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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 SECOND
BATTLE, AND THE DISTRESS
OF THE GREEKS
Jupiter assembles a
council of the deities,
and threatens them with
the
pains of Tartarus if
they assist either side:
Minerva only obtains of
him
that she may direct the
Greeks by her counsels.(189)
his balances the
fates of both, and
affrights the Greeks
with his thunders and
lightnings.
Nestor alone continues
in the field in great
danger: Diomed relieves
him;
whose exploits, and
those of Hector, are
excellently described.
Juno
endeavours to animate
Neptune to the
assistance of the
Greeks, but in
vain. The acts of
Teucer, who is at length
wounded by Hector, and
carried
off. Juno and Minerva
prepare to aid the
Grecians, but are
restrained by
Iris, sent from Jupiter.
The night puts an end to
the battle. Hector
continues in the field,
(the Greeks being driven
to their fortifications
before the ships,) and
gives orders to keep the
watch all night in the
camp, to prevent the
enemy from re-embarking
and escaping by flight.
They
kindle fires through all
the fields, and pass the
night under arms.
The time of seven and
twenty days is employed
from the opening of the
poem
to the end of this book.
The scene here (except
of the celestial
machines)
lies in the field
towards the seashore.
Aurora now,
fair
daughter of
the dawn,
Sprinkled
with rosy
light the
dewy lawn;
When Jove
convened the
senate of
the skies,
Where high
Olympus'
cloudy tops
arise,
The sire of
gods his
awful
silence
broke;
The heavens
attentive
trembled as
he spoke:
"Celestial
states!
immortal
gods! give
ear,
Hear our
decree, and
reverence
what ye
hear;
The fix'd
decree which
not all
heaven can
move;
Thou, fate!
fulfil it!
and, ye
powers,
approve!
What god but
enters yon
forbidden
field,
Who yields
assistance,
or but wills
to yield,
Back to the
skies with
shame he
shall be
driven,
Gash'd with
dishonest
wounds, the
scorn of
heaven;
Or far, oh
far, from
steep
Olympus
thrown,
Low in the
dark
Tartarean
gulf shall
groan,
With burning
chains fix'd
to the
brazen
floors,
And lock'd
by hell's
inexorable
doors;
As deep
beneath the
infernal
centre
hurl'd,(190)
As from that
centre to
the ethereal
world.
Let him who
tempts me,
dread those
dire abodes:
And know,
the Almighty
is the god
of gods.
League all
your forces,
then, ye
powers
above,
Join all,
and try the
omnipotence
of Jove.
Let down our
golden
everlasting
chain(191)
Whose strong
embrace
holds
heaven, and
earth, and
main
Strive all,
of mortal
and immortal
birth,
To drag, by
this, the
Thunderer
down to
earth
Ye strive in
vain! if I
but stretch
this hand,
I heave the
gods, the
ocean, and
the land;
I fix the
chain to
great
Olympus'
height,
And the vast
world hangs
trembling in
my sight!
For such I
reign,
unbounded
and above;
And such are
men, and
gods,
compared to
Jove."
The
all-mighty
spoke, nor
durst the
powers
reply:
A reverend
horror
silenced all
the sky;
Trembling
they stood
before their
sovereign's
look;
At length
his
best-beloved,
the power of
wisdom,
spoke:
"O first and
greatest!
God, by gods
adored
We own thy
might, our
father and
our lord!
But, ah!
permit to
pity human
state:
If not to
help, at
least lament
their fate.
From fields
forbidden we
submiss
refrain,
With arms
unaiding
mourn our
Argives
slain;
Yet grant my
counsels
still their
breasts may
move,
Or all must
perish in
the wrath of
Jove."
The
cloud-compelling
god her suit
approved,
And smiled
superior on
his best
beloved;
Then call'd
his
coursers,
and his
chariot
took;
The stedfast
firmament
beneath them
shook:
Rapt by the
ethereal
steeds the
chariot
roll'd;
Brass were
their hoofs,
their
curling
manes of
gold:
Of heaven's
undrossy
gold the
gods array,
Refulgent,
flash'd
intolerable
day.
High on the
throne he
shines: his
coursers fly
Between the
extended
earth and
starry sky.
But when to
Ida's
topmost
height he
came,
(Fair nurse
of
fountains,
and of
savage
game,)
Where o'er
her pointed
summits
proudly
raised,
His fane
breathed
odours, and
his altar
blazed:
There, from
his radiant
car, the
sacred sire
Of gods and
men released
the steeds
of fire:
Blue ambient
mists the
immortal
steeds
embraced;
High on the
cloudy point
his seat he
placed;
Thence his
broad eye
the subject
world
surveys,
The town,
and tents,
and
navigable
seas.
Now had the
Grecians
snatch'd a
short
repast,
And buckled
on their
shining arms
with haste.
Troy roused
as soon; for
on this
dreadful day
The fate of
fathers,
wives, and
infants lay.
