Translated by John Dryden [1697]
All were attentive to the godlike man,
When from his lofty
couch he thus began:
"Great queen, what you command me to
relate
Renews the sad remembrance of our fate:
An empire from
its old foundations rent,
And ev'ry woe the Trojans underwent;
A
peopled city made a desart place;
All that I saw, and part of
which I was:
Not ev'n the hardest of our foes could hear,
Nor
stern Ulysses tell without a tear.
And now the latter watch of
wasting night,
And setting stars, to kindly rest invite;
But,
since you take such int'rest in our woe,
And Troy's disastrous end
desire to know,
I will restrain my tears, and briefly tell
What
in our last and fatal night befell.
"By destiny compell'd, and in despair,
The Greeks grew
weary of the tedious war,
And by Minerva's aid a fabric
rear'd,
Which like a steed of monstrous height appear'd:
The
sides were plank'd with pine; they feign'd it made
For their
return, and this the vow they paid.
Thus they pretend, but in the
hollow side
Selected numbers of their soldiers hide:
With
inward arms the dire machine they load,
And iron bowels stuff the
dark abode.
In sight of Troy lies Tenedos, an isle
(While
Fortune did on Priam's empire smile)
Renown'd for wealth; but,
since, a faithless bay,
Where ships expos'd to wind and weather
lay.
There was their fleet conceal'd. We thought, for Greece
Their
sails were hoisted, and our fears release.
The Trojans, coop'd
within their walls so long,
Unbar their gates, and issue in a
throng,
Like swarming bees, and with delight survey
The camp
deserted, where the Grecians lay:
The quarters of the sev'ral
chiefs they show'd;
Here Phoenix, here Achilles, made abode;
Here
join'd the battles; there the navy rode.
Part on the pile their
wond'ring eyes employ:
The pile by Pallas rais'd to ruin
Troy.
Thymoetes first ('t is doubtful whether hir'd,
Or so the
Trojan destiny requir'd)
Mov'd that the ramparts might be broken
down,
To lodge the monster fabric in the town.
But Capys, and
the rest of sounder mind,
The fatal present to the flames
designed,
Or to the wat'ry deep; at least to bore
The hollow
sides, and hidden frauds explore.
The giddy vulgar, as their
fancies guide,
With noise say nothing, and in parts
divide.
Laocoon, follow'd by a num'rous crowd,
Ran from the
fort, and cried, from far, aloud:
'O wretched countrymen! what
fury reigns?
What more than madness has possess'd your
brains?
Think you the Grecians from your coasts are gone?
And
are Ulysses' arts no better known?
This hollow fabric either must
inclose,
Within its blind recess, our secret foes;
Or 't is an
engine rais'd above the town,
T' o'erlook the walls, and then to
batter down.
Somewhat is sure design'd, by fraud or force:
Trust
not their presents, nor admit the horse.'
Thus having said,
against the steed he threw
His forceful spear, which, hissing as
flew,
Pierc'd thro' the yielding planks of jointed wood,
And
trembling in the hollow belly stood.
The sides, transpierc'd,
return a rattling sound,
And groans of Greeks inclos'd come
issuing thro' the wound
And, had not Heav'n the fall of Troy
design'd,
Or had not men been fated to be blind,
Enough was
said and done t'inspire a better mind.
Then had our lances pierc'd
the treach'rous wood,
And Ilian tow'rs and Priam's empire
stood.
Meantime, with shouts, the Trojan shepherds bring
A
captive Greek, in bands, before the king;
Taken to take; who made
himself their prey,
T' impose on their belief, and Troy
betray;
Fix'd on his aim, and obstinately bent
To die
undaunted, or to circumvent.
About the captive, tides of Trojans
flow;
All press to see, and some insult the foe.
Now hear how
well the Greeks their wiles disguis'd;
Behold a nation in a man
compris'd.
Trembling the miscreant stood, unarm'd and bound;
He
star'd, and roll'd his haggard eyes around,
Then said: 'Alas! what
earth remains, what sea
Is open to receive unhappy me?
What
fate a wretched fugitive attends,
Scorn'd by my foes, abandon'd by
my friends?'
He said, and sigh'd, and cast a rueful eye:
Our
pity kindles, and our passions die.
We cheer youth to make his own
defense,
And freely tell us what he was, and whence:
What news
he could impart, we long to know,
And what to credit from a
captive foe.
"His fear at length dismiss'd, he said: 'Whate'er
My fate
ordains, my words shall be sincere:
I neither can nor dare my
birth disclaim;
Greece is my country, Sinon is my name.
Tho'
plung'd by Fortune's pow'r in misery,
'T is not in Fortune's pow'r
to make me lie.
If any chance has hither brought the name
Of
Palamedes, not unknown to fame,
Who suffer'd from the malice of
the times,
Accus'd and sentenc'd for pretended crimes,
Because
these fatal wars he would prevent;
Whose death the wretched Greeks
too late lament-
Me, then a boy, my father, poor and bare
Of
other means, committed to his care,
His kinsman and companion in
the war.
While Fortune favor'd, while his arms support
The
cause, and rul'd the counsels, of the court,
I made some figure
there; nor was my name
Obscure, nor I without my share of
fame.
But when Ulysses, with fallacious arts,
Had made
impression in the people's hearts,
And forg'd a treason in my
patron's name
(I speak of things too far divulg'd by fame),
My
kinsman fell. Then I, without support,
In private mourn'd his
loss, and left the court.
Mad as I was, I could not bear his
fate
With silent grief, but loudly blam'd the state,
And curs'd
the direful author of my woes.
'T was told again; and hence my
ruin rose.
I threaten'd, if indulgent Heav'n once more
Would
land me safely on my native shore,
His death with double vengeance
to restore.
This mov'd the murderer's hate; and soon ensued
Th'
effects of malice from a man so proud.
Ambiguous rumors thro' the
camp he spread,
And sought, by treason, my devoted head;
New
crimes invented; left unturn'd no stone,
To make my guilt appear,
and hide his own;
Till Calchas was by force and threat'ning
wrought-
But why- why dwell I on that anxious thought?
