THUS humbled in the dust, the pensive train | |
| Thro the sad city mournd her hero slain. | |
| The body soild with dust, and black with gore, | |
| Lies on broad Hellesponts resounding shore: | |
| The Grecians seek their ships, and clear the strand, | 5 |
| All but the martial Myrmidonian band: | |
| These yet assembled great Achilles holds, | |
| And the stern purpose of his mind unfolds: | |
| Not yet (my brave companions of the war) | |
| Release your smoking coursers from the car; | 10 |
| But with his chariot each in order led, | |
| Perform due honours to Patroclus dead; | |
| Ere yet from rest or food we seek relief, | |
| Some rites remain, to glut our rage of grief. | |
| The troops obeyd; and thrice in order led | 15 |
| (Achilles first) their coursers round the dead | |
| And thrice their sorrows and laments renew; | |
| Tears bathe their arms, and tears the sands bedew. | |
| For such a warrior Thetis aids their woe, | |
| Melts their strong hearts, and bids their eyes to flow. | 20 |
| But chief, Pelides; thick-succeeding sighs | |
| Burst from his heart, and torrents from his eyes; | |
| His slaughtring hands, yet red with blood, he laid | |
| On his dead friends cold breast, and thus he said: | |
| All hail, Patroclus! let thy honourd ghost | 25 |
| Hear and rejoice on Plutos dreary coast; | |
| Behold! Achilles promise is complete; | |
| The bloody Hector stretchd before thy feet. | |
| Lo! to the dogs his carcass I resign; | |
| And twelve sad victims of the Trojan line, | 30 |
| Sacred to vengeance, instant shall expire, | |
| Their lives effused around thy funeral pyre. | |
| Gloomy he said, and (horrible to view) | |
| Before the bier the bleeding Hector threw, | |
| Prone on the dust. The Myrmidons around | 35 |
| Unbraced their armour, and the steeds unbound. | |
| All to Achilles sable ship repair, | |
| Frequent and full, the genial feast to share. | |
| Now from the well-fed swine black smokes aspire, | |
| The bristly victims hissing oer the fire; | 40 |
| The huge ox bellwing falls; with feebler cries | |
| Expires the goat; the sheep in silence dies. | |
| Around the heros prostrate body flowd, | |
| In one promiscuous stream, the reeking blood. | |
| And now a band of Argive Monarchs brings | 45 |
| The glorious victor to the King of Kings. | |
| From his dead friend the pensive warrior went, | |
| With steps unwilling, to the regal tent. | |
| Th attending heralds, as by office bound, | |
| With kindled flames the tripod-vase surround; | 50 |
| To cleanse his conquering hands from hostile gore, | |
| They urged in vain; the Chief refused, and swore, | |
| No drop shall touch me, by Almighty Jove! | |
| The first and greatest of the Gods above! | |
| Till on the pyre I place thee; till I rear | 55 |
| The grassy mound, and clip thy sacred hair. | |
| Some ease at least those pious rites may give, | |
| And soothe my sorrows, while I bear to live. | |
| Howeer, reluctant as I am, I stay, | |
| And share your feast; but, with the dawn of day | 60 |
| (O King of Men!) it claims thy royal care, | |
| That Greece the warriors funeral pile prepare, | |
| And bid the forests fall (such rites are paid | |
| To heroes slumbring in eternal shade). | |
| Then, when his earthly part shall mount in fire, | 65 |
| Let the leagued squadrons to their posts retire. | |
| He spoke: they hear him, and the word obey; | |
| The rage of hunger and of thirst allay, | |
| Then ease in sleep the labours of the day. | |
| But great Pelides, stretchd along the shore, | 70 |
| Where dashd on rocks the broken billows roar, | |
| Lies inly groaning; while on either hand | |
| The martial Myrmidons confusedly stand: | |
| Along the grass his languid members fall, | |
| Tired with his chase around the Trojan wall; | 75 |
| Hushd by the murmurs of the rolling deep, | |
| At length he sinks in the soft arms of sleep. | |
| When lo! the shade before his closing eyes | |
| Of sad Patroclus rose, or seemd to rise: | |
| In the same robe he living wore, he came, | 80 |
| In stature, voice, and pleasing look, the same. | |
| The form familiar hoverd oer his head, | |
| And, Sleeps Achilles (thus the phantom said), | |
| Sleeps my Achilles, his Patroclus dead? | |
| Living, I seemd his dearest, tenderest care, | 85 |
| But now forgot, I wander in the air: | |
| Let my pale corse the rites of burial know, | |
| And give me entrance in the realms below; | |
| Till then, the spirit finds no resting-place, | |
| But here and there th unbodied spectres chase | 90 |
| The vagrant dead around the dark abode, | |
| Forbid to cross th irremeable flood. | |
| Now give thy hand; for to the farther shore | |
| When once we pass, the soul returns no more. | |
| When once the last funereal flames ascend, | 95 |
| No more shall meet Achilles and his friend; | |
| No more our thoughts to those we love make known, | |
| Or quit the dearest to converse alone. | |
| Me Fate has severd from the sons of earth, | |
| The Fate foredoomd that waited from my birth: | 100 |
| Thee too it waits; before the Trojan wall | |
| Evn great and godlike thou art doomd to fall. | |
| Hear then; and as in Fate and love we join, | |
| Ah, suffer that my bones may rest with thine! | |
| Together have we livd, together bred, | 105 |
| One house receivd us, and one table fed! | |
| That golden urn thy goddess-mother gave, | |
| May mix our ashes in one common grave. | |
| And is it thou? (he answers) To my sight | |
| Once more returnst thou from the realms of night? | 110 |
| Oh more than brother! think each office paid | |
| Whateer can rest a discontented shade; | |
| But grant one last embrace, unhappy boy! | |
| Afford at least that melancholy joy. | |
| He said, and with his longing arms essayd | 115 |
| In vain to grasp the visionary shade; | |
| Like a thin smoke he sees the spirit fly, | |
| And hears a feeble, lamentable cry. | |
| Confused he wakes; amazement breaks the bands | |
| Of golden sleep, and, starting from the sands, | 120 |
| Pensive he muses with uplifted hands: | |
| T is true, t is certain; man, tho dead, retains | |
| Part of himself; th immortal mind remains: | |
| The form subsists, without the bodys aid, | |
| Aërial semblance, and an empty shade! | 125 |
| This night, my friend, so late in battle lost, | |
| Stood at my side a pensive, plaintive ghost; | |
| Evn now familiar, as in life, he came, | |
| Alas, how different! yet how like the same! | |
| Thus while he spoke, each eye grew big with tears; | 130 |
| And now the rosy-fingerd morn appears, | |
| Shows every mournful face with tears oerspread, | |
| And glares on the pale visage of the dead. | |
| But Agamemnon, as the rites demand, | |
