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Metamorphoses Book The Twelfth

AM, to whom the story was unknown,                   As dead, deplor'd his metamorphos'd son:                   A cenotaph his name, and title kept,                   And Hector round the tomb, with all his brothers,                       wept.                   This pious office Paris did not share;                   Absent alone; and author of the war,                   Which, for the Spartan queen, the Grecians drew                   T' avenge the rape; and Asia to subdue.        The          A thousand ships were mann'd, to sail the sea:    Trojan War     Nor had their just resentments found delay,                   Had not the winds, and waves oppos'd their way.                   At Aulis, with united pow'rs they meet,                   But there, cross-winds or calms detain'd the fleet.                   Now, while they raise an altar on the shore,                   And Jove with solemn sacrifice adore;                   A boding sign the priests and people see:                   A snake of size immense ascends a tree,                   And, in the leafie summit, spy'd a nest,                   Which o'er her callow young, a sparrow press'd.                   Eight were the birds unfledg'd; their mother flew,                   And hover'd round her care; but still in view:                   'Till the fierce reptile first devour'd the brood,                   Then seiz'd the flutt'ring dam, and drunk her                       blood.                   This dire ostent, the fearful people view;                   Calchas alone, by Phoebus taught, foreknew                   What Heav'n decreed; and with a smiling glance,                   Thus gratulates to Greece her happy chance:                   O Argives, we shall conquer:

Troy is ours,                   But long delays shall first afflict our pow'rs:                   Nine years of labour, the nine birds portend;                   The tenth shall in the town's destruction end.                     The serpent, who his maw obscene had fill'd,                   The branches in his curl'd embraces held:                   But, as in spires he stood, he turn'd to stone:                   The stony snake retain'd the figure still his own.                     Yet, not for this, the wind-bound navy weigh'd;                   Slack were their sails; and Neptune disobey'd.                   Some thought him loth the town should be destroy'd,                   Whose building had his hands divine employ'd:                   Not so the seer; who knew, and known foreshow'd,                   The virgin Phoebe, with a virgin's blood                   Must first be reconcil'd: the common cause                   Prevail'd; and pity yielding to the laws,                   Fair Iphigenia the devoted maid                   Was, by the weeping priests, in linnen-robes                       array'd;                   All mourn her fate; but no relief appear'd;                   The royal victim bound, the knife already rear'd:                   When that offended Pow'r, who caus'd their woe,                   Relenting ceas'd her wrath; and stop'd the coming                       blow.                   A mist before the ministers she cast,                   And, in the virgin's room, a hind she plac'd.                   Th' oblation slain, and Phoebe, reconcil'd,                   The storm was hush'd, and dimpled ocean smil'd:                   A favourable gale arose from shore,                   Which to the port desir'd, the Graecian gallies                       bore.   The House of      Full in the midst of this created space,       Fame        Betwixt Heav'n,

Earth, and skies, there stands a                       place,                   Confining on all three, with triple bound;                   Whence all things, tho' remote, are view'd around;                   And thither bring their undulating sound.                   The palace of loud Fame, her seat of pow'r,                   Plac'd on the summet of a lofty tow'r;                   A thousand winding entries long and wide,                   Receive of fresh reports a flowing tide.                   A thousand crannies in the walls are made;                   Nor gate, nor bars exclude the busie trade.                   'Tis built of brass, the better to diffuse                   The spreading sounds, and multiply the news:                   Where eccho's in repeated eccho's play:                   A mart for ever full, and open night and day.                   Nor silence is within, nor voice express,                   But a deaf noise of sounds, that never cease.                   Confus'd and chiding, like the hollow roar                   Of tides, receding from th' insulted shore,                   Or like the broken thunder heard from far,                   When Jove at distance drives the rouling war.                   The courts are fill'd with a tumultuous din                   Of crouds, or issuing forth, or entring in:                   A thorough-fare of news: where some devise                   Things never heard, some mingle truth with lies;                   The troubled air with empty sounds they beat,                   Intent to hear, and eager to repeat.                   Error sits brooding there, with added train                   Of vain credulity, and joys as vain:                   Suspicion, with sedition join'd, are near,                   And rumours rais'd, and murmurs mix'd, and panique                       fear.                   Fame sits aloft, and sees the subject ground,                   And seas about, and skies above; enquiring all                       around.                     The Goddess gives th' alarm; and soon is known                   The Grecian fleet descending on the town.                   Fix'd on defence, the Trojans are not slow                   To guard their shore, from an expected foe.                   They meet in fight: by Hector's fatal hand                   Protesilaus falls, and bites the strand:                   Which with expence of blood the Grecians won;                   And prov'd the strength unknown of Priam's son.                   And to their cost the Trojan leaders felt                   The Grecian heroes; and what deaths they dealt.   The Story of      From these first onsets, the Sigaean shore      Cygnus       Was strew'd with carcasses, and stain'd with gore:                   Neptunian Cygnus troops of Greeks had slain;                   Achilles in his carr had scour'd the plain,                   And clear'd the Trojan ranks: where-e'er he fought,                   Cygnus, or Hector, through the fields he sought:                   Cygnus he found; on him his force essay'd:                   For Hector was to the tenth year delay'd.                   His white-main'd steeds, that bow'd beneath the                       yoke,                   He chear'd to courage, with a gentle stroke;                   Then urg'd his fiery chariot on the foe;                   And rising shook his lance; in act to throw.                   But first he cry'd,

