Complete Works of Virgil
Page 258
With skins of beasts, and bearing high the flame. 325
Fresh, dainty gifts they bring, the second course to frame.
XXXVIII . Next came the Salians, dancing as they sung
Around the blazing altars. Poplar crowned
Their brows; a double chorus, old and young,
Chant forth the glories and the deeds renowned
Of Hercules; how, potent to confound
His stepdame’s hate, he crushed the serpents twain;
What towns in war he levelled to the ground,
Troy and OEchalia; how with infinite pain 334
Eurystheus’ tasks he sped, and Juno’s fates were vain:
XXXIX . “Oh thou, unconquered, whose resistless hand
Smote the twin giants of the cloud-born crew,
Pholus, Hylæus; and the Cretan land
Freed from its monster; and in Nemea slew
The lion! Styx hath trembled at thy view,
And Cerberus, when, smeared with gore, he lay
On bones half-mumbled in his darksome mew.
Thee not Typhoeus, when in armed array 343
He towered erect, could daunt, nor grisly shapes dismay.
XL . “Prompt was thy wit, when, powerless to prevail,
Around thee twined, the beast of Lerna’s fen
Hissed with the legion of its heads. O hail,
True son of Jove, the praise of mortal men,
And Heaven’s new glory. Hither turn thy ken,
And cheer thy votaries.” So with heart and will
They chant his praise, nor less the monster’s den,
And Cacus, breathing flames. The loud notes fill 352
The sacred grove around, and echo to the hill.
XLI . The rites thus ended, to the town they fare.
In front, the good Evander, old and grey,
Moves ‘twixt Æneas and his youthful heir,
And oft with various converse, as they stray,
Beguiles the lightened labour of the way.
Now this, now that the Trojan chief admires,
Filled with new pleasure, as his eyes survey
Each place in turn. Oft, gladly he enquires 361
The tokens, one by one, and tales of ancient sires.
XLII . Then he, who built the citadel of Rome,
Spake thus — the good Evander: “Yonder view
The forest; ’twas the Fauns’ and Wood-nymphs’ home.
Their birth from trunks and rugged oaks they drew;
No arts they had, nor settled life, nor knew
To yoke the ox, or lay up stores, or spare
What wealth they gathered; but their wants were few;
The branches gave them sustenance, whate’er 370
In toilsome chase they won, composed their scanty fare.
XLIII . “Then first came Saturn from Olympus’ height,
Flying from Jove, his kingdom barred and banned,
He taught the scattered hillsmen to unite,
And gave them laws, and bade the name to stand
Of Latium, he safe latent in the land.
Then tranquilly the happy seasons rolled
Year after year, and Peace, with plenteous hand,
Smiled on his sceptre. ’Twas the Age of Gold, 379
So well his placid sway the willing folk controlled.
XLIV . “Then waxed the times degenerate, and the stain
With stealthy growth gave birth to deeds of shame,
The rage of battle, and the lust of gain.
Then came Ausonians, then Sicanians came,
And oft the land of Saturn changed its name.
Strange tyrants came, and ruled Italia’s shore,
Grim-visaged Thybris, of gigantic frame;
His name henceforth the river Tiber bore, 388
And Albula’s old name was known, alas! no more.
XLV . “Me, from my country driven forth to roam
The utmost deep, perforce the Fates’ design
And Fortune’s power drove hitherward. This home
My mother, Nymph Carmentis, warned was mine;
A god, Apollo, did these shores assign.”
So saying, he shows the altar and the gate
Long called Carmental, from the Nymph divine,
First seer who sang, with faithful voice, how great 397
Æneas’ race should rise, and Pallanteum’s fate.
XLVI . He shows the grove of Romulus, his famed
Asylum; then, beneath the rock’s cold crest
Lupercal’s cave, from Pan Lycæan named;
Then, Argiletum’s grove, whose shades attest
The death of Argus, once the monarch’s guest;
Tarpeia’s rock, the Capitolian height,
Now golden — rugged ’twas of old, a nest
Of tangled brakes, yet hallowed was the site 406
E’en then, and wood and rock filled the rude hinds with fright.
XLVII . “These wooded steeps,” he said, “this sacred grove
What godhead haunts, we know not; legends say
Arcadians here have seen the form of Jove,
And seen his right hand, with resistless sway,
Shake the dread Ægis, and the clouds array.
See, yon two cities, once renowned by fame,
Now ruined walls and crumbling to decay;
This Janus built, those walls did Saturn frame; 415
Janiculum was this, that bore Saturnia’s name.”
XLVIII . So talking, to Evander’s lowly seat
They journeyed. Herds were lowing on the plain,
Where stand the Forum and Carinæ’s street.
“These gates,” said he, “did great Alcides deign
To pass; this palace did the god contain.
Dare thou to quit thee like the god, nor dread
To scorn mere wealth, nor humble cheer disdain.”
So saying, Æneas through the door he led, 424
And skins of Libyan bears on garnered leaves outspread.
