Metamorphoses

Ovid

Ovid. Metamorphoses. More, Brookes, translator. Boston: Cornhill Publishing Co., 1922.

  1. Now the Euboean dweller in great waves,
  2. Glaucus, had left behind the crest of Aetna,
  3. raised upward from a giant's head; and left
  4. the Cyclops' fields, that never had been torn
  5. by harrow or by plough and never were
  6. indebted to the toil of oxen yoked;
  7. left Zancle, also, and the opposite walls
  8. of Rhegium, and the sea, abundant cause
  9. of shipwreck, which confined with double shores
  10. bounds the Ausonian and Sicilian lands.
  11. All these behind him, Glaucus, swimming on
  12. with his huge hands through those Tyrrhenian seas,
  13. drew near the hills so rich in magic herbs
  14. and halls of Circe, daughter of the Sun,—
  15. halls filled with men in guise of animals.
  16. After due salutations had been given—
  17. received by her as kindly—Glaucus said,
  18. “You as a goddess, certainly should have
  19. compassion upon me, a god; for you
  20. alone (if I am worthy of it) can
  21. relieve my passion. What the power of herbs
  22. can be, Titania, none knows more than I,
  23. for by their power I was myself transformed.
  24. To make the cause of my strange madness known,
  25. I have found Scylla on Italian shores,
  26. directly opposite Messenian walls.
  27. “It shames me to recount my promises,
  28. entreaties, and caresses, and at last
  29. rejection of my suit. If you have known
  30. a power of incantation, I implore
  31. you now repeat that incantation here,
  32. with sacred lips—If herbs have greater power,
  33. use the tried power of herbs. But I would not
  34. request a cure—the healing of this wound.
  35. Much better than an end of pain, let her
  36. share, and feel with me my impassioned flame.”
  37. But Circe was more quick than any other
  38. to burn with passion's flame. It may have been
  39. her nature or it may have been the work
  40. of Venus, angry at her tattling sire.
  41. “You might do better,” she replied, “to court
  42. one who is willing, one who wants your love,
  43. and feels a like desire. You did deserve
  44. to win her love, yes, to be wooed yourself.
  45. In fact you might be. If you give some hope,
  46. you have my word, you shall indeed be wooed.
  47. That you may have no doubt, and so retain
  48. all confidence in your attraction's power—
  49. behold! I am a goddess, and I am
  50. the daughter also, of the radiant Sun!
  51. And I who am so potent with my charms,
  52. and I who am so potent with my herbs,
  53. wish only to be yours. Despise her who
  54. despises you, and her who is attached
  55. to you repay with like attachment—so
  56. by one act offer each her just reward.”
  57. But Glaucus answered her attempt of love,
  58. “The trees will sooner grow in ocean waves,
  59. the sea-weed sooner grow on mountain tops,
  60. than I shall change my love for graceful! Scylla.”
  61. The goddess in her jealous rage could not
  62. and would not injure him, whom she still loved,
  63. but turned her wrath upon the one preferred.
  64. She bruised immediately the many herbs
  65. most infamous for horrid juices, which,
  66. when bruised, she mingled with most artful care
  67. and incantations given by Hecate.
  68. Then, clothed in azure vestments, she passed through
  69. her troop of fawning savage animals,
  70. and issued from the center of her hall.
  71. Pacing from there to Rhegium, opposite
  72. the dangerous rocks of Zancle, she at once
  73. entered the tossed waves boiling up with tides:
  74. on these as if she walked on the firm shore,
  75. she set her feet and, hastening on dry shod,
  76. she skimmed along the surface of the deep.
  77. Not far away there was an inlet curved,
  78. round as a bent bow, which was often used
  79. by Scylla as a favorite retreat.
  80. There, she withdrew from heat of sea and sky
  81. when in the zenith blazed the unclouded sun
  82. and cast the shortest shadows on the ground.
  83. Circe infected it before that hour,
  84. polluting it with monster-breeding drugs.
  85. She sprinkled juices over it, distilled
  86. from an obnoxious root, and thrice times nine
  87. she muttered over it with magic lips,
  88. her most mysterious charm involved in words
  89. of strangest import and of dubious thought.
  90. Scylla came there and waded in waist deep,
  91. then saw her loins defiled with barking shapes.
  92. Believing they could be no part of her,
  93. she ran and tried to drive them back and feared
  94. the boisterous canine jaws. But what she fled
  95. she carried with her. And, feeling for her thighs,
  96. her legs, and feet, she found Cerberian jaws
  97. instead. She rises from a rage of dogs,
  98. and shaggy backs encircle her shortened loins.
  99. The lover Glaucus wept. He fled the embrace
  100. of Circe and her hostile power of herbs
  101. and magic spells. But Scylla did not leave
  102. the place of her disaster; and, as soon
  103. as she had opportunity, for hate
  104. of Circe, she robbed Ulysses of his men.
  105. She would have wrecked the Trojan ships, if she
  106. had not been changed beforehand to a rock
  107. which to this day reveals a craggy rim.
  108. And even the rock awakes the sailors' dread.
  1. After the Trojan ships, pushed by their oars,
  2. had safely passed by Scylla and the fierce
  3. Charybdis, and with care had then approached
  4. near the Ausonian shore, a roaring gale
  5. bore them far southward to the Libyan coast.
  6. And then Sidonian Dido, who was doomed
  7. not calmly to endure the loss of her
  8. loved Phrygian husband, graciously received
  9. Aeneas to her home and her regard:
  10. and on a pyre, erected with pretense
  11. of holy rites, she fell upon the sword.
  12. Deceived herself, she there deceived them all.
  13. Aeneas, fleeing the new walls built on
  14. that sandy shore, revisited the land
  15. of Eryx and Acestes, his true friend.
  16. There he performed a hallowed sacrifice
  17. and paid due honor to his father's tomb.
  18. And presently he loosened from that shore
  19. the ships which Iris, Juno's minister,
  20. had almost burned; and sailing, passed far off
  21. the kingdom of the son of Hippotas,
  22. in those hot regions smoking with the fumes
  23. of burning sulphur, and he left behind
  24. the rocky haunt of Achelous' daughters,
  25. the Sirens. Then, when his good ship had lost
  26. the pilot, he coasted near Inarime,
  27. near Prochyta, and near the barren hill
  28. which marks another island, Pithecusae,
  29. an island named from strange inhabitants.