O youth, be proud to bear                   Thy death, ennobled by Pelides' spear.                   The lance pursu'd the voice without delay,                   Nor did the whizzing weapon miss the way;                   But pierc'd his cuirass, with such fury sent,                   And sign'd his bosom with a purple dint.                   At this the seed of Neptune:

Goddess-born,                   For ornament, not use, these arms are worn;                   This helm, and heavy buckler,

I can spare;                   As only decorations of the war:                   So Mars is arm'd for glory, not for need.                   'Tis somewhat more from Neptune to proceed,                   Than from a daughter of the sea to spring:                   Thy sire is mortal; mine is ocean's king.                   Secure of death,

I shou'd contemn thy dart,                   Tho' naked; and impassible depart:                   He said, and threw: the trembling weapon pass'd                   Through nine bull-hides, each under other plac'd,                   On his broad shield; and stuck within the last.                   Achilles wrench'd it out; and sent again                   The hostile gift: the hostile gift was vain.                   He try'd a third, a tough well-chosen spear;                   Th' inviolable body stood sincere,                   Though Cygnus then did no defence provide,                   But scornful offer'd his unshielded side.                     Not otherwise th' impatient hero far'd,                   Than as a bull incompass'd with a guard,                   Amid the Circus roars, provok'd from far                   By sight of scarlet, and a sanguine war:                   They quit their ground, his bended horns elude;                   In vain pursuing, and in vain pursu'd:                     Before to farther fight he wou'd advance,                   He stood considering, and survey'd his lance.                   Doubts if he wielded not a wooden spear                   Without a point: he look'd, the point was there.                   This is my hand, and this my lance, he said;                   By which so many thousand foes are dead,                   O whither is their usual virtue fled!                   I had it once; and the Lyrnessian wall,                   And Tenedos, confess'd it in their fall.                   Thy streams,

Caicus, rowl'd a crimson-flood;                   And Thebes ran red with her own natives' blood.                   Twice Telephus employ'd their piercing steel,                   To wound him first, and afterward to heal.                   The vigour of this arm was never vain:                   And that my wonted prowess I retain,                   Witness these heaps of slaughter on the plain.                   He said; and, doubtful of his former deeds,                   To some new tryal of his force proceeds.                   He chose Menoetes from among the rest;                   At him he launch'd his spear, and pierc'd his                       breast:                   On the hard earth the Lycian knock'd his head,                   And lay supine; and forth the spirit fled.                     Then thus the hero:

Neither can I blame                   The hand, or jav'lin; both are still the same.                   The same I will employ against this foe,                   And wish but with the same success to throw.                   So spoke the chief; and while he spoke he threw;                   The weapon with unerring fury flew,                   At his left shoulder aim'd: nor entrance found;                   But back, as from a rock, with swift rebound                   Harmless return'd: a bloody mark appear'd,                   Which with false joy the flatter'd hero chear'd.                   Wound there was none; the blood that was in view,                   The lance before from slain Menoetes drew.                     Headlong he leaps from off his lofty car,                   And in close fight on foot renews the war.                   Raging with high disdain, repeats his blows;                   Nor shield, nor armour can their force oppose;                   Huge cantlets of his buckler strew the ground,                   And no defence in his bor'd arms is found,                   But on his flesh, no wound or blood is seen;                   The sword it self is blunted on the skin.                     This vain attempt the chief no longer bears;                   But round his hollow temples and his ears                   His buckler beats: the son of Neptune, stunn'd                   With these repeated buffets, quits his ground;                   A sickly sweat succeeds, and shades of night;                   Inverted Nature swims before his sight:                   Th' insulting victor presses on the more,                   And treads the steps the vanquish'd trod before,                   Nor rest, nor respite gives.