If on my
nation just revenge you seek,
And 't is t' appear a foe, t' appear
a Greek;
Already you my name and country know;
Assuage your
thirst of blood, and strike the blow:
My death will both the
kingly brothers please,
And set insatiate Ithacus at ease.'
This
fair unfinish'd tale, these broken starts,
Rais'd expectations in
our longing hearts:
Unknowing as we were in Grecian arts.
His
former trembling once again renew'd,
With acted fear, the villain
thus pursued:
"'Long had the Grecians (tir'd with fruitless care,
And
wearied with an unsuccessful war)
Resolv'd to raise the siege, and
leave the town;
And, had the gods permitted, they had gone;
But
oft the wintry seas and southern winds
Withstood their passage
home, and chang'd their minds.
Portents and prodigies their souls
amaz'd;
But most, when this stupendous pile was rais'd:
Then
flaming meteors, hung in air, were seen,
And thunders rattled
thro' a sky serene.
Dismay'd, and fearful of some dire
event,
Eurypylus t' enquire their fate was sent.
He from the
gods this dreadful answer brought:
"O Grecians, when the Trojan shores you sought,
Your
passage with a virgin's blood was bought:
So must your safe return
be bought again,
And Grecian blood once more atone the main."
The
spreading rumor round the people ran;
All fear'd, and each
believ'd himself the man.
Ulysses took th' advantage of their
fright;
Call'd Calchas, and produc'd in open sight:
Then bade
him name the wretch, ordain'd by fate
The public victim, to redeem
the state.
Already some presag'd the dire event,
And saw what
sacrifice Ulysses meant.
For twice five days the good old seer
withstood
Th' intended treason, and was dumb to blood,
Till,
tir'd, with endless clamors and pursuit
Of Ithacus, he stood no
longer mute;
But, as it was agreed, pronounc'd that I
Was
destin'd by the wrathful gods to die.
All prais'd the sentence,
pleas'd the storm should fall
On one alone, whose fury threaten'd
all.
The dismal day was come; the priests prepare
Their
leaven'd cakes, and fillets for my hair.
I follow'd nature's laws,
and must avow
I broke my bonds and fled the fatal blow.
Hid in
a weedy lake all night I lay,
Secure of safety when they sail'd
away.
But now what further hopes for me remain,
To see my
friends, or native soil, again;
My tender infants, or my careful
sire,
Whom they returning will to death require;
Will
perpetrate on them their first design,
And take the forfeit of
their heads for mine?
Which, O! if pity mortal minds can move,
If
there be faith below, or gods above,
If innocence and truth can
claim desert,
Ye Trojans, from an injur'd wretch avert.'
"False tears true pity move; the king commands
To loose
his fetters, and unbind his hands:
Then adds these friendly words:
'Dismiss thy fears;
Forget the Greeks; be mine as thou wert
theirs.
But truly tell, was it for force or guile,
Or some
religious end, you rais'd the pile?'
Thus said the king. He, full
of fraudful arts,
This well-invented tale for truth imparts:
'Ye
lamps of heav'n!' he said, and lifted high
His hands now free,
'thou venerable sky!
Inviolable pow'rs, ador'd with dread!
Ye
fatal fillets, that once bound this head!
Ye sacred altars, from
whose flames I fled!
Be all of you adjur'd; and grant I
may,
Without a crime, th' ungrateful Greeks betray,
Reveal the
secrets of the guilty state,
And justly punish whom I justly
hate!
But you, O king, preserve the faith you gave,
If I, to
save myself, your empire save.
The Grecian hopes, and all th'
attempts they made,
Were only founded on Minerva's aid.
But
from the time when impious Diomede,
And false Ulysses, that
inventive head,
Her fatal image from the temple drew,
The
sleeping guardians of the castle slew,
Her virgin statue with
their bloody hands
Polluted, and profan'd her holy bands;
From
thence the tide of fortune left their shore,
And ebb'd much faster
than it flow'd before:
Their courage languish'd, as their hopes
decay'd;
And Pallas, now averse, refus'd her aid.
Nor did the
goddess doubtfully declare
Her alter'd mind and alienated
care.
When first her fatal image touch'd the ground,
She
sternly cast her glaring eyes around,
That sparkled as they
roll'd, and seem'd to threat:
Her heav'nly limbs distill'd a briny
sweat.
Thrice from the ground she leap'd, was seen to wield
Her
brandish'd lance, and shake her horrid shield.
Then Calchas bade
our host for flight
And hope no conquest from the tedious
war,
Till first they sail'd for Greece; with pray'rs besought
Her
injur'd pow'r, and better omens brought.
And now their navy plows
the wat'ry main,
Yet soon expect it on your shores again,
With
Pallas pleas'd; as Calchas did ordain.
But first, to reconcile the
blue-ey'd maid
For her stol'n statue and her tow'r
betray'd,
Warn'd by the seer, to her offended name
We rais'd
and dedicate this wondrous frame,
So lofty, lest thro' your
forbidden gates
It pass, and intercept our better fates:
For,
once admitted there, our hopes are lost;
And Troy may then a new
Palladium boast;
For so religion and the gods ordain,
That, if
you violate with hands profane
Minerva's gift, your town in flames
shall burn,
(Which omen, O ye gods, on Graecia turn!)
But if it
climb, with your assisting hands,
The Trojan walls, and in the
city stands;
Then Troy shall Argos and Mycenae burn,
And the
reverse of fate on us return.'
"With such deceits he gain'd their easy hearts,
Too prone
to credit his perfidious arts.
What Diomede, nor Thetis' greater
son,
A thousand ships, nor ten years' siege, had done-
False
tears and fawning words the city won.
"A greater omen, and of worse portent,
Did our unwary
minds with fear torment,
Concurring to produce the dire
event.
Laocoon, Neptune's priest by lot that year,
With solemn
pomp then sacrific'd a steer;
When, dreadful to behold, from sea
we spied
Two serpents, rank'd abreast, the seas divide,
And
smoothly sweep along the swelling tide.
Their flaming crests above
the waves they show;
Their bellies seem to burn the seas
below;
Their speckled tails advance to steer their course,
And
on the sounding shore the flying billows force.