The gates
unfolding
pour forth
all their
train;
Squadrons on
squadrons
cloud the
dusky plain:
Men, steeds,
and chariots
shake the
trembling
ground,
The tumult
thickens,
and the
skies
resound;
And now with
shouts the
shocking
armies
closed,
To lances
lances,
shields to
shields
opposed,
Host against
host with
shadowy
legends
drew,
The sounding
darts in
iron
tempests
flew;
Victors and
vanquish'd
join
promiscuous
cries,
Triumphant
shouts and
dying groans
arise;
With
streaming
blood the
slippery
fields are
dyed,
And
slaughter'd
heroes swell
the dreadful
tide.
Long as the
morning
beams,
increasing
bright,
O'er
heaven's
clear azure
spread the
sacred
light,
Commutual
death the
fate of war
confounds,
Each adverse
battle gored
with equal
wounds.
But when the
sun the
height of
heaven
ascends,
The sire of
gods his
golden
scales
suspends,(192)
With equal
hand: in
these
explored the
fate
Of Greece
and Troy,
and poised
the mighty
weight:
Press'd with
its load,
the Grecian
balance lies
Low sunk on
earth, the
Trojan
strikes the
skies.
Then Jove
from Ida's
top his
horrors
spreads;
The clouds
burst
dreadful
o'er the
Grecian
heads;
Thick
lightnings
flash; the
muttering
thunder
rolls;
Their
strength he
withers, and
unmans their
souls.
Before his
wrath the
trembling
hosts
retire;
The gods in
terrors, and
the skies on
fire.
Nor great
Idomeneus
that sight
could bear,
Nor each
stern Ajax,
thunderbolts
of war:
Nor he, the
king of war,
the alarm
sustain'd
Nestor
alone,
amidst the
storm
remain'd.
Unwilling he
remain'd,
for Paris'
dart
Had pierced
his courser
in a mortal
part;
Fix'd in the
forehead,
where the
springing
man
Curl'd o'er
the brow, it
stung him to
the brain;
Mad with his
anguish, he
begins to
rear,
Paw with his
hoofs aloft,
and lash the
air.
Scarce had
his falchion
cut the
reins, and
freed
The
encumber'd
chariot from
the dying
steed,
When
dreadful
Hector,
thundering
through the
war,
Pour'd to
the tumult
on his
whirling
car.
That day had
stretch'd
beneath his
matchless
hand
The hoary
monarch of
the Pylian
band,
But Diomed
beheld; from
forth the
crowd
He rush'd,
and on
Ulysses
call'd
aloud:
"Whither, oh
whither does
Ulysses run?
Oh, flight
unworthy
great
Laertes'
son!
Mix'd with
the vulgar
shall thy
fate be
found,
Pierced in
the back, a
vile,
dishonest
wound?
Oh turn and
save from
Hector's
direful rage
The glory of
the Greeks,
the Pylian
sage."
His
fruitless
words are
lost unheard
in air,
Ulysses
seeks the
ships, and
shelters
there.
But bold
Tydides to
the rescue
goes,
A single
warrior
midst a host
of foes;
Before the
coursers
with a
sudden
spring
He leap'd,
and anxious
thus bespoke
the king:
"Great
perils,
father! wait
the unequal
fight;
These
younger
champions
will oppress
thy might.
Thy veins no
more with
ancient
vigour glow,
Weak is thy
servant, and
thy coursers
slow.
Then haste,
ascend my
seat, and
from the car
Observe the
steeds of
Tros,
renown'd in
war.
Practised
alike to
turn, to
stop, to
chase,
To dare the
fight, or
urge the
rapid race:
These late
obey'd
Æneas'
guiding
rein;
Leave thou
thy chariot
to our
faithful
train;
With these
against yon
Trojans will
we go,
Nor shall
great Hector
want an
equal foe;
Fierce as he
is, even he
may learn to
fear
The thirsty
fury of my
flying
spear."
Thus said
the chief;
and Nestor,
skill'd in
war,
Approves his
counsel, and
ascends the
car:
The steeds
he left,
their trusty
servants
hold;
Eurymedon,
and
Sthenelus
the bold:
The reverend
charioteer
directs the
course,
And strains
his aged arm
to lash the
horse.
Hector they
face;
unknowing
how to fear,
Fierce he
drove on;
Tydides
whirl'd his
spear.
The spear
with erring
haste
mistook its
way,
But plunged
in Eniopeus'
bosom lay.
His opening
hand in
death
forsakes the
rein;
The steeds
fly back: he
falls, and
spurns the
plain.
Great Hector
sorrows for
his servant
kill'd,
Yet
unrevenged
permits to
press the
field;
Till, to
supply his
place and
rule the
car,
Rose
Archeptolemus,
the fierce
in war.