| With mules and wagons sends a chosen band | 135 |
| To load the timber, and the pile to rear; | |
| A charge consignd to Merions faithful care. | |
| With proper instruments they take the road, | |
| Axes to cut, and ropes to sling the load. | |
| First march the heavy mules, securely slow, | 140 |
| Oer hills, oer dales, oer crags, oer rocks they go: | |
| Jumping, high oer the shrubs of the rough ground, | |
| Rattle the clattring cars, and the shockd axles bound, | |
| But when arrived at Idas spreading woods | |
| (Fair Ida, waterd with descending floods), | 145 |
| Loud sounds the axe, redoubling strokes on strokes; | |
| On all sides round the forest hurls her oaks | |
| Headlong. Deep-echoing groan the thickets brown; | |
| Then rustling, crackling, crashing, thunder down: | |
| The wood the Grecians cleave, prepared to burn; | 150 |
| And the slow mules the same rough road return. | |
| The sturdy woodmen equal burthens bore | |
| (Such charge was givn them) to the sandy shore; | |
| There on the spot which great Achilles showd, | |
| They easd their shoulders and disposed the load; | 155 |
| Circling around the place, where times to come | |
| Shall view Patroclus and Achilles tomb. | |
| The hero bids his martial troops appear | |
| High on their cars, in all the pomp of war: | |
| Each in refulgent arms his limbs attires, | 160 |
| All mount their chariots, combatants and squires. | |
| The chariots first proceed, a shining train; | |
| Then clouds of foot that smoke along the plain; | |
| Next these a melancholy band appear; | |
| Amidst, lay dead Patroclus on the bier: | 165 |
| Oer all the corse their scatterd locks they throw: | |
| Achilles next, oppressd with mighty woe, | |
| Supporting with his hands the heros head, | |
| Bends oer th extended body of the dead. | |
| Patroclus decent on th appointed ground | 170 |
| They place, and heap the sylvan pile around. | |
| But great Achilles stands apart in prayer, | |
| And from his head divides the yellow hair; | |
| Those curling locks which from his youth he vowd, | |
| And sacred grew to Sperchius honourd flood: | 175 |
| Then, sighing, to the deep his looks he cast, | |
| And rolld his eyes around the watry waste: | |
| Sperchius! whose waves, in mazy errors lost, | |
| Delightful roll along my native coast! | |
| To whom we vainly vowd, at our return, | 180 |
| These locks to fall, and hecatombs to burn; | |
| Full fifty rams to bleed in sacrifice | |
| Where to the day thy silver fountains rise, | |
| And where in shade of consecrated bowers | |
| Thy altars stand, perfumed with native flowers! | 185 |
| So vowd my father, but he vowd in vain; | |
| No more Achilles sees his native plain; | |
| In that vain hope these hairs no longer grow, | |
| Patroclus bears them to the shades below. | |
| Thus oer Patroclus while the hero prayd, | 190 |
| On his cold hand the sacred lock he laid. | |
| Once more afresh the Grecian sorrows flow: | |
| And now the sun had set upon their woe; | |
| But to the King of Men thus spoke the Chief: | |
| Enough, Atrides! give the troops relief: | 195 |
| Permit the mourning legions to retire, | |
| And let the Chiefs alone attend the pyre; | |
| The pious care be ours, the dead to burn. | |
| He said: the people to their ships return: | |
| While those deputed to inter the slain, | 200 |
| Heap with a rising pyramid the plain; | |
| A hundred foot in length, a hundred wide, | |
| The growing structure spreads on evry side; | |
| High on the top the manly corse they lay, | |
| And well-fed sheep and sable oxen slay: | 205 |
| Achilles coverd with their fat the dead, | |
| And the piled victims round the body spread; | |
| Then jars of honey and of fragrant oil | |
| Suspends around, low-bending oer the pile. | |
| Four sprightly coursers, with a deadly groan, | 210 |
| Pour forth their lives, and on the pyre are thrown. | |
| Of nine large dogs, domestic at his board, | |
| Fall two, selected to attend their lord. | |
| Then last of all, and horrible to tell, | |
| Sad sacrifice! twelve Trojan captives fell: | 215 |
| On these the rage of fire victorious preys, | |
| Involves, and joins them in one common blaze. | |
| Smeard with the bloody rites he stands on high, | |
| And calls the spirit with a dreadful cry: | |
| All hail, Patroclus! let thy vengeful ghost | 220 |
| Hear and exult on Plutos dreary coast. | |
| Behold Achilles promise fully paid, | |
| Twelve Trojan heroes offerd to thy shade; | |
| But heavier fates on Hectors corse attend, | |
| Saved from the flames, for hungry dogs to rend. | 225 |
| So spake he, threatning: but the Gods made vain | |
| His threat, and guard inviolate the slain: | |
| Celestial Venus hoverd oer his head, | |
| And roseate unguents, heavnly fragrance! shed: | |
| She watchd him all the night, and all the day, | 230 |
| And drove the bloodhounds from their destind prey. | |
| Nor sacred Phbus less employd his care: | |
| He pourd around a veil of gatherd air, | |
| And kept the nerves undried, the flesh entire, | |
| Against the solar beam and Sirian fire. | 235 |
| Nor yet the pile, where dead Patroclus lies, | |
| Smokes, nor as yet the sullen flames arise; | |
| But, fast beside, Achilles stood in prayer, | |
| Invoked the Gods whose spirit moves the air, | |
| And victims promisd, and libations cast, | 240 |
| To gentle Zephyr and the Boreal blast: | |
| He calld th aërial Powers, along the skies | |
| To breathe, and whisper to the fires to rise. | |
| The winged Iris heard the heros call, | |
| And instant hastend to their airy hall, | 245 |
| Where, in old Zephyrs open courts on high, | |
| Sat all the blustring brethren of the sky. | |
| She shone amidst them, on her painted bow; | |
| The rocky pavement glitterd with the show. | |
| All from the banquet rise, and each invites | 250 |
| The various Goddess to partake the rites. | |
| Not so (the Dame replied), I haste to go | |
| To sacred Ocean, and the floods below; | |
| Evn now our solemn hecatombs attend, | |
| And Heavn is feasting on the worlds green end, | 255 |
| With righteous Æthiops (uncorrupted train)! | |
| Far on th extremest limits of the main. | |
| But Peleus son entreats, with sacrifice, | |
| The Western spirit, and the North to rise; | |
| Let on Patroclus pile your blast be drivn, | 260 |
| And bear the blazing honours high to Heavn. | |
| Swift as the word, she vanishd from their view: | |
| Swift as the word, the winds tumultuous flew; | |
| Forth burst the stormy band with thundring roar, | |
| And heaps on heaps the clouds are tossd before. | 265 |
| To the wide main then stooping from the skies, | |