And now the
strand, and now the plain they held;
Their ardent eyes with bloody
streaks were fill'd;
Their nimble tongues they brandish'd as they
came,
And lick'd their hissing jaws, that sputter'd flame.
We
fled amaz'd; their destin'd way they take,
And to Laocoon and his
children make;
And first around the tender boys they wind,
Then
with their sharpen'd fangs their limbs and bodies grind.
The
wretched father, running to their aid
With pious haste, but vain,
they next invade;
Twice round his waist their winding volumes
roll'd;
And twice about his gasping throat they fold.
The
priest thus doubly chok'd, their crests divide,
And tow'ring o'er
his head in triumph ride.
With both his hands he labors at the
knots;
His holy fillets the blue venom blots;
His roaring fills
the flitting air around.
Thus, when an ox receives a glancing
wound,
He breaks his bands, the fatal altar flies,
And with
loud bellowings breaks the yielding skies.
Their tasks perform'd,
the serpents quit their prey,
And to the tow'r of Pallas make
their way:
Couch'd at her feet, they lie protected there
By her
large buckler and protended spear.
Amazement seizes all; the
gen'ral cry
Proclaims Laocoon justly doom'd to die,
Whose hand
the will of Pallas had withstood,
And dared to violate the sacred
wood.
All vote t' admit the steed, that vows be paid
And
incense offer'd to th' offended maid.
A spacious breach is made;
the town lies bare;
Some hoisting-levers, some the wheels
prepare
And fasten to the horse's feet; the rest
With cables
haul along th' unwieldly beast.
Each on his fellow for assistance
calls;
At length the fatal fabric mounts the walls,
Big with
destruction. Boys with chaplets crown'd,
And choirs of virgins,
sing and dance around.
Thus rais'd aloft, and then descending
down,
It enters o'er our heads, and threats the town.
O sacred
city, built by hands divine!
O valiant heroes of the Trojan
line!
Four times he struck: as oft the clashing sound
Of arms
was heard, and inward groans rebound.
Yet, mad with zeal, and
blinded with our fate,
We haul along the horse in solemn
state;
Then place the dire portent within the tow'r.
Cassandra
cried, and curs'd th' unhappy hour;
Foretold our fate; but, by the
god's decree,
All heard, and none believ'd the prophecy.
With
branches we the fanes adorn, and waste,
In jollity, the day
ordain'd to be the last.
Meantime the rapid heav'ns roll'd down
the light,
And on the shaded ocean rush'd the night;
Our men,
secure, nor guards nor sentries held,
But easy sleep their weary
limbs compell'd.
The Grecians had embark'd their naval pow'rs
From
Tenedos, and sought our well-known shores,
Safe under covert of
the silent night,
And guided by th' imperial galley's light;
When
Sinon, favor'd by the partial gods,
Unlock'd the horse, and op'd
his dark abodes;
Restor'd to vital air our hidden foes,
Who
joyful from their long confinement rose.
Tysander bold, and
Sthenelus their guide,
And dire Ulysses down the cable slide:
Then
Thoas, Athamas, and Pyrrhus haste;
Nor was the Podalirian hero
last,
Nor injur'd Menelaus, nor the fam'd
Epeus, who the fatal
engine fram'd.
A nameless crowd succeed; their forces join
T'
invade the town, oppress'd with sleep and wine.
Those few they
find awake first meet their fate;
Then to their fellows they unbar
the gate.
"'T was in the dead of night, when sleep repairs
Our
bodies worn with toils, our minds with cares,
When Hector's ghost
before my sight appears:
A bloody shroud he seem'd, and bath'd in
tears;
Such as he was, when, by Pelides slain,
Thessalian
coursers dragg'd him o'er the plain.
Swoln were his feet, as when
the thongs were thrust
Thro' the bor'd holes; his body black with
dust;
Unlike that Hector who return'd from toils
Of war,
triumphant, in Aeacian spoils,
Or him who made the fainting Greeks
retire,
And launch'd against their navy Phrygian fire.
His hair
and beard stood stiffen'd with his gore;
And all the wounds he for
his country bore
Now stream'd afresh, and with new purple ran.
I
wept to see the visionary man,
And, while my trance continued,
thus began:
'O light of Trojans, and support of Troy,
Thy
father's champion, and thy country's joy!
O, long expected by thy
friends! from whence
Art thou so late return'd for our defense?
Do
we behold thee, wearied as we are
With length of labors, and with
toils of war?
After so many fun'rals of thy own
Art thou
restor'd to thy declining town?
But say, what wounds are these?
What new disgrace
Deforms the manly features of thy face?'
"To this the specter no reply did frame,
But answer'd to
the cause for which he came,
And, groaning from the bottom of his
breast,
This warning in these mournful words express'd:
'O
goddess-born! escape, by timely flight,
The flames and horrors of
this fatal night.
The foes already have possess'd the wall;
Troy
nods from high, and totters to her fall.
Enough is paid to Priam's
royal name,
More than enough to duty and to fame.
If by a
mortal hand my father's throne
Could be defended, 't was by mine
alone.
Now Troy to thee commends her future state,
And gives
her gods companions of thy fate:
From their assistance walls
expect,
Which, wand'ring long, at last thou shalt erect.'
He
said, and brought me, from their blest abodes,
The venerable
statues of the gods,
With ancient Vesta from the sacred choir,
The
wreaths and relics of th' immortal fire.
"Now peals of shouts come thund'ring from afar,
Cries,
threats, and loud laments, and mingled war:
The noise approaches,
tho' our palace stood
Aloof from streets, encompass'd with a
wood.
Louder, and yet more loud, I hear th' alarms
Of human
cries distinct, and clashing arms.
Fear broke my slumbers; I no
longer stay,
But mount the terrace, thence the town survey,
And
hearken what the frightful sounds convey.
Thus, when a flood of
fire by wind is borne,
Crackling it rolls, and mows the standing
corn;
Or deluges, descending on the plains,
Sweep o'er the
yellow year, destroy the pains
Of lab'ring oxen and the peasant's
gains;
Unroot the forest oaks, and bear away
Flocks, folds, and
trees, and undistinguish'd prey:
The shepherd climbs the cliff,
and sees from far
The wasteful ravage of the wat'ry war.
