Aeneid

Virgil

Vergil. The Aeneid of Virgil. Williams, Theodore, C, translator. Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 1910.

  1. But now in dwellings of the gods on high,
  2. Diana to fleet-footed Opis called,
  3. a virgin from her consecrated train,
  4. and thus in sorrow spoke: “O maiden mine!
  5. Camilla now to cruel conflict flies;
  6. with weapons like my own she girds her side,
  7. in vain, though dearest of all nymphs to me.
  8. Nor is it some new Iove that stirs to-day
  9. with sudden sweetness in Diana's breast:
  10. for long ago, when from his kingdom driven,
  11. for insolent and envied power, her sire
  12. King Metabus, from old Privernum's wall
  13. was taking flight amidst opposing foes,
  14. he bore a little daughter in his arms
  15. to share his exile; and he called the child
  16. (Changing Casmilla, her queen-mother's name)
  17. Camilla. Bearing on his breast the babe,
  18. he fled to solitary upland groves.
  19. But hovering round him with keen lances, pressed
  20. the Volscian soldiery. Across his path,
  21. lo, Amasenus with full-foaming wave
  22. o'erflowed its banks—so huge a rain had burst
  23. but lately from the clouds. There would he fain
  24. swim over, but the love of that sweet babe
  25. restrained him, trembling for his burden dear.
  26. In his perplexed heart suddenly arose
  27. firm resolve. It chanced the warrior bore
  28. huge spear in his brawny hand, strong shaft
  29. of knotted, seasoned oak; to this he lashed
  30. his little daughter with a withe of bark
  31. pulled from a cork-tree, and with skilful bonds
  32. fast bound her to the spear; then, poising it
  33. high in his right hand, thus he called on Heaven:
  1. ‘Latona's daughter, whose benignant grace
  2. protects this grove, behold, her father now
  3. gives thee this babe for handmaid! Lo, thy spear
  4. her infant fingers hold, as from her foes
  5. she flies a suppliant to thee! Receive,
  6. O goddess, I implore, what now I cast
  7. upon the perilous air.’—He spoke, and hurled
  8. with lifted arm the whirling shaft. The waves
  9. roared loud, as on the whistling javelin
  10. hapless Camilla crossed th' impetuous flood.
  11. But Metabus, his foes in hot pursuit,
  12. dared plunge him in mid-stream, and, triumphing,
  13. soon plucked from grass-grown river-bank the spear,
  14. the child upon it,—now to Trivia vowed,
  15. a virgin offering. Him nevermore
  16. could cities hold, nor would his wild heart yield
  17. its sylvan freedom, but his days were passed
  18. with shepherds on the solitary hills.
  19. His daughter too in tangled woods he bred:
  20. a brood-mare from the milk of her fierce breast
  21. suckled the child, and to its tender lips
  22. .Her udders moved; and when the infant feet
  23. their first firm steps had taken, the small palms
  24. were armed with a keen javelin; her sire
  25. a bow and quiver from her shoulder slung.
  26. Instead of golden combs and flowing pall,
  27. she wore, from her girl-forehead backward thrown,
  28. the whole skin of a tigress; with soft hands
  29. she made her plaything of a whirling spear,
  30. or, swinging round her head the polished thong
  31. of her good sling, she fetched from distant sky
  32. Strymonian cranes or swans of spotless wing.
  33. From Tuscan towns proud matrons oft in vain
  34. sought her in marriage for their sons; but she
  35. to Dian only turned her stainless heart,
  36. her virgin freedom and her huntress' arms
  37. with faithful passion serving. Would that now
  38. this Iove of war had ne'er seduced her mind
  39. the Teucrians to provoke! So might she be
  40. one of our wood-nymphs still. But haste, I pray,
  41. for bitter is her now impending doom.
  42. Descend, dear nymph, from heaven, and explore
  43. the country of the Latins, where the fight
  44. with unpropitious omens now begins.
  45. These weapons take, and from this quiver draw
  46. a vengeful arrow, wherewith he who dares
  47. to wound her sacred body, though he be
  48. a Trojan or Italian, shall receive
  49. bloody and swift reward at my command.
  50. Then, in a cloud concealed, I will consign
  51. her corpse, ill-fated but inviolate
  52. unto the sepulchre, restoring so
  53. the virgin to her native land.” Thus spake
  54. the goddess; but her handmaid, gliding down,
  55. took her loud pathway on the moving winds,
  56. and mantled in dark storm her shape divine.
  1. Meanwhile the Teucrian legions to the wall
  2. draw near, with Tuscan lords and cavalry
  3. in numbered troops arrayed. Loud-footed steeds
  4. prance o'er the field, to manage of the rein
  5. rebellious, but turned deftly here or there.
