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The Iliad by Homer 1899 |
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| The
Iliad by Homer
1899
About the
Author:
Homer
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ARGUMENT - THE GRIEF OF
ACHILLES, AND NEW ARMOUR
MADE HIM BY VULCAN
The news of the death of
Patroclus is brought to
Achilles by Antilochus.
Thetis, hearing his
lamentations, comes with
all her sea-nymphs to
comfort him. The
speeches of the mother
and son on this
occasion. Iris
appears to Achilles by
the command of Juno, and
orders him to show
himself
at the head of the
intrenchments. The sight
of him turns the
fortunes of
the day, and the body of
Patroclus is carried off
by the Greeks. The
Trojans call a council,
where Hector and
Polydamas disagree in
their
opinions: but the advice
of the former prevails,
to remain encamped in
the
field. The grief of
Achilles over the body
of Patroclus.
Thetis goes to the
palace of Vulcan to
obtain new arms for her
son. The
description of the
wonderful works of
Vulcan: and, lastly,
that noble one
of the shield of
Achilles.
The latter part of the
nine-and-twentieth day,
and the night ensuing,
take
up this book: the scene
is at Achilles' tent on
the sea-shore, from
whence
it changes to the palace
of Vulcan.
Thus like
the rage of
fire the
combat
burns,(250)
And now it
rises, now
it sinks by
turns.
Meanwhile,
where
Hellespont's
broad waters
flow,
Stood
Nestor's
son, the
messenger of
woe:
There sat
Achilles,
shaded by
his sails,
On hoisted
yards
extended to
the gales;
Pensive he
sat; for all
that fate
design'd
Rose in sad
prospect to
his boding
mind.
Thus to his
soul he
said: "Ah!
what
constrains
The Greeks,
late
victors, now
to quit the
plains?
Is this the
day, which
heaven so
long ago
Ordain'd, to
sink me with
the weight
of woe?
(So Thetis
warn'd;)
when by a
Trojan hand
The bravest
of the
Myrmidonian
band
Should lose
the light!
Fulfilled is
that decree;
Fallen is
the warrior,
and
Patroclus
he!
In vain I
charged him
soon to quit
the plain,
And warn'd
to shun
Hectorean
force in
vain!"
Thus while
he thinks,
Antilochus
appears,
And tells
the
melancholy
tale with
tears.
"Sad
tidings, son
of Peleus!
thou must
hear;
And wretched
I, the
unwilling
messenger!
Dead is
Patroclus!
For his
corse they
fight;
His naked
corse: his
arms are
Hector's
right."
A sudden
horror shot
through all
the chief,
And wrapp'd
his senses
in the cloud
of grief;
Cast on the
ground, with
furious
hands he
spread
The
scorching
ashes o'er
his graceful
head;
His purple
garments,
and his
golden
hairs,
Those he
deforms with
dust, and
these he
tears;
On the hard
soil his
groaning
breast he
threw,
And roll'd
and
grovell'd,
as to earth
he grew.
The virgin
captives,
with
disorder'd
charms,
(Won by his
own, or by
Patroclus'
arms,)
Rush'd from
their tents
with cries;
and
gathering
round,
Beat their
white
breasts, and
fainted on
the ground:
While
Nestor's son
sustains a
manlier
part,
And mourns
the warrior
with a
warrior's
heart;
Hangs on his
arms, amidst
his frantic
woe,
And oft
prevents the
meditated
blow.
Far in the
deep abysses
of the
main,(251)
With hoary
Nereus, and
the watery
train,
The
mother-goddess
from her
crystal
throne
Heard his
loud cries,
and answer'd
groan for
groan.
The circling
Nereids with
their
mistress
weep,
And all the
sea-green
sisters of
the deep.
Thalia,
Glauce
(every
watery
name),
Nesaea mild,
and silver
Spio came:
Cymothoe and
Cymodoce
were nigh,
And the blue
languish of
soft Alia's
eye.
Their locks
Actaea and
Limnoria
rear,
Then Proto,
Doris,
Panope
appear,
Thoa,
Pherusa,
Doto,
Melita;
Agave
gentle, and
Amphithoe
gay:
Next
Callianira,
Callianassa
show
Their sister
looks;
Dexamene the
slow,
And swift
Dynamene,
now cut the
tides:
Iaera now
the verdant
wave
divides:
Nemertes
with
Apseudes
lifts the
head,
Bright
Galatea
quits her
pearly bed;
These
Orythia,
Clymene,
attend,
Maera,
Amphinome,
the train
extend;
And black
Janira, and
Janassa
fair,
And Amatheia
with her
amber hair.
All these,
and all that
deep in
ocean held
Their sacred
seats, the
glimmering
grotto
fill'd;
Each beat
her ivory
breast with
silent woe,
Till Thetis'
sorrows thus
began to
flow:
"Hear me,
and judge,
ye sisters
of the main!
