Aeneid

Virgil

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

  1. A spreading bay is there, impregnable
  2. to all invading storms; and Aetna's throat
  3. with roar of frightful ruin thunders nigh.
  4. Now to the realm of light it lifts a cloud
  5. of pitch-black, whirling smoke, and fiery dust,
  6. shooting out globes of flame, with monster tongues
  7. that lick the stars; now huge crags of itself,
  8. out of the bowels of the mountain torn,
  9. its maw disgorges, while the molten rock
  10. rolls screaming skyward; from the nether deep
  11. the fathomless abyss makes ebb and flow.
  12. Enceladus, his body lightning-scarred,
  13. lies prisoned under all, so runs the tale:
  14. o'er him gigantic Aetna breathes in fire
  15. from crack and seam; and if he haply turn
  16. to change his wearied side, Trinacria's isle
  17. trembles and moans, and thick fumes mantle heaven.
  18. That night in screen and covert of a grove
  19. we bore the dire convulsion, unaware
  20. whence the loud horror came. For not a star
  21. its lamp allowed, nor burned in upper sky
  22. the constellated fires, but all was gloom,
  23. and frowning night confined the moon in cloud.
  1. When from the eastern waves the light of morn
  2. began to peer, and from the upper sky
  3. Aurora flamed away the dark and dew,
  4. out of the forest sprang a startling shape
  5. of hunger-wasted misery; a man
  6. in wretched guise, who shoreward came with hands
  7. outstretched in supplication. We turned back
  8. and scanned him well. All grime and foulness he,
  9. with long and tangled beard, his savage garb
  10. fastened with thorns; but in all else he seemed
  11. a Greek, and in his country's league of arms
  12. sent to the seige of Troy. Then he beheld
  13. the Dardan habit, and our Trojan steel,
  14. he somewhat paused, as if in dread dismay
  15. such sight to see, and falteringly moved;
  16. but soon with headlong steps he sought the shore,
  17. ejaculating broken sobs and prayers:
  18. “By stars above! By gods on high! O, hear!
  19. By this bright heavenly air we mortals breathe,
  20. save me, sweet Trojans! Carry me away
  21. unto what land ye will! I ask no more.
  22. I came, I know it, in the ships of Greece;
  23. and I did war, 't is true, with Ilium's gods.
  24. O, if the crime deserve it, fling my corse
  25. on yonder waves, and in the boundless brine
  26. sink me forever! Give me in my death
  27. the comfort that by human hands I die.”
  28. He clasped our knees, and writhing on his own
  29. clung fast. We bid him tell his race and name,
  30. and by what fate pursued. Anchises gave
  31. his own right hand in swift and generous aid,
  32. and by prompt token cheered the exile's heart,
  33. who, banishing his fears, poured forth this tale :—
  1. “My home was Ithaca, and I partook
  2. the fortunes of Ulysses evil-starred.
  3. My name is Achemenides, my sire
  4. was Adamastus, and I sailed for Troy,
  5. being so poor,—O, that I ne'er had change
  6. the lot I bore! In yon vast Cyclops' cave
  7. my comrades, flying from its gruesome door,
  8. left me behind, forgotten. 'T is a house
  9. of gory feasts of flesh, 't is deep and dark,
  10. and vaulted high. He looms as high as heaven;
  11. I pray the blessed gods to rid the earth
  12. of the vile monster! None can look on him,
  13. none speak with him. He feeds on clotted gore
  14. of disembowelled men. These very eyes
  15. saw him seize two of our own company,
  16. and, as he lolled back in the cave, he clutched
  17. and dashed them on the stones, fouling the floor
  18. with torrent of their blood; myself I saw him
  19. crunch with his teeth the dripping, bloody limbs
  20. still hot and pulsing on his hungry jaw.
  21. But not without reward! For such a sight
  22. Ulysses would not brook, and Ithaca
  23. forgot not in such strait the name he bore.
  24. For soon as, gorged with feasting and o'ercome
  25. with drunken slumber, the foul giant lay
  26. sprawled through the cave, his head dropped helpless down,
  27. disgorging as he slept thick drool of gore
  28. and gobbets drenched with bloody wine; then we,
  29. calling on Heaven and taking place by lot,
  30. drew round him like one man, and with a beam
  31. sharpened at end bored out that monster eye,
  32. which, huge and sole, lay under the grim brow,
  33. round as an Argive shield or Phoebus' star.
