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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0690.phi003.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="6"><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="535"><l n="693">While thus they talked, the crimsoned car of Morn</l><l n="694">Had wheeled beyond the midmost point of heaven,</l><l n="695">On her ethereal road. The princely pair</l><l n="696">Had wasted thus the whole brief gift of hours;</l><l n="697">But Sibyl spoke the warning: “Night speeds by,</l><l n="698">And we, Aeneas, lose it in lamenting.</l><l n="699">Here comes the place where cleaves our way in twain.</l><l n="700">Thy road, the right, toward Pluto's dwelling goes,</l><l n="701">And leads us to Elysium. But the left</l><l n="702">Speeds sinful souls to doom, and is their path</l><l n="703">To Tartarus th' accurst.” <choice><reg>Deiphobus</reg><orig>Deïphobus</orig></choice>
               </l><l n="704">Cried out: “0 priestess, be not wroth with us!</l><l n="705">Back to the ranks with yonder ghosts I go.</l><l n="706">0 glory of my race, pass on! Thy lot</l><l n="707">Be happier than mine!” He spoke, and fled.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="548"><l n="708">Aeneas straightway by the leftward cliff</l><l n="709">Beheld a spreading rampart, high begirt</l><l n="710">With triple wall, and circling round it ran</l><l n="711">A raging river of swift floods of flame,</l><l n="712">Infernal Phlegethon, which whirls along</l><l n="713">Loud-thundering rocks. A mighty gate is there</l><l n="714">Columned in adamant; no human power,</l><l n="715">Nor even the gods, against this gate prevail.</l><l n="716">Tall tower of steel it has; and seated there</l><l n="717">Tisiphone, in blood-flecked pall arrayed,</l><l n="718">Sleepless forever, guards the entering way.</l><l n="719">Hence groans are heard, fierce cracks of lash and scourge,</l><l n="720">Loud-clanking iron links and trailing chains.</l><l n="721">Aeneas motionless with horror stood</l><l n="722">o'erwhelmed at such uproar. “0 virgin, say</l><l n="723">What shapes of guilt are these? What penal woe</l><l n="724">Harries them thus? What wailing smites the air?”</l><l n="725">To whom the Sibyl, “Far-famed prince of <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>,</l><l n="726">The feet of innocence may never pass</l><l n="727">Into this house of sin. But Hecate,</l><l n="728">When o'er th' Avernian groves she gave me power,</l><l n="729">Taught me what penalties the gods decree,</l><l n="730">And showed me all. There Cretan Rhadamanth</l><l n="731">His kingdom keeps, and from unpitying throne</l><l n="732">Chastises and lays bare the secret sins</l><l n="733">Of mortals who, exulting in vain guile,</l><l n="734">Elude till death, their expiation due.</l><l n="735">There, armed forever with her vengeful scourge,</l><l n="736">Tisiphone, with menace and affront,</l><l n="737">The guilty swarm pursues; in her left hand</l><l n="738">She lifts her angered serpents, while she calls</l><l n="739">A troop of sister-furies fierce as she.</l><l n="740">Then, grating loud on hinge of sickening sound,</l><l n="741">Hell's portals open wide. 0, dost thou see</l><l n="742">What sentinel upon that threshold sits,</l><l n="743">What shapes of fear keep guard upon that gloom?</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="576"><l n="744">Far, far within the dragon Hydra broods</l><l n="745">With half a hundred mouths, gaping and black;</l><l n="746">And Tartarus slopes downward to the dark</l><l n="747">Twice the whole space that in the realms of light</l><l n="748">Th' Olympian heaven above our earth aspires. —</l><l n="749">Here Earth's first offspring, the Titanic brood,</l><l n="750">Roll lightning-blasted in the gulf profound;</l><l n="751">The twin <choice><reg>Aloidae</reg><orig>Aloïdae</orig></choice>, colossal shades,</l><l n="752">Came on my view; their hands made stroke at Heaven</l><l n="753">And strove to thrust Jove from his seat on high.</l><l n="754">I saw Salmoneus his dread stripes endure,</l><l n="755">Who dared to counterfeit Olympian thunder</l><l n="756">And Jove's own fire. In chariot of four steeds,</l><l n="757">Brandishing torches, he triumphant rode</l><l n="758">Through throngs of Greeks, o'er <placeName key="perseus,Elis">Elis</placeName>' sacred way,</l><l n="759">Demanding worship as a god. 0 fool!</l><l n="760">To mock the storm's inimitable flash—</l><l n="761">With crash of hoofs and roll of brazen wheel!</l><l n="762">But mightiest Jove from rampart of thick cloud</l><l n="763">Hurled his own shaft, no flickering, mortal flame,</l><l n="764">And in vast whirl of tempest laid him low.</l><l n="765">Next unto these, on Tityos I looked,</l><l n="766">Child of old Earth, whose womb all creatures bears:</l><l n="767">Stretched o'er nine roods he lies; a vulture huge</l><l n="768">Tears with hooked beak at his immortal side,</l><l n="769">Or deep in entrails ever rife with pain</l><l n="770">Gropes for a feast, making his haunt and home</l><l n="771">In the great Titan bosom; nor will give</l><l n="772">To ever new-born flesh surcease of woe.</l><l n="773">Why name Ixion and Pirithous,</l><l n="774">The Lapithae, above whose impious brows</l><l n="775">A crag of flint hangs quaking to its fall,</l><l n="776">As if just toppling down, while couches proud,</l><l n="777">Propped upon golden pillars, bid them feast</l><l n="778">In royal glory: but beside them lies</l><l n="779">The eldest of the Furies, whose dread hands</l><l n="780">Thrust from the feast away, and wave aloft</l><l n="781">A flashing firebrand, with shrieks of woe.</l><l n="782">Here in a prison-house awaiting doom</l><l n="783">Are men who hated, long as life endured,</l><l n="784">Their brothers, or maltreated their gray sires,</l><l n="785">Or tricked a humble friend; the men who grasped</l><l n="786">At hoarded riches, with their kith and kin</l><l n="787">Not sharing ever—an unnumbered throng;</l><l n="788">Here slain adulterers be; and men who dared</l><l n="789">To fight in unjust cause, and break all faith</l><l n="790">With their own lawful lords. Seek not to know</l><l n="791">What forms of woe they feel, what fateful shape</l><l n="792">Of retribution hath o'erwhelmed them there.</l><l n="793">Some roll huge boulders up; some hang on wheels,</l><l n="794">Lashed to the whirling spokes; in his sad seat</l><l n="795">Theseus is sitting, nevermore to rise;</l><l n="796">Unhappy Phlegyas uplifts his voice</l><l n="797">In warning through the darkness, calling loud,</l><l n="798">‘0, ere too late, learn justice and fear God!’