How just a
cause has
Thetis to
complain!
How
wretched,
were I
mortal, were
my fate!
How more
than
wretched in
the immortal
state!
Sprung from
my bed a
godlike hero
came,
The bravest
far that
ever bore
the name;
Like some
fair olive,
by my
careful hand
He grew, he
flourish'd
and adorn'd
the land
To Troy I
sent him:
but the
fates ordain
He never,
never must
return
again.
So short a
space the
light of
heaven to
view,
So short,
alas! and
fill'd with
anguish too!
Hear how his
sorrows echo
through the
shore!
I cannot
ease them,
but I must
deplore;
I go at
least to
bear a
tender part,
And mourn my
loved-one
with a
mother's
heart."
She said,
and left the
caverns of
the main,
All bathed
in tears;
the
melancholy
train
Attend her
way.
Wide-opening
part the
tides,
While the
long pomp
the silver
wave
divides.
Approaching
now, they
touch'd the
Trojan land;
Then, two by
two,
ascended up
the strand.
The immortal
mother,
standing
close beside
Her mournful
offspring,
to his sighs
replied;
Along the
coast their
mingled
clamours
ran,
And thus the
silver-footed
dame began:
"Why mourns
my son? thy
late
preferr'd
request
The god has
granted, and
the Greeks
distress'd:
Why mourns
my son? thy
anguish let
me share,
Reveal the
cause, and
trust a
parent's
care."
He, deeply
groaning--"To
this
cureless
grief,
Not even the
Thunderer's
favour
brings
relief.
Patroclus--Ah!--say,
goddess, can
I boast
A pleasure
now? revenge
itself is
lost;
Patroclus,
loved of all
my martial
train,
Beyond
mankind,
beyond
myself is
slain!
Lost are
those arms
the gods
themselves
bestow'd
On Peleus;
Hector bears
the glorious
load.
Cursed be
that day,
when all the
powers above
Thy charms
submitted to
a mortal
love:
O hadst thou
still, a
sister of
the main,
Pursued the
pleasures of
the watery
reign:
And happier
Peleus, less
ambitious,
led
A mortal
beauty to
his equal
bed!
Ere the sad
fruit of thy
unhappy womb
Had caused
such sorrows
past, and
woes to
come.
For soon,
alas! that
wretched
offspring
slain,
New woes,
new sorrows,
shall create
again.
'Tis not in
fate the
alternate
now to give;
Patroclus
dead,
Achilles
hates to
live.
Let me
revenge it
on proud
Hector's
heart,
Let his last
spirit smoke
upon my
dart;
On these
conditions
will I
breathe:
till then,
I blush to
walk among
the race of
men."
A flood of
tears, at
this, the
goddess
shed:
"Ah then, I
see thee
dying, see
thee dead!
When Hector
falls, thou
diest."--"Let
Hector die,
And let me
fall!
(Achilles
made reply)
Far lies
Patroclus
from his
native
plain!
He fell, and
falling,
wish'd my
aid in vain.
Ah then,
since from
this
miserable
day
I cast all
hope of my
return away;
Since,
unrevenged,
a hundred
ghosts
demand
The fate of
Hector from
Achilles'
hand;
Since here,
for brutal
courage far
renown'd,
I live an
idle burden
to the
ground,
(Others in
council
famed for
nobler
skill,
More useful
to preserve,
than I to
kill,)
Let me--But
oh! ye
gracious
powers
above!
Wrath and
revenge from
men and gods
remove:
Far, far too
dear to
every mortal
breast,
Sweet to the
soul, as
honey to the
taste:
Gathering
like vapours
of a noxious
kind
From fiery
blood, and
darkening
all the
mind.
Me Agamemnon
urged to
deadly hate;
'Tis past--I
quell it; I
resign to
fate.
Yes--I will
meet the
murderer of
my friend;
Or (if the
gods ordain
it) meet my
end.
The stroke
of fate the
strongest
cannot shun:
The great
Alcides,
Jove's
unequall'd
son,
To Juno's
hate, at
length
resign'd his
breath,
And sunk the
victim of
all-conquering
death.
So shall
Achilles
fall!
stretch'd
pale and
dead,
No more the
Grecian
hope, or
Trojan
dread!
Let me, this
instant,
rush into
the fields,
And reap
what glory
life's short
harvest
yields.
Shall I not
force some
widow'd dame
to tear
With frantic
hands her
long
dishevell'd
hair?
Shall I not
force her
breast to
heave with
sighs,
And the soft
tears to
trickle from
her eyes?
Yes, I shall
give the
fair those
mournful
charms--
In vain you
hold
me--Hence!
my arms! my
arms!--
Soon shall
the sanguine
torrent
spread so
wide,
That all
shall know
Achilles
swells the
tide."