XLIX . Night, with dark wings descending, wrapt the world,
When Venus, harassed, nor in vain, with fear,
To see the menace at Laurentum hurled,
To Vulcan, on his golden couch, drew near,
Breathing immortal passion: “Husband dear,
When Greeks the fated citadel of Troy
With fire and sword were ravaging, or ere
Her towers had fallen, I sought not to employ 433
Arms, arts or aid of thine, their purpose to destroy.
L . “Ne’er taxed I then thy labours, dearest love,
Large as my debt to Priam’s sons, and sore
My grief for poor Æneas. Now, since Jove
Hath brought him here to the Rutulian shore,
Thine arms I ask, thy deity implore,
A mother for her son. Dread power divine,
Whom Thetis, whom Tithonus’ spouse of yore
Could move with tears, behold, what hosts combine, 442
What towns, with barr’d gates, arm to ruin me and mine.”
LI . She spake, and both her snowy arms outflung
Around him doubting, and embraced the Sire,
And, softly fondling, kissed him as she clung.
Through bones and veins her melting charms inspire
The well-known heat, and reawake desire.
So, riven by the thunder, through the pile
Of storm-clouds runs the glittering cleft of fire.
Proud of her beauty, with a conscious smile, 451
The Goddess feels her power, and gladdens at the guile.
LII . Then Vulcan, mastered by immortal love,
Answers his spouse, “Why, Goddess mine, invent
Such far-fetched pleas? Dost thou thy faith remove,
And cease to trust in Vulcan? Had thy bent
So moved thee then, arms quickly had I lent
To aid thy Trojans, and thy wish were gained,
Nor envious Fate, nor J
ove omnipotent
Had crossed my purpose; then had Troy remained, 460
And Priam ten years more the kingly line sustained.
LIII . “E’en now, if war thou seekest to prepare,
And thither tends thy purpose, be it sped.
Whate’er my craft can promise, whatso’er
Is wrought with iron, ivory or lead,
Fanned with the blast, or molten in the bed,
Thine be it all; forbear a suppliant’s quest,
Nor wrong thy beauty’s potency.” He said,
And gave the love she longed for; on her breast 469
Outpoured at length he slept, and loosed his limbs with rest.
LIV . ’Twas midnight; sleep had faded from its prime,
The hour, when housewives, who a scanty fare
Eke out with loom and distaff, rise in time
To wake the embers, and the night outwear;
Then call their handmaids, by the light to share
The task, that keeps the husband’s bed from shame,
And earns a pittance for the babes. So there,
Nor tardier, to his toil the Lord of Flame 478
Springs from his couch of down, the workmen’s task to frame.
LV . Hard by Æolian Lipare, before
Sicania, looms an island from the deep,
With smoking rocks. There Ætna’s caverns roar,
Hewn by the Cyclop’s forges from the steep.
There the steel hisses and the sparks upleap,
And clanging anvils, smit with dexterous aim,
Groan through the cavern, as their strokes they heap,
And restless in the furnace pants the flame. 487
’Twas Vulcan’s house, the land even yet bears Vulcan’s name.
LVI . Down to this cavern came the Lord of Flame,
And found Pyracmon, naked as he strove,
Brontes and Steropes. Their hands still frame
A thunderbolt unfinished, such as Jove
Rains thickly from his armouries above,
Tipt with twelve barbs and never known to fail.
Part still remain unwrought; three rays they wove
Of ruddy fire, three of the Southern gale, 496
Three of the watery cloud, and three of twisted hail.
LVII . They blend the frightful flashes and the peals,
Sound, fear, and fury with the flames behind.
These forge the War-Gods’ chariot and swift wheels,
Which stir up cities, and arouse mankind.
Here, burnished bright for wrathful Pallas, shined,
With serpent scales, and golden links firm bound,
Her dreadful Ægis, and the snakes entwined;
And on her breast, with severed neck, still frowned 505
Medusa’s head, and rolled her dying eyes around.
LVIII . “Cease now,” said Vulcan, “and these toils forbear,
Cyclops of Ætna; hither turn your heed.
Arms for a hero must the forge prepare.
Now use your strength and nimble hands; ye need
A master’s cunning; to your tasks with speed.”
He spake; each quickly at the word once more
Falls to his labour, as the lots decreed.
Now flows the copper, now the golden ore; 514
Now melts the deadly steel; the flames resume their roar.
LIX . A mighty shield they fashion, fit to meet
Singly all arms of Latium. Layer on layer,
Seven folds in circles on its face they beat.
These from the windy bellows force the air,
These hissing copper for the forge prepare,
Dipt in the trough. The cavern floor below
Groans with the anvils and the strokes they bear,
As strong arms timed heap measured blow on blow, 523
And, turned with griping tongs, the molten mass doth glow.
LX . While on Æolia’s coast the Lemnian sire
Wrought thus, the fair Dawn, mantling in the skies,
Awakes Evander, and the lowly choir
Of birds beneath the eaves invites to rise.