And now had
death and
horror
cover'd
all;(193)
Like
timorous
flocks the
Trojans in
their wall
Inclosed had
bled: but
Jove with
awful sound
Roll'd the
big thunder
o'er the
vast
profound:
Full in
Tydides'
face the
lightning
flew;
The ground
before him
flamed with
sulphur
blue;
The
quivering
steeds fell
prostrate at
the sight;
And Nestor's
trembling
hand
confess'd
his fright:
He dropp'd
the reins:
and, shook
with sacred
dread,
Thus,
turning,
warn'd the
intrepid
Diomed:
"O chief!
too daring
in thy
friend's
defence
Retire
advised, and
urge the
chariot
hence.
This day,
averse, the
sovereign of
the skies
Assists
great
Hector, and
our palm
denies.
Some other
sun may see
the happier
hour,
When Greece
shall
conquer by
his heavenly
power.
'Tis not in
man his
fix'd decree
to move:
The great
will glory
to submit to
Jove."
"O reverend
prince!
(Tydides
thus
replies)
Thy years
are awful,
and thy
words are
wise.
But ah, what
grief!
should
haughty
Hector boast
I fled
inglorious
to the
guarded
coast.
Before that
dire
disgrace
shall blast
my fame,
O'erwhelm
me, earth;
and hide a
warrior's
shame!"
To whom
Gerenian
Nestor thus
replied:(194)
"Gods! can
thy courage
fear the
Phrygian's
pride?
Hector may
vaunt, but
who shall
heed the
boast?
Not those
who felt thy
arm, the
Dardan host,
Nor Troy,
yet bleeding
in her
heroes lost;
Not even a
Phrygian
dame, who
dreads the
sword
That laid in
dust her
loved,
lamented
lord."
He said,
and, hasty,
o'er the
gasping
throng
Drives the
swift
steeds: the
chariot
smokes
along;
The shouts
of Trojans
thicken in
the wind;
The storm of
hissing
javelins
pours
behind.
Then with a
voice that
shakes the
solid skies,
Pleased,
Hector
braves the
warrior as
he flies.
"Go, mighty
hero! graced
above the
rest
In seats of
council and
the
sumptuous
feast:
Now hope no
more those
honours from
thy train;
Go less than
woman, in
the form of
man!
To scale our
walls, to
wrap our
towers in
flames,
To lead in
exile the
fair
Phrygian
dames,
Thy once
proud hopes,
presumptuous
prince! are
fled;
This arm
shall reach
thy heart,
and stretch
thee dead."
Now fears
dissuade
him, and now
hopes
invite.
To stop his
coursers,
and to stand
the fight;
Thrice
turn'd the
chief, and
thrice
imperial
Jove
On Ida's
summits
thunder'd
from above.
Great Hector
heard; he
saw the
flashing
light,
(The sign of
conquest,)
and thus
urged the
fight:
"Hear, every
Trojan,
Lycian,
Dardan band,
All famed in
war, and
dreadful
hand to
hand.
Be mindful
of the
wreaths your
arms have
won,
Your great
forefathers'
glories, and
your own.
Heard ye the
voice of
Jove?
Success and
fame
Await on
Troy, on
Greece
eternal
shame.
In vain they
skulk behind
their
boasted
wall,
Weak
bulwarks;
destined by
this arm to
fall.
High o'er
their
slighted
trench our
steeds shall
bound,
And pass
victorious
o'er the
levell'd
mound.
Soon as
before yon
hollow ships
we stand,
Fight each
with flames,
and toss the
blazing
brand;
Till, their
proud navy
wrapt in
smoke and
fires,
All Greece,
encompass'd,
in one blaze
expires."
Furious he
said; then
bending o'er
the yoke,
Encouraged
his proud
steeds,
while thus
he spoke:
"Now,
Xanthus,
Æthon,
Lampus, urge
the chase,
And thou,
Podargus!
prove thy
generous
race;
Be fleet, be
fearless,
this
important
day,
And all your
master's
well-spent
care repay.
For this,
high-fed, in
plenteous
stalls ye
stand,
Served with
pure wheat,
and by a
princess'
hand;
For this my
spouse, of
great
Aetion's
line,
So oft has
steep'd the
strengthening
grain in
wine.
Now swift
pursue, now
thunder
uncontroll'd:
Give me to
seize rich
Nestor's
shield of
gold;
From Tydeus'
shoulders
strip the
costly load,
Vulcanian
arms, the
labour of a
god:
These if we
gain, then
victory, ye
powers!
This night,
this
glorious
night, the
fleet is
ours!"
That heard,
deep anguish
stung
Saturnia's
soul;
She shook
her throne,
that shook
the starry
pole:
And thus to
Neptune:
"Thou, whose
force can
make
The stedfast
earth from
her
foundations
shake,
Seest thou
the Greeks
by fates
unjust
oppress'd,
Nor swells
thy heart in
that
immortal
breast?
Yet Ægae,
Helice, thy
power obey,(195)
And gifts
unceasing on
thine altars
lay.
