Luis de Camoes Collected Poetical Works
Page 95
With furious speed the goddess rush’d before,
Her beauteous form a joyful Triton bore,
Whose eager face with glowing rapture fir’d,
Betray’d the pride which such a task inspir’d.
And now arriv’d, where to the whistling wind
The warlike navy’s bending masts reclin’d,
As through the billows rush’d the speedy prows,
The nymphs dividing, each her station chose.
Against the leader’s prow, her lovely breast
With more than mortal force the goddess press’d;
The ship recoiling trembles on the tide,
The nymphs, in help, pour round on every side,
From the dread bar the threaten’d keels to save;
The ship bounds up, half lifted from the wave,
And, trembling, hovers o’er the wat’ry grave.
As when alarm’d, to save the hoarded grain,
The care-earn’d store for winter’s dreary reign,
So toil, so tug, so pant, the lab’ring emmet train,125*
So toil’d the nymphs, and strain’d their panting force
To turn126* the navy from its fatal course:
Back, back the ship recedes; in vain the crew
With shouts on shouts their various toils renew;
In vain each nerve, each nautic art they strain,
And the rough wind distends the sail in vain:
Enraged, the sailors see their labours cross’d;
From side to side the reeling helm is toss’d:
High on the poop the skilful master stands;
Sudden he shrieks aloud, and spreads his hands.
A lurking rock its dreadful rifts betrays,
And right before the prow its ridge displays;
Loud shrieks of horror from the yard-arms rise,
And a dire general yell invades the skies.
The Moors start, fear-struck, at the horrid sound,
As if the rage of combat roar’d around.
Pale are their lips, each look in wild amaze
The horror of detected guilt betrays.
Pierc’d by the glance of Gama’s awful eyes
The conscious pilot quits the helm and flies,
From the high deck he plunges in the brine;
His mates their safety to the waves consign;
Dash’d by their plunging falls on every side
Foams and boils up around the rolling tide.
Thus127* the hoarse tenants of the sylvan lake,
A Lycian race of old, to flight betake,
At ev’ry sound they dread Latona’s hate,
And doubled vengeance of their former fate;
All sudden plunging leave the margin green,
And but their heads above the pool are seen.
So plung’d the Moors, when, horrid to behold!
From the bar’d rock’s dread jaws the billows roll’d,
Opening in instant fate the fleet to whelm,
When ready Vasco caught the stagg’ring helm:
Swift as his lofty voice resounds aloud,
The pond’rous anchors dash the whit’ning flood,
And round his vessel, nodding o’er the tide,
His other ships, bound by their anchors, ride.
And now revolving in his piercing thought
These various scenes with hidden import fraught:
The boastful pilot’s self-accusing flight,
The former treason of the Moorish spite;
How headlong to the rock the furious wind,
The boiling current, and their art combin’d;
Yet, though the groaning blast the canvas swell’d,
Some wondrous cause, unknown, their speed withheld:
Amaz’d, with hands high rais’d, and sparkling eyes,
“A128* miracle!” the raptur’d Gama cries,
“A miracle! O hail, thou sacred sign,
Thou pledge illustrious of the care divine!
Ah! fraudful malice! how shall wisdom’s care
Escape the poison of thy gilded snare?
The front of honesty, the saintly show,
The smile of friendship, and the holy vow
All, all conjoin’d our easy faith to gain,
To whelm us, shipwreck’d, in the ruthless main;
But where our prudence no deceit could spy,
There, heavenly Guardian, there thy watchful eye
Beheld our danger: still, oh still prevent,
Where human foresight fails, the dire intent,
The lurking treason of the smiling foe;
And let our toils, our days of length’ning woe,
Our weary wand’rings end. If still for thee,
To spread thy rites, our toils and vows agree,
On India’s strand thy sacred shrines to rear,
Oh let some friendly land of rest appear:
If for thine honour we these toils have dar’d,
These toils let India’s long-sought shore reward.”
So spoke the chief: the pious accents move
The gentle bosom of celestial Love:
The beauteous Queen129* to heaven now darts away;
In vain the weeping nymphs implore her stay:
Behind her now the morning star she leaves,
And the130* sixth heaven her lovely form receives.
Her radiant eyes such living splendours cast,
The sparkling stars were brighten’d as she pass’d;
The frozen pole with sudden streamlets flow’d,
And, as the burning zone, with fervour glow’d.
And now confess’d before the throne of Jove,
In all her charms appears the Queen of Love:
Flush’d by the ardour of her rapid flight
Through fields of æther and the realms of light,
Bright as the blushes of the roseate morn,
New blooming tints her glowing cheeks adorn;
And all that pride of beauteous grace she wore,
As131* when in Ida’s bower she stood of yore,
When every charm and every hope of joy
Enraptur’d and allur’d the Trojan boy.
Ah!132* had that hunter, whose unhappy fate
The human visage lost by Dian’s hate,
Had he beheld this fairer goddess move
Not hounds had slain him, but the fires of love.
