Imagens da página
PDF
ePub

BOOK XXI.

ARGUMENT

THE BATTLE IN THE RIVER SCAMANDER.*

The Trojans fly before Achilles, some towards the town, others to the river Scaman.

der : he falls upon the latter with great slaughter : takes twelve captives alive, to sacrifice to the shade of Patroclus; and kills

Lycaon and Asteropeus Scamander attacks him with all his wavesi Neptune and Pallas assist the hero: Simoïs joins Scamander : at length Vulcan, by the instigation of Juno, almost dries up the river. This combat ended, the other gods engage each other. Meanwhile Achilles continues the slaughter, drves the rest into Troy Agenor only makes a stand, and is conveyed away in a cloud by Apollo ; who (to delude Achilles) takes upon hun Agenor's shape, and while he pursues him in that disguise, gives the Trojans an opportunity of retiring into their city.

The same day cortinues The scene is on the banks and in the stream of Scamander

And now to Xanthus' gliding stream they drove,
Xanthus, immortal progeny of Jove.
The river here divides the flying train,
Part to the town fly diverse o'er the plain,
Where late their troops triumphant bore the fight,
Now chased, and trembling in ignoble flight
(These with a gather'd mist Saturnia shrouds,
And rolls behind the rout a heap of clouds):
Part plunge into the stream: old Xanthus roars,
The flashing billows beat the whiten'd shores :
With cries promiscuous all the banks resound,
And here, and there, in eddies whirling round,
The flouncing steeds and shrieking warriors drown'd.
As the scorch'd locusts from their fields retire,
While fast behind them runs the blaze of fire;

* “ Perhaps the boldest excursion of Homer into this region of poetical fancy is the collision into which, in the twenty-first of the Iliad, he has brought the river god Scamander, first with Achilles, and afterwards with Vulcan, when summoned by Juno to the hero's aid. The overwhelming fury of the stream finds the natural interpretation in the character of the mountain torrents of Greece and Asia Minor. Their wide, shingly beds are in summer comparatively dry, so as to be easily forded by the foot passenger. But a thunder-shower in the mountains, unobserved by the traveller on the plain, may suddenly immerse dim in the flood of a mighty river. The rescue of Achilles by the fiery arms of Vulcan scarcely admits of the same ready explanation from physical causes. Yet the subsiding of the flood at the critical moment when the hero's destruction appeared imminent, might, by a slight extension of the figurative parallel, be ascribed to a god symbolic of the influences opposed to all atmospheric moisture.”-Mure, vol. i. p. 480, sq.

Driven from the land before the smoky cloud,
The clustering legions rush into the flood :
So, plunged in Xanthus by Achilles' force,
Roars the resounding surge with men and horse.
His bloody lance the hero casts aside
(Which spreading tamarisks on the margin hide),
Then, like a god, the rapid billows braves,
Arm'd with his sword, high brandish'd o'er the waves :
Now down he plunges, now he whirls it round,
Deep groan'd the waters with the dying sound;
Repeated wounds the reddening river dyed,
And the warm purple circled on the tide.
Swift through the foamy flood the Trojans fly,
And close in rocks or winding caverns lie:
So the huge dolphin tempesting the main,
In shoals before him fly the scaly train,
Confusedly heap'd they seek their inmost caves,
Or pant and heave beneath the floating waves.
Now, tired with slaughter, from the Trojan band
Twelve chosen youths he drags alive to land;
With their rich belts their captive arms restrains
(Late their proud ornaments, but now their chains).
These his attendants to the ships convey'd,
Sad victims destined to Patroclus' shade ;

Then, as once more he plunged amid the flood,
The young Lycaon in his passage stood;
The son of Priam ; whom the hero's hand
But late made captive in his father's land
(As from a sycamore, his sounding steel
Lopp'd the green arms to spoke a chariot wheel)
To Lemnos isle he sold the royal slave,
Where Jason's son the price demanded gave ;
But kind Eētion, touching on the shore,
The ransom'd prince to fair Arisbè bore.
Ten days were past, since in his father's reign
He felt the sweets of liberty again;
The next, that god whom men in vain withstand
Gives the same youth to the same conquering hand :
Now never to return ! and doom'd to go
A sadder journey to the shades below.
His well-known face when great Achilles eyed
(The helm and visor he had cast aside
With wild affright, and dropp'd upon the field
His useless lance and unavailing shield),
As trembling, panting, from the stream he fled,
And knock'd his faltering knees, the hero said :
“Ye mighty gods ! what wonders strike my

view!

Is it in vain our conquering arms subdue ?
Sure I shall see yon heaps of Trojans kill'd
Rise from the shades, and brave me on the field:
As now the captive, whom so late I bound
And sold to Lemnos, stalks on Trojan ground !
Not him the sea's unmeasured deeps detain,
That bar such numbers from their native plain :
Lo! he returns. Try, then, my flying spear!
Try, if the grave can hold the wanderer;
If earth, at length, this active prince can seize,
Earth, whose strong grasp has held down Hercules.'

