Complete Works of Homer

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Complete Works of Homer Page 112

by Homer


  Wash'd from beneath him slides the slimy soil;

  When thus (his eyes on heaven's expansion thrown)

  Forth bursts the hero with an angry groan:

  "Is there no god Achilles to befriend,

  No power to avert his miserable end?

  Prevent, O Jove! this ignominious date,

  And make my future life the sport of fate.

  Of all heaven's oracles believed in vain,

  But most of Thetis must her son complain;

  By Phoebus' darts she prophesied my fall,

  In glorious arms before the Trojan wall.

  Oh! had I died in fields of battle warm,

  Stretch'd like a hero, by a hero's arm!

  Might Hector's spear this dauntless bosom rend,

  And my swift soul o'ertake my slaughter'd friend.

  Ah no! Achilles meets a shameful fate,

  Oh how unworthy of the brave and great!

  Like some vile swain, whom on a rainy day,

  Crossing a ford, the torrent sweeps away,

  An unregarded carcase to the sea."

  Neptune and Pallas haste to his relief,

  And thus in human form address'd the chief:

  The power of ocean first: "Forbear thy fear,

  O son of Peleus! Lo, thy gods appear!

  Behold! from Jove descending to thy aid,

  Propitious Neptune, and the blue-eyed maid.

  Stay, and the furious flood shall cease to rave

  'Tis not thy fate to glut his angry wave.

  But thou, the counsel heaven suggests, attend!

  Nor breathe from combat, nor thy sword suspend,

  Till Troy receive her flying sons, till all

  Her routed squadrons pant behind their wall:

  Hector alone shall stand his fatal chance,

  And Hector's blood shall smoke upon thy lance.

  Thine is the glory doom'd." Thus spake the gods:

  Then swift ascended to the bright abodes.

  Stung with new ardour, thus by heaven impell'd,

  He springs impetuous, and invades the field:

  O'er all the expanded plain the waters spread;

  Heaved on the bounding billows danced the dead,

  Floating 'midst scatter'd arms; while casques of gold

  And turn'd-up bucklers glitter'd as they roll'd.

  High o'er the surging tide, by leaps and bounds,

  He wades, and mounts; the parted wave resounds.

  Not a whole river stops the hero's course,

  While Pallas fills him with immortal force.

  With equal rage, indignant Xanthus roars,

  And lifts his billows, and o'erwhelms his shores.

  Then thus to Simois! "Haste, my brother flood;

  And check this mortal that controls a god;

  Our bravest heroes else shall quit the fight,

  And Ilion tumble from her towery height.

  Call then thy subject streams, and bid them roar,

  From all thy fountains swell thy watery store,

  With broken rocks, and with a load of dead,

  Charge the black surge, and pour it on his head.

  Mark how resistless through the floods he goes,

  And boldly bids the warring gods be foes!

  But nor that force, nor form divine to sight,

  Shall aught avail him, if our rage unite:

  Whelm'd under our dark gulfs those arms shall lie,

  That blaze so dreadful in each Trojan eye;

  And deep beneath a sandy mountain hurl'd,

  Immersed remain this terror of the world.

  Such ponderous ruin shall confound the place,

  No Greeks shall e'er his perish'd relics grace,

  No hand his bones shall gather, or inhume;

  These his cold rites, and this his watery tomb."

  ACHILLES CONTENDING WITH THE RIVERS.

  He said; and on the chief descends amain,

  Increased with gore, and swelling with the slain.

  Then, murmuring from his beds, he boils, he raves,

  And a foam whitens on the purple waves:

  At every step, before Achilles stood

  The crimson surge, and deluged him with blood.

  Fear touch'd the queen of heaven: she saw dismay'd,

  She call'd aloud, and summon'd Vulcan's aid.

  "Rise to the war! the insulting flood requires

  Thy wasteful arm! assemble all thy fires!

