not less uproused,

  speed Turnus and Aeneas o’er the field;

  now storms their martial rage; now fiercely swells

  either indomitable heart; and now

  each hero’s full strength to the slaughter moves.

  Behold Murranus, boasting his high birth

  from far-descended sires of storied name,

  the line of Latium’s kings! Aeneas now

  with mountain-boulder lays him low in dust,

  smitten with whirlwind of the monster stone;

  and o’er him fallen under yoke and rein

  roll his own chariot wheels, while with swift tread

  the mad hoofs of his horses stamp him down,

  not knowing him their lord. But Turnus found

  proud Hyllus fronting him with frantic rage,

  and at his golden helmet launched the shaft

  that pierced it; in his cloven brain it clung.

  Nor could thy sword, O Cretheus, save thee then

  from Turnus, though of bravest Greeks the peer;

  nor did Cupencus’ gods their priest defend

  against Aeneas, but his breast he gave

  unto the hostile blade; his brazen shield

  delayed no whit his miserable doom.

  Thee also, Aeolus, Laurentum saw

  spread thy huge body dying on the ground;

  yea, dying, thou whom Greeks in serried arms

  subdued not, nor Achilles’ hand that hurled

  the throne of Priam down: here didst thou touch

  thy goal of death; one stately house was thine

  on Ida’s mountain, at Lyrnessus, one;

  Laurentum’s hallowed earth was but thy grave.

  Now the whole host contends; all Latium meets

  all Ilium; Mnestheus and Serestus bold;

  Messapus, the steed-breaker, and high-soured

  Asilas; Tuscans in a phalanx proud;

  Arcadian riders of Evander’s train:

  each warrior lifts him to his height supreme

  of might and skill; no sloth nor lingering now,

  but in one far-spread conflict all contend.

  His goddess-mother in Aeneas’ mind

  now stirred the purpose to make sudden way

  against the city-wall, in swift advance

  of all his line, confounding Latium so

  with slaughter and surprise. His roving glance,

  seeking for Turnus through the scattered lines

  this way and that, beholds in distant view

  the city yet unscathed and calmly free

  from the wide-raging fight. Then on his soul

  rushed the swift vision of a mightier war.

  Mnestheus, Sergestus, and Serestus brave,

  his chosen chiefs, he summons to his side,

  and stands upon a hillock, whither throng

  the Teucrian legions, each man holding fast

  his shield and spear. He, towering high,

  thus from the rampart to his people calls:

  “Perform my bidding swiftly: Jove’s own hand

  sustains our power. Be ye not slack, because

  the thing I do is sudden. For this day

  I will pluck out th’ offending root of war, —

  yon city where Latinus reigns. Unless

  it bear our yoke and heed a conqueror’s will,

  will lay low in dust its blazing towers.

  Must I wait Turnus’ pleasure, till he deign

  to meet my stroke, and have a mind once more,

  though vanquished, to show fight? My countrymen,

  see yonder stronghold of their impious war!

  Bring flames; avenge the broken oath with fire!”

  Scarce had he said, when with consenting souls,

  they speed them to the walls in dense array,

  forming a wedge. Ladders now leap in air,

  and sudden-blazing fires. In various war

  some troops run charging at the city-gates,

  and slay the guards; some fling the whirling spear

  and darken heaven with arrows. In their van,

  his right hand lifted to the wails and towers,

  Aeneas, calling on the gods to hear,

  loudly upbraids Latinus that once more

  conflict is thrust upon him; that once more

  Italians are his foes and violate

  their second pledge of peace. So blazes forth

  dissension ‘twixt the frighted citizens:

  some would give o’er the city and fling wide

  its portals to the Trojan, or drag forth

  the King himself to parley; others fly

  to arms, and at the rampart make a stand.

  ‘T is thus some shepherd from a caverned crag

  stirs up the nested bees with plenteous fume

  of bitter smoke; they, posting to and fro,

  fly desperate round the waxen citadel,

  and whet their buzzing fury; through their halls

  the stench and blackness rolls; within the caves

  noise and confusion ring; the fatal cloud

  pours forth incessant on the vacant air.

  But now a new adversity befell

  the weary Latins, which with common woe

  shook the whole city to its heart. The Queen,

  when at her hearth she saw the close assault

  of enemies, the walls beset, and fire

  spreading from roof to roof, but no defence

  from the Rutulian arms, nor front of war

  with Turnus leading, — she, poor soul, believed

  her youthful champion in the conflict slain;

  and, mad with sudden sorrow, shrieked aloud

  against herself, the guilty chief and cause

  of all this ill; and, babbling her wild woe

  in endless words, she rent her purple pall,

  and with her own hand from the rafter swung

  a noose for her foul death. The tidings dire

  among the moaning wives of Latium spread,

  and young Lavinia’s frantic fingers tore

  her rose-red cheek and hyacinthine hair.