  6. The iron harvest of keen spears spreads far,
  7. and all the plain burns bright with lifted steel.
  8. Messapus and swift Latin cavalry,
  9. Coras his brother, and th' attending train
  10. of the fair maid Camilla, form their lines
  11. in the opposing field. Their poised right hands
  12. point the long lances forward, and light shafts
  13. are brandished in the air; the warrior hosts
  14. on steeds of fire come kindling as they ride.
  15. One instant, at a spear-throw's space, each line
  16. its motion stays; then with one sudden cry
  17. they rush forth, spurring on each frenzied steed.
  18. From-every side the multitudinous spears
  19. pour down like snowflakes, mantling heaven in shade.
  20. Now with contending spears and straining thews,
  21. Tyrrhenus, and Aconteus, champion bold,
  22. ride forward; with the onset terrible
  23. loudly their armor rings; their chargers twain
  24. crash breast to breast, and like a thunderbolt
  25. Aconteus drops, or like a ponderous stone
  26. hurled from a catapult; full length he falls,
  27. surrend'ring to the winds his fleeting soul.
  1. Now all is panic: holding their light shields
  2. behind their backs, the Latin horse wheel round,
  3. retreating to the wall, the Trojan foe
  4. in close pursuit. Asilas, chieftain proud,
  5. led on th' assault. Hard by the city gates
  6. the Latins wheeled once more and pressed the rein
  7. strong on the yielding neck; the charging foe
  8. took flight and hurried far with loose-flung rein.
  9. 'T was like the shock and onset of the sea
  10. that landward hurls the alternating flood
  11. and hides high cliffs in foam,—the tawny sands
  12. upflinging as it rolls; then, suddenly
  13. whirled backward on the reingulfing waves,
  14. it quits the ledges, and with ebbing flow
  15. far from the shore retires. The Tuscans twice
  16. drive back the flying Rutules to the town;
  17. and twice repulsed, with shields to rearward thrown,
  18. glare back at the pursuer; but conjoined
  19. in the third battle-charge, both armies merge
  20. confusedly together in grim fight
  21. of man to man; then follow dying groans,
  22. armor blood-bathed and corpses, and strong steeds
  23. inextricably with their masters slain,
  24. so fierce the fray. Orsilochus—afraid
  25. to front the warrior's arms—launched forth a spear
  26. at Remulus' horse, and left the fatal steel
  27. clinging below its ear; the charger plunged
  28. madly, and tossed its trembling hoofs in air,
  29. sustaining not the wound; the rider fell,
  30. flung headlong to the ground. Catillus slew
  31. Iollas; and then struck Herminius down,
  32. great-bodied and great-hearted, who could wield
  33. a monster weapon, and whose yellow hair
  34. from naked head to naked shoulder flowed.
  35. By wounds unterrified he dared oppose
  36. his huge bulk to the foe: the quivering spear
  37. pierced to his broad back, and with throes of pain
  38. bowed the man double and clean clove him through.
  39. Wide o'er the field th' ensanguined horror flowed,
  40. where fatal swords were crossed and cut their way
  41. through many a wound to famous death and fair.
  1. Swift through the midmost slaughter proudly strides
  2. the quiver-girt Camilla, with one breast
  3. thrust naked to the fight, like Amazon.
  4. Oft from her hand her pliant shafts she rains,
  5. or whirls with indefatigable arm
  6. a doughty battle-axe; her shoulder bears
  7. Diana's sounding arms and golden bow.
  8. Sometimes retreating and to flight compelled,
  9. the maiden with a rearward-pointing bow
  10. shoots arrows as she flies. Around her move
  11. her chosen peers, Larina, virgin brave,
  12. Tarpeia, brandishing an axe of bronze,
  13. and Tulla, virgins out of Italy
  14. whom the divine Camilla chose to be
  15. her glory, each a faithful servitress
  16. in days of peace or war. The maids of Thrace
  17. ride thus along Thermodon's frozen flood,
  18. and fight with blazoned Amazonian arms
  19. around Hippolyta; or when returns
  20. Penthesilea in triumphal car
  21. 'mid acclamations shrill, and all her host
  22. of women clash in air the moon-shaped shield.
  1. What warrior first, whom last, did thy strong spear,
  2. fierce virgin, earthward fling? Or what thy tale
  3. of prostrate foes laid gasping on the ground?
  4. Eunaeus first, the child of Clytius' Ioins,
  5. whose bared breast, as he faced his foe, she pierced
  6. with fir-tree javelin; from his lips outpoured
  7. the blood-stream as he fell; and as he bit
  8. the gory dust, he clutched his mortal wound.
