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Luis de Camoes Collected Poetical Works

Page 108

by Luis de Camoes


  On the wide mountain-wave’s slant ridge forlorn,

  At times discover’d by the lightnings blue,

  Hangs Gama’s lofty vessel, to the view

  Small as her boat; o’er Paulus’ shatter’d prore

  Falls the tall mainmast, prone, with crashing roar;

  Their hands, yet grasping their uprooted hair,

  The sailors lift to heaven in wild despair,

  The Saviour-God each yelling voice implores.

  Nor less from brave Coello’s war-ship pours

  The shriek, shrill rolling on the tempest’s wings:

  Dire as the bird of death at midnight sings

  His dreary howlings in the sick man’s ear,

  The answ’ring shriek from ship to ship they hear.

  Now, on the mountain-billows upward driv’n,

  The navy mingles with the clouds of heav’n;

  Now, rushing downward with the sinking waves,

  Bare they behold old Ocean’s vaulty caves.

  The eastern blast against the western pours,

  Against the southern storm the northern roars:

  From pole to pole the flashy lightnings glare,

  One pale, blue, twinkling sheet enwraps the air;

  In swift succession now the volleys fly,

  Darted in pointed curvings o’er the sky;

  And, through the horrors of the dreadful night,

  O’er the torn waves they shed a ghastly light;

  The breaking surges flame with burning red,

  Wider, and louder still the thunders spread,

  As if the solid heav’ns together crush’d,

  Expiring worlds on worlds expiring rush’d,

  And dim-brow’d Chaos struggled to regain

  The wild confusion of his ancient reign.

  Not such the volley when the arm of Jove

  From heav’n’s high gates the rebel Titans drove;

  Not such fierce lightnings blaz’d athwart the flood,

  When, sav’d by Heaven, Deucalion’s vessel rode

  High o’er the delug’d hills. Along the shore

  The halcyons, mindful of their fate, deplore;432*

  As beating round, on trembling wings they fly,

  Shrill through the storm their woful clamours die.

  So, from the tomb, when midnight veils the plains,

  With shrill, faint voice, th’ untimely ghost complains.433*

  The am’rous dolphins to their deepest caves

  In vain retreat, to fly the furious waves;

  High o’er the mountain-capes the ocean flows,

  And tears the aged forests from their brows:

  The pine and oak’s huge, sinewy roots uptorn,

  And, from their beds the dusky sands upborne

  On the rude whirlings of the billowy sweep,

  Imbrown the surface of the boiling deep.

  High to the poop the valiant Gama springs,

  And all the rage of grief his bosom wrings,

  Grief to behold, the while fond hope enjoy’d

  The meed of all his toils, that hope destroy’d.

  In awful horror lost, the hero stands,

  And rolls his eyes to heav’n, and spreads his hands,

  While to the clouds his vessel rides the swell,

  And now, her black keel strikes the gates of hell;

  “O Thou,” he cries, “whom trembling heav’n obeys,

  Whose will the tempest’s furious madness sways,

  Who, through the wild waves, ledd’st Thy chosen race,

  While the high billows stood like walls of brass:434*

  O Thou, while ocean bursting o’er the world

  Roar’d o’er the hills, and from the sky down hurl’d

  Rush’d other headlong oceans; oh, as then

  The second father of the race of men435*

  Safe in Thy care the dreadful billows rode,

  Oh! save us now, be now the Saviour-God!

  Safe in Thy care, what dangers have we pass’d!

  And shalt Thou leave us, leave us now at last

  To perish here — our dangers and our toils

  To spread Thy laws unworthy of Thy smiles;

  Our vows unheard? Heavy with all thy weight,

  Oh horror, come! and come, eternal night!”

  He paus’d; — then round his eyes and arms he threw

  In gesture wild, and thus: “Oh happy you!

  You, who in Afric fought for holy faith,

  And, pierc’d with Moorish spears, in glorious death

  Beheld the smiling heav’ns your toils reward,

  By your brave mates beheld the conquest shar’d;

  Oh happy you, on every shore renown’d!