</l><l n="799">Yon traitor sold his country, and for gold</l><l n="800">Enchained her to a tyrant, trafficking</l><l n="801">In laws, for bribes enacted or made void;</l><l n="802">Another did incestuously take</l><l n="803">His daughter for a wife in lawless bonds.</l><l n="804">All ventured some unclean, prodigious crime;</l><l n="805">And what they dared, achieved. I could not tell,</l><l n="806">Not with a hundred mouths, a hundred tongues,</l><l n="807">Or iron voice, their divers shapes of sin,</l><l n="808">Nor call by name the myriad pangs they bear.”</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="628"><l n="809">So spake Apollo's aged prophetess.</l><l n="810">“Now up and on!” she cried. “Thy task fulfil!</l><l n="811">We must make speed. Behold yon arching doors</l><l n="812">Yon walls in furnace of the Cyclops forged!</l><l n="813">'T is there we are commanded to lay down</l><l n="814">Th' appointed offering.” So, side by side,</l><l n="815">Swift through the intervening dark they strode,</l><l n="816">And, drawing near the portal-arch, made pause.</l><l n="817">Aeneas, taking station at the door,</l><l n="818">Pure, lustral waters o'er his body threw,</l><l n="819">And hung for garland there the Golden Bough.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="637"><l n="820">Now, every rite fulfilled, and tribute due</l><l n="821">Paid to the sovereign power of Proserpine,</l><l n="822">At last within a land delectable</l><l n="823">Their journey lay, through pleasurable bowers</l><l n="824">Of groves where all is joy,—a blest abode!</l><l n="825">An ampler sky its roseate light bestows</l><l n="826">On that bright land, which sees the cloudless beam</l><l n="827">Of suns and planets to our earth unknown.</l><l n="828">On smooth green lawns, contending limb with limb,</l><l n="829">Immortal athletes play, and wrestle long</l><l n="830">'gainst mate or rival on the tawny sand;</l><l n="831">With sounding footsteps and ecstatic song,</l><l n="832">Some thread the dance divine: among them moves</l><l n="833">The bard of <placeName key="tgn,7002756">Thrace</placeName>, in flowing vesture clad,</l><l n="834">Discoursing seven-noted melody,</l><l n="835">Who sweeps the numbered strings with changeful hand,</l><l n="836">Or smites with ivory point his golden lyre.</l><l n="837">Here Trojans be of eldest, noblest race,</l><l n="838">Great-hearted heroes, born in happier times,</l><l n="839">Ilus, Assaracus, and Dardanus,</l><l n="840">Illustrious builders of the Trojan town.</l><l n="841">Their arms and shadowy chariots he views,</l><l n="842">And lances fixed in earth, while through the fields</l><l n="843">Their steeds without a bridle graze at will.</l><l n="844">For if in life their darling passion ran</l><l n="845">To chariots, arms, or glossy-coated steeds,</l><l n="846">The self-same joy, though in their graves, they feel.</l><l n="847">Lo! on the left and right at feast reclined</l><l n="848">Are other blessed souls, whose chorus sings</l><l n="849">Victorious paeans on the fragrant air</l><l n="850">Of laurel groves; and hence to earth outpours</l><l n="851">Eridanus, through forests rolling free.</l><l n="852">Here dwell the brave who for their native land</l><l n="853">Fell wounded on the field; here holy priests</l><l n="854">Who kept them undefiled their mortal day;</l><l n="855">And poets, of whom the true-inspired song</l><l n="856">Deserved Apollo's name; and all who found</l><l n="857">New arts, to make man's life more blest or fair;</l><l n="858">Yea! here dwell all those dead whose deeds bequeath</l><l n="859">Deserved and grateful memory to their kind.</l><l n="860">And each bright brow a snow-white fillet wears.</l><l n="861">Unto this host the Sibyl turned, and hailed</l><l n="862">Musaeus, midmost of a numerous throng,</l><l n="863">Who towered o'er his peers a shoulder higher:</l><l n="864">“0 spirits blest! 0 venerable bard!</l><l n="865">Declare what dwelling or what region holds</l><l n="866">Anchises, for whose sake we twain essayed</l><l n="867">Yon passage over the wide streams of hell.”</l><l n="868">And briefly thus the hero made reply:</l><l n="869">“No fixed abode is ours. In shadowy groves</l><l n="870">We make our home, or meadows fresh and fair,</l><l n="871">With streams whose flowery banks our couches be.</l><l n="872">But you, if thitherward your wishes turn,</l><l n="873">Climb yonder hill, where I your path may show.”</l><l n="874">So saying, he strode forth and led them on,</l><l n="875">Till from that vantage they had prospect fair</l><l n="876">Of a wide, shining land; thence wending down,</l><l n="877">They left the height they trod;<milestone ed="p" n="679" unit="card"/>for far below</l><l n="878">Father Anchises in a pleasant vale</l><l n="879">Stood pondering, while his eyes and thought surveyed</l><l n="880">A host of prisoned spirits, who there abode</l><l n="881">Awaiting entrance to terrestrial air.</l><l n="882">And musing he reviewed the legions bright</l><l n="883">Of his own progeny and offspring proud—</l><l n="884">Their fates and fortunes, virtues and great deeds.</l><l n="885">Soon he discerned Aeneas drawing nigh</l><l n="886">o'er the green slope, and, lifting both his hands</l><l n="887">In eager welcome, spread them swiftly forth.</l><l n="888">Tears from his eyelids rained, and thus he spoke:</l><l n="889">“Art here at last? Hath thy well-proven love</l><l n="890">Of me thy sire achieved yon arduous way?</l><l n="891">Will Heaven, beloved son, once more allow</l><l n="892">That eye to eye we look? and shall I hear</l><l n="893">Thy kindred accent mingling with my own?</l><l n="894">I cherished long this hope. My prophet-soul</l><l n="895">Numbered the lapse of days, nor did my thought</l><l n="896">Deceive. 0, o'er what lands and seas wast driven</l><l n="897">To this embrace! What perils manifold</l><l n="898">Assailed thee, 0 my son, on every side!</l><l n="899">How long I trembled, lest that Libyan throne</l><l n="900">Should work thee woe!”</l><l n="901">Aeneas thus replied:</l><l n="902">“Thine image, sire, thy melancholy shade,</l><l n="903">Came oft upon my vision, and impelled</l><l n="904">My journey hitherward. Our fleet of ships</l><l n="905">Lies safe at anchor in the Tuscan seas.</l><l n="906">Come, clasp my hand! Come, father, I implore,</l><l n="907">And heart to heart this fond embrace receive!”