Then
Hector's faith was manifestly clear'd,
And Grecian frauds in open
light appear'd.
The palace of Deiphobus ascends
In smoky
flames, and catches on his friends.
Ucalegon burns next: the seas
are bright
With splendor not their own, and shine with Trojan
light.
New clamors and new clangors now arise,
The sound of
trumpets mix'd with fighting cries.
With frenzy seiz'd, I run to
meet th' alarms,
Resolv'd on death, resolv'd to die in arms,
But
first to gather friends, with them t' oppose
(If fortune favor'd)
and repel the foes;
Spurr'd by my courage, by my country
fir'd,
With sense of honor and revenge inspir'd.
"Pantheus, Apollo's priest, a sacred name,
Had scap'd the
Grecian swords, and pass'd the flame:
With relics loaden. to my
doors he fled,
And by the hand his tender grandson led.
'What
hope, O Pantheus? whither can we run?
Where make a stand? and what
may yet be done?'
Scarce had I said, when Pantheus, with a
groan:
'Troy is no more, and Ilium was a town!
The fatal day,
th' appointed hour, is come,
When wrathful Jove's irrevocable
doom
Transfers the Trojan state to Grecian hands.
The fire
consumes the town, the foe commands;
And armed hosts, an
unexpected force,
Break from the bowels of the fatal horse.
Within
the gates, proud Sinon throws about
The flames; and foes for
entrance press without,
With thousand others, whom I fear to
name,
More than from Argos or Mycenae came.
To sev'ral posts
their parties they divide;
Some block the narrow streets, some
scour the wide:
The bold they kill, th' unwary they surprise;
Who
fights finds death, and death finds him who flies.
The warders of
the gate but scarce maintain
Th' unequal combat, and resist in
vain.'
"I heard; and Heav'n, that well-born souls inspires,
Prompts
me thro' lifted swords and rising fires
To run where clashing arms
and clamor calls,
And rush undaunted to defend the walls.
Ripheus
and Iph'itus by my side engage,
For valor one renown'd, and one
for age.
Dymas and Hypanis by moonlight knew
My motions and my
mien, and to my party drew;
With young Coroebus, who by love was
led
To win renown and fair Cassandra's bed,
And lately brought
his troops to Priam's aid,
Forewarn'd in vain by the prophetic
maid.
Whom when I saw resolv'd in arms to fall,
And that one
spirit animated all:
'Brave souls!' said I,- 'but brave, alas! in
vain-
Come, finish what our cruel fates ordain.
You see the
desp'rate state of our affairs,
And heav'n's protecting pow'rs are
deaf to pray'rs.
The passive gods behold the Greeks defile
Their
temples, and abandon to the spoil
Their own abodes: we, feeble
few, conspire
To save a sinking town, involv'd in fire.
Then
let us fall, but fall amidst our foes:
Despair of life the means
of living shows.'
So bold a speech incourag'd their desire
Of
death, and added fuel to their fire.
"As hungry wolves, with raging appetite,
Scour thro' the
fields, nor fear the stormy night-
Their whelps at home expect the
promis'd food,
And long to temper their dry chaps in blood-
So
rush'd we forth at once; resolv'd to die,
Resolv'd, in death, the
last extremes to try.
We leave the narrow lanes behind, and
dare
Th' unequal combat in the public square:
Night was our
friend; our leader was despair.
What tongue can tell the slaughter
of that night?
What eyes can weep the sorrows and affright?
An
ancient and imperial city falls:
The streets are fill'd with
frequent funerals;
Houses and holy temples float in blood,
And
hostile nations make a common flood.
Not only Trojans fall; but,
in their turn,
The vanquish'd triumph, and the victors mourn.
Ours
take new courage from despair and night:
Confus'd the fortune is,
confus'd the fight.
All parts resound with tumults, plaints, and
fears;
And grisly Death in sundry shapes appears.
Androgeos
fell among us, with his band,
Who thought us Grecians newly come
to land.
'From whence,' said he, 'my friends, this long delay?
You
loiter, while the spoils are borne away:
Our ships are laden with
the Trojan store;
And you, like truants, come too late ashore.'
He
said, but soon corrected his mistake,
Found, by the doubtful
answers which we make:
Amaz'd, he would have shunn'd th' unequal
fight;
But we, more num'rous, intercept his flight.
As when
some peasant, in a bushy brake,
Has with unwary footing press'd a
snake;
He starts aside, astonish'd, when he spies
His rising
crest, blue neck, and rolling eyes;
So from our arms surpris'd
Androgeos flies.
In vain; for him and his we compass'd
round,
Possess'd with fear, unknowing of the ground,
And of
their lives an easy conquest found.
Thus Fortune on our first
endeavor smil'd.
Coroebus then, with youthful hopes
beguil'd,
Swoln with success, and a daring mind,
This new
invention fatally design'd.
'My friends,' said he, 'since Fortune
shows the way,
'T is fit we should th' auspicious guide obey.
For
what has she these Grecian arms bestow'd,
But their destruction,
and the Trojans' good?
Then change we shields, and their devices
bear:
Let fraud supply the want of force in war.
They find us
arms.' This said, himself he dress'd
In dead Androgeos' spoils,
his upper vest,
His painted buckler, and his plumy crest.
Thus
Ripheus, Dymas, all the Trojan train,
Lay down their own attire,
and strip the slain.
Mix'd with the Greeks, we go with ill
presage,
Flatter'd with hopes to glut our greedy rage;
Unknown,
assaulting whom we blindly meet,
And strew with Grecian carcasses
the street.
Thus while their straggling parties we defeat,
Some
to the shore and safer ships retreat;
And some, oppress'd with
more ignoble fear,
Remount the hollow horse, and pant in secret
there.
"But, ah! what use of valor can be made,
When heav'n's
propitious pow'rs refuse their aid!
Behold the royal prophetess,
the fair
Cassandra, dragg'd by her dishevel'd hair,
Whom not
Minerva's shrine, nor sacred bands,
In safety could protect from
sacrilegious hands:
On heav'n she cast her eyes, she sigh'd, she
cried-
'T was all she could- her tender arms were tied.