  While to their aid, by our command enjoin'd,

  Rush the swift eastern and the western wind:

  These from old ocean at my word shall blow,

  Pour the red torrent on the watery foe,

  Corses and arms to one bright ruin turn,

  And hissing rivers to their bottoms burn.

  Go, mighty in thy rage! display thy power,

  Drink the whole flood, the crackling trees devour.

  Scorch all the banks! and (till our voice reclaim)

  Exert the unwearied furies of the flame!"

  The power ignipotent her word obeys:

  Wide o'er the plain he pours the boundless blaze;

  At once consumes the dead, and dries the soil

  And the shrunk waters in their channel boil.

  As when autumnal Boreas sweeps the sky,

  And instant blows the water'd gardens dry:

  So look'd the field, so whiten'd was the ground,

  While Vulcan breathed the fiery blast around.

  Swift on the sedgy reeds the ruin preys;

  Along the margin winds the running blaze:

  The trees in flaming rows to ashes turn,

  The flowering lotos and the tamarisk burn,

  Broad elm, and cypress rising in a spire;

  The watery willows hiss before the fire.

  Now glow the waves, the fishes pant for breath,

  The eels lie twisting in the pangs of death:

  Now flounce aloft, now dive the scaly fry,

  Or, gasping, turn their bellies to the sky.

  At length the river rear'd his languid head,

  And thus, short-panting, to the god he said:

  "Oh Vulcan! oh! what power resists thy might?

  I faint, I sink, unequal to the fight —

  I yield — Let Ilion fall; if fate decree —

  Ah — bend no more thy fiery arms on me!"

  He ceased; wide conflagration blazing round;

  The bubbling waters yield a hissing sound.

  As when the flames beneath a cauldron rise,

  To melt the fat of some rich sacrifice,

  Amid the fierce embrace of circling fires

  The waters foam, the heavy smoke aspires:

  So boils the imprison'd flood, forbid to flow,

  And choked with vapours feels his bottom glow.

  To Juno then, imperial queen of air,

  The burning river sends his earnest prayer:

  "Ah why, Saturnia; must thy son engage

  Me, only me, with all his wasteful rage?

  On other gods his dreadful arm employ,

  For mightier gods assert the cause of Troy.

  Submissive I desist, if thou command;

  But ah! withdraw this all-destroying hand.

  Hear then my solemn oath, to yield to fate

  Unaided Ilion, and her destined state,

  Till Greece shall gird her with destructive flame,

  And in one ruin sink the Trojan name."

  His warm entreaty touch'd Saturnia's ear:

  She bade the ignipotent his rage forbear,

  Recall the flame, nor in a mortal cause

  Infest a god: the obedient flame withdraws:

  Again the branching streams begin to spread,

  And soft remurmur in their wonted bed.

  While these by Juno's will the strife resign,

  The warring gods in fierce contention join:

  Rekindling rage each heavenly breast alarms:

  With horrid clangour shock the et
hereal arms:

  Heaven in loud thunder bids the trumpet sound;

  And wide beneath them groans the rending ground.

  Jove, as his sport, the dreadful scene descries,

  And views contending gods with careless eyes.

  The power of battles lifts his brazen spear,

  And first assaults the radiant queen of war:

  "What moved thy madness, thus to disunite

  Ethereal minds, and mix all heaven in fight?

  What wonder this, when in thy frantic mood

  Thou drovest a mortal to insult a god?

  Thy impious hand Tydides' javelin bore,

  And madly bathed it in celestial gore."

  He spoke, and smote the long-resounding shield,

  Which bears Jove's thunder on its dreadful field:

  The adamantine aegis of her sire,

  That turns the glancing bolt and forked fire.

  Then heaved the goddess in her mighty hand

  A stone, the limit of the neighbouring land,

  There fix'd from eldest times; black, craggy, vast;

  This at the heavenly homicide she cast.

  Thundering he falls, a mass of monstrous size:

  And seven broad acres covers as he lies.