| The heaving deeps in watry mountains rise: | |
| Troy feels the blast along her shaking walls, | |
| Till on the pile the gatherd tempest falls. | |
| The structure crackles in the roaring fires, | 270 |
| And all the night the plenteous flame aspires: | |
| All night Achilles hails Patroclus soul, | |
| With large libation from the golden bowl, | |
| As a poor father, helpless and undone, | |
| Mourns oer the ashes of an only son, | 275 |
| Takes a sad pleasure the last bones to burn, | |
| And pour in tears, ere yet they close the urn: | |
| So stayd Achilles, circling round the shore, | |
| So watchd the flames, till now they flame no more. | |
| T was when, emerging thro the shades of night, | 280 |
| The morning planet told th approach of light; | |
| And, fast behind, Auroras warmer ray | |
| Oer the broad ocean pourd the golden day: | |
| Then sunk the blaze, the pile no longer burnd, | |
| And to their caves the whistling winds returnd: | 285 |
| Across the Thracian seas their course they bore; | |
| The ruffled seas beneath their passage roar. | |
| Then, parting from the pile, he ceasd to weep, | |
| And sunk to quiet in th embrace of sleep, | |
| Exhausted with his grief: meanwhile the crowd | 290 |
| Of thronging Grecians round Achilles stood: | |
| The tumult waked him: from his eyes he shook | |
| Unwilling slumber, and the Chief bespoke: | |
| Ye Kings and Princes of th Achaian name! | |
| First let us quench the yet remaining flame | 295 |
| With sable wine; then (as the rites direct) | |
| The heros bones with careful view select | |
| (Apart, and easy to be known they lie, | |
| Amidst the heap, and obvious to the eye: | |
| The rest around the margins will be seen, | 300 |
| Promiscuous, steeds and immolated men). | |
| These, wrappd in double cauls of fat, prepare; | |
| And in the golden vase dispose with care; | |
| There let them rest, with decent honour laid, | |
| Till I shall follow to th infernal shade. | 305 |
| Meantime erect the tomb with pious hands, | |
| A common structure on the humble sands; | |
| Hereafter Greece some nobler work may raise, | |
| And late posterity record our praise. | |
| The Greeks obey; where yet the embers glow, | 310 |
| Wide oer the pile the sable wine they throw, | |
| And deep subsides the ashy heap below. | |
| Next the white bones his sad companions place, | |
| With tears collected, in the golden vase. | |
| The sacred relics to the tent they bore; | 315 |
| The urn a veil of linen coverd oer. | |
| That done, they bid the sepulchre aspire, | |
| And cast the deep foundations round the pyre; | |
| High in the midst they heap the swelling bed | |
| Of rising earth, memorial of the dead. | 320 |
| The swarming populace the Chief detains, | |
| And leads amidst a wide extent of plains; | |
| There placed them round; then from the ships proceeds | |
| A train of oxen, mules, and stately steeds, | |
| Vases and tripods, for the funeral games, | 325 |
| Resplendent brass, and more resplendent dames. | |
| First stood the prizes to reward the force | |
| Of rapid racers in the dusty course: | |
| A woman for the first, in beautys bloom, | |
| Skilld in the needle, and the labring loom; | 330 |
| And a large vase, where two bright handles rise, | |
| Of twenty measures its capacious size. | |
| The second victor claims a mare unbroke, | |
| Big with a mule, unknowing of the yoke; | |
| The third, a charger yet untouchd by flame; | 335 |
| Four ample measures held the shining frame: | |
| Two golden talents for the fourth were placed; | |
| An ample double bowl contents the last. | |
| These in fair order ranged upon the plain, | |
| The hero, rising, thus addressd the train: | 340 |
| Behold the prizes, valiant Greeks! decreed | |
| To the brave rulers of the racing steed; | |
| Prizes which none beside ourself could gain, | |
| Should our immortal coursers take the plain | |
| (A race unrivalld, which from Oceans God | 345 |
| Peleus receivd, and on his son bestowd). | |
| But t is no time our vigour to display, | |
| Nor suit with them the games of this sad day: | |
| Lost is Patroclus now, that wont to deck | |
| Their flowing manes, and sleek their glossy neck. | 350 |
| Sad, as they shared in human grief, they stand, | |
| And trail those graceful honours on the sand! | |
| Let others for the noble task prepare, | |
| Who trust the courser, and the flying car. | |
| Fired at his word, the rival racers rise; | 355 |
| But, far the first, Eumelus hopes the prize; | |
| Famed thro Pieria for the fleetest breed, | |
| And skilld to manage the high-bounding steed. | |
| With equal ardour bold Tydides swelld, | |
| The steeds of Tros beneath his yoke compelld | 360 |
| (Which late obeyd the Dardan Chiefs command, | |
| When scarce a God redeemd him from his hand). | |
| Then Menelaüs his Podargus brings, | |
| And the famed courser of the King of Kings: | |
| Whom rich Echepolus (more rich than brave), | 365 |
| To scape the wars, to Agamemnon gave | |
| (Æthe her name), at home to end his days, | |
| Base wealth preferring to eternal praise. | |
| Next him Antilochus demands the course, | |
| With beating heart, and cheers his Pylian horse. | 370 |
| Experiencd Nestor gives his son the reins, | |
| Directs his judgment, and his heat restrains; | |
| Nor idly warns the hoary sire, nor hears | |
| The prudent son with unattending ears: | |
| My son! tho youthful ardour fire thy breast, | 375 |
| The Gods have lovd thee, and with arts have blessd. | |
| Neptune and Jove on thee conferrd the skill | |
| Swift round the goal to turn the flying wheel. | |
| To guide thy conduct, little precept needs; | |
| But slow, and past their vigour, are my steeds. | 380 |
| Fear not thy rivals, tho for swiftness known, | |
| Compare those rivals judgment, and thy own: | |
| It is not strength, but art, obtains the prize, | |
| And to be swift is less than to be wise: | |
| T is more by art, than force of numerous strokes, | 385 |
| The dextrous woodman shapes the stubborn oaks; | |
| By art the pilot, thro the boiling deep | |
| And howling tempests, steers the fearless ship; | |
| And t is the artist wins the glorious course, | |
| Not those who trust in chariots and in horse. | 390 |
| In vain, unskilful, to the goal they strive, | |
| And short, or wide, th ungovernd courser drive: | |
| While with sure skill, tho with inferior steeds, | |
| The knowing racer to his end proceeds; | |
| Fixd on the goal his eye fore-runs the course, | 395 |
| His hand unerring steers the steady horse, | |
| And now contracts, or now extends, the rein, | |
| Observing still the foremost on the plain. | |
| Mark then the goal, t is easy to be found; | |