"My son
(coerulean
Thetis made
reply,
To fate
submitting
with a
secret
sigh,)
The host to
succour, and
thy friends
to save,
Is worthy
thee; the
duty of the
brave.
But canst
thou, naked,
issue to the
plains?
Thy radiant
arms the
Trojan foe
detains.
Insulting
Hector bears
the spoils
on high,
But vainly
glories, for
his fate is
nigh.
Yet, yet
awhile thy
generous
ardour stay;
Assured, I
meet thee at
the dawn of
day,
Charged with
refulgent
arms (a
glorious
load),
Vulcanian
arms, the
labour of a
god."
Then turning
to the
daughters of
the main,
The goddess
thus
dismiss'd
her azure
train:
"Ye sister
Nereids! to
your deeps
descend;
Haste, and
our father's
sacred seat
attend;
I go to find
the
architect
divine,
Where vast
Olympus'
starry
summits
shine:
So tell our
hoary
sire"--This
charge she
gave:
The
sea-green
sisters
plunge
beneath the
wave:
Thetis once
more ascends
the bless'd
abodes,
And treads
the brazen
threshold of
the gods.
And now the
Greeks from
furious
Hector's
force,
Urge to
broad
Hellespont
their
headlong
course;
Nor yet
their chiefs
Patroclus'
body bore
Safe through
the tempest
to the
tented
shore.
The horse,
the foot,
with equal
fury join'd,
Pour'd on
the rear,
and
thunder'd
close
behind:
And like a
flame
through
fields of
ripen'd
corn,
The rage of
Hector o'er
the ranks
was borne.
Thrice the
slain hero
by the foot
he drew;
Thrice to
the skies
the Trojan
clamours
flew:
As oft the
Ajaces his
assault
sustain;
But check'd,
he turns;
repuls'd,
attacks
again.
With fiercer
shouts his
lingering
troops he
fires,
Nor yields a
step, nor
from his
post
retires:
So watchful
shepherds
strive to
force, in
vain,
The hungry
lion from a
carcase
slain.
Even yet
Patroclus
had he borne
away,
And all the
glories of
the extended
day,
Had not high
Juno from
the realms
of air,
Secret,
despatch'd
her trusty
messenger.
The various
goddess of
the showery
bow,
Shot in a
whirlwind to
the shore
below;
To great
Achilles at
his ships
she came,
And thus
began the
many-colour'd
dame:
"Rise, son
of Peleus!
rise,
divinely
brave!
Assist the
combat, and
Patroclus
save:
For him the
slaughter to
the fleet
they spread,
And fall by
mutual
wounds
around the
dead.
To drag him
back to Troy
the foe
contends:
Nor with his
death the
rage of
Hector ends:
A prey to
dogs he
dooms the
corse to
lie,
And marks
the place to
fix his head
on high.
Rise, and
prevent (if
yet you
think of
fame)
Thy friend's
disgrace,
thy own
eternal
shame!"
"Who sends
thee,
goddess,
from the
ethereal
skies?"
Achilles
thus. And
Iris thus
replies:
"I come,
Pelides!
from the
queen of
Jove,
The immortal
empress of
the realms
above;
Unknown to
him who sits
remote on
high,
Unknown to
all the
synod of the
sky."
"Thou comest
in vain (he
cries, with
fury
warm'd);
Arms I have
none, and
can I fight
unarm'd?
Unwilling as
I am, of
force I
stay,
Till Thetis
bring me at
the dawn of
day
Vulcanian
arms: what
other can I
wield,
Except the
mighty
Telamonian
shield?
That, in my
friend's
defence, has
Ajax spread,
While his
strong lance
around him
heaps the
dead:
The gallant
chief
defends
Menoetius'
son,
And does
what his
Achilles
should have
done."
"Thy want of
arms (said
Iris) well
we know;
But though
unarm'd, yet
clad in
terrors, go!
Let but
Achilles
o'er yon
trench
appear,
Proud Troy
shall
tremble, and
consent to
fear;
Greece from
one glance
of that
tremendous
eye
Shall take
new courage,
and disdain
to fly."
She spoke,
and pass'd
in air. The
hero rose:
Her aegis
Pallas o'er
his shoulder
throws;
Around his
brows a
golden cloud
she spread;
A stream of
glory flamed
above his
head.
As when from
some
beleaguer'd
town arise
The smokes,
high curling
to the
shaded
skies;
(Seen from
some island,
o'er the
main afar,
When men
distress'd
hang out the
sign of
war;)
Soon as the
sun in ocean
hides his
rays,
Thick on the
hills the
flaming
beacons
blaze;
With
long-projected
beams the
seas are
bright,
And heaven's
high arch
reflects the
ruddy light:
So from
Achilles'
head the
splendours
rise,
Reflecting
blaze on
blaze
against the
skies.