A stone there lay                   Behind his trembling foe, and stopp'd his way:                   Achilles took th' advantage which he found,                   O'er-turn'd, and push'd him backward on the ground,                   His buckler held him under, while he press'd,                   With both his knees, above his panting breast.                   Unlac'd his helm: about his chin the twist                   He ty'd; and soon the strangled soul dismiss'd.                     With eager haste he went to strip the dead:                   The vanish'd body from his arms was fled.                   His sea-God sire, t' immortalize his frame,                   Had turn'd it to a bird that bears his name.                     A truce succeeds the labours of this day,                   And arms suspended with a long delay.                   While Trojan walls are kept with watch and ward;                   The Greeks before their trenches mount the guard;                   The feast approach'd; when to the blue-ey'd maid                   His vows for Cygnus slain the victor paid,                   And a white heyfer on her altar laid.                   The reeking entrails on the fire they threw,                   And to the Gods the grateful odour flew.                   Heav'n had its part in sacrifice: the rest                   Was broil'd, and roasted for the future feast.                   The chief-invited guests were set around!                   And hunger first asswag'd, the bowls were crown'd,                   Which in deep draughts their cares, and labours                       drown'd.                   The mellow harp did not their ears employ:                   And mute was all the warlike symphony:                   Discourse, the food of souls, was their delight,                   And pleasing chat prolong'd the summer's night.                   The subject, deeds of arms; and valour shown,                   Or on the Trojan side, or on their own.                   Of dangers undertaken, fame atchiev'd,                   They talk'd by turns; the talk by turns reliev'd.                   What things but these could fierce Achilles tell,                   Or what cou'd fierce Achilles hear so well?                   The last great act perform'd, of Cygnus slain,                   Did most the martial audience entertain:                   Wondring to find a body free by Fate                   From steel; and which cou'd ev'n that steel rebate:                   Amaz'd, their admiration they renew;                   And scarce Pelides cou'd believe it true.   The Story of      Then Nestor thus: what once this age has known,      Caeneus      In fated Cygnus, and in him alone,                   These eyes have seen in Caeneus long before;                   Whose body not a thousand swords cou'd bore.                   Caeneus, in courage, and in strength, excell'd;                   And still his Othrys with his fame is fill'd:                   But what did most his martial deeds adorn                   (Though since he chang'd his sex) a woman born.                     A novelty so strange, and full of Fate,                   His list'ning audience ask'd him to relate.                   Achilles thus commends their common sute:                   O father, first for prudence in repute,                   Tell, with that eloquence, so much thy own,                   What thou hast heard, or what of Caeneus known:                   What was he, whence his change of sex begun,                   What trophies, join'd in wars with thee, he won?                   Who conquer'd him, and in what fatal strife                   The youth, without a wound, cou'd lose his life?                     Neleides then:

Though tardy age, and time,                   Have shrunk my sinews, and decay'd my prime;                   Though much I have forgotten of my store,                   Yet not exhausted,

I remember more.                   Of all that arms atchiev'd, or peace design'd,                   That action still is fresher in my mind,                   Than ought beside.

If reverend age can give                   To faith a sanction, in my third I live.                     'Twas in my second cent'ry,

I survey'd                   Young Caenis, then a fair Thessalian maid:                   Caenis the bright, was born to high command;                   A princess, and a native of thy land,                   Divine Achilles; every tongue proclaim'd                   Her beauty, and her eyes all hearts inflam'd.                   Peleus, thy sire, perhaps had sought her bed,                   Among the rest; but he had either led                   Thy mother then; or was by promise ty'd;                   But she to him, and all, alike her love deny'd.                     It was her fortune once to take her way                   Along the sandy margin of the sea:                   The Pow'r of ocean view'd her as she pass'd,                   And, lov'd as soon as seen, by force embrac'd.                   So Fame reports.

Her virgin-treasure seiz'd,                   And his new joys, the ravisher so pleas'd,                   That thus, transported, to the nymph he cry'd;                   Ask what thou wilt, no pray'r shall be deny'd.                   This also Fame relates: the haughty fair,                   Who not the rape ev'n of a God cou'd bear,                   This answer, proud, return'd:

To mighty wrongs                   A mighty recompence, of right, belongs.                   Give me no more to suffer such a shame;                   But change the woman, for a better name;                   One gift for all: she said; and while she spoke,                   A stern, majestick, manly tone she took.                   A man she was: and as the Godhead swore,                   To Caeneus turn'd, who Caenis was before.                     To this the lover adds, without request,                   No force of steel shou'd violate his breast.                   Glad of the gift, the new-made warrior goes;                   And arms among the Greeks, and longs for equal                       foes.   The Skirmish      Now brave Perithous, bold Ixion's son,    between the    The love of fair Hippodame had won.   Centaurs and    The cloud-begotten race, half men, half beast,    Lapithites     Invited, came to grace the nuptial feast:                   In a cool cave's recess the treat was made,                   Whose entrance, trees with spreading boughs                       o'er-shade                   They sate: and summon'd by the bridegroom, came,                   To mix with those, the Lapythaean name:                   Nor wanted I: the roofs with joy resound:                   And Hymen,

Io Hymen, rung around.                   Rais'd altars shone with holy fires; the bride,                   Lovely her self (and lovely by her side                   A bevy of bright nymphs, with sober grace),                   Came glitt'ring like a star, and took her place.                   Her heav'nly form beheld, all wish'd her joy;                   And little wanted; but in vain, their wishes all                       employ.                     For one, most brutal, of the brutal brood,                   Or whether wine, or beauty fir'd his blood,                   Or both at once, beheld with lustful eyes                   The bride; at once resolv'd to make his prize.                   Down went the board; and fastning on her hair,                   He seiz'd with sudden force the frighted fair.                   'Twas Eurytus began: his bestial kind                   His crime pursu'd; and each as pleas'd his mind,                   Or her, whom chance presented, took: the feast                   An image of a taken town express'd.                     The cave resounds with female shrieks; we rise,                   Mad with revenge to make a swift reprise:                   And Theseus first,

