ARGUMENT - THE ACTS OF
DIOMED
Diomed, assisted by
Pallas, performs wonders
in this day's battle.
Pandarus wounds him with
an arrow, but the
goddess cures him,
enables him
to discern gods from
mortals, and prohibits
him from contending with
any
of the former, excepting
Venus. Æneas joins
Pandarus to oppose him;
Pandarus is killed, and
Æneas in great danger
but for the assistance
of
Venus; who, as she is
removing her son from
the fight, is wounded on
the
hand by Diomed. Apollo
seconds her in his
rescue, and at length
carries
off Æneas to Troy, where
he is healed in the
temple of Pergamus. Mars
rallies the Trojans, and
assists Hector to make a
stand. In the meantime
Æneas is restored to the
field, and they
overthrow several of the
Greeks;
among the rest
Tlepolemus is slain by
Sarpedon. Juno and
Minerva descend
to resist Mars; the
latter incites Diomed to
go against that god; he
wounds him, and sends
him groaning to heaven.
The first battle
continues through this
book. The scene is the
same as in the former.
But Pallas
now Tydides'
soul
inspires,(143)
Fills with
her force,
and warms
with all her
fires,
Above the
Greeks his
deathless
fame to
raise,
And crown
her hero
with
distinguish'd
praise.
High on his
helm
celestial
lightnings
play,
His beamy
shield emits
a living
ray;
The
unwearied
blaze
incessant
streams
supplies,
Like the red
star that
fires the
autumnal
skies,
When fresh
he rears his
radiant orb
to sight,
And, bathed
in ocean,
shoots a
keener
light.
Such glories
Pallas on
the chief
bestow'd,
Such, from
his arms,
the fierce
effulgence
flow'd:
Onward she
drives him,
furious to
engage,
Where the
fight burns,
and where
the thickest
rage.
The sons of
Dares first
the combat
sought,
A wealthy
priest, but
rich without
a fault;
In Vulcan's
fane the
father's
days were
led,
The sons to
toils of
glorious
battle bred;
These
singled from
their troops
the fight
maintain,
These, from
their
steeds,
Tydides on
the plain.
Fierce for
renown the
brother-chiefs
draw near,
And first
bold Phegeus
cast his
sounding
spear,
Which o'er
the
warrior's
shoulder
took its
course,
And spent in
empty air
its erring
force.
Not so,
Tydides,
flew thy
lance in
vain,
But pierced
his breast,
and
stretch'd
him on the
plain.
Seized with
unusual
fear, Idaeus
fled,
Left the
rich
chariot, and
his brother
dead.
And had not
Vulcan lent
celestial
aid,
He too had
sunk to
death's
eternal
shade;
But in a
smoky cloud
the god of
fire
Preserved
the son, in
pity to the
sire.
The steeds
and chariot,
to the navy
led,
Increased
the spoils
of gallant
Diomed.
Struck with
amaze and
shame, the
Trojan crew,
Or slain, or
fled, the
sons of
Dares view;
When by the
blood-stain'd
hand Minerva
press'd
The god of
battles, and
this speech
address'd:
"Stern power
of war! by
whom the
mighty fall,
Who bathe in
blood, and
shake the
lofty wall!
Let the
brave chiefs
their
glorious
toils
divide;
And whose
the
conquest,
mighty Jove
decide:
While we
from
interdicted
fields
retire,
Nor tempt
the wrath of
heaven's
avenging
sire."
Her words
allay the
impetuous
warrior's
heat,
The god of
arms and
martial maid
retreat;
Removed from
fight, on
Xanthus'
flowery
bounds
They sat,
and listen'd
to the dying
sounds.
Meantime,
the Greeks
the Trojan
race pursue,
And some
bold
chieftain
every leader
slew:
First Odius
falls, and
bites the
bloody sand,
His death
ennobled by
Atrides'
hand:
As he to
flight his
wheeling car
address'd,
The speedy
javelin
drove from
back to
breast.
In dust the
mighty
Halizonian
lay,
His arms
resound, the
spirit wings
its way.
Thy fate was
next, O
Phaestus!
doom'd to
feel
The great
Idomeneus'
protended
steel;
Whom Borus
sent (his
son and only
joy)
From
fruitful
Tarne to the
fields of
Troy.
The Cretan
javelin
reach'd him
from afar,
And pierced
his shoulder
as he mounts
his car;
Back from
the car he
tumbles to
the ground,
And
everlasting
shades his
eyes
surround.
Then died
Scamandrius,
expert in
the chase,
In woods and
wilds to
wound the
savage race;
Diana taught
him all her
sylvan arts,
To bend the
bow, and aim
unerring
darts:
But vainly
here Diana's
arts he
tries,
The fatal
lance
arrests him
as he flies;
From
Menelaus'
arm the
weapon sent,
Through his
broad back
and heaving
bosom went:
Down sinks
the warrior
with a
thundering
sound,
His brazen
armour rings
against the
ground.
Next artful
Phereclus
untimely
fell;
Bold Merion
sent him to
the realms
of hell.
Thy father's
skill, O
Phereclus!
was thine,
The graceful
fabric and
the fair
design;
For loved by
Pallas,
Pallas did
impart
To him the
shipwright's
and the
builder's
art.
Beneath his
hand the
fleet of
Paris rose,
The fatal
cause of all
his
country's
woes;
But he, the
mystic will
of heaven
unknown,
Nor saw his
country's
peril, nor
his own.
The hapless
artist,
while
confused he
fled,
The spear of
Merion
mingled with
the dead.
Through his
right hip,
with
forceful
fury cast,
Between the
bladder and
the bone it
pass'd;
Prone on his
knees he
falls with
fruitless
cries,
And death in
lasting
slumber
seals his
eyes.
From Meges'
force the
swift
Pedaeus
fled,
Antenor's
offspring
from a
foreign bed,
Whose
generous
spouse,
Theanor,
heavenly
fair,
Nursed the
young
stranger
with a
mother's
care.