  Then all her company of women shrieked

  in anguish, and the wailing echoed far

  along the royal seat; from whence the tale

  of sorrow through the peopled city flew;

  hearts sank; Latinus rent his robes, appalled
r />   to see his consort’s doom, his falling throne;

  and heaped foul dust upon his hoary hair.

  Meanwhile the warrior Turnus far afield

  pursued a scattered few; but less his speed,

  for less and less his worn steeds worked his will;

  and now wind-wafted to his straining ear

  a nameless horror came, a dull, wild roar,

  the city’s tumult and distressful cry.

  “Alack,” he cried, “what stirs in yonder walls

  such anguish? Or why rings from side to side

  such wailing through the city?” Asking so,

  he tightened frantic grasp upon the rein.

  To him his sister, counterfeiting still

  the charioteer Metiscus, while she swayed

  rein, steeds, and chariot, this answer made:

  “Hither, my Turnus, let our arms pursue

  the sons of Troy. Here lies the nearest way

  to speedy triumph. There be other swords

  to keep yon city safe. Aeneas now

  storms against Italy in active war;

  we also on this Trojan host may hurl

  grim havoc. Nor shalt thou the strife give o’er

  in glory second, nor in tale of slain.”

  Turnus replied, “O sister, Iong ago

  I knew thee what thou wert, when guilefully

  thou didst confound their treaty, and enlist

  thy whole heart in this war. No Ionger now

  thy craft divine deceives me. But what god

  compelled thee, from Olympus fallen so far,

  to bear these cruel burdens? Wouldst thou see

  thy wretched brother slaughtered? For what else

  is in my power? What flattering hazard still

  holds forth deliverance? My own eyes have seen

  Murranus (more than any now on earth

  my chosen friend) who, calling on my name,

  died like a hero by a hero’s sword.

  Ill-fated Ufens fell, enduring not

  to Iook upon my shame; the Teucrians

  divide his arms for spoil and keep his bones.

  Shall I stand tamely, till my hearth and home

  are levelled with the ground? For this would be

  the only blow not fallen. Shall my sword

  not give the lie to Drances’ insolence?

  Shall I take flight and let my country see

  her Turnus renegade? Is death a thing

  so much to weep for? O propitious dead,

  O spirits of the dark, receive and bless

  me whom yon gods of light have cast away!

  Sacred and guiltless shall my soul descend

  to join your company; I have not been

  unworthy offspring of my kingly sires.”

  Scarce had he said, when through the foeman’s line

  Saces dashed forth upon a foaming steed,

  his face gashed by an arrow. He cried loud

  on Turnus’ name: “O Turnus, but in thee

  our last hope lies. Have pity on the woe

  of all thy friends and kin! Aeneas hurls

  his thunderbolt of war, and menaces

  to crush the strongholds of all Italy,

  and lay them low; already where we dwell

  his firebrands are raining. Unto thee

  the Latins Iook, and for thy valor call.

  The King sits dumb and helpless, even he,

  in doubt which son-in-law, which cause to choose.

  Yea, and the Queen, thy truest friend, is fallen

  by her own hand; gone mad with grief and fear,

  she fled the light of day. At yonder gates

  Messapus only and Atinas bear

  the brunt of battle; round us closely draw

  the serried ranks; their naked blades of steel

  are thick as ripening corn; wilt thou the while

  speed in thy chariot o’er this empty plain?”

  Dazed and bewildered by such host of ills,

  Turnus stood dumb; in his pent bosom stirred

  shame, frenzy, sorrow, a despairing love

  goaded to fury, and a warrior’s pride

  of valor proven.

  But when first the light

  of reason to his blinded soul returned,

  he strained his flaming eyeballs to behold

  the distant wall, and from his chariot gazed

  in wonder at the lordly citadel.

  For, lo, a pointed peak of flame uprolled

  from tier to tier, and surging skyward seized

  a tower — the very tower his own proud hands

  had built of firm-set beams and wheeled in place,

  and slung its Iofty bridges high in air.

  “Fate is too strong, my sister! Seek no more

  to stay the stroke. But let me hence pursue

  that path where Heaven and cruel Fortune call.

  Aeneas I must meet; and I must bear

  the bitterness of death, whate’er it be.

  O sister, thou shalt look upon my shame

  no longer. But first grant a madman’s will!”