Forth
march'd the
chief, and
distant from
the crowd,
High on the
rampart
raised his
voice aloud;
With her own
shout
Minerva
swells the
sound;
Troy starts
astonish'd,
and the
shores
rebound.
As the loud
trumpet's
brazen mouth
from far
With
shrilling
clangour
sounds the
alarm of
war,
Struck from
the walls,
the echoes
float on
high,
And the
round
bulwarks and
thick towers
reply;
So high his
brazen voice
the hero
rear'd:
Hosts
dropp'd
their arms,
and trembled
as they
heard:
And back the
chariots
roll, and
coursers
bound,
And steeds
and men lie
mingled on
the ground.
Aghast they
see the
living
lightnings
play,
And turn
their
eyeballs
from the
flashing
ray.
Thrice from
the trench
his dreadful
voice he
raised,
And thrice
they fled,
confounded
and amazed.
Twelve in
the tumult
wedged,
untimely
rush'd
On their own
spears, by
their own
chariots
crush'd:
While,
shielded
from the
darts, the
Greeks
obtain
The
long-contended
carcase of
the slain.
A lofty bier
the
breathless
warrior
bears:
Around, his
sad
companions
melt in
tears.
But chief
Achilles,
bending down
his head,
Pours
unavailing
sorrows o'er
the dead,
Whom late
triumphant,
with his
steeds and
car,
He sent
refulgent to
the field of
war;
(Unhappy
change!) now
senseless,
pale, he
found,
Stretch'd
forth, and
gash'd with
many a
gaping
wound.
Meantime,
unwearied
with his
heavenly
way,
In ocean's
waves the
unwilling
light of day
Quench'd his
red orb, at
Juno's high
command,
And from
their
labours
eased the
Achaian
band.
The frighted
Trojans
(panting
from the
war,
Their steeds
unharness'd
from the
weary car)
A sudden
council
call'd: each
chief
appear'd
In haste,
and
standing;
for to sit
they fear'd.
'Twas now no
season for
prolong'd
debate;
They saw
Achilles,
and in him
their fate.
Silent they
stood:
Polydamas at
last,
Skill'd to
discern the
future by
the past,
The son of
Panthus,
thus
express'd
his fears
(The friend
of Hector,
and of equal
years;
The
self-same
night to
both a being
gave,
One wise in
council, one
in action
brave):
"In free
debate, my
friends,
your
sentence
speak;
For me, I
move, before
the morning
break,
To raise our
camp: too
dangerous
here our
post,
Far from
Troy walls,
and on a
naked coast.
I deem'd not
Greece so
dreadful,
while
engaged
In mutual
feuds her
king and
hero raged;
Then, while
we hoped our
armies might
prevail
We boldly
camp'd
beside a
thousand
sail.
I dread
Pelides now:
his rage of
mind
Not long
continues to
the shores
confined,
Nor to the
fields,
where long
in equal
fray
Contending
nations won
and lost the
day;
For Troy,
for Troy,
shall
henceforth
be the
strife,
And the hard
contest not
for fame,
but life.
Haste then
to Ilion,
while the
favouring
night
Detains
these
terrors,
keeps that
arm from
fight.
If but the
morrow's sun
behold us
here,
That arm,
those
terrors, we
shall feel,
not fear;
And hearts
that now
disdain,
shall leap
with joy,
If heaven
permit them
then to
enter Troy.
Let not my
fatal
prophecy be
true,
Nor what I
tremble but
to think,
ensue.
Whatever be
our fate,
yet let us
try
What force
of thought
and reason
can supply;
Let us on
counsel for
our guard
depend;
The town her
gates and
bulwarks
shall
defend.
When morning
dawns, our
well-appointed
powers,
Array'd in
arms, shall
line the
lofty
towers.
Let the
fierce hero,
then, when
fury calls,
Vent his mad
vengeance on
our rocky
walls,
Or fetch a
thousand
circles
round the
plain,
Till his
spent
coursers
seek the
fleet again:
So may his
rage be
tired, and
labour'd
down!
And dogs
shall tear
him ere he
sack the
town."
"Return!
(said
Hector,
fired with
stern
disdain)
What! coop
whole armies
in our walls
again?
Was't not
enough, ye
valiant
warriors,
say,
Nine years
imprison'd
in those
towers ye
lay?
Wide o'er
the world
was Ilion
famed of old
For brass
exhaustless,
and for
mines of
gold:
But while
inglorious
in her walls
we stay'd,
Sunk were
her
treasures,
and her
stores
decay'd;
The
Phrygians
now her
scatter'd
spoils
enjoy,
And proud
Maeonia
wastes the
fruits of
Troy.
Great Jove
at length my
arms to
conquest
calls,
And shuts
the Grecians
in their
wooden
walls,
Darest thou
dispirit
whom the
gods incite?