What phrenzy has possess'd,                   O Eurytus, he cry'd, thy brutal breast,                   To wrong Perithous, and not him alone,                   But while I live, two friends conjoyn'd in one?                     To justifie his threat, he thrusts aside                   The crowd of centaurs; and redeems the bride:                   The monster nought reply'd: for words were vain,                   And deeds cou'd only deeds unjust maintain;                   But answers with his hand, and forward press'd,                   With blows redoubled, on his face, and breast.                   An ample goblet stood, of antick mold,                   And rough with figures of the rising gold;                   The hero snatch'd it up, and toss'd in air                   Full at the front of the foul ravisher.                   He falls; and falling vomits forth a flood                   Of wine, and foam, and brains, and mingled blood.                   Half roaring, and half neighing through the hall,                   Arms, arms, the double-form'd with fury call;                   To wreak their brother's death: a medley-flight                   Of bowls, and jars, at first supply the fight,                   Once instruments of feasts; but now of Fate;                   Wine animates their rage, and arms their hate.                     Bold Amycus, from the robb'd vestry brings                   The chalices of Heav'n; and holy things                   Of precious weight: a sconce that hung on high,                   With tapers fill'd, to light the sacristy,                   Torn from the cord, with his unhallow'd hand                   He threw amid the Lapythaean band.                   On Celadon the ruin fell; and left                   His face of feature, and of form bereft:                   So, when some brawny sacrificer knocks,                   Before an altar led, an offer'd ox,                   His eyes-balls rooted out, are thrown to ground;                   His nose, dismantled, in his mouth is found;                   His jaws, cheeks, front, one undistinguish'd wound.                     This,

Belates, th' avenger, cou'd not brook;                   But, by the foot, a maple board he took;                   And hurl'd at Amycus; his chin it bent                   Against his chest, and down the centaur sent:                   Whom sputtring bloody teeth, the second blow                   Of his drawn sword, dispatch'd to shades below.                     Grineus was near; and cast a furious look                   On the side-altar, cens'd with sacred smoke,                   And bright with flaming fires;

The Gods, he cry'd,                   Have with their holy trade our hands supply'd:                   Why use we not their gifts?

Then from the floor                   An altar stone he heav'd, with all the load it                       bore:                   Altar, and altar's freight together slew,                   Where thickest throng'd the Lapythaean crew:                   And, at once,

Broteas and Oryus flew.                   Oryus' mother,

Mycale, was known                   Down from her sphere to draw the lab'ring moon.                     Exadius cry'd,

Unpunish'd shall not go                   This fact, if arms are found against the foe.                   He look'd about, where on a pine were spread                   The votive horns of a stag's branching head:                   At Grineus these he throws; so just they fly,                   That the sharp antlers stuck in either eye:                   Breathless, and blind he fell; with blood                       besmear'd;                   His eye-balls beaten out, hung dangling on his                       beard.                   Fierce Rhoetus, from the hearth a burning brand                   Selects, and whirling waves; 'till, from his hand                   The fire took flame; then dash'd it from the right,                   On fair Charaxus' temples, near the sight:                   The whistling pest came on, and pierc'd the bone,                   And caught the yellow hair, that shrivel'd while it                       shone.                   Caught, like dry stubble fir'd; or like seerwood;                   Yet from the wound ensu'd no purple flood;                   But look'd a bubbling mass of frying blood.                   His blazing locks sent forth a crackling sound;                   And hiss'd, like red hot ir'n within the smithy                       drown'd.                   The wounded warrior shook his flaming hair,                   Then (what a team of horse could hardly rear)                   He heaves the threshold stone, but could not throw;                   The weight itself forbad the threaten'd blow;                   Which dropping from his lifted arms, came down                   Full on Cometes' head; and crush'd his crown.                   Nor Rhoetus then retain'd his joy; but said,                   So by their fellows may our foes be sped;                   Then, with redoubled strokes he plies his head:                   The burning lever not deludes his pains:                   But drives the batter'd skull within the brains.                     Thus flush'd, the conqueror, with force renew'd,                   Evagrus,

Dryas,

Corythus, pursu'd:                   First,

Corythus, with downy cheeks, he slew;                   Whose fall, when fierce Evagrus had in view,                   He cry'd,

What palm is from a beardless prey?                   Rhoetus prevents what more he had to say;                   And drove within his mouth the fi'ry death,                   Which enter'd hissing in, and choak'd his breath.                   At Dryas next he flew: but weary chance,                   No longer wou'd the same success advance.                   For while he whirl'd in fiery circles round                   The brand, a sharpen'd stake strong Dryas found;                   And in the shoulder's joint inflicts the wound.                   The weapon stuck; which, roaring out with pain,                   He drew; nor longer durst the fight maintain,                   But turn'd his back, for fear; and fled amain.                   With him fled Orneus, with like dread possess'd,                   Thaumas, and Medon wounded in the breast;                   And Mermeros, in the late race renown'd,                   Now limping ran, and tardy with his wound.                   Pholus, and Melaneus from fight withdrew,                   And Abas maim'd, who boars encountring slew:                   And Augur Asbolos, whose art in vain,                   From fight dissuaded the four-footed train,                   Now beat the hoof with Nessus on the plain;                   But to his fellow cry'd,