  30. The father of the gods abhorred the frauds
  31. and perjuries of the Cercopians
  32. and for the crimes of that bad treacherous race,
  33. transformed its men to ugly animals,
  34. appearing unlike men, although like men.
  35. He had contracted and had bent their limbs,
  36. and flattened out their noses, bent back towards
  37. their foreheads; he had furrowed every face
  38. with wrinkles of old age, and made them live
  39. in that spot, after he had covered all
  40. their bodies with long yellow ugly hair.
  41. Besides all that, he took away from them
  42. the use of language and control of tongues,
  43. so long inclined to dreadful perjury;
  44. and left them always to complain of life
  45. and their ill conduct in harsh jabbering.
  1. After Aeneas had passed by all those
  2. and seen to his right hand the distant walls
  3. guarding the city of Parthenope,
  4. he passed on his left hand a mound,
  5. grave of the tuneful son of Aeolus.
  6. Landing on Cumae's marshy shore, he reached
  7. a cavern, home of the long lived Sibylla,
  8. and prayed that she would give him at the lake,
  9. Avernus, access to his father's shade.
  10. She raised her countenance, from gazing on
  11. the ground, and with an inspiration given
  12. to her by influence of the god, she said,
  13. “Much you would have, O man of famous deeds,
  14. whose courage is attested by the sword,
  15. whose filial piety is proved by flame.
  16. But, Trojan, have no fear. I grant your wish,
  17. and with my guidance you shall look upon
  18. the latest kingdom of the world, shall see
  19. Elysian homes and your dear father's shade,
  20. for virtue there is everywhere a way.”
  21. She spoke, and pointed out to him a branch
  22. refulgent with bright gold, found in the woods
  23. of Juno of Avernus, and commanded him
  24. to pluck it from the stem. Aeneas did
  25. what she advised him. Then he saw the wealth
  26. of the dread Orcus, and he saw his own
  27. ancestors, and beheld the aged ghost
  28. of great Anchises. There he learned the laws
  29. of that deep region, and what dangers must
  30. be undergone by him in future wars.
  31. Retracing with his weary steps the path
  32. up to the light, he found relief from toil
  33. in converse with the sage Cumaean guide.
  34. While in thick dusk he trod the frightful way,
  35. “Whether you are a deity,” he said,
  36. “Or human and most favored by the gods,
  37. to me you always will appear divine.
  38. I will confess, too, my existence here
  39. is due to your kind aid, for by your will
  40. I visited the dark abodes of death,
  41. and I escaped the death which I beheld.
  42. For this great service, when I shall emerge
  43. into the sunlit air, I will erect
  44. for you a temple and will burn for you
  45. sweet incense kindled at the altar flame.”
  46. The prophetess looked on him and with sighs,
  47. “I am no goddess,” she replied, “nor is
  48. it well to honor any mortal head
  49. with tribute of the holy frankincense.
  50. And, that you may not err through ignorance,
  51. I tell you life eternal without end
  52. was;offered to me, if I would but yield
  53. virginity to Phoebus for his love.
  54. And, while he hoped for this and in desire
  55. offered to bribe me for my virtue, first
  56. with gifts, he said, ‘Maiden of Cumae choose
  57. whatever you may wish, and you shall gain
  58. all that you wish.’ I pointed to a heap
  59. of dust collected there, and foolishly
  60. replied, ‘As many birthdays must be given
  61. to me as there are particles of sand.’
  62. “For I forgot to wish them days of changeless youth.
  63. He gave long life and offered youth besides,
  64. if I would grant his wish. This I refused,
  65. I live unwedded still. My happier time
  66. has fled away, now comes with tottering step
  67. infirm old age, which I shall long endure.
  68. You find me ending seven long centuries,
  69. and there remain for me, before my years
  70. equal the number of those grains of sand,
  71. three hundred harvests, three hundred vintages!
  72. The time will come, when long increase of days
  73. will so contract me from my present size
  74. and so far waste away my limbs with age
  75. that I shall dwindle to a trifling weight,
  76. so trifling, it will never be believed
  77. I once was loved and even pleased a god.
  78. Perhaps, even Phoebus will not recognize me,
  79. or will deny he ever bore me love.
  80. But, though I change till eye would never know me,
  81. my voice shall live, the fates will leave my voice.”
  1. Sibylla with such words beguild their way
  2. from Stygian realms up to the Euboean town.
  3. Trojan Aeneas, after he had made
  4. due sacrifice in Cumae, touched the shore
  5. that had not yet been given his nurse's name.
  6. There Macareus of Neritus had come,
  7. companion of long tried Ulysses, there
  8. he rested, weary of his lengthened toils.
  9. He recognized one left in Aetna's cave,
  10. greek Achaemenides, and, all amazed
  11. to find him yet alive, he said to him,
  12. “What chance, or what god, Achaemenides,
  13. preserves you? Why is this barbarian ship
  14. conveying you a Greek? What land is sought?”
  15. No longer ragged in the clothes he wore
  16. and his own master, wearing clothes not tacked
  17. with sharp thorns, Achaemenides replied,
  18. “Again may I see Polyphemus' jaws
  19. out-streaming with their slaughtered human blood;
  20. if my own home and Ithaca give more
  21. delight to me than this barbarian bark,
  22. or if I venerate Aeneas less
  23. than my own father. If I should give my all,
  24. it never could express my gratitude,
  25. that I can speak and breath, and see the heavens
  26. illuminated by the gleaming sun—
  27. how can I be ungrateful and forget all this?
  28. Because of him these limbs of mine were spared
  29. the Cyclops' jaws; and, though I were even now
  30. to leave the light of life, I should at worst
  31. be buried in a tomb—not in his maw.
  32. “What were my feelings when (unless indeed
  33. my terror had deprived me of all sense) left there,
  34. I saw you making for the open sea?
  35. I wished to shout aloud, but was afraid
  36. it would betray me to the enemy.
  37. The shoutings of Ulysses nearly caused
  38. destruction of your ship and there I saw
  39. the Cyclops, when he tore a crag away
  40. and hurled the huge rock in the whirling waves;
  41. I saw him also throw tremendous stones
  42. with his gigantic arms. They flew afar,
  43. as if impelled by catapults of war,
  44. I was struck dumb with terror lest
  45. the waves or stones might overwhelm the ship,
  46. forgetting that I still was on the shore!
