ALL were attentive to the godlike man,
When from his lofty couch he thus began:
Great queen, what you command me to relate
Renews the sad remembrance of our fate:
An empire from its old foundations rent, 5
And evry woe the Trojans underwent;
A peopled city made a desart place;
All that I saw, and part of which I was:
Not evn the hardest of our foes could hear,
Nor stern Ulysses tell without a tear. 10
And now the latter watch of wasting night,
And setting stars, to kindly rest invite;
But, since you take such intrest in our woe,
And Troys disastrous end desire to know,
I will restrain my tears, and briefly tell 15
What in our last and fatal night befell.
By destiny compelld, and in despair,
The Greeks grew weary of the tedious war,
And by Minervas aid a fabric reard,
Which like a steed of monstrous height appeard: 20
The sides were plankd with pine; they feignd it made
For their return, and this the vow they paid.
Thus they pretend, but in the hollow side
Selected numbers of their soldiers hide:
With inward arms the dire machine they load, 25
And iron bowels stuff the dark abode.
In sight of Troy lies Tenedos, an isle
(While Fortune did on Priams empire smile)
Renownd for wealth; but, since, a faithless bay,
Where ships exposd to wind and weather lay. 30
There was their fleet conceald. We thought, for Greece
Their sails were hoisted, and our fears release.
The Trojans, coopd within their walls so long,
Unbar their gates, and issue in a throng,
Like swarming bees, and with delight survey 35
The camp deserted, where the Grecians lay:
The quarters of the sevral chiefs they showd;
Here Phnix, here Achilles, made abode;
Here joind the battles; there the navy rode.
Part on the pile their wondring eyes employ: 40
The pile by Pallas raisd to ruin Troy.
Thymoetes first (t is doubtful whether hird,
Or so the Trojan destiny requird)
Movd that the ramparts might be broken down,
To lodge the monster fabric in the town. 45
But Capys, and the rest of sounder mind,
The fatal present to the flames designed,
Or to the watry deep; at least to bore
The hollow sides, and hidden frauds explore.
The giddy vulgar, as their fancies guide, 50
With noise say nothing, and in parts divide.
Laocoon, followd by a numrous crowd,
Ran from the fort, and cried, from far, aloud:
O wretched countrymen! what fury reigns?
What more than madness has possessd your brains? 55
Think you the Grecians from your coasts are gone?
And are Ulysses arts no better known?
This hollow fabric either must inclose,
Within its blind recess, our secret foes;
Or t is an engine raisd above the town, 60
T oerlook the walls, and then to batter down.
Somewhat is sure designd, by fraud or force:
Trust not their presents, nor admit the horse.
Thus having said, against the steed he threw
His forceful spear, which, hissing as it flew, 65
Piercd thro the yielding planks of jointed wood,
And trembling in the hollow belly stood.
The sides, transpiercd, return a rattling sound,
And groans of Greeks inclosd come issuing thro the wound.
And, had not Heavn the fall of Troy designd, 70
Or had not men been fated to be blind,
Enough was said and done t inspire a better mind.
Then had our lances piercd the treachrous wood,
And Ilian towrs and Priams empire stood.
Meantime, with shouts, the Trojan shepherds bring 75
A captive Greek, in bands, before the king;
Taken to take; who made himself their prey,
T impose on their belief, and Troy betray;
Fixd on his aim, and obstinately bent
To die undaunted, or to circumvent. 80
About the captive, tides of Trojans flow;
All press to see, and some insult the foe.
Now hear how well the Greeks their wiles disguisd;
Behold a nation in a man comprisd.
Trembling the miscreant stood, unarmd and bound; 85
He stard, and rolld his haggard eyes around,
Then said: Alas! what earth remains, what sea
Is open to receive unhappy me?
What fate a wretched fugitive attends,
Scornd by my foes, abandond by my friends? 90
He said, and sighd, and cast a rueful eye:
Our pity kindles, and our passions die.
We cheer the youth to make his own defense,
And freely tell us what he was, and whence:
What news he could impart, we long to know, 95
And what to credit from a captive foe.
His fear at length dismissd, he said: Whateer
My fate ordains, my words shall be sincere:
I neither can nor dare my birth disclaim;
Greece is my country, Sinon is my name. 100
Tho plungd by Fortunes powr in misery,
T is not in Fortunes powr to make me lie.
If any chance has hither brought the name
Of Palamedes, not unknown to fame,
Who sufferd from the malice of the times, 105
Accusd and sentencd for pretended crimes,
Because these fatal wars he would prevent;
Whose death the wretched Greeks too late lament
Me, then a boy, my father, poor and bare
Of other means, committed to his care, 110
His kinsman and companion in the war.
While Fortune favord, while his arms support
The cause, and ruld the counsels, of the court,
I made some figure there; nor was my name
Obscure, nor I without my share of fame. 115
But when Ulysses, with fallacious arts,
Had made impression in the peoples hearts,
And forgd a treason in my patrons name
(I speak of things too far divulgd by fame),
My kinsman fell. Then I, without support, 120
In private mournd his loss, and left the court.
Mad as I was, I could not bear his fate
With silent grief, but loudly blamd the state,
And cursd the direful author of my woes.
T was told again; and hence my ruin rose. 125
I threatend, if indulgent Heavn once more
Would land me safely on my native shore,
His death with double vengeance to restore.
This movd the murderers hate; and soon ensued
Th effects of malice from a man so proud. 130
Ambiguous rumors thro the camp he spread,
And sought, by treason, my devoted head;
New crimes invented; left unturnd no stone,
To make my guilt appear, and hide his own;
Till Calchas was by force and threatning wrought 135
But whywhy dwell I on that anxious thought?
If on my nation just revenge you seek,
And t is t appear a foe, t appear a Greek;
Already you my name and country know;
Assuage your thirst of blood, and strike the blow: 140
My death will both the kingly brothers please,
And set insatiate Ithacus at ease.