  34. Thus took we joyful vengeance for the shades
  35. of our lost mates. But, O ill-fated men!
  36. Fly, I implore, and cut the cables free
  37. along the beach! For in the land abide,
  38. like Polyphemus, who in hollow cave
  39. kept fleecy sheep, and milked his fruitful ewes,
  40. a hundred other, huge as he, who rove
  41. wide o'er this winding shore and mountains fair:
  42. Cyclops accursed, bestial! Thrice the moon
  43. has filled her horns with light, while here I dwell
  44. in lonely woods and lairs of creatures wild;
  45. or from tall cliffs out-peering I discern
  46. the Cyclops, and shrink shuddering from the sound
  47. of their vast step and cry. My sorry fare
  48. is berries and hard corners dropped from trees,
  49. or herb-roots torn out from the niggard ground.
  50. Though watching the whole sea, only today
  51. Have I had sight of ships. To you I fled.
  52. Whate'er ye be, it was my only prayer
  53. to 'scape that monster brood. I ask no more.
  54. O, set me free by any death ye will!”
  1. He scarce had said, when moving o'er the crest
  2. of a high hill a giant shape we saw:
  3. that shepherd Polyphemus, with his flocks
  4. down-wending to the well-known water-side;
  5. huge, shapeless, horrible, with blinded eye,
  6. bearing a lopped pine for a staff, he made
  7. his footing sure, while the white, fleecy sheep,
  8. sole pleasure now, and solace of his woes,
  9. ran huddling at his side.
  10. Soon to the vast flood of the level brine
  11. he came, and washed the flowing gore away
  12. from that out-hollowed eye; he gnashed his teeth,
  13. groaning, and deep into the watery way
  14. stalked on, his tall bulk wet by scarce a wave.
  15. We fled in haste, though far, and with us bore
  16. the truthful suppliant; cut silently
  17. the anchor-ropes, and, bending to the oar,
  18. swept on with eager strokes clean out to sea.
  19. Aware he was, and toward our loud halloo
  20. whirled sudden round; but when no power had he
  21. to seize or harm, nor could his fierce pursuit
  22. o'ertake the Ionian surges as they rolled,
  23. he raised a cry incredible; the sea
  24. with all its billows trembled; the wide shore
  25. of Italy from glens and gorges moaned,
  26. and Aetna roared from every vaulted cave.
  1. Then rallied from the grove-clad, Iofty isle
  2. the Cyclops' clan, and lined the beach and bay.
  3. We saw each lonely eyeball glare in vain,
  4. as side by side those brothers Aetna-born
  5. stood towering high, a conclave dark and dire:
  6. as when, far up some mountain's famous crest,
  7. wind-fronting oaks or cone-clad cypresses
  8. have made assembling in the solemn hills,
  9. Jove's giant wood or Dian's sacred grove.
  10. We, terror-struck, would fly we knew not where,
  11. with loosened sheet and canvas swelling strong
  12. before a welcome wind; but Helenus
  13. bade us both Scylla and Charybdis fear,
  14. where 'twixt the twain death straitly hems the way;
  15. and so the counsel was to veer our bark
  16. the course it came. But lo! a northern gale
  17. burst o'er us from Pelorus' narrowed side,
  18. and on we rode far past Pantagia's bay
  19. of unhewn rock, and past the haven strong
  20. of Megara, and Thapsus Iying low.
  21. Such were the names retold, and such the shores
  22. shown us by Achemenides, whose fate
  23. made him familiar there, for he had sailed
  24. with evil-starred Ulysses o'er that sea.
  1. Off the Sicilian shore an island lies,
  2. wave-washed Plemmyrium, called in olden days
  3. Ortygia; here Alpheus, river-god,
  4. from Elis flowed by secret sluice, they say,
  5. beneath the sea, and mingles at thy mouth,
  6. fair Arethusa! with Sicilian waves.
  7. Our voices hailed the great gods of the land
  8. with reverent prayer; then skirted we the shore,
  9. where smooth Helorus floods the fruitful plain.
  10. Under Pachynus' beetling precipice
  11. we kept our course; then Camarina rose
  12. in distant view, firm-seated evermore
  13. by Fate's decree; and that far-spreading vale
  14. of Gela, with the name of power it takes
  15. from its wide river; and, uptowering far,
  16. the ramparts of proud Acragas appeared,
  17. where fiery steeds were bred in days of old.