| Yon aged trunk, a cubit from the ground; | 400 |
| Of some once-stately oak the last remains, | |
| Or hardy fir, unperishd with the rains: | |
| Enclosed with stones, conspicuous from afar, | |
| And round, a circle for the wheeling car | |
| (Some tomb perhaps of old, the dead to grace; | 405 |
| Or then, as now, the limit of a race). | |
| Bear close to this, and warily proceed, | |
| A little bending to the left-hand steed; | |
| But urge the right, and give him all the reins; | |
| While thy strict hand his fellows head restrains, | 410 |
| And turns him short; till, doubling as they roll, | |
| The wheels round naves appear to brush the goal; | |
| Yet (not to break the car, or lame the horse), | |
| Clear of the stony heap direct the course; | |
| Lest, thro incaution failing, thou mayst be | 415 |
| A joy to others, a reproach to me. | |
| So shalt thou pass the goal, secure of mind, | |
| And leave unskilful swiftness far behind, | |
| Tho thy fierce rival drove the matchless steed | |
| Which bore Adrastus, of celestial breed; | 420 |
| Or the famed race thro all the regions known, | |
| That whirld the car of proud Laomedon. | |
| Thus (nought unsaid) the much-advising sage | |
| Concludes; then sat, stiff with unwieldly age. | |
| Next bold Meriones was seen to rise, | 425 |
| The last, but not least ardent for the prize. | |
| They mount their seats; the lots their place dispose | |
| (Rolld in his helmet, these Achilles throws); | |
| Young Nestor leads the race; Eumelus then; | |
| And next, the brother of the King of Men: | 430 |
| Thy lot, Meriones, the fourth was cast; | |
| And, far the bravest, Diomed, was last. | |
| They stand in order, an impatient train; | |
| Pelides points the barrier on the plain, | |
| And sends before old Phnix to the place, | 435 |
| To mark the racers, and to judge the race. | |
| At once the coursers from the barrier bound; | |
| The lifted scourges all at once resound; | |
| Their heart, their eyes, their voice, they send before; | |
| And up the champaign thunder from the shore: | 440 |
| Thick, where they drive, the dusty clouds arise, | |
| And the lost courser in the whirlwind flies; | |
| Loose on their shoulders the long manes reclind, | |
| Float in their speed, and dance upon the wind: | |
| The smoking chariots, rapid as they bound, | 445 |
| Now seem to touch the sky, and now the ground; | |
| While hot for Fame, and conquest all their care | |
| (Each oer his flying courser hung in air), | |
| Erect with ardour, poisd upon the rein, | |
| They pant, they stretch, they shout along the plain: | 450 |
| Now (the last compass fetchd around the goal) | |
| At the neat prize each gathers all his soul, | |
| Each burns with double hope, with double pain | |
| Tears up the shore, and thunders towrd the main. | |
| First flew Eumelus on Pheretian steeds; | 455 |
| With those of Tros, bold Diomed succeeds: | |
| Close on Eumelus back they puff the wind, | |
| And seem just mounting on his car behind; | |
| Full on his neck he feels the sultry breeze, | |
| And, hovring oer, their stretching shadows sees. | 460 |
| Then had he lost, or left a doubtful prize; | |
| But angry Phbus to Tydides flies, | |
| Strikes from his hand the scourge, and renders vain | |
| His matchless horses labour on the plain. | |
| Rage fills his eye with anguish, to survey, | 465 |
| Snatchd from his hope, the glories of the day. | |
| The fraud celestial Pallas sees with pain, | |
| Springs to her knight, and gives the scourge again, | |
| And fills his steeds with vigour. At a stroke, | |
| She breaks his rivals chariot from the yoke: | 470 |
| No more their way the startled horses held; | |
| The car reversd came rattling on the field; | |
| Shot headlong from his seat, beside the wheel, | |
| Prone on the dust th unhappy master fell; | |
| His batterd face and elbows strike the ground: | 475 |
| Nose, mouth, and front one undistinguishd wound: | |
| Grief stops his voice, a torrent drowns his eyes; | |
| Before him far the glad Tydides flies; | |
| Minervas spirit drives his matchless pace, | |
| And crowns him victor of the labourd race. | 480 |
| The next, tho distant, Menelaus succeeds; | |
| While thus young Nestor animates his steeds: | |
| Now, now, my genrous pair, exert your force; | |
| Not that we hope to match Tydides horse; | |
| Since great Minerva wings their rapid way, | 485 |
| And gives their lord the honours of the day. | |
| But reach Atrides! shall his mare out-go | |
| Your swiftness? vanquishd by a female foe? | |
| Thro your neglect, if, lagging on the plain, | |
| The last ignoble gift be all we gain, | 490 |
| No more shall Nestors hand your food supply; | |
| The old mans fury rises, and ye die. | |
| Haste then! yon narrow road before our sight | |
| Presents th occasion, could we use it right. | |
| Thus he. The coursers at their masters threat | 495 |
| With quicker steps the sounding champaign beat. | |
| And now Antilochus, with nice survey, | |
| Observes the compass of the hollow way. | |
| T was where by force of wintry torrents torn, | |
| Fast by the road a precipice was worn: | 500 |
| Here, where but one could pass, to shun the throng, | |
| The Spartan heros chariot smoked along. | |
| Close up the venturous youth resolves to keep, | |
| Still edging near, and bears him towrd the steep. | |
| Atrides, trembling, casts his eye below, | 505 |
| And wonders at the rashness of his foe: | |
| Hold, stay your steedswhat madness thus to ride | |
| This narrow way! Take larger field (he cried), | |
| Or both must fall. Atrides cried in vain; | |
| He flies more fast, and throws up all the rein. | 510 |
| Far as an able arm the disc can send, | |
| When youthful rivals their full force extend, | |
| So far, Antilochus! thy chariot flew | |
| Before the King: he, cautious, backward drew | |
| His horse compelld; foreboding in his fears | 515 |
| The rattling ruin of the clashing cars, | |
| The floundring coursers rolling on the plain, | |
| And conquest lost thro frantic haste to gain. | |
| But thus upbraids his rival as he flies: | |
| Go, furious youth! ungenrous and unwise! | 520 |
| Go, but expect not I ll the prize resign; | |
| Add perjury to fraud, and make it thine. | |
| Then to his steeds with all his force he cries: | |
| Be swift, be vigrous, and regain the prize! | |
| Your rivals, destitute of youthful force, | 525 |
| With fainting knees shall labour in the course, | |
| And yield the glory yours. The steeds obey; | |
| Already at their heels they wing their way, | |
| And seem already to retrieve the day. | |
| Meantime the Grecians in a ring beheld | 530 |