  9. Then Liris, and upon him Pagasus
  10. she slew: the one clung closer to the reins
  11. of his stabbed horse, and rolled off on the ground;
  12. the other, flying to his fallen friend,
  13. reached out a helpless hand; so both of these
  14. fell on swift death together. Next in line
  15. she smote Amastrus, son of Hippotas;
  16. then, swift-pursuing, pierced with far-flung spear
  17. Tereus, Harpalycus, Demophoon,
  18. and Chromis; every shaft the virgin threw
  19. laid low its Phrygian warrior. From afar
  20. rode Ornytus on his Apulian steed,
  21. bearing a hunter's uncouth arms; for cloak
  22. he wore upon his shoulders broad a hide
  23. from some wild bull stripped off; his helmet was
  24. a wolf's great, gaping mouth, with either jaw
  25. full of white teeth; the weapon in his hand,
  26. a farmer's pole. He strode into the throng,
  27. head taller than them all. But him she seized
  28. and clove him through (his panic-stricken troop
  29. gave her advantage), and with wrathful heart
  30. she taunted thus the fallen: “Didst thou deem
  31. this was a merry hunting in the wood
  32. in chase of game? Behold, thy fatal day
  33. befalls thee at a woman's hand, and thus
  34. thy boasting answers. No small glory thou
  35. unto the ghosts of thy dead sires wilt tell,
  36. that 't was Camilla's javelin struck thee down.”
  1. The turn of Butes and Orsilochus
  2. came next, who were the Trojans, hugest twain:
  3. yet Butes with her javelin-point she clove
  4. from rearward, 'twixt the hauberk and the helm,
  5. just where the horseman's neck showed white, and where
  6. from shoulder leftward slung the light-weight shield.
  7. From swift Orsilochus she feigned to fly,
  8. through a wide circle sweeping, craftily
  9. taking the inside track, pursuing so
  10. her own pursuer; then she raised herself
  11. to her full height, and through the warrior's helm
  12. drove to his very skull with doubling blows
  13. of her strong battle-axe,—while he implored
  14. her mercy with loud prayers: his cloven brain
  15. spilt o'er his face. Next in her pathway came—
  16. but shrank in startled fear—the warrior son
  17. of Aunus, haunter of the Apennine,
  18. not least of the Ligurians ere his doom
  19. cut short a life of lies. He, knowing well
  20. no flight could save him from the shock of arms
  21. nor turn the royal maid's attack, began
  22. with words of cunning and insidious guile:
  23. “What glory is it if a girl be bold,
  24. on sturdy steed depending? Fly me not!
  25. But, venturing with me on this equal ground,
  26. gird thee to fight on foot. Soon shalt thou see
  27. which one of us by windy boast achieves
  28. a false renown.” He spoke; but she, to pangs
  29. of keenest fury stung, gave o'er her steed
  30. in charge of a companion, and opposed
  31. her foe at equal vantage, falchion drawn,
  32. on foot, and, though her shield no blazon bore,
  33. of fear incapable. But the warrior fled,
  34. thinking his trick victorious, and rode off
  35. full speed, with reins reversed,—his iron heel
  36. goading his charger's flight. Camilla cried:
  37. “Ligurian cheat! In vain thy boastful heart
  38. puffs thee so large; in vain thou hast essayed
  39. thy father's slippery ways; nor shall thy trick
  40. bring thee to guileful Aunus safely home.”
  41. Herewith on winged feet that virgin bold
  42. flew past the war-horse, seized the streaming rein,
  43. and, fronting him, took vengeance on her foe
  44. in bloody strokes: with not less ease a hawk,
  45. dark bird of omen, from his mountain crag
  46. pursues on pinions strong a soaring dove
  47. to distant cloud, and, clutching with hooked claws,
  48. holds tight and rips,—while through celestial air
  49. the torn, ensanguined plumage floats along.
  1. But now not blindly from Olympian throne
  2. the Sire of gods and men observant saw
  3. how sped the day. Then to the conflict dire
  4. the god thrust Tarchon forth, the Tyrrhene King,
  5. goading the warrior's rage. So Tarchon rode
  6. through slaughter wide and legions in retreat,
  7. and roused the ranks with many a wrathful cry:
  8. he called each man by name, and toward the foe
  9. drove back the routed lines. “What terrors now,
  10. Tuscan cowards, dead to noble rage,
  11. have seized ye? or what laggard sloth and vile
  12. unmans your hearts, that now a woman's arm
  13. pursues ye and this scattered host confounds?