Would all
the deities
of Greece
combine,
In vain the
gloomy
Thunderer
might
repine:
Sole should
he sit, with
scarce a god
to friend,
And see his
Trojans to
the shades
descend:
Such be the
scene from
his Idaean
bower;
Ungrateful
prospect to
the sullen
power!"
Neptune with
wrath
rejects the
rash design:
"What rage,
what
madness,
furious
queen! is
thine?
I war not
with the
highest. All
above
Submit and
tremble at
the hand of
Jove."
Now godlike
Hector, to
whose
matchless
might
Jove gave
the glory of
the destined
fight,
Squadrons on
squadrons
drives, and
fills the
fields
With
close-ranged
chariots,
and with
thicken'd
shields.
Where the
deep trench
in length
extended
lay,
Compacted
troops stand
wedged in
firm array,
A dreadful
front! they
shake the
brands, and
threat
With
long-destroying
flames the
hostile
fleet.
The king of
men, by
Juno's self
inspired,
Toil'd
through the
tents, and
all his army
fired.
Swift as he
moved, he
lifted in
his hand
His purple
robe, bright
ensign of
command.
High on the
midmost bark
the king
appear'd:
There, from
Ulysses'
deck, his
voice was
heard:
To Ajax and
Achilles
reach'd the
sound,
Whose
distant
ships the
guarded navy
bound.
"O Argives!
shame of
human race!
(he cried:
The hollow
vessels to
his voice
replied,)
Where now
are all your
glorious
boasts of
yore,
Your hasty
triumphs on
the Lemnian
shore?
Each
fearless
hero dares a
hundred
foes,
While the
feast lasts,
and while
the goblet
flows;
But who to
meet one
martial man
is found,
When the
fight rages,
and the
flames
surround?
O mighty
Jove! O sire
of the
distress'd!
Was ever
king like
me, like me
oppress'd?
With power
immense,
with justice
arm'd in
vain;
My glory
ravish'd,
and my
people
slain!
To thee my
vows were
breathed
from every
shore;
What altar
smoked not
with our
victims'
gore?
With fat of
bulls I fed
the constant
flame,
And ask'd
destruction
to the
Trojan name.
Now,
gracious
god! far
humbler our
demand;
Give these
at least to
'scape from
Hector's
hand,
And save the
relics of
the Grecian
land!"
Thus pray'd
the king,
and heaven's
great father
heard
His vows, in
bitterness
of soul
preferr'd:
The wrath
appeased, by
happy signs
declares,
And gives
the people
to their
monarch's
prayers.
His eagle,
sacred bird
of heaven!
he sent,
A fawn his
talons
truss'd,
(divine
portent!)
High o'er
the
wondering
hosts he
soar'd
above,
Who paid
their vows
to
Panomphaean
Jove;
Then let the
prey before
his altar
fall;
The Greeks
beheld, and
transport
seized on
all:
Encouraged
by the sign,
the troops
revive,
And fierce
on Troy with
doubled fury
drive.
Tydides
first, of
all the
Grecian
force,
O'er the
broad ditch
impell'd his
foaming
horse,
Pierced the
deep ranks,
their
strongest
battle tore,
And dyed his
javelin red
with Trojan
gore.
Young
Agelaus
(Phradmon
was his
sire)
With flying
coursers
shunn'd his
dreadful
ire;
Struck
through the
back, the
Phrygian
fell
oppress'd;
The dart
drove on,
and issued
at his
breast:
Headlong he
quits the
car: his
arms
resound;
His
ponderous
buckler
thunders on
the ground.
Forth rush a
tide of
Greeks, the
passage
freed;
The Atridae
first, the
Ajaces next
succeed:
Meriones,
like Mars in
arms
renown'd,
And godlike
Idomen, now
passed the
mound;
Evaemon's
son next
issues to
the foe,
And last
young Teucer
with his
bended bow.
Secure
behind the
Telamonian
shield
The skilful
archer wide
survey'd the
field,
With every
shaft some
hostile
victim slew,
Then close
beneath the
sevenfold
orb
withdrew:
The
conscious
infant so,
when fear
alarms,
Retires for
safety to
the mother's
arms.
Thus Ajax
guards his
brother in
the field,
Moves as he
moves, and
turns the
shining
shield.
Who first by
Teucer's
mortal
arrows bled?
Orsilochus;
then fell
Ormenus
dead:
The godlike
Lycophon
next press'd
the plain,
With
Chromius,
Daetor,
Ophelestes
slain:
Bold
Hamopaon
breathless
sunk to
ground;
The bloody
pile great
Melanippus
crown'd.
Heaps fell
on heaps,
sad trophies
of his art,
A Trojan
ghost
attending
every dart.
Great
Agamemnon
views with
joyful eye
The ranks
grow thinner
as his
arrows fly:
"O youth
forever
dear! (the
monarch
cried)
Thus, always
thus, thy
early worth
be tried;
Thy brave
example
shall
retrieve our
host,
Thy
country's
saviour, and
thy father's
boast!