Be safely slow,                   Thy death deferr'd is due to great Alcides' bow.                     Mean-time strong Dryas urg'd his chance so well,                   That Lycidas,

Areos,

Imbreus fell;                   All, one by one, and fighting face to face:                   Crenaeus fled, to fall with more disgrace:                   For, fearful, while he look'd behind, he bore,                   Betwixt his nose, and front, the blow before.                   Amid the noise, and tumult of the fray,                   Snoring, and drunk with wine,

Aphidas lay.                   Ev'n then the bowl within his hand he kept,                   And on a bear's rough hide securely slept.                   Him Phorbas with his flying dart transfix'd;                   Take thy next draught, with Stygian waters mix'd,                   And sleep thy fill, th' insulting victor cry'd;                   Surpriz'd with death unfelt, the centaur dy'd;                   The ruddy vomit, as he breath'd his soul                   Repass'd his throat, and fill'd his empty bowl.                     I saw Petraeus' arms employ'd around                   A well-grown oak, to root it from the ground.                   This way, and that, he wrench'd the fibrous bands;                   The trunk was like a sappling, in his hands,                   And still obey'd the bent: while thus he stood,                   Perithous' dart drove on; and nail'd him to the                       wood;                   Lycus, and Chromis fell, by him oppress'd:                   Helops, and Dictis added to the rest                   A nobler palm:

Helops, through either ear                   Transfix'd, receiv'd the penetrating spear.                   This Dictis saw; and, seiz'd with sudden fright,                   Leapt headlong from the hill of steepy height;                   And crush'd an ash beneath, that cou'd not bear his                       weight.                   The shatter'd tree receives his fall; and strikes,                   Within his full-blown paunch, the sharpen'd spikes.                   Strong Aphareus had heav'd a mighty stone,                   The fragment of a rock; and wou'd have thrown;                   But Theseus, with a club of harden'd oak,                   The cubit-bone of the bold centaur broke;                   And left him maim'd; nor seconded the stroke.                   Then leapt on tall Bianor's back (who bore                   No mortal burden but his own, before);                   Press'd with his knees his sides; the double man,                   His speed with spurs increas'd, unwilling ran.                   One hand the hero fastn'd on his locks;                   His other ply'd him with repeated strokes.                   The club rung round his ears, and batter'd brows;                   He falls; and lashing up his heels, his rider                       throws.                     The same Herculean arms,

Nedymnus wound;                   And lay by him Lycotas on the ground,                   And Hippasus, whose beard his breast invades;                   And Ripheus, haunter of the woodland shades:                   And Thereus, us'd with mountain-bears to strive,                   And from their dens to draw th' indignant beasts                       alive.                     Demoleon cou'd not bear this hateful sight,                   Or the long fortune of th' Athenian knight:                   But pull'd with all his force, to disengage                   From Earth a pine, the product of an age:                   The root stuck fast: the broken trunk he sent                   At Theseus;

Theseus frustrates his intent,                   And leaps aside; by Pallas warn'd, the blow                   To shun (for so he said; and we believ'd it so).                   Yet not in vain th' enormous weight was cast;                   Which Crantor's body sunder'd at the waist:                   Thy father's 'squire,

Achilles, and his care;                   Whom conquer'd in the Polopeian war,                   Their king, his present ruin to prevent,                   A pledge of peace implor'd, to Peleus sent.                     Thy sire, with grieving eyes, beheld his Fate;                   And cry'd,

Not long, lov'd Crantor, shalt thou wait                   Thy vow'd revenge.

At once he said, and threw                   His ashen-spear; which quiver'd, as it flew;                   With all his force, and all his soul apply'd;                   The sharp point enter'd in the centaur's side:                   Both hands, to wrench it out, the monster join'd;                   And wrench'd it out; but left the steel behind;                   Stuck in his lungs it stood: inrag'd he rears                   His hoofs, and down to ground thy father bears.                   Thus trampled under foot, his shield defends                   His head; his other hand the lance portends.                   Ev'n while he lay extended on the dust,                   He sped the centaur, with one single thrust.                   Two more his lance before transfix'd from far;                   And two, his sword had slain, in closer war.                   To these was added Dorylas, who spread                   A bull's two goring horns around his head.                   With these he push'd; in blood already dy'd,                   Him fearless,

I approach'd; and thus defy'd:                   Now, monster, now, by proof it shall appear,                   Whether thy horns are sharper, or my spear.                   At this,