  14. Why dressed in steel, or to what purpose wear
  15. your futile swords? Not slackly do ye join
  16. the ranks of Venus in a midnight war;
  17. or when fantastic pipes of Bacchus call
  18. your dancing feet, right venturesome ye fly
  19. to banquets and the flowing wine—what zeal,
  20. what ardor then! Or if your flattering priest
  21. begins the revel, and to Iofty groves
  22. fat flesh of victims bids ye haste away!”
  23. So saying, his steed he spurred, and scorning death
  24. dashed into the mid-fray, where, frenzy-driven,
  25. he sought out Venulus, and, grappling him
  26. with one hand, from the saddle snatched his foe,
  27. and, clasping strongly to his giant breast,
  28. exultant bore away. The shouting rose
  29. to heaven, and all the Latins gazed his way,
  30. as o'er the plain the fiery Tarchon flew
  31. bearing the full-armed man; then, breaking off
  32. the point of his own spear, he pried a way
  33. through the seam'd armor for the mortal wound;
  34. the other, struggling, thrust back from his throat
  35. the griping hand, full force to force opposing.
  36. As when a golden eagle high in air
  37. knits to a victim—snake his clinging feet
  38. and deeply-thrusting claws; but, coiling back,
  39. the wounded serpent roughens his stiff scales
  40. and stretches high his hissing head; whereat
  41. the eagle with hooked beak the more doth rend
  42. her writhing foe, and with swift stroke of wing
  43. lashes the air: so Tarchon, from the ranks
  44. of Tibur's sons, triumphant snatched his prey.
  45. The Tuscans rallied now, well pleased to view
  46. their king's example and successful war.
  47. Then Arruns, marked for doom, made circling line
  48. around Camilla's path, his crafty spear
  49. seeking its lucky chance. Where'er the maid
  50. sped furious to the battle, Arruns there
  51. in silence dogged her footsteps and pursued;
  52. or where triumphant from her fallen foes
  53. she backward drew, the warrior stealthily
  54. turned his swift reins that way: from every side
  55. he circled her, and scanned his vantage here
  56. or vantage there, his skilful javelin
  57. stubbornly shaking. But it soon befell
  58. that Chloreus, once a priest of Cybele,
  59. shone forth in far-resplendent Phrygian arms,
  60. and urged a foaming steed, which wore a robe
  61. o'erwrought with feathery scales of bronze and gold;
  62. while he, in purples of fine foreign stain,
  63. bore light Gortynian shafts and Lycian bow;
  64. his bow was gold; a golden casque he wore
  65. upon his priestly brow; the saffron cloak,
  66. all folds of rustling cambric, was enclasped
  67. in glittering gold; his skirts and tunics gay
  68. were broidered, and the oriental garb
  69. swathed his whole leg. Him when the maiden spied,
  70. (Perchance she fain on temple walls would hang
  71. the Trojan prize, or in such captured gold
  72. her own fair shape array), she gave mad chase,
  73. and reckless through the ranks her prey pursued,
  74. desiring, woman-like, the splendid spoil.
  75. Then from his ambush Arruns seized at last
  76. the fatal moment and let speed his shaft,
  77. thus uttering his vow to heavenly powers:
  78. “Chief of the gods, Apollo, who dost guard
  79. Soracte's hallowed steep, whom we revere
  80. first of thy worshippers, for thee is fed
  81. the heap of burning pine; for thee we pass
  82. through the mid-blaze in sacred zeal secure,
  83. and deep in glowing embers plant our feet.
  84. O Sire Omnipotent, may this my spear
  85. our foul disgrace put by. I do not ask
  86. for plunder, spoils, or trophies in my name,
  87. when yonder virgin falls; let honor's crown
  88. be mine for other deeds. But if my stroke
  89. that curse and plague destroy, may I unpraised
  90. safe to the cities of my sires return.”
  1. Apollo heard and granted half the prayer,
  2. but half upon the passing breeze he threw:
  3. granting his votary he should confound
  4. Camilla by swift death; but 't was denied
  5. the mountain-fatherland once more to see,
  6. or safe return,—that prayer th' impetuous winds
  7. swept stormfully away. Soon as the spear
  8. whizzed from his hand, straight-speeding on the air,
  9. the Volscians all turned eager thought and eyes
  10. toward their Queen. She only did not heed
  11. that windy roar, nor weapon dropped from heaven,
  12. till in her bare, protruded breast the spear
  13. drank, deeply driven, of her virgin blood.
  14. Her terror-struck companians swiftly throng
  15. around her, and uplift their sinking Queen.