Thus while he spoke, the Trojan pale with fears
Approach'd, and sought his knees with suppliant tears,
Loth as he was to yield his youthful breath,
And his soul shivering at the approach of death.
Achilles raised the spear, prepared to wound;
He kiss'd his feet, extended on the ground:
And while, above, the spear suspended stood,
Longing to dip its thirsty point in blood,
One

hand embraced them close, one stopp'd the dart, While thus these melting words attempt his heart:

“Thy well-known captive, great Achilles ! see, Once more Lycaon trembles at thy knee. Some pity to a suppliant's name afford, Who shared the gifts of Ceres at thy board; Whom late thy conquering arm to Lemnos bore, Far from his father, friends, and native shore; A hundred oxen were his price that day, Now sums immense thy mercy shall repay. Scarce respited from woes I yet appear, And scarce twelve morning suns have seen me here; Lo! Jove again submits me to thy hands, Again, her victim cruel Fate demands ! I sprang from Priam, and Laothöe fair (Old Altès' daughter, and Lelegia's heir; Who held in Pedasus his famed abode, And ruled the fields where silver Satnio flow'd), Two sons (alas ! unhappy sons) she bore ; For ah ! one spear shall drink each brother's gore And I succeed to slaughter'd Polydore. How from that arm of terror shall I fly? Some demon urges ! 'tis my doom to die ! If ever yet soft pity touch'd thy mind, Ah! think not me too much of Hector's kind ! Not the same mother gave thy suppliant breath, With his, who wrought thy loved Patroclus' death.'

These words, attended with a shower of tears,

[ocr errors]

The youth address'd to unrelenting ears:
“ Talk not of life, or ransom (he replies):
Patroclus dead, whoever meets me, dies :
In vain a single Trojan sues for grace;
But least, the sons of Priam's hateful race.
Die then, my friend! what boots it to deplore ?
The great, the good Patroclus is no more !
He, far thy better, was foredoom'd to die,
And thou, dost thou bewail mortality ?
Seest thou not me, whom nature's gifts adorn,
Sprung from a hero, from a goddess born ?
The day shall come (which nothing can avert)
When by the spear, the arrow, or the dart,
By night, or day, by force, or by design,
Impending death and certain fate are mine !
Die then,”—He said ; and as the word he spoke,
The fainting stripling sank before the stroke :
His hand forgot its grasp, and left the spear,
While all his trembling frame confess'd his fear :
Sudden, Achilles his broad sword display'd,
And buried in his neck the reeking blade.
Prone fell the youth ; and panting on the land,
The gushing purple dyed the thirsty sand.
The victor to the stream the carcase gave,
And thus insults him, floating on the wave:

“ Lie there, Lycaon! let the fish surround
Thy bloated corpse, and suck thy gory wound:
There no sad mother shall thy funerals weep,
But swift Scamander roll thee to the deep,
Whose every wave some watery monster brings,
To feast unpunish'd on the fat of kings.
So perish Troy, and all the Trojan line !
Such ruin theirs, and such compassion mine.
What boots ye now Scamander's worshipp'd stream,
His earthly honors, and immortal name?
In vain your immolated bulls are slain,
Your living coursers glut his gulfs in vain !
Thus he rewards you, with this bitter fate ;
Thus, till the Grecian vengeance is complete :
Thus is atoned Patroclus' honored shade,
And the short absence of Achilles paid.”

These boastful words provoked the raging god;
With fury swells the violated flood.
What means divine may yet the power employ
To check Achilles, and to rescue Troy?
Meanwhile the hero springs in arms, to dare
The great Asteropeus to mortal war;

The son of Pelagon, whose lofty line
Flows from the source of Axius, stream divine !
(Fair Peribæa's love the god had crown'd,
With all his refluent waters circled round):
On him Achilles rush'd; he fearless stood,
And shook two spears, advancing from the flood;
The food impell’d him, on Pelides' head
To avenge his waters choked with heaps of dead.
Near as they drew, Achilles thus began :

“What art thou, boldest of the race of man ?
Who, or from whence ? Unhappy is the sire
Whose son encounters our resistless ire.”
“O son of Peleus! what avails to trace
(Replied the warrior) our illustrious race?
From rich Pæonia's valleys I command,
Arm'd with protended spears, my native band ;
Now shines the tenth bright morning since I came
In aid of Ilion to the fields of fame :
Axius, who swells with all the neighboring rills,
And wide around the floated region fills,
Begot my sire, whose spear rauch glory won:
Now lift thy arm, and try that hero's son!”.

Threatening he said: the hostile chiefs advance ; At once Asteropeus discharged each lance (For both his dexterous hands the lance could wield), One struck, but pierced not, the Vulcanian shield; One razed Achilles' hand; the spouting blood Spun forth; in earth the fasten'd weapon stood. Like lightning next the Pelean javelin flies: Its erring fury hiss’d along the skies ; Deep in the swelling bank was driven the spear, Even to the middle earth; and quiver'd there. Then from his side the sword Pelides drew, And on his foe with double fury flew. The foe thrice tugod, and shook the rooted wood; Repulsive of his might the weapon stood : The fourth, he tries to break the spear in vain; Bent as he stands, he tumbles to the plain; His belly open'd with a ghastly wound, The reeking entrails pour upon the ground. Beneath the hero's feet he panting lies, And his eye darkens, and his spirit flies; While the proud victor thus triumphing said, His radiant armor tearing from the dead :

“So ends thy glory! Such the fate they prove, Who strive presumptuous with the sons of Jove ! Sprung from a river, didst thou boast thy line ?

« AnteriorContinuar »