  47. “But when your flight had saved you from that death
  48. of cruelty, the Cyclops, roaring rage,
  49. paced all about Mount Aetna, groping through
  50. its forests with his outstretched arms. Deprived
  51. of sight, he stumbled there against the rocks,
  52. until he reached the sea; and stretching out
  53. his gore stained arms into its waters there,
  54. he cursed all of the Grecian race, and said,
  55. ‘Oh! that some accident would carry back
  56. Ulysses to me, or but one of his
  57. companions; against whom my rage
  58. might vent itself, whose joints my hand might tear
  59. whose blood might drench my throat, whose living limbs
  60. might quiver in my teeth. How trifling then,
  61. how insignificant would be the loss,
  62. of my sight which he took from me!’
  63. “All this
  64. and more he said. A ghastly horror took
  65. possession of me when I saw his face
  66. and every feature streaming yet with blood,
  67. his ruthless hands, and the vile open space
  68. where his one eye had been, and his coarse limbs,
  69. and his beard matted through with human blood.
  70. “It seemed as if Death were before my eyes,
  71. yet that was but the least part of my woe.
  72. I seemed upon the point of being caught,
  73. my flesh about to be the food of his.
  74. Before my mind was fixed the time I saw
  75. two bodies of my loved companions
  76. dashed three or four times hard against the ground,
  77. when he above them, like a lion, crouched,
  78. devouring quickly in his hideous jaws,
  79. their entrails and their flesh and their crushed bones,
  80. white marrowed, and their mangled quivering limbs.
  81. A trembling fear seized on me as I stood
  82. pallid and without power to move from there,
  83. while I recalled him chewing greedily,
  84. and belching out his bloody banquet from
  85. his huge mouth—vomiting crushed pieces mixed
  86. with phlegmy wine—and I feared such a doom
  87. in readiness, awaited wretched me.
  88. “Most carefully concealed for many days,
  89. trembling at every sound and fearing death,
  90. although desiring death; I fed myself
  91. on grass and acorns, mixed with leaves; alone
  92. and destitute, despondent unto death,
  93. awaiting my destruction I lost hope.
  94. In that condition a long while, at last
  95. I saw a ship not far off, and by signs
  96. prayed for deliverance, as I ran in haste,
  97. down to the shore. My prayers prevailed on them.
  98. A Trojan ship took in and saved a Greek!
  99. “And now, O dearest to me of all men,
  100. tell me of your adventures, of your chief
  101. and comrades, when you sailed out on the sea.”
  1. Then Macareus told him of Aeolus,
  2. the son of Hippotas, whose kingdom is
  3. the Tuscan sea, whose prison holds the winds,
  4. and how Ulysses had received the winds
  5. tied in a bull's hide bag, an awesome gift,
  6. how nine days with a favoring breeze they sailed
  7. and saw afar their longed for native land.
  8. How, as the tenth day dawned, the crew was moved
  9. by envy and a lust for gold, which they
  10. imagined hidden in that leathern bag
  11. and so untied the thong which held the winds.
  12. These, rushing out, had driven the vessel back
  13. over the waves which they had safely passed,
  14. back to the harbor of King Aeolus.
  15. “From there,” he said, “we sailed until we reached
  16. the ancient city of Lamus, Laestrygon.—
  17. Antiphates was reigning in that land,
  18. and I was sent with two men of our troop,
  19. ambassadors to see him. Two of us
  20. escaped with difficulty, but the third
  21. stained the accursed Lestrygonian's jaws
  22. with his devoted blood. Antiphates
  23. pursued us, calling out his murderous horde.
  24. They came and, hurling stones and heavy beams,
  25. they overwhelmed and sank both ships and men.
  26. One ship escaped, on which Ulysses sailed.
  27. “Grieving, lamenting for companions lost,
  28. we finally arrived at that land which
  29. you may discern far off, and, trust my word,
  30. far off it should be seen—I saw it near!
  31. And oh most righteous Trojan, Venus' son,
  32. Aeneas, whom I call no more a foe,
  33. I warn you now: avoid the shores of Circe.
  34. “We moored our ship beside that country too;
  35. but, mindful of the dangers we had run
  36. with Laestrygons and cruel Polyphemus,
  37. refused to go ashore. Ulysses chose
  38. some men by lot and told them to seek out
  39. a roof which he had seen among the trees.
  40. The lot took me, then staunch Polytes next,
  41. Eurylochus, Elpenor fond of wine,
  42. and eighteen more and brought us to the walls
  43. of Circe's dwelling.
  44. “As we drew near and stood
  45. before the door, a thousand wolves rushed out
  46. from woods near by, and with the wolves there ran
  47. she bears and lionesses, dread to see.
  48. And yet we had no cause to fear, for none
  49. would harm us with the smallest scratch.
  50. Why, they in friendship even wagged their tails
  51. and fawned upon us, while we stood in doubt.
  52. “Then handmaids took us in and led us on
  53. through marble halls to the presence of their queen.
  54. She, in a beautiful recess, sat on her throne,
  55. clad richly in a shining purple robe,
  56. and over it she wore a golden veil.
  57. Nereids and nymphs, who never carded fleece
  58. with motion of their fingers, nor drew out
  59. a ductile thread, were setting potent herbs
  60. in proper order and arranging them
  61. in baskets—a confusing wealth of flowers
  62. were scattered among leaves of every hue:
  63. and she prescribed the tasks they all performed.
  64. “She knew the natural use of every leaf
  65. and combinations of their virtues, when
  66. mixed properly; and, giving them her close
  67. attention, she examined every herb
  68. as it was weighed. When she observed us there,
  69. and had received our greetings and returned them,
  70. she smiled, as if we should be well received.
  71. At once she had her maidens bring a drink
  72. of parched barley, of honey and strong wine,
  73. and curds of milk. And in the nectarous draught
  74. she added secretly her baleful drugs.
  75. “We took the cups presented to us by
  76. her sacred right hand; and, as soon as we,
  77. so thirsty, quaffed them with our parching mouths,
  78. that ruthless goddess with her outstretched wand
  79. touched lightly the topmost hair upon our heads.
  80. (Although I am ashamed, I tell you this)
  81. stiff bristles quickly grew out over me,
  82. and I could speak no more. Instead of words
  83. I uttered hoarse murmurs and towards the ground
  84. began to bend and gaze with all my face.
