Metamorphoses

Ovid

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

  1. High in the dome of Heaven, behold the bright
  2. Caduceus-Bearer soared on balanced wings;
  3. and far below him through a fruitful grove,
  4. devoted to Minerva's hallowed reign,
  5. some virgins bearing on their lovely heads,
  6. in wicker baskets wreathed and decked with flowers,
  7. their sacred offerings to the citadel
  8. of that chaste goddess. And the winged God,
  9. while circling in the clear unbounded skies,
  10. beheld that train of virgins, beautiful,
  11. as they were thence returning on their way.
  12. Not forward on a level line he flew,
  13. but wheeled in circles round. Lo, the swift kite
  14. swoops round the smoking entrails, while the priests
  15. enclose in guarded ranks their sacrifice:
  16. wary with fear, that swiftest of all birds,
  17. dares not to venture from his vantage height,
  18. but greedily hovers on his waving wings
  19. around his keen desire. So, the bright God
  20. circled those towers, Actaean, round and round,
  21. in mazey circles, greedy as the bird.
  22. As much as Lucifer outshines the stars
  23. that emulate the glory of his rays,
  24. as greatly as bright Phoebe pales thy light,
  25. O lustrous Lucifer! so far surpassed
  26. in beauty the fair maiden Herse, all
  27. those lovely virgins of that sacred train,
  28. departing joyous from Minerva's grove.
  29. The Son of Jove, astonished, while he wheeled
  30. on balanced pinions through the yielding air,
  31. burned hot; as oft from Balearic sling
  32. the leaden missile, hurled with sudden force,
  33. burns in a glowing heat beneath the clouds.
  34. Then sloped the god his course from airy height,
  35. and turned a different way; another way
  36. he went without disguise, in confidence
  37. of his celestial grace. But though he knew
  38. his face was beautiful, he combed his hair,
  39. and fixed his flowing raiment, that the fringe
  40. of radiant gold appeared. And in his hand
  41. he waved his long smooth wand, with which he gives
  42. the wakeful sleep or waketh ridded eyes.
  43. He proudly glanced upon his twinkling feet
  44. that sparkled with their scintillating wings.
  45. In a secluded part of that great fane,
  46. devoted to Minerva's hallowed rites,
  47. three chambers were adorned with tortoise shell
  48. and ivory and precious woods inlaid;
  49. and there, devoted to Minerva's praise,
  50. three well known sisters dwelt. Upon the right
  51. dwelt Pandrosos and over on the left
  52. Aglauros dwelt, and Herse occupied
  53. the room between those two.
  54. When Mercury
  55. drew near to them, Aglauros first espied
  56. the God, and ventured to enquire his name,
  57. and wherefore he was come. Then gracious spoke
  58. to her in answer the bright son of Jove;
  59. “Behold the god who carries through the air
  60. the mandates of almighty Jupiter!
  61. But I come hither not to waste my time
  62. in idle words, but rather to beseech
  63. thy kindness and good aid, that I may win
  64. the love of thy devoted sister Herse.”
  65. Aglauros, on the son of Jupiter,
  66. gazed with those eyes that only lately viewed
  67. the guarded secret of the yellow-haired
  68. Minerva, and demanded as her price
  69. gold of great weight; before he paid denied
  70. admittance of the house.
  71. Minerva turned,
  72. with orbs of stern displeasure, towards the maid
  73. Aglauros; and her bosom heaved with sighs
  74. so deeply laboured that her Aegis-shield
  75. was shaken on her valiant breast. For she
  76. remembered when Aglauros gave to view
  77. her charge, with impious hand, that monster form
  78. without a mother, maugre Nature's law,
  79. what time the god who dwells on Lemnos loved.—
  80. now to requite the god and sister; her
  81. to punish whose demand of gold was great;
  82. Minerva to the Cave of Envy sped.
  83. Dark, hideous with black gore, her dread abode
  84. is hidden in the deepest hollowed cave,
  85. in utmost limits where the genial sun
  86. may never shine, and where the breathing winds
  87. may never venture; dismal, bitter cold,
  88. untempered by the warmth of welcome fires,
  89. involved forever in abounding gloom.
  90. When the fair champion came to this abode
  91. she stood before its entrance, for she deemed
  92. it not a lawful thing to enter there:
  93. and she whose arm is mortal to her foes,
  94. struck the black door-posts with her pointed spear,
  95. and shook them to the center. Straight the doors
  96. flew open, and, behold, within was Envy
  97. ravening the flesh of vipers, self-begot,
  98. the nutriment of her depraved desires.—
  99. when the great goddess met her evil gaze
  100. she turned her eyes away. But Envy slow,
  101. in sluggish languor from the ground uprose,
  102. and left the scattered serpents half-devoured;
  103. then moving with a sullen pace approached.—
  104. and when she saw the gracious goddess, girt
  105. with beauty and resplendent in her arms,
  106. she groaned aloud and fetched up heavy sighs.
  107. Her face is pale, her body long and lean,
  108. her shifting eyes glance to the left and right,
  109. her snaggle teeth are covered with black rust,
  110. her hanging paps overflow with bitter gall,
  111. her slavered tongue drips venom to the ground;
  112. busy in schemes and watchful in dark snares
  113. sweet sleep is banished from her blood-shot eyes;
  114. her smiles are only seen when others weep;
  115. with sorrow she observes the fortunate,
  116. and pines away as she beholds their joy;
  117. her own existence is her punishment,
  118. and while tormenting she torments herself.
  119. Although Minerva held her in deep scorn
  120. she thus commanded her with winged words;
  121. “Instil thy poison in Aglauros, child
  122. of Cecrops; I command thee; do my will.”