This fair unfinishd tale, these broken starts,
Raisd expectations in our longing hearts:
Unknowing as we were in Grecian arts. 145
His former trembling once again renewd,
With acted fear, the villain thus pursued:
Long had the Grecians (tird with fruitless care,
And wearied with an unsuccessful war)
Resolvd to raise the siege, and leave the town; 150
And, had the gods permitted, they had gone;
But oft the wintry seas and southern winds
Withstood their passage home, and changd their minds.
Portents and prodigies their souls amazd;
But most, when this stupendous pile was raisd: 155
Then flaming meteors, hung in air, were seen,
And thunders rattled thro a sky serene.
Dismayd, and fearful of some dire event,
Eurypylus t enquire their fate was sent.
He from the gods this dreadful answer brought: 160
O Grecians, when the Trojan shores you sought,
Your passage with a virgins blood was bought:
So must your safe return be bought again,
And Grecian blood once more atone the main.
The spreading rumor round the people ran; 165
All feard, and each believd himself the man.
Ulysses took th advantage of their fright;
Calld Calchas, and producd in open sight:
Then bade him name the wretch, ordaind by fate
The public victim, to redeem the state. 170
Already some presagd the dire event,
And saw what sacrifice Ulysses meant.
For twice five days the good old seer withstood
Th intended treason, and was dumb to blood,
Till, tird, with endless clamors and pursuit 175
Of Ithacus, he stood no longer mute;
But, as it was agreed, pronouncd that I
Was destind by the wrathful gods to die.
All praisd the sentence, pleasd the storm should fall
On one alone, whose fury threatend all. 180
The dismal day was come; the priests prepare
Their leavend cakes, and fillets for my hair.
I followd natures laws, and must avow
I broke my bonds and fled the fatal blow.
Hid in a weedy lake all night I lay, 185
Secure of safety when they saild away.
But now what further hopes for me remain,
To see my friends, or native soil, again;
My tender infants, or my careful sire,
Whom they returning will to death require; 190
Will perpetrate on them their first design,
And take the forfeit of their heads for mine?
Which, O! if pity mortal minds can move,
If there be faith below, or gods above,
If innocence and truth can claim desert, 195
Ye Trojans, from an injurd wretch avert.
False tears true pity move; the king commands
To loose his fetters, and unbind his hands:
Then adds these friendly words: Dismiss thy fears;
Forget the Greeks; be mine as thou wert theirs. 200
But truly tell, was it for force or guile,
Or some religious end, you raisd the pile?
Thus said the king. He, full of fraudful arts,
This well-invented tale for truth imparts:
Ye lamps of heavn! he said, and lifted high 205
His hands now free, thou venerable sky!
Inviolable powrs, adord with dread!
Ye fatal fillets, that once bound this head!
Ye sacred altars, from whose flames I fled!
Be all of you adjurd; and grant I may, 210
Without a crime, th ungrateful Greeks betray,
Reveal the secrets of the guilty state,
And justly punish whom I justly hate!
But you, O king, preserve the faith you gave,
If I, to save myself, your empire save. 215
The Grecian hopes, and all th attempts they made,
Were only founded on Minervas aid.
But from the time when impious Diomede,
And false Ulysses, that inventive head,
Her fatal image from the temple drew, 220
The sleeping guardians of the castle slew,
Her virgin statue with their bloody hands
Polluted, and profand her holy bands;
From thence the tide of fortune left their shore,
And ebbd much faster than it flowd before: 225
Their courage languishd, as their hopes decayd;
And Pallas, now averse, refusd her aid.
Nor did the goddess doubtfully declare
Her alterd mind and alienated care.
When first her fatal image touchd the ground, 230
She sternly cast her glaring eyes around,
That sparkled as they rolld, and seemd to threat:
Her heavnly limbs distilld a briny sweat.
Thrice from the ground she leapd, was seen to wield
Her brandishd lance, and shake her horrid shield. 235
Then Calchas bade our host for flight prepare,
And hope no conquest from the tedious war,
Till first they saild for Greece; with prayrs besought
Her injurd powr, and better omens brought.
And now their navy plows the watry main, 240
Yet soon expect it on your shores again,
With Pallas pleasd; as Calchas did ordain.
But first, to reconcile the blue-eyd maid
For her stoln statue and her towr betrayd,
Warnd by the seer, to her offended name 245
We raisd and dedicate this wondrous frame,
So lofty, lest thro your forbidden gates
It pass, and intercept our better fates:
For, once admitted there, our hopes are lost;
And Troy may then a new Palladium boast; 250
For so religion and the gods ordain,
That, if you violate with hands profane
Minervas gift, your town in flames shall burn,
(Which omen, O ye gods, on Græcia turn!)
But if it climb, with your assisting hands, 255
The Trojan walls, and in the city stands;
Then Troy shall Argos and Mycenæ burn,
And the reverse of fate on us return.
With such deceits he gaind their easy hearts,
Too prone to credit his perfidious arts. 260
What Diomede, nor Thetis greater son,
A thousand ships, nor ten years siege, had done
False tears and fawning words the city won.
A greater omen, and of worse portent,
Did our unwary minds with fear torment, 265
Concurring to produce the dire event.
Laocoon, Neptunes priest by lot that year,
With solemn pomp then sacrificd a steer;
When, dreadful to behold, from sea we spied
Two serpents, rankd abreast, the seas divide, 270
And smoothly sweep along the swelling tide.
Their flaming crests above the waves they show;
Their bellies seem to burn the seas below;
Their speckled tails advance to steer their course,
And on the sounding shore the flying billows force. 275
And now the strand, and now the plain they held;
Their ardent eyes with bloody streaks were filld;
Their nimble tongues they brandishd as they came,
And lickd their hissing jaws, that sputterd flame.