</l><l n="908">So speaking, all his eyes suffused with tears;</l><l n="909">Thrice would his arms in vain that shape enfold.</l><l n="910">Thrice from the touch of hand the vision fled,</l><l n="911">Like wafted winds or likest hovering dreams.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="703"><l n="912">After these things Aeneas was aware</l><l n="913">Of solemn groves in one deep, distant vale,</l><l n="914">Where trees were whispering, and forever flowed</l><l n="915">The river Lethe, through its land of calm.</l><l n="916">Nations unnumbered roved and haunted there:</l><l n="917">As when, upon a windless summer morn,</l><l n="918">The bees afield among the rainbow flowers</l><l n="919">Alight and sip, or round the lilies pure</l><l n="920">Pour forth in busy swarm, while far diffused</l><l n="921">Their murmured songs from all the meadows rise.</l><l n="922">Aeneas in amaze the wonder views,</l><l n="923">And fearfully inquires of whence and why;</l><l n="924">What yonder rivers be; what people press,</l><l n="925">Line after line, on those dim shores along.</l><l n="926">Said Sire Anchises: “Yonder thronging souls</l><l n="927">To reincarnate shape predestined move.</l><l n="928">Here, at the river Lethe's wave, they quaff</l><l n="929">Care-quelling floods, and long oblivion.</l><l n="930">Of these I shall discourse, and to thy soul</l><l n="931">Make visible the number and array</l><l n="932">Of my posterity; so shall thy heart</l><l n="933">In <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, thy new-found home, rejoice.”</l><l n="934">“0 father,” said Aeneas, “must I deem</l><l n="935">That from this region souls exalted rise</l><l n="936">To upper air, and shall once more return</l><l n="937">To cumbering flesh? 0, wherefore do they feel,</l><l n="938">Unhappy ones, such fatal lust to live?”</l><l n="939">“I speak, my son, nor make thee longer doubt,”</l><l n="940">Anchises said, and thus the truth set forth,</l><l n="941">In ordered words from point to point unfolding:</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="724"><l n="942">“Know first that heaven and earth and ocean's plain,</l><l n="943">The moon's bright orb, and stars of Titan birth</l><l n="944">Are nourished by one Life; one primal Mind,</l><l n="945">Immingled with the vast and general frame,</l><l n="946">Fills every part and stirs the mighty whole.</l><l n="947">Thence man and beast, thence creatures of the air,</l><l n="948">And all the swarming monsters that be found</l><l n="949">Beneath the level of the marbled sea;</l><l n="950">A fiery virtue, a celestial power,</l><l n="951">Their native seeds retain; but bodies vile,</l><l n="952">With limbs of clay and members born to die,</l><l n="953">Encumber and o'ercloud; whence also spring</l><l n="954">Terrors and passions, suffering and joy;</l><l n="955">For from deep darkness and captivity</l><l n="956">All gaze but blindly on the radiant world.</l><l n="957">Nor when to life's last beam they bid farewell</l><l n="958">May sufferers cease from pain, nor quite be freed</l><l n="959">From all their fleshly plagues; but by fixed law,</l><l n="960">The strange, inveterate taint works deeply in.</l><l n="961">For this, the chastisement of evils past</l><l n="962">Is suffered here, and full requital paid.</l><l n="963">Some hang on high, outstretched to viewless winds;</l><l n="964">For some their sin's contagion must be purged</l><l n="965">In vast ablution of deep-rolling seas,</l><l n="966">Or burned away in fire. Each man receives</l><l n="967">His ghostly portion in the world of dark;</l><l n="968">But thence to realms Elysian we go free,</l><l n="969">Where for a few these seats of bliss abide,</l><l n="970">Till time's long lapse a perfect orb fulfils,</l><l n="971">And takes all taint away, restoring so</l><l n="972">The pure, ethereal soul's first virgin fire.</l><l n="973">At last, when the millennial aeon strikes,</l><l n="974">God calls them forth to yon Lethaean stream,</l><l n="975">In numerous host, that thence, oblivious all,</l><l n="976">They may behold once more the vaulted sky,</l><l n="977">And willingly to shapes of flesh return.”</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="752"><l n="978">So spoke Anchises; then led forth his son,</l><l n="979">The Sibyl with him, to the assembled shades</l><l n="980">(A voiceful throng), and on a lofty mound</l><l n="981">His station took, whence plainly could be seen</l><l n="982">The long procession, and each face descried.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="756"><l n="983">“Hark now! for of the glories I will tell</l><l n="984">That wait our Dardan blood; of our sons' sons</l><l n="985">Begot upon the old Italian breed,</l><l n="986">Who shall be mighty spirits, and prolong</l><l n="987">Our names, their heritage. I will unfold</l><l n="988">The story, and reveal the destined years.</l><l n="989">Yon princeling, thou beholdest leaning there</l><l n="990">Upon a royal lance, shall next emerge</l><l n="991">Into the realms of day. He is the first</l><l n="992">Of half-Italian strain, the last-born heir</l><l n="993">To thine old age by fair Lavinia given,</l><l n="994">Called Silvius, a royal Alban name</l><l n="995">(Of sylvan birth and sylvan nurture he),</l><l n="996">A king himself and sire of kings to come,</l><l n="997">By whom our race in <placeName key="perseus,Alba Longa">Alba Longa</placeName> reign.</l><l n="998">Next Procas stands, our Trojan people's boast;</l><l n="999">Capys and Numitor, and, named like thee,</l><l n="1000">Aeneas Sylvius, like thee renowned</l><l n="1001">For faithful honor and for deeds of war,</l><l n="1002">When he ascends at last his Alban throne.</l><l n="1003">Behold what warrior youth they be! How strong</l><l n="1004">Their goodly limbs! Above their shaded brows</l><l n="1005">The civic oak they wear! For thee they build</l><l n="1006">Nomentum, and the walls of <placeName key="perseus,Gabii">Gabii</placeName>,</l><l n="1007">Fidena too, and on the mountains pile</l><l n="1008">Collatia's citadels, Pometii,</l><l n="1009">Bola and <placeName key="perseus,Cora">Cora</placeName>, Castrum-Inui—</l><l n="1010">Such be the names the nameless lands shall bear.</l><l n="1011">See, in that line of sires the son of Mars,</l><l n="1012">Great Romulus, of Ilian mother born,</l><l n="1013">From far-descended line of Trojan kings!