  85. I felt my mouth take on a hardened skin
  86. with a long crooked snout, and my neck swell
  87. with muscles. With the very member which
  88. a moment earlier had received the cup
  89. I now made tracks in sand of the palace court.
  90. Then with my friends, who suffered a like change
  91. (charms have such power!) I was prisoned in a stye.
  92. “We saw Eurylochus alone avoid
  93. our swinish form, for he refused the cup.
  94. If he had drained it, I should still remain
  95. one of a bristly herd. Nor would his news
  96. have made Ulysses sure of our disaster
  97. and brought a swift avenger of our fate.
  98. “Peace bearing Hermes gave him a white flower
  99. from a black root, called Moly by the gods.
  100. With this protection and the god's advice
  101. he entered Circe's hall and, as she gave
  102. the treacherous cup and with her magic wand
  103. essayed to touch his hair, he drove her back
  104. and terrified her with his quick drawn sword.
  105. She gave her promise, and, right hands exchanged,
  106. he was received unharmed into her couch,
  107. where he required the bodies of his friends
  108. awarded him, as his prized marriage gift.
  109. “We then were sprinkled with more favored juice
  110. of harmless plants, and smitten on the head
  111. with the magic wand reversed. And new charms were
  112. repeated, all conversely to the charms
  113. which had degraded us. Then, as she sings,
  114. more and yet more we raise ourselves erect,
  115. the bristles fall off and the fissures leave
  116. our cloven feet, our shoulders overcome
  117. their lost shape and our arms become attached,
  118. as they had been before. With tears of joy
  119. we all embrace him, also weeping tears;
  120. and we cling fondly to our chieftain's neck;—
  121. not one of us could say a single word
  122. till thus we had attested gratitude.”
  123. “The full space of a year detained us there,
  124. and I, remaining that long stretch of time,
  125. saw many things and heard as much besides:
  126. and this among the many other things,
  127. was told me secretly by one of the four
  128. handmaidens of those rites. While Circe passed
  129. her time from all apart except my chief,
  130. she brought me to a white marble shape, a youth
  131. who bore a woodpecker upon his head.
  132. It stood erected in a hallowed place,
  133. adorned with many wreaths. When I had asked
  134. the statue's name and why he stood revered
  135. in that most sacred temple, and what caused
  136. that bird he carried on his head; she said:—
  137. ‘Listen, Macareus, and learn from this tale too
  138. the power of Circe, and weigh the knowledge well!’
  1. “Picus, offspring of Saturn, was the king
  2. of the Ausonian land, one very fond
  3. of horses raised for war. The young man's form
  4. was just what you now see, and had you known
  5. him as he lived, you would not change a line.
  6. His nature was as noble as his shape.
  7. He could not yet have seen the steeds contend
  8. four times in races held with each fifth year
  9. at Grecian Elis. But his good looks had charmed
  10. the dryads born on Latin hills, Naiads
  11. would pine for him—both goddesses of spring
  12. and goddesses of fountains, pined for him,
  13. and nymphs that live in streaming Albula,
  14. Numicus, Anio's course, brief flowing Almo,
  15. and rapid Nar and Farfarus, so cool
  16. in its delightful shades; all these and those
  17. which haunt the forest lake of Scythian
  18. Diana and the other nearby lakes.
  19. “ ‘But, heedless of all these, he loved a nymph
  20. whom on the hill, called Palatine, 'tis said,
  21. Venilia bore to Janus double faced.
  22. When she had reached the age of marriage, she
  23. was given to Picus Laurentine, preferred
  24. by her above all others—wonderful
  25. indeed her beauty, but more wonderful
  26. her skill in singing, from which art they called
  27. her Canens. The fascination of her voice
  28. would move the woods and rocks and tame wild beasts,
  29. and stay long rivers, and it even detained
  30. the wandering bird. Once, while she sang a lay
  31. with high, clear voice, Picus on his keen horse
  32. rode in Laurentian fields to hunt the boar,
  33. two spears in his left hand, his purple cloak
  34. fastened with gold. The daughter of the Sun
  35. wandered in woods near by to find new herbs
  36. growing on fertile hills, for she had left
  37. Circaean fields called so from her own name.
  38. “ ‘From a concealing thicket she observed
  39. the youth with wonder. All the gathered herbs
  40. dropped from her hands, forgotten, to the ground
  41. and a hot fever-flame seemed to pervade
  42. her marrow. When she could collect her thought
  43. she wanted to confess her great desire,
  44. but the swift horse and his surrounding guards
  45. prevented her approach. “Still you shall not
  46. escape me,” she declared, “although you may
  47. be borne on winds, if I but know myself,
  48. and if some potency in herbs remains,
  49. and if my art of charms does not deceive.”
  50. “ ‘Such were her;thoughts, and then she formed
  51. an image of a bodiless wild swine
  52. and let it cross the trail before the king
  53. and rush into a woodland dense with trees,
  54. which fallen trunks made pathless for his horse.
  55. Picus at once, unconscious of all harm,
  56. followed the phantom-prey and, hastily
  57. quitting the reeking back of his good steed,
  58. he wandered in pursuit of a vain hope,
  59. on foot through that deep wood. She seized the chance
  60. and by her incantation called strange gods
  61. with a strange charm, which had the power to hide
  62. the white moon's features and draw thirsty clouds
  63. about her father's head. The changing sky
  64. then lowered more black at each repeated tone
  65. of incantation, and the ground exhaled
  66. its vapours, while his people wandered there
  67. along the darkened paths until no guard
  68. was near to aid the imperiled king.
  69. “ ‘Having now gained an opportunity
  70. and place, she said, “ O, youth most beautiful!
  71. By those fine eyes, which captivated mine,
  72. and by that graceful person, which brings me,
  73. even me, a goddess, suppliant to you,
  74. have pity on my passion; let the Sun,
  75. who looks on all things, be your father-in-law;
  76. do not despise Circe, the Titaness.”
  77. “But fiercely he repelled her and her prayer,
  78. “Whoever you may be, you are not mine,”
  79. he said. “Another lady has my heart.
  80. I pray that for a lengthening space of time
  81. she may so hold me. I will not pollute
  82. conjugal ties with the unhallowed loves
  83. of any stranger, while the Fates preserve
  84. to me the child of Janus, my dear Canens.”
  85. “‘Titan's daughter, when many pleas had failed,
  86. said angrily, “You shall not leave me with
  87. impunity, and you shall not return
  88. to Canens; and by your experience
  89. you shall now learn what can be done by her
  90. so slighted—what a woman deep in love
  91. can do— and Circe is that slighted love.”