So sad
a sight Coroebus could not bear;
But, fir'd with rage, distracted
with despair,
Amid the barb'rous ravishers he flew:
Our
leader's rash example we pursue.
But storms of stones, from the
proud temple's height,
Pour down, and on our batter'd helms
alight:
We from our friends receiv'd this fatal blow,
Who
thought us Grecians, as we seem'd in show.
They aim at the
mistaken crests, from high;
And ours beneath the pond'rous ruin
lie.
Then, mov'd with anger and disdain, to see
Their troops
dispers'd, the royal virgin free,
The Grecians rally, and their
pow'rs unite,
With fury charge us, and renew the fight.
The
brother kings with Ajax join their force,
And the whole squadron
of Thessalian horse.
"Thus, when the rival winds their quarrel try,
Contending
for the kingdom of the sky,
South, east, and west, on airy
coursers borne;
The whirlwind gathers, and the woods are
torn:
Then Nereus strikes the deep; the billows rise,
And,
mix'd with ooze and sand, pollute the skies.
The troops we
squander'd first again appear
From several quarters, and enclose
the rear.
They first observe, and to the rest betray,
Our
diff'rent speech; our borrow'd arms survey.
Oppress'd with odds,
we fall; Coroebus first,
At Pallas' altar, by Peneleus
pierc'd.
Then Ripheus follow'd, in th' unequal fight;
Just of
his word, observant of the right:
Heav'n thought not so. Dymas
their fate attends,
With Hypanis, mistaken by their friends.
Nor,
Pantheus, thee, thy miter, nor the bands
Of awful Phoebus, sav'd
from impious hands.
Ye Trojan flames, your testimony bear,
What
I perform'd, and what I suffer'd there;
No sword avoiding in the
fatal strife,
Expos'd to death, and prodigal of life;
Witness,
ye heavens! I live not by my fault:
I strove to have deserv'd the
death I sought.
But, when I could not fight, and would have
died,
Borne off to distance by the growing tide,
Old Iphitus
and I were hurried thence,
With Pelias wounded, and without
defense.
New clamors from th' invested palace ring:
We run to
die, or disengage the king.
So hot th' assault, so high the tumult
rose,
While ours defend, and while the Greeks oppose
As all the
Dardan and Argolic race
Had been contracted in that narrow
space;
Or as all Ilium else were void of fear,
And tumult, war,
and slaughter, only there.
Their targets in a tortoise cast, the
foes,
Secure advancing, to the turrets rose:
Some mount the
scaling ladders; some, more bold,
Swerve upwards, and by posts and
pillars hold;
Their left hand gripes their bucklers in th'
ascent,
While with their right they seize the battlement.
From
their demolish'd tow'rs the Trojans throw
Huge heaps of stones,
that, falling, crush the foe;
And heavy beams and rafters from the
sides
(Such arms their last necessity provides)
And gilded
roofs, come tumbling from on high,
The marks of state and ancient
royalty.
The guards below, fix'd in the pass, attend
The charge
undaunted, and the gate defend.
Renew'd in courage with recover'd
breath,
A second time we ran to tempt our death,
To clear the
palace from the foe, succeed
The weary living, and revenge the
dead.
"A postern door, yet unobserv'd and free,
Join'd by the
length of a blind gallery,
To the king's closet led: a way well
known
To Hector's wife, while Priam held the throne,
Thro'
which she brought Astyanax, unseen,
To cheer his grandsire and his
grandsire's queen.
Thro' this we pass, and mount the tow'r, from
whence
With unavailing arms the Trojans make defense.
From this
the trembling king had oft descried
The Grecian camp, and saw
their navy ride.
Beams from its lofty height with swords we
hew,
Then, wrenching with our hands, th' assault renew;
And,
where the rafters on the columns meet,
We push them headlong with
our arms and feet.
The lightning flies not swifter than the
fall,
Nor thunder louder than the ruin'd wall:
Down goes the
top at once; the Greeks beneath
Are piecemeal torn, or pounded
into death.
Yet more succeed, and more to death are sent;
We
cease not from above, nor they below relent.
Before the gate stood
Pyrrhus, threat'ning loud,
With glitt'ring arms conspicuous in the
crowd.
So shines, renew'd in youth, the crested snake,
Who
slept the winter in a thorny brake,
And, casting off his slough
when spring returns,
Now looks aloft, and with new glory
burns;
Restor'd with poisonous herbs, his ardent sides
Reflect
the sun; and rais'd on spires he rides;
High o'er the grass,
hissing he rolls along,
And brandishes by fits his forky
tongue.
Proud Periphas, and fierce Automedon,
His father's
charioteer, together run
To force the gate; the Scyrian
infantry
Rush on in crowds, and the barr'd passage free.
Ent'ring
the court, with shouts the skies they rend;
And flaming firebrands
to the roofs ascend.
Himself, among the foremost, deals his
blows,
And with his ax repeated strokes bestows
On the strong
doors; then all their shoulders ply,
Till from the posts the
brazen hinges fly.
He hews apace; the double bars at length
Yield
to his ax and unresisted strength.
A mighty breach is made: the
rooms conceal'd
Appear, and all the palace is reveal'd;
The
halls of audience, and of public state,
And where the lonely queen
in secret sate.
Arm'd soldiers now by trembling maids are
seen,
With not a door, and scarce a space, between.
The house
is fill'd with loud laments and cries,
And shrieks of women rend
the vaulted skies;
The fearful matrons run from place to
place,
And kiss the thresholds, and the posts embrace.
The
fatal work inhuman Pyrrhus plies,
And all his father sparkles in
his eyes;
Nor bars, nor fighting guards, his force sustain:
The
bars are broken, and the guards are slain.
In rush the Greeks, and
all the apartments fill;
Those few defendants whom they find, they
kill.
Not with so fierce a rage the foaming flood
Roars, when
he finds his rapid course withstood;
Bears down the dams with
unresisted sway,
And sweeps the cattle and the cots away.
These
eyes beheld him when he march'd between
The brother kings: I saw
th' unhappy queen,
The hundred wives, and where old Priam
stood,
To stain his hallow'd altar with his brood.
