<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:latinLit:phi0690.phi003.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" subtype="book" n="12"><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="791"><l n="1066">Meanwhile th' Olympian sovereign supreme</l><l n="1067">to Juno speaks, as from an amber cloud</l><l n="1068">the strife she views: “My Queen, what end shall be?</l><l n="1069">What yet remains? Thou seest Aeneas' name</l><l n="1070">numbered with tutelary gods of power;</l><l n="1071">and well thou know'st what station in the sky</l><l n="1072">his starward destiny intends. What scheme</l><l n="1073">vexes thy bosom still? What stubborn hope,</l><l n="1074">fostered in cloud and cold? O, was it well</l><l n="1075">to desecrate a god with mortal wound;</l><l n="1076">or well (what were a nymph unhelped by thee?)</l><l n="1077">to give back Turnus his lost sword, and lend</l><l n="1078">strength unavailing to the fallen brave?</l><l n="1079">Give o'er, and to our supplication yield;</l><l n="1080">let not such grief thy voiceless heart devour;</l><l n="1081">nor from thy sweet lips let thy mournful care</l><l n="1082">so oft assail my mind. For now is come</l><l n="1083">the last decisive day. Thy power availed</l><l n="1084">to vex the Trojans upon land and sea,</l><l n="1085">to wake abominable war, bring shame</l><l n="1086">upon a royal house, and mix the songs</l><l n="1087">of marriage and the grave: but further act</l><l n="1088">I thee refuse.” Such was the word of Jove.</l><l n="1089"><milestone ed="P" unit="para"/>Thus Saturn's daughter answered, drooping low</l><l n="1090">her brows divine: “Because, great Jove, I knew</l><l n="1091">thy pleasure, I from yonder earth retired</l><l n="1092">and Turnus' cause, tho, with unwilling mind.</l><l n="1093">Else shouldst thou not behold me at this hour</l><l n="1094">Upon my solitary throne of air</l><l n="1095">enduring fair and foul; I should be found</l><l n="1096">flame-girded on the battle's deadly verge,</l><l n="1097">tempting the Teucrians to a hated war.</l><l n="1098">Yea, 't was my motion thrust Juturna forth</l><l n="1099">to help her hapless brother. I approved—</l><l n="1100">to save his life—that she should be too bold;</l><l n="1101">but bade no whirl of spear nor bending bow:</l><l n="1102">I swear it by th' inexorable fount</l><l n="1103">whence flow the Stygian rivers, the sole seat</l><l n="1104">where gods of light bow down in awful prayer.</l><l n="1105">I yield me now; heart-sick I quit the war.</l><l n="1106">But ask one boon, which in the book of fate</l><l n="1107">is not denied; for <placeName key="tgn,7003080">Latium</placeName>'s good I sue,</l><l n="1108">and high prerogatives of men that be</l><l n="1109">thy kith and kin: when happy wedlock vows</l><l n="1110">(aye, be it so!) shall join them by strong laws</l><l n="1111">of chartered peace, let not the Latins Iose</l><l n="1112">their ancient, native name. Bid them not pass</l><l n="1113">for Trojans, nor be hailed as Teucer's sons;</l><l n="1114">no alien speech, no alien garb impose.</l><l n="1115">Let it be <placeName key="tgn,7003080">Latium</placeName> ever; let the lords</l><l n="1116">of Alba unto distant ages reign;</l><l n="1117">let the strong, master blood of <placeName key="perseus,Rome">Rome</placeName> receive</l><l n="1118">the manhood and the might of <placeName key="tgn,1000080">Italy</placeName>.</l><l n="1119"><placeName key="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName> perished: let its name and glory die!”</l><l n="1120">The Author of mankind and all that is,</l><l n="1121">smiling benignant, answered thus her plea:</l><l n="1122">“Jove's sister true, and Saturn's second child,</l><l n="1123">what seas of anger vex thy heart divine!</l><l n="1124">But come, relinquish thy rash, fruitless rage:</l><l n="1125">I give thee this desire, and yield to thee</l><l n="1126">free submission. The Ausonian tribes</l><l n="1127">shall keep the speech and customs of their sires;</l><l n="1128">the name remains as now; the Teucrian race,</l><l n="1129">abiding in the land, shall but infuse</l><l n="1130">the mixture of its blood. I will bestow</l><l n="1131">a league of worship, and to Latins give</l><l n="1132">one language only. From the mingled breed</l><l n="1133">a people shall come forth whom thou shalt see</l><l n="1134">surpass all mortal men and even outvie</l><l n="1135">the faithfulness of gods; for none that live</l><l n="1136">shall render to thy name an equal praise.”