  18. Borne by the winds, along thy coast I fled,
  19. Selinus, green with palm! and past the shore
  20. of Lilybaeum with its treacherous reef;
  21. till at the last the port of Drepanum
  22. received me to its melancholy strand.
  23. Here, woe is me I outworn by stormful seas,
  24. my sire, sole comfort of my grievous doom,
  25. Anchises ceased to be. O best of sires!
  26. Here didst thou leave me in the weary way;
  27. through all our perils—O the bitter loss! —
  28. borne safely, but in vain. King Helenus,
  29. whose prophet-tongue of dark events foretold,
  30. spoke not this woe; nor did Celeno's curse
  31. of this forebode. Such my last loss and pain;
  32. such, of my weary way, the destined goal.
  33. From thence departing, the divine behest
  34. impelled me to thy shores, O listening queen!
  1. Such was, while all gave ear, the tale sublime
  2. father Aeneas, none but he, set forth
  3. of wanderings and of dark decrees divine:
  4. silent at last, he ceased, and took repose.
  1. Now felt the Queen the sharp, slow-gathering pangs
  2. of love; and out of every pulsing vein
  3. nourished the wound and fed its viewless fire.
  4. Her hero's virtues and his lordly line
  5. keep calling to her soul; his words, his glance,
  6. cling to her heart like lingering, barbed steel,
  7. and rest and peace from her vexed body fly.
  8. A new day's dawn with Phoebus' lamp divine
  9. lit up all lands, and from the vaulted heaven
  10. Aurora had dispelled the dark and dew;
  11. when thus unto the ever-answering heart
  12. of her dear sister spoke the stricken Queen:
  13. “Anna, my sister, what disturbing dreams
  14. perplex me and alarm? What guest is this
  15. new-welcomed to our house? How proud his mien!
  16. What dauntless courage and exploits of war!
  17. Sooth, I receive it for no idle tale
  18. that of the gods he sprang. 'T is cowardice
  19. betrays the base-born soul. Ah me! How fate
  20. has smitten him with storms! What dire extremes
  21. of war and horror in his tale he told!
  22. O, were it not immutably resolved
  23. in my fixed heart, that to no shape of man
  24. I would be wed again (since my first love
  25. left me by death abandoned and betrayed);
  26. loathed I not so the marriage torch and train,
  27. I could—who knows?—to this one weakness yield.
  28. Anna, I hide it not! But since the doom
  29. of my ill-starred Sichaeus, when our shrines
  30. were by a brother's murder dabbled o'er,
  31. this man alone has moved me; he alone
  32. has shaken my weak will. I seem to feel
  33. the motions of love's lost, familiar fire.
  34. But may the earth gape open where I tread,
  35. and may almighty Jove with thunder-scourge
  36. hurl me to Erebus' abysmal shade,
  37. to pallid ghosts and midnight fathomless,
  38. before, O Chastity! I shall offend
  39. thy holy power, or cast thy bonds away!
  40. He who first mingled his dear life with mine
  41. took with him all my heart. 'T is his alone —
  42. o, let it rest beside him in the grave!”
  43. She spoke: the bursting tears her breast o'erflowed.
  1. “O dearer to thy sister than her life,”
  2. Anna replied, “wouldst thou in sorrow's weed
  3. waste thy long youth alone, nor ever know
  4. sweet babes at thine own breast, nor gifts of love?
  5. Will dust and ashes, or a buried ghost
  6. reck what we do? 'T is true thy grieving heart
  7. was cold to earlier wooers, Libya's now,
  8. and long ago in Tyre. Iarbas knew
  9. thy scorn, and many a prince and captain bred
  10. in Afric's land of glory. Why resist
  11. a love that makes thee glad? Hast thou no care
  12. what alien lands are these where thou dost reign?