  123. She spake; and spurning with her spear the ground
  124. departed; and the sad and furtive-eyed
  125. envy observed her in her glorious flight:
  126. she murmured at the goddess, great in arms:
  127. but waiting not she took in hand her staff,
  128. which bands of thorns encircled as a wreath,
  129. and veiled in midnight clouds departed thence.
  130. She blasted on her way the ripening fields;
  131. scorched the green meadows, starred with flowers,
  132. and breathed a pestilence throughout the land
  133. and the great cities. When her eyes beheld
  134. the glorious citadel of Athens, great
  135. in art and wealth, abode of joyful peace,
  136. she hardly could refrain from shedding tears,
  137. that nothing might be witnessed worthy tears.
  138. She sought the chamber where Aglauros slept,
  139. and hastened to obey the God's behest.
  140. She touched the maiden's bosom with her hands,
  141. foul with corrupting stains, and pierced her heart
  142. with jagged thorns, and breathed upon her face
  143. a noxious venom; and distilled through all
  144. the marrow of her bones, and in her lungs,
  145. a poison blacker than the ooze of pitch.
  146. And lest the canker of her poisoned soul
  147. might spread unchecked throughout increasing space,
  148. she caused a vision of her sister's form
  149. to rise before her, happy with the God
  150. who shone in his celestial beauty. All
  151. appeared more beautiful than real life.—
  152. when the most wretched daughter of Cecrops
  153. had seen the vision secret torment seized
  154. on all her vitals; and she groaned aloud,
  155. tormented by her frenzy day and night.
  156. A slow consumption wasted her away,
  157. as ice is melted by the slant sunbeam,
  158. when the cool clouds are flitting in the sky.
  159. If she but thought of Herse's happiness
  160. she burned, as thorny bushes are consumed
  161. with smoldering embers under steaming stems.
  162. She could not bear to see her sister's joy,
  163. and longed for death, an end of misery;
  164. or schemed to end the torture of her mind
  165. by telling all she knew in shameful words,
  166. whispered to her austere and upright sire.
  167. But after many agonizing hours,
  168. she sat before the threshold of their home
  169. to intercept the God, who as he neared
  170. spoke softly in smooth blandishment.
  171. “Enough,” she said, “I will not move from here
  172. until thou hast departed from my sight.”
  173. “Let us adhere to that which was agreed.”
  174. Rejoined the graceful-formed Cyllenian God,
  175. who as he spoke thrust open with a touch
  176. of his compelling wand the carved door.
  177. But when she made an effort to arise,
  178. her thighs felt heavy, rigid and benumbed;
  179. and as she struggled to arise her knees
  180. were stiffened? and her nails turned pale and cold;
  181. her veins grew pallid as the blood congealed.
  182. And even as the dreaded cancer spreads
  183. through all the body, adding to its taint
  184. the flesh uninjured; so, a deadly chill
  185. entered by slow degrees her breast, and stopped
  186. her breathing, and the passages of life.
  187. She did not try to speak, but had she made
  188. an effort to complain there was not left
  189. a passage for her voice. Her neck was changed
  190. to rigid stone, her countenance felt hard;
  191. she sat a bloodless statue, but of stone
  192. not marble-white—her mind had stained it black.
  1. So from the land of Pallas went the God,
  2. his great revenge accomplished on the head
  3. of impious Aglauros; and he soared
  4. on waving wings into the opened skies:
  5. and there his father called him to his side,
  6. and said,—with words to hide his passion;—Son,—
  7. thou faithful minister of my commands.—
  8. let naught delay thee—swiftly take the way,
  9. accustomed, to the land of Sidon (which
  10. adores thy mother's star upon the left)
  11. when there, drive over to the sounding shore
  12. that royal herd, which far away is fed
  13. on mountain grass.—
  14. he spoke, and instantly
  15. the herd was driven from the mountain side;
  16. then headed for the shore, as Jove desired,—
  17. to where the great king's daughter often went
  18. in play, attended by the maids of Tyre.—
  19. can love abide the majesty of kings?
  20. Love cannot always dwell upon a throne.—
  21. Jove laid aside his glorious dignity,
  22. for he assumed the semblance of a bull
  23. and mingled with the bullocks in the groves,
  24. his colour white as virgin snow, untrod,
  25. unmelted by the watery Southern Wind.
  26. His neck was thick with muscles, dewlaps hung
  27. between his shoulders; and his polished horns,
  28. so small and beautifully set, appeared
  29. the artifice of man; fashioned as fair
  30. and more transparent than a lucent gem.
  31. His forehead was not lowered for attack,
  32. nor was there fury in his open eyes;
  33. the love of peace was in his countenance.
  34. When she beheld his beauty and mild eyes,
  35. the daughter of Agenor was amazed;
  36. but, daring not to touch him, stood apart
  37. until her virgin fears were quieted;
  38. then, near him, fragrant flowers in her hand
  39. she offered,—tempting, to his gentle mouth:
  40. and then the loving god in his great joy
  41. kissed her sweet hands, and could not wait her will.
  42. Jove then began to frisk upon the grass,
  43. or laid his snow-white side on the smooth sand,
  44. yellow and golden. As her courage grew
  45. he gave his breast one moment for caress,
  46. or bent his head for garlands newly made,
  47. wreathed for his polished horns.
  48. The royal maid,
  49. unwitting what she did, at length sat down
  50. upon the bull's broad back. Then by degrees
  51. the god moved from the land and from the shore,
  52. and placed his feet, that seemed but shining hoofs,
  53. in shallow water by the sandy merge;
  54. and not a moment resting bore her thence,
  55. across the surface of the Middle Sea,
  56. while she affrighted gazed upon the shore—
  57. so fast receding. And she held his horn
  58. with her right hand, and, steadied by the left,
  59. held on his ample back—and in the breeze
  60. her waving garments fluttered as they went.