Sprung from
an alien's
bed thy sire
to grace,
The vigorous
offspring of
a stolen
embrace:
Proud of his
boy, he
own'd the
generous
flame,
And the
brave son
repays his
cares with
fame.
Now hear a
monarch's
vow: If
heaven's
high powers
Give me to
raze Troy's
long-defended
towers;
Whatever
treasures
Greece for
me design,
The next
rich
honorary
gift be
thine:
Some golden
tripod, or
distinguished
car,
With
coursers
dreadful in
the ranks of
war:
Or some fair
captive,
whom thy
eyes
approve,
Shall
recompense
the
warrior's
toils with
love."
To this the
chief: "With
praise the
rest
inspire,
Nor urge a
soul already
fill'd with
fire.
What
strength I
have, be now
in battle
tried,
Till every
shaft in
Phrygian
blood be
dyed.
Since
rallying
from our
wall we
forced the
foe,
Still aim'd
at Hector
have I bent
my bow:
Eight forky
arrows from
this hand
have fled,
And eight
bold heroes
by their
points lie
dead:
But sure
some god
denies me to
destroy
This fury of
the field,
this dog of
Troy."
He said, and
twang'd the
string. The
weapon flies
At Hector's
breast, and
sings along
the skies:
He miss'd
the mark;
but pierced
Gorgythio's
heart,
And drench'd
in royal
blood the
thirsty
dart.
(Fair
Castianira,
nymph of
form divine,
This
offspring
added to
king Priam's
line.)
As
full-blown
poppies,
overcharged
with rain,(196)
Decline the
head, and
drooping
kiss the
plain;
So sinks the
youth: his
beauteous
head,
depress'd
Beneath his
helmet,
drops upon
his breast.
Another
shaft the
raging
archer drew,
That other
shaft with
erring fury
flew,
(From
Hector,
Phoebus
turn'd the
flying
wound,)
Yet fell not
dry or
guiltless to
the ground:
Thy breast,
brave
Archeptolemus!
it tore,
And dipp'd
its feathers
in no vulgar
gore.
Headlong he
falls: his
sudden fall
alarms
The steeds,
that startle
at his
sounding
arms.
Hector with
grief his
charioteer
beheld
All pale and
breathless
on the
sanguine
field:
Then bids
Cebriones
direct the
rein,
Quits his
bright car,
and issues
on the
plain.
Dreadful he
shouts: from
earth a
stone he
took,
And rush'd
on Teucer
with the
lifted rock.
The youth
already
strain'd the
forceful
yew;
The shaft
already to
his shoulder
drew;
The feather
in his hand,
just wing'd
for flight,
Touch'd
where the
neck and
hollow chest
unite;
There, where
the juncture
knits the
channel
bone,
The furious
chief
discharged
the craggy
stone:
The
bow-string
burst
beneath the
ponderous
blow,
And his
numb'd hand
dismiss'd
his useless
bow.
He fell: but
Ajax his
broad shield
display'd,
And screen'd
his brother
with the
mighty
shade;
Till great
Alaster, and
Mecistheus,
bore
The batter'd
archer
groaning to
the shore.
Troy yet
found grace
before the
Olympian
sire,
He arm'd
their hands,
and fill'd
their
breasts with
fire.
The Greeks
repulsed,
retreat
behind their
wall,
Or in the
trench on
heaps
confusedly
fall.
First of the
foe, great
Hector
march'd
along,
With terror
clothed, and
more than
mortal
strong.
As the bold
hound, that
gives the
lion chase,
With beating
bosom, and
with eager
pace,
Hangs on his
haunch, or
fastens on
his heels,
Guards as he
turns, and
circles as
he wheels;
Thus oft the
Grecians
turn'd, but
still they
flew;
Thus
following,
Hector still
the hindmost
slew.
When flying
they had
pass'd the
trench
profound,
And many a
chief lay
gasping on
the ground;
Before the
ships a
desperate
stand they
made,
And fired
the troops,
and called
the gods to
aid.
Fierce on
his rattling
chariot
Hector came:
His eyes
like Gorgon
shot a
sanguine
flame
That
wither'd all
their host:
like Mars he
stood:
Dire as the
monster,
dreadful as
the god!
Their strong
distress the
wife of Jove
survey'd;
Then pensive
thus, to
war's
triumphant
maid:
"O daughter
of that god,
whose arm
can wield
The avenging
bolt, and
shake the
sable
shield!
Now, in this
moment of
her last
despair,
Shall
wretched
Greece no
more confess
our care,
Condemn'd to
suffer the
full force
of fate,
And drain
the dregs of
heaven's
relentless
hate?
Gods! shall
one raging
hand thus
level all?
What numbers
fell! what
numbers yet
shall fall!
What power
divine shall
Hector's
wrath
assuage?
Still swells
the
slaughter,
and still
grows the
rage!"