  13. Here are Gaetulia's cities and her tribes
  14. unconquered ever; on thy borders rove
  15. Numidia's uncurbed cavalry; here too
  16. lies Syrtis' cruel shore, and regions wide
  17. of thirsty desert, menaced everywhere
  18. by the wild hordes of Barca. Shall I tell
  19. of Tyre's hostilities, the threats and rage
  20. of our own brother? Friendly gods, I bow,
  21. wafted the Teucrian ships, with Juno's aid,
  22. to these our shores. O sister, what a throne,
  23. and what imperial city shall be thine,
  24. if thus espoused! With Trojan arms allied
  25. how far may not our Punic fame extend
  26. in deeds of power? Call therefore on the gods
  27. to favor thee; and, after omens fair,
  28. give queenly welcome, and contrive excuse
  29. to make him tarry, while yon wintry seas
  30. are loud beneath Orion's stormful star,
  31. and on his battered ships the season frowns.”
  1. So saying, she stirred a passion-burning breast
  2. to Iove more madly still; her words infused
  3. a doubting mind with hope, and bade the blush
  4. of shame begone. First to the shrines they went
  5. and sued for grace; performing sacrifice,
  6. choosing an offering of unblemished ewes,
  7. to law-bestowing Ceres, to the god
  8. of light, to sire Lyeus, Iord of wine;
  9. but chiefly unto Juno, patroness
  10. of nuptial vows. There Dido, beauteous Queen
  11. held forth in her right hand the sacred bowl
  12. and poured it full between the lifted horns
  13. of the white heifer; or on temple floors
  14. she strode among the richly laden shrines,
  15. the eyes of gods upon her, worshipping
  16. with many a votive gift; or, peering deep
  17. into the victims' cloven sides, she read
  18. the fate-revealing tokens trembling there.
  19. How blind the hearts of prophets be! Alas!
  20. Of what avail be temples and fond prayers
  21. to change a frenzied mind? Devouring ever,
  22. love's fire burns inward to her bones; she feels
  23. quick in her breast the viewless, voiceless wound.
  24. Ill-fated Dido ranges up and down
  25. the spaces of her city, desperate
  26. her life one flame—like arrow-stricken doe
  27. through Cretan forest rashly wandering,
  28. pierced by a far-off shepherd, who pursues
  29. with shafts, and leaves behind his light-winged steed,
  30. not knowing; while she scours the dark ravines
  31. of Dicte and its woodlands; at her heart
  32. the mortal barb irrevocably clings.
  33. around her city's battlements she guides
  34. aeneas, to make show of Sidon's gold,
  35. and what her realm can boast; full oft her voice
  36. essays to speak and frembling dies away:
  37. or, when the daylight fades, she spreads anew
  38. a royal banquet, and once more will plead
  39. mad that she is, to hear the Trojan sorrow;
  40. and with oblivious ravishment once more
  41. hangs on his lips who tells; or when her guests
  42. are scattered, and the wan moon's fading horn
  43. bedims its ray, while many a sinking star
  44. invites to slumber, there she weeps alone
  45. in the deserted hall, and casts her down
  46. on the cold couch he pressed. Her love from far
  47. beholds her vanished hero and receives
  48. his voice upon her ears; or to her breast,
  49. moved by a father's image in his child,
  50. she clasps Ascanius, seeking to deceive
  51. her unblest passion so. Her enterprise
  52. of tower and rampart stops: her martial host
  53. no Ionger she reviews, nor fashions now
  54. defensive haven and defiant wall;
  55. but idly all her half-built bastions frown,
  56. and enginery of sieges, high as heaven.
  1. But soon the chosen spouse of Jove perceived
  2. the Queen's infection; and because the voice
  3. of honor to such frenzy spoke not, she,
  4. daughter of Saturn, unto Venus turned
  5. and counselled thus: “How noble is the praise,
  6. how glorious the spoils of victory,
  7. for thee and for thy boy! Your names should be
  8. in lasting, vast renown—that by the snare
  9. of two great gods in league one woman fell!
  10. it 'scapes me not that my protected realms
  11. have ever been thy fear, and the proud halls
  12. of Carthage thy vexation and annoy.
  13. Why further go? Prithee, what useful end
  14. has our long war? Why not from this day forth
  15. perpetual peace and nuptial amity?
  16. Hast thou not worked thy will? Behold and see
  17. how Iove-sick Dido burns, and all her flesh
  18. 'The madness feels! So let our common grace
  19. smile on a mingled people! Let her serve
  20. a Phrygian husband, while thy hands receive
  21. her Tyrian subjects for the bridal dower!”