  1. Now Jupiter had not revealed himself,
  2. nor laid aside the semblance of a bull,
  3. until they stood upon the plains of Crete.
  4. But not aware of this, her father bade
  5. her brother Cadmus search through all the world,
  6. until he found his sister, and proclaimed
  7. him doomed to exile if he found her not;—
  8. thus was he good and wicked in one deed.
  9. When he had vainly wandered over the earth
  10. (for who can fathom the deceits of Jove?)
  11. Cadmus, the son of King Agenor, shunned
  12. his country and his father's mighty wrath.
  13. But he consulted the famed oracles
  14. of Phoebus, and enquired of them what land
  15. might offer him a refuge and a home.
  16. And Phoebus answered him; “When on the plains
  17. a heifer, that has never known the yoke,
  18. shall cross thy path go thou thy way with her,
  19. and follow where she leads; and when she lies,
  20. to rest herself upon the meadow green,
  21. there shalt thou stop, as it will be a sign
  22. for thee to build upon that plain the walls
  23. of a great city: and its name shall be
  24. the City of Boeotia.”
  25. Cadmus turned;
  26. but hardly had descended from the cave,
  27. Castalian, ere he saw a heifer go
  28. unguarded, gentle-paced, without the scars
  29. of labour on her neck. He followed close
  30. upon her steps (and silently adored
  31. celestial Phoebus, author of his way)
  32. till over the channel that Cephissus wears
  33. he forded to the fields of Panope
  34. and even over to Boeotia.—
  35. there stood the slow-paced heifer, and she raised
  36. her forehead, broad with shapely horns, towards Heaven;
  37. and as she filled the air with lowing, stretched
  38. her side upon the tender grass, and turned
  39. her gaze on him who followed in her path.
  40. Cadmus gave thanks and kissed the foreign soil,
  41. and offered salutation to the fields
  42. and unexplored hills. Then he prepared
  43. to make large sacrifice to Jupiter,
  44. and ordered slaves to seek the living springs
  45. whose waters in libation might be poured.
  46. There was an ancient grove, whose branching trees
  47. had never known the desecrating ax,
  48. where hidden in the undergrowth a cave,
  49. with oziers bending round its low-formed arch,
  50. was hollowed in the jutting rocks—deep-found
  51. in the dark center of that hallowed grove—
  52. beneath its arched roof a beauteous stream
  53. of water welled serene. Its gloom concealed
  54. a dragon, sacred to the war-like Mars;
  55. crested and gorgeous with radescent scales,
  56. and eyes that sparkled as the glow of coals.
  57. A deadly venom had puffed up his bulk,
  58. and from his jaws he darted forth three tongues,
  59. and in a triple row his sharp teeth stood.
  60. Now those who ventured of the Tyrian race,
  61. misfortuned followers of Cadmus, took
  62. the path that led them to this grove; and when
  63. they cast down-splashing in the springs an urn,
  64. the hidden dragon stretched his azure head
  65. out from the cavern's gloom, and vented forth
  66. terrific hissings. Horrified they dropped
  67. their urns. A sudden trembling shook their knees;
  68. and their life-blood was ice within their veins.
  69. The dragon wreathed his scales in rolling knots,
  70. and with a spring, entwisted in great folds,
  71. reared up his bulk beyond the middle rings,
  72. high in the air from whence was given his gaze
  73. the extreme confines of the grove below.
  74. A size prodigious, his enormous bulk,
  75. if seen extended where was naught to hide,
  76. would rival in its length the Serpent's folds,
  77. involved betwixt the planes of the Twin Bears.
  78. The terrified Phoenicians, whether armed
  79. for conflict, or in flight precipitate,
  80. or whether held incapable from fear,
  81. he seized with sudden rage; stung them to death,
  82. or crushed them in the grasp of crushing folds,
  83. or blasted with the poison of his breath.
  84. High in the Heavens the sun small shadow made
  85. when Cadmus, wondering what detained his men,
  86. prepared to follow them. Clothed in a skin
  87. torn from a lion, he was armed, complete,
  88. with lance of glittering steel; and with a dart:
  89. but passing these he had a dauntless soul.
  90. When he explored the grove and there beheld
  91. the lifeless bodies, and above them stretched
  92. the vast victorious dragon licking up
  93. the blood that issued from their ghastly wounds;
  94. his red tongues dripping gore; then Cadmus filled
  95. with rage and grief; “Behold, my faithful ones!
  96. I will avenge your deaths or I will share it!”
  97. He spoke; and lifted up a mill-stone huge,
  98. in his right hand, and having poised it, hurled
  99. with a tremendous effort dealing such
  100. a blow would crush the strongest builded walls;
  101. yet neither did the dragon flinch the shock
  102. nor was he wounded, for his armour-scales,
  103. fixed in his hard and swarthy hide, repelled
  104. the dreadful impact. Not the javelin thus,
  105. so surely by his armoured skin was foiled,
  106. for through the middle segment of his spine
  107. the steel point pierced, and sank beneath the flesh,
  108. deep in his entrails. Writhing in great pain
  109. he turned his head upon his bleeding back,
  110. twisting the shaft, with force prodigious shook
  111. it back and forth, and wrenched it from the wound;
  112. with difficulty wrenched it. But the steel
  113. remained securely fastened in his bones.
  114. Such agony but made increase of rage:
  115. his throat was swollen with great knotted veins;
  116. a white froth gathered on his poisonous jaws;
  117. the earth resounded with his rasping scales;
  118. he breathed upon the grass a pestilence,
  119. steaming mephitic from his Stygian mouth.
  120. His body writhes up in tremendous gyres;
  121. his folds, now straighter than a beam, untwist;
  122. he rushes forward on his vengeful foe,
  123. his great breast crushing the deep-rooted trees.