How vain
those cares!
when Meges
in the rear
Full in his
nape infix'd
the fatal
spear;
Swift
through his
crackling
jaws the
weapon
glides,
And the cold
tongue and
grinning
teeth
divides.
Then died
Hypsenor,
generous and
divine,
Sprung from
the brave
Dolopion's
mighty line,
Who near
adored
Scamander
made abode,
Priest of
the stream,
and honoured
as a god.
On him,
amidst the
flying
numbers
found,
Eurypylus
inflicts a
deadly
wound;
On his broad
shoulders
fell the
forceful
brand,
Thence
glancing
downwards,
lopp'd his
holy hand,
Which
stain'd with
sacred blood
the blushing
sand.
Down sunk
the priest:
the purple
hand of
death
Closed his
dim eye, and
fate
suppress'd
his breath.
Thus toil'd
the chiefs,
in different
parts
engaged.
In every
quarter
fierce
Tydides
raged;
Amid the
Greek, amid
the Trojan
train,
Rapt through
the ranks he
thunders
o'er the
plain;
Now here,
now there,
he darts
from place
to place,
Pours on the
rear, or
lightens in
their face.
Thus from
high hills
the torrents
swift and
strong
Deluge whole
fields, and
sweep the
trees along,
Through
ruin'd moles
the rushing
wave
resounds,
O'erwhelm's
the bridge,
and bursts
the lofty
bounds;
The yellow
harvests of
the ripen'd
year,
And flatted
vineyards,
one sad
waste
appear!(144)
While Jove
descends in
sluicy
sheets of
rain,
And all the
labours of
mankind are
vain.
So raged
Tydides,
boundless in
his ire,
Drove armies
back, and
made all
Troy retire.
With grief
the leader
of the
Lycian band
Saw the wide
waste of his
destructive
hand:
His bended
bow against
the chief he
drew;
Swift to the
mark the
thirsty
arrow flew,
Whose forky
point the
hollow
breastplate
tore,
Deep in his
shoulder
pierced, and
drank the
gore:
The rushing
stream his
brazen
armour dyed,
While the
proud archer
thus
exulting
cried:
"Hither, ye
Trojans,
hither drive
your steeds!
Lo! by our
hand the
bravest
Grecian
bleeds,
Not long the
deathful
dart he can
sustain;
Or Phoebus
urged me to
these fields
in vain."
So spoke he,
boastful:
but the
winged dart
Stopp'd
short of
life, and
mock'd the
shooter's
art.
The wounded
chief,
behind his
car retired,
The helping
hand of
Sthenelus
required;
Swift from
his seat he
leap'd upon
the ground,
And tugg'd
the weapon
from the
gushing
wound;
When thus
the king his
guardian
power
address'd,
The purple
current
wandering
o'er his
vest:
"O progeny
of Jove!
unconquer'd
maid!
If e'er my
godlike sire
deserved thy
aid,
If e'er I
felt thee in
the fighting
field;
Now,
goddess,
now, thy
sacred
succour
yield.
O give my
lance to
reach the
Trojan
knight,
Whose arrow
wounds the
chief thou
guard'st in
fight;
And lay the
boaster
grovelling
on the
shore,
That vaunts
these eyes
shall view
the light no
more."
Thus pray'd
Tydides, and
Minerva
heard,
His nerves
confirm'd,
his languid
spirits
cheer'd;
He feels
each limb
with wonted
vigour
light;
His beating
bosom
claim'd the
promised
fight.
"Be bold,
(she cried),
in every
combat
shine,
War be thy
province,
thy
protection
mine;
Rush to the
fight, and
every foe
control;
Wake each
paternal
virtue in
thy soul:
Strength
swells thy
boiling
breast,
infused by
me,
And all thy
godlike
father
breathes in
thee;
Yet more,
from mortal
mists I
purge thy
eyes,(145)
And set to
view the
warring
deities.
These see
thou shun,
through all
the
embattled
plain;
Nor rashly
strive where
human force
is vain.
If Venus
mingle in
the martial
band,
Her shalt
thou wound:
so Pallas
gives
command."
With that,
the
blue-eyed
virgin
wing'd her
flight;
The hero
rush'd
impetuous to
the fight;
With tenfold
ardour now
invades the
plain,
Wild with
delay, and
more enraged
by pain.
As on the
fleecy
flocks when
hunger
calls,
Amidst the
field a
brindled
lion falls;
If chance
some
shepherd
with a
distant dart
The savage
wound, he
rouses at
the smart,
He foams, he
roars; the
shepherd
dares not
stay,
But
trembling
leaves the
scattering
flocks a
prey;
Heaps fall
on heaps; he
bathes with
blood the
ground,
Then leaps
victorious
o'er the
lofty mound.
Not with
less fury
stern
Tydides
flew;
And two
brave
leaders at
an instant
slew;
Astynous
breathless
fell, and by
his side,
His people's
pastor, good
Hypenor,
died;
Astynous'
breast the
deadly lance
receives,
Hypenor's
shoulder his
broad
falchion
cleaves.
Those slain
he left, and
sprung with
noble rage
Abas and
Polyidus to
engage;
Sons of
Eurydamus,
who, wise
and old,
Could fate
foresee, and
mystic
dreams
unfold;
The youths
return'd not
from the
doubtful
plain,
And the sad
father tried
his arts in
vain;
No mystic
dream could
make their
fates
appear,
Though now
determined
by Tydides'
spear.
Young
Xanthus
next, and
Thoon felt
his rage;
The joy and
hope of
Phaenops'
feeble age:
Vast was his
wealth, and
these the
only heirs
Of all his
labours and
a life of
cares.
Cold death
o'ertakes
them in
their
blooming
years,
And leaves
the father
unavailing
tears:
To strangers
now descends
his heapy
store,
The race
forgotten,
and the name
no more.
Two sons of
Priam in one
chariot
ride,
Glittering
in arms, and
combat side
by side.
As when the
lordly lion
seeks his
food
Where
grazing
heifers
range the
lonely wood,
He leaps
amidst them
with a
furious
bound,
Bends their
strong
necks, and
tears them
to the
ground:
So from
their seats
the brother
chiefs are
torn,
Their steeds
and chariot
to the navy
borne.