  16. But Arruns, panic-stricken more than all,
  17. makes off, half terror and half joy, nor dares
  18. hazard his lance again, nor dares oppose
  19. a virgin's arms. As creeps back to the hills
  20. in pathless covert ere his foes pursue,
  21. from shepherd slain or mighty bull laid low,
  22. some wolf, who, now of his bold trespass ware,
  23. curls close against his paunch a quivering tail
  24. and to the forest tries: so Arruns speeds
  25. from sight of men in terror, glad to fly,
  26. and hides him in the crowd. But his keen spear
  27. dying Camilla from her bosom drew,
  28. though the fixed barb of deeply-wounding steel
  29. clung to the rib. She sank to earth undone,
  30. her cold eyes closed in death, and from her cheeks
  31. the roses fled. With failing breath she called
  32. on Acca—who of all her maiden peers
  33. was chiefly dear and shared her heart's whole pain—
  34. and thus she spoke: “O Acca, sister mine,
  35. I have been strong till now. The cruel wound
  36. consumes me, and my world is growing dark.
  37. Haste thee to Turnus! Tell my dying words!
  38. 'T is he must bear the battle and hold back
  39. the Trojan from our city wall. Farewell!”
  40. So saying, her fingers from the bridle-rein
  41. unclasped, and helpless to the earth she fell;
  42. then, colder grown, she loosed her more and more
  43. out of the body's coil; she gave to death
  44. her neck, her drooping head, and ceased to heed
  45. her war-array. So fled her spirit forth
  46. with wrath and moaning to the world below.
  47. Then clamor infinite uprose and smote
  48. the golden stars, as round Camilla slain
  49. the battle newly raged. To swifter charge
  50. the gathered Trojans ran, with Tuscan lords
  51. and King Evander's troops of Arcady.
  1. Fair Opis, keeping guard for Trivia
  2. in patient sentry on a lofty hill, beheld
  3. unterrified the conflict's rage. Yet when,
  4. amid the frenzied shouts of soldiery,
  5. she saw from far Camilla pay the doom
  6. of piteous death, with deep-drawn voice of sight
  7. she thus complained: “O virgin, woe is me!
  8. Too much, too much, this agony of thine,
  9. to expiate that thou didst lift thy spear
  10. for wounding Troy. It was no shield in war,
  11. nor any vantage to have kept thy vow
  12. to chaste Diana in the thorny wild.
  13. Our maiden arrows at thy shoulder slung
  14. availed thee not! Yet will our Queen divine
  15. not leave unhonored this thy dying day,
  16. nor shall thy people let thy death remain
  17. a thing forgot, nor thy bright name appear
  18. a glory unavenged. Whoe'er he be
  19. that marred thy body with the mortal wound
  20. shall die as he deserves.” Beneath that hill
  21. an earth-built mound uprose, the tomb
  22. of King Dercennus, a Laurentine old,
  23. by sombre ilex shaded: thither hied
  24. the fair nymph at full speed, and from the mound
  25. looked round for Arruns. When his shape she saw
  26. in glittering armor vainly insolent,
  27. “Whither so fast?” she cried. “This way, thy path!
  28. This fatal way approach, and here receive
  29. thy reward for Camilla! Thou shalt fall,
  30. vile though thou art, by Dian's shaft divine.”
  31. She said; and one swift-coursing arrow took
  32. from golden quiver, like a maid of Thrace,
  33. and stretched it on her bow with hostile aim,
  34. withdrawing far, till both the tips of horn
  35. together bent, and, both hands poising well,
  36. the left outreached to touch the barb of steel,
  37. the right to her soft breast the bowstring drew:
  38. the hissing of the shaft, the sounding air,
  39. Arruns one moment heard, as to his flesh
  40. the iron point clung fast. But his last groan
  41. his comrades heeded not, and let him lie,
  42. scorned and forgotten, on the dusty field,
  43. while Opis soared to bright Olympian air.
  1. Camilla's light-armed troop, its virgin chief
  2. now fallen, were the first to fly; in flight
  3. the panic-stricken Rutule host is seen
  4. and Acer bold; his captains in dismay
  5. with shattered legions from the peril fly,
  6. and goad their horses to the city wall.
  7. Not one sustains the Trojan charge, or stands
  8. in arms against the swift approach of death.
  9. Their bows unstrung from drooping shoulder fall,
  10. and clatter of hoof-beats shakes the crumbling ground.
  11. On to the city in a blinding cloud
  12. the dust uprolls. From watch-towers Iooking forth,
  13. the women smite their breasts and raise to heaven
  14. shrill shouts of fear. Those fliers who first passed
  15. the open gates were followed by the foe,
  16. routed and overwhelmed. They could not fly
  17. a miserable death, but were struck down
  18. in their own ancient city, or expired
  19. before the peaceful shrines of hearth and home.