Adown her neck, more white than virgin snow,
Of softest hue the golden tresses flow;
Her heaving breasts of purer, softer white
Than snow hills glist’ning in the moon’s pale light,
Except where cover’d by the sash, were bare,
And133* Love, unseen, smil’d soft, and panted there:
Nor less the zone the god’s fond zeal employs,
The zone awakes the flames of secret joys.
As ivy-tendrils round her limbs divine
Their spreading arms the young desires entwine:
Below her waist, and quiv’ring on the gale,
Of thinnest texture flows the silken veil:
(Ah! where the lucid curtain dimly shows,
With doubled fires the roving fancy glows!)
The hand of modesty the foldings threw,
Nor all conceal’d, nor all was given to view;
Yet her deep grief her lovely face betrays,
Though on her cheek the soft smile falt’ring plays.
All heaven was mov’d — as when some damsel coy,
Hurt by the rudeness of the am’rous boy,
Offended chides and smiles; with angry mien
Thus mixt with smiles, advanc’d the plaintive queen;
And134* thus: “O Thunderer! O potent Sire!
Shall I in vain thy kind regard require?
Alas! and cherish still the fond deceit,
That yet on me thy kindest smiles await.
Ah heaven! and must that valour which I love
Awake the vengeance and the rage of J
ove?
Yet mov’d with pity for my fav’rite race
I speak, though frowning on thine awful face,
I mark the tenor of the dread decree,
That to thy wrath consigns my sons and me.
Yes! let stern Bacchus bless thy partial care,
His be the triumph, and be mine despair.
The bold advent’rous sons of Tago’s clime
I loved — alas! that love is now their crime:
O happy they, and prosp’rous gales their fate,
Had I pursued them with relentless hate!
Yes! let my woeful sighs in vain implore,
Yes! let them perish on some barb’rous shore,
For I have lov’d them.” Here the swelling sigh
And pearly tear-drop rushing in her eye,
As morning dew hangs trembling on the rose,
Though fond to speak, her further speech oppose —
Her lips, then moving, as the pause of woe
Were now to give the voice of grief to flow;
When kindled by those charms, whose woes might move
And melt the prowling tiger’s rage to love.
The thundering-god her weeping sorrows eyed,
And sudden threw his awful state aside:
With135* that mild look which stills the driving storm,
When black roll’d clouds the face of heaven deform;
With that mild visage and benignant mien
Which to the sky restores the blue serene,
Her snowy neck and glowing cheek he press’d,
And wip’d her tears, and clasp’d her to his breast;
Yet she, still sighing, dropp’d the trickling tear,
As the chid nursling, mov’d with pride and fear,
Still sighs and moans, though fondled and caress’d;
Till thus great Jove the Fates’ decrees confess’d:
“O thou, my daughter, still belov’d as fair,
Vain are thy fears, thy heroes claim my care:
No power of gods could e’er my heart incline,
Like one fond smile, one powerful tear of thine.
Wide o’er the eastern shores shalt thou behold
Thy flags far streaming, and thy thunders roll’d;
Where nobler triumphs shall thy nation crown,
Than those of Roman or of Greek renown.
“If by mine aid the sapient Greek136* could brave
Th’ Ogygian seas, nor sink a deathless slave;137*
If through th’ Illyrian shelves Antenor bore,
Till safe he landed on Timavus’ shore;
If, by his fate, the pious Trojan138* led,
Safe through Charybdis’139* barking whirlpools sped:
Shall thy bold heroes, by my care disclaim’d,
Be left to perish, who, to worlds unnam’d
By vaunting Rome, pursue their dauntless way?
No — soon shalt thou with ravish’d eyes survey,
From stream to stream their lofty cities spread,
And their proud turrets rear the warlike head:
The stern-brow’d Turk shall bend the suppliant knee,
And Indian monarchs, now secure and free,
Beneath thy potent monarch’s yoke shall bend,
And thy just laws wide o’er the East extend.
Thy chief, who now in error’s circling maze,
For India’s shore through shelves and tempests strays;
That chief shalt thou behold, with lordly pride,
O’er Neptune’s trembling realm triumphant ride.
O wondrous fate! when not a breathing140* gale
Shall curl the billows, or distend the sail,
The waves shall boil and tremble, aw’d with dread,
And own the terror o’er their empire spread.
That hostile coast, with various streams supplied,
Whose treach’rous sons the fountain’s gifts denied;
That coast shalt thou behold his port supply,
Where oft thy weary fleets in rest shall lie.
Each shore which weav’d for him the snares of death,
To him these shores shall pledge their offer’d faith;
To him their haughty lords shall lowly bend,
And yield him tribute for the name of friend.
The Red-sea wave shall darken in the shade
Of thy broad sails, in frequent pomp display’d;
Thine eyes shall see the golden Ormuz’141* shore,
Twice thine, twice conquer’d, while the furious Moor,
Amaz’d, shall view his arrows backward142* driven,
Shower’d on his legions by the hand of Heaven.