I threw: for want of other ward,                   He lifted up his hand, his front to guard.                   His hand it pass'd; and fix'd it to his brow:                   Loud shouts of ours attend the lucky blow.                   Him Peleus finish'd, with a second wound,                   Which thro' the navel pierc'd: he reel'd around;                   And dragg'd his dangling bowels on the ground.                   Trod what he drag'd; and what he trod, he crush'd:                   And to his mother-Earth, with empty belly, rush'd.   The Story of      Nor cou'd thy form, o Cyllarus, foreflow   Cyllarus and    Thy Fate (if form to monsters men allow):     Hylonome      Just bloom'd thy beard: thy beard of golden hue:                   Thy locks, in golden waves, about thy shoulders                       flew.                   Sprightly thy look: thy shapes in ev'ry part                   So clean, as might instruct the sculptor's art;                   As far as man extended: where began                   The beast, the beast was equal to the man.                   Add but a horse's head and neck; and he,                   O Castor, was a courser worthy thee.                   So was his back proportion'd for the seat:                   So rose his brawny chest; so swiftly mov'd his                       feet.                   Coal-black his colour, but like jett it shone;                   His legs, and flowing tail were white alone.                   Belov'd by many maidens of his kind;                   But fair Hylonome possess'd his mind;                   Hylonome, for features, and for face,                   Excelling all the nymphs of double race:                   Nor less her blandishments, than beauty, move;                   At once both loving, and confessing love.                   For him she dress'd: for him, with female care                   She comb'd, and set in curls, her auburn hair.                   Of roses, violets, and lillies mix'd,                   And sprigs of flowing rosemary betwixt,                   She form'd the chaplet, that adorn'd her front:                   In waters of the Pegasaean fount,                   And in the streams that from the fountain play,                   She wash'd her face; and bath'd her twice a-day.                   The scarf of furs, that hung below her side,                   Was ermin, or the panther's spotted pride;                   Spoils of no common beast: with equal flame                   They lov'd: their silvan pleasures were the same:                   All day they hunted: and when day expir'd,                   Together to some shady cave retir'd:                   Invited to the nuptials, both repair:                   And, side by side, they both engage in war.                     Uncertain from what hand, a flying dart                   At Cyllarus was sent; which pierc'd his heart.                   The jav'lin drawn from out the mortal wound,                   He faints with stagg'ring steps; and seeks the                       ground:                   The fair within her arms receiv'd his fall,                   And strove his wand'ring spirits to recall:                   And while her hand the streaming blood oppos'd,                   Join'd face to face, his lips with hers she clos'd.                   Stifled with kisses, a sweet death he dies;                   She fills the fields with undistinguish'd cries;                   At least her words were in her clamour drown'd;                   For my stunn'd ears receiv'd no vocal sound.                   In madness of her grief, she seiz'd the dart                   New-drawn, and reeking from her lover's heart;                   To her bare bosom the sharp point apply'd;                   And wounded fell; and falling by his side,                   Embrac'd him in her arms; and thus embracing dy'd.                     Ev'n still methinks,

I see Phaeocomes;                   Strange was his habit, and as odd his dress.                   Six lions' hides, with thongs together fast,                   His upper part defended to his waist:                   And where man ended, the continued vest,                   Spread on his back, the houss and trappings of a                       beast.                   A stump too heavy for a team to draw                   (It seems a fable, tho' the fact I saw);                   He threw at Pholon; the descending blow                   Divides the skull, and cleaves his head in two.                   The brains, from nose, and mouth, and either ear,                   Came issuing out, as through a colendar                   The curdled milk; or from the press the whey,                   Driv'n down by weight above, is drain'd away.                     But him, while stooping down to spoil the slain,                   Pierc'd through the paunch,

I tumbled on the plain.                   Then Chthonyus, and Teleboas I slew:                   A fork the former arm'd; a dart his fellow threw.                   The jav'lin wounded me (behold the scar,                   Then was my time to seek the Trojan war;                   Then I was Hector's match in open field;                   But he was then unborn; at least a child:                   Now,

I am nothing).

I forbear to tell                   By Periphantas how Pyretus fell;                   The centaur by the knight: nor will I stay                   On Amphix, or what deaths he dealt that day:                   What honour, with a pointless lance, he won,                   Stuck in the front of a four-footed man.                   What fame young Macareus obtain'd in fight:                   Or dwell on Nessus, now return'd from flight.                   How prophet Mopsus not alone divin'd,                   Whose valour equal'd his foreseeing mind.      Caeneus        Already Caeneus, with his conquering hand,  transform'd to   Had slaughter'd five the boldest of their band.     an Eagle      Pyrachmus,