  Your vows respected, and your wishes crown’d.”

  He spoke; redoubled rag’d the mingled blasts;

  Through the torn cordage and the shatter’d masts

  The winds loud whistled, fiercer lightnings blaz’d,

  And louder roars the doubled thunders rais’d,

  The sky and ocean blending, each on fire,

  Seem’d as all Nature struggled to expire.

  When now, the silver star of Love appear’d,436*

  Bright in the east her radiant front she rear’d;

  Fair, through the horrid storm, the gentle ray

  Announc’d the promise of the cheerful day;

  From her bright throne Celestial Love beheld

  The tempest burn, and blast on blast impell’d:

  “And must the furious demon still,” she cries,

  “Still urge his rage, nor all the past suffice!

  Yet, as the past, shall all his rage be vain — —”

  She spoke, and darted to the roaring main;

  Her lovely nymphs she calls, the nymphs obey,

  Her nymphs the virtues who confess her sway;

  Round ev’ry brow she bids the rose-buds twine,

  And ev’ry flower adown the locks to shine,

  The snow-white lily, and the laurel green,

  And pink and yellow as at strife be seen.

  Instant, amid their golden ringlets strove

  Each flow’ret, planted by the hand of Love;

  At strife, who first th’ enamour’d powers to gain,

  Who rule the tempests and the waves restrain:

  Bright as a starry band the Nereids shone,

  Instant old Eolus’ sons their presence437* own;

  The winds die faintly, and, in softest sighs,

  Each at his fair one’s feet desponding lies:

  The bright Orithia, threatening, sternly chides

  The furious Boreas, and his faith derides;

  The furious Boreas owns her powerful bands:

  Fair Galatea, with a smile commands

  The raging Notus, for his love, how true,

  His fervent passion and his faith she knew.

  Thus, every nymph her various lover chides;

  The silent winds are fetter’d by their brides;

  And, to the goddess of celestial loves,

  Mild as her look, and gentle as her doves,

  In flow’ry bands are brought. Their am’rous flame

  The queen approves, and “ever burn the same,”

  She cries, and joyful on the nymphs’ fair hands,

  Th’ Eolian race receive the queen’s commands,

  And vow, that henceforth her Armada’s sails

  Should gently swell with fair propitious gales.438*

  Now, morn, serene, in dappled grey arose

  O’er the fair lawns where murm’ring Ganges flows;

  Pale shone the wave beneath the golden beam,

  Blue, o’er the silver flood, Malabria’s mountains gleam;

  The sailors on the main-top’s airy round,

  “Land, land!” aloud with waving hands resound;

  Aloud the pilot of Melinda cries,

  “Behold, O chief, the shores of India rise!”

  Elate, the joyful crew on tip-toe trod,
/>   And every breast with swelling raptures glow’d;

  Gama’s great soul confess’d the rushing swell,

  Prone on his manly knees the hero fell;

  “O bounteous heav’n!” he cries, and spreads his hands

  To bounteous heav’n, while boundless joy commands

  No further word to flow. In wonder lost,

  As one in horrid dreams through whirlpools toss’d,

  Now, snatch’d by demons, rides the flaming air,

  And howls, and hears the howlings of despair;

  Awak’d, amaz’d, confus’d with transport glows,

  And, trembling still, with troubled joy o’erflows;

  So, yet affected with the sickly weight

  Left by the horrors of the dreadful night,

  The hero wakes, in raptures to behold

  The Indian shores before his prows unfold:

  Bounding, he rises, and, with eyes on fire,

  Surveys the limits of his proud desire.

  O glorious chief, while storms and oceans rav’d,

  What hopeless toils thy dauntless valour brav’d!

  By toils like thine the brave ascend to heav’n,

  By toils like thine immortal fame is giv’n.

  Not he, who daily moves in ermine gown,

  Who nightly slumbers on the couch of down;

  Who proudly boasts through heroes old to trace

  The lordly lineage of his titled race;

  Proud of the smiles of every courtier lord,

  A welcome guest at every courtier’s board;

  Not he, the feeble son of ease, may claim

  Thy wreath, O Gama, or may hope thy fame.