Though twice assail’d by many a vengeful band,
Unconquer’d still shall Dio’s ramparts stand,
Such prowess there shall raise the Lusian name
That Mars shall tremble for his blighted fame;
There shall the Moors, blaspheming, sink in death,
And curse their Prophet with their parting breath.
“Where Goa’s warlike ramparts frown on high,
Pleas’d shalt thou see thy Lusian banners fly;
The pagan tribes in chains shall crowd her gate,
While the sublime shall tower in regal state,
The fatal scourge, the dread of all who dare
Against thy sons to plan the future war.
Though few thy troops who Conanour sustain,
The foe, though num’rous, shall assault in vain.
Great Calicut,143* for potent hosts renown’d,
By Lisbon’s sons assail’d shall strew the ground:
What floods on floods of vengeful hosts shall wage
On Cochin’s walls their swift-repeated rage;
In vain: a Lusian hero shall oppose
His dauntless bosom and disperse the foes,
As high-swelled waves, that thunder’d to the shock,
Disperse in feeble streamlets from the rock.
When144* black’ning broad and far o’er Actium’s tide
Augustus’ fleets the slave of love145* defied,
When that fallen warrior to the combat led
The bravest troops in Bactrian Scythia bred,
With Asian legions, and, his shameful bane,
The Egyptian queen, attendant in the train;
Though Mars rag’d high, and all his fury pour’d,
Till with the storm the boiling surges roar’d,
Yet shall thine eyes more dreadful scenes behold,
On burning surges burning surges roll’d,
The sheets of fire far billowing o’er the brine,
While I my thunder to thy sons resign.
Thus many a sea shall blaze, and many a shore
Resound the horror of the combat’s roar,
While thy bold prows triumphant ride along
By trembling China to the isles unsung
By ancient bard, by ancient chief unknown,
Till Ocean’s utmost shore thy bondage own.
“Thus from the Ganges to the Gadian146* strand,
From the most northern wave to southmost land:
That land decreed to bear the injur’d name
Of Magalhaens, the Lusian pride and shame;147*
From all that vast, though crown’d with heroes old,
Who with the gods were demi-gods enroll’d:
From all that vast no equal heroes shine
To match in arms, O lovely daughter, thine.”
So spake the awful ruler of the skies,
And Maia’s148* son swift at his mandate flies:
His charge, from treason and Mombassa’s149* king
The weary fleet in friendly port to bring,
And, while in sleep the brave De Gama lay,
To warn, and fair the shore of rest display.
Fleet through the yielding air Cyllenius150* glides,
As to the light the nimble air divides.
The mystic helmet151* on his head he wore,
A
nd in his hand the fatal rod152* he bore;
That rod of power153* to wake the silent dead,
Or o’er the lids of care soft slumbers shed.
And now, attended by the herald Fame,
To fair Melinda’s gate, conceal’d, he came;
And soon loud rumour echo’d through the town,
How from the western world, from waves unknown,
A noble band had reach’d the Æthiop shore,
Through seas and dangers never dar’d before:
The godlike, dread attempt their wonder fires,
Their gen’rous wonder fond regard inspires,
And all the city glows their aid to give,
To view the heroes, and their wants relieve.
’Twas now the solemn hour when midnight reigns,
And dimly twinkling o’er the ethereal plains,
The starry host, by gloomy silence led,
O’er earth and sea a glimm’ring paleness shed;
When to the fleet, which hemm’d with dangers lay,
The silver-wing’d Cyllenius154* darts away.
Each care was now in soft oblivion steep’d,
The watch alone accustom’d vigils kept;
E’en Gama, wearied by the day’s alarms,
Forgets his cares, reclin’d in slumber’s arms.
Scarce had he clos’d his careful eyes in rest,
When Maia’s son154* in vision stood confess’d:
And “Fly,” he cried, “O Lusitanian, fly;
Here guile and treason every nerve apply:
An impious king for thee the toil prepares,
An impious people weaves a thousand snares:
Oh fly these shores, unfurl the gather’d sail,
Lo, Heaven, thy guide, commands the rising gale.
Hark, loud it rustles; see, the gentle tide
Invites thy prows; the winds thy ling’ring chide.
Here such dire welcome is for thee prepar’d
As155* Diomed’s unhappy strangers shar’d;
His hapless guests at silent midnight bled,
On their torn limbs his snorting coursers fed.
Oh fly, or here with strangers’ blood imbru’d
Busiris’ altars thou shalt find renew’d:
Amidst his slaughter’d guests his altars stood
Obscene with gore, and bark’d with human blood:
Then thou, belov’d of Heaven, my counsel hear;
Right by the coast thine onward journey steer,
Till where the sun of noon no shade begets,
But day with night in equal tenor sets.156*
A sov’reign there, of gen’rous faith unstain’d,
With ancient bounty, and with joy unfeign’d
Your glad arrival on his shore shall greet,
And soothe with every care your weary fleet.
And when again for India’s golden strand