Flies any
Trojan? I
shall stop
his flight.
To better
counsel then
attention
lend;
Take due
refreshment,
and the
watch
attend.
If there be
one whose
riches cost
him care,
Forth let
him bring
them for the
troops to
share;
'Tis better
generously
bestow'd on
those,
Than left
the plunder
of our
country's
foes.
Soon as the
morn the
purple
orient
warms,
Fierce on
yon navy
will we pour
our arms.
If great
Achilles
rise in all
his might,
His be the
danger: I
shall stand
the fight.
Honour, ye
gods! or let
me gain or
give;
And live he
glorious,
whosoe'er
shall live!
Mars is our
common lord,
alike to
all;
And oft the
victor
triumphs,
but to
fall."
The shouting
host in loud
applauses
join'd;
So Pallas
robb'd the
many of
their mind;
To their own
sense
condemn'd,
and left to
choose
The worst
advice, the
better to
refuse.
While the
long night
extends her
sable reign,
Around
Patroclus
mourn'd the
Grecian
train.
Stern in
superior
grief
Pelides
stood;
Those
slaughtering
arms, so
used to
bathe in
blood,
Now clasp
his
clay-cold
limbs: then
gushing
start
The tears,
and sighs
burst from
his swelling
heart.
The lion
thus, with
dreadful
anguish
stung,
Roars
through the
desert, and
demands his
young;
When the
grim savage,
to his
rifled den
Too late
returning,
snuffs the
track of
men,
And o'er the
vales and
o'er the
forest
bounds;
His
clamorous
grief the
bellowing
wood
resounds.
So grieves
Achilles;
and,
impetuous,
vents
To all his
Myrmidons
his loud
laments.
"In what
vain
promise,
gods! did I
engage,
When to
console
Menoetius'
feeble age,
I vowed his
much-loved
offspring to
restore,
Charged with
rich spoils,
to fair
Opuntia's
shore?(252)
But mighty
Jove cuts
short, with
just
disdain,
The long,
long views
of poor
designing
man!
One fate the
warrior and
the friend
shall
strike,
And Troy's
black sands
must drink
our blood
alike:
Me too a
wretched
mother shall
deplore,
An aged
father never
see me more!
Yet, my
Patroclus!
yet a space
I stay,
Then swift
pursue thee
on the
darksome
way.
Ere thy dear
relics in
the grave
are laid,
Shall
Hector's
head be
offer'd to
thy shade;
That, with
his arms,
shall hang
before thy
shrine;
And twelve,
the noblest
of the
Trojan line,
Sacred to
vengeance,
by this hand
expire;
Their lives
effused
around thy
flaming
pyre.
Thus let me
lie till
then! thus,
closely
press'd,
Bathe thy
cold face,
and sob upon
thy breast!
While Trojan
captives
here thy
mourners
stay,
Weep all the
night and
murmur all
the day:
Spoils of my
arms, and
thine; when,
wasting
wide,
Our swords
kept time,
and
conquer'd
side by
side."
He spoke,
and bade the
sad
attendants
round
Cleanse the
pale corse,
and wash
each
honour'd
wound.
A massy
caldron of
stupendous
frame
They
brought, and
placed it
o'er the
rising
flame:
Then heap'd
the lighted
wood; the
flame
divides
Beneath the
vase, and
climbs
around the
sides:
In its wide
womb they
pour the
rushing
stream;
The boiling
water
bubbles to
the brim.
The body
then they
bathe with
pious toil,
Embalm the
wounds,
anoint the
limbs with
oil,
High on a
bed of state
extended
laid,
And decent
cover'd with
a linen
shade;
Last o'er
the dead the
milk-white
veil they
threw;
That done,
their
sorrows and
their sighs
renew.
Meanwhile to
Juno, in the
realms
above,
(His wife
and sister,)
spoke
almighty
Jove.
"At last thy
will
prevails:
great
Peleus' son
Rises in
arms: such
grace thy
Greeks have
won.
Say (for I
know not),
is their
race divine,
And thou the
mother of
that martial
line?"
"What words
are these?
(the
imperial
dame
replies,
While anger
flash'd from
her majestic
eyes)
Succour like
this a
mortal arm
might lend,
And such
success mere
human wit
attend:
And shall
not I, the
second power
above,
Heaven's
queen, and
consort of
the
thundering
Jove,
Say, shall
not I one
nation's
fate
command,
Not wreak my
vengeance on
one guilty
land?"
So they.
Meanwhile
the
silver-footed
dame
Reach'd the
Vulcanian
dome,
eternal
frame!
High-eminent
amid the
works
divine,
Where
heaven's
far-beaming
brazen
mansions
shine.