Helymus,

Antimachus,                   Bromus the brave, and stronger Stiphelus,                   Their names I number'd, and remember well,                   No trace remaining, by what wounds they fell.                     Laitreus, the bulki'st of the double race,                   Whom the spoil'd arms of slain Halesus grace,                   In years retaining still his youthful might,                   Though his black hairs were interspers'd with                       white,                   Betwixt th' imbattled ranks began to prance,                   Proud of his helm, and Macedonian lance;                   And rode the ring around; that either hoast                   Might hear him, while he made this empty boast:                   And from a strumpet shall we suffer shame?                   For Caenis still, not Caeneus, is thy name:                   And still the native softness of thy kind                   Prevails; and leaves the woman in thy mind;                   Remember what thou wert; what price was paid                   To change thy sex; to make thee not a maid:                   And but a man in shew; go, card and spin;                   And leave the business of the war to men.                     While thus the boaster exercis'd his pride,                   The fatal spear of Caeneus reach'd his side:                   Just in the mixture of the kinds it ran;                   Betwixt the neather beast, and upper man:                   The monster mad with rage, and stung with smart,                   His lance directed at the hero's heart:                   It struck; but bounded from his harden'd breast,                   Like hail from tiles, which the safe house invest.                   Nor seem'd the stroke with more effect to come,                   Than a small pebble falling on a drum.                   He next his fauchion try'd, in closer fight;                   But the keen fauchion had no pow'r to bite.                   He thrust; the blunted point return'd again:                   Since downright blows, he cry'd, and thrusts are                       vain,                   I'll prove his side; in strong embraces held                   He prov'd his side; his side the sword repell'd:                   His hollow belly eccho'd to the stroke,                   Untouch'd his body, as a solid rock;                   Aim'd at his neck at last, the blade in shivers                       broke.                     Th' impassive knight stood idle, to deride                   His rage, and offer'd oft his naked side;                   At length,

Now monster, in thy turn, he cry'd,                   Try thou the strength of Caeneus: at the word                   He thrust; and in his shoulder plung'd the sword.                   Then writh'd his hand; and as he drove it down,                   Deep in his breast, made many wounds in one.                     The centaurs saw, inrag'd, th' unhop'd success;                   And rushing on in crowds, together press;                   At him, and him alone, their darts they threw:                   Repuls'd they from his fated body flew.                   Amaz'd they stood; 'till Monichus began,                   O shame, a nation conquer'd by a man!                   A woman-man! yet more a man is he,                   Than all our race; and what he was, are we.                   Now, what avail our nerves? th' united force,                   Of two the strongest creatures, man and horse;                   Nor Goddess-born; nor of Ixion's seed                   We seem (a lover built for Juno's bed);                   Master'd by this half man.

Whole mountains throw                   With woods at once, and bury him below.                   This only way remains.

Nor need we doubt                   To choak the soul within; though not to force it                       out:                   Heap weights, instead of wounds.

He chanc'd to see                   Where southern storms had rooted up a tree;                   This, rais'd from Earth, against the foe he threw;                   Th' example shewn, his fellow-brutes pursue.                   With forest-loads the warrior they invade;                   Othrys, and Pelion soon were void of shade;                   And spreading groves were naked mountains made.                   Press'd with the burden,

Caeneus pants for breath;                   And on his shoulders bears the wooden death.                   To heave th' intolerable weight he tries;                   At length it rose above his mouth and eyes:                   Yet still he heaves; and, strugling with despair,                   Shakes all aside, and gains a gulp of air:                   A short relief, which but prolongs his pain;                   He faints by fits; and then respires again:                   At last, the burden only nods above,                   As when an earthquake stirs th' Idaean grove.                   Doubtful his death: he suffocated seem'd,                   To most; but otherwise our Mopsus deem'd,                   Who said he saw a yellow bird arise                   From out the piles, and cleave the liquid skies:                   I saw it too, with golden feathers bright;                   Nor e'er before beheld so strange a sight.                   Whom Mopsus viewing, as it soar'd around                   Our troop, and heard the pinions' rattling sound,                   All hail, he cry'd, thy country's grace and love!                   Once first of men below, now first of birds above.                   Its author to the story gave belief:                   For us, our courage was increas'd by grief:                   Asham'd to see a single man, pursu'd                   With odds, to sink beneath a multitude,                   We push'd the foe: and forc'd to shameful flight,                   Part fell, and part escap'd by favour of the night.    The Fate of      This tale, by Nestor told, did much displease   Periclymenos    Tlepolemus, the seed of Hercules:                   For, often he had heard his father say,                   That he himself was present at the fray;                   And more than shar'd the glories of the day.                     Old Chronicle, he said, among the rest,                   You might have nam'd Alcides at the least:                   Is he not worth your praise?

The Pylian prince                   Sigh'd ere he spoke; then made this proud defence.                   My former woes in long oblivion drown'd,                   I wou'd have lost; but you renew the wound:                   Better to pass him o'er, than to relate                   The cause I have your mighty sire to hate.                   His fame has fill'd the world, and reach'd the sky                   (Which, oh,

I wish, with truth,

I cou'd deny!);                   We praise not Hector; though his name, we know,                   Is great in arms; 'tis hard to praise a foe.                     He, your great father, levell'd to the ground                   Messenia's tow'rs: nor better fortune found                   Elis, and Pylos; that a neighb'ring state,                   And this my own: both guiltless of their fate.                     To pass the rest, twelve, wanting one, he slew;                   My brethren, who their birth from Neleus drew,                   All youths of early promise, had they liv'd;                   By him they perish'd:

I alone surviv'd.                   The rest were easie conquest: but the fate                   Of Periclymenos, is wondrous to relate.                   To him, our common grandsire of the main                   Had giv'n to change his form, and chang'd, resume                       again.                   Vary'd at pleasure, every shape he try'd;                   And in all beasts,