  The stunning stroke his stubborn nerves unbound:

  Loud o'er the fields his ringing arms resound:

  The scornful dame her conquest views with smiles,

  And, glorying, thus the prostrate god reviles:

  "Hast thou not yet, insatiate fury! known

  How far Minerva's force transcends thy own?

  Juno, whom thou rebellious darest withstand,

  Corrects thy folly thus by Pallas' hand;

  Thus meets thy broken faith with just disgrace,

  And partial aid to Troy's perfidious race."

  The goddess spoke, and turn'd her eyes away,

  That, beaming round, diffused celestial day.

  Jove's Cyprian daughter, stooping on the land,

  Lent to the wounded god her tender hand:

  Slowly he rises, scarcely breathes with pain,

  And, propp'd on her fair arm, forsakes the plain.

  This the bright empress of the heavens survey'd,

  And, scoffing, thus to war's victorious maid:

  "Lo! what an aid on Mars's side is seen!

  The smiles' and loves' unconquerable queen!

  Mark with what insolence, in open view,

  She moves: let Pallas, if she dares, pursue."

  Minerva smiling heard, the pair o'ertook,

  And slightly on her breast the wanton strook:

  She, unresisting, fell (her spirits fled);

  On earth together lay the lovers spread.

  "And like these heroes be the fate of all

  (Minerva cries) who guard the Trojan wall!

  To Grecian gods such let the Phrygian be,

  So dread, so fierce, as Venus is to me;

  Then from the lowest stone shall Troy be moved."

  Thus she, and Juno with a smile approved.

  Meantime, to mix in more than mortal fight,

  The god of ocean dares the god of light.

  "What sloth has seized us, when the fields around

  Ring with conflicting powers, and heaven returns the sound:

  Shall, ignominious, we with shame retire,

  No deed perform'd, to our Olympian sire?

  Come, prove thy arm! for first the war to wage,

  Suits not my greatness, or superior age:

  Rash as thou art to prop the Trojan throne,

  (Forgetful of my wrongs, and of thy own,)

  And guard the race of proud Laomedon!

  Hast thou forgot, how, at the monarch's prayer,

  We shared the lengthen'd labours of a year?

  Troy walls I raised (for such were Jove's commands),

  And yon proud bulwarks grew beneath my hands:

  Thy task it was to feed the bellowing droves

  Along fair Ida's vales and pendant groves.

  But when the circling seasons in their train

  Brought back the grateful day that crown'd our pain,

  With menace stern the fraudful king defied

  Our latent godhead, and the prize denied:

  Mad as he was, he threaten'd servile bands,

  And doom'd us exiles far in barbarous lands.

  Incensed, we heavenward fled with swiftest wing,

  And destined vengeance on the perjured king.

  Dost thou, for this, afford proud Ilion grace,

  And not, like us, infest the faithless race;

  Like us, their present, future sons destroy,

  And from its deep foundations heave their Troy?"

  Apollo thus: "To combat for mankind

  Ill suits the wisdom of celestial mind;

  For what is man? Calamitous by birth,

  They owe their life and nourishment to earth;

  Like yearly leaves, that now, with beauty crown'd,

  Smile on the sun; now, wither on the ground.

  To their own hands commit the frantic scene,

  Nor mix immortals in a cause so mean."

  Then turns his face, far-beaming heavenly fires,

  And from the senior power submiss retires:

  Him thus retreating, Artemis upbraids,

  The quiver'd huntress of the sylvan shades:

  "And is it thus the youthful Phoebus flies,

  And yields to ocean's hoary sire the prize?

  How vain that martial pomp, and dreadful show

  Of pointed arrows and the silver bow!

  Now boast no more in yon celestial bower,

  Thy force can match the great earth-shaking power."

  Silent he heard the queen of woods upbraid:

  Not so Saturnia bore the vaunting maid:

  But furious thus: "What insolence has driven

  Thy pride to face the majesty of heaven?