There the
lame
architect
the goddess
found,
Obscure in
smoke, his
forges
flaming
round,
While bathed
in sweat
from fire to
fire he
flew;
And puffing
loud, the
roaring
billows
blew.
That day no
common task
his labour
claim'd:
Full twenty
tripods for
his hall he
framed,
That placed
on living
wheels of
massy gold,
(Wondrous to
tell,)
instinct
with spirit
roll'd
From place
to place,
around the
bless'd
abodes
Self-moved,
obedient to
the beck of
gods:
For their
fair handles
now,
o'erwrought
with
flowers,
In moulds
prepared,
the glowing
ore he
pours.
Just as
responsive
to his
thought the
frame
Stood prompt
to move, the
azure
goddess
came:
Charis, his
spouse, a
grace
divinely
fair,
(With purple
fillets
round her
braided
hair,)
Observed her
entering;
her soft
hand she
press'd,
And,
smiling,
thus the
watery queen
address'd:
"What,
goddess!
this unusual
favour
draws?
All hail,
and welcome!
whatsoe'er
the cause;
Till now a
stranger, in
a happy hour
Approach,
and taste
the dainties
of the
bower."
High on a
throne, with
stars of
silver
graced,
And various
artifice,
the queen
she placed;
A footstool
at her feet:
then
calling,
said,
"Vulcan,
draw near,
'tis Thetis
asks your
aid."
"Thetis
(replied the
god) our
powers may
claim,
An
ever-dear,
an
ever-honour'd
name!
When my
proud mother
hurl'd me
from the
sky,
(My awkward
form, it
seems,
displeased
her eye,)
She, and
Eurynome, my
griefs
redress'd,
And soft
received me
on their
silver
breast.
Even then
these arts
employ'd my
infant
thought:
Chains,
bracelets,
pendants,
all their
toys, I
wrought.
Nine years
kept secret
in the dark
abode,
Secure I
lay,
conceal'd
from man and
god:
Deep in a
cavern'd
rock my days
were led;
The rushing
ocean
murmur'd
o'er my
head.
Now, since
her presence
glads our
mansion,
say,
For such
desert what
service can
I pay?
Vouchsafe, O
Thetis! at
our board to
share
The genial
rites, and
hospitable
fare;
While I the
labours of
the forge
forego,
And bid the
roaring
bellows
cease to
blow."
Then from
his anvil
the lame
artist rose;
Wide with
distorted
legs oblique
he goes,
And stills
the bellows,
and (in
order laid)
Locks in
their chests
his
instruments
of trade.
Then with a
sponge the
sooty
workman
dress'd
His brawny
arms
embrown'd,
and hairy
breast.
With his
huge sceptre
graced, and
red attire,
Came halting
forth the
sovereign of
the fire:
The
monarch's
steps two
female forms
uphold,
That moved
and breathed
in animated
gold;
To whom was
voice, and
sense, and
science
given
Of works
divine (such
wonders are
in heaven!)
On these
supported,
with unequal
gait,
He reach'd
the throne
where
pensive
Thetis sate;
There placed
beside her
on the
shining
frame,
He thus
address'd
the
silver-footed
dame:
"Thee,
welcome,
goddess!
what
occasion
calls
(So long a
stranger) to
these
honour'd
walls?
'Tis thine,
fair Thetis,
the command
to lay,
And Vulcan's
joy and duty
to obey."
To whom the
mournful
mother thus
replies:
(The crystal
drops stood
trembling in
her eyes:)
"O Vulcan!
say, was
ever breast
divine
So pierced
with
sorrows, so
o'erwhelm'd
as mine?
Of all the
goddesses,
did Jove
prepare
For Thetis
only such a
weight of
care?
I, only I,
of all the
watery race
By force
subjected to
a man's
embrace,
Who, sinking
now with age
and sorrow,
pays
The mighty
fine imposed
on length of
days.
Sprung from
my bed, a
godlike hero
came,
The bravest
sure that
ever bore
the name;
Like some
fair plant
beneath my
careful hand
He grew, he
flourish'd,
and he
graced the
land:
To Troy I
sent him!
but his
native shore
Never, ah
never, shall
receive him
more;
(Even while
he lives, he
wastes with
secret woe;)
Nor I, a
goddess, can
retard the
blow!
Robb'd of
the prize
the Grecian
suffrage
gave,
The king of
nations
forced his
royal slave:
For this he
grieved;
and, till
the Greeks
oppress'd
Required his
arm, he
sorrow'd
unredress'd.
Large gifts
they
promise, and
their elders
send;
In vain--he
arms not,
but permits
his friend
His arms,
his steeds,
his forces
to employ:
He marches,
combats,
almost
conquers
Troy:
Then slain
by Phoebus
(Hector had
the name)
At once
resigns his
armour,
life, and
fame.