  124. Small space gave Cadmus to the dragon's rage,
  125. for by the lion's spoil he stood the shock,
  126. and thrusting in his adversary's jaws
  127. the trusted lance gave check his mad career.
  128. Wild in his rage the dragon bit the steel
  129. and fixed his teeth on the keen-biting point:
  130. out from his poisoned palate streams of gore
  131. spouted and stained the green with sanguine spray.
  132. Yet slight the wound for he recoiled in time,
  133. and drew his wounded body from the spear;
  134. by shrinking from the sharp steel saved his throat
  135. a mortal wound. But Cadmus as he pressed
  136. the spear-point deeper in the serpent's throat,
  137. pursued him till an oak-tree barred the way;
  138. to this he fixed the dragon through the neck:
  139. the stout trunk bending with the monster's weight,
  140. groaned at the lashing of his serpent tail.
  1. While the brave victor gazed upon the bulk
  2. enormous of his vanquished foe, a voice
  3. was heard—from whence was difficult to know,
  4. but surely heard—“Son of Agenor, why
  5. art thou here standing by this carcase-worm,
  6. for others shall behold thy body changed
  7. into a serpent?” Terrified, amazed,
  8. he lost his colour and his self-control;
  9. his hair stood upright from the dreadful fright.
  10. But lo, the hero's watchful Deity,
  11. Minerva, from the upper realms of air
  12. appeared before him. She commanded him
  13. to sow the dragon's teeth in mellowed soil,
  14. from which might spring another race of men.
  15. And he obeyed: and as he plowed the land,
  16. took care to scatter in the furrowed soil
  17. the dragon's teeth; a seed to raise up man.
  18. 'Tis marvelous but true, when this was done
  19. the clods began to move. A spear-point first
  20. appeared above the furrows, followed next
  21. by helmet-covered heads, nodding their cones;
  22. their shoulders, breasts and arms weighted with spears;
  23. and largely grew the shielded crop of men.—
  24. so is it in the joyful theaters
  25. when the gay curtains, rolling from the floor,
  26. are upward drawn until the scene is shown,—
  27. it seems as if the figures rise to view:
  28. first we behold their faces, then we see
  29. their bodies, and their forms by slow degrees
  30. appear before us on the painted cloth.
  31. Cadmus, affrighted by this host, prepared
  32. to arm for his defence; but one of those
  33. from earth created cried; “Arm not! Away
  34. from civil wars!” And with his trenchant sword
  35. he smote an earth-born brother, hand to hand;
  36. even as the vanquished so the victor fell,
  37. pierced by a dart some distant brother hurled;
  38. and likewise he who cast that dart was slain:
  39. both breathing forth their lives upon the air
  40. so briefly theirs, expired together. All
  41. as if demented leaped in sudden rage,
  42. each on the other, dealing mutual wounds.
  43. So, having lived the space allotted them,
  44. the youthful warriors perished as they smote
  45. the earth (their blood-stained mother) with their breasts:
  46. and only five of all the troop remained;
  47. of whom Echion, by Minerva warned,
  48. called on his brothers to give up the fight,
  49. and cast his arms away in pledge of faith.—
  50. when Cadmus, exiled from Sidonia's gates,
  51. builded the city by Apollo named,
  52. these five were trusted comrades in his toil.
  53. Now Thebes is founded, who can deem thy days
  54. unhappy in shine exile, Cadmus? Thou,
  55. the son-in-law of Mars and Venus; thou,
  56. whose glorious wife has borne to shine embrace
  57. daughters and sons? And thy grandchildren join
  58. around thee, almost grown to man's estate.—
  59. nor should we say, “He leads a happy life,”
  60. Till after death the funeral rites are paid.
  1. Thy grandson, Cadmus, was the first to cast
  2. thy dear felicity in sorrow's gloom.
  3. Oh, it was pitiful to witness him,
  4. his horns outbranching from his forehead, chased
  5. by dogs that panted for their master's blood!
  6. If thou shouldst well inquire it will be shown
  7. his sorrow was the crime of Fortune—not
  8. his guilt—for who maintains mistakes are crimes?
  9. Upon a mountain stained with slaughtered game,
  10. the young Hyantian stood. Already day,
  11. increasing to meridian, made decrease
  12. the flitting shadows, and the hot sun shone
  13. betwixt extremes in equal distance. Such
  14. the hour, when speaking to his fellow friends,
  15. the while they wandered by those lonely haunts,
  16. actaeon of Hyantis kindly thus;
  17. “Our nets and steel are stained with slaughtered game,
  18. the day has filled its complement of sport;
  19. now, when Aurora in her saffron car
  20. brings back the light of day, we may again
  21. repair to haunts of sport. Now Phoebus hangs
  22. in middle sky, cleaving the fields with heat.—
  23. enough of toil; take down the knotted nets.”—
  24. all did as he commanded; and they sought
  25. their needed rest.
  26. There is a valley called
  27. Gargaphia; sacred to Diana, dense
  28. with pine trees and the pointed cypress, where,
  29. deep in the woods that fringed the valley's edge,
  30. was hollowed in frail sandstone and the soft
  31. white pumice of the hills an arch, so true
  32. it seemed the art of man; for Nature's touch
  33. ingenious had so fairly wrought the stone,
  34. making the entrance of a grotto cool.
  35. Upon the right a limpid fountain ran,
  36. and babbled, as its lucid channel spread
  37. into a clear pool edged with tender grass.
  38. Here, when a-wearied with exciting sport,
  39. the Sylvan goddess loved to come and bathe
  40. her virgin beauty in the crystal pool.
  41. After Diana entered with her nymphs,
  42. she gave her javelin, quiver and her bow
  43. to one accustomed to the care of arms;
  44. she gave her mantle to another nymph
  45. who stood near by her as she took it off;
  46. two others loosed the sandals from her feet;
  47. but Crocale, the daughter of Ismenus,
  48. more skillful than her sisters, gathered up
  49. the goddess' scattered tresses in a knot;—
  50. her own were loosely wantoned on the breeze.