  What though by Jove the female plague design'd,

  Fierce to the feeble race of womankind,

  The wretched matron feels thy piercing dart;

  Thy sex's tyrant, with a tiger's heart?

  What though tremendous in the woodland chase

  Thy certain arrows pierce the savage race?

  How dares thy rashness on the powers divine

  Employ those arms, or match thy force with mine?

  Learn hence, no more unequal war to wage — "

  She said, and seized her wrists with eager rage;

  These in her left hand lock'd, her right untied

  The bow, the quiver, and its plumy pride.

  About her temples flies the busy bow;

  Now here, now there, she winds her from the blow;

  The scattering arrows, rattling from the case,

  Drop round, and idly mark the dusty place.

  Swift from the field the baffled huntress flies,

  And scarce restrains the torrent in her eyes:

  So, when the falcon wings her way above,

  To the cleft cavern speeds the gentle dove;

  (Not fated yet to die;) there safe retreats,

  Yet still her heart against the marble beats.

  To her Latona hastes with tender care;

  Whom Hermes viewing, thus declines the war:

  "How shall I face the dame, who gives delight

  To him whose thunders blacken heaven with night?

  Go, matchless goddess! triumph in the skies,

  And boast my conquest, while I yield the prize."

  He spoke; and pass'd: Latona, stooping low,

  Collects the scatter'd shafts and fallen bow,

  That, glittering on the dust, lay here and there

  Dishonour'd relics of Diana's war:

  Then swift pursued her to her blest abode,

  Where, all confused, she sought the sovereign god;

  Weeping, she grasp'd his knees: the ambrosial vest

  Shook with her sighs, and panted on her breast.
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  The sire superior smiled, and bade her show

  What heavenly hand had caused his daughter's woe?

  Abash'd, she names his own imperial spouse;

  And the pale crescent fades upon her brows.

  Thus they above: while, swiftly gliding down,

  Apollo enters Ilion's sacred town;

  The guardian-god now trembled for her wall,

  And fear'd the Greeks, though fate forbade her fall.

  Back to Olympus, from the war's alarms,

  Return the shining bands of gods in arms;

  Some proud in triumph, some with rage on fire;

  And take their thrones around the ethereal sire.

  Through blood, through death, Achilles still proceeds,

  O'er slaughter'd heroes, and o'er rolling steeds.

  As when avenging flames with fury driven

  On guilty towns exert the wrath of heaven;

  The pale inhabitants, some fall, some fly;

  And the red vapours purple all the sky:

  So raged Achilles: death and dire dismay,

  And toils, and terrors, fill'd the dreadful day.

  High on a turret hoary Priam stands,

  And marks the waste of his destructive hands;

  Views, from his arm, the Trojans' scatter'd flight,

  And the near hero rising on his sight!

  No stop, no check, no aid! With feeble pace,

  And settled sorrow on his aged face,

  Fast as he could, he sighing quits the walls;

  And thus descending, on the guards he calls:

  "You to whose care our city-gates belong,

  Set wide your portals to the flying throng:

  For lo! he comes, with unresisted sway;

  He comes, and desolation marks his way!

  But when within the walls our troops take breath,

  Lock fast the brazen bars, and shut out death."

  Thus charged the reverend monarch: wide were flung

  The opening folds; the sounding hinges rung.

  Phoebus rush'd forth, the flying bands to meet;

  Struck slaughter back, and cover'd the retreat,

  On heaps the Trojans crowd to gain the gate,

  And gladsome see their last escape from fate.

  Thither, all parch'd with thirst, a heartless train,

  Hoary with dust, they beat the hollow plain:

  And gasping, panting, fainting, labour on

  With heavier strides, that lengthen toward the town.

  Enraged Achilles follows with his spear;

  Wild with revenge, insatiable of war.

  Then had the Greeks eternal praise acquired,

  And Troy inglorious to her walls retired;

  But he, the god who darts ethereal flame,

  Shot down to save her, and redeem her fame:

  To young Agenor force divine he gave;

 

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