But thou, in
pity, by my
prayer be
won:
Grace with
immortal
arms this
short-lived
son,
And to the
field in
martial pomp
restore,
To shine
with glory,
till he
shines no
more!"
To her the
artist-god:
"Thy griefs
resign,
Secure, what
Vulcan can,
is ever
thine.
O could I
hide him
from the
Fates, as
well,
Or with
these hands
the cruel
stroke
repel,
As I shall
forge most
envied arms,
the gaze
Of wondering
ages, and
the world's
amaze!"
Thus having
said, the
father of
the fires
To the black
labours of
his forge
retires.
Soon as he
bade them
blow, the
bellows
turn'd
Their iron
mouths; and
where the
furnace
burn'd,
Resounding
breathed: at
once the
blast
expires,
And twenty
forges catch
at once the
fires;
Just as the
god directs,
now loud,
now low,
They raise a
tempest, or
they gently
blow;
In hissing
flames huge
silver bars
are roll'd,
And stubborn
brass, and
tin, and
solid gold;
Before, deep
fix'd, the
eternal
anvils
stand;
The
ponderous
hammer loads
his better
hand,
His left
with tongs
turns the
vex'd metal
round,
And thick,
strong
strokes, the
doubling
vaults
rebound.
Then first
he form'd
the immense
and solid
shield;
Rich various
artifice
emblazed the
field;
Its utmost
verge a
threefold
circle
bound;(253)
A silver
chain
suspends the
massy round;
Five ample
plates the
broad
expanse
compose,
And godlike
labours on
the surface
rose.
There shone
the image of
the
master-mind:
There earth,
there
heaven,
there ocean
he design'd;
The
unwearied
sun, the
moon
completely
round;
The starry
lights that
heaven's
high convex
crown'd;
The Pleiads,
Hyads, with
the northern
team;
And great
Orion's more
refulgent
beam;
To which,
around the
axle of the
sky,
The Bear,
revolving,
points his
golden eye,
Still shines
exalted on
the ethereal
plain,
Nor bathes
his blazing
forehead in
the main.
Two cities
radiant on
the shield
appear,
The image
one of
peace, and
one of war.
Here sacred
pomp and
genial feast
delight,
And solemn
dance, and
hymeneal
rite;
Along the
street the
new-made
brides are
led,
With torches
flaming, to
the nuptial
bed:
The youthful
dancers in a
circle bound
To the soft
flute, and
cithern's
silver
sound:
Through the
fair streets
the matrons
in a row
Stand in
their
porches, and
enjoy the
show.
There in the
forum swarm
a numerous
train;
The subject
of debate, a
townsman
slain:
One pleads
the fine
discharged,
which one
denied,
And bade the
public and
the laws
decide:
The witness
is produced
on either
hand:
For this, or
that, the
partial
people
stand:
The
appointed
heralds
still the
noisy bands,
And form a
ring, with
sceptres in
their hands:
On seats of
stone,
within the
sacred
place,(254)
The reverend
elders
nodded o'er
the case;
Alternate,
each the
attesting
sceptre
took,
And rising
solemn, each
his sentence
spoke
Two golden
talents lay
amidst, in
sight,
The prize of
him who best
adjudged the
right.
Another part
(a prospect
differing
far)(255)
Glow'd with
refulgent
arms, and
horrid war.
Two mighty
hosts a
leaguer'd
town
embrace,
And one
would
pillage, one
would burn
the place.
Meantime the
townsmen,
arm'd with
silent care,
A secret
ambush on
the foe
prepare:
Their wives,
their
children,
and the
watchful
band
Of trembling
parents, on
the turrets
stand.
They march;
by Pallas
and by Mars
made bold:
Gold were
the gods,
their
radiant
garments
gold,
And gold
their
armour:
these the
squadron
led,
August,
divine,
superior by
the head!
A place for
ambush fit
they found,
and stood,
Cover'd with
shields,
beside a
silver
flood.
Two spies at
distance
lurk, and
watchful
seem
If sheep or
oxen seek
the winding
stream.
Soon the
white flocks
proceeded
o'er the
plains,
And steers
slow-moving,
and two
shepherd
swains;
Behind them
piping on
their reeds
they go,
Nor fear an
ambush, nor
suspect a
foe.
In arms the
glittering
squadron
rising round
Rush sudden;
hills of
slaughter
heap the
ground;
Whole flocks
and herds
lie bleeding
on the
plains,
And, all
amidst them,
dead, the
shepherd
swains!
The
bellowing
oxen the
besiegers
hear;
They rise,
take horse,
approach,
and meet the
war,
They fight,
they fall,
beside the
silver
flood;
The waving
silver
seem'd to
blush with
blood.