  51. Then in their ample urns dipt up the wave
  52. and poured it forth, the cloud-nymph Nephele,
  53. the nymph of crystal pools called Hyale,
  54. the rain-drop Rhanis, Psecas of the dews,
  55. and Phyale the guardian of their urns.
  56. And while they bathed Diana in their streams,
  57. Actaeon, wandering through the unknown woods,
  58. entered the precincts of that sacred grove;
  59. with steps uncertain wandered he as fate
  60. directed, for his sport must wait till morn.—
  61. soon as he entered where the clear springs welled
  62. or trickled from the grotto's walls, the nymphs,
  63. now ready for the bath, beheld the man,
  64. smote on their breasts, and made the woods resound,
  65. suddenly shrieking. Quickly gathered they
  66. to shield Diana with their naked forms, but she
  67. stood head and shoulders taller than her guards.—
  68. as clouds bright-tinted by the slanting sun,
  69. or purple-dyed Aurora, so appeared
  70. Diana's countenance when she was seen.
  71. Oh, how she wished her arrows were at hand!
  72. But only having water, this she took
  73. and dashed it on his manly countenance,
  74. and sprinkled with the avenging stream his hair,
  75. and said these words, presage of future woe;
  76. “Go tell it, if your tongue can tell the tale,
  77. your bold eyes saw me stripped of all my robes.”
  78. No more she threatened, but she fixed the horns
  79. of a great stag firm on his sprinkled brows;
  80. she lengthened out his neck; she made his ears
  81. sharp at the top; she changed his hands and feet;
  82. made long legs of his arms, and covered him
  83. with dappled hair—his courage turned to fear.
  84. The brave son of Autonoe took to flight,
  85. and marveled that he sped so swiftly on.—
  86. he saw his horns reflected in a stream
  87. and would have said, “Ah, wretched me!” but now
  88. he had no voice, and he could only groan:
  89. large tears ran trickling down his face, transformed
  90. in every feature.—Yet, as clear remained
  91. his understanding, and he wondered what
  92. he should attempt to do: should he return
  93. to his ancestral palace, or plunge deep
  94. in vast vacuities of forest wilds?
  95. Fear made him hesitate to trust the woods,
  96. and shame deterred him from his homeward way.
  97. While doubting thus his dogs espied him there:
  98. first Blackfoot and the sharp nosed Tracer raised
  99. the signal: Tracer of the Gnossian breed,
  100. and Blackfoot of the Spartan: swift as wind
  101. the others followed. Glutton, Quicksight, Surefoot,
  102. three dogs of Arcady; then valiant Killbuck,
  103. Tempest, fierce Hunter, and the rapid Wingfoot;
  104. sharp-scented Chaser, and Woodranger wounded
  105. so lately by a wild boar; savage Wildwood,
  106. the wolf-begot with Shepherdess the cow-dog;
  107. and ravenous Harpy followed by her twin whelps;
  108. and thin-girt Ladon chosen from Sicyonia;
  109. racer and Barker, brindled Spot and Tiger;
  110. sturdy old Stout and white haired Blanche and black Smut
  111. lusty big Lacon, trusty Storm and Quickfoot;
  112. active young Wolfet and her Cyprian brother
  113. black headed Snap, blazed with a patch of white hair
  114. from forehead to his muzzle; swarthy Blackcoat
  115. and shaggy Bristle, Towser and Wildtooth,
  116. his sire of Dicte and his dam of Lacon;
  117. and yelping Babbler: these and others, more
  118. than patience leads us to recount or name.
  119. All eager for their prey the pack surmount
  120. rocks, cliffs and crags, precipitous—where paths
  121. are steep, where roads are none. He flies by routes
  122. so oft pursued but now, alas, his flight
  123. is from his own!—He would have cried, “Behold
  124. your master!—It is I—Actaeon!” Words
  125. refused his will. The yelping pack pressed on.
  126. First Blackmane seized and tore his master's back,
  127. Savage the next, then Rover's teeth were clinched
  128. deep in his shoulder.—These, though tardy out,
  129. cut through a by-path and arriving first
  130. clung to their master till the pack came up.
  131. The whole pack fastened on their master's flesh
  132. till place was none for others. Groaning he
  133. made frightful sounds that not the human voice
  134. could utter nor the stag; and filled the hills
  135. with dismal moans; and as a suppliant fell
  136. down to the ground upon his trembling knees;
  137. and turned his stricken eyes on his own dogs,
  138. entreating them to spare him from their fangs.
  139. But his companions, witless of his plight,
  140. urged on the swift pack with their hunting cries.
  141. They sought Actaeon and they vainly called,
  142. “Actaeon! Hi! Actaeon!” just as though
  143. he was away from them. Each time they called
  144. he turned his head. And when they chided him,
  145. whose indolence denied the joys of sport,
  146. how much he wished an indolent desire
  147. had haply held him from his ravenous pack.
  148. Oh, how much;better 'tis to see the hunt,
  149. and the fierce dogs, than feel their savage deeds!
  150. They gathered round him, and they fixed their snouts
  151. deep in his flesh: tore him to pieces, he
  152. whose features only as a stag appeared.—
  153. 'Tis said Diana's fury raged with none
  154. abatement till the torn flesh ceased to live.
  1. Hapless Actaeon's end in various ways
  2. was now regarded; some deplored his doom,
  3. but others praised Diana's chastity;
  4. and all gave many reasons. But the spouse
  5. of Jove, alone remaining silent, gave
  6. nor praise nor blame. Whenever calamity
  7. befell the race of Cadmus she rejoiced,
  8. in secret, for she visited her rage
  9. on all Europa's kindred.