With deep
concern
divine Æneas
view'd
The foe
prevailing,
and his
friends
pursued;
Through the
thick storm
of singing
spears he
flies,
Exploring
Pandarus
with careful
eyes.
At length he
found
Lycaon's
mighty son;
To whom the
chief of
Venus' race
begun:
"Where,
Pandarus,
are all thy
honours now,
Thy winged
arrows and
unerring
bow,
Thy
matchless
skill, thy
yet
unrivall'd
fame,
And boasted
glory of the
Lycian name?
O pierce
that mortal!
if we mortal
call
That
wondrous
force by
which whole
armies fall;
Or god
incensed,
who quits
the distant
skies
To punish
Troy for
slighted
sacrifice;
(Which, oh
avert from
our unhappy
state!
For what so
dreadful as
celestial
hate)?
Whoe'er he
be,
propitiate
Jove with
prayer;
If man,
destroy; if
god, entreat
to spare."
To him the
Lycian:
"Whom your
eyes behold,
If right I
judge, is
Diomed the
bold:
Such
coursers
whirl him
o'er the
dusty field,
So towers
his helmet,
and so
flames his
shield.
If 'tis a
god, he
wears that
chief's
disguise:
Or if that
chief, some
guardian of
the skies,
Involved in
clouds,
protects him
in the fray,
And turns
unseen the
frustrate
dart away.
I wing'd an
arrow, which
not idly
fell,
The stroke
had fix'd
him to the
gates of
hell;
And, but
some god,
some angry
god
withstands,
His fate was
due to these
unerring
hands.
Skill'd in
the bow, on
foot I
sought the
war,
Nor join'd
swift horses
to the rapid
car.
Ten polish'd
chariots I
possess'd at
home,
And still
they grace
Lycaon's
princely
dome:
There veil'd
in spacious
coverlets
they stand;
And twice
ten coursers
wait their
lord's
command.
The good old
warrior bade
me trust to
these,
When first
for Troy I
sail'd the
sacred seas;
In fields,
aloft, the
whirling car
to guide,
And through
the ranks of
death
triumphant
ride.
But vain
with youth,
and yet to
thrift
inclined,
I heard his
counsels
with
unheedful
mind,
And thought
the steeds
(your large
supplies
unknown)
Might fail
of forage in
the
straiten'd
town;
So took my
bow and
pointed
darts in
hand
And left the
chariots in
my native
land.
"Too late, O
friend! my
rashness I
deplore;
These
shafts, once
fatal, carry
death no
more.
Tydeus' and
Atreus' sons
their points
have found,
And
undissembled
gore pursued
the wound.
In vain they
bleed: this
unavailing
bow
Serves, not
to
slaughter,
but provoke
the foe.
In evil hour
these bended
horns I
strung,
And seized
the quiver
where it
idly hung.
Cursed be
the fate
that sent me
to the field
Without a
warrior's
arms, the
spear and
shield!
If e'er with
life I quit
the Trojan
plain,
If e'er I
see my
spouse and
sire again,
This bow,
unfaithful
to my
glorious
aims,
Broke by my
hand, shall
feed the
blazing
flames."
To whom the
leader of
the Dardan
race:
"Be calm,
nor Phoebus'
honour'd
gift
disgrace.
The distant
dart be
praised,
though here
we need
The rushing
chariot and
the bounding
steed.
Against yon
hero let us
bend our
course,
And, hand to
hand,
encounter
force with
force.
Now mount my
seat, and
from the
chariot's
height
Observe my
father's
steeds,
renown'd in
fight;
Practised
alike to
turn, to
stop, to
chase,
To dare the
shock, or
urge the
rapid race;
Secure with
these,
through
fighting
fields we
go;
Or safe to
Troy, if
Jove assist
the foe.
Haste, seize
the whip,
and snatch
the guiding
rein;
The
warrior's
fury let
this arm
sustain;
Or, if to
combat thy
bold heart
incline,
Take thou
the spear,
the
chariot's
care be
mine."
"O prince!
(Lycaon's
valiant son
replied)
As thine the
steeds, be
thine the
task to
guide.
The horses,
practised to
their lord's
command,
Shall bear
the rein,
and answer
to thy hand;
But, if,
unhappy, we
desert the
fight,
Thy voice
alone can
animate
their
flight;
Else shall
our fates be
number'd
with the
dead,
And these,
the victor's
prize, in
triumph led.
Thine be the
guidance,
then: with
spear and
shield
Myself will
charge this
terror of
the field."
And now both
heroes mount
the
glittering
car;
The bounding
coursers
rush amidst
the war;
Their fierce
approach
bold
Sthenelus
espied,
Who thus,
alarm'd, to
great
Tydides
cried:
"O friend!
two chiefs
of force
immense I
see,
Dreadful
they come,
and bend
their rage
on thee:
Lo the brave
heir of old
Lycaon's
line,
And great
Æneas,
sprung from
race divine!
Enough is
given to
fame. Ascend
thy car!
And save a
life, the
bulwark of
our war."
At this the
hero cast a
gloomy look,
Fix'd on the
chief with
scorn; and
thus he
spoke:
"Me dost
thou bid to
shun the
coming
fight?
Me wouldst
thou move to
base,
inglorious
flight?
Know, 'tis
not honest
in my soul
to fear,
Nor was
Tydides born
to tremble
here.
I hate the
cumbrous
chariot's
slow
advance,
And the long
distance of
the flying
lance;
But while my
nerves are
strong, my
force
entire,
Thus front
the foe, and
emulate my
sire.
Nor shall
yon steeds,
that fierce
to fight
convey
Those
threatening
heroes, bear
them both
away;
One chief at
least
beneath this
arm shall
die;
So Pallas
tells me,
and forbids
to fly.
But if she
dooms, and
if no god
withstand,
That both
shall fall
by one
victorious
hand,
Then heed my
words: my
horses here
detain,
Fix'd to the
chariot by
the
straiten'd
rein;
Swift to
Æneas' empty
seat
proceed,
And seize
the coursers
of ethereal
breed;
The race of
those, which
once the
thundering
god(146)
For ravish'd
Ganymede on
Tros
bestow'd,
The best
that e'er on
earth's
broad
surface run,
Beneath the
rising or
the setting
sun.