We fled amazd; their destind way they take, 280
And to Laocoon and his children make;
And first around the tender boys they wind,
Then with their sharpend fangs their limbs and bodies grind
The wretched father, running to their aid
With pious haste, but vain, they next invade; 285
Twice round his waist their winding volumes rolld;
And twice about his gasping throat they fold.
The priest thus doubly chokd, their crests divide,
And towring oer his head in triumph ride.
With both his hands he labors at the knots; 290
His holy fillets the blue venom blots;
His roaring fills the flitting air around.
Thus, when an ox receives a glancing wound,
He breaks his bands, the fatal altar flies,
And with loud bellowings breaks the yielding skies. 295
Their tasks performd, the serpents quit their prey,
And to the towr of Pallas make their way:
Couchd at her feet, they lie protected there
By her large buckler and protended spear.
Amazement seizes all; the genral cry 300
Proclaims Laocoon justly doomd to die,
Whose hand the will of Pallas had withstood,
And dared to violate the sacred wood.
All vote t admit the steed, that vows be paid
And incense offerd to th offended maid. 305
A spacious breach is made; the town lies bare;
Some hoisting-levers, some the wheels prepare
And fasten to the horses feet; the rest
With cables haul along th unwieldly beast.
Each on his fellow for assistance calls; 310
At length the fatal fabric mounts the walls,
Big with destruction. Boys with chaplets crownd,
And choirs of virgins, sing and dance around.
Thus raisd aloft, and then descending down,
It enters oer our heads, and threats the town. 315
O sacred city, built by hands divine!
O valiant heroes of the Trojan line!
Four times he struck: as oft the clashing sound
Of arms was heard, and inward groans rebound.
Yet, mad with zeal, and blinded with our fate, 320
We haul along the horse in solemn state;
Then place the dire portent within the towr.
Cassandra cried, and cursd th unhappy hour;
Foretold our fate; but, by the gods decree,
All heard, and none believd the prophecy. 325
With branches we the fanes adorn, and waste,
In jollity, the day ordaind to be the last.
Meantime the rapid heavns rolld down the light,
And on the shaded ocean rushd the night;
Our men, secure, nor guards nor sentries held, 330
But easy sleep their weary limbs compelld.
The Grecians had embarkd their naval powrs
From Tenedos, and sought our well-known shores,
Safe under covert of the silent night,
And guided by th imperial galleys light; 335
When Sinon, favord by the partial gods,
Unlockd the horse, and opd his dark abodes;
Restord to vital air our hidden foes,
Who joyful from their long confinement rose.
Tysander bold, and Sthenelus their guide, 340
And dire Ulysses down the cable slide:
Then Thoas, Athamas, and Pyrrhus haste;
Nor was the Podalirian hero last,
Nor injurd Menelaus, nor the famd
Epeus, who the fatal engine framd. 345
A nameless crowd succeed; their forces join
T invade the town, oppressd with sleep and wine.
Those few they find awake first meet their fate;
Then to their fellows they unbar the gate.
T was in the dead of night, when sleep repairs 350
Our bodies worn with toils, our minds with cares,
When Hectors ghost before my sight appears:
A bloody shroud he seemd, and bathd in tears;
Such as he was, when, by Pelides slain,
Thessalian coursers draggd him oer the plain. 355
Swoln were his feet, as when the thongs were thrust
Thro the bord holes; his body black with dust;
Unlike that Hector who returnd from toils
Of war, triumphant, in Æacian spoils,
Or him who made the fainting Greeks retire, 360
And launchd against their navy Phrygian fire.
His hair and beard stood stiffend with his gore;
And all the wounds he for his country bore
Now streamd afresh, and with new purple ran.
I wept to see the visionary man, 365
And, while my trance continued, thus began:
O light of Trojans, and support of Troy,
Thy fathers champion, and thy countrys joy!
O, long expected by thy friends! from whence
Art thou so late returnd for our defense? 370
Do we behold thee, wearied as we are
With length of labors, and with toils of war?
After so many funrals of thy own
Art thou restord to thy declining town?
But say, what wounds are these? What new disgrace 375
Deforms the manly features of thy face?
To this the specter no reply did frame,
But answerd to the cause for which he came,
And, groaning from the bottom of his breast,
This warning in these mournful words expressd: 380
O goddess-born! escape, by timely flight,
The flames and horrors of this fatal night.
The foes already have possessd the wall;
Troy nods from high, and totters to her fall.
Enough is paid to Priams royal name, 385
More than enough to duty and to fame.
If by a mortal hand my fathers throne
Could be defended, t was by mine alone.
Now Troy to thee commends her future state,
And gives her gods companions of thy fate: 390
From their assistance happier walls expect,
Which, wandring long, at last thou shalt erect.
He said, and brought me, from their blest abodes,
The venerable statues of the gods,
With ancient Vesta from the sacred choir, 395
The wreaths and relics of th immortal fire.
Now peals of shouts come thundring from afar,
Cries, threats, and loud laments, and mingled war:
The noise approaches, tho our palace stood
Aloof from streets, encompassd with a wood. 400
Louder, and yet more loud, I hear th alarms
Of human cries distinct, and clashing arms.
Fear broke my slumbers; I no longer stay,
But mount the terrace, thence the town survey,
And hearken what the frightful sounds convey. 405
Thus, when a flood of fire by wind is borne,
Crackling it rolls, and mows the standing corn;
Or deluges, descending on the plains,
Sweep oer the yellow year, destroy the pains
Of labring oxen and the peasants gains; 410
Unroot the forest oaks, and bear away
Flocks, folds, and trees, an undistinguishd prey:
The shepherd climbs the cliff, and sees from far
The wasteful ravage of the watry war.