  10. Now a fresh
  11. occasion has been added to her grief,
  12. and wild with jealousy of Semele,
  13. her tongue as ever ready to her rage,
  14. lets loose a torrent of abuse;
  15. “Away!
  16. Away with words! Why should I speak of it?
  17. Let me attack her! Let me spoil that jade!
  18. Am I not Juno the supreme of Heaven?
  19. Queen of the flashing scepter? Am I not
  20. sister and wife of Jove omnipotent?
  21. She even wishes to be known by him
  22. a mother of a Deity, a joy
  23. almost denied to me! Great confidence
  24. has she in her great beauty—nevertheless,
  25. I shall so weave the web the bolt of Jove
  26. would fail to save her.—Let the Gods deny
  27. that I am Saturn's daughter, if her shade
  28. descend not stricken to the Stygian wave.”
  29. She rose up quickly from her shining throne,
  30. and hidden in a cloud of fiery hue
  31. descended to the home of Semele;
  32. and while encompassed by the cloud, transformed
  33. her whole appearance as to counterfeit
  34. old Beroe, an Epidaurian nurse,
  35. who tended Semele.
  36. Her tresses changed
  37. to grey, her smooth skin wrinkled and her step
  38. grown feeble as she moved with trembling limbs;—
  39. her voice was quavering as an ancient dame's,
  40. as Juno, thus disguised, began to talk
  41. to Semele. When presently the name
  42. of Jove was mentioned—artful Juno thus;
  43. (doubtful that Jupiter could be her love)—
  44. “When Jove appears to pledge his love to you,
  45. implore him to assume his majesty
  46. and all his glory, even as he does
  47. in presence of his stately Juno—Yea,
  48. implore him to caress you as a God.”
  49. With artful words as these the goddess worked
  50. upon the trusting mind of Semele,
  51. daughter of Cadmus, till she begged of Jove
  52. a boon, that only hastened her sad death;
  53. for Jove not knowing her design replied,
  54. “Whatever thy wish, it shall not be denied,
  55. and that thy heart shall suffer no distrust,
  56. I pledge me by that Deity, the Waves
  57. of the deep Stygian Lake,—oath of the Gods.”
  58. All overjoyed at her misfortune, proud
  59. that she prevailed, and pleased that she secured
  60. of him a promise, that could only cause
  61. her own disaster, Semele addressed
  62. almighty Jove; “Come unto me in all
  63. the splendour of thy glory, as thy might
  64. is shown to Juno, goddess of the skies.”
  65. Fain would he stifle her disastrous tongue;
  66. before he knew her quest the words were said;
  67. and, knowing that his greatest oath was pledged,
  68. he sadly mounted to the lofty skies,
  69. and by his potent nod assembled there
  70. the deep clouds: and the rain began to pour,
  71. and thunder-bolts resounded.
  72. But he strove
  73. to mitigate his power, and armed him not
  74. with flames overwhelming as had put to flight
  75. his hundred-handed foe Typhoeus—flames
  76. too dreadful. Other thunder-bolts he took,
  77. forged by the Cyclops of a milder heat,
  78. with which insignia of his majesty,
  79. sad and reluctant, he appeared to her.—
  80. her mortal form could not endure the shock
  81. and she was burned to ashes in his sight.
  82. An unformed babe was rescued from her side,
  83. and, nurtured in the thigh of Jupiter,
  84. completed Nature's time until his birth.
  85. Ino, his aunt, in secret nursed the boy
  86. and cradled him. And him Nyseian nymphs
  87. concealed in caves and fed with needful milk.
  1. While these events according to the laws
  2. of destiny occurred, and while the child,
  3. the twice-born Bacchus, in his cradle lay,
  4. 'Tis told that Jupiter, a careless hour,
  5. indulged too freely in the nectar cup;
  6. and having laid aside all weighty cares,
  7. jested with Juno as she idled by.
  8. Freely the god began; “Who doubts the truth?
  9. The female's pleasure is a great delight,
  10. much greater than the pleasure of a male.”
  11. Juno denied it; wherefore 'twas agreed
  12. to ask Tiresias to declare the truth,
  13. than whom none knew both male and female joys:
  14. for wandering in a green wood he had seen
  15. two serpents coupling; and he took his staff
  16. and sharply struck them, till they broke and fled.
  17. 'Tis marvelous, that instant he became
  18. a woman from a man, and so remained
  19. while seven autumns passed. When eight were told,
  20. again he saw them in their former plight,
  21. and thus he spoke; “Since such a power was wrought,
  22. by one stroke of a staff my sex was changed—
  23. again I strike!” And even as he struck
  24. the same two snakes, his former sex returned;
  25. his manhood was restored.—
  26. as both agreed
  27. to choose him umpire of the sportive strife,
  28. he gave decision in support of Jove;
  29. from this the disappointment Juno felt
  30. surpassed all reason, and enraged, decreed
  31. eternal night should seal Tiresias' eyes.—
  32. immortal Deities may never turn
  33. decrees and deeds of other Gods to naught,
  34. but Jove, to recompense his loss of sight,
  35. endowed him with the gift of prophecy.
  1. Tiresias' fame of prophecy was spread
  2. through all the cities of Aonia,
  3. for his unerring answers unto all
  4. who listened to his words. And first of those
  5. that harkened to his fateful prophecies,
  6. a lovely Nymph, named Liriope, came
  7. with her dear son, who then fifteen, might seem
  8. a man or boy—he who was born to her
  9. upon the green merge of Cephissus' stream—
  10. that mighty River-God whom she declared
  11. the father of her boy.—
  12. she questioned him.