| The coursers bounding oer the dusty field. | |
| The first who markd them was the Cretan King; | |
| High on a rising ground, above the ring, | |
| The Monarch sat; from whence with sure survey | |
| He well observd the Chief who led the way, | 535 |
| And heard from far his animating cries, | |
| And saw the foremost steed with sharpend eyes; | |
| On whose broad front a blaze of shining white, | |
| Like the full moon, stood obvious to the sight. | |
| He saw; and, rising, to the Greeks begun: | 540 |
| Are yonder horse discernd by me alone? | |
| Or can ye, all, another Chief survey, | |
| And other steeds, than lately led the way? | |
| Those, tho the swiftest, by some God withheld, | |
| Lie sure disabled in the middle field: | 545 |
| For since the goal they doubled, round the plain | |
| I search to find them, but I search in vain. | |
| Perchance the reins forsook the drivers hand, | |
| And, turnd too short, he tumbled on the strand, | |
| Shot from the chariot; while his coursers stray | 550 |
| With frantic fury from the destind way. | |
| Rise then some other, and inform my sight | |
| (For these dim eyes, perhaps, discern not right); | |
| Yet sure he seems (to judge by shape and air) | |
| The great Ætolian Chief, renownd in war. | 555 |
| Old man! (Oïleus rashly thus replies), | |
| Thy tongue too hastily confers the prize. | |
| Of those who view the course, not sharpest eyed, | |
| Nor youngest, yet the readiest to decide. | |
| Eumelus steeds high-bounding in the chase, | 560 |
| Still, as at first, unrivalld lead the race; | |
| I well discern him, as he shakes the rein, | |
| And hear his shouts victorious oer the plain. | |
| Thus he. Idomeneus incensd rejoind: | |
| Barbrous of words! and arrogant of mind! | 565 |
| Contentious Prince! of all the Greeks beside | |
| The last in merit, as the first in pride! | |
| To vile reproach what answer can we make? | |
| A goblet or a tripod let us stake, | |
| And be the King the judge. The most unwise | 570 |
| Will learn their rashness, when they pay the price. | |
| He said: and Ajax, by mad passion borne, | |
| Stern had replied; fierce scorn enhancing scorn | |
| To fell extremes. But Thetis godlike son, | |
| Awful, amidst them rose; and thus begun: | 575 |
| Forbear, ye Chiefs! reproachful to contend: | |
| Much would ye blame, should others thus offend: | |
| And lo! th approaching steeds your contest end. | |
| No sooner had he spoke, but, thundring near, | |
| Drives, thro a stream of dust, the charioteer; | 580 |
| High oer his head the circling lash he wields; | |
| His bounding horses scarcely touch the fields: | |
| His car amidst the dusty whirlwind rolld, | |
| Bright with the mingled blaze of tin and gold, | |
| Refulgent thro the cloud: no eye could find | 585 |
| The track his flying wheels had left behind: | |
| And the fierce coursers urged their rapid pace | |
| So swift, it seemd a flight, and not a race. | |
| Now victor at the goal Tydides stands, | |
| Quits his bright car, and springs upon the sands; | 590 |
| From the hot steeds the sweaty torrents stream; | |
| The well-plied whip is hung athwart the beam: | |
| With joy brave Sthenelus receives the prize, | |
| The tripod-vase, and dame with radiant eyes: | |
| These to the ships his train triumphant leads, | 595 |
| The Chief himself unyokes the panting steeds. | |
| Young Nestor follows (who by art, not force, | |
| Oerpassd Atrides), second in the course. | |
| Behind, Atrides urged the race, more near | |
| Than to the courser in his swift career | 600 |
| The follwing car, just touching with his heel | |
| And brushing with his tail the whirling wheel: | |
| Such, and so narrow, now the space between | |
| The rivals, late so distant on the green; | |
| So soon swift Æthe her lost ground regaind, | 605 |
| One length, one moment, had the race obtaind. | |
| Merion pursued, at greater distance still, | |
| With tardier coursers, and inferior skill. | |
| Last came, Admetus! thy unhappy son; | |
| Slow draggd the steeds his batterd chariot on; | 610 |
| Achilles saw, and pitying thus begun: | |
| Behold! the man whose matchless art surpassd | |
| The sons of Greece! the ablest, yet the last! | |
| Fortune denies, but justice bids us pay | |
| (Since great Tydides bears the first away) | 615 |
| To him the second honours of the day. | |
| The Greeks consent with loud applauding cries, | |
| And then Eumelus had receivd the prize, | |
| But youthful Nestor, jealous of his fame, | |
| Th award opposes, and asserts his claim: | 620 |
| Think not (he cries), I tamely will resign, | |
| O Peleus son! the mare so justly mine. | |
| What if the Gods, the skilful to confound, | |
| Have thrown the horse and horseman to the ground? | |
| Perhaps he sought not Heavn by sacrifice, | 625 |
| And vows omitted forfeited the prize. | |
| If yet (distinction to thy friend to show, | |
| And please a soul desirous to bestow) | |
| Some gift must grace Eumelus, view thy store | |
| Of beauteous handmaids, steeds, and shining ore; | 630 |
| An ample present let him thence receive, | |
| And Greece shall praise thy genrous thirst to give. | |
| But this, my prize, I never shall forego; | |
| This, who but touches, Warriors! is my foe. | |
| Thus spake the youth, nor did his words offend; | 635 |
| Pleasd with the well-turnd flattery of a friend, | |
| Achilles smiled: The gift proposed (he cried), | |
| Antilochus! we shall ourselves provide. | |
| With plates of brass the corslet coverd oer | |
| (The same renownd Asteropæus wore), | 640 |
| Whose glittring margins raisd with silver shine | |
| (No vulgar gift), Eumelus, shall be thine. | |
| He said: Automedon at his command | |
| The corslet brought, and gave it to his hand. | |
| Distinguishd by his friend, his bosom glows | 645 |
| With genrous joy; then Menelaus rose; | |
| The herald placed the sceptre in his hands, | |
| And stilld the clamour of the shouting bands. | |
| Not without cause incensd at Nestors son, | |
| And inly grieving, thus the King begun: | 650 |
| The praise of wisdom, in thy youth obtaind, | |
| An act so rash, Antilochus, has staind. | |
| Robbd of my glory and my just reward, | |
| To you, O Grecians! be my wrong declared: | |
| So not a leader shall our conduct blame, | 655 |
| Or judge me envious of a rivals fame. | |
| But shall not we, ourselves, the truth maintain? | |
| What needs appealing in a fact so plain? | |
| What Greek shall blame me, if I bid thee rise | |
| And vindicate by oath th ill-gotten prize? | 660 |
| Rise, if thou darest, before thy chariot stand, | |
| The driving scourge high lifted in thy hand, | |
| And touch thy steeds, and swear thy whole intent | |