</l><l n="1014">See from his helm the double crest uprear,</l><l n="1015">While his celestial father in his mien</l><l n="1016">Shows forth his birth divine! Of him, my son,</l><l n="1017">Great <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> shall rise, and, favored of his star,</l><l n="1018">Have power world-wide, and men of godlike mind.</l><l n="1019">She clasps her seven hills in single wall,</l><l n="1020">Proud mother of the brave! So Cybele,</l><l n="1021">The Berecynthian goddess, castle-crowned,</l><l n="1022">On through the Phrygian kingdoms speeds her car,</l><l n="1023">Exulting in her hundred sons divine,</l><l n="1024">All numbered with the gods, all throned on high.</l><l n="1025">“Let now thy visionary glance look long</l><l n="1026">On this thy race, these Romans that be thine.</l><l n="1027">Here Caesar, of Iulus' glorious seed,</l><l n="1028">Behold ascending to the world of light!</l><l n="1029">Behold, at last, that man, for this is he,</l><l n="1030">So oft unto thy listening ears foretold,</l><l n="1031">Augustus Caesar, kindred unto Jove.</l><l n="1032">He brings a golden age; he shall restore</l><l n="1033">Old Saturn's sceptre to our Latin land,</l><l n="1034">And o'er remotest Garamant and Ind</l><l n="1035">His sway extend; the fair dominion</l><l n="1036">outruns th' horizon planets, yea, beyond</l><l n="1037">The sun's bright path, where Atlas' shoulder bears</l><l n="1038">Yon dome of heaven set thick with burning stars.</l><l n="1039">Against his coming the far Caspian shores</l><l n="1040">Break forth in oracles; the Maeotian land</l><l n="1041">Trembles, and all the seven-fold mouths of <placeName key="tgn,1127805">Nile</placeName>.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="801"><l n="1042">Not o'er domain so wide Alcides passed,</l><l n="1043">Although the brazen-footed doe he slew</l><l n="1044">And stilled the groves of Erymanth, and bade</l><l n="1045">The beast of <placeName key="perseus,Lerna">Lerna</placeName> at his arrows quail.</l><l n="1046">Nor half so far triumphant Baechus drove,</l><l n="1047">With vine-entwisted reins, his frolic team</l><l n="1048">Of tigers from the tall-topped Indian hill.</l><l n="1049">“Still do we doubt if heroes' deeds can fill</l><l n="1050">A realm so wide? Shall craven fear constrain</l><l n="1051">Thee or thy people from Ausonia's shore?</l><l n="1052">Look, who is he I may discern from far</l><l n="1053">By olive-branch and holy emblems known?</l><l n="1054">His flowing locks and hoary beard, behold!</l><l n="1055">Fit for a Roman king! By hallowed laws</l><l n="1056">He shall found <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> anew—from mean estate</l><l n="1057">In lowly Cures led to mightier sway.</l><l n="1058">But after him arises one whose reign</l><l n="1059">Shall wake the land from slumber: Tullus then</l><l n="1060">Shall stir slack chiefs to battle, rallying</l><l n="1061">His hosts which had forgot what triumphs be.</l><l n="1062">Him boastful Ancus follows hard upon,</l><l n="1063">o'erflushed with his light people's windy praise.</l><l n="1064">Wilt thou see Tarquins now? And haughty hand</l><l n="1065">Of vengeful Brutus seize the signs of power?</l><l n="1066">He first the consul's name shall take; he first</l><l n="1067">Th' inexorable fasces sternly bear.</l><l n="1068">When his own sons in rash rebellion join,</l><l n="1069">The father and the judge shall sentence give</l><l n="1070">In beauteous freedom's cause—unhappy he!</l><l n="1071">Howe'er the age to come the story tell,</l><l n="1072">'t will bless such love of honor and of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>.</l><l n="1073">See Decius, sire and son, the Drusi, see!</l><l n="1074">Behold Torquatus with his axe! Look where</l><l n="1075">Camillus brings the Gallic standards home!</l><l n="1076">“But who are these in glorious armor clad</l><l n="1077">And equal power? In this dark world of cloud</l><l n="1078">Their souls in concord move;—but woe is me!</l><l n="1079">What duel 'twixt them breaks, when by and by</l><l n="1080">The light of life is theirs, and forth they call</l><l n="1081">Their long-embattled lines to carnage dire!</l><l n="1082">Allied by nuptial truce, the sire descends</l><l n="1083">From Alpine rampart and that castled cliff,</l><l n="1084"><placeName key="tgn,7011066">Monoecus</placeName> by the sea; the son arrays</l><l n="1085">His hostile legions in the lands of morn.</l><l n="1086">Forbear, my children! School not your great souls</l><l n="1087">In such vast wars, nor turn your giant strength</l><l n="1088">Against the bowels of your native land!</l><l n="1089">But be thou first, 0 first in mercy! thou</l><l n="1090">Who art of birth Olympian! Fling away</l><l n="1091">Thy glorious sword, mine offspring and mine heir!</l><l n="1092">“Yonder is one whose chariot shall ascend</l><l n="1093">The laurelled Capitolian steep; he rides</l><l n="1094">In glory o'er <placeName key="tgn,7002733">Achaea</placeName>'s hosts laid low,</l><l n="1095">And <placeName key="perseus,Corinth">Corinth</placeName> overthrown. There, too, is he</l><l n="1096">Who shall uproot proud <placeName key="perseus,Argos">Argos</placeName> and the towers</l><l n="1097">Of Agamemnon; vanquishing the heir</l><l n="1098">Even of Aeacus, the warrior seed</l><l n="1099">Of Peleus' son; such vengeance shall be wrought</l><l n="1100">For <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>'s slain sires, and violated shrines!</l><l n="1101">“Or who could fail great Cato's name to tell?</l><l n="1102">Or, Cossus, thine? or in oblivion leave</l><l n="1103">The sons of Gracchus? or the Scipios,</l><l n="1104">Twin thunderbolts of war, and <placeName key="tgn,1000172">Libya</placeName>'s bane?</l><l n="1105">Or, more than kingly in his mean abode,</l><l n="1106">Fabricius? or Serranus at the plough?</l><l n="1107">Ye Fabii, how far would ye prolong</l><l n="1108">My weary praise? But see! 'T is Maximus,</l><l n="1109">Who by wise waiting saves his native land.</l><l n="1110">“Let others melt and mould the breathing bronze</l><l n="1111">To forms more fair,—aye! out of marble bring</l><l n="1112">Features that live; let them plead causes well;</l><l n="1113">Or trace with pointed wand the cycled heaven,</l><l n="1114">And hail the constellations as they rise;</l><l n="1115">But thou, 0 Roman, learn with sovereign sway</l><l n="1116">To rule the nations. Thy great art shall be</l><l n="1117">To keep the world in lasting peace, to spare</l><l n="1118">humbled foe, and crush to earth the proud.”