Luis de Camoes Collected Poetical Works

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by Luis de Camoes


  Fond he demands, and now demands again

  Their various triumphs on the western main

  Again, ere readiest answer found a place,

  He asks the story of the Lusian race;

  What god was founder of the mighty line,

  Beneath what heaven their land, what shores adjoin;

  And what their climate, where the sinking day

  Gives the last glimpse of twilight’s silv’ry ray.

  “But most, O chief,” the zealous monarch cries,

  “What raging seas you brav’d, what low’ring skies;

  What tribes, what rites you saw; what savage hate

  On our rude Afric prov’d your hapless fate:

  Oh tell, for lo, the chilly dawning star

  Yet rides before the morning’s purple car;

  And o’er the wave the sun’s bold coursers raise

  Their flaming fronts, and give the opening blaze;

  Soft on the glassy wave the zephyrs sleep,

  And the still billows holy silence keep.

  Nor less are we, undaunted chief, prepar’d

  To hear thy nation’s gallant deeds declar’d;

  Nor think, tho’ scorch’d beneath the car of day,

  Our minds too dull the debt of praise to pay;

  Melinda’s sons the test of greatness know,

  And on the Lusian race the palm bestow.

  “If Titan’s giant brood with impious arms

  Shook high Olympus’ brow with rude alarms;

  If Theseus and Pirithoüs dar’d invade

  The dismal horrors of the Stygian shade,

  Nor less your glory, nor your boldness less

  That thus exploring Neptune’s last recess

  Contemns his waves and tempests. If the thirst

  To live in fame, though famed for deeds accurs’d,

  Could urge the caitiff, who to win a name

  Gave Dian’s temple to the wasting flame:174*

  If such the ardour to attain renown,

  How bright the lustre of the hero’s crown,

  Whose deeds of fair emprize his honours raise,

  And bind his brows, like thine, with deathless bays!”

  END OF THE SECOND BOOK.

  BOOK III.

  THE ARGUMENT.

  Gama, in reply to the King of Melinda, describes the various countries of Europe; narrates the rise of the Portuguese nation. History of Portugal. Battle of Guimaraens. Egas offers himself with his wife and family for the honour of his country. Alonzo pardons him. Battle of Ourique against the Moors; great slaughter of the Moors. Alonzo proclaimed King of Portugal on the battle-field of Ourique. At Badajoz he is wounded and taken prisoner: resigns the kingdom to his son, Don Sancho. Hearing that thirteen Moorish kings, headed by the Emperor of Morocco, were besieging Sancho in Santarem, he hastens to deliver his son: gains a great battle, in which the Moorish Emperor is slain. Victories of Sancho; capture of Sylves from the Moors, and of Tui from the King of Leon. Conquest of Alcazar de Sul by Alfonso II. Deposition of Sancho II. Is succeeded by Alphonso III., the conqueror of Algarve; succeeded by Dionysius, founder of the University of Coimbra. His son, Alfonso the Brave. Affecting story of the fair Inez, who is crowned Queen of Portugal after her assassination. Don Pedro, her husband, rendered desperate by the loss of his mistress, is succeeded by the weak and effeminate Ferdinand. His wife Eleonora, torn from the arms of her lawful husband, dishonours his reign.

  OH now, Calliope, thy potent aid!

  What to the king th’ illustrious Gama said

  Clothe in immortal verse. With sacred fire

  My breast, If e’er it loved thy lore, inspire:

  So may the patron175* of the healing art,

  The god of day to thee consign his heart;

  From thee, the mother of his darling son,176*

  May never wand’ring thought to Daphne run:

  May never Clytia, nor Leucothoë’s pride

  Henceforth with thee his changeful love divide.

  Then aid, O fairest nymph, my fond desire,

  And give my verse the Lusian warlike fire:

  Fir’d by the song, the list’ning world shall know

  That Aganippe’s streams from Tagus flow.