  1. In answer (reading the dissembler's mind
  2. which unto Libyan shores were fain to shift
  3. italia's future throne) thus Venus spoke:
  4. “'T were mad to spurn such favor, or by choice
  5. be numbered with thy foes. But can it be
  6. that fortune on thy noble counsel smiles?
  7. To me Fate shows but dimly whether Jove
  8. unto the Trojan wanderers ordains
  9. a common city with the sons of Tyre,
  10. with mingling blood and sworn, perpetual peace.
  11. His wife thou art; it is thy rightful due
  12. to plead to know his mind. Go, ask him, then!
  13. For humbly I obey!” With instant word
  14. Juno the Queen replied: “Leave that to me!
  15. But in what wise our urgent task and grave
  16. may soon be sped, I will in brief unfold
  17. to thine attending ear. A royal hunt
  18. in sylvan shades unhappy Dido gives
  19. for her Aeneas, when to-morrow's dawn
  20. uplifts its earliest ray and Titan's beam
  21. shall first unveil the world. But I will pour
  22. black storm-clouds with a burst of heavy hail
  23. along their way; and as the huntsmen speed
  24. to hem the wood with snares, I will arouse
  25. all heaven with thunder. The attending train
  26. shall scatter and be veiled in blinding dark,
  27. while Dido and her hero out of Troy
  28. to the same cavern fly. My auspices
  29. I will declare—if thou alike wilt bless;
  30. and yield her in true wedlock for his bride.
  31. Such shall their spousal be!” To Juno's will
  32. Cythera's Queen inclined assenting brow,
  33. and laughed such guile to see. Aurora rose,
  34. and left the ocean's rim. The city's gates
  35. pour forth to greet the morn a gallant train
  36. of huntsmen, bearing many a woven snare
  37. and steel-tipped javelin; while to and fro
  38. run the keen-scented dogs and Libyan squires.
  39. The Queen still keeps her chamber; at her doors
  40. the Punic lords await; her palfrey, brave
  41. in gold and purple housing, paws the ground
  42. and fiercely champs the foam-flecked bridle-rein.
  43. At last, with numerous escort, forth she shines:
  44. her Tyrian pall is bordered in bright hues,
  45. her quiver, gold; her tresses are confined
  46. only with gold; her robes of purple rare
  47. meet in a golden clasp. To greet her come
  48. the noble Phrygian guests; among them smiles
  49. the boy Iulus; and in fair array
  50. Aeneas, goodliest of all his train.
  51. In such a guise Apollo (when he leaves
  52. cold Lycian hills and Xanthus' frosty stream
  53. to visit Delos to Latona dear)
  54. ordains the song, while round his altars cry
  55. the choirs of many islands, with the pied,
  56. fantastic Agathyrsi; soon the god
  57. moves o'er the Cynthian steep; his flowing hair
  58. he binds with laurel garland and bright gold;
  59. upon his shining shoulder as he goes
  60. the arrows ring:—not less uplifted mien
  61. aeneas wore; from his illustrious brow
  62. such beauty shone. Soon to the mountains tall
  63. the cavalcade comes nigh, to pathless haunts
  64. of woodland creatures; the wild goats are seen,
  65. from pointed crag descending leap by leap
  66. down the steep ridges; in the vales below
  67. are routed deer, that scour the spreading plain,
  68. and mass their dust-blown squadrons in wild flight,
  69. far from the mountain's bound. Ascanius
  70. flushed with the sport, spurs on a mettled steed
  71. from vale to vale, and many a flying herd
  72. his chase outspeeds; but in his heart he prays
  73. among these tame things suddenly to see
  74. a tusky boar, or, leaping from the hills,
  75. a growling mountain-lion, golden-maned.
  1. Meanwhile low thunders in the distant sky
  2. mutter confusedly; soon bursts in full
  3. the storm-cloud and the hail. The Tyrian troop
  4. is scattered wide; the chivalry of Troy,
  5. with the young heir of Dardan's kingly line,
  6. of Venus sprung, seek shelter where they may,
  7. with sudden terror; down the deep ravines
  8. the swollen torrents roar. In that same hour
  9. Queen Dido and her hero out of Troy
  10. to the same cavern fly. Old Mother-Earth
  11. and wedlock-keeping Juno gave the sign;
  12. the flash of lightnings on the conscious air
  13. were torches to the bridal; from the hills
  14. the wailing wood-nymphs sobbed a wedding song.