| Was but to conquer, not to circumvent. | |
| Swear by that God whose liquid arms surround | 665 |
| The globe, and whose dread earthquakes heave the ground. | |
| The prudent Chief with calm attention heard; | |
| Then mildly thus: Excuse, if youth have errd; | |
| Superior as thou art, forgive th offence, | |
| Nor I thy equal, or in years, or sense | 670 |
| Thou knowst the errors of unripend age, | |
| Weak are its counsels, headlong is its rage. | |
| The prize I quit, if thou thy wrath resign; | |
| The mare, or aught thou askst, be freely thine, | |
| Ere I become (from thy dear friendship torn) | 675 |
| Hateful to thee, and to the Gods forsworn. | |
| So spoke Antilochus; and at the word | |
| The mare contested to the King restord. | |
| Joy swells his soul, as when the vernal grain | |
| Lifts the green ear above the springing plain, | 680 |
| The fields their vegetable life renew, | |
| And laugh and glitter with the morning dew: | |
| Such joy the Spartans shining face oerspread, | |
| And lifted his gay heart, while thus he said: | |
| Still may our souls, O genrous youth! agree; | 685 |
| T is now Atrides turn to yield to thee. | |
| Rash heat perhaps a moment might control, | |
| Not break, the settled temper of thy soul. | |
| Not but (my friend) t is still the wiser way | |
| To waive contention with superior sway: | 690 |
| For ah! how few, who should like thee offend, | |
| Like thee, have talents to regain the friend? | |
| To plead indulgence, and thy fault atone, | |
| Suffice thy fathers merits, and thy own: | |
| Genrous alike, for me the sire and son | 695 |
| Have greatly sufferd, and have greatly done. | |
| I yield that all may know my soul can bend, | |
| Nor is my pride preferrd before my friend. | |
| He said: and pleasd his passion to command, | |
| Resignd the courser to Noëmons hand, | 700 |
| Friend of the youthful Chief: himself content, | |
| The shining charger to his vessel sent. | |
| The golden talents Merion next obtaind; | |
| The fifth reward, the double bowl, remaind. | |
| Achilles this to revrend Nestor bears, | 705 |
| And thus the purpose of his gift declares: | |
| Accept thou this, O sacred Sire (he said), | |
| In dear memorial of Patroclus dead; | |
| Dead, and for ever lost, Patroclus lies, | |
| For ever snatchd from our desiring eyes! | 710 |
| Take thou this token of a grateful heart: | |
| Tho t is not thine to hurl the distant dart, | |
| The quoit to toss, the pondrous mace to wield, | |
| Or urge the race, or wrestle on the field: | |
| Thy pristine vigour age has overthrown, | 715 |
| But left the glory of the past thy own. | |
| He said, and placed the goblet at his side: | |
| With joy the venerable King replied: | |
| Wisely and well, my son, thy words have provd | |
| A senior honourd and a friend belovd! | 720 |
| Too true it is, deserted of my strength, | |
| These witherd arms and limbs have faild at length. | |
| Oh! had I now that force I felt of yore, | |
| Known thro Buprasium and the Pylian shore! | |
| Victorious then in evry solemn game, | 725 |
| Ordaind to Amarynces mighty name; | |
| The brave Epeians gave my glory way, | |
| Ætolians, Pylians, all resignd the day. | |
| I quelld Clytomedes in fights of hand, | |
| And backward hurled Ancæus on the sand, | 730 |
| Surpassed Iphiclus in the swift career, | |
| Phyleus and Polydorus, with the spear: | |
| The sons of Actor won the prize of horse, | |
| But won by numbers, not by art or force: | |
| For the famed twins, impatient to survey | 735 |
| Prize after prize by Nestor borne away, | |
| Sprung to their car; and with united pains | |
| One lashd the coursers, while one ruled the reins. | |
| Such once I was! Now to these tasks succeeds | |
| A younger race, that emulate our deeds: | 740 |
| I yield, alas! (to age who must not yield?) | |
| Tho once the foremost hero of the field. | |
| Go thou, my son! by genrous friendship led, | |
| With martial honours decorate the dead; | |
| While pleasd I take the gift thy hands present | 745 |
| (Pledge of benevolence, and kind intent); | |
| Rejoicd, of all the numerous Greeks, to see | |
| Not one but honours sacred age and me: | |
| Those due distinctions thou so well canst pay, | |
| May the just Gods return another day. | 750 |
| Proud of the gift, thus spake the Full of Days: | |
| Achilles heard him, prouder of the praise. | |
| The prizes next are orderd to the field, | |
| For the bold champions who the cæstus wield. | |
| A stately mule, as yet by toils unbroke, | 755 |
| Of six years age, unconscious of the yoke, | |
| Is to the circus led, and firmly bound; | |
| Next stands a goblet, massy, large, and round. | |
| Achilles rising thus: Let Greece excite | |
| Two heroes equal to this hardy fight; | 760 |
| Who dares his foe with lifted arms provoke, | |
| And rush beneath the long-descending stroke. | |
| On whom Apollo shall the palm bestow, | |
| And whom the Greeks supreme by conquest know, | |
| This mule his dauntless labour shall repay; | 765 |
| The vanquishd bear the massy bowl away. | |
| The dreadful combat great Epeüs chose: | |
| High oer the crowd, enormous bulk! he rose, | |
| And seizd the beast, and thus began to say: | |
| Stand forth some man, to bear the bowl away! | 770 |
| (Price of his ruin) for who dares deny | |
| This mule my right? th undoubted victor I. | |
| Others, t is ownd, in fields of battle shine, | |
| But the first honours of this fight are mine; | |
| For who excels in all? Then let my foe | 775 |
| Draw near, but first his certain fortune know, | |
| Secure, this hand shall his whole frame confound, | |
| Mash all his bones, and all his body pound: | |
| So let his friends be nigh, a needful train, | |
| To heave the batterd carcass off the plain. | 780 |
| The Giant spoke; and in a stupid gaze | |
| The host beheld him, silent with amaze! | |
| T was thou, Euryalus! who durst aspire | |
| To meet his might, and emulate thy sire, | |
| The great Mecistheus; who in days of yore | 785 |
| In Theban games the noblest trophy bore | |
| (The games ordaind dead dipus to grace), | |
| And singly vanquishd the Cadmean race. | |
| Him great Tydides urges to contend, | |
| Warm with the hopes of conquest for his friend; | 790 |
| Officious with the cincture girds him round; | |
| And to his wrist the gloves of death are bound. | |
| Amid the circle now each champion stands, | |
| And poises high in air his iron hands: | |
| With clashing gauntlets now they fiercely close, | 795 |
| Their crackling jaws re-echo to the blows, | |
| And painful sweat from all their members flows. | |
| At length Epeüs dealt a weighty blow | |