  Oh, let no more the flowers of Pindus shine

  On thy fair breast, or round thy temples twine:

  On Tago’s banks a richer chaplet blows,

  And with the tuneful god my bosom glows:

  I feel, I feel the mighty power infuse,

  And bathe my spirit in Aonian177* dews!

  Now silence woo’d the illustrious chief’s reply,

  And keen attention watch’d on every eye;

  When slowly turning with a modest grace,

  The noble Vasco rais’d his manly face;

  O mighty king (he cries), at thy178* command

  The martial story of my native land

  I tell; but more my doubtful heart had joy’d

  Had other wars my praiseful lips employ’d.

  When men the honours of their race commend,

  The doubts of strangers on the tale attend:

  Yet, though reluctance falter on my tongue,

  Though day would fail a narrative so long,

  Yet, well assur’d no fiction’s glare can raise,

  Or give my country’s fame a brighter praise;

  Though less, far less, whate’er my lips can say,

  Than truth must give it, I thy will obey.

  Between that zone where endless winter reigns

  And that where flaming heat consumes the plains;

  Array’d in green, beneath indulgent skies,

  The queen of arts and arms, fair Europe lies.

  Around her northern and her western shores,

  Throng’d with the finny race old ocean roars;

  The midland sea,179* where tide ne’er swell’d the waves,

  Her richest lawns, the southern border, laves.

  Against the rising morn, the northmost bound

  The whirling Tanais180* parts from Asian ground,

  As tumbling from the Scythian mountains cold

  Their crooked way the rapid waters hold

  To dull Mæotis’181* lake. Her eastern line

  More to the south, the Phrygian waves confine:

  Those waves, which, black with many a navy, bore

  The Grecian heroes to the Dardan shore;

  Where now the seaman, rapt in mournful joy,

  Explores in vain the sad remains of Troy.

  Wide to the north beneath the pole she spreads;

  Here piles of mountains rear their rugged heads,

  Here winds on winds in endless tempests roll,

  The valleys sigh, the length’ning echoes howl.

  On the rude cliffs, with frosty spangles grey,

  Weak as the twilight, gleams the solar ray;

  Each mountain’s breast with snows eternal shines,

  The streams and seas eternal frost confines.

  Here dwelt the num’rous Scythian tribes of old,

  A dreadful race! by victor ne’er controll’d,

  Whose pride maintain’d that theirs the sacred earth,

  Not that of Nile, which first gave man his birth.

  Here dismal Lapland spreads a dreary wild,

  Here Norway’s wastes, where harvest never smil’d,

  Whose groves of fir in gloomy horror frown,

  Nod o’er the rocks, and to the tempest groan.

  Here Scandia’s clime her rugged shores extends,

  And, far projected, through the ocean bends;

  Whose sons’ dread footsteps yet Ausonia182* wears,

  And yet proud Rome in mournful ruin bears.

  When summer bursts stern winter’s icy chain,

  Here the bold Swede, the Prussian, and the Dane

  Hoist the white sail and plough the foamy way,

  Cheer’d by whole months of one continual day:

  Between these shores and Tanais’183* ru
shing tide

  Livonia’s sons and Russia’s hordes reside.

  Stern as their clime the tribes, whose sires of yore

  The name, far dreaded, of Sarmatians bore.

  Where, fam’d of old, th’ Hercynian184* forest lower’d,

  Oft seen in arms the Polish troops are pour’d

  Wide foraging the downs. The Saxon race,

  The Hungar dext’rous in the wild-boar chase,

  The various nations whom the Rhine’s cold wave

  The Elbe, Amasis, and the Danube lave,

  Of various tongues, for various princes known,

  Their mighty lord the German emperor own.

  Between the Danube and the lucid tide

  Where hapless Helle left her name,185* and died:

  The dreadful god of battles’ kindred race,

  Degenerate now, possess the hills of Thrace.

  Mount Hæmus186* here, and Rhodope renown’d,

  And proud Byzantium,187* long with empire crown’d;

  Their ancient pride, their ancient virtue fled,

  Low to the Turk now bend the servile head.