  92. “ ‘Then twice she turned herself to face the west
  93. and twice to face the East; and three times then
  94. she touched the young man with her wand,
  95. and sang three incantations. Picus fled,
  96. but, marvelling at his unaccustomed speed,
  97. he saw new wings, that spread on either side
  98. and bore him onward. Angry at the thought
  99. of transformation—all so suddenly
  100. added a strange bird to the Latian woods,
  101. he struck the wild oaks with his hard new beak,
  102. and in his rage inflicted many wounds
  103. on the long waving branches his wings took
  104. the purple of his robe. The piece of gold
  105. which he had used so nicely in his robe
  106. was changed to golden feathers, and his neck
  107. was rich as yellow gold. Nothing remained
  108. of Picus as he was except the name.
  109. “ ‘While all this happened his attendants called
  110. on Picus often but in vain throughout
  111. surrounding fields, and finding not a trace
  112. of their young king, at length by chance they met
  113. with Circe, who had cleared the darkened air
  114. and let the clouds disperse before the wind
  115. and clear rays of the sun. Then with good cause
  116. they blamed her, they demanded the return
  117. of their lost king, and with their hunting spears
  118. they threatened her. She, sprinkling baleful drugs
  119. and poison juices over them, invoked
  120. the aid of Night and all the gods of Night
  121. from Erebus and Chaos, and desired
  122. the aid of Hecat with long, wailing cries.
  123. “ ‘Most wonderful to tell, the forests leaped
  124. from fixed localities and the torn soil
  125. uttered deep groans, the trees surrounding changed
  126. from life-green to sick pallor, and the grass
  127. was moistened with besprinkling drops of blood;
  128. the stones sent forth harsh longings, unknown dogs
  129. barked loudly, and the ground became a mass
  130. of filthy snakes, and unsubstantial hosts
  131. of the departed flitted without sound.
  132. The men all quaked appalled. With magic rod
  133. she touched their faces, pale and all amazed,
  134. and at her touch the youths took on strange forms
  135. of wild animals. None kept his proper shape.
  136. “ ‘The setting sun is resting low upon
  137. the far Tartessian shores, and now in vain
  138. her husband is expected by the eyes
  139. of longing Canens. Her slaves and people run
  140. about through all the forest, holding lights
  141. to meet him. Nor is it enough for that
  142. dear nymph to weep and frenzied tear her hair
  143. and beat her breast—she did all that and more.
  144. Distracted she rushed forth and wandered through
  145. the Latin fields. Six nights, six brightening dawns
  146. found her quite unrefreshed with food or sleep
  147. wandering at random over hill and dale.
  148. The Tiber saw her last, with grief and toil
  149. wearied and lying on his widespread bank.
  150. In tears she poured out words with a faint voice,
  151. lamenting her sad woe, as when the swan
  152. about to die sings a funereal dirge.
  153. Melting with grief at last she pined away;
  154. her flesh, her bones, her marrow liquified
  155. and vanished by degrees as formless air
  156. and yet the story lingers near that place,
  157. fitly named Canens by old-time Camenae!.’
  158. “Such things I heard and saw through a long year.
  159. Sluggish, inactive through our idleness,
  160. we were all ordered to embark again
  161. out on the deep, again to set our sails.
  162. The Titaness explained the doubtful paths,
  163. the great extent and peril, of wild seas.
  164. I was alarmed, I will confess to you;
  165. so, having reached these shores, I have remained.”
  1. Macareus finished. And Aeneas' nurse,
  2. now buried in a marble urn, had this
  3. brief, strange inscription on her tomb:—
  4. “My foster-child of proven piety,
  5. burned me Caieta here: although
  6. I was at first preserved from Argive fire,
  7. I later burned with fire which was my due.”
  8. The cable loosened from the grassy bank,
  9. they steered a course which kept them well away
  10. from ill famed Circe's wiles and from her home
  11. and sought the groves where Tiber dark with shade,
  12. breaks with his yellow sands into the sea.
  13. Aeneas then fell heir to the home and won
  14. the daughter of Latinus, Faunus' son,
  15. not without war. A people very fierce
  16. made war, and Turnus, their young chief,
  17. indignant fought to hold a promised bride.
  18. With Latium all Etruria was embroiled,
  19. a victory hard to win was sought through war.
  20. By foreign aid each side got further strength:
  21. the camp of Rutuli abounds in men,
  22. and many throng the opposing camp of Troy.
  23. Aeneas did not find Evander's home
  24. in vain. But Venulus with no success
  25. came to the realm of exiled Diomed.
  26. That hero had marked out his mighty walls
  27. with favor of Iapygian Daunus and
  28. held fields that came to him as marriage dower.
  29. When Venulus, by Turnus' orders, made
  30. request for aid, the Aetolian hero said
  31. that he was poor in men: he did not wish
  32. to risk in battle himself nor any troops
  33. belonging to his father-in-law and had
  34. no troops of his that he could arm for battle.
  35. “Lest you should think I feign,” he then went on
  36. “Although my grief must be renewed because
  37. of bitter recollections of the past,
  38. I will endure recital now to you:—
  39. “After the lofty Ilion was burnt
  40. and Pergama had fed the Grecian flames,
  41. and Ajax, the Narycian hero, had
  42. brought from a virgin, for a virgin wronged,
  43. the punishment which he alone deserved
  44. on our whole expedition, we were then
  45. dispersed and driven by violent winds
  46. over the hostile seas; and we, the Greeks,
  47. had to endure in darkness, lightning, rain,
  48. the wrath both of the heavens and of the sea,
  49. and Caphareus, the climax of our woe.
  50. Not to detain you by relating such
  51. unhappy things in order, Greece might then
  52. have seemed to merit even Priam's tears.
  53. “Although well armed Minerva's care preserved
  54. me then and brought me safe through rocks and waves,
  55. from my native Argos I was driven again,
  56. for outraged Venus took her full revenge
  57. remembering still that wound of long ago;
  58. and I endured such hardships on the deep,
  59. and hazards amid armies on the shore,
  60. that often I called those happy whom the storm—
  61. an ill that came on all, or Cephareus had drowned.