The fifty
nuptial beds (such hopes had he,
So large a promise, of a
progeny),
The posts, of plated gold, and hung with spoils,
Fell
the reward of the proud victor's toils.
Where'er the raging fire
had left a space,
The Grecians enter and possess the place.
"Perhaps you may of Priam's fate enquire.
He, when he saw
his regal town on fire,
His ruin'd palace, and his ent'ring
foes,
On ev'ry side inevitable woes,
In arms, disus'd, invests
his limbs, decay'd,
Like them, with age; a late and useless
aid.
His feeble shoulders scarce the weight sustain;
Loaded,
not arm'd, he creeps along with pain,
Despairing of success,
ambitious to be slain!
Uncover'd but by heav'n, there stood in
view
An altar; near the hearth a laurel grew,
Dodder'd with
age, whose boughs encompass round
The household gods, and shade
the holy ground.
Here Hecuba, with all her helpless train
Of
dames, for shelter sought, but sought in vain.
Driv'n like a flock
of doves along the sky,
Their images they hug, and to their altars
fly.
The Queen, when she beheld her trembling lord,
And hanging
by his side a heavy sword,
'What rage,' she cried, 'has seiz'd my
husband's mind?
What arms are these, and to what use
design'd?
These times want other aids! Were Hector here,
Ev'n
Hector now in vain, like Priam, would appear.
With us, one common
shelter thou shalt find,
Or in one common fate with us be
join'd.'
She said, and with a last salute embrac'd
The poor old
man, and by the laurel plac'd.
Behold! Polites, one of Priam's
sons,
Pursued by Pyrrhus, there for safety runs.
Thro' swords
and foes, amaz'd and hurt, he flies
Thro' empty courts and open
galleries.
Him Pyrrhus, urging with his lance, pursues,
And
often reaches, and his thrusts renews.
The youth, transfix'd, with
lamentable cries,
Expires before his wretched parent's eyes:
Whom
gasping at his feet when Priam saw,
The fear of death gave place
to nature's law;
And, shaking more with anger than with age,
'The
gods,' said he, 'requite thy brutal rage!
As sure they will,
barbarian, sure they must,
If there be gods in heav'n, and gods be
just-
Who tak'st in wrongs an insolent delight;
With a son's
death t' infect a father's sight.
Not he, whom thou and lying fame
conspire
To call thee his- not he, thy vaunted sire,
Thus us'd
my wretched age: the gods he fear'd,
The laws of nature and of
nations heard.
He cheer'd my sorrows, and, for sums of gold,
The
bloodless carcass of my Hector sold;
Pitied the woes a parent
underwent,
And sent me back in safety from his tent.'
"This said, his feeble hand a javelin threw,
Which,
flutt'ring, seem'd to loiter as it flew:
Just, and but barely, to
the mark it held,
And faintly tinkled on the brazen shield.
"Then Pyrrhus thus: 'Go thou from me to fate,
And to my
father my foul deeds relate.
Now die!' With that he dragg'd the
trembling sire,
Slidd'ring thro' clotter'd blood and holy
mire,
(The mingled paste his murder'd son had made,)
Haul'd
from beneath the violated shade,
And on the sacred pile the royal
victim laid.
His right hand held his bloody falchion bare,
His
left he twisted in his hoary hair;
Then, with a speeding thrust,
his heart he found:
The lukewarm blood came rushing thro' the
wound,
And sanguine streams distain'd the sacred ground.
Thus
Priam fell, and shar'd one common fate
With Troy in ashes, and his
ruin'd state:
He, who the scepter of all Asia sway'd,
Whom
monarchs like domestic slaves obey'd.
On the bleak shore now lies
th' abandon'd king,
A headless carcass, and a nameless thing.
"Then, not before, I felt my cruddled blood
Congeal with
fear, my hair with horror stood:
My father's image fill'd my pious
mind,
Lest equal years might equal fortune find.
Again I
thought on my forsaken wife,
And trembled for my son's abandon'd
life.
I look'd about, but found myself alone,
Deserted at my
need! My friends were gone.
Some spent with toil, some with
despair oppress'd,
Leap'd headlong from the heights; the flames
consum'd the rest.
Thus, wand'ring in my way, without a guide,
The
graceless Helen in the porch I spied
Of Vesta's temple; there she
lurk'd alone;
Muffled she sate, and, what she could, unknown:
But,
by the flames that cast their blaze around,
That common bane of
Greece and Troy I found.
For Ilium burnt, she dreads the Trojan
sword;
More dreads the vengeance of her injur'd lord;
Ev'n by
those gods who refug'd her abhorr'd.
Trembling with rage, the
strumpet I regard,
Resolv'd to give her guilt the due
reward:
'Shall she triumphant sail before the wind,
And leave
in flames unhappy Troy behind?
Shall she her kingdom and her
friends review,
In state attended with a captive crew,
While
unreveng'd the good old Priam falls,
And Grecian fires consume the
Trojan walls?
For this the Phrygian fields and Xanthian flood
Were
swell'd with bodies, and were drunk with blood?
'T is true, a
soldier can small honor gain,
And boast no conquest, from a woman
slain:
Yet shall the fact not pass without applause,
Of
vengeance taken in so just a cause;
The punish'd crime shall set
my soul at ease,
And murm'ring manes of my friends appease.'
Thus
while I rave, a gleam of pleasing light
Spread o'er the place;
and, shining heav'nly bright,
My mother stood reveal'd before my
sight
Never so radiant did her eyes appear;
Not her own star
confess'd a light so clear:
Great in her charms, as when on gods
above
She looks, and breathes herself into their love.
She held
my hand, the destin'd blow to break;
Then from her rosy lips began
to speak:
'My son, from whence this madness, this neglect
Of my
commands, and those whom I protect?
Why this unmanly rage? Recall
to mind
Whom you forsake, what pledges leave behind.
Look if
your helpless father yet survive,
Or if Ascanius or Creusa
live.
Around your house the greedy Grecians err;
And these had
perish'd in the nightly war,
But for my presence and protecting
care.
Not Helen's face, nor Paris, was in fault;
But by the
gods was this destruction brought.