  20. Then some one barred the gates. They dared not now
  21. give their own people entrance, and were deaf
  22. to all entreaty. Woeful deaths ensued,
  23. both of the armed defenders of the gate,
  24. and of the foe in arms. The desperate band,
  25. barred from the city in the face and eyes
  26. of their own weeping parents, either dropped
  27. with headlong and inevitable plunge
  28. into the moat below; or, frantic, blind,
  29. battered with beams against the stubborn door
  30. and columns strong. Above in conflict wild
  31. even the women (who for faithful love
  32. of home and country schooled them to be brave
  33. Camilla's way) rained weapons from the walls,
  34. and used oak-staves and truncheons shaped in flame,
  35. as if, well-armed in steel, each bosom bold
  36. would fain in such defence be first to die.
  1. Meanwhile th' unpitying messenger had flown
  2. to Turnus in the wood; the warrior heard
  3. from Acca of the wide confusion spread,
  4. the Volscian troop destroyed, Camilla slain,
  5. the furious foe increasing, and, with Mars
  6. to help him, grasping all, till in that hour
  7. far as the city-gates the panic reigned.
  8. Then he in desperate rage (Jove's cruel power
  9. decreed it) from the ambushed hills withdrew
  10. and pathless wild. He scarce had passed beyond
  11. to the bare plain, when forth Aeneas marched
  12. along the wide ravine, climbed up the ridge,
  13. and from the dark, deceiving grove stood clear.
  14. Then swiftly each with following ranks of war
  15. moved to the city-wall, nor wide the space
  16. that measured 'twixt the twain. Aeneas saw
  17. the plain with dust o'erclouded, and the lines
  18. of the Laurentian host extending far;
  19. Turnus, as clearly, saw the war array
  20. of dread Aeneas, and his ear perceived
  21. loud tramp of mail-clad men and snorting steeds.
  22. Soon had they sped to dreadful shock of arms,
  23. hazard of war to try; but Phoebus now,
  24. glowing rose-red, had dipped his wearied wheel
  25. deep in Iberian seas, and brought back night
  26. above the fading day. So near the town
  27. both pitch their camps and make their ramparts strong.
  1. When Turnus marks how much the Latins quail
  2. in adverse war, how on himself they call
  3. to keep his pledge, and with indignant eyes
  4. gaze all his way, fierce rage implacable
  5. swells his high heart. As when on Libyan plain
  6. a lion, gashed along his tawny breast
  7. by the huntsman's grievous thrust, awakens him
  8. unto his last grim fight, and gloriously
  9. shaking the great thews of his maned neck,
  10. shrinks not, but crushes the despoiler's spear
  11. with blood-sprent, roaring mouth,—not less than so
  12. burns the wild soul of Turnus and his ire.
  13. Thus to the King he spoke with stormful brow:
  14. “The war lags not for Turnus' sake. No cause
  15. constrains the Teucrian cowards and their King
  16. to eat their words and what they pledged refuse.
  17. On his own terms I come. Bring forward, sire,
  18. the sacrifice, and seal the pact I swear:
  19. either to deepest hell this hand shall fling
  20. yon Trojan runaway—the Latins all
  21. may sit at ease and see!—and my sole sword
  22. efface the general shame; or let him claim
  23. the conquest, and Lavinia be his bride.”
  1. To him Latinus with unruffled mind
  2. thus made reply: “O youth surpassing brave!
  3. The more thy sanguinary valor burns
  4. beyond its wont, the more with toilsome care
  5. I ponder with just fear what chance may fall,
  6. weighing it well. Thy father Daunus' throne,
  7. and many a city by thy sword subdued,
  8. are still thy own. Latinus also boasts
  9. much golden treasure and a liberal hand.
  10. Other unwedded maids of noble stem
  11. in Latium and Laurentine land are found.
  12. Permit me, then, to tell thee without guile
  13. things hard to utter; let them deeply fill
  14. thy listening soul. My sacred duty 'twas
  15. to plight my daughter's hand to nonesoe'er
  16. of all her earlier wooers—so declared
  17. the gods and oracles; but overcome
  18. by love of thee, by thy dear, kindred blood,
  19. and by the sad eyes of my mournful Queen,
  20. I shattered every bond; I snatched away
  21. the plighted maiden from her destined lord,
  22. and took up impious arms. What evil case
  23. upon that deed ensued, what hapless wars,
  24. thou knowest, since thyself dost chiefly bear
  25. the cruel burden. In wide-ranging fight
  26. twice-conquered, our own city scarce upholds
  27. the hope of Italy. Yon Tiber's wave
  28. still runs warm with my people's blood; the plains
  29. far round us glisten with their bleaching bones.