Hence great
Anchises
stole a
breed
unknown,
By mortal
mares, from
fierce
Laomedon:
Four of this
race his
ample stalls
contain,
And two
transport
Æneas o'er
the plain.
These, were
the rich
immortal
prize our
own,
Through the
wide world
should make
our glory
known."
Thus while
they spoke,
the foe came
furious on,
And stern
Lycaon's
warlike race
begun:
"Prince,
thou art
met. Though
late in vain
assail'd,
The spear
may enter
where the
arrow
fail'd."
He said,
then shook
the
ponderous
lance, and
flung;
On his broad
shield the
sounding
weapon rung,
Pierced the
tough orb,
and in his
cuirass
hung,
"He bleeds!
the pride of
Greece! (the
boaster
cries,)
Our triumph
now, the
mighty
warrior
lies!"
"Mistaken
vaunter!
(Diomed
replied;)
Thy dart has
erred, and
now my spear
be tried;
Ye 'scape
not both;
one,
headlong
from his
car,
With hostile
blood shall
glut the god
of war."
He spoke,
and rising
hurl'd his
forceful
dart,
Which,
driven by
Pallas,
pierced a
vital part;
Full in his
face it
enter'd, and
betwixt
The nose and
eye-ball the
proud Lycian
fix'd;
Crash'd all
his jaws,
and cleft
the tongue
within,
Till the
bright point
look'd out
beneath the
chin.
Headlong he
falls, his
helmet
knocks the
ground:
Earth groans
beneath him,
and his arms
resound;
The starting
coursers
tremble with
affright;
The soul
indignant
seeks the
realms of
night.
To guard his
slaughter'd
friend,
Æneas flies,
His spear
extending
where the
carcase
lies;
Watchful he
wheels,
protects it
every way,
As the grim
lion stalks
around his
prey.
O'er the
fall'n trunk
his ample
shield
display'd,
He hides the
hero with
his mighty
shade,
And threats
aloud! the
Greeks with
longing eyes
Behold at
distance,
but forbear
the prize.
Then fierce
Tydides
stoops; and
from the
fields
Heaved with
vast force,
a rocky
fragment
wields.
Not two
strong men
the enormous
weight could
raise,
Such men as
live in
these
degenerate
days:(147)
He swung it
round; and,
gathering
strength to
throw,
Discharged
the
ponderous
ruin at the
foe.
Where to the
hip the
inserted
thigh
unites,
Full on the
bone the
pointed
marble
lights;
Through both
the tendons
broke the
rugged
stone,
And stripp'd
the skin,
and crack'd
the solid
bone.
Sunk on his
knees, and
staggering
with his
pains,
His falling
bulk his
bended arm
sustains;
Lost in a
dizzy mist
the warrior
lies;
A sudden
cloud comes
swimming
o'er his
eyes.
There the
brave chief,
who mighty
numbers
sway'd,
Oppress'd
had sunk to
death's
eternal
shade,
But heavenly
Venus,
mindful of
the love
She bore
Anchises in
the Idaean
grove,
His danger
views with
anguish and
despair,
And guards
her
offspring
with a
mother's
care.
About her
much-loved
son her arms
she throws,
Her arms
whose
whiteness
match the
falling
snows.
Screen'd
from the foe
behind her
shining
veil,
The swords
wave
harmless,
and the
javelins
fail;
Safe through
the rushing
horse, and
feather'd
flight
Of sounding
shafts, she
bears him
from the
fight.
Nor
Sthenelus,
with
unassisting
hands,
Remain'd
unheedful of
his lord's
commands:
His panting
steeds,
removed from
out the war,
He fix'd
with
straiten'd
traces to
the car,
Next,
rushing to
the Dardan
spoil,
detains
The heavenly
coursers
with the
flowing
manes:
These in
proud
triumph to
the fleet
convey'd,
No longer
now a Trojan
lord obey'd.
That charge
to bold
Deipylus he
gave,
(Whom most
he loved, as
brave men
love the
brave,)
Then
mounting on
his car,
resumed the
rein,
And follow'd
where
Tydides
swept the
plain.
Meanwhile
(his
conquest
ravished
from his
eyes)
The raging
chief in
chase of
Venus flies:
No goddess
she,
commission'd
to the
field,
Like Pallas
dreadful
with her
sable
shield,
Or fierce
Bellona
thundering
at the wall,
While flames
ascend, and
mighty ruins
fall;
He knew soft
combats suit
the tender
dame,
New to the
field, and
still a foe
to fame.
Through
breaking
ranks his
furious
course he
bends,
And at the
goddess his
broad lance
extends;
Through her
bright veil
the daring
weapon
drove,
The
ambrosial
veil which
all the
Graces wove;
Her snowy
hand the
razing steel
profaned,
And the
transparent
skin with
crimson
stain'd,
From the
clear vein a
stream
immortal
flow'd,
Such stream
as issues
from a
wounded
god;(148)
Pure
emanation!
uncorrupted
flood!
Unlike our
gross,
diseased,
terrestrial
blood:
(For not the
bread of man
their life
sustains,
Nor wine's
inflaming
juice
supplies
their
veins:)
With tender
shrieks the
goddess
fill'd the
place,
And dropp'd
her
offspring
from her
weak
embrace.
Him Phoebus
took: he
casts a
cloud around
The fainting
chief, and
wards the
mortal
wound.
Then with a
voice that
shook the
vaulted
skies,
The king
insults the
goddess as
she flies:
"Ill with
Jove's
daughter
bloody
fights
agree,
The field of
combat is no
scene for
thee:
Go, let thy
own soft sex
employ thy
care,
Go, lull the
coward, or
delude the
fair.
Taught by
this stroke
renounce the
war's
alarms,
And learn to
tremble at
the name of
arms."
Tydides
thus. The
goddess,
seized with
dread,
Confused,
distracted,
from the
conflict
fled.
