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The Aeneid
The Aeneid
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The Aeneid

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New pangs of mortal fear our minds assail;

We tug at ev’ry oar, and hoist up ev’ry sail,

And take th’ advantage of the friendly gale.

Forewarn’d by Helenus, we strive to shun

Charybdis’ gulf, nor dare to Scylla run.

An equal fate on either side appears:

We, tacking to the left, are free from fears;

For, from Pelorus’ point, the North arose,

And drove us back where swift Pantagias flows.

His rocky mouth we pass, and make our way

By Thapsus and Megara’s winding bay.

This passage Achaemenides had shown,

Tracing the course which he before had run.

“Right o’er against Plemmyrium’s wat’ry strand,

There lies an isle once call’d th’ Ortygian land.

Alpheus, as old fame reports, has found

From Greece a secret passage under ground,

By love to beauteous Arethusa led;

And, mingling here, they roll in the same sacred bed.

As Helenus enjoin’d, we next adore

Diana’s name, protectress of the shore.

With prosp’rous gales we pass the quiet sounds

Of still Elorus, and his fruitful bounds.

Then, doubling Cape Pachynus, we survey

The rocky shore extended to the sea.

The town of Camarine from far we see,

And fenny lake, undrain’d by fate’s decree.

In sight of the Geloan fields we pass,

And the large walls, where mighty Gela was;

Then Agragas, with lofty summits crown’d,

Long for the race of warlike steeds renown’d.

We pass’d Selinus, and the palmy land,

And widely shun the Lilybaean strand,

Unsafe, for secret rocks and moving sand.

At length on shore the weary fleet arriv’d,

Which Drepanum’s unhappy port receiv’d.

Here, after endless labors, often toss’d

By raging storms, and driv’n on ev’ry coast,

My dear, dear father, spent with age, I lost:

Ease of my cares, and solace of my pain,

Sav’d thro’ a thousand toils, but sav’d in vain

The prophet, who my future woes reveal’d,

Yet this, the greatest and the worst, conceal’d;

And dire Celaeno, whose foreboding skill

Denounc’d all else, was silent of the ill.

This my last labor was. Some friendly god

From thence convey’d us to your blest abode.”

Thus, to the list’ning queen, the royal guest

His wand’ring course and all his toils express’d;

And here concluding, he retir’d to rest.

BOOK IV

But anxious cares already seiz’d the queen:

She fed within her veins a flame unseen;

The hero’s valor, acts, and birth inspire

Her soul with love, and fan the secret fire.

His words, his looks, imprinted in her heart,

Improve the passion, and increase the smart.

Now, when the purple morn had chas’d away

The dewy shadows, and restor’d the day,

Her sister first with early care she sought,

And thus in mournful accents eas’d her thought:

“My dearest Anna, what new dreams affright

My lab’ring soul! what visions of the night

Disturb my quiet, and distract my breast

With strange ideas of our Trojan guest!

His worth, his actions, and majestic air,

A man descended from the gods declare.

Fear ever argues a degenerate kind;

His birth is well asserted by his mind.

Then, what he suffer’d, when by Fate betray’d!

What brave attempts for falling Troy he made!

Such were his looks, so gracefully he spoke,

That, were I not resolv’d against the yoke

Of hapless marriage, never to be curst

With second love, so fatal was my first,

To this one error I might yield again;

For, since Sichaeus was untimely slain,

This only man is able to subvert

The fix’d foundations of my stubborn heart.

And, to confess my frailty, to my shame,

Somewhat I find within, if not the same,

Too like the sparkles of my former flame.

But first let yawning earth a passage rend,

And let me thro’ the dark abyss descend;

First let avenging Jove, with flames from high,

Drive down this body to the nether sky,

Condemn’d with ghosts in endless night to lie,

Before I break the plighted faith I gave!

No! he who had my vows shall ever have;

For, whom I lov’d on earth, I worship in the grave.”

She said: the tears ran gushing from her eyes,

And stopp’d her speech. Her sister thus replies:

“O dearer than the vital air I breathe,

Will you to grief your blooming years bequeath,

Condemn’d to waste in woes your lonely life,

Without the joys of mother or of wife?

Think you these tears, this pompous train of woe,

Are known or valued by the ghosts below?

I grant that, while your sorrows yet were green,

It well became a woman, and a queen,