  62. I even wished I had been one of them.
  63. “My best companions having now endured
  64. utmost extremities in wars and seas,
  65. lost courage and demanded a swift end
  66. of our long wandering. Acmon, by nature hot,
  67. and much embittered by misfortune, said,
  68. ‘What now remains for you, my friends,
  69. that patience can endure? What can be done
  70. by Venus (if she wants to) more than she
  71. already has done? While we have a dread
  72. of greater evils, reason will be found
  73. for patience; but, when fortune brings her worst,
  74. we scorn and trample fear beneath our feet.
  75. Upon the height of woe, why should we care?
  76. Let Venus listen, let her hate Diomed
  77. more than all others—as indeed she does,
  78. we all despise her hate. At a great price
  79. we have bought and won the right to such contempt!’
  80. “With language of this kind Pleuronian Acmon.
  81. Provoking Venus further than before,
  82. revived her former anger. His fierce words
  83. were then approved of by a few, while we
  84. the greater number of his real friends,
  85. rebuked the words of Acmon: and while he
  86. prepared to answer us, his voice, and even
  87. the passage of his voice, were both at once
  88. diminished, his hair changed to feathers, while
  89. his neck took a new form. His breast and back
  90. covered themselves with down, and both his arms
  91. grew longer feathers, and his elbows curved
  92. into light wings, much of each foot was changed
  93. to long toes, and his mouth grew still and hard
  94. with pointed horn.
  95. “Amazed at his swift change
  96. were Lycus, Abas, Nycteus and Rhexenor.
  97. And, while they stared, they took his feathered shape.
  98. The larger portion of my company
  99. flew from their boat, resounding all around
  100. our oars with flapping of new-fashioned wings.
  101. If you should ask the form of these strange birds
  102. they were like snowy swans, though not the same.
  103. “Now as Iapygian Daunus' son-in-law
  104. I scarcely hold this town and arid fields
  105. with my small remnant of trustworthy men.”
  106. So Diomed made answer. Venulus
  107. soon after left the Calydonian realms,
  108. Peucetian bays, and the Messapian fields.
  109. Among those fields he saw a darkened cave
  110. in woods and waving reeds. The halfgoat Pan
  111. now lives there, but in older time the nymphs
  112. possessed it. An Apulian shepherd scared
  113. them from that spot. At first he terrified
  114. them with a sudden fear, but soon in scorn,
  115. as they considered what the intruder was,
  116. they danced before him, moving feet to time.
  117. The shepherd clown abused them, capering,
  118. grotesquely imitating graceful steps,
  119. and railed at them with coarse and foolish words.
  120. He was not silent till a tree's new bark
  121. had closed his mouth for now he is a tree.
  122. And the wild olive's fruit took bitterness
  123. from him. It has the tartness of his tongue.
  1. When the ambassadors returned and told
  2. their tale about Aetolian arms refused,
  3. the bold Rutulians carried on the war
  4. without those forces, and much blood was shed.
  5. Then Turnus with a greedy torch drew near
  6. the Trojan fleet, well built of close-knit pine.
  7. What had escaped the waves, now feared the flame.
  8. Soon Mulciber was burning pitch and wax
  9. and other food of fire, up the high masts
  10. he ran and fed upon the tight furled sails,
  11. and even the benches in the curved hull smoked.
  12. When the holy mother of the gods, recalling
  13. how those same pines were felled on Ida's crest,
  14. filled the wind with a sound of cymbals clashed
  15. and trill of boxwood flutes. Borne through light air
  16. by her famed lion yoke, she came and said,
  17. “In vain you cast the fire with impious hand,
  18. Turnus, for I will save this burning fleet.
  19. I will not let the greedy flame consume
  20. trees that were part and members of my grove.”
  21. It thundered while she spoke, and heavy clouds,
  22. following the thunder, brought a storm
  23. of bounding hail. The Astraean brothers filled
  24. both air and swollen waters with their rage
  25. and rushed to battle. With the aid of one
  26. of them the kindly mother broke the ropes
  27. which held the Phrygian ships, and, drawing all
  28. prow foremost, plunged them underneath the wave.
  29. Softening quickly in the waters quiet depth,
  30. their wood was changed to flesh, the curving prows
  31. were metamorphosed into human heads,
  32. blades of the oars made feet, the looms were changed
  33. to swimming legs, the sides turned human flanks,
  34. each keel below the middle of a ship
  35. transformed became a spine, the cordage changed
  36. to soft hair, and the sail yards changed to arms.
  37. The azure color of the ships remained.
  38. As sea-nymphs in the water they began
  39. to agitate with virgin sports the waves,
  40. which they had always dreaded. Natives of
  41. the rugged mountains they are now so changed,
  42. they swim and dwell in the soft flowing sea,
  43. with every influence of birth forgot.
  44. Never forgetful of the myriad risks
  45. they have endured among the boisterous waves,
  46. they often give a helping hand to ships
  47. tossed in the power of storms—unless, of course,
  48. the ship might carry men of Grecian race.
  49. Never forgetful of the Phrygians and
  50. catastrophe, their hatred was so great
  51. of all Pelasgians, that they looked with joy
  52. upon the fragments of Ulysses' ship;
  53. and were delighted when they saw the ship
  54. of King Alcinous growing hard upon
  55. the breakers, as its wood was turned to stone.
  56. Many were hopeful that a fleet which had
  57. received life strangely in the forms of nymphs
  58. would cause the chieftain of the Rutuli
  59. to feel such awe that he would end their strife.
  60. But he continued fighting, and each side
  61. had its own gods, and each had courage too,
  62. which often can be as potent as the gods.
  63. Now they forgot the kingdom as a dower,
  64. forgot the scepter of a father-in-law,
  65. and even forgot the pure Lavinia:
  66. their one thought was to conquer, and they waged
  67. war to prevent the shame of a defeat.
  68. But Venus finally beheld the arms
  69. of her victorious son; for Turnus fell,
  70. and Ardea fell, a town which, while he lived,
  71. was counted strong. The Trojan swords
  72. destroyed it.—All its houses burned and sank
  73. down in the heated embers: and a bird
  74. not known before that time, flew upward from
  75. a wrecked heap, beating the dead ashes with
  76. its flapping wings. The voice, the lean pale look,
  77. the sorrows of a captured city, even
  78. the name of the ruined city, all these things
  79. remain in that bird—Ardea's fallen walls
  80. are beaten in lamentation by his wings.