Then Hectors faith was manifestly cleard, 415
And Grecian frauds in open light appeard.
The palace of Deiphobus ascends
In smoky flames, and catches on his friends.
Ucalegon burns next: the seas are bright
With splendor not their own, and shine with Trojan light. 420
New clamors and new clangors now arise,
The sound of trumpets mixd with fighting cries.
With frenzy seizd, I run to meet th alarms,
Resolvd on death, resolvd to die in arms,
But first to gather friends, with them t oppose 425
(If fortune favord) and repel the foes;
Spurrd by my courage, by my country fird,
With sense of honor and revenge inspird.
Pantheus, Apollos priest, a sacred name,
Had scapd the Grecian swords, and passd the flame: 430
With relics loaden, to my doors he fled,
And by the hand his tender grandson led.
What hope, O Pantheus? whither can we run?
Where make a stand? and what may yet be done?
Scarce had I said, when Pantheus, with a groan: 435
Troy is no more, and Ilium was a town!
The fatal day, th appointed hour, is come,
When wrathful Joves irrevocable doom
Transfers the Trojan state to Grecian hands.
The fire consumes the town, the foe commands; 440
And armed hosts, an unexpected force,
Break from the bowels of the fatal horse.
Within the gates, proud Sinon throws about
The flames; and foes for entrance press without,
With thousand others, whom I fear to name, 445
More than from Argos or Mycenæ came.
To sevral posts their parties they divide;
Some block the narrow streets, some scour the wide:
The bold they kill, th unwary they surprise;
Who fights finds death, and death finds him who flies. 450
The warders of the gate but scarce maintain
Th unequal combat, and resist in vain.
I heard; and Heavn, that well-born souls inspires,
Prompts me thro lifted swords and rising fires
To run where clashing arms and clamor calls, 455
And rush undaunted to defend the walls.
Ripheus and Iphitus by my side engage,
For valor one renownd, and one for age.
Dymas and Hypanis by moonlight knew
My motions and my mien, and to my party drew; 460
With young Coroebus, who by love was led
To win renown and fair Cassandras bed,
And lately brought his troops to Priams aid,
Forewarnd in vain by the prophetic maid.
Whom when I saw resolvd in arms to fall, 465
And that one spirit animated all:
Brave souls! said I,but brave, alas! in vain
Come, finish what our cruel fates ordain.
You see the desprate state of our affairs,
And heavns protecting powrs are deaf to prayrs. 470
The passive gods behold the Greeks defile
Their temples, and abandon to the spoil
Their own abodes: we, feeble few, conspire
To save a sinking town, involvd in fire.
Then let us fall, but fall amidst our foes: 475
Despair of life the means of living shows.
So bold a speech incouragd their desire
Of death, and added fuel to their fire.
As hungry wolves, with raging appetite,
Scour thro the fields, nor fear the stormy night 480
Their whelps at home expect the promisd food,
And long to temper their dry chaps in blood
So rushd we forth at once; resolvd to die,
Resolvd, in death, the last extremes to try.
We leave the narrow lanes behind, and dare 485
Th unequal combat in the public square:
Night was our friend; our leader was despair.
What tongue can tell the slaughter of that night?
What eyes can weep the sorrows and affright?
An ancient and imperial city falls: 490
The streets are filld with frequent funerals;
Houses and holy temples float in blood,
And hostile nations make a common flood.
Not only Trojans fall; but, in their turn,
The vanquishd triumph, and the victors mourn. 495
Ours take new courage from despair and night:
Confusd the fortune is, confusd the fight.
All parts resound with tumults, plaints, and fears;
And grisly Death in sundry shapes appears.
Androgeos fell among us, with his band, 500
Who thought us Grecians newly come to land.
From whence, said he, my friends, this long delay?
You loiter, while the spoils are borne away:
Our ships are laden with the Trojan store;
And you, like truants, come too late ashore. 505
He said, but soon corrected his mistake,
Found, by the doubtful answers which we make:
Amazd, he would have shunnd th unequal fight;
But we, more numrous, intercept his flight.
As when some peasant, in a bushy brake, 510
Has with unwary footing pressd a snake;
He starts aside, astonishd, when he spies
His rising crest, blue neck, and rolling eyes;
So from our arms surprisd Androgeos flies.
In vain; for him and his we compassd round, 515
Possessd with fear, unknowing of the ground,
And of their lives an easy conquest found.
Thus Fortune on our first endeavor smild.
Coroebus then, with youthful hopes beguild,
Swoln with success, and of a daring mind, 520
This new invention fatally designd.
My friends, said he, since Fortune shows the way,
T is fit we should th auspicious guide obey.
For what has she these Grecian arms bestowd,
But their destruction, and the Trojans good? 525
Then change we shields, and their devices bear:
Let fraud supply the want of force in war.
They find us arms. This said, himself he dressd
In dead Androgeos spoils, his upper vest,
His painted buckler, and his plumy crest. 530
Thus Ripheus, Dymas, all the Trojan train,
Lay down their own attire, and strip the slain.
Mixd with the Greeks, we go with ill presage,
Flatterd with hopes to glut our greedy rage;
Unknown, assaulting whom we blindly meet, 535
And strew with Grecian carcasses the street.
Thus while their straggling parties we defeat,
Some to the shore and safer ships retreat;
And some, oppressd with more ignoble fear,
Remount the hollow horse, and pant in secret there. 540
But, ah! what use of valor can be made,
When heavns propitious powrs refuse their aid!
Behold the royal prophetess, the fair
Cassandra, draggd by her disheveld hair,
Whom not Minervas shrine, nor sacred bands, 545
In safety could protect from sacrilegious hands:
On heavn she cast her eyes, she sighd, she cried
T was all she couldher tender arms were tied.
So sad a sight Coroebus could not bear;
But, fird with rage, distracted with despair, 550
Amid the barbrous ravishers he flew:
Our leaders rash example we pursue.