| Full on the cheek of his unwary foe; | |
| Beneath that pondrous arms resistless sway | 800 |
| Down droppd he, nerveless, and extended lay. | |
| As a large fish, when winds and waters roar, | |
| By some huge billow dashd against the shore, | |
| Lies panting: not less batterd with his wound, | |
| The bleeding hero pants upon the ground. | 805 |
| To rear his fallen foe the victor lends, | |
| Scornful, his hand; and gives him to his friends; | |
| Whose arms support him, reeling thro the throng. | |
| And dragging his disabled legs along; | |
| Nodding, his head hangs down, his shoulder oer; | 810 |
| His mouth and nostrils pour the clotted gore; | |
| Wrappd round in mists he lies, and lost to thought; | |
| His friends receive the bowl, too dearly bought. | |
| The third bold game Achilles next demands, | |
| And calls the wrestlers to the level sands: | 815 |
| A massy tripod for the victor lies, | |
| Of twice six oxen its reputed price: | |
| And next, the losers spirits to restore, | |
| A female captive, valued but at four; | |
| Scarce did the Chief the vigrous strife propose, | 820 |
| When tower-like Ajax and Ulysses rose. | |
| Amid the ring each nervous rival stands, | |
| Embracing rigid with implicit hands: | |
| Close lockd above, their heads and arms are mixd; | |
| Below, their planted feet at distance fixd: | 825 |
| Like two strong rafters, which the builder forms | |
| Proof to the wintry winds and howling storms, | |
| Their tops connected, but at wider space | |
| Fixd on the centre stands their solid base. | |
| Now to the grasp each manly body bends; | 830 |
| The humid sweat from every pore descends; | |
| Their bones resound with blows: sides, shoulders, thighs, | |
| Swell to each gripe, and bloody tumours rise. | |
| Nor could Ulysses, for his art renownd, | |
| Oerturn the strength of Ajax on the ground; | 835 |
| Nor could the strength of Ajax overthrow | |
| The watchful caution of his artful foe. | |
| While the long strife evn tired the lookers-on, | |
| Thus to Ulysses spoke great Telamon: | |
| Or let me lift thee, Chief, or lift thou me: | 840 |
| Prove we our force, and Jove the rest decree. | |
| He said: and, straining, heavd him off the ground | |
| With matchless strength: that time Ulysses found | |
| The strength t evade, and where the nerves combine | |
| His ankle struck: the giant fell supine; | 845 |
| Ulysses follwing, on his bosom lies; | |
| Shouts of applause run rattling thro the skies. | |
| Ajax to lift, Ulysses next essays, | |
| He barely stirrd him, but he could not raise; | |
| His knee lockd fast, the foes attempt denied; | 850 |
| And, grappling close, they tumble side by side. | |
| Defiled with honourable dust, they roll, | |
| Still breathing strife, and unsubdued of soul: | |
| Again they rage, again to combat rise; | |
| When great Achilles thus divides the prize: | 855 |
| Your noble vigour, oh my friends, restrain; | |
| Nor weary out your genrous strength in vain. | |
| Ye both have won: let others who excel, | |
| Now prove that prowess you have provd so well. | |
| The heros words the willing Chiefs obey, | 860 |
| From their tired bodies wipe the dust away, | |
| And, clothed anew, the follwing games survey. | |
| And now succeed the gifts ordaind to grace | |
| The youths contending in the rapid race: | |
| A silver urn that full six measures held, | 865 |
| By none in weight or workmanship excelld: | |
| Sidonian artists taught the frame to shine, | |
| Elaborate, with artifice divine; | |
| Whence Tyrian sailors did the prize transport, | |
| And gave to Thoas at the Lemnian port: | 870 |
| From him descended, good Eunæus heird | |
| The glorious gift; and, for Lycaon spared, | |
| To brave Patroclus gave the rich reward. | |
| Now, the same heros funeral rites to grace, | |
| It stands the prize of swiftness in the race. | 875 |
| A well-fed ox was for the second placed; | |
| And half a talent must content the last. | |
| Achilles rising then bespoke the train: | |
| Who hope the palm of swiftness to obtain, | |
| Stand forth, and bear these prizes from the plain. | 880 |
| The hero said, and, starting from his place, | |
| Oïlean Ajax rises to the race; | |
| Ulysses next; and he whose speed surpassd | |
| His youthful equals, Nestors son the last. | |
| Ranged in a line the ready racers stand; | 885 |
| Pelides points the barrier with his hand: | |
| All start at once; Oïleus led the race; | |
| The next Ulysses, measuring pace with pace: | |
| Behind him, diligently close, he sped, | |
| As closely follwing as the running thread | 890 |
| The spindle follows, and displays the charms | |
| Of the fair spinsters breast, and moving arms: | |
| Graceful in motion thus, his foe he plies, | |
| And treads each footstep ere the dust can rise: | |
| His glowing breath upon his shoulders plays; | 895 |
| Th admiring Greeks loud acclamations raise: | |
| To him they give their wishes, hearts, and eyes, | |
| And send their souls before him as he flies. | |
| Now three times turnd in prospect of the goal, | |
| The panting chief to Pallas lifts his soul: | 900 |
| Assist, O Goddess! (thus in thought he prayd) | |
| And, present at his thought, descends the maid. | |
| Buoyd by her heavnly force, he seems to swim, | |
| And feels a pinion lifting evry limb. | |
| All fierce, and ready now the prize to gain, | 905 |
| Unhappy Ajax stumbles on the plain | |
| (Oerturnd by Pallas) where the slippry shore | |
| Was cloggd with slimy dung, and mingled gore | |
| (The self-same place beside Patroclus pyre, | |
| Where late the slaughterd victims fed the fire): | 910 |
| Besmeard with filth, and blotted oer with clay, | |
| Obscene to sight, the rueful racer lay: | |
| The well-fed bull (the second prize) he shared, | |
| And left the urn Ulysses rich reward. | |
| Then, grasping by the horn the mighty beast, | 915 |
| The baffled hero thus the Greeks addressd: | |
| Accursed Fate! the conquest I forego; | |
| A mortal I, a Goddess was my foe: | |
| She urged her favrite on the rapid way, | |
| And Pallas, not Ulysses, won the day. | 920 |
| Thus sourly waild he, sputtring dirt and gore; | |
| A burst of laughter echoed thro the shore. | |
| Antilochus, more humorous than the rest, | |
| Takes the last prize and takes it with a jest: | |
| Why with our wiser elders should we strive? | 925 |
| The Gods still love them, and they always thrive. | |
| Ye see, to Ajax I must yield the prize; | |
| He to Ulysses, still more aged and wise | |
| (A green old age unconscious of decays, | |
| That proves the hero born in better days); | 930 |
| Behold his vigour in this active race! | |
| Achilles only boasts a swifter pace: | |