So spake the
imperial
regent of
the skies;
To whom the
goddess with
the azure
eyes:
"Long since
had Hector
stain'd
these fields
with gore,
Stretch'd by
some Argive
on his
native
shore:
But he
above, the
sire of
heaven,
withstands,
Mocks our
attempts,
and slights
our just
demands;
The stubborn
god,
inflexible
and hard,
Forgets my
service and
deserved
reward:
Saved I, for
this, his
favourite
son
distress'd,
By stern
Eurystheus
with long
labours
press'd?
He begg'd,
with tears
he begg'd,
in deep
dismay;
I shot from
heaven, and
gave his arm
the day.
Oh had my
wisdom known
this dire
event,
When to grim
Pluto's
gloomy gates
he went;
The triple
dog had
never felt
his chain,
Nor Styx
been
cross'd, nor
hell
explored in
vain.
Averse to me
of all his
heaven of
gods,
At Thetis'
suit the
partial
Thunderer
nods;
To grace her
gloomy,
fierce,
resenting
son,
My hopes are
frustrate,
and my
Greeks
undone.
Some future
day,
perhaps, he
may be moved
To call his
blue-eyed
maid his
best
beloved.
Haste,
launch thy
chariot,
through yon
ranks to
ride;
Myself will
arm, and
thunder at
thy side.
Then,
goddess!
say, shall
Hector glory
then?
(That terror
of the
Greeks, that
man of men)
When Juno's
self, and
Pallas shall
appear,
All dreadful
in the
crimson
walks of
war!
What mighty
Trojan then,
on yonder
shore,
Expiring,
pale, and
terrible no
more,
Shall feast
the fowls,
and glut the
dogs with
gore?"
She ceased,
and Juno
rein'd the
steeds with
care:
(Heaven's
awful
empress,
Saturn's
other heir:)
Pallas,
meanwhile,
her various
veil
unbound,
With flowers
adorn'd,
with art
immortal
crown'd;
The radiant
robe her
sacred
fingers wove
Floats in
rich waves,
and spreads
the court of
Jove.
Her father's
arms her
mighty limbs
invest,
His cuirass
blazes on
her ample
breast.
The vigorous
power the
trembling
car ascends:
Shook by her
arm, the
massy
javelin
bends:
Huge,
ponderous,
strong! that
when her
fury burns
Proud
tyrants
humbles, and
whole hosts
o'erturns.
Saturnia
lends the
lash; the
coursers
fly;
Smooth
glides the
chariot
through the
liquid sky.
Heaven's
gates
spontaneous
open to the
powers,
Heaven's
golden
gates, kept
by the
winged
Hours.
Commission'd
in alternate
watch they
stand,
The sun's
bright
portals and
the skies
command;
Close, or
unfold, the
eternal
gates of day
Bar heaven
with clouds,
or roll
those clouds
away.
The sounding
hinges ring,
the clouds
divide.
Prone down
the steep of
heaven their
course they
guide.
But Jove,
incensed,
from Ida's
top
survey'd,
And thus
enjoin'd the
many-colour'd
maid.
"Thaumantia!
mount the
winds, and
stop their
car;
Against the
highest who
shall wage
the war?
If furious
yet they
dare the
vain debate,
Thus have I
spoke, and
what I speak
is fate:
Their
coursers
crush'd
beneath the
wheels shall
lie,
Their car in
fragments,
scatter'd
o'er the
sky:
My lightning
these
rebellious
shall
confound,
And hurl
them
flaming,
headlong, to
the ground,
Condemn'd
for ten
revolving
years to
weep
The wounds
impress'd by
burning
thunder
deep.
So shall
Minerva
learn to
fear our
ire,
Nor dare to
combat hers
and nature's
sire.
For Juno,
headstrong
and
imperious
still,
She claims
some title
to
transgress
our will."
Swift as the
wind, the
various-colour'd
maid
From Ida's
top her
golden wings
display'd;
To great
Olympus'
shining gate
she flies,
There meets
the chariot
rushing down
the skies,
Restrains
their
progress
from the
bright
abodes,
And speaks
the mandate
of the sire
of gods.
"What frenzy
goddesses!
what rage
can move
Celestial
minds to
tempt the
wrath of
Jove?
Desist,
obedient to
his high
command:
This is his
word; and
know his
word shall
stand:
His
lightning
your
rebellion
shall
confound,
And hurl ye
headlong,
flaming, to
the ground;
Your horses
crush'd
beneath the
wheels shall
lie,
Your car in
fragments
scatter'd
o'er the
sky;
Yourselves
condemn'd
ten rolling
years to
weep
The wounds
impress'd by
burning
thunder
deep.
So shall
Minerva
learn to
fear his
ire,
Nor dare to
combat hers
and nature's
sire.
For Juno,
headstrong
and
imperious
still,
She claims
some title
to
transgress
his will:
But thee,
what
desperate
insolence
has driven
To lift thy
lance
against the
king of
heaven?"