  15. Such was that day of death, the source and spring
  16. of many a woe. For Dido took no heed
  17. of honor and good-name; nor did she mean
  18. her loves to hide; but called the lawlessness
  19. a marriage, and with phrases veiled her shame.
  1. Swift through the Libyan cities Rumor sped.
  2. Rumor! What evil can surpass her speed?
  3. In movement she grows mighty, and achieves
  4. strength and dominion as she swifter flies.
  5. small first, because afraid, she soon exalts
  6. her stature skyward, stalking through the lands
  7. and mantling in the clouds her baleful brow.
  8. The womb of Earth, in anger at high Heaven,
  9. bore her, they say, last of the Titan spawn,
  10. sister to Coeus and Enceladus.
  11. Feet swift to run and pinions like the wind
  12. the dreadful monster wears; her carcase huge
  13. is feathered, and at root of every plume
  14. a peering eye abides; and, strange to tell,
  15. an equal number of vociferous tongues,
  16. foul, whispering lips, and ears, that catch at all.
  17. At night she spreads midway 'twixt earth and heaven
  18. her pinions in the darkness, hissing loud,
  19. nor e'er to happy slumber gives her eyes:
  20. but with the morn she takes her watchful throne
  21. high on the housetops or on lofty towers,
  22. to terrify the nations. She can cling
  23. to vile invention and malignant wrong,
  24. or mingle with her word some tidings true.
  25. She now with changeful story filled men's ears,
  26. exultant, whether false or true she sung:
  27. how, Trojan-born Aeneas having come,
  28. Dido, the lovely widow, Iooked his way,
  29. deigning to wed; how all the winter long
  30. they passed in revel and voluptuous ease,
  31. to dalliance given o'er; naught heeding now
  32. of crown or kingdom—shameless! lust-enslaved!
  33. Such tidings broadcast on the lips of men
  34. the filthy goddess spread; and soon she hied
  35. to King Iarbas, where her hateful song
  36. to newly-swollen wrath his heart inflamed.
  1. Him the god Ammon got by forced embrace
  2. upon a Libyan nymph; his kingdoms wide
  3. possessed a hundred ample shrines to Jove,
  4. a hundred altars whence ascended ever
  5. the fires of sacrifice, perpetual seats
  6. for a great god's abode, where flowing blood
  7. enriched the ground, and on the portals hung
  8. garlands of every flower. The angered King,
  9. half-maddened by malignant Rumor's voice,
  10. unto his favored altars came, and there,
  11. surrounded by the effluence divine,
  12. upraised in prayer to Jove his suppliant hands.
  13. “Almighty Jupiter, to whom each day,
  14. at banquet on the painted couch reclined,
  15. Numidia pours libation! Do thine eyes
  16. behold us? Or when out of yonder heaven,
  17. o sire, thou launchest the swift thunderbolt,
  18. is it for naught we fear thee? Do the clouds
  19. shoot forth blind fire to terrify the soul
  20. with wild, unmeaning roar? O, Iook upon
  21. that woman, who was homeless in our realm,
  22. and bargained where to build her paltry town,
  23. receiving fertile coastland for her farms,
  24. by hospitable grant! She dares disdain
  25. our proffered nuptial vow. She has proclaimed
  26. Aeneas partner of her bed and throne.
  27. And now that Paris, with his eunuch crew,
  28. beneath his chin and fragrant, oozy hair
  29. ties the soft Lydian bonnet, boasting well
  30. his stolen prize. But we to all these fanes,
  31. though they be thine, a fruitless offering bring,
  32. and feed on empty tales our trust in thee.”
  1. As thus he prayed and to the altars clung,
  2. th' Omnipotent gave ear, and turned his gaze
  3. upon the royal dwelling, where for love
  4. the amorous pair forgot their place and name.
  5. Then thus to Mercury he gave command:
  6. “Haste thee, my son, upon the Zephyrs call,
  7. and take thy winged way! My mandate bear
  8. unto that prince of Troy who tarries now
  9. in Tyrian Carthage, heedless utterly
  10. of empire Heaven-bestowed. On winged winds
  11. hasten with my decrees. Not such the man
  12. his beauteous mother promised; not for this
  13. twice did she shield him from the Greeks in arms:
  14. but that he might rule Italy, a land
  15. pregnant with thrones and echoing with war;
  16. that he of Teucer's seed a race should sire,
  17. and bring beneath its law the whole wide world.