  13. Imploring him to tell her if her son,
  14. unequalled for his beauty, whom she called
  15. Narcissus, might attain a ripe old age.
  16. To which the blind seer answered in these words,
  17. “If he but fail to recognize himself,
  18. a long life he may have, beneath the sun,”—
  19. so, frivolous the prophet's words appeared;
  20. and yet the event, the manner of his death,
  21. the strange delusion of his frenzied love, confirmed it.
  22. Three times five years so were passed.
  23. Another five-years, and the lad might seem
  24. a young man or a boy. And many a youth,
  25. and many a damsel sought to gain his love;
  26. but such his mood and spirit and his pride,
  27. none gained his favour.
  28. Once a noisy Nymph,
  29. (who never held her tongue when others spoke,
  30. who never spoke till others had begun)
  31. mocking Echo, spied him as he drove,
  32. in his delusive nets, some timid stags.—
  33. for Echo was a Nymph, in olden time,—
  34. and, more than vapid sound,—possessed a form:
  35. and she was then deprived the use of speech,
  36. except to babble and repeat the words,
  37. once spoken, over and over.
  38. Juno confused
  39. her silly tongue, because she often held
  40. that glorious goddess with her endless tales,
  41. till many a hapless Nymph, from Jove's embrace,
  42. had made escape adown a mountain. But
  43. for this, the goddess might have caught them. Thus
  44. the glorious Juno, when she knew her guile;
  45. “Your tongue, so freely wagged at my expense,
  46. shall be of little use; your endless voice,
  47. much shorter than your tongue.” At once the Nymph
  48. was stricken as the goddess had decreed;—
  49. and, ever since, she only mocks the sounds
  50. of others' voices, or, perchance, returns
  51. their final words.
  52. One day, when she observed
  53. Narcissus wandering in the pathless woods,
  54. she loved him and she followed him, with soft
  55. and stealthy tread.—The more she followed him
  56. the hotter did she burn, as when the flame
  57. flares upward from the sulphur on the torch.
  58. Oh, how she longed to make her passion known!
  59. To plead in soft entreaty! to implore his love!
  60. But now, till others have begun, a mute
  61. of Nature she must be. She cannot choose
  62. but wait the moment when his voice may give
  63. to her an answer.
  64. Presently the youth,
  65. by chance divided from his trusted friends,
  66. cries loudly, “Who is here?” and Echo, “Here!”
  67. Replies. Amazed, he casts his eyes around,
  68. and calls with louder voice, “Come here!” “Come here!”
  69. She calls the youth who calls.—He turns to see
  70. who calls him and, beholding naught exclaims,
  71. “Avoid me not!” “Avoid me not!” returns.
  72. He tries again, again, and is deceived
  73. by this alternate voice, and calls aloud;
  74. “Oh let us come together!” Echo cries,
  75. “Oh let us come together!” Never sound
  76. seemed sweeter to the Nymph, and from the woods
  77. she hastens in accordance with her words,
  78. and strives to wind her arms around his neck.
  79. He flies from her and as he leaves her says,
  80. “Take off your hands! you shall not fold your arms
  81. around me. Better death than such a one
  82. should ever caress me!” Naught she answers save,
  83. “Caress me!”
  84. Thus rejected she lies hid
  85. in the deep woods, hiding her blushing face
  86. with the green leaves; and ever after lives
  87. concealed in lonely caverns in the hills.
  88. But her great love increases with neglect;
  89. her miserable body wastes away,
  90. wakeful with sorrows; leanness shrivels up
  91. her skin, and all her lovely features melt,
  92. as if dissolved upon the wafting winds—
  93. nothing remains except her bones and voice—
  94. her voice continues, in the wilderness;
  95. her bones have turned to stone. She lies concealed
  96. in the wild woods, nor is she ever seen
  97. on lonely mountain range; for, though we hear
  98. her calling in the hills, 'tis but a voice,
  99. a voice that lives, that lives among the hills.
  100. Thus he deceived the Nymph and many more,
  101. sprung from the mountains or the sparkling waves;
  102. and thus he slighted many an amorous youth.—
  103. and therefore, some one whom he once despised,
  104. lifting his hands to Heaven, implored the Gods,
  105. “If he should love deny him what he loves!”
  106. and as the prayer was uttered it was heard
  107. by Nemesis, who granted her assent.
  108. There was a fountain silver-clear and bright,
  109. which neither shepherds nor the wild she-goats,
  110. that range the hills, nor any cattle's mouth
  111. had touched—its waters were unsullied—birds
  112. disturbed it not; nor animals, nor boughs
  113. that fall so often from the trees. Around
  114. sweet grasses nourished by the stream grew; trees
  115. that shaded from the sun let balmy airs
  116. temper its waters. Here Narcissus, tired
  117. of hunting and the heated noon, lay down,
  118. attracted by the peaceful solitudes
  119. and by the glassy spring. There as he stooped
  120. to quench his thirst another thirst increased.
  121. While he is drinking he beholds himself
  122. reflected in the mirrored pool—and loves;
  123. loves an imagined body which contains
  124. no substance, for he deems the mirrored shade
  125. a thing of life to love. He cannot move,
  126. for so he marvels at himself, and lies
  127. with countenance unchanged, as if indeed
  128. a statue carved of Parian marble. Long,
  129. supine upon the bank, his gaze is fixed
  130. on his own eyes, twin stars; his fingers shaped
  131. as Bacchus might desire, his flowing hair
  132. as glorious as Apollo's, and his cheeks
  133. youthful and smooth; his ivory neck, his mouth
  134. dreaming in sweetness, his complexion fair
  135. and blushing as the rose in snow-drift white.
  136. All that is lovely in himself he loves,
  137. and in his witless way he wants himself:—
  138. he who approves is equally approved;
  139. he seeks, is sought, he burns and he is burnt.
  140. And how he kisses the deceitful fount;
  141. and how he thrusts his arms to catch the neck
  142. that's pictured in the middle of the stream!