But storms of stones, from the proud temples height,
Pour down, and on our batterd helms alight:
We from our friends receivd this fatal blow, 555
Who thought us Grecians, as we seemd in show.
They aim at the mistaken crests, from high;
And ours beneath the pondrous ruin lie.
Then, movd with anger and disdain, to see
Their troops dispersd, the royal virgin free, 560
The Grecians rally, and their powrs unite,
With fury charge us, and renew the fight.
The brother kings with Ajax join their force,
And the whole squadron of Thessalian horse.
Thus, when the rival winds their quarrel try, 565
Contending for the kingdom of the sky,
South, east, and west, on airy coursers borne;
The whirlwind gathers, and the woods are torn:
Then Nereus strikes the deep; the billows rise,
And, mixd with ooze and sand, pollute the skies. 570
The troops we squanderd first again appear
From several quarters, and enclose the rear.
They first observe, and to the rest betray,
Our diffrent speech; our borrowd arms survey.
Oppressd with odds, we fall; Coroebus first, 575
At Pallas altar, by Peneleus piercd.
Then Ripheus followd, in th unequal fight;
Just of his word, observant of the right:
Heavn thought not so. Dymas their fate attends,
With Hypanis, mistaken by their friends. 580
Nor, Pantheus, thee, thy miter, nor the bands
Of awful Phbus, savd from impious hands.
Ye Trojan flames, your testimony bear,
What I performd, and what I sufferd there;
No sword avoiding in the fatal strife, 585
Exposd to death, and prodigal of life;
Witness, ye heavens! I live not by my fault:
I strove to have deservd the death I sought.
But, when I could not fight, and would have died,
Borne off to distance by the growing tide, 590
Old Iphitus and I were hurried thence,
With Pelias wounded, and without defense.
New clamors from th invested palace ring:
We run to die, or disengage the king.
So hot th assault, so high the tumult rose, 595
While ours defend, and while the Greeks oppose
As all the Dardan and Argolic race
Had been contracted in that narrow space;
Or as all Ilium else were void of fear,
And tumult, war, and slaughter, only there. 600
Their targets in a tortoise cast, the foes,
Secure advancing, to the turrets rose:
Some mount the scaling ladders; some, more bold,
Swerve upwards, and by posts and pillars hold;
Their left hand gripes their bucklers in th ascent, 605
While with their right they seize the battlement.
From their demolishd towrs the Trojans throw
Huge heaps of stones, that, falling, crush the foe;
And heavy beams and rafters from the sides
(Such arms their last necessity provides) 610
And gilded roofs, come tumbling from on high,
The marks of state and ancient royalty.
The guards below, fixd in the pass, attend
The charge undaunted, and the gate defend.
Renewd in courage with recoverd breath, 615
A second time we ran to tempt our death,
To clear the palace from the foe, succeed
The weary living, and revenge the dead.
A postern door, yet unobservd and free,
Joind by the length of a blind gallery, 620
To the kings closet led: a way well known
To Hectors wife, while Priam held the throne,
Thro which she brought Astyanax, unseen,
To cheer his grandsire and his grandsires queen.
Thro this we pass, and mount the towr, from whence 625
With unavailing arms the Trojans make defense.
From this the trembling king had oft descried
The Grecian camp, and saw their navy ride.
Beams from its lofty height with swords we hew,
Then, wrenching with our hands, th assault renew; 630
And, where the rafters on the columns meet,
We push them headlong with our arms and feet.
The lightning flies not swifter than the fall,
Nor thunder louder than the ruind wall:
Down goes the top at once; the Greeks beneath 635
Are piecemeal torn, or pounded into death.
Yet more succeed, and more to death are sent;
We cease not from above, nor they below relent.
Before the gate stood Pyrrhus, threatning loud,
With glittring arms conspicuous in the crowd. 640
So shines, renewd in youth, the crested snake,
Who slept the winter in a thorny brake,
And, casting off his slough when spring returns,
Now looks aloft, and with new glory burns;
Restord with poisnous herbs, his ardent sides 645
Reflect the sun; and raisd on spires he rides;
High oer the grass, hissing he rolls along,
And brandishes by fits his forky tongue.
Proud Periphas, and fierce Automedon,
His fathers charioteer, together run 650
To force the gate; the Scyrian infantry
Rush on in crowds, and the barrd passage free.
Entring the court, with shouts the skies they rend;
And flaming firebrands to the roofs ascend.
Himself, among the foremost, deals his blows, 655
And with his ax repeated strokes bestows
On the strong doors; then all their shoulders ply,
Till from the posts the brazen hinges fly.
He hews apace; the double bars at length
Yield to his ax and unresisted strength. 660
A mighty breach is made: the rooms conceald
Appear, and all the palace is reveald;
The halls of audience, and of public state,
And where the lonely queen in secret sate.
Armd soldiers now by trembling maids are seen, 665
With not a door, and scarce a space, between.
The house is filld with loud laments and cries,
And shrieks of women rend the vaulted skies;
The fearful matrons run from place to place,
And kiss the thresholds, and the posts embrace. 670
The fatal work inhuman Pyrrhus plies,
And all his father sparkles in his eyes;
Nor bars, nor fighting guards, his force sustain:
The bars are broken, and the guards are slain.
In rush the Greeks, and all the apartments fill; 675
Those few defendants whom they find, they kill.
Not with so fierce a rage the foaming flood
Roars, when he finds his rapid course withstood;
Bears down the dams with unresisted sway,
And sweeps the cattle and the cots away. 680
These eyes beheld him when he marchd between
The brother kings: I saw th unhappy queen,
The hundred wives, and where old Priam stood,
To stain his hallowd altar with his brood.