To aid her,
swift the
winged Iris
flew,
Wrapt in a
mist above
the warring
crew.
The queen of
love with
faded charms
she found.
Pale was her
cheek, and
livid look'd
the wound.
To Mars, who
sat remote,
they bent
their way:
Far, on the
left, with
clouds
involved he
lay;
Beside him
stood his
lance,
distain'd
with gore,
And, rein'd
with gold,
his foaming
steeds
before.
Low at his
knee, she
begg'd with
streaming
eyes
Her
brother's
car, to
mount the
distant
skies,
And show'd
the wound by
fierce
Tydides
given,
A mortal
man, who
dares
encounter
heaven.
Stern Mars
attentive
hears the
queen
complain,
And to her
hand commits
the golden
rein;
She mounts
the seat,
oppress'd
with silent
woe,
Driven by
the goddess
of the
painted bow.
The lash
resounds,
the rapid
chariot
flies,
And in a
moment
scales the
lofty skies:
They stopp'd
the car, and
there the
coursers
stood,
Fed by fair
Iris with
ambrosial
food;
Before her
mother,
love's
bright queen
appears,
O'erwhelmed
with
anguish, and
dissolved in
tears:
She raised
her in her
arms, beheld
her bleed,
And ask'd
what god had
wrought this
guilty deed?
Then she:
"This insult
from no god
I found,
An impious
mortal gave
the daring
wound!
Behold the
deed of
haughty
Diomed!
'Twas in the
son's
defence the
mother bled.
The war with
Troy no more
the Grecians
wage;
But with the
gods (the
immortal
gods)
engage."
Dione then:
"Thy wrongs
with
patience
bear,
And share
those griefs
inferior
powers must
share:
Unnumber'd
woes mankind
from us
sustain,
And men with
woes afflict
the gods
again.
The mighty
Mars in
mortal
fetters
bound,(149)
And lodged
in brazen
dungeons
underground,
Full
thirteen
moons
imprison'd
roar'd in
vain;
Otus and
Ephialtes
held the
chain:
Perhaps had
perish'd had
not Hermes'
care
Restored the
groaning god
to upper
air.
Great Juno's
self has
borne her
weight of
pain,
The imperial
partner of
the heavenly
reign;
Amphitryon's
son infix'd
the deadly
dart,(150)
And fill'd
with anguish
her immortal
heart.
E'en hell's
grim king
Alcides'
power
confess'd,
The shaft
found
entrance in
his iron
breast;
To Jove's
high palace
for a cure
he fled,
Pierced in
his own
dominions of
the dead;
Where Paeon,
sprinkling
heavenly
balm around,
Assuaged the
glowing
pangs, and
closed the
wound.
Rash,
impious man!
to stain the
bless'd
abodes,
And drench
his arrows
in the blood
of gods!
"But thou
(though
Pallas urged
thy frantic
deed),
Whose spear
ill-fated
makes a
goddess
bleed,
Know thou,
whoe'er with
heavenly
power
contends,
Short is his
date, and
soon his
glory ends;
From fields
of death
when late he
shall
retire,
No infant on
his knees
shall call
him sire.
Strong as
thou art,
some god may
yet be
found,
To stretch
thee pale
and gasping
on the
ground;
Thy distant
wife, Ægiale
the fair,(151)
Starting
from sleep
with a
distracted
air,
Shall rouse
thy slaves,
and her lost
lord
deplore,
The brave,
the great,
the glorious
now no
more!"
This said,
she wiped
from Venus'
wounded palm
The sacred
ichor, and
infused the
balm.
Juno and
Pallas with
a smile
survey'd,
And thus to
Jove began
the
blue-eyed
maid:
"Permit thy
daughter,
gracious
Jove! to
tell
How this
mischance
the Cyprian
queen
befell,
As late she
tried with
passion to
inflame
The tender
bosom of a
Grecian
dame;
Allured the
fair, with
moving
thoughts of
joy,
To quit her
country for
some youth
of Troy;
The clasping
zone, with
golden
buckles
bound,
Razed her
soft hand
with this
lamented
wound."
The sire of
gods and men
superior
smiled,
And, calling
Venus, thus
address'd
his child:
"Not these,
O daughter
are thy
proper
cares,
Thee milder
arts befit,
and softer
wars;
Sweet smiles
are thine,
and kind
endearing
charms;
To Mars and
Pallas leave
the deeds of
arms."
Thus they in
heaven:
while on the
plain below
The fierce
Tydides
charged his
Dardan foe,
Flush'd with
celestial
blood
pursued his
way,
And fearless
dared the
threatening
god of day;
Already in
his hopes he
saw him
kill'd,
Though
screen'd
behind
Apollo's
mighty
shield.
Thrice
rushing
furious, at
the chief he
strook;
His blazing
buckler
thrice
Apollo
shook:
He tried the
fourth:
when,
breaking
from the
cloud,
A more than
mortal voice
was heard
aloud.
"O son of
Tydeus,
cease! be
wise and see
How vast the
difference
of the gods
and thee;
Distance
immense!
between the
powers that
shine
Above,
eternal,
deathless,
and divine,
And mortal
man! a
wretch of
humble
birth,
A
short-lived
reptile in
the dust of
earth."
So spoke the
god who
darts
celestial
fires:
He dreads
his fury,
and some
steps
retires.
Then Phoebus
bore the
chief of
Venus' race
To Troy's
high fane,
and to his
holy place;
Latona there
and Phoebe
heal'd the
wound,
With vigour
arm'd him,
and with
glory
crown'd.
This done,
the patron
of the
silver bow
A phantom
raised, the
same in
shape and
show
With great
Æneas; such
the form he
bore,
And such in
fight the
radiant arms
he wore.
Around the
spectre
bloody wars
are waged,
And Greece
and Troy
with
clashing
shields
engaged.
Meantime on
Ilion's
tower Apollo
stood,
And calling
Mars, thus
urged the
raging god:
"Stern power
of arms, by
whom the
mighty fall;
Who bathest
in blood,
and shakest
the
embattled
wall,
Rise in thy
wrath! to
hell's
abhorr'd
abodes
Despatch yon
Greek, and
vindicate
the gods.