  18. If such a glory and event supreme
  19. enkindle not his bosom; if such task
  20. to his own honor speak not; can the sire
  21. begrudge Ascanius the heritage
  22. of the proud name of Rome? What plans he now?
  23. What mad hope bids him linger in the lap
  24. of enemies, considering no more
  25. the land Lavinian and Ausonia's sons.
  26. Let him to sea! Be this our final word:
  27. this message let our herald faithful bear.”
  1. He spoke. The god a prompt obedience gave
  2. to his great sire's command. He fastened first
  3. those sandals of bright gold, which carry him
  4. aloft o'er land or sea, with airy wings
  5. that race the fleeting wind; then lifted he
  6. his wand, wherewith he summons from the grave
  7. pale-featured ghosts, or, if he will, consigns
  8. to doleful Tartarus; or by its power
  9. gives slumber or dispels; or quite unseals
  10. the eyelids of the dead: on this relying,
  11. he routs the winds or cleaves th' obscurity
  12. of stormful clouds. Soon from his flight he spied
  13. the summit and the sides precipitous
  14. of stubborn Atlas, whose star-pointing peak
  15. props heaven; of Atlas, whose pine-wreathed brow
  16. is girdled evermore with misty gloom
  17. and lashed of wind and rain; a cloak of snow
  18. melts on his shoulder; from his aged chin
  19. drop rivers, and ensheathed in stiffening ice
  20. glitters his great grim beard. Here first was stayed
  21. the speed of Mercury's well-poising wing;
  22. here making pause, from hence he headlong flung
  23. his body to the sea; in motion like
  24. some sea-bird's, which along the levelled shore
  25. or round tall crags where rove the swarming fish,
  26. flies Iow along the waves: o'er-hovering so
  27. between the earth and skies, Cyllene's god
  28. flew downward from his mother's mountain-sire,
  29. parted the winds and skimmed the sandy merge
  30. of Libya. When first his winged feet
  31. came nigh the clay-built Punic huts, he saw
  32. Aeneas building at a citadel,
  33. and founding walls and towers; at his side
  34. was girt a blade with yellow jaspers starred,
  35. his mantle with the stain of Tyrian shell
  36. flowed purple from his shoulder, broidered fair
  37. by opulent Dido with fine threads of gold,
  38. her gift of love; straightway the god began:
  39. “Dost thou for lofty Carthage toil, to build
  40. foundations strong? Dost thou, a wife's weak thrall,
  41. build her proud city? Hast thou, shameful loss!
  42. Forgot thy kingdom and thy task sublime?
  43. From bright Olympus, I. He who commands
  44. all gods, and by his sovran deity
  45. moves earth and heaven—he it was who bade
  46. me bear on winged winds his high decree.
  47. What plan is thine? By what mad hope dost thou
  48. linger so Iong in lap of Libyan land?
  49. If the proud reward of thy destined way
  50. move not thy heart, if all the arduous toil
  51. to thine own honor speak not, Iook upon
  52. Iulus in his bloom, thy hope and heir
  53. Ascanius. It is his rightful due
  54. in Italy o'er Roman lands to reign.”
  55. After such word Cyllene's winged god
  56. vanished, and e'er his accents died away,
  57. dissolved in air before the mortal's eyes.
  1. Aeneas at the sight stood terror-dumb
  2. with choking voice and horror-rising hair.
  3. He fain would fly at once and get him gone
  4. from that voluptuous land, much wondering
  5. at Heaven's wrathful word. Alas! how stir?
  6. What cunning argument can plead his cause
  7. before th' infuriate Queen? How break such news?
  8. Flashing this way and that, his startled mind
  9. makes many a project and surveys them all.
  10. But, pondering well, his final counsel stopped
  11. at this resolve: he summoned to his side
  12. Mnestheus, Sergestus, and Serestus bold,
  13. and bade them fit the fleet, all silently
  14. gathering the sailors and collecting gear,
  15. but carefully dissembling what emprise
  16. such novel stir intends: himself the while
  17. (Since high-born Dido dreamed not love so fond
  18. could have an end) would seek an audience,
  19. at some indulgent time, and try what shift
  20. such matters may require. With joy they heard,
  21. and wrought, assiduous, at their prince's plan.