  30. Why tell it o'er and o'er? What maddening dream
  31. perverts my mind? If after Turnus slain
  32. I must for friendship of the Trojan sue,
  33. were it not better to suspend the fray
  34. while Turnus lives? For what will be the word
  35. of thy Rutulian kindred—yea, of all
  36. Italia, if to death I give thee o'er—
  37. (Which Heaven avert!) because thou fain wouldst win
  38. my daughter and be sworn my friend and son?
  39. Bethink thee what a dubious work is war;
  40. have pity on thy father's reverend years,
  41. who even now thy absence daily mourns
  42. in Ardea, his native land and thine.”
  43. But to this pleading Turnus' frenzied soul
  44. yields not at all, but rather blazes forth
  45. more wildly, and his fever fiercer burns
  46. beneath the healer's hand. In answer he,
  47. soon as his passion gathered voice, began:
  48. “This keen solicitude for love of me,
  49. I pray, good sire, for love of me put by!
  50. And let me traffic in the just exchange
  51. of death for glory. This right hand, O King,
  52. can scatter shafts not few, nor do I wield
  53. untempered steel. Whene'er I make a wound
  54. blood follows. For my foeman when we meet
  55. will find no goddess-mother near, with hand
  56. to hide him in her woman's skirt of cloud,
  57. herself in dim, deluding shade concealed.”
  1. But now the Queen, whose whole heart shrank in fear
  2. from these new terms of duel, wept aloud,
  3. and like one dying clasped her fiery son:
  4. “O Turnus, by these tears-if in thy heart
  5. thou honorest Amata still—O thou
  6. who art of our distressful, dark old age
  7. the only hope and peace, the kingly name
  8. and glory of Latinus rests in thee;
  9. thou art the mighty prop whereon is stayed
  10. our falling house. One favor I implore:
  11. give o'er this fight with Trojans. In such strife
  12. thy destined doom is destined to be mine
  13. by the same fatal stroke. For in that hour
  14. this hated life shall cease, nor will I look
  15. with slave's eyes on Aeneas as my son.”
  16. Lavinia heard her mother's voice, and tears
  17. o'erflowed her scarlet cheek, where blushes spread
  18. like flame along her warm, young face and brow:
  19. as when the Indian ivory must wear
  20. ensanguined crimson stain, or lilies pale
  21. mingled with roses seem to blush, such hues
  22. her virgin features bore; and love's desire
  23. disturbed his breast, as, gazing on the maid,
  24. his martial passion fiercer flamed; whereon
  25. in brief speech he addressed the Queen: “No tears!
  26. No evil omen, mother, I implore!
  27. Make me no sad farewells, as I depart
  28. to the grim war-god's game! Can Turnus' hand
  29. delay death's necessary coming? Go,
  30. Idmon, my herald, to the Phrygian King,
  31. and tell him this—a word not framed to please:
  32. soon as Aurora from her crimson car
  33. flushes to-morrow's sky, let him no more
  34. against the Rutule lead the Teucrian line;
  35. let Teucrian swords and Rutule take repose,
  36. while with our own spilt blood we twain will make
  37. an end of war; on yonder mortal field
  38. let each man woo Lavinia for his bride.”
  1. So saying, he hied him to his lordly halls,
  2. summoned his steeds, and with pleased eye surveyed
  3. their action proud: them Orithyia, bride
  4. of Boreas, to Sire Pilumnus gave,
  5. which in their whiteness did surpass the snow
  6. in speed the wind. The nimble charioteers
  7. stood by and smote with hollowed hand and palm
  8. the sounding chests, or combed the necks and manes.
  9. But he upon his kingly shoulders clasped
  10. his corselet, thick o'erlaid with blazoned gold
  11. and silvery orichalch; he fitted him
  12. with falchion, shield, and helm of purple plume,
  13. that falchion which the Lord of Fire had made
  14. for Daunus, tempering in the Stygian wave
  15. when white it glowed; next grasped he the good spear
  16. which leaned its weight against a column tall
  17. in the mid-court, Auruncan Actor's spoil,
  18. and waved it wide in air with mighty cry:
  19. “O spear, that ne'er did fail me when I called,
  20. the hour is come! Once mighty Actor's hand,
  21. but now the hand of Turnus is thy lord.
  22. Grant me to strike that carcase to the ground,
  23. and with strong hand the corselet rip and rend
  24. from off that Phrygian eunuch: let the dust
  25. befoul those tresses, tricked to curl so fine
  26. with singeing steel and sleeked with odorous oil.”
  27. Such frenzy goads him: his impassioned brow
  28. is all on flame, the wild eyes flash with fire.
  29. Thus, bellowing loud before the fearful fray,
  30. some huge bull proves the fury of his horns,
  31. pushing against a tree-trunk; his swift thrusts
  32. would tear the winds in pieces; while his hoofs
  33. toss up the turf and sand, rehearsing war.