</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="854"><l n="1119">So did Anchises speak, then, after pause,</l><l n="1120">Thus to their wondering ears his word prolonged:</l><l n="1121">“Behold Marcellus, bright with glorious spoil,</l><l n="1122">In lifted triumph through his warriors move!</l><l n="1123">The Roman power in tumultuous days</l><l n="1124">He shall establish; he rides forth to quell</l><l n="1125">Afric and rebel <placeName key="tgn,1000070">Gaul</placeName>; and to the shrine</l><l n="1126">Of Romulus the third-won trophy brings.”</l><l n="1127">Then spoke Aeneas, for he now could see</l><l n="1128">A beauteous youth in glittering dress of war,</l><l n="1129">Though of sad forehead and down-dropping eyes:</l><l n="1130">“Say, father, who attends the prince? a son?</l><l n="1131">Or of his greatness some remoter heir?</l><l n="1132">How his friends praise him, and how matchless he!</l><l n="1133">But mournful night Tests darkly o'er his brow.”</l><l n="1134">With brimming eyes Anchises answer gave:</l><l n="1135">“Ask not, 0 son, what heavy weight of woe</l><l n="1136">Thy race shall bear, when fate shall just reveal</l><l n="1137">This vision to the world, then yield no more.</l><l n="1138">0 gods above, too glorious did ye deem</l><l n="1139">The seed of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName>, had this one gift been sure?</l><l n="1140">The lamentation of a multitude</l><l n="1141">Arises from the field of Mars, and strikes</l><l n="1142">The city's heart. 0 Father Tiber, see</l><l n="1143">What pomp of sorrow near the new-made tomb</l><l n="1144">Beside thy fleeting stream! What Ilian youth</l><l n="1145">Shall e'er his Latin kindred so advance</l><l n="1146">In hope of glory? When shall the proud land</l><l n="1147">Of Romulus of such a nursling boast?</l><l n="1148">Ah, woe' is me! 0 loyal heart and true!</l><l n="1149">0 brave, right arm invincible! What foe</l><l n="1150">Had 'scaped his onset in the shock of arms,</l><l n="1151">Whether on foot he strode, or if he spurred</l><l n="1152">The hot flanks of his war-horse flecked with foam?</l><l n="1153">0 lost, lamented child! If thou evade</l><l n="1154">Thy evil star, Marcellus thou shalt be.</l><l n="1155">0 bring me lilies! Bring with liberal hand!</l><l n="1156">Sad purple blossoms let me throw—the shade</l><l n="1157">Of my own kin to honor, heaping high</l><l n="1158">My gifts upon his grave! So let me pay</l><l n="1159">An unavailing vow!”</l><l n="1160">Then, far and wide</l><l n="1161">Through spacious fields of air, they wander free,</l><l n="1162">Witnessing all; Anchises guides his son</l><l n="1163">From point to point, and quickens in his mind</l><l n="1164">Hunger for future fame. Of wars he tells</l><l n="1165">Soon imminent; of fair Laurentum's tribes;</l><l n="1166">Of King Latinus' town; and shows what way</l><l n="1167">Each task and hardship to prevent, or bear.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="893"><l n="1168">Now Sleep has portals twain, whereof the one</l><l n="1169">Is horn, they say, and easy exit gives</l><l n="1170">To visions true; the other, gleaming white</l><l n="1171">With polished ivory, the.dead employ</l><l n="1172">To people night with unsubstantial dreams.</l><l n="1173">Here now Anchises bids his son farewell;</l><l n="1174">And with Sibylla, his companion sage,</l><l n="1175">Up through that ivory portal lets him rise.</l><l n="1176">Back to his fleet and his dear comrades all</l><l n="1177">Aeneas hastes.<milestone ed="P" unit="para"/>Then hold they their straight course</l><l n="1178">Into <placeName key="perseus,Caieta">Caieta</placeName>'s bay. An anchor holds</l><l n="1179">Each lofty prow; the sterns stand firm on shore.</l></div></div><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="7"><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="1"><l n="1">One more immortal name thy death bequeathed,</l><l n="2">Nurse of Aeneas, to Italian shores,</l><l n="3"><placeName key="perseus,Caieta">Caieta</placeName>; there thy honor hath a home;</l><l n="4">Thy bones a name: and on Hesperia's breast</l><l n="5">Their proper glory.<milestone ed="p" n="5" unit="card"/>When Aeneas now</l><l n="6">The tribute of sepulchral vows had paid</l><l n="7">Beside the funeral mound, and o'er the seas</l><l n="8">Stillness had fallen, he flung forth his sails,</l><l n="9">And leaving port pursued his destined way.</l><l n="10">Freshly the night-winds breathe; the cloudless moon</l><l n="11">Outpours upon his path unstinted beam,</l><l n="12">And with far-trembling glory smites the sea.</l><l n="13">Close to the lands of Circe soon they fare,</l><l n="14">Where the Sun's golden daughter in far groves</l><l n="15">Sounds forth her ceaseless song; her lofty hall</l><l n="16">Is fragrant every night with flaring brands</l><l n="17">Of cedar, giving light the while she weaves</l><l n="18">With shrill-voiced shuttle at her linens fine.</l><l n="19">From hence are heard the loud lament and wrath</l><l n="20">Of lions, rebels to their linked chains</l><l n="21">And roaring all night long; great bristly boars</l><l n="22">And herded bears, in pinfold closely kept,</l><l n="23">Rage horribly, and monster-wolves make moan;</l><l n="24">Whom the dread goddess with foul juices strong</l><l n="25">From forms of men drove forth, and bade to wear</l><l n="26">the mouths and maws of beasts in Circe's thrall.</l><l n="27">But lest the sacred Trojans should endure</l><l n="28">such prodigy of doom, or anchor there</l><l n="29">on that destroying shore, kind Neptune filled</l><l n="30">their sails with winds of power, and sped them on</l><l n="31">in safety past the perils of that sea.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="25"><l n="32">Now morning flushed the wave, and saffron-garbed</l><l n="33">Aurora from her rose-red chariot beamed</l><l n="34">in highest heaven; the sea-winds ceased to stir;</l><l n="35">a sudden calm possessed the air, and tides</l><l n="36">of marble smoothness met the laboring oar.</l><l n="37">Then, gazing from the deep, Aeneas saw</l><l n="38">a stretch of groves, whence <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>'s smiling stream,</l><l n="39">its tumbling current rich with yellow sands,</l><l n="40">burst seaward forth: around it and above</l><l n="41">shore-haunting birds of varied voice and plume</l><l n="42">flattered the sky with song, and, circling far</l><l n="43">o'er river-bed and grove, took joyful wing.</l><l n="44">Thither to landward now his ships he steered,</l><l n="45">and sailed, high-hearted, up the shadowy stream.