The fifty nuptial beds (such hopes had he, 685
So large a promise, of a progeny),
The posts, of plated gold, and hung with spoils,
Fell the reward of the proud victors toils.
Whereer the raging fire had left a space,
The Grecians enter and possess the place. 690
Perhaps you may of Priams fate enquire.
He, when he saw his regal town on fire,
His ruind palace, and his entring foes,
On evry side inevitable woes,
In arms, disusd, invests his limbs, decayd, 695
Like them, with age; a late and useless aid.
His feeble shoulders scarce the weight sustain;
Loaded, not armd, he creeps along with pain,
Despairing of success, ambitious to be slain!
Uncoverd but by heavn, there stood in view 700
An altar; near the hearth a laurel grew,
Dodderd with age, whose boughs encompass round
The household gods, and shade the holy ground.
Here Hecuba, with all her helpless train
Of dames, for shelter sought, but sought in vain. 705
Drivn like a flock of doves along the sky,
Their images they hug, and to their altars fly.
The Queen, when she beheld her trembling lord,
And hanging by his side a heavy sword,
What rage, she cried, has seizd my husbands mind? 710
What arms are these, and to what use designd?
These times want other aids! Were Hector here,
Evn Hector now in vain, like Priam, would appear.
With us, one common shelter thou shalt find,
Or in one common fate with us be joind. 715
She said, and with a last salute embracd
The poor old man, and by the laurel placd.
Behold! Polites, one of Priams sons,
Pursued by Pyrrhus, there for safety runs.
Thro swords and foes, amazd and hurt, he flies 720
Thro empty courts and open galleries.
Him Pyrrhus, urging with his lance, pursues,
And often reaches, and his thrusts renews.
The youth, transfixd, with lamentable cries,
Expires before his wretched parents eyes: 725
Whom gasping at his feet when Priam saw,
The fear of death gave place to natures law;
And, shaking more with anger than with age,
The gods, said he, requite thy brutal rage!
As sure they will, barbarian, sure they must, 730
If there be gods in heavn, and gods be just
Who takst in wrongs an insolent delight;
With a sons death t infect a fathers sight.
Not he, whom thou and lying fame conspire
To call thee hisnot he, thy vaunted sire, 735
Thus usd my wretched age: the gods he feard,
The laws of nature and of nations heard.
He cheerd my sorrows, and, for sums of gold,
The bloodless carcass of my Hector sold;
Pitied the woes a parent underwent, 740
And sent me back in safety from his tent.
This said, his feeble hand a javelin threw,
Which, fluttring, seemd to loiter as it flew:
Just, and but barely, to the mark it held,
And faintly tinkled on the brazen shield. 745
Then Pyrrhus thus: Go thou from me to fate,
And to my father my foul deeds relate.
Now die! With that he draggd the trembling sire,
Sliddring thro clotterd blood and holy mire,
(The mingled paste his murderd son had made,) 750
Hauld from beneath the violated shade,
And on the sacred pile the royal victim laid.
His right hand held his bloody falchion bare,
His left he twisted in his hoary hair;
Then, with a speeding thrust, his heart he found: 755
The lukewarm blood came rushing thro the wound,
And sanguine streams distaind the sacred ground.
Thus Priam fell, and shard one common fate
With Troy in ashes, and his ruind state:
He, who the scepter of all Asia swayd, 760
Whom monarchs like domestic slaves obeyd.
On the bleak shore now lies th abandond king,
A headless carcass, and a nameless thing.
Then, not before, I felt my cruddled blood
Congeal with fear, my hair with horror stood: 765
My fathers image filld my pious mind,
Lest equal years might equal fortune find.
Again I thought on my forsaken wife,
And trembled for my sons abandond life.
I lookd about, but found myself alone, 770
Deserted at my need! My friends were gone.
Some spent with toil, some with despair oppressd,
Leapd headlong from the heights; the flames consumd the rest.
Thus, wandring in my way, without a guide,
The graceless Helen in the porch I spied 775
Of Vestas temple; there she lurkd alone;
Muffled she sate, and, what she could, unknown:
But, by the flames that cast their blaze around,
That common bane of Greece and Troy I found.
For Ilium burnt, she dreads the Trojan sword; 780
More dreads the vengeance of her injurd lord;
Evn by those gods who refugd her abhorrd.
Trembling with rage, the strumpet I regard,
Resolvd to give her guilt the due reward:
Shall she triumphant sail before the wind, 785
And leave in flames unhappy Troy behind?
Shall she her kingdom and her friends review,
In state attended with a captive crew,
While unrevengd the good old Priam falls,
And Grecian fires consume the Trojan walls? 790
For this the Phrygian fields and Xanthian flood
Were swelld with bodies, and were drunk with blood?
T is true, a soldier can small honor gain,
And boast no conquest, from a woman slain:
Yet shall the fact not pass without applause, 795
Of vengeance taken in so just a cause;
The punishd crime shall set my soul at ease,
And murmring manes of my friends appease.
Thus while I rave, a gleam of pleasing light
Spread oer the place; and, shining heavnly bright, 800
My mother stood reveald before my sight
Never so radiant did her eyes appear;
Not her own star confessd a light so clear:
Great in her charms, as when on gods above
She looks, and breathes herself into their love. 805
She held my hand, the destind blow to break;
Then from her rosy lips began to speak:
My son, from whence this madness, this neglect
Of my commands, and those whom I protect?
Why this unmanly rage? Recall to mind 810
Whom you forsake, what pledges leave behind.
Look if your helpless father yet survive,
Or if Ascanius or Creusa live.
Around your house the greedy Grecians err;
And these had perishd in the nightly war, 815
But for my presence and protecting care.
Not Helens face, nor Paris, was in fault;
But by the gods was this destruction brought.
Now cast your eyes around, while I dissolve
The mists and films that mortal eyes involve, 820
Purge from your sight the dross, and make you see
The shape of each avenging deity.