Now cast your eyes around,
while I dissolve
The mists and films that mortal eyes
involve,
Purge from your sight the dross, and make you see
The
shape of each avenging deity.
Enlighten'd thus, my just commands
fulfil,
Nor fear obedience to your mother's will.
Where yon
disorder'd heap of ruin lies,
Stones rent from stones; where
clouds of dust arise-
Amid that smother Neptune holds his
place,
Below the wall's foundation drives his mace,
And heaves
the building from the solid base.
Look where, in arms, imperial
Juno stands
Full in the Scaean gate, with loud commands,
Urging
on shore the tardy Grecian bands.
See! Pallas, of her snaky
buckler proud,
Bestrides the tow'r, refulgent thro' the
cloud:
See! Jove new courage to the foe supplies,
And arms
against the town the partial deities.
Haste hence, my son; this
fruitless labor end:
Haste, where your trembling spouse and sire
attend:
Haste; and a mother's care your passage shall
befriend.'
She said, and swiftly vanish'd from my sight,
Obscure
in clouds and gloomy shades of night.
I look'd, I listen'd;
dreadful sounds I hear;
And the dire forms of hostile gods
appear.
Troy sunk in flames I saw (nor could prevent),
And
Ilium from its old foundations rent;
Rent like a mountain ash,
which dar'd the winds,
And stood the sturdy strokes of lab'ring
hinds.
About the roots the cruel ax resounds;
The stumps are
pierc'd with oft-repeated wounds:
The war is felt on high; the
nodding crown
Now threats a fall, and throws the leafy honors
down.
To their united force it yields, tho' late,
And mourns
with mortal groans th' approaching fate:
The roots no more their
upper load sustain;
But down she falls, and spreads a ruin thro'
the plain.
"Descending thence, I scape thro' foes and fire:
Before
the goddess, foes and flames retire.
Arriv'd at home, he, for
whose only sake,
Or most for his, such toils I undertake,
The
good Anchises, whom, by timely flight,
I purpos'd to secure on
Ida's height,
Refus'd the journey, resolute to die
And add his
fun'rals to the fate of Troy,
Rather than exile and old age
sustain.
'Go you, whose blood runs warm in ev'ry vein.
Had
Heav'n decreed that I should life enjoy,
Heav'n had decreed to
save unhappy Troy.
'T is, sure, enough, if not too much, for
one,
Twice to have seen our Ilium overthrown.
Make haste to
save the poor remaining crew,
And give this useless corpse a long
adieu.
These weak old hands suffice to stop my breath;
At least
the pitying foes will aid my death,
To take my spoils, and leave
my body bare:
As for my sepulcher, let Heav'n take care.
'T is
long since I, for my celestial wife
Loath'd by the gods, have
dragg'd a ling'ring life;
Since ev'ry hour and moment I
expire,
Blasted from heav'n by Jove's avenging fire.'
This oft
repeated, he stood fix'd to die:
Myself, my wife, my son, my
family,
Intreat, pray, beg, and raise a doleful cry-
'What,
will he still persist, on death resolve,
And in his ruin all his
house involve!'
He still persists his reasons to maintain;
Our
pray'rs, our tears, our loud laments, are vain.
"Urg'd by despair, again I go to try
The fate of arms,
resolv'd in fight to die:
'What hope remains, but what my death
must give?
Can I, without so dear a father, live?
You term it
prudence, what I baseness call:
Could such a word from such a
parent fall?
If Fortune please, and so the gods ordain,
That
nothing should of ruin'd Troy remain,
And you conspire with
Fortune to be slain,
The way to death is wide, th' approaches
near:
For soon relentless Pyrrhus will appear,
Reeking with
Priam's blood- the wretch who slew
The son (inhuman) in the
father's view,
And then the sire himself to the dire altar drew.
O
goddess mother, give me back to Fate;
Your gift was undesir'd, and
came too late!
Did you, for this, unhappy me convey
Thro' foes
and fires, to see my house a prey?
Shall I my father, wife, and
son behold,
Welt'ring in blood, each other's arms infold?
Haste!
gird my sword, tho' spent and overcome:
'T is the last summons to
receive our doom.
I hear thee, Fate; and I obey thy call!
Not
unreveng'd the foe shall see my fall.
Restore me to the yet
unfinish'd fight:
My death is wanting to conclude the
night.'
Arm'd once again, my glitt'ring sword I wield,
While
th' other hand sustains my weighty shield,
And forth I rush to
seek th' abandon'd field.
I went; but sad Creusa stopp'd my
way,
And cross the threshold in my passage lay,
Embrac'd my
knees, and, when I would have gone,
Shew'd me my feeble sire and
tender son:
'If death be your design, at least,' said she,
'Take
us along to share your destiny.
If any farther hopes in arms
remain,
This place, these pledges of your love, maintain.
To
whom do you expose your father's life,
Your son's, and mine, your
now forgotten wife!'
While thus she fills the house with clam'rous
cries,
Our hearing is diverted by our eyes:
For, while I held
my son, in the short space
Betwixt our kisses and our last
embrace;
Strange to relate, from young Iulus' head
A lambent
flame arose, which gently spread
Around his brows, and on his
temples fed.
Amaz'd, with running water we prepare
To quench
the sacred fire, and slake his hair;
But old Anchises, vers'd in
omens, rear'd
His hands to heav'n, and this request preferr'd:
'If
any vows, almighty Jove, can bend
Thy will; if piety can pray'rs
commend,
Confirm the glad presage which thou art pleas'd to
send.'
Scarce had he said, when, on our left, we hear
A peal of
rattling thunder roll in air:
There shot a streaming lamp along
the sky,
Which on the winged lightning seem'd to fly;
From o'er
the roof the blaze began to move,
And, trailing, vanish'd in th'
Idaean grove.
It swept a path in heav'n, and shone a guide,
Then
in a steaming stench of sulphur died.
"The good old man with suppliant hands implor'd
The gods'
protection, and their star ador'd.
'Now, now,' said he, 'my son,
no more delay!
I yield, I follow where Heav'n shews the way.
Keep,
O my country gods, our dwelling place,
And guard this relic of the
Trojan race,
This tender child! These omens are your own,
And
you can yet restore the ruin'd town.