</l><l n="1137">So Juno bowed consent, and let her will</l><l n="1138">be changed, as with much comfort in her breast</l><l n="1139">she left <placeName key="perseus,Olympos,Lycia">Olympus</placeName> and her haunt of cloud.</l></div><div type="textpart" subtype="card" resp="p" n="843"><l n="1140">After these things Jove gave his kingly mind</l><l n="1141">to further action, that he might forthwith</l><l n="1142">cut off Juturna from her brother's cause.</l><l n="1143">Two plagues there be, called Furies, which were spawned</l><l n="1144">at one birth from the womb of wrathful Night</l><l n="1145">with dread Megaera, phantom out of hell;</l><l n="1146">and of their mother's gift, each Fury wears</l><l n="1147">grim-coiling serpents and tempestuous wings.</l><l n="1148">These at Jove's throne attend, and watch the doors</l><l n="1149">of that stern King—to whet the edge of fear</l><l n="1150">for wretched mortals, when the King of gods</l><l n="1151">hurls pestilence and death, or terrifies</l><l n="1152">offending nations with the scourge of war.</l><l n="1153">'T was one of these which Jove sent speeding down</l><l n="1154">from his ethereal seat, and bade her cross</l><l n="1155">the pathway of Juturna for a sign.</l><l n="1156">Her wings she spread, and earthward seemed to ride</l><l n="1157">upon a whirling storm. As when some shaft,</l><l n="1158">with Parthian poison tipped or Cretan gall,</l><l n="1159">a barb of death, shoots cloudward from the bow,</l><l n="1160">and hissing through the dark hastes forth unseen:</l><l n="1161">so earthward flew that daughter of the night.</l><l n="1162">Soon as she spied the Teucrians in array</l><l n="1163">and Turnus' lines, she shrivelled to the shape</l><l n="1164">of that small bird which on lone tombs and towers</l><l n="1165">sits perching through the midnight, and prolongs</l><l n="1166">in shadow and deep gloom her troubling cry.</l><l n="1167">In such disguise the Fury, screaming shrill,</l><l n="1168">flitted in Turnus' face, and with her wings</l><l n="1169">smote on his hollow shield. A strange affright</l><l n="1170">palsied his every limb; each several hair</l><l n="1171">lifted with horror, and his gasping voice</l><l n="1172">died on his lips. <milestone ed="p" n="869" unit="card"/>But when Juturna knew</l><l n="1173">from far the shrieking fiend's infernal wing,</l><l n="1174">she loosed her tresses, and their beauty tore,</l><l n="1175">to tell a sister's woe; with clenching hands</l><l n="1176">she marred her cheeks and beat her naked breast. </l><l n="1177">“What remedy or help, my Turnus, now</l><l n="1178">is in a sister's power? What way remains</l><l n="1179">for stubborn me? Or with what further guile</l><l n="1180">thy life prolong? What can my strength oppose</l><l n="1181">to this foul thing? I quit the strife at last.</l><l n="1182">Withdraw thy terror from my fearful eyes,</l><l n="1183">thou bird accurst! The tumult of thy wings</l><l n="1184">I know full well, and thy death-boding call.</l><l n="1185">The harsh decrees of that large-minded Jove</l><l n="1186">I plainly see. Is this the price he pays</l><l n="1187">for my lost maidenhood? Why flatter me</l><l n="1188">with immortality, and snatch away</l><l n="1189">my property of death? What boon it were</l><l n="1190">to end this grief this hour, and hie away</l><l n="1191">to be my brother's helpmeet in his grave!</l><l n="1192">I, an immortal? O, what dear delight</l><l n="1193">is mine, sweet brother, living without thee?</l><l n="1194">O, where will earth yawn deep enough and wide</l><l n="1195">to hide a goddess with the ghosts below?”</l><l n="1196">She spoke; and veiled in glistening mantle gray</l><l n="1197">her mournful brow; then in her stream divine</l><l n="1198">the nymph sank sighing to its utmost cave.</l></div></div></div></body></text></TEI>