Enlightend thus, my just commands fulfil,
Nor fear obedience to your mothers will.
Where yon disorderd heap of ruin lies, 825
Stones rent from stones; where clouds of dust arise
Amid that smother Neptune holds his place,
Below the walls foundation drives his mace,
And heaves the building from the solid base.
Look where, in arms, imperial Juno stands 830
Full in the Scæan gate, with loud commands,
Urging on shore the tardy Grecian bands.
See! Pallas, of her snaky buckler proud,
Bestrides the towr, refulgent thro the cloud:
See! Jove new courage to the foe supplies, 835
And arms against the town the partial deities.
Haste hence, my son; this fruitless labor end:
Haste, where your trembling spouse and sire attend:
Haste; and a mothers care your passage shall befriend.
She said, and swiftly vanishd from my sight, 840
Obscure in clouds and gloomy shades of night.
I lookd, I listend; dreadful sounds I hear;
And the dire forms of hostile gods appear.
Troy sunk in flames I saw (nor could prevent),
And Ilium from its old foundations rent; 845
Rent like a mountain ash, which dard the winds,
And stood the sturdy strokes of labring hinds.
About the roots the cruel ax resounds;
The stumps are piercd with oft-repeated wounds:
The war is felt on high; the nodding crown 850
Now threats a fall, and throws the leafy honors down.
To their united force it yields, tho late,
And mourns with mortal groans th approaching fate:
The roots no more their upper load sustain;
But down she falls, and spreads a ruin thro the plain. 855
Descending thence, I scape thro foes and fire:
Before the goddess, foes and flames retire.
Arrivd at home, he, for whose only sake,
Or most for his, such toils I undertake,
The good Anchises, whom, by timely flight, 860
I purposd to secure on Idas height,
Refusd the journey, resolute to die
And add his funrals to the fate of Troy,
Rather than exile and old age sustain.
Go you, whose blood runs warm in evry vein. 865
Had Heavn decreed that I should life enjoy,
Heavn had decreed to save unhappy Troy.
T is, sure, enough, if not too much, for one,
Twice to have seen our Ilium overthrown.
Make haste to save the poor remaining crew, 870
And give this useless corpse a long adieu.
These weak old hands suffice to stop my breath;
At least the pitying foes will aid my death,
To take my spoils, and leave my body bare:
As for my sepulcher, let Heavn take care. 875
T is long since I, for my celestial wife
Loathd by the gods, have draggd a lingring life;
Since evry hour and moment I expire,
Blasted from heavn by Joves avenging fire.
This oft repeated, he stood fixd to die: 880
Myself, my wife, my son, my family,
Intreat, pray, beg, and raise a doleful cry
What, will he still persist, on death resolve,
And in his ruin all his house involve!
He still persists his reasons to maintain; 885
Our prayrs, our tears, our loud laments, are vain.
Urgd by despair, again I go to try
The fate of arms, resolvd in fight to die:
What hope remains, but what my death must give?
Can I, without so dear a father, live? 890
You term it prudence, what I baseness call:
Could such a word from such a parent fall?
If Fortune please, and so the gods ordain,
That nothing should of ruind Troy remain,
And you conspire with Fortune to be slain, 895
The way to death is wide, th approaches near:
For soon relentless Pyrrhus will appear,
Reeking with Priams bloodthe wretch who slew
The son (inhuman) in the fathers view,
And then the sire himself to the dire altar drew. 900
O goddess mother, give me back to Fate;
Your gift was undesird, and came too late!
Did you, for this, unhappy me convey
Thro foes and fires, to see my house a prey?
Shall I my father, wife, and son behold, 905
Weltring in blood, each others arms infold?
Haste! gird my sword, tho spent and overcome:
T is the last summons to receive our doom.
I hear thee, Fate; and I obey thy call!
Not unrevengd the foe shall see my fall. 910
Restore me to the yet unfinishd fight:
My death is wanting to conclude the night.
Armd once again, my glittring sword I wield,
While th other hand sustains my weighty shield,
And forth I rush to seek th abandond field. 915
I went; but sad Creusa stoppd my way,
And cross the threshold in my passage lay,
Embracd my knees, and, when I would have gone,
Shewd me my feeble sire and tender son:
If death be your design, at least, said she, 920
Take us along to share your destiny.
If any farther hopes in arms remain,
This place, these pledges of your love, maintain.
To whom do you expose your fathers life,
Your sons, and mine, your now forgotten wife! 925
While thus she fills the house with clamrous cries,
Our hearing is diverted by our eyes:
For, while I held my son, in the short space
Betwixt our kisses and our last embrace;
Strange to relate, from young Iulus head 930
A lambent flame arose, which gently spread
Around his brows, and on his temples fed.
Amazd, with running water we prepare
To quench the sacred fire, and slake his hair;
But old Anchises, versd in omens, reard 935
His hands to heavn, and this request preferrd:
If any vows, almighty Jove, can bend
Thy will; if piety can prayrs commend,
Confirm the glad presage which thou art pleasd to send.
Scarce had he said, when, on our left, we hear 940
A peal of rattling thunder roll in air:
There shot a streaming lamp along the sky,
Which on the winged lightning seemd to fly;
From oer the roof the blaze began to move,
And, trailing, vanishd in th Idæan grove. 945
It swept a path in heavn, and shone a guide,
Then in a steaming stench of sulphur died.
The good old man with suppliant hands implord
The gods protection, and their star adord.
Now, now, said he, my son, no more delay! 950
I yield, I follow where Heavn shews the way.
Keep, O my country gods, our dwelling place,
And guard this relic of the Trojan race,
This tender child! These omens are your own,
And you can yet restore the ruind town. 955
At least accomplish what your signs foreshow:
I stand resignd, and am prepard to go.
He said. The crackling flames appear on high.