  Here spread the fields of warlike Macedon,

  And here those happy lands where genius shone

  In all the arts, in all the Muses’ charms,

  In all the pride of elegance and arms,

  Which to the heavens resounded Grecia’s name,

  And left in every age a deathless fame.

  The stern Dalmatians till the neighb’ring ground;

  And where Antenor anchor’d in the sound

  Proud Venice, as a queen, majestic towers,

  And o’er the trembling waves her thunder pours.

  For learning glorious, glorious for the sword,

  While Rome’s proud monarch reign’d the world’s dread lord,

  Here Italy her beauteous landscapes shows;

  Around her sides his arms old ocean throws;

  The dashing waves the ramparts aid supply;

  The hoary Alps high tow’ring to the sky,

  From shore to shore a rugged barrier spread,

  And lower destruction on the hostile tread.

  But now no more her hostile spirit burns,

  There now the saint, in humble vespers mourns

  To Heaven more grateful than the pride of war,

  And all the triumphs of the victor’s car.

  Onward fair Gallia opens to the view

  Her groves of olive, and her vineyards blue:

  Wide spread her harvests o’er the scenes renown’d,

  Where Julius188* proudly strode with laurel crown’d.

  Here Seine, how fair when glist’ning to the moon!

  Rolls his white wave, and here the cold Garoon;

  Here the deep Rhine the flow’ry margin laves,

  And here the rapid Rhone impervious raves.

  Here the gruff mountains, faithless to the vows

  Of lost Pyrene189* rear their cloudy brows;

  Whence, when of old the flames their woods devour’d,

  Streams of red gold and melted silver pour’d.

  And now, as head of all the lordly train

  Of Europe’s realms, appears illustrious Spain.

  Alas, what various fortunes has she known!

  Yet ever did her sons her wrongs atone;

  Short was the triumph of her haughty foes,

  And still with fairer bloom her honours rose.

  Where, lock’d with land, the struggling currents boil

  Fam’d for the godlike Theban’s latest toil,190*

  Against one coast the Punic strand extends,

  Around her breast the midland ocean bends,

  Around her shores two various oceans swell,

  And various nations in her bosom dwell.

  Such deeds of valour dignify their names,

  Each the imperial right of honour claims.

  Proud Aragon, who twice her standard rear’d

  In conquer’d Naples; and for art rever’d,

  Galicia’s prudent sons; the fierce Navarre,

  And he far dreaded in the Moorish war,

  The bold Asturian; nor Sevilia’s race,

  Nor thine, Granada, claim the second place.

  Here too the heroes who command the plain

  By Betis191* water’d; here the pride of Spain,

  The brave Castilian pauses o’er his sword,

  His country’s dread deliverer and lord.

  Proud o’er the rest, with splendid wealth array’d,

  As crown to this wide empire, Europe’s head,

  Fair Lusitania smiles, the western bound,

  Whose verdant breast the rolling waves surround,

  Where gentle evening pours her lambent ray,

  The last pale gleaming of departing day;

  This, this, O mighty king, the sacred earth,

  This the loved parent-soil that gave me birth.

  And oh, would bounteous Heaven my prayer regard,

  And fair success my perilous toils reward,

  May that dear land my latest breath receive,

  And give my weary bones a peaceful grave.

  Sublime the honours of my native land,

  And high in Heaven’s regard her heroes stand;

  By Heaven’s decree ’twas theirs the first to quell

  The Moorish tyrants, and from Spain expel;

  Nor could their burning wilds conceal their flight,

  Their burning wilds confess’d the Lusian might.

  From Lusus famed, whose honour’d name we bear,

  (The son of Bacchus or the bold compeer),

  The glorious name of Lusitania rose,

  A name tremendous to the Roman foes,

  When her bold troops the valiant shepherd192* led,

  And foul with rout the Roman eagles fled;

  When haughty Rome achiev’d the treach’rous blow,

  That own’d her terror of the matchless foe.193*

  But, when no more her Viriatus fought,

  Age after age her deeper thraldom brought;

  Her broken sons by ruthless tyrants spurn’d,

  Her vineyards languish’d, and her pastures mourn’d;

  Till time revolving rais’d her drooping head,

  And o’er the wond’ring world her conquests spread.