At least accomplish what your
signs foreshow:
I stand resign'd, and am prepar'd to go.'
"He said. The crackling flames appear on high.
And driving
sparkles dance along the sky.
With Vulcan's rage the rising winds
conspire,
And near our palace roll the flood of fire.
'Haste,
my dear father, ('t is no time to wait,)
And load my shoulders
with a willing freight.
Whate'er befalls, your life shall be my
care;
One death, or one deliv'rance, we will share.
My hand
shall lead our little son; and you,
My faithful consort, shall our
steps pursue.
Next, you, my servants, heed my strict
commands:
Without the walls a ruin'd temple stands,
To Ceres
hallow'd once; a cypress nigh
Shoots up her venerable head on
high,
By long religion kept; there bend your feet,
And in
divided parties let us meet.
Our country gods, the relics, and the
bands,
Hold you, my father, in your guiltless hands:
In me 't
is impious holy things to bear,
Red as I am with slaughter, new
from war,
Till in some living stream I cleanse the guilt
Of
dire debate, and blood in battle spilt.'
Thus, ord'ring all that
prudence could provide,
I clothe my shoulders with a lion's
hide
And yellow spoils; then, on my bending back,
The welcome
load of my dear father take;
While on my better hand Ascanius
hung,
And with unequal paces tripp'd along.
Creusa kept behind;
by choice we stray
Thro' ev'ry dark and ev'ry devious way.
I,
who so bold and dauntless, just before,
The Grecian darts and
shock of lances bore,
At ev'ry shadow now am seiz'd with fear,
Not
for myself, but for the charge I bear;
Till, near the ruin'd gate
arriv'd at last,
Secure, and deeming all the danger past,
A
frightful noise of trampling feet we hear.
My father, looking
thro' the shades, with fear,
Cried out: 'Haste, haste, my son, the
foes are nigh;
Their swords and shining armor I descry.'
Some
hostile god, for some unknown offense,
Had sure bereft my mind of
better sense;
For, while thro' winding ways I took my flight,
And
sought the shelter of the gloomy night,
Alas! I lost Creusa: hard
to tell
If by her fatal destiny she fell,
Or weary sate, or
wander'd with affright;
But she was lost for ever to my sight.
I
knew not, or reflected, till I meet
My friends, at Ceres' now
deserted seat.
We met: not one was wanting; only she
Deceiv'd
her friends, her son, and wretched me.
"What mad expressions did my tongue refuse!
Whom did I
not, of gods or men, accuse!
This was the fatal blow, that pain'd
me more
Than all I felt from ruin'd Troy before.
Stung with my
loss, and raving with despair,
Abandoning my now forgotten
care,
Of counsel, comfort, and of hope bereft,
My sire, my son,
my country gods I left.
In shining armor once again I sheathe
My
limbs, not feeling wounds, nor fearing death.
Then headlong to the
burning walls I run,
And seek the danger I was forc'd to shun.
I
tread my former tracks; thro' night explore
Each passage, ev'ry
street I cross'd before.
All things were full of horror and
affright,
And dreadful ev'n the silence of the night.
Then to
my father's house I make repair,
With some small glimpse of hope
to find her there.
Instead of her, the cruel Greeks I met;
The
house was fill'd with foes, with flames beset.
Driv'n on the wings
of winds, whole sheets of fire,
Thro' air transported, to the
roofs aspire.
From thence to Priam's palace I resort,
And
search the citadel and desart court.
Then, unobserv'd, I pass by
Juno's church:
A guard of Grecians had possess'd the porch;
There
Phoenix and Ulysses watch prey,
And thither all the wealth of Troy
convey:
The spoils which they from ransack'd houses brought,
And
golden bowls from burning altars caught,
The tables of the gods,
the purple vests,
The people's treasure, and the pomp of
priests.
A rank of wretched youths, with pinion'd hands,
And
captive matrons, in long order stands.
Then, with ungovern'd
madness, I proclaim,
Thro' all the silent street, Creusa's
name:
Creusa still I call; at length she hears,
And sudden
thro' the shades of night appears-
Appears, no more Creusa, nor my
wife,
But a pale specter, larger than the life.
Aghast,
astonish'd, and struck dumb with fear,
I stood; like bristles rose
my stiffen'd hair.
Then thus the ghost began to soothe my
grief
'Nor tears, nor cries, can give the dead relief.
Desist,
my much-lov'd lord,'t indulge your pain;
You bear no more than
what the gods ordain.
My fates permit me not from hence to
fly;
Nor he, the great controller of the sky.
Long wand'ring
ways for you the pow'rs decree;
On land hard labors, and a length
of sea.
Then, after many painful years are past,
On Latium's
happy shore you shall be cast,
Where gentle Tiber from his bed
beholds
The flow'ry meadows, and the feeding folds.
There end
your toils; and there your fates provide
A quiet kingdom, and a
royal bride:
There fortune shall the Trojan line restore,
And
you for lost Creusa weep no more.
Fear not that I shall watch,
with servile shame,
Th' imperious looks of some proud Grecian
dame;
Or, stooping to the victor's lust, disgrace
My goddess
mother, or my royal race.
And now, farewell! The parent of the
gods
Restrains my fleeting soul in her abodes:
I trust our
common issue to your care.'
She said, and gliding pass'd unseen in
air.
I strove to speak: but horror tied my tongue;
And thrice
about her neck my arms I flung,
And, thrice deceiv'd, on vain
embraces hung.
Light as an empty dream at break of day,
Or as a
blast of wind, she rush'd away.
"Thus having pass'd the night in fruitless pain,
I to my
longing friends return again,
Amaz'd th' augmented number to
behold,
Of men and matrons mix'd, of young and old;
A wretched
exil'd crew together brought,
With arms appointed, and with
treasure fraught,
Resolv'd, and willing, under my command,
To
run all hazards both of sea and land.
The Morn began, from Ida, to
display
Her rosy cheeks; and Phosphor led the day:
Before the
gates the Grecians took their post,
And all pretense of late
relief was lost.
I yield to Fate, unwillingly retire,
And,
loaded, up the hill convey my sire."