  ’Tis he, who nurtur’d on the tented field,

  From whose brown cheek each tint of fear expell’d,

  With manly face unmov’d, secure, serene,

  Amidst the thunders of the deathful scene,

  From horror’s mouth dares snatch the warrior’s crown,

  His own his honours, all his fame his own:

  Who, proudly just to honour’s stern commands,

  The dogstar’s rage on Afric’s burning sands,

  Or the keen air of midnight polar skies,

  Long watchful by the helm, alike defies:

  Who, on his front, the trophies of the wars,

  Bears his proud knighthood’s badge, his honest scars;

  Who, cloth’d in steel, by thirst, by famine worn,

  Through raging seas by bold ambition borne,

  Scornful of gold, by noblest ardour fir’d,

  Each wish by mental dignity inspir’d,

  Prepar’d each ill to suffer, or to dare,

  To bless mankind, his great, his only care;

  Him whom her son mature Experience owns,

  Him, him alone Heroic Glory crowns.

  Once more the translator is tempted to confess his opinion, that the contrary practice of Homer and Virgil affords, in reality, no reasonable objection against the exclamatory exuberances of Camoëns. Homer, though the father of the epic poem, has his exuberances, which violently trespass against the first rule of the epopea, the unity of the action. A rule which, strictly speaking, is not outraged by the digressive exclamations of Camoëns. The one now before us, as the severest critic must allow, is happily adapted to the subject of the book. The great dangers which the hero had hitherto encountered are particularly described. He is afterwards brought in safety to the Indian shore, the object of his ambition, and of all his toils. The exclamation, therefore, on the grand hinge of the poem has its propriety, and discovers the warmth of its author’s genius. It must also please, as it is strongly characteristic of the temper of our military poet. The manly contempt with which he speaks of the luxurious, inactive courtier, and the delight and honour with which he talks of the toils of the soldier, present his own active life to the reader of sensibility. His campaigns in Africa, where in a gallant attack he lost an eye, his dangerous life at sea, and the military fatigues, and the battles in which he bore an honourable share in India, rise to our idea, and possess us with an esteem and admiration of our martial poet, who thus could look back with a gallant enthusiasm (though his modesty does not mention himself) on all the hardships he had endured; who thus could bravely esteem the dangers to which he had been exposed, and by which he had severely suffered, as the most desirable occurrences of his life, and the ornament of his name.

  END OF THE SIXTH BOOK.

  BOOK VII.

  THE ARGUMENT.

  The poet, having expatiated on the glorious achievements of the Portuguese, describes the Germans, English, French, and Italians, reproaching them for their profane wars and luxury, while they ought to have been employed in opposing the enemies of the Christian faith. He then describes the western peninsula of India — the shores of Malabar — and Calicut, the capital of the Zamorim, where Gama had landed. Monsaide, a Moor of Barbary, is met with, who addresses Gama in Spanish, and offers to serve him as interpreter, Monsaide gives him a particular account of everything in India. The Zamorim invites Gama to an audience. The catual, or prime minister, with his officers, visits the ships, and embraces the opportunity of asking Gama to relate to him the history of Portugal.

  HAIL glorious chief!439* where never chief before

  Forc’d his bold way, all hail on India’s shore!

  And hail, Ye Lusian heroes, fair and wide

  What groves of palm, to haughty Rome denied,

  For you by Ganges’ length’ning banks unfold!

  What laurel-forests on the shores of gold

  For you their honours ever verdant rear,

  Proud, with their leaves, to twine the Lusian spear!

  Ah Heav’n! what fury Europe’s sons controls!

  What self-consuming discord fires their souls!

  ‘Gainst her own breast her sword Germania turns,

  Through all her states fraternal rancour burns;440*

  Some, blindly wand’ring, holy faith disclaim,441*

  And, fierce through all, wild rages civil flame.