And driving sparkles dance along the sky.
With Vulcans rage the rising winds conspire, 960
And near our palace roll the flood of fire.
Haste, my dear father, (t is no time to wait,)
And load my shoulders with a willing freight.
Whateer befalls, your life shall be my care;
One death, or one delivrance, we will share. 965
My hand shall lead our little son; and you,
My faithful consort, shall our steps pursue.
Next, you, my servants, heed my strict commands:
Without the walls a ruind temple stands,
To Ceres hallowd once; a cypress nigh 970
Shoots up her venerable head on high,
By long religion kept; there bend your feet,
And in divided parties let us meet.
Our country gods, the relics, and the bands,
Hold you, my father, in your guiltless hands: 975
In me t is impious holy things to bear,
Red as I am with slaughter, new from war,
Till in some living stream I cleanse the guilt
Of dire debate, and blood in battle spilt.
Thus, ordring all that prudence could provide, 980
I clothe my shoulders with a lions hide
And yellow spoils; then, on my bending back,
The welcome load of my dear father take;
While on my better hand Ascanius hung,
And with unequal paces trippd along. 985
Creusa kept behind; by choice we stray
Thro evry dark and evry devious way.
I, who so bold and dauntless, just before,
The Grecian darts and shock of lances bore,
At evry shadow now am seizd with fear, 990
Not for myself, but for the charge I bear;
Till, near the ruind gate arrivd at last,
Secure, and deeming all the danger past,
A frightful noise of trampling feet we hear.
My father, looking thro the shades, with fear, 995
Cried out: Haste, haste, my son, the foes are nigh;
Their swords and shining armor I descry.
Some hostile god, for some unknown offense,
Had sure bereft my mind of better sense;
For, while thro winding ways I took my flight, 1000
And sought the shelter of the gloomy night,
Alas! I lost Creusa: hard to tell
If by her fatal destiny she fell,
Or weary sate, or wanderd with affright;
But she was lost for ever to my sight. 1005
I knew not, or reflected, till I meet
My friends, at Ceres now deserted seat.
We met: not one was wanting; only she
Deceivd her friends, her son, and wretched me.
What mad expressions did my tongue refuse! 1010
Whom did I not, of gods or men, accuse!
This was the fatal blow, that paind me more
Than all I felt from ruind Troy before.
Stung with my loss, and raving with despair,
Abandoning my now forgotten care, 1015
Of counsel, comfort, and of hope bereft,
My sire, my son, my country gods I left.
In shining armor once again I sheathe
My limbs, not feeling wounds, nor fearing death.
Then headlong to the burning walls I run, 1020
And seek the danger I was forcd to shun.
I tread my former tracks; thro night explore
Each passage, evry street I crossd before.
All things were full of horror and affright,
And dreadful evn the silence of the night. 1025
Then to my fathers house I make repair,
With some small glimpse of hope to find her there.
Instead of her, the cruel Greeks I met;
The house was filld with foes, with flames beset.
Drivn on the wings of winds, whole sheets of fire, 1030
Thro air transported, to the roofs aspire.
From thence to Priams palace I resort,
And search the citadel and desart court.
Then, unobservd, I pass by Junos church:
A guard of Grecians had possessd the porch; 1035
There Phnix and Ulysses watch the prey,
And thither all the wealth of Troy convey:
The spoils which they from ransackd houses brought,
And golden bowls from burning altars caught,
The tables of the gods, the purple vests, 1040
The peoples treasure, and the pomp of priests.
A rank of wretched youths, with piniond hands,
And captive matrons, in long order stands.
Then, with ungovernd madness, I proclaim,
Thro all the silent street, Creusas name: 1045
Creusa still I call; at length she hears,
And sudden thro the shades of night appears
Appears, no more Creusa, nor my wife,
But a pale specter, larger than the life.
Aghast, astonishd, and struck dumb with fear, 1050
I stood; like bristles rose my stiffend hair.
Then thus the ghost began to soothe my grief
Nor tears, nor cries, can give the dead relief.
Desist, my much-lovd lord, t indulge your pain;
You bear no more than what the gods ordain. 1055
My fates permit me not from hence to fly;
Nor he, the great controller of the sky.
Long wandring ways for you the powrs decree;
On land hard labors, and a length of sea.
Then, after many painful years are past, 1060
On Latiums happy shore you shall be cast,
Where gentle Tiber from his bed beholds
The flowry meadows, and the feeding folds.
There end your toils; and there your fates provide
A quiet kingdom, and a royal bride: 1065
There fortune shall the Trojan line restore,
And you for lost Creusa weep no more.
Fear not that I shall watch, with servile shame,
Th imperious looks of some proud Grecian dame;
Or, stooping to the victors lust, disgrace 1070
My goddess mother, or my royal race.
And now, farewell! The parent of the gods
Restrains my fleeting soul in her abodes:
I trust our common issue to your care.
She said, and gliding passd unseen in air. 1075
I strove to speak: but horror tied my tongue;
And thrice about her neck my arms I flung,
And, thrice deceivd, on vain embraces hung.
Light as an empty dream at break of day,
Or as a blast of wind, she rushd away. 1080
Thus having passd the night in fruitless pain,
I to my longing friends return again,
Amazd th augmented number to behold,
Of men and matrons mixd, of young and old;
A wretched exild crew together brought, 1085
With arms appointed, and with treasure fraught,
Resolvd, and willing, under my command,
To run all hazards both of sea and land.
The Morn began, from Ida, to display
Her rosy cheeks; and Phosphor led the day: 1090
Before the gates the Grecians took their post,
And all pretense of late relief was lost.
I yield to Fate, unwillingly retire,
And, loaded, up the hill convey my sire.
The Aeneid of Virgil: Book 2
written byPublius Vergilius Maro
© Publius Vergilius Maro