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="37"><l n="46">Hail, Erato! while olden kings and thrones</l><l n="47">and all their sequent story I unfold!</l><l n="48">How <placeName key="tgn,7003080">Latium</placeName>'s honor stood, when alien ships</l><l n="49">brought war to <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>, and from what cause</l><l n="50">the primal conflict sprang, O goddess, breathe</l><l n="51">upon thy bard in song. Dread wars I tell,</l><l n="52">array of battle, and high-hearted kings</l><l n="53">thrust forth to perish, when Etruria's host</l><l n="54">and all Hesperia gathered to the fray.</l><l n="55">Events of grander march impel my song,</l><l n="56">and loftier task I try. <milestone ed="p" n="45" unit="card"/>Latinus, then</l><l n="57">an aged king, held long-accepted sway</l><l n="58">o'er tranquil vales and towns. He was the son</l><l n="59">of Faunus, so the legend tells, who wed</l><l n="60">the nymph Marica of Laurentian stem.</l><l n="61">Picus was Faunus' father, whence the line</l><l n="62">to Saturn's Ioins ascends. O heavenly sire,</l><l n="63">from thee the stem began! But Fate had given</l><l n="64">to King Latinus' body no heirs male:</l><l n="65">for taken in the dawning of his day</l><l n="66">his only son had been; and now his home</l><l n="67">and spacious palace one sole daughter kept,</l><l n="68">who was grown ripe to wed and of full age</l><l n="69">to take a husband. Many suitors tried</l><l n="70">from all Ausonia and <placeName key="tgn,7003080">Latium</placeName>'s bounds;</l><l n="71">but comeliest in all their princely throng</l><l n="72">came Turnus, of a line of mighty sires.</l><l n="73">Him the queen mother chiefly loved, and yearned</l><l n="74">to call him soon her son. But omens dire</l><l n="75">and menaces from Heaven withstood her will.</l><l n="76">A laurel-tree grew in the royal close,</l><l n="77">of sacred leaf and venerated age,</l><l n="78">which, when he builded there his wall and tower,</l><l n="79">Father Latinus found, and hallowed it</l><l n="80">to Phoebus' grace and power, wherefrom the name</l><l n="81">Laurentian, which his realm and people bear.</l><l n="82">Unto this tree-top, wonderful to tell,</l><l n="83">came hosts of bees, with audible acclaim</l><l n="84">voyaging the stream of air, and seized a place</l><l n="85">on the proud, pointing crest, where the swift swarm,</l><l n="86">with interlacement of close-clinging feet,</l><l n="87">swung from the leafy bough. “Behold, there comes,”</l><l n="88">the prophet cried, “a husband from afar!</l><l n="89">To the same region by the self-same path</l><l n="90">behold an arm'd host taking lordly sway</l><l n="91">upon our city's crown!” Soon after this,</l><l n="92">when, coming to the shrine with torches pure,</l><l n="93">Lavinia kindled at her father's side</l><l n="94">the sacrifice, swift seemed the flame to burn</l><l n="95">along her flowing hair—O sight of woe!</l><l n="96">Over her broidered snood it sparkling flew,</l><l n="97">lighting her queenly tresses and her crown</l><l n="98">of jewels rare: then, wrapt in flaming cloud,</l><l n="99">from hall to hall the fire-god's gift she flung.</l><l n="100">This omen dread and wonder terrible</l><l n="101">was rumored far: for prophet-voices told</l><l n="102">bright honors on the virgin's head to fall</l><l n="103">by Fate's decree, but on her people, war.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="81"><l n="104">The King, sore troubled by these portents, sought</l><l n="105">oracular wisdom of his sacred sire,</l><l n="106">Faunus, the fate-revealer, where the groves</l><l n="107">stretch under high Albunea, and her stream</l><l n="108">roars from its haunted well, exhaling through</l><l n="109">vast, gloomful woods its pestilential air.</l><l n="110">Here all Oenotria's tribes ask oracles</l><l n="111">in dark and doubtful days: here, when the priest</l><l n="112">has brought his gifts, and in the night so still,</l><l n="113">couched on spread fleeces of the offered flock,</l><l n="114">awaiting slumber lies, then wondrously</l><l n="115">a host of flitting shapes he sees, and hears</l><l n="116">voices that come and go: with gods he holds</l><l n="117">high converse, or in deep Avernian gloom</l><l n="118">parleys with Acheron. Thither drew near</l><l n="119">Father Latinus, seeking truth divine.</l><l n="120">Obedient to the olden rite, he slew</l><l n="121">a hundred fleecy sheep, and pillowed lay</l><l n="122">upon their outstretched skins. Straightway a voice</l><l n="123">out of the lofty forest met his prayer.</l><l n="124">“Seek not in wedlock with a Latin lord</l><l n="125">to join thy daughter, O my son and seed!</l><l n="126">Beware this purposed marriage! There shall come</l><l n="127">sons from afar, whose blood shall bear our name</l><l n="128">starward; the children of their mighty loins,</l><l n="129">as far as eve and morn enfold the seas,</l><l n="130">shall see a subject world beneath their feet</l><l n="131">submissive lie.” This admonition given</l><l n="132">Latinus hid not. But on restless wing</l><l n="133">rumor had spread it, when the men of <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>
               </l><l n="134">along the river-bank of mounded green </l><l n="135">their fleet made fast.<milestone ed="p" n="107" unit="card"/>Aeneas and his chiefs,</l><l n="136">with fair Iulus, under spreading boughs</l><l n="137">of one great tree made resting-place, and set</l><l n="138">the banquet on. Thin loaves of altar-bread</l><l n="139">along the sward to bear their meats were laid</l><l n="140">(such was the will of Jove), and wilding fruits</l><l n="141">rose heaping high, with Ceres' gift below.</l><l n="142">Soon, all things else devoured, their hunger turned</l><l n="143">to taste the scanty bread, which they attacked</l><l n="144">with tooth and nail audacious, and consumed</l><l n="145">both round and square of that predestined leaven.</l><l n="146">“Look, how we eat our tables even!” cried</l><l n="147">Iulus, in a jest. Such was the word</l><l n="148">which bade their burdens fall. From his boy's lip</l><l n="149">the father caught this utterance of Fate,</l><l n="150">silent with wonder at the ways of Heaven;</l><l n="151">then swift he spoke: “Hail! O my destined shore,</l><l n="152">protecting deities of <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Ilium</placeName>, hail!