Alcides still defy'd:                   Vanquish'd on Earth, at length he soar'd above;                   Chang'd to the bird, that bears the bolt of Jove:                   The new-dissembled eagle, now endu'd                   With beak, and pounces,

Hercules pursu'd,                   And cuff'd his manly cheeks, and tore his face;                   Then, safe retir'd, and tour'd in empty space.                   Alcides bore not long his flying foe;                   But bending his inevitable bow,                   Reach'd him in air, suspended as he stood;                   And in his pinion fix'd the feather'd wood.                   Light was the wound; but in the sinew hung                   The point, and his disabled wing unstrung.                   He wheel'd in air, and stretch'd his vans in vain;                   His vans no longer cou'd his flight sustain:                   For while one gather'd wind, one unsupply'd                   Hung drooping down, nor pois'd his other side.                   He fell: the shaft that slightly was impress'd,                   Now from his heavy fall with weight increas'd,                   Drove through his neck, aslant, he spurns the                       ground,                   And the soul issues through the weazon's wound.                     Now, brave commander of the Rhodian seas,                   What praise is due from me, to Hercules?                   Silence is all the vengeance I decree                   For my slain brothers; but 'tis peace with thee.                     Thus with a flowing tongue old Nestor spoke:                   Then, to full bowls each other they provoke:                   At length, with weariness, and wine oppress'd,                   They rise from table; and withdraw to rest.   The Death of      The sire of Cygnus, monarch of the main,     Achilles      Mean-time, laments his son, in battel slain,                   And vows the victor's death; nor vows in vain.                   For nine long years the smother'd pain he bore                   (Achilles was not ripe for Fate before):                   Then when he saw the promis'd hour was near,                   He thus bespoke the God, that guides the year:                   Immortal offspring of my brother Jove;                   My brightest nephew, and whom best I love,                   Whose hands were join'd with mine, to raise the                       wall                   Of tott'ring Troy, now nodding to her fall,                   Dost thou not mourn our pow'r employ'd in vain;                   And the defenders of our city slain?                   To pass the rest, could noble Hector lie                   Unpity'd, drag'd around his native Troy?                   And yet the murd'rer lives: himself by far                   A greater plague, than all the wasteful war:                   He lives; the proud Pelides lives, to boast                   Our town destroy'd, our common labour lost.                   O, could I meet him!

But I wish too late:                   To prove my trident is not in his Fate!                   But let him try (for that's allow'd) thy dart,                   And pierce his only penetrable part.                     Apollo bows to the superior throne;                   And to his uncle's anger, adds his own.                   Then in a cloud involv'd, he takes his flight,                   Where Greeks, and Trojans mix'd in mortal fight;                   And found out Paris, lurking where he stood,                   And stain'd his arrows with plebeian blood:                   Phoebus to him alone the God confess'd,                   Then to the recreant knight, he thus address'd.                   Dost thou not blush, to spend thy shafts in vain                   On a degenerate, and ignoble train?                   If fame, or better vengeance be thy care,                   There aim: and, with one arrow, end the war.                     He said; and shew'd from far the blazing shield                   And sword, which, but Achilles, none cou'd wield;                   And how he mov'd a God, and mow'd the standing                       field.                   The deity himself directs aright                   Th' invenom'd shaft; and wings the fatal flight.                     Thus fell the foremost of the Grecian name;                   And he, the base adult'rer, boasts the fame.                   A spectacle to glad the Trojan train;                   And please old Priam, after Hector slain.                   If by a female hand he had foreseen                   He was to die, his wish had rather been                   The lance, and double ax of the fair warriour                       queen.                   And now the terror of the Trojan field,                   The Grecian honour, ornament, and shield,                   High on a pile, th' unconquer'd chief is plac'd,                   The God that arm'd him first, consum'd at last.                   Of all the mighty man, the small remains                   A little urn, and scarcely fill'd, contains.                   Yet great in Homer, still Achilles lives;                   And equal to himself, himself survives.                     His buckler owns its former lord; and brings                   New cause of strife, betwixt contending kings;                   Who worthi'st after him, his sword to wield,                   Or wear his armour, or sustain his shield.                   Ev'n Diomede sat mute, with down-cast eyes;                   Conscious of wanted worth to win the prize:                   Nor Menelaus presum'd these arms to claim,                   Nor he the king of men, a greater name.                   Two rivals only rose:

Laertes' son,                   And the vast bulk of Ajax Telamon:                   The king, who cherish'd each with equal love,                   And from himself all envy wou'd remove,                   Left both to be determin'd by the laws;                   And to the Graecian chiefs transferr'd the cause.                              The End of the Twelfth Book.                                                                        Translated into English verse under the direction of                Sir Samuel Garth by John Dryden,

Alexander Pope,

Joseph Addison,                William Congreve and other eminent hands

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Ovid Ovid

Publius Ovidius Naso (Classical Latin: [ˈpuːblɪ.ʊs ɔˈwɪdɪ.ʊs ˈnaːsoː]; 20 March 43 BC – 17/18 AD), known as Ovid (/ˈɒvɪd/ OV-id)[1] in the Engli…

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