  143. Yet never may he wreathe his arms around
  144. that image of himself. He knows not what
  145. he there beholds, but what he sees inflames
  146. his longing, and the error that deceives
  147. allures his eyes. But why, O foolish boy,
  148. so vainly catching at this flitting form?
  149. The cheat that you are seeking has no place.
  150. Avert your gaze and you will lose your love,
  151. for this that holds your eyes is nothing save
  152. the image of yourself reflected back to you.
  153. It comes and waits with you; it has no life;
  154. it will depart if you will only go.
  1. Nor food nor rest can draw him thence—outstretched
  2. upon the overshadowed green, his eyes
  3. fixed on the mirrored image never may know
  4. their longings satisfied, and by their sight
  5. he is himself undone. Raising himself
  6. a moment, he extends his arms around,
  7. and, beckoning to the murmuring forest; “Oh,
  8. ye aisled wood was ever man in love
  9. more fatally than I? Your silent paths
  10. have sheltered many a one whose love was told,
  11. and ye have heard their voices. Ages vast
  12. have rolled away since your forgotten birth,
  13. but who is he through all those weary years
  14. that ever pined away as I? Alas,
  15. this fatal image wins my love, as I
  16. behold it. But I cannot press my arms
  17. around the form I see, the form that gives
  18. me joy. What strange mistake has intervened
  19. betwixt us and our love? It grieves me more
  20. that neither lands nor seas nor mountains, no,
  21. nor walls with closed gates deny our loves,
  22. but only a little water keeps us far
  23. asunder. Surely he desires my love
  24. and my embraces, for as oft I strive
  25. to kiss him, bending to the limpid stream
  26. my lips, so often does he hold his face
  27. fondly to me, and vainly struggles up.
  28. It seems that I could touch him. 'Tis a strange
  29. delusion that is keeping us apart.
  30. “Whoever thou art, Come up! Deceive me not!
  31. Oh, whither when I fain pursue art thou?
  32. Ah, surely I am young and fair, the Nymphs
  33. have loved me; and when I behold thy smiles
  34. I cannot tell thee what sweet hopes arise.
  35. When I extend my loving arms to thee
  36. thine also are extended me — thy smiles
  37. return my own. When I was weeping, I
  38. have seen thy tears, and every sign I make
  39. thou cost return; and often thy sweet lips
  40. have seemed to move, that, peradventure words,
  41. which I have never heard, thou hast returned.
  42. “No more my shade deceives me, I perceive
  43. 'Tis I in thee—I love myself—the flame
  44. arises in my breast and burns my heart—
  45. what shall I do? Shall I at once implore?
  46. Or should I linger till my love is sought?
  47. What is it I implore? The thing that I
  48. desire is mine—abundance makes me poor.
  49. Oh, I am tortured by a strange desire
  50. unknown to me before, for I would fain
  51. put off this mortal form; which only means
  52. I wish the object of my love away.
  53. Grief saps my strength, the sands of life are run,
  54. and in my early youth am I cut off;
  55. but death is not my bane—it ends my woe.—
  56. I would not death for this that is my love,
  57. as two united in a single soul
  58. would die as one.”
  59. He spoke; and crazed with love,
  60. returned to view the same face in the pool;
  61. and as he grieved his tears disturbed the stream,
  62. and ripples on the surface, glassy clear,
  63. defaced his mirrored form. And thus the youth,
  64. when he beheld that lovely shadow go;
  65. “Ah whither cost thou fly? Oh, I entreat
  66. thee leave me not. Alas, thou cruel boy
  67. thus to forsake thy lover. Stay with me
  68. that I may see thy lovely form, for though
  69. I may not touch thee I shall feed my eyes
  70. and soothe my wretched pains.” And while he spoke
  71. he rent his garment from the upper edge,
  72. and beating on his naked breast, all white
  73. as marble, every stroke produced a tint
  74. as lovely as the apple streaked with red,
  75. or as the glowing grape when purple bloom
  76. touches the ripening clusters.
  77. When as glass
  78. again the rippling waters smoothed, and when
  79. such beauty in the stream the youth observed,
  80. no more could he endure. As in the flame
  81. the yellow wax, or as the hoar-frost melts
  82. in early morning 'neath the genial sun;
  83. so did he pine away, by love consumed,
  84. and slowly wasted by a hidden flame.
  85. No vermeil bloom now mingled in the white
  86. of his complexion fair; no strength has he,
  87. no vigor, nor the comeliness that wrought
  88. for love so long: alas, that handsome form
  89. by Echo fondly loved may please no more.
  90. But when she saw him in his hapless plight,
  91. though angry at his scorn, she only grieved.
  92. As often as the love-lore boy complained,
  93. “Alas!” “Alas!” her echoing voice returned;
  94. and as he struck his hands against his arms,
  95. she ever answered with her echoing sounds.
  96. And as he gazed upon the mirrored pool
  97. he said at last, “Ah, youth beloved in vain!”
  98. “In vain, in vain!” the spot returned his words;
  99. and when he breathed a sad “farewell!” “Farewell!”
  100. sighed Echo too. He laid his wearied head,
  101. and rested on the verdant grass; and those
  102. bright eyes, which had so loved to gaze, entranced,
  103. on their own master's beauty, sad Night closed.
  104. And now although among the nether shades
  105. his sad sprite roams, he ever loves to gaze
  106. on his reflection in the Stygian wave.
  107. His Naiad sisters mourned, and having clipped
  108. their shining tresses laid them on his corpse:
  109. and all the Dryads mourned: and Echo made
  110. lament anew. And these would have upraised
  111. his funeral pyre, and waved the flaming torch,
  112. and made his bier; but as they turned their eyes
  113. where he had been, alas he was not there!
  114. And in his body's place a sweet flower grew,
  115. golden and white, the white around the gold.