  Thus rose her power: the lands of lordly Spain

  Were now the brave Alonzo’s wide domain;

  Great were his honours in the bloody fight,

  And Fame proclaim’d him champion of the right.

  And oft the groaning Saracen’s194* proud crest

  And shatter’d mail his awful force confess’d.

  From Calpe’s summits to the Caspian shore

  Loud-tongued renown his godlike actions bore.

  And many a chief from distant regions195* came

  To share the laurels of Alonzo’s fame;

  Yet, more for holy Faith’s unspotted cause

  Their spears they wielded, than for Fame’s applause.

  Great were the deeds their thund’ring arms display’d,

  And still their foremost swords the battle sway’d.

  And now to honour with distinguish’d meed

  Each hero’s worth the gen’rous king decreed.

  The first and bravest of the foreign bands

  Hungaria’s younger son, brave Henry196* stands.

  To him are given the fields where Tagus flows,

  And the glad king his daughter’s hand bestows;

  The fair Teresa shines his blooming bride,

  And owns her father’s love, and Henry’s pride.

  With her, besides, the sire confirms in dower

  Whate’er his sword might rescue from the Moor;

  And soon on Hagar’s race197* the hero pours

  His warlike fury — soon the vanquish’d Moors

  To him far round the neighb’ring lands resign,

  And Heaven rewards him with a glorious line.

  To him is born, Heaven
’s gift, a gallant son,

  The glorious founder of the Lusian throne.

  Nor Spain’s wide lands alone his deeds attest,

  Deliver’d Judah Henry’s might198* confess’d

  On Jordan’s bank the victor-hero strode,

  Whose hallow’d waters bath’d the Saviour-God;

  And Salem’s199* gate her open folds display’d,

  When Godfrey200* conquer’d by the hero’s aid.

  But now no more in tented fields oppos’d,

  By Tagus’ stream his honour’d age he clos’d;

  Yet still his dauntless worth, his virtue lived,

  And all the father in the son survived.

  And soon his worth was prov’d, the parent dame

  Avow’d a second hymeneal flame.201*

  The low-born spouse assumes the monarch’s place,

  And from the throne expels the orphan race.

  But young Alphonso, like his sires of yore

  (His grandsire’s virtues, as his name, he bore),

  Arms for the fight, his ravish’d throne to win,

  And the lac’d helmet grasps his beardless chin.

  Her fiercest firebrands Civil Discord wav’d,

  Before her troops the lustful mother rav’d;

  Lost to maternal love, and lost to shame,

  Unaw’d she saw Heaven’s awful vengeance flame;

  The brother’s sword the brother’s bosom tore,

  And sad Guimaria’s202* meadows blush’d with gore;

  With Lusian gore the peasant’s cot was stain’d,

  And kindred blood the sacred shrine profan’d.

  Here, cruel Progne, here, O Jason’s wife,

  Yet reeking with your children’s purple life,

  Here glut your eyes with deeper guilt than yours;

  Here fiercer rage her fiercer rancour pours.

  Your crime was vengeance on the faithless sires,

  But here ambition with foul lust conspires.

  ’Twas rage of love, O Scylla, urged the knife203*

  That robb’d thy father of his fated life;

  Here grosser rage the mother’s breast inflames,

  And at her guiltless son the vengeance aims,

  But aims in vain; her slaughter’d forces yield,

  And the brave youth rides victor o’er the field.

  No more his subjects lift the thirsty sword,

  And the glad realm proclaims the youthful lord.

  But ah, how wild the noblest tempers run!

  His filial duty now forsakes the son;

  Secluded from the day, in clanking chains

  His rage the parent’s agèd limbs constrains.

  Heaven frown’d — Dark vengeance lowering on his brows,

  And sheath’d in brass, the proud Castilian rose,

  Resolv’d the rigour to his daughter shown

 

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