  1. The merit of Aeneas now had moved
  2. the gods. Even Juno stayed her lasting hate,
  3. when, with the state of young Iulus safe,
  4. the hero son of Cytherea was
  5. prepared for heaven. In a council of the gods
  6. Venus arose, embraced her father's neck,
  7. and said: “ My father, ever kind to me,
  8. I do beseech your kind indulgence now;
  9. grant, dearest, to Aeneas, my own son
  10. and also your own grandson, grant to him
  11. a godhead power, although of lowest class,
  12. sufficient if but granted. It is enough
  13. to have looked once upon the unlovely realm.
  14. And once to have gone across the Stygian streams.”
  15. The gods assented, and the queen of Jove
  16. nodded consent with calm, approving face.
  17. The father said, “You well deserve the gift,
  18. both you who ask it, and the one for whom
  19. you ask it: what you most desire is yours,
  20. my daughter.” He decreed, and she rejoiced
  21. and thanked her parent. Borne by harnessed doves
  22. over and through the light air, she arrived
  23. safe on Laurentine shores: Numicius there
  24. winds through his tall reeds to the neighboring sea
  25. the waters of his stream: and there she willed
  26. Numicius should wash perfectly away
  27. from her Aeneas every part that might
  28. be subject unto death; and bear it far
  29. with quiet current into Neptune's realm.
  30. The horned Numicius satisfied the will
  31. of Venus; and with flowing waters washed
  32. from her Aeneas every mortal part,
  33. and sprinkled him, so that the essential part
  34. of immortality remained alone,
  35. and she anointed him, thus purified,
  36. with heavenly essence, and she touched his face
  37. with sweetest nectar and ambrosia mixt,
  38. thereby transforming him into a god.
  39. The throng of the Quirini later named
  40. the new god Indiges, and honored him.
  1. Under the scepter of Ascanius
  2. the Latin state, transferred, was Alban too.
  3. Silvius ruled after him. Latinus then,
  4. wearing the crown, brought back an older name.
  5. Illustrious Alba followed after him,
  6. Epytus next in time, and Capys next,
  7. then Capetus. And reigning after them
  8. King Tiberinus followed. He was drowned
  9. in waves of that Etrurian stream, to which
  10. he gave his name. His sons were Remulus
  11. and fierce Acrota—each in turn was king.
  12. The elder, Remulus, would imitate
  13. the lightning, and he perished by a flash
  14. of lightning. Then Acrota, not so rash,
  15. succeeded to his brother, and he left
  16. his scepter to the valiant Aventinus,
  17. hill-buried on the very mountain which
  18. he ruled upon and which received his name.
  19. And Proca ruled then—on the Palatine.
  20. Under this king, Pomona lived, and none
  21. of all the Latin hamadryads could
  22. attend her garden with more skill, and none
  23. was more attentive to the fruitful trees,
  24. because of them her name was given to her.
  25. She cared not for the forests or the streams,
  26. but loved the country and the boughs that bear
  27. delicious fruit. Her right hand never felt
  28. a javelin's weight, always she loved to hold
  29. a sharp curved pruning-knife with which she would
  30. at one time crop too largely growing shoots,
  31. or at another time reduce the branch
  32. that straggled; at another time she would
  33. engraft a sucker in divided bark,
  34. and so find nourishment for some young, strange
  35. nursling. She never suffered them to thirst,
  36. for she would water every winding thread
  37. of twisting roots with freshly flowing streams.
  38. All this was her delight, her chief pursuit;
  39. she never felt the least desire of love;
  40. but fearful of some rustic's violence,
  41. she had her orchard closed within a wall;
  42. and both forbade and fled the approach of males.
  43. What did not satyrs do to gain her love,
  44. a youthful crew expert at every dance?
  45. And also Pans their brows wreathed with the pine,
  46. Silenus too, more youthful than his years,
  47. and that god who is ever scaring thieves
  48. with pruning-hook or limb—what did they not
  49. to gain her love? And though Vertumnus did
  50. exceed them in his love, yet he was not
  51. more fortunate than they.
  52. How often disguised
  53. as a rough reaper he brought her barley ears—
  54. truly he seemed a reaper to the life!
  55. Often he came, his temples wreathed with hay,
  56. as if he had been tossing new mown grass.
  57. He often held a whip in his tough hand,
  58. you could have sworn he had a moment before
  59. unyoked his wearied oxen. When he had
  60. a pruning-knife, he seemed to rear fine fruit
  61. in orchard trees or in the well kept vines.
  62. When he came with a ladder, you would think
  63. he must be gathering fruit. Sometimes he was
  64. a soldier with a sword—a fisherman,
  65. the rod held in his hand.—In fact by means
  66. of many shapes he often had obtained
  67. access to her and joyed in seeing her beauty.
  68. At length he had his brows bound with a cap
  69. of color, and then leaning on a stick,
  70. with white hair round his temples, he assumed
  71. the shape of an old woman. Entering so
  72. the cultivated garden, he admired
  73. the fruit and said, “But you are so much lovelier!”
  74. And, while he praised her, gave some kisses too,
  75. such as no real beldame ever gave.
  76. The bent old creature then sat on the grass.
  77. Gazing at branches weighed down with their fruit
  78. of autumn. Opposite to them there was
  79. an elm-tree beautiful with shining grapes;
  80. and, after he had praised it with the vine
  81. embracing it, he said,
  82. “But only think,
  83. if this trunk stood unwedded to this vine,
  84. it would have nothing to attract our hearts
  85. beyond its leaves, and this delightful vine,
  86. united to the elm tree finds its rest;
  87. but, if not so joined to it, would fall down,
  88. prostrate upon the ground. And yet you find
  89. no warning in the example of this tree.
  90. You have avoided marriage, with no wish
  91. to be united—I must wish that you
  92. would change and soon desire it. Helen would
  93. not have so many suitors for her hand, nor she
  94. who caused the battles of the Lapithae,
  95. nor would the wife of timid, and not bold,
  96. Ulysses. Even now, while you avoid
  97. those who are courting you, and while you turn
  98. in your disgust, a thousand suitors want
  99. to marry you—the demigods and gods,
  100. and deities of Alba's mountain-tops.
  101. “But you, if you are wise, and wish to make
  102. a good match, listen patiently to me,
  103. an old, old woman (I love you much more
  104. than all of them, more than you dream or think).
  105. Despise all common persons, and choose now
  106. Vertumnus as the partner of your couch,
  107. and you may take me as a surety for him.