  He spoke; and leaping from his chariot, sped

  through foes and foemen’s spears, not seeing now

  his sister’s sorrow, as in swift career

  he burst from line to line. Thus headlong falls

  a mountain-boulder by a whirlwind flung

  from lofty peak, or loosened by much rain,

  or by insidious lapse of seasons gone;

  the huge, resistless crag goes plunging down

  by leaps and bounds, o’erwhelming as it flies

  tall forests, Bocks and herds, and mortal men:

  so through the scattered legions Turnus ran

  straight to the city walls, where all the ground

  was drenched with blood, and every passing air

  shrieked with the noise of spears. His lifted hand

  made sign of silence as he loudly called:

  “Refrain, Rutulians! O ye Latins all,

  your spears withhold! The issue of the fray

  is all my own. I only can repair

  our broken truce by judgment of the sword.”

  Back fell the hostile lines, and cleared the field.

  But Sire Aeneas, hearing Turnus’ name,

  down the steep rampart from the citadel

  unlingering tried, all lesser task laid by,

  with joy exultant and dread-thundering arms.

  Like Athos’ crest he loomed, or soaring top

  of Eryx, when the nodding oaks resound,

  or sovereign Apennine that lifts in air

  his forehead of triumphant snow. All eyes

  of Troy, Rutulia, and Italy

  were fixed his way; and all who kept a guard

  on lofty rampart, or in siege below

  were battering the foundations, now laid by

  their implements and arms. Latinus too

  stood awestruck to behold such champions, born

  in lands far-sundered, met upon one field

  for one decisive stroke of sword with sword.

  Swift striding forth where spread the vacant plain,

  they hurled their spears from far; then in close fight

  the brazen shields rang. Beneath their tread

  Earth groaned aloud, as with redoubling blows

  their falchions fell; nor could a mortal eye

  ‘twixt chance and courage the dread work divide.

  As o’er Taburnus’ top, or spacious hills

  of Sila, in relentless shock of war,

  two bulls rush brow to brow, while terror-pale

  the herdsmen fly; the herd is hushed with fear;

  the heifers dumbly marvel which shall be

  true monarch of the grove, whom all the kine

  obedient follow; but the rival twain,

  commingling mightily wound after wound,

  thrust with opposing horns, and bathe their necks

  in st
reams of blood; the forest far and wide

  repeats their bellowing rage: not otherwise

  Trojan Aeneas and King Daunus’ son

  clashed shield on shield, till all the vaulted sky

  felt the tremendous sound. The hand of Jove

  held scales in equipoise, and threw thereon

  th’ unequal fortunes of the heroes twain:

  one to vast labors doomed and one to die.

  Soon Turnus, reckless of the risk, leaped forth,

  upreached his whole height to his lifted sword,

  and struck: the Trojans and the Latins pale

  cried mightily, and all eyes turned one way

  expectant. But the weak, perfidious sword

  broke off, and as the blow descended, failed

  its furious master, whose sole succor now

  was flight; and swifter than the wind he flew.

  But, lo! a hilt of form and fashion strange

  lay in his helpless hand. For in his haste,

  when to the battle-field his team he drove,

  his father’s sword forgotten (such the tale),

  he snatched Metiscus’ weapon. This endured

  to strike at Trojan backs, as he pursued,

  but when on Vulcan’s armory divine

  its earthly metal smote, the brittle blade

  broke off like ice, and o’er the yellow sands

  in flashing fragments scattered. Turnus now

  takes mad flight o’er the distant plain, and winds

  in wavering gyration round and round;

  for Troy’s close ring confines him, and one way

  a wide swamp lies, one way a frowning wall.

  But lo! Aeneas — though the arrow’s wound

  still slackens him and oft his knees refuse

  their wonted step — pursues infuriate

  his quailing foe, and dogs him stride for stride.

  As when a stag-hound drives the baffled roe

  to torrent’s edge (or where the flaunting snare

  of crimson feathers fearfully confines)

  and with incessant barking swift pursues;

  while through the snared copse or embankment high

  the frightened creature by a thousand ways

  doubles and turns; but that keen Umbrian hound

  with wide jaws, undesisting, grasps his prey,

  or, thinking that he grasps it, snaps his teeth

  cracking together, and deludes his rage,

  devouring empty air: then peal on peal

  the cry of hunters bursts; the lake and shore

  reecho, and confusion fills the sky: —

  such was the flight of Turnus, who reviled

  the Rutules as he fled, and loudly sued

  of each by name to fetch his own lost sword.

  Aeneas vowed destruction and swift death

  to all who dared come near, and terrified

  their trembling souls with menace that his power

 

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