There
Tumult,
there
Contention
stood
confess'd;
One rear'd a
dagger at a
captive's
breast;
One held a
living foe,
that freshly
bled
With
new-made
wounds;
another
dragg'd a
dead;
Now here,
now there,
the carcases
they tore:
Fate stalk'd
amidst them,
grim with
human gore.
And the
whole war
came out,
and met the
eye;
And each
bold figure
seem'd to
live or die.
A field deep
furrow'd
next the god
design'd,(256)
The third
time
labour'd by
the sweating
hind;
The shining
shares full
many
ploughmen
guide,
And turn
their
crooked
yokes on
every side.
Still as at
either end
they wheel
around,
The master
meets them
with his
goblet
crown'd;
The hearty
draught
rewards,
renews their
toil,
Then back
the turning
ploughshares
cleave the
soil:
Behind, the
rising earth
in ridges
roll'd;
And sable
look'd,
though
form'd of
molten gold.
Another
field rose
high with
waving
grain;
With bended
sickles
stand the
reaper
train:
Here
stretched in
ranks the
levell'd
swarths are
found,
Sheaves
heap'd on
sheaves here
thicken up
the ground.
With
sweeping
stroke the
mowers strow
the lands;
The
gatherers
follow, and
collect in
bands;
And last the
children, in
whose arms
are borne
(Too short
to gripe
them) the
brown
sheaves of
corn.
The rustic
monarch of
the field
descries,
With silent
glee, the
heaps around
him rise.
A ready
banquet on
the turf is
laid,
Beneath an
ample oak's
expanded
shade.
The victim
ox the
sturdy youth
prepare;
The reaper's
due repast,
the woman's
care.
Next, ripe
in yellow
gold, a
vineyard
shines,
Bent with
the
ponderous
harvest of
its vines;
A deeper dye
the dangling
clusters
show,
And curl'd
on silver
props, in
order glow:
A darker
metal mix'd
intrench'd
the place;
And pales of
glittering
tin the
inclosure
grace.
To this, one
pathway
gently
winding
leads,
Where march
a train with
baskets on
their heads,
(Fair maids
and blooming
youths,)
that smiling
bear
The purple
product of
the autumnal
year.
To these a
youth awakes
the warbling
strings,
Whose tender
lay the fate
of Linus
sings;
In measured
dance behind
him move the
train,
Tune soft
the voice,
and answer
to the
strain.
Here herds
of oxen
march, erect
and bold,
Rear high
their horns,
and seem to
low in gold,
And speed to
meadows on
whose
sounding
shores
A rapid
torrent
through the
rushes
roars:
Four golden
herdsmen as
their
guardians
stand,
And nine
sour dogs
complete the
rustic band.
Two lions
rushing from
the wood
appear'd;
And seized a
bull, the
master of
the herd:
He roar'd:
in vain the
dogs, the
men
withstood;
They tore
his flesh,
and drank
his sable
blood.
The dogs
(oft cheer'd
in vain)
desert the
prey,
Dread the
grim
terrors, and
at distance
bay.
Next this,
the eye the
art of
Vulcan leads
Deep through
fair
forests, and
a length of
meads,
And stalls,
and folds,
and
scatter'd
cots
between;
And fleecy
flocks, that
whiten all
the scene.
A figured
dance
succeeds;
such once
was seen
In lofty
Gnossus for
the Cretan
queen,
Form'd by
Daedalean
art; a
comely band
Of youths
and maidens,
bounding
hand in
hand.
The maids in
soft simars
of linen
dress'd;
The youths
all graceful
in the
glossy vest:
Of those the
locks with
flowery
wreath
inroll'd;
Of these the
sides
adorn'd with
swords of
gold,
That
glittering
gay, from
silver belts
depend.
Now all at
once they
rise, at
once
descend,
With
well-taught
feet: now
shape in
oblique
ways,
Confusedly
regular, the
moving maze:
Now forth at
once, too
swift for
sight, they
spring,
And
undistinguish'd
blend the
flying ring:
So whirls a
wheel, in
giddy circle
toss'd,
And, rapid
as it runs,
the single
spokes are
lost.
The gazing
multitudes
admire
around:
Two active
tumblers in
the centre
bound;
Now high,
now low,
their pliant
limbs they
bend:
And general
songs the
sprightly
revel end.
Thus the
broad shield
complete the
artist
crown'd
With his
last hand,
and pour'd
the ocean
round:
In living
silver
seem'd the
waves to
roll,
And beat the
buckler's
verge, and
bound the
whole.
This done,
whate'er a
warrior's
use requires
He forged;
the cuirass
that
outshone the
fires,
The greaves
of ductile
tin, the
helm
impress'd
With various
sculpture,
and the
golden
crest.
At Thetis'
feet the
finished
labour lay:
She, as a
falcon cuts
the aerial
way,
Swift from
Olympus'
snowy summit
flies,
And bears
the blazing
present
through the
skies.(257) |
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