  108. He is not better known even to himself,
  109. than he is known to me. And he is not
  110. now wandering everywhere, from here to there
  111. throughout the world. He always will frequent
  112. the places near here; and he does not, like
  113. so many of your wooers, fall in love
  114. with her he happens to have seen the last.
  115. You are his first and last love, and to you
  116. alone will he devote his life. Besides
  117. all—he is young and has a natural gift
  118. of grace, so that he can most readily
  119. transform himself to any wanted shape,
  120. and will become whatever you may wish—
  121. even though you ask him things unseen before.
  122. “And only think, have you not the same tastes?
  123. Will he not be the first to welcome fruits
  124. which are your great delight? And does he not
  125. hold your gifts safely in his glad right hand?
  126. But now he does not long for any fruit
  127. plucked from the tree, and has no thought of herbs
  128. with pleasant juices that the garden gives;
  129. he cannot think of anything but you.
  130. Have pity on his passion, and believe
  131. that he who woos you is here and he pleads
  132. with my lips.
  133. “You should not forget to fear
  134. avenging deities, and the Idalian,
  135. who hate all cruel hearts, and also dread
  136. the fierce revenge of her of Rhamnus-Land.
  137. And that you may stand more in awe of them,
  138. (old age has given me opportunities
  139. of knowing many things) I will relate
  140. some happenings known in Cyprus, by which you
  141. may be persuaded and relent with ease.
  1. “Iphis, born of a humble family,
  2. had seen the famed Anaxarete, who
  3. was of the race of ancient Teucer.—He
  4. had seen her and felt fire inflame his bones.
  5. Struggling a long time, he could not subdue
  6. his passion by his reason, so he came
  7. a suppliant to her doors. And having now
  8. confessed his ardent passion to her nurse,
  9. besought her by the hopes reposed in her
  10. by the loved girl, not to give him a cold heart
  11. and at another time, with fair words given
  12. to each of many servants he besought
  13. their kindest interest with an anxious voice.
  14. He often gave them coaxing words engraved
  15. on tablets of soft wax; and sometimes he
  16. would fasten garlands, wet with dew of tears,
  17. upon the door-posts; and he often laid
  18. his tender side nightlong on the hard threshold,
  19. sadly reproaching the obdurate bolt.
  20. “Deafer than the deep sea that rises high
  21. when the rainy Constellation of the Kids
  22. is setting; harder than the iron which
  23. the fire of Noricum refines; more hard
  24. than rock which in its native state is fixed
  25. firm rooted; she despised and laughed at him,
  26. and, adding to her cruel deeds and pride,
  27. she boasted and deprived him of all hope.
  28. “Iphis, unable to endure such pain prolonged,
  29. spoke these, his final words, before her door:
  30. ‘Anaxarete, you have conquered me,
  31. and you shall have no more annoyances
  32. to bear from me. Be joyful and prepare
  33. your triumph, and invoke god Paean, crown
  34. yourself with shining laurel. You are now
  35. my conqueror, and I resigned will die.
  36. Woman of iron, rejoice in victory!
  37. “At least, you will commend me for one thing,
  38. one point in which I must please even you,
  39. and cause you to confess my right of praise.
  40. Remember that my star crossed love for you
  41. died only with the last breath of my life.
  42. And now in one short moment I shall be
  43. deprived a twofold light; and no report
  44. will come to you, no messenger of death.
  45. But doubt not, I will come to you so that
  46. I can be seen in person, and you may
  47. then satiate your cruel eyesight with
  48. my lifeless body. If, you gods above!
  49. You have some knowledge of our mortal ways
  50. remember me, for now my tongue can pray
  51. no longer. Let me be renowned in times
  52. far distant and give all those hours to Fame
  53. which you have taken from my life on earth.’
  54. “Then to the doorpost which he often had
  55. adorned with floral wreaths he lifted up
  56. his swimming eyes and both his pallid arms,
  57. and, when he had fastened over the capital
  58. a rope that held a dangling noose, he said,—
  59. “Are these the garlands that delight your heart?
  60. You cruel and unnatural woman?”—Then,
  61. thrust in his head, turning even then towards her,
  62. and hung a hapless weight with broken neck.
  63. “The door, struck by the motion of his feet
  64. as they were quivering, seemed to utter sounds
  65. of groaning, and, when it flew open, showed
  66. the sad sight. All the servants cried aloud,
  67. and after they had tried in vain to save him,
  68. carried him from there to his mother's house,
  69. (to her because his father was then dead).
  70. “She held him to her bosom and embraced
  71. the cold limbs of her dead child. After she
  72. had uttered words so natural to the grief
  73. of wretched mothers—after she had done
  74. what wretched mothers do at such sad times,
  75. she led a tearful funeral through the streets,
  76. the pale corpse following high upon the bier,
  77. on to a pyre laid in the central square.
  78. By chance, Anaxarete's house was near
  79. the way through which the mournful funeral
  80. was going with the corpse, and the sad sound
  81. of wailing reached the ears of that proud girl—
  82. hardhearted, and already goaded on
  83. by an avenging god. Moved by the sound,
  84. she said; “Let me observe their sniveling rites.”
  85. And she ascended to an upper room,
  86. provided with wide windows. Scarcely had
  87. she looked at Iphis, laid out on the bier,
  88. when her eyes stiffened, and she turned all white,
  89. as warm blood left her body. She tried then
  90. to turn back from the window, but she stood
  91. transfixed there. She then tried to turn her face
  92. away from that sad sight, but could not move;
  93. and by degrees the stone, which always had
  94. existed, petrified in her cold breast,
  95. and took possession of her heart and limbs.
  96. “This is not fiction, and that you may know,
  97. Salamis keeps that statue safe today,
  98. formed of the virgin and has also built
  99. a temple called, ‘Venus the watchful Goddess.’
  100. Warned by her fate, O sweet nymph, lay aside
  101. prolonged disdain, and cheerfully unite
  102. yourself to one who loves you. Then may frost
  103. of springtime never nip your fruit in bud,
  104. nor rude winds strike the blossom.”
  105. When the god,
  106. fitted for every shape, had said these words in vain,
  107. he laid the old woman's form aside and was
  108. again a youth. On her he seemed to blaze,
  109. as when the full light of the brilliant Sun,
  110. after it has dispelled opposing clouds,
  111. has shone forth with not one to intercept.
  112. He purposed violence, but there was then
  113. no need of force. The lovely nymph was charmed,
  114. was captivated by the god's bright form
  115. and felt a passion answering to his love.