</l><l n="153">Here is our home, our country here! This day</l><l n="154">I publish the mysterious prophecy</l><l n="155">by Sire Anchises given: ‘My son,’ said he,</l><l n="156">‘When hunger in strange lands shall bid devour</l><l n="157">the tables of thy banquet gone, then hope</l><l n="158">for home, though weary, and take thought to build</l><l n="159">a dwelling and a battlement.’ Behold!</l><l n="160">This was our fated hunger! This last proof</l><l n="161">will end our evil days. Up, then! For now</l><l n="162">by morning's joyful beam we will explore</l><l n="163">what men, what cities, in this region be,</l><l n="164">and, leaving ship, our several errands ply.</l><l n="165">Your gift to Jove outpour! Make thankful prayer</l><l n="166">unto Anchises' shade! To this our feast</l><l n="167">bring back the flowing wine!” <milestone ed="p" n="135" unit="card"/>Thereat he bound</l><l n="168">his forehead with green garland, calling loud</l><l n="169">upon the Genius of that place, and Earth,</l><l n="170">eldest of names divine; the Nymphs he called,</l><l n="171">and river-gods unknown; his voice invoked</l><l n="172">the night, the omen-stars through night that roll.</l><l n="173">Jove, Ida's child, and <placeName key="tgn,7002613">Phrygia</placeName>'s fertile Queen:</l><l n="174">he called his mother from Olympian skies,</l><l n="175">and sire from Erebus. Lo, o'er his head</l><l n="176">three times unclouded Jove omnipotent</l><l n="177">in thunder spoke, and, with effulgent ray</l><l n="178">from his ethereal tract outreaching far,</l><l n="179">shook visibly the golden-gleaming air.</l><l n="180">Swift, through the concourse of the Trojans, spread</l><l n="181">news of the day at hand when they should build</l><l n="182">their destined walls. So, with rejoicing heart</l><l n="183">at such vast omen, they set forth a feast</l><l n="184">with zealous emulation, ranging well</l><l n="185">the wine-cups fair with many a garland crowned.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="148"><l n="186">Soon as the morrow with the lamp of dawn</l><l n="187">looked o'er the world, they took their separate ways,</l><l n="188">exploring shore and towns; here spread the pools</l><l n="189">and fountain of Numicius; here they see</l><l n="190">the river <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName>, where bold Latins dwell.</l><l n="191">Anchises' son chose out from his brave band</l><l n="192">a hundred envoys, bidding them depart</l><l n="193">to the King's sacred city, each enwreathed</l><l n="194">with Pallas' silver leaf; and gifts they bear</l><l n="195">to plead for peace and friendship at his throne.</l><l n="196">While on this errand their swift steps are sped,</l><l n="197">Aeneas, by a shallow moat and small,</l><l n="198">his future city shows, breaks ground, and girds</l><l n="199">with mound and breastwork like a camp of war</l><l n="200">the Trojans' first abode. Soon, making way</l><l n="201">to where the Latin citadel uprose,</l><l n="202">the envoys scanned the battlements, and paused</l><l n="203">beneath its wall. Outside the city gates</l><l n="204">fair youths and striplings in life's early bloom</l><l n="205">course with swift steeds, or steer through dusty cloud</l><l n="206">the whirling chariot, or stretch stout bows,</l><l n="207">or hurl the seasoned javelin, or strive</l><l n="208">in boxing-bout and foot-race: one of these</l><l n="209">made haste on horseback to the aged King,</l><l n="210">with tidings of a stranger company</l><l n="211">in foreign garb approaching. The good King</l><l n="212">bade call them to his house, and took his seat</l><l n="213">in mid-court on his high, ancestral throne.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="170"><l n="214">Large and majestical the castle rose:</l><l n="215">a hundred columns lifted it in air</l><l n="216">upon the city's crown—the royal keep</l><l n="217">of Picus of Laurentum; round it lay</l><l n="218">deep, gloomy woods by olden worship blest.</l><l n="219">Here kings took sceptre and the fasces proud</l><l n="220">with omens fair; the selfsame sacred place</l><l n="221">was senate-house and temple; here was found</l><l n="222">a hall for hallowed feasting, where a ram</l><l n="223">was offered up, and at long banquet-boards</l><l n="224">the nation's fathers sat in due array.</l><l n="225">Here ranged ancestral statues roughly hewn</l><l n="226">of ancient cedar-wood: King Italus;</l><l n="227">Father Sabinus, planter of the vine,</l><l n="228">a curving sickle in his sculptured hand;</l><l n="229">gray-bearded Saturn; and the double brow</l><l n="230">of Janus' head; and other sires and kings</l><l n="231">were wardens of the door, with many a chief</l><l n="232">wounded in battle for his native land.</l><l n="233">Trophies of arms in goodly order hung</l><l n="234">along the columns: chariots of war</l><l n="235">from foeman taken, axes of round blade,</l><l n="236">plumed helmets, bolts and barriers of steel</l><l n="237">from city-gates, shields, spears, and beaks of bronze</l><l n="238">from captured galleys by the conqueror torn.</l><l n="239">Here, wielding his Quirinal augur-staff,</l><l n="240">girt in scant shift, and bearing on his left</l><l n="241">the sacred oval shield, appeared enthroned</l><l n="242">Picus, breaker of horses, whom his bride,</l><l n="243">enamoured Circe, smote with golden wand,</l><l n="244">and, raining o'er him potent poison-dew,</l><l n="245">changed to a bird of pied and dappled wings.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="192"><l n="246">In such a temple of his gods did Sire</l><l n="247">Latinus, on hereditary throne,</l><l n="248">welcome the Trojans to his halls, and thus</l><l n="249">with brow serene gave greeting as they came:</l><l n="250">“O sons of Dardanus, think not unknown</l><l n="251">your lineage and city! Rumored far</l><l n="252">your venturous voyage has been. What seek ye here?</l><l n="253">What cause, what quest, has brought your barks and you</l><l n="254">o'er the blue waters to Ausonia's hills?</l><l n="255">What way uncharted, or wild stress of storm,</l><l n="256">or what that sailors suffer in mid-sea,</l><l n="257">unto this river bank and haven bore?</l><l n="258">Doubt not our welcome! We of Latin land</l><l n="259">are Saturn's sons, whose equitable minds,</l><l n="260">not chained by statute or compulsion, keep</l><l n="261">in freedom what the god's good custom gave.