Then,
mounting on
the pinions
of the wind,
She flew;
and Juno
thus her
rage
resign'd:
"O daughter
of that god,
whose arm
can wield
The avenging
bolt, and
shake the
dreadful
shield
No more let
beings of
superior
birth
Contend with
Jove for
this low
race of
earth;
Triumphant
now, now
miserably
slain,
They breathe
or perish as
the fates
ordain:
But Jove's
high
counsels
full effect
shall find;
And, ever
constant,
ever rule
mankind."
She spoke,
and backward
turn'd her
steeds of
light,
Adorn'd with
manes of
gold, and
heavenly
bright.
The Hours
unloosed
them,
panting as
they stood,
And heap'd
their
mangers with
ambrosial
food.
There tied,
they rest in
high
celestial
stalls;
The chariot
propp'd
against the
crystal
walls,
The pensive
goddesses,
abash'd,
controll'd,
Mix with the
gods, and
fill their
seats of
gold.
And now the
Thunderer
meditates
his flight
From Ida's
summits to
the Olympian
height.
Swifter than
thought, the
wheels
instinctive
fly,
Flame
through the
vast of air,
and reach
the sky.
'Twas
Neptune's
charge his
coursers to
unbrace,
And fix the
car on its
immortal
base;
There stood
the chariot,
beaming
forth its
rays,
Till with a
snowy veil
he screen'd
the blaze.
He, whose
all-conscious
eyes the
world
behold,
The eternal
Thunderer
sat,
enthroned in
gold.
High heaven
the
footstool of
his feet he
makes,
And wide
beneath him
all Olympus
shakes.
Trembling
afar the
offending
powers
appear'd,
Confused and
silent, for
his frown
they fear'd.
He saw their
soul, and
thus his
word
imparts:
"Pallas and
Juno! say,
why heave
your hearts?
Soon was
your battle
o'er: proud
Troy retired
Before your
face, and in
your wrath
expired.
But know,
whoe'er
almighty
power
withstand!
Unmatch'd
our force,
unconquer'd
is our hand:
Who shall
the
sovereign of
the skies
control?
Not all the
gods that
crown the
starry pole.
Your hearts
shall
tremble, if
our arms we
take,
And each
immortal
nerve with
horror
shake.
For thus I
speak, and
what I speak
shall stand;
What power
soe'er
provokes our
lifted hand,
On this our
hill no more
shall hold
his place;
Cut off, and
exiled from
the ethereal
race."
Juno and
Pallas
grieving
hear the
doom,
But feast
their souls
on Ilion's
woes to
come.
Though
secret anger
swell'd
Minerva's
breast,
The prudent
goddess yet
her wrath
repress'd;
But Juno,
impotent of
rage,
replies:
"What hast
thou said, O
tyrant of
the skies!
Strength and
omnipotence
invest thy
throne;
'Tis thine
to punish;
ours to
grieve
alone.
For Greece
we grieve,
abandon'd by
her fate
To drink the
dregs of thy
unmeasured
hate.
From fields
forbidden we
submiss
refrain,
With arms
unaiding see
our Argives
slain;
Yet grant
our counsels
still their
breasts may
move,
Lest all
should
perish in
the rage of
Jove."
The goddess
thus; and
thus the god
replies,
Who swells
the clouds,
and blackens
all the
skies:
"The morning
sun, awaked
by loud
alarms,
Shall see
the almighty
Thunderer in
arms.
What heaps
of Argives
then shall
load the
plain,
Those
radiant eyes
shall view,
and view in
vain.
Nor shall
great Hector
cease the
rage of
fight,
The navy
flaming, and
thy Greeks
in flight,
Even till
the day when
certain
fates ordain
That stern
Achilles
(his
Patroclus
slain)
Shall rise
in
vengeance,
and lay
waste the
plain.
For such is
fate, nor
canst thou
turn its
course
With all thy
rage, with
all thy
rebel force.
Fly, if thy
wilt, to
earth's
remotest
bound,
Where on her
utmost verge
the seas
resound;
Where cursed
Iapetus and
Saturn
dwell,
Fast by the
brink,
within the
streams of
hell;
No sun e'er
gilds the
gloomy
horrors
there;
No cheerful
gales
refresh the
lazy air:
There arm
once more
the bold
Titanian
band;
And arm in
vain; for
what I will,
shall
stand."
Now deep in
ocean sunk
the lamp of
light,
And drew
behind the
cloudy veil
of night:
The
conquering
Trojans
mourn his
beams
decay'd;
The Greeks
rejoicing
bless the
friendly
shade.
The victors
keep the
field; and
Hector calls
A martial
council near
the navy
walls;
These to
Scamander's
bank apart
he led,
Where thinly
scatter'd
lay the
heaps of
dead.
The
assembled
chiefs,
descending
on the
ground,
Attend his
order, and
their prince
surround.