  1. That self-same day with aspect terrible
  2. Aeneas girt him in the wondrous arms
  3. his mother gave; made sharp his martial steel,
  4. and roused his heart to ire; though glad was he
  5. to seal such truce and end the general war.
  6. Then he spoke comfort to his friends; and soothed
  7. Iulus' fear, unfolding Heaven's intent;
  8. but on Latinus bade his heralds lay
  9. unyielding terms and laws of peace impose.
  1. Soon as the breaking dawn its glory threw
  2. along the hills, and from the sea's profound
  3. leaped forth the horses of the sun-god's car,
  4. from lifted nostrils breathing light and fire,
  5. then Teucrian and Rutulian measured out
  6. a place for duel, underneath the walls
  7. of the proud city. In the midst were set
  8. altars of turf and hearth-stones burning bright
  9. in honor of their common gods. Some brought
  10. pure waters and the hallowed flame, their thighs
  11. in priestly skirt arrayed, and reverend brows
  12. with vervain bound. Th' Ausonians, spear in hand,
  13. out from the city's crowded portals moved
  14. in ordered column: next the Trojans all,
  15. with Tuscan host in various martial guise,
  16. equipped with arms of steel, as if they heard
  17. stern summons to the fight. Their captains, too,
  18. emerging from the multitude, in pride
  19. of gold and purple, hurried to and fro:
  20. Mnestheus of royal stem, Asilas brave;
  21. and Neptune's offspring, tamer of the steed,
  22. Messapus. Either host, at signal given,
  23. to its own ground retiring, fixed in earth
  24. the long shafts of the spears and stacked the shields.
  25. Then eagerly to tower and rampart fly
  26. the women, the infirm old men, the throng
  27. of the unarmed, and sit them there at gaze,
  28. or on the columned gates expectant stand.
  1. But Juno, peering from that summit proud
  2. which is to-day the Alban (though that time
  3. nor name nor fame the hallowed mountain knew),
  4. surveyed the plain below and fair array
  5. of Trojan and Laurentine, by the walls
  6. of King Latinus. Whereupon straightway
  7. with Turnus' sister she began converse,
  8. goddess with goddess; for that nymph divine
  9. o'er Alba's calm lakes and loud rivers reigns;
  10. Jove, the high monarch of th' ethereal sky,
  11. gave her such glory when he stole away
  12. her virgin zone. “O nymph“, she said, “who art
  13. the pride of flowing streams, and much beloved
  14. of our own heart! thou knowest thou alone
  15. hast been my favorite of those Latin maids
  16. that to proud Jove's unthankful bed have climbed;
  17. and willingly I found thee place and share
  18. in our Olympian realm. So blame not me,
  19. but hear, Juturna, what sore grief is thine:
  20. while chance and destiny conceded aught
  21. of strength to Latium's cause, I shielded well
  22. both Turnus and thy city's wall; but now
  23. I see our youthful champion make his war
  24. with fates adverse. The Parcae's day of doom
  25. implacably impends. My eyes refuse
  26. to Iook upon such fight, such fatal league.
  27. If for thy brother's life thou couldst be bold
  28. to venture some swift blow, go, strike it now!
  29. 'T is fit and fair! Some issue fortunate
  30. may tread on sorrow's heel.” She scarce had said,
  31. when rained the quick tears from Juturna's eyes.
  32. Three times and yet again her desperate hand
  33. smote on her comely breast. But Juno cried,
  34. “No tears to-day! But haste thee, haste and find
  35. what way, if way there be, from clutch of death
  36. to tear thy brother free; arouse the war;
  37. their plighted peace destroy. I grant thee leave
  38. such boldness to essay.” With this command
  39. she left the nymph dismayed and grieving sore.
  1. Meanwhile the kings ride forth: Latinus first,
  2. looming tall-statured from his four-horse car;
  3. twelve rays of gold encircle his bright brow,
  4. sign of the sun-god, his progenitor;
  5. next Turnus, driving snow-white steeds, is seen,—
  6. two bread-tipped javelins in his hand he bears;
  7. Aeneas, of Rome's blood the source and sire,
  8. with star-bright shield and panoply divine,
  9. far-shining comes; Ascanius by his side—
  10. of Roman greatness the next hope is he.
  11. To camp they rode, where, garbed in blameless white,
  12. with youngling swine and two-year sheep unshorn,
  13. the priest before the flaming altars drove
  14. his flock and offering: to the rising sun
  15. all eyes are lifted, as with careful hand
  16. the salted meal is scattered, while with knives
  17. they mark each victim's brow, outpouring wine
  18. from shallow bowls, the sacrifice to bless.