  High sound the titles of the English crown,

  “King of Jerusalem,”442* his old renown!

  Alas, delighted with an airy name,

  The thin, dim shadow of departed fame,

  England’s stern monarch, sunk in soft repose,

  Luxurious riots mid his northern snows:

  Or, if the starting burst of rage succeed,

  His brethren are his foes, and Christians bleed;

  While Hagar’s brutal race his titles stain,

  In weeping Salem unmolested reign,

  And with their rites impure her holy shrines profane.

  }

  And thou, O Gaul,443* with gaudy trophies plum’d.

  “Most Christian” nam’d; alas, in vain assum’d!

  What impious lust of empire steels thy breast444*

  From their just lords the Christian lands to wrest!

  While holy faith’s hereditary foes445*

  Possess the treasures where Cynifio flows;446*

  And all secure, behold their harvests smile

  In waving gold along the banks of Nile.

  And thou, O lost to glory, lost to fame,

  Thou dark oblivion of thy ancient name,

  By every vicious luxury debas’d,

  Each noble passion from thy breast eras’d,

  Nerveless in sloth, enfeebling arts thy boast,

  O Italy, how fall’n, how low, how lost!447*

  In vain, to thee, the call of glory sounds,

  Thy sword alone thy own soft bosom wounds.

  Ah, Europe’s sons, ye brother-powers, in you

  The fables old of Cadmus448* now are true;

  Fierce rose the brothers from the dragon teeth,

  And each fell, crimson’d with a brother’s death.

  So, fall the bravest of the Christian name,449*

  While dogs unclean450* Messiah’s lore blaspheme,

  And howl their curses o’er the holy tomb
,

  While to the sword the Christian race they doom.

  From age to age, from shore to distant shore,

  By various princes led, their legions pour;

  United all in one determin’d aim,

  From ev’ry land to blot the Christian name.

  Then wake, ye brother-powers, combin’d awake,

  And, from the foe the great example take.

  If empire tempt ye, lo, the East expands,

  Fair and immense, her summer-garden lands:

  There, boastful Wealth displays her radiant store;

  Pactol and Hermus’ streams, o’er golden ore,

  Roll their long way; but, not for you they flow,

  Their treasures blaze on the stern sultan’s brow:

  For him Assyria plies the loom of gold,

  And Afric’s sons their deepest mines unfold

  To build his haughty throne. Ye western powers,

  To throw the mimic bolt of Jove is yours,

  Yours all the art to wield the arms of fire,

  Then, bid the thunders of the dreadful tire

  Against the walls of dread Byzantium451* roar,

  Till, headlong driven from Europe’s ravish’d shore

  To their cold Scythian wilds, and dreary dens,

  By Caspian mountains, and uncultur’d fens,

  (Their fathers’ seats beyond the Wolgian Lake,452*)

  The barb’rous race of Saracen betake.

  And hark, to you the woful Greek exclaims;

  The Georgian fathers and th’ Armenian dames,

  Their fairest offspring from their bosoms torn,

  (A dreadful tribute!)453* loud imploring mourn.

  Alas, in vain! their offspring captive led,

  In Hagar’s454* sons’ unhallow’d temples bred,

  To rapine train’d, arise a brutal host,

  The Christian terror, and the Turkish boast.

  Yet sleep, ye powers of Europe, careless sleep,

  To you in vain your eastern brethren weep;

  Yet, not in vain their woe-wrung tears shall sue,

  Though small the Lusian realms, her legions few,

  The guardian oft by Heav’n ordain’d before,

  The Lusian race shall guard Messiah’s lore.

  When Heav’n decreed to crush the Moorish foe

  Heav’n gave the Lusian spear to strike the blow.

  When Heav’n’s own laws o’er Afric’s shores were heard,

  The sacred shrines the Lusian heroes rear’d;455*

  Nor shall their zeal in Asia’s bounds expire,

  Asia, subdu’d, shall fume with hallow’d fire.

  When the red sun the Lusian shore forsakes,

  And on the lap of deepest west456* awakes,

 

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