A massy
spear he
bore of
mighty
strength,
Of full ten
cubits was
the lance's
length;
The point
was brass,
refulgent to
behold,
Fix'd to the
wood with
circling
rings of
gold:
The noble
Hector on
his lance
reclined,
And, bending
forward,
thus
reveal'd his
mind:
"Ye valiant
Trojans,
with
attention
hear!
Ye Dardan
bands, and
generous
aids, give
ear!
This day, we
hoped, would
wrap in
conquering
flame
Greece with
her ships,
and crown
our toils
with fame.
But darkness
now, to save
the cowards,
falls,
And guards
them
trembling in
their wooden
walls.
Obey the
night, and
use her
peaceful
hours
Our steeds
to forage,
and refresh
our powers.
Straight
from the
town be
sheep and
oxen sought,
And
strengthening
bread and
generous
wine be
brought
Wide o'er
the field,
high blazing
to the sky,
Let numerous
fires the
absent sun
supply,
The flaming
piles with
plenteous
fuel raise,
Till the
bright morn
her purple
beam
displays;
Lest, in the
silence and
the shades
of night,
Greece on
her sable
ships
attempt her
flight.
Not
unmolested
let the
wretches
gain
Their lofty
decks, or
safely
cleave the
main;
Some hostile
wound let
every dart
bestow,
Some lasting
token of the
Phrygian
foe,
Wounds, that
long hence
may ask
their
spouses'
care.
And warn
their
children
from a
Trojan war.
Now through
the circuit
of our Ilion
wall,
Let sacred
heralds
sound the
solemn call;
To bid the
sires with
hoary
honours
crown'd,
And
beardless
youths, our
battlements
surround.
Firm be the
guard, while
distant lie
our powers,
And let the
matrons hang
with lights
the towers;
Lest, under
covert of
the midnight
shade,
The
insidious
foe the
naked town
invade.
Suffice,
to-night,
these orders
to obey;
A nobler
charge shall
rouse the
dawning day.
The gods, I
trust, shall
give to
Hector's
hand
From these
detested
foes to free
the land,
Who
plough'd,
with fates
averse, the
watery way:
For Trojan
vultures a
predestined
prey.
Our common
safety must
be now the
care;
But soon as
morning
paints the
fields of
air,
Sheathed in
bright arms
let every
troop
engage,
And the
fired fleet
behold the
battle rage.
Then, then
shall Hector
and Tydides
prove
Whose fates
are heaviest
in the
scales of
Jove.
To-morrow's
light (O
haste the
glorious
morn!)
Shall see
his bloody
spoils in
triumph
borne,
With this
keen javelin
shall his
breast be
gored,
And
prostrate
heroes bleed
around their
lord.
Certain as
this, oh!
might my
days endure,
From age
inglorious,
and black
death
secure;
So might my
life and
glory know
no bound,
Like Pallas
worshipp'd,
like the sun
renown'd!
As the next
dawn, the
last they
shall enjoy,
Shall crush
the Greeks,
and end the
woes of
Troy."
The leader
spoke. From
all his host
around
Shouts of
applause
along the
shores
resound.
Each from
the yoke the
smoking
steeds
untied,
And fix'd
their
headstalls
to his
chariot-side.
Fat sheep
and oxen
from the
town are
led,
With
generous
wine, and
all-sustaining
bread,
Full
hecatombs
lay burning
on the
shore:
The winds to
heaven the
curling
vapours
bore.
Ungrateful
offering to
the immortal
powers!(197)
Whose wrath
hung heavy
o'er the
Trojan
towers:
Nor Priam
nor his sons
obtain'd
their grace;
Proud Troy
they hated,
and her
guilty race.
The troops
exulting sat
in order
round,
And beaming
fires
illumined
all the
ground.
As when the
moon,
refulgent
lamp of
night,(198)
O'er
heaven's
pure azure
spreads her
sacred
light,
When not a
breath
disturbs the
deep serene,
And not a
cloud
o'ercasts
the solemn
scene,
Around her
throne the
vivid
planets
roll,
And stars
unnumber'd
gild the
glowing
pole,
O'er the
dark trees a
yellower
verdure
shed,
And tip with
silver every
mountain's
head:
Then shine
the vales,
the rocks in
prospect
rise,
A flood of
glory bursts
from all the
skies:
The
conscious
swains,
rejoicing in
the sight,
Eye the blue
vault, and
bless the
useful
light.
So many
flames
before proud
Ilion blaze,
And lighten
glimmering
Xanthus with
their rays.
The long
reflections
of the
distant
fires
Gleam on the
walls, and
tremble on
the spires.
A thousand
piles the
dusky
horrors
gild,
And shoot a
shady lustre
o'er the
field.
Full fifty
guards each
flaming pile
attend,
Whose
umber'd
arms, by
fits, thick
flashes
send,
Loud neigh
the coursers
o'er their
heaps of
corn,
And ardent
warriors
wait the
rising morn. |
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