| For who can match Achilles? He who can, | |
| Must yet be more than hero, more than man. | |
| Th effect succeeds the speech. Pelides cries, | 935 |
| Thy artful praise deserves a better prize. | |
| Nor Greece in vain shall hear thy friend extolld; | |
| Receive a talent of the purest gold. | |
| The youth departs content. The host admire | |
| The son of Nestor, worthy of his sire. | 940 |
| Next these a buckler, spear, and helm he brings; | |
| Cast on the plain the brazen burthen rings: | |
| Arms, which of late divine Sarpedon wore, | |
| And great Patroclus in short triumph bore. | |
| Stand forth, the bravest of our host (he cries), | 945 |
| Whoever dares deserve so rich a prize! | |
| Now grace the lists before our armys sight, | |
| And, sheathed in steel, provoke his foe to fight. | |
| Who first the jointed armour shall explore, | |
| And stain his rivals mail with issuing gore; | 950 |
| The sword Asteropæus possessd of old | |
| (A Thracian blade, distinct with studs of gold), | |
| Shall pay the stroke, and grace the strikers side; | |
| These arms in common let the chiefs divide: | |
| For each brave champion, when the combat ends, | 955 |
| A sumptuous banquet at our tent attends. | |
| Fierce at the word, up rose great Tydeus son, | |
| And the huge bulk of Ajax Telamon: | |
| Clad in refulgent steel, on either hand, | |
| The dreadful chiefs amid the circle stand: | 960 |
| Lowring they meet, tremendous to the sight; | |
| Each Argive bosom beats with fierce delight. | |
| Opposed in arms not long they idly stood, | |
| But thrice they closed, and thrice the charge renewd. | |
| A furious pass the spear of Ajax made | 965 |
| Thro the broad shield, but at the corslet stayd: | |
| Not thus the foe; his javlin aimd above | |
| The bucklers margin, at the neck he drove. | |
| But Greece, now trembling for her heros life, | |
| Bade share the honours, and surcease the strife. | 970 |
| Yet still the victors due Tydides gains, | |
| With him the sword and studded belt remains. | |
| Then hurld the hero, thundring on the ground, | |
| A mass of iron (an enormous round), | |
| Whose weight and size the circling Greeks admire, | 975 |
| Rude from the furnace, and but shaped by fire. | |
| This might quoit Eëtion wont to rear, | |
| And from his whirling arm dismiss in air: | |
| The giant by Achilles slain, he stowd | |
| Among his spoils this memorable load. | 980 |
| For this he bids those nervous artists vie, | |
| That teach the disc to sound along the sky: | |
| Let him whose might can hurl this bowl, arise; | |
| Who farthest hurls it, takes it as his prize: | |
| If he be one enrichd with large domain | 985 |
| Of downs for flocks, and arable for grain, | |
| Small stock of iron needs that man provide; | |
| His hinds and swains whole years shall be supplied | |
| From hence; nor ask the neighbring citys aid | |
| For ploughshares, wheels, and all the rural trade. | 990 |
| Stern Polyptes steppd before the throng, | |
| And great Leonteus, more than mortal strong: | |
| Whose force with rival forces to oppose, | |
| Up rose great Ajax; up Epeüs rose. | |
| Each stood in order: first Epeüs threw; | 995 |
| High oer the wondring crowds the whirling circle flew. | |
| Leonteus next a little space surpassd, | |
| And third, the strength of godlike Ajax cast: | |
| Oer both their marks it flew; till, fiercely flung | |
| From Polyptes arm, the discus sung: | 1000 |
| Far as a swain his whirling sheephook throws, | |
| That distant falls among the grazing cows, | |
| So past them all the rapid circle flies: | |
| His friends (while loud applauses shake the skies) | |
| With force conjoind heave off the weighty prize. | 1005 |
| Those who in skilful archery contend | |
| He next invites, the twanging bow to bend: | |
| And twice ten axes casts amidst the round | |
| (Ten double-edgd, and ten that singly wound). | |
| The mast, which late a first-rate galley bore, | 1010 |
| The hero fixes in the sandy shore: | |
| To the tall top a milk-white dove they tie, | |
| The trembling mark at which their arrows fly. | |
| Whose weapon strikes you fluttring bird shall bear | |
| These two-edgd axes, terrible in war: | 1015 |
| The single, he whose shaft divides the cord. | |
| He said: experiencd Merion took the word; | |
| And skilful Teucer: in the helm they threw | |
| Their lots inscribed, and forth the latter flew. | |
| Swift from the string the sounding arrow flies; | 1020 |
| But flies unblest! No grateful sacrifice, | |
| No firstling lambs, unheedful! didst thou vow | |
| To Phbus, patron of the shaft and bow. | |
| For this, thy well-aimd arrow, turnd aside, | |
| Errd from the dove, yet cut the cord that tied: | 1025 |
| Adown the main-mast fell the parted string, | |
| And the free bird to Heavn displays her wing: | |
| Seas, shores, and skies with loud applause resound, | |
| And Merion eager meditates the wound: | |
| He takes the bow, directs the shaft above, | 1030 |
| And, follwing with his eye the soaring dove, | |
| Implores the God to speed it thro the skies, | |
| With vows of firstling lambs, and grateful sacrifice. | |
| The dove, in airy circles as she wheels, | |
| Amid the clouds the piercing arrow feels; | 1035 |
| Quite thro and thro the point its passage found, | |
| And at his feet fell bloody to the ground. | |
| The wounded bird, ere yet she breathed her last | |
| With flagging wings alighted on the mast, | |
| A moment hung, and spread her pinions there, | 1040 |
| Then sudden droppd, and left her life in air. | |
| From the pleasd crowd new peals of thunder rise, | |
| And to the ships brave Merion bears the prize. | |
| To close the funeral games, Achilles last | |
| A massy spear amid the circle placed, | 1045 |
| And ample charger of unsullied frame, | |
| With flowers high wrought, not blackend yet by flame. | |
| For these he bids the heroes prove their art, | |
| Whose dextrous skill directs the flying dart. | |
| Here too great Merion hopes the noble prize; | 1050 |
| Nor here disdaind the King of Men to rise. | |
| With joy Pelides saw the honour paid, | |
| Rose to the Monarch, and respectful said: | |
| Thee first in virtue, as in power supreme, | |
| O King of Nations! all thy Greeks proclaim; | 1055 |
| In evry martial game thy worth attest, | |
| And know thee both their greatest and their best; | |
| Take then the prize, but let brave Merion bear | |
| This beamy javlin in thy brothers war. | |
| Pleasd from the heros lips his praise to hear, | 1060 |
| The King to Merion gives the brazen spear; | |
| But, set apart for sacred use, commands | |
| The glittring charger to Talthybius hands. | |
| |