  1. But what can cheat true love? The Queen foreknew
  2. his stratagem, and all the coming change
  3. perceived ere it began. Her jealous fear
  4. counted no hour secure. That unclean tongue
  5. of Rumor told her fevered heart the fleet
  6. was fitting forth, and hastening to be gone.
  7. Distractedly she raved, and passion-tossed
  8. roamed through her city, like a Maenad roused
  9. by the wild rout of Bacchus, when are heard
  10. the third year's orgies, and the midnight scream
  11. to cold Cithaeron calls the frenzied crew.
  12. Finding Aeneas, thus her plaint she poured:
  13. “Didst hope to hide it, false one, that such crime
  14. was in thy heart,—to steal without farewell
  15. out of my kingdom? Did our mutual joy
  16. not move thee; nor thine own true promise given
  17. once on a time? Nor Dido, who will die
  18. a death of sorrow? Why compel thy ships
  19. to brave the winter stars? Why off to sea
  20. so fast through stormy skies? O, cruelty!
  21. If Troy still stood, and if thou wert not bound
  22. for alien shore unknown, wouldst steer for Troy
  23. through yonder waste of waves? Is it from me
  24. thou takest flight? O, by these flowing tears,
  25. by thine own plighted word (for nothing more
  26. my weakness left to miserable me),
  27. by our poor marriage of imperfect vow,
  28. if aught to me thou owest, if aught in me
  29. ever have pleased thee—O, be merciful
  30. to my low-fallen fortunes! I implore,
  31. if place be left for prayer, thy purpose change!
  32. Because of thee yon Libyan savages
  33. and nomad chiefs are grown implacable,
  34. and my own Tyrians hate me. Yes, for thee
  35. my chastity was slain and honor fair,
  36. by which alone to glory I aspired,
  37. in former days. To whom dost thou in death
  38. abandon me? my guest!—since but this name
  39. is left me of a husband! Shall I wait
  40. till fell Pygmalion, my brother, raze
  41. my city walls? Or the Gaetulian king,
  42. Iarbas, chain me captive to his car? .
  43. O, if, ere thou hadst fled, I might but bear
  44. some pledge of love to thee, and in these halls
  45. watch some sweet babe Aeneas at his play,
  46. whose face should be the memory of thine own —
  47. I were not so forsaken, Iost, undone!”
  1. She said. But he, obeying Jove's decree,
  2. gazed steadfastly away; and in his heart
  3. with strong repression crushed his cruel pain;
  4. then thus the silence broke: “O Queen, not one
  5. of my unnumbered debts so strongly urged
  6. would I gainsay. Elissa's memory
  7. will be my treasure Iong as memory holds,
  8. or breath of life is mine. Hear my brief plea!
  9. 'T was not my hope to hide this flight I take,
  10. as thou hast dreamed. Nay, I did never light
  11. a bridegroom's torch, nor gave I thee the vow
  12. of marriage. Had my destiny decreed,
  13. that I should shape life to my heart's desire,
  14. and at my own will put away the weight
  15. of foil and pain, my place would now be found
  16. in Troy, among the cherished sepulchres
  17. of my own kin, and Priam's mansion proud
  18. were standing still; or these my loyal hands
  19. had rebuilt Ilium for her vanquished sons.
  20. But now to Italy Apollo's power
  21. commands me forth; his Lycian oracles
  22. are loud for Italy. My heart is there,
  23. and there my fatherland. If now the towers
  24. of Carthage and thy Libyan colony
  25. delight thy Tyrian eyes; wilt thou refuse
  26. to Trojan exiles their Ausonian shore?
  27. I too by Fate was driven, not less than thou,
  28. to wander far a foreign throne to find.
  29. Oft when in dewy dark night hides the world,
  30. and flaming stars arise, Anchises' shade
  31. looks on me in my dreams with angered brow.
  32. I think of my Ascanius, and the wrong
  33. to that dear heart, from whom I steal away
  34. Hesperia, his destined home and throne.
  35. But now the winged messenger of Heaven,
  36. sent down by Jove (I swear by thee and me!),
  37. has brought on winged winds his sire's command.
  38. My own eyes with unclouded vision saw
  39. the god within these walls; I have received
  40. with my own ears his word. No more inflame
  41. with lamentation fond thy heart and mine.
  42. 'T is not my own free act seeks Italy.”