</l><l n="262">Now I bethink me our Ausonian seers</l><l n="263">have dark, dim lore that 't was this land gave birth</l><l n="264">to Dardanus, who after took his way </l><l n="265">through Phrygian Ida's towns and <placeName key="perseus,Samothrace City">Samothrace</placeName>. </l><l n="266">Once out of Tuscan Corythus he fared;</l><l n="267">but now in golden house among the stars</l><l n="268">he has a throne, and by his altars blest</l><l n="269">adds to the number of the gods we praise.”</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="212"><l n="270">He spoke; Ilioneus this answer made:</l><l n="271">“O King, great heir of Faunus! No dark storm</l><l n="272">impelled us o'er the flood thy realm to find.</l><l n="273">Nor star deceived, nor strange, bewildering shore</l><l n="274">threw out of our true course; but we are come</l><l n="275">by our free choice and with deliberate aim</l><l n="276">to this thy town, though exiled forth of realms</l><l n="277">once mightiest of all the sun-god sees</l><l n="278">when moving from his utmost eastern bound.</l><l n="279">From Jove our line began; the sons of <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>
               </l><l n="280">boast Jove to be their sire, and our true King</l><l n="281">is of Olympian seed. To thine abode</l><l n="282">Trojan Aeneas sent us. How there burst</l><l n="283">o'er Ida's vales from dread <placeName key="perseus,Mycenae">Mycenae</placeName>'s kings</l><l n="284">a tempest vast, and by what stroke of doom </l><l n="285">all <placeName key="tgn,1000004">Asia</placeName>'s world with <placeName key="tgn,1000003">Europe</placeName> clashed in war,</l><l n="286">that lone wight hears whom earth's remotest isle</l><l n="287">has banished to the Ocean's rim, or he</l><l n="288">whose dwelling is the ample zone that burns</l><l n="289">betwixt the changeful sun-god's milder realms,</l><l n="290">far severed from the world. We are the men</l><l n="291">from war's destroying deluge safely borne</l><l n="292">over the waters wide. We only ask</l><l n="293">some low-roofed dwelling for our fathers' gods,</l><l n="294">some friendly shore, and, what to all is free,</l><l n="295">water and air. We bring no evil name</l><l n="296">upon thy people; thy renown will be</l><l n="297">but wider spread; nor of a deed so fair</l><l n="298">can grateful memory die. Ye ne'er will rue</l><l n="299">that to Ausonia's breast ye gathered <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>.</l><l n="300">I swear thee by the favored destinies</l><l n="301">of great Aeneas, by his strength of arm</l><l n="302">in friendship or in war, that many a tribe</l><l n="303">(O, scorn us not, that, bearing olive green,</l><l n="304">with suppliant words we come), that many a throne</l><l n="305">has sued us to be friends. But Fate's decree</l><l n="306">to this thy realm did guide. Here Dardanus</l><l n="307">was born; and with reiterate command</l><l n="308">this way Apollo pointed to the stream</l><l n="309">of <placeName key="tgn,1130786">Tiber</placeName> and Numicius' haunted spring.</l><l n="310">Lo, these poor tributes from his greatness gone</l><l n="311">Aeneas sends, these relics snatched away</l><l n="312">from <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Ilium</placeName> burning: with this golden bowl</l><l n="313">Anchises poured libation when he prayed;</l><l n="314">and these were Priam's splendor, when he gave</l><l n="315">laws to his gathered states; this sceptre his,</l><l n="316">this diadem revered, and beauteous pall,</l><l n="317">handwork of <placeName key="tgn,1000004">Asia</placeName>'s queens.” <milestone ed="p" n="249" unit="card"/>So ceased to speak</l><l n="318">Ilioneus. But King Latinus gazed</l><l n="319">unanswering on the ground, all motionless</l><l n="320">save for his musing eyes. The broidered pall</l><l n="321">of purple, and the sceptre Priam bore,</l><l n="322">moved little on his kingly heart, which now</l><l n="323">pondered of giving to the bridal bed</l><l n="324">his daughter dear. He argues in his mind</l><l n="325">the oracle of Faunus:—might this be</l><l n="326">that destined bridegroom from an alien land,</l><l n="327">to share his throne, to get a progeny</l><l n="328">of glorious valor, which by mighty deeds</l><l n="329">should win the world for kingdom? So at last</l><l n="330">with joyful brow he spoke: “Now let the gods</l><l n="331">our purpose and their own fair promise bless!</l><l n="332">Thou hast, O Trojan, thy desire. Thy gifts</l><l n="333">I have not scorned; nor while Latinus reigns</l><l n="334">shall ye lack riches in my plenteous land,</l><l n="335">not less than Trojan store. But where is he,</l><l n="336">Aeneas' self? If he our royal love</l><l n="337">so much desire, and have such urgent mind</l><l n="338">to be our guest and friend, let him draw near,</l><l n="339">nor turn him from well-wishing looks away!</l><l n="340">My offering and pledge of peace shall be</l><l n="341">to clasp your monarch's hand. Bear back, I pray,</l><l n="342">this answer to your King: my dwelling holds</l><l n="343">a daughter, whom with husband of her blood</l><l n="344">great signs in heaven and from my father's tomb</l><l n="345">forbid to wed. A son from alien shores</l><l n="346">they prophesy for <placeName key="tgn,7003080">Latium</placeName>'s heir, whose seed</l><l n="347">shall lift our glory to the stars divine.</l><l n="348">I am persuaded this is none but he,</l><l n="349">that man of destiny; and if my heart</l><l n="350">be no false prophet, I desire it so.”</l><l n="351">Thus having said, the sire took chosen steeds</l><l n="352">from his full herd, whereof, well-groomed and fair,</l><l n="353">three hundred stood within his ample pale.</l><l n="354">Of these to every Teucrian guest he gave</l><l n="355">a courser swift and strong, in purple clad</l><l n="356">and broidered housings gay; on every breast</l><l n="357">hung chains of gold; in golden robes arrayed,</l><l n="358">they champed the red gold curb their teeth between.</l><l n="359">For offering to Aeneas, he bade send</l><l n="360">a chariot, with chargers twain of seed</l><l n="361">ethereal, their nostrils breathing fire:</l><l n="362">the famous kind which guileful Circe bred,</l><l n="363">cheating her sire, and mixed the sun-god's team</l><l n="364">with brood-mares earthly born. The sons of <placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>,</l><l n="365">such gifts and greetings from Latinus bearing,</l><l n="366">rode back in pomp his words of peace to bring.</l></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>
                </passage>
            </reply>
            </GetPassage>