First rosy
Venus felt
his brutal
rage;
Me next he
charged, and
dares all
heaven
engage:
The wretch
would brave
high
heaven's
immortal
sire,
His triple
thunder, and
his bolts of
fire."
The god of
battle
issues on
the plain,
Stirs all
the ranks,
and fires
the Trojan
train;
In form like
Acamas, the
Thracian
guide,
Enraged to
Troy's
retiring
chiefs he
cried:
"How long,
ye sons of
Priam! will
ye fly,
And
unrevenged
see Priam's
people die?
Still
unresisted
shall the
foe destroy,
And stretch
the
slaughter to
the gates of
Troy?
Lo, brave
Æneas sinks
beneath his
wound,
Not godlike
Hector more
in arms
renown'd:
Haste all,
and take the
generous
warrior's
part.
He
said;--new
courage
swell'd each
hero's
heart.
Sarpedon
first his
ardent soul
express'd,
And, turn'd
to Hector,
these bold
words
address'd:
"Say, chief,
is all thy
ancient
valour lost?
Where are
thy threats,
and where
thy glorious
boast,
That propp'd
alone by
Priam's race
should stand
Troy's
sacred
walls, nor
need a
foreign
hand?
Now, now thy
country
calls her
wonted
friends,
And the
proud vaunt
in just
derision
ends.
Remote they
stand while
alien troops
engage,
Like
trembling
hounds
before the
lion's rage.
Far distant
hence I held
my wide
command,
Where
foaming
Xanthus
laves the
Lycian land;
With ample
wealth (the
wish of
mortals)
bless'd,
A beauteous
wife, and
infant at
her breast;
With those I
left
whatever
dear could
be:
Greece, if
she
conquers,
nothing wins
from me;
Yet first in
fight my
Lycian bands
I cheer,
And long to
meet this
mighty man
ye fear;
While Hector
idle stands,
nor bids the
brave
Their wives,
their
infants, and
their altars
save.
Haste,
warrior,
haste!
preserve thy
threaten'd
state,
Or one vast
burst of
all-involving
fate
Full o'er
your towers
shall fall,
and sweep
away
Sons, sires,
and wives,
an
undistinguish'd
prey.
Rouse all
thy Trojans,
urge thy
aids to
fight;
These claim
thy thoughts
by day, thy
watch by
night;
With force
incessant
the brave
Greeks
oppose;
Such cares
thy friends
deserve, and
such thy
foes."
Stung to the
heart the
generous
Hector
hears,
But just
reproof with
decent
silence
bears.
From his
proud car
the prince
impetuous
springs,
On earth he
leaps, his
brazen
armour
rings.
Two shining
spears are
brandish'd
in his
hands;
Thus arm'd,
he animates
his drooping
bands,
Revives
their
ardour,
turns their
steps from
flight,
And wakes
anew the
dying flames
of fight.
They turn,
they stand;
the Greeks
their fury
dare,
Condense
their
powers, and
wait the
growing war.
As when, on
Ceres'
sacred
floor, the
swain
Spreads the
wide fan to
clear the
golden
grain,
And the
light chaff,
before the
breezes
borne,
Ascends in
clouds from
off the
heapy corn;
The grey
dust, rising
with
collected
winds,
Drives o'er
the barn,
and whitens
all the
hinds:
So white
with dust
the Grecian
host
appears.
From
trampling
steeds, and
thundering
charioteers;
The dusky
clouds from
labour'd
earth arise,
And roll in
smoking
volumes to
the skies.
Mars hovers
o'er them
with his
sable
shield,
And adds new
horrors to
the darken'd
field:
Pleased with
his charge,
and ardent
to fulfil,
In Troy's
defence,
Apollo's
heavenly
will:
Soon as from
fight the
blue-eyed
maid
retires,
Each Trojan
bosom with
new warmth
he fires.
And now the
god, from
forth his
sacred fane,
Produced
Æneas to the
shouting
train;
Alive,
unharm'd,
with all his
peers
around,
Erect he
stood, and
vigorous
from his
wound:
Inquiries
none they
made; the
dreadful day
No pause of
words
admits, no
dull delay;
Fierce
Discord
storms,
Apollo loud
exclaims,
Fame calls,
Mars
thunders,
and the
field's in
flames.
Stern Diomed
with either
Ajax stood,
And great
Ulysses,
bathed in
hostile
blood.
Embodied
close, the
labouring
Grecian
train
The fiercest
shock of
charging
hosts
sustain.
Unmoved and
silent, the
whole war
they wait
Serenely
dreadful,
and as fix'd
as fate.
So when the
embattled
clouds in
dark array,
Along the
skies their
gloomy lines
display;
When now the
North his
boisterous
rage has
spent,
And peaceful
sleeps the
liquid
element:
The low-hung
vapours,
motionless
and still,
Rest on the
summits of
the shaded
hill;
Till the
mass
scatters as
the winds
arise,
Dispersed
and broken
through the
ruffled
skies.
Nor was the
general
wanting to
his train;
From troop
to troop he
toils
through all
the plain,
"Ye Greeks,
be men! the
charge of
battle bear;
Your brave
associates
and
yourselves
revere!
Let glorious
acts more
glorious
acts
inspire,
And catch
from breast
to breast
the noble
fire!
On valour's
side the
odds of
combat lie,
The brave
live
glorious, or
lamented
die;
The wretch
who trembles
in the field
of fame,
Meets death,
and worse
than death,
eternal
shame!"
These words
he seconds
with his
flying
lance,
To meet
whose point
was strong
Deicoon's
chance:
Æneas'
friend, and
in his
native place
Honour'd and
loved like
Priam's
royal race:
Long had he
fought the
foremost in
the field,
But now the
monarch's
lance
transpierced
his shield:
His shield
too weak the
furious dart
to stay,
Through his
broad belt
the weapon
forced its
way:
The grisly
wound
dismiss'd
his soul to
hell,
His arms
around him
rattled as
he fell.