The Tuscan sandals to his feet he ties,
The kirtle dons, the Tegeæan sword
Links to his side. A panther’s skin supplies
His scarf, hung leftward, and his watchful ward, 532
Two dogs, the threshold leave, and ‘company their lord.
LXI . So to the chamber of his Dardan guest
The good Evander for his promise’ sake
Full early hastens pondering in his breast
The tale he listened to, the words he spake.
Nor less Æneas, with the dawn awake,
Goes forth. Achates at his side attends,
His son, young Pallas, doth Evander take.
So meeting, each a willing hand extends, 541
And host and guest sit down, and frankly talk as friends.
LXII . First spake the King: “Great Chief of Trojan fame,
Who living, ne’er the Trojan state is lost.
Small is our strength for war, though great our name.
Here Tiber bounds us, there Rutulians boast
To rend our walls, and thunder with their host.
But mighty tribes and wealthy realms shall band
Their arms with mine. Chance, where unlooked-for most,
Points to this succour. By the Fate’s command 550
Thou comest; thee the gods have guided to our land.
LXIII . “Not far from here, upon an aged rock,
There stands a town, Agylla is its name,
Where on Etruscan ridges dwells the stock
Of ancient Lydia, men of warlike fame.
Long years it flourished, till Mezentius came
And ruled it fiercely, with a tyrant’s sway.
Ah me! why tell the nameless deeds of shame,
The savage murders wrought from day to day? 559
May Heaven on him and his those cruelties repay!
LXIV . “Nay more, he joined the living to the dead,
Hand linked to hand in torment, face to face.
The rank flesh mouldered, and the limbs still bled,
Till death, O misery, with lingering pace,
Loosed the foul union and the long embrace.
Worn out at last with all his crimes abhorred,
Around the horrid madman swarmed apace
The armed Agyllans. On his roof they poured 568
The firebrands, seized his guards and slew them with the sword.
LXV . “He safely through the carnage slunk away
To fields Rutulian, where with sheltering hand
Great Turnus shields the tyrant. So to-day,
Stirred with just fury, all Etruria’s land
Springs to the war, prompt vengeance to demand.
Thine be these all, for thousands can I boast,
Æneas, thine to captain and command.
Mark now their shouts; already roars the host, 577
‘Arm, bring the banners forth’; their vessels crowd the coast.
LXVI . “An aged seer thus warns them to refrain,
Expounding Fate: ‘Choice youths, the flower and show
Of ancient warriors of Meonian strain,
Whom just resentment arms against the foe,
Whose souls with hatred of Mezentius glow,
No man of Italy is fit to lead
So vast a multitude, the Fates say “No;
Seek ye a foreign captain.”’ Awed, they heed 586
The warning words divine, and camp upon the mead.
LXVII . “Lo, Tarchon sends ambassadors; they bring
The crown, and sceptre, and the signs of state,
And bid me join the Tuscans as their king.
But frosty years have dulled me; life is late,
And envious Age forbids an Empire’s weight.
Fit were my son, but half Italian he,
His mother born a Sabine. Thee hath Fate
Endowed with years and proper birth; for thee 595
The Gods this throne have willed, and, what they will, decree.
LXVIII . “Advance, brave Chief of Italy and Troy!
Advance; young Pallas at thy side shall fare,
My hope, my solace, and my heart’s best joy.
With thee to teach him, he shall learn to share
The war’s grim work, the warrior’s toil to bear;
From earliest youth to marvel at thy deeds,
And try to match them. Horsemen shall be there,
Ten score, the choicest that Arcadia breeds; 604
Two hundred more, his own, the gallant stripling leads.”
LXIX . He spake: Æneas and Achates stood
With down-fixt eyes, musing the strange event.
Dark thoughts were theirs, and sorrowful their mood;
When lo, to leftward Cytherea sent
A sign amid the open firmament.
A flash of lightning swift from ether sprang
With thunder. Turmoil universal blent
Earth, sea and sky; the empyrean rang 613
With arms, and loudly pealed the Tuscan trumpet’s clang.
LXX . Upward they look: again and yet again
Comes the loud crash of thunder, and between
A cloud that frets the firmamental plain,
With bright, red flash amid the sky serene,
The glitter of resounding arms is seen.
All tremble; but Æneas hails the sign
Long-promised. “Ask not,” he exclaims, “what mean
These prodigies and portents; they are mine. 622
Me great Olympus calls; I hear the voice divine.
LXXI . “This sign my Goddess-mother vowed to send,
If war should threaten; thus in armed array
From heaven with aid she promised to descend.
Ah, woe for thee, Laurentum, soon the prey
Of foeman! What a reckoning shalt thou pay
To me, ill-fated Turnus! How thy wave
Shall redden, Tiber, as it rolls away
Helmets, and shields and bodies of the brave! 631
Ay, let them break the league, and bid the War-god rave.”
LXXII . He spake, and, rising from his seat, renews
The slumbering fires of Hercules, and tends
The hearth-god’s shrine of yesterday. Choice ewes