Then fierce
Æneas,
brandishing
his blade,
In dust
Orsilochus
and Crethon
laid,
Whose sire
Diocleus,
wealthy,
brave and
great,
In
well-built
Pherae held
his lofty
seat:(152)
Sprung from
Alpheus'
plenteous
stream, that
yields
Increase of
harvests to
the Pylian
fields.
He got
Orsilochus,
Diocleus he,
And these
descended in
the third
degree.
Too early
expert in
the martial
toil,
In sable
ships they
left their
native soil,
To avenge
Atrides:
now,
untimely
slain,
They fell
with glory
on the
Phrygian
plain.
So two young
mountain
lions,
nursed with
blood
In deep
recesses of
the gloomy
wood,
Rush
fearless to
the plains,
and
uncontroll'd
Depopulate
the stalls
and waste
the fold:
Till pierced
at distance
from their
native den,
O'erpowered
they fall
beneath the
force of
men.
Prostrate on
earth their
beauteous
bodies lay,
Like
mountain
firs, as
tall and
straight as
they.
Great
Menelaus
views with
pitying
eyes,
Lifts his
bright
lance, and
at the
victor
flies;
Mars urged
him on; yet,
ruthless in
his hate,
The god but
urged him to
provoke his
fate.
He thus
advancing,
Nestor's
valiant son
Shakes for
his danger,
and neglects
his own;
Struck with
the thought,
should
Helen's lord
be slain,
And all his
country's
glorious
labours
vain.
Already met,
the
threatening
heroes
stand;
The spears
already
tremble in
their hand:
In rush'd
Antilochus,
his aid to
bring,
And fall or
conquer by
the Spartan
king.
These seen,
the Dardan
backward
turn'd his
course,
Brave as he
was, and
shunn'd
unequal
force.
The
breathless
bodies to
the Greeks
they drew,
Then mix in
combat, and
their toils
renew.
First,
Pylaemenes,
great in
battle,
bled,
Who sheathed
in brass the
Paphlagonians
led.
Atrides
mark'd him
where
sublime he
stood;
Fix'd in his
throat the
javelin
drank his
blood.
The faithful
Mydon, as he
turn'd from
fight
His flying
coursers,
sunk to
endless
night;
A broken
rock by
Nestor's son
was thrown:
His bended
arm received
the falling
stone;
From his
numb'd hand
the
ivory-studded
reins,
Dropp'd in
the dust,
are trail'd
along the
plains:
Meanwhile
his temples
feel a
deadly
wound;
He groans in
death, and
ponderous
sinks to
ground:
Deep drove
his helmet
in the
sands, and
there
The head
stood fix'd,
the
quivering
legs in air,
Till
trampled
flat beneath
the
coursers'
feet:
The youthful
victor
mounts his
empty seat,
And bears
the prize in
triumph to
the fleet.
Great Hector
saw, and,
raging at
the view,
Pours on the
Greeks: the
Trojan
troops
pursue:
He fires his
host with
animating
cries,
And brings
along the
furies of
the skies,
Mars, stern
destroyer!
and Bellona
dread,
Flame in the
front, and
thunder at
their head:
This swells
the tumult
and the rage
of fight;
That shakes
a spear that
casts a
dreadful
light.
Where Hector
march'd, the
god of
battles
shined,
Now storm'd
before him,
and now
raged
behind.
Tydides
paused
amidst his
full career;
Then first
the hero's
manly breast
knew fear.
As when some
simple swain
his cot
forsakes,
And wide
through fens
an unknown
journey
takes:
If chance a
swelling
brook his
passage
stay,
And foam
impervious
'cross the
wanderer's
way,
Confused he
stops, a
length of
country
pass'd,
Eyes the
rough waves,
and tired,
returns at
last.
Amazed no
less the
great
Tydides
stands:
He stay'd,
and turning
thus
address'd
his bands:
"No wonder,
Greeks! that
all to
Hector
yield;
Secure of
favouring
gods, he
takes the
field;
His strokes
they second,
and avert
our spears.
Behold where
Mars in
mortal arms
appears!
Retire then,
warriors,
but sedate
and slow;
Retire, but
with your
faces to the
foe.
Trust not
too much
your
unavailing
might;
'Tis not
with Troy,
but with the
gods ye
fight."
Now near the
Greeks the
black
battalions
drew;
And first
two leaders
valiant
Hector slew:
His force
Anchialus
and Mnesthes
found,
In every art
of glorious
war
renown'd;
In the same
car the
chiefs to
combat ride,
And fought
united, and
united died.
Struck at
the sight,
the mighty
Ajax glows
With thirst
of
vengeance,
and assaults
the foes.
His massy
spear with
matchless
fury sent,
Through
Amphius'
belt and
heaving
belly went;
Amphius
Apaesus'
happy soil
possess'd,
With herds
abounding,
and with
treasure
bless'd;
But fate
resistless
from his
country led
The chief,
to perish at
his people's
head.
Shook with
his fall his
brazen
armour rung,
And fierce,
to seize it,
conquering
Ajax sprung;
Around his
head an iron
tempest
rain'd;
A wood of
spears his
ample shield
sustain'd:
Beneath one
foot the yet
warm corpse
he press'd,
And drew his
javelin from
the bleeding
breast:
He could no
more; the
showering
darts denied
To spoil his
glittering
arms, and
plumy pride.
Now foes on
foes came
pouring on
the fields,
With
bristling
lances, and
compacted
shields;
Till in the
steely
circle
straiten'd
round,
Forced he
gives way,
and sternly
quits the
ground.
While thus
they strive,
Tlepolemus
the great,(153)
Urged by the
force of
unresisted
fate,
Burns with
desire
Sarpedon's
strength to
prove;
Alcides'
offspring
meets the
son of Jove.
Sheathed in
bright arms
each adverse
chief came
on.
Jove's great
descendant,
and his
greater son.
Prepared for
combat, ere
the lance he
toss'd,
The daring
Rhodian
vents his
haughty
boast:
"What brings
this Lycian
counsellor
so far,
To tremble
at our arms,
not mix in
war!
Know thy
vain self,
nor let
their
flattery
move,
Who style
thee son of
cloud-compelling
Jove.
How far
unlike those
chiefs of
race divine,
How vast the
difference
of their
deeds and
thine!
Jove got
such heroes
as my sire,
whose soul
No fear
could daunt,
nor earth
nor hell
control.
Troy felt
his arm, and
yon proud
ramparts
stand
Raised on
the ruins of
his vengeful
hand:
With six
small ships,
and but a
slender
train,
lie left the
town a
wide-deserted
plain.
But what art
thou, who
deedless
look'st
around,
While
unrevenged
thy Lycians
bite the
ground!
Small aid to
Troy thy
feeble force
can be;
But wert
thou
greater,
thou must
yield to me.
Pierced by
my spear, to
endless
darkness go!
I make this
present to
the shades
below."
The son of
Hercules,
the Rhodian
guide,
Thus haughty
spoke. The
Lycian king
replied:
"Thy sire, O
prince!
o'erturn'd
the Trojan
state,
Whose
perjured
monarch well
deserved his
fate;
Those
heavenly
steeds the
hero sought
so far,
False he
detain'd,
the just
reward of
war.
Nor so
content, the
generous
chief
defied,
With base
reproaches
and unmanly
pride.
But you,
unworthy the
high race
you boast,
Shall raise
my glory
when thy own
is lost:
Now meet thy
fate, and by
Sarpedon
slain,
Add one more
ghost to
Pluto's
gloomy
reign."
He said:
both
javelins at
an instant
flew;
Both struck,
both
wounded, but
Sarpedon's
slew:
Full in the
boaster's
neck the
weapon
stood,
Transfix'd
his throat,
and drank
the vital
blood;
The soul
disdainful
seeks the
caves of
night,
And his
seal'd eyes
for ever
lose the
light.
Yet not in
vain,
Tlepolemus,
was thrown
Thy angry
lance; which
piercing to
the bone
Sarpedon's
thigh, had
robb'd the
chief of
breath;
But Jove was
present, and
forbade the
death.
Borne from
the conflict
by his
Lycian
throng,
The wounded
hero dragg'd
the lance
along.
(His
friends,
each busied
in his
several
part,
Through
haste, or
danger, had
not drawn
the dart.)
The Greeks
with slain
Tlepolemus
retired;
Whose fall
Ulysses
view'd, with
fury fired;
Doubtful if
Jove's great
son he
should
pursue,
Or pour his
vengeance on
the Lycian
crew.
But heaven
and fate the
first design
withstand,
Nor this
great death
must grace
Ulysses'
hand.
Minerva
drives him
on the
Lycian
train;
Alastor,
Cronius,
Halius,
strew'd the
plain,
Alcander,
Prytanis,
Noemon
fell:(154)
And numbers
more his
sword had
sent to
hell,
But Hector
saw; and,
furious at
the sight,
Rush'd
terrible
amidst the
ranks of
fight.
With joy
Sarpedon
view'd the
wish'd
relief,
And, faint,
lamenting,
thus
implored the
chief:
"O suffer
not the foe
to bear away
My helpless
corpse, an
unassisted
prey;
If I,
unbless'd,
must see my
son no more,
My
much-loved
consort, and
my native
shore,
Yet let me
die in
Ilion's
sacred wall;
Troy, in
whose cause
I fell,
shall mourn
my fall."
He said, nor
Hector to
the chief
replies,
But shakes
his plume,
and fierce
to combat
flies;
Swift as a
whirlwind,
drives the
scattering
foes;
And dyes the
ground with
purple as he
goes.
Beneath a
beech,
Jove's
consecrated
shade,
His mournful
friends
divine
Sarpedon
laid:
Brave
Pelagon, his
favourite
chief, was
nigh,
Who wrench'd
the javelin
from his
sinewy
thigh.
The fainting
soul stood
ready wing'd
for flight,
And o'er his
eye-balls
swam the
shades of
night;
But Boreas
rising
fresh, with
gentle
breath,
Recall'd his
spirit from
the gates of
death.
The generous
Greeks
recede with
tardy pace,
Though Mars
and Hector
thunder in
their face;
None turn
their backs
to mean
ignoble
flight,
Slow they
retreat, and
even
retreating
fight.
Who first,
who last, by
Mars' and
Hector's
hand,
Stretch'd in
their blood,
lay gasping
on the sand?
Tenthras the
great,
Orestes the
renown'd
For managed
steeds, and
Trechus
press'd the
ground;,
Next
OEnomaus and
OEnops'
offspring
died;
Oresbius
last fell
groaning at
their side:
Oresbius, in
his painted
mitre gay,
In fat
Boeotia held
his wealthy
sway,
Where lakes
surround low
Hyle's
watery
plain;
A prince and
people
studious of
their gain.
The carnage
Juno from
the skies
survey'd,
And touch'd
with grief
bespoke the
blue-eyed
maid:
"Oh, sight
accursed!
Shall
faithless
Troy
prevail,
And shall
our promise
to our
people fail?
How vain the
word to
Menelaus
given
By Jove's
great
daughter and
the queen of
heaven,
Beneath his
arms that
Priam's
towers
should fall,
If warring
gods for
ever guard
the wall!
Mars, red
with
slaughter,
aids our
hated foes:
Haste, let
us arm, and
force with
force
oppose!"
She spoke;
Minerva
burns to
meet the
war:
And now
heaven's
empress
calls her
blazing car.
At her
command rush
forth the
steeds
divine;
Rich with
immortal
gold their
trappings
shine.
Bright Hebe
waits; by
Hebe, ever
young,
The whirling
wheels are
to the
chariot
hung.
On the
bright axle
turns the
bidden wheel
Of sounding
brass; the
polished
axle steel.
Eight brazen
spokes in
radiant
order flame;
The circles
gold, of
uncorrupted
frame,
Such as the
heavens
produce: and
round the
gold
Two brazen
rings of
work divine
were roll'd.
The bossy
naves of
sold silver
shone;
Braces of
gold suspend
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