Aeneid - Book 9

While these Affairs in distant Places pass'd,
The various Iris Juno sends with haste,
To find bold Turnus , who, with anxious Thought,
The secret Shade of his great Grandsire sought.
Retir'd alone she found the daring Man;
And op'd her rosie Lips, and thus began.
What none of all the Gods cou'd grant thy Vows;
That, Turnus , this auspicious Day bestows.
Æneas , gone to seek th' Arcadian Prince,
Has left the Trojan Camp without defence;
And, short of Succours there; employs his Pains
In Parts remote to raise the Tuscan Swains:
Now snatch an Hour that favours thy Designs,
Unite thy Forces, and attack their Lines.
This said, on equal Wings she pois'd her Weight,
And form'd a radiant Rainbow in her flight.
 The Daunian Heroe lifts his Hands and Eyes;
And thus invokes the Goddess as she flies.
Iris , the Grace of Heav'n, what Pow'r Divine
Has sent thee down, thro' dusky Clouds to shine?
See they divide; immortal Day appears;
And glitt'ring Planets dancing in their Spheres!
With Joy, these happy Omens I obey;
And follow to the War, the God that leads the Way.
 Thus having said, as by the Brook he stood,
He scoop'd the Water from the Crystal Flood;
Then with his Hands the drops to Heav'n he throws,
And loads the Pow'rs above with offer'd Vows.
 Now march the bold Confed'rates thro' the Plain;
Well hors'd, well clad, a rich and shining Train:
Messapus leads the Van; and in the Reer,
The Sons of Tyrrheus in bright Arms appear.
In the Main Battel, with his flaming Crest,
The mighty Turnus tow'rs above the rest:
Silent they move; majestically slow,
Like ebbing Nile , or Ganges in his flow.
The Trojans view the dusty Cloud from far;
And the dark Menace of the distant War.
Caicus from the Rampire saw it rise,
Blackning the Fields, and thickning thro' the Skies.
Then to his Fellows thus aloud he calls,
What rowling Clouds, my Friends, approach the Walls?
Arm, arm, and man the Works; prepare your Spears,
And pointed Darts; the Latian Hoast appears.
 Thus warn'd, they shut their Gates; with Shouts ascend
The Bulwarks, and secure their Foes attend.
For their wise Gen'ral with foreseeing Care,
Had charg'd them not to tempt the doubtful War:
Nor, tho' provok'd, in open Fields advance;
But close within their Lines attend their chance.
Unwilling, yet they keep the strict Command;
And sourly wait in Arms the Hostile Band.
The fiery Turnus flew before the rest,
A Pye-ball'd Steed of Thracian Strain he press'd;
His Helm of massy Gold; and Crimson was his Crest.
With twenty Horse to second his Designs,
An unexpected Foe, he fac'd the Lines.
 Is there, he said, in Arms who bravely dare,
His Leader's Honour, and his Danger share?
Then, spurring on, his brandish'd Dart he threw,
In sign of War, applauding Shouts ensue.
 Amaz'd to find a dastard Race that Run
Behind the Rampires, and the Battel shun,
He rides around the Camp, with rowling Eyes,
And stops at ev'ry Post; and ev'ry Passage tries.
So roams the nightly Wolf about the Fold,
Wet with descending Show'rs, and stiff with cold;
He howls for Hunger, and he grins for Pain;
His gnashing Teeth are exercis'd in vain:
And impotent of Anger, finds no way
In his distended Paws to grasp the Prey.
The Mothers listen; but the bleating Lambs
Securely swig the Dug, beneath the Dams.
Thus ranges eager Turnus o're the Plain,
Sharp with Desire, and furious with Disdain:
Surveys each Passage with a piercing Sight;
To force his Foes in equal Field to fight.
Thus, while he gazes round, at length he spies
Where, fenc'd with strong Redoubts, their Navy lies;
Close underneath the Walls: The washing Tyde
Secures from all approach this weaker side.
He takes the wish'd Occasion; fills his Hand
With ready Fires, and shakes a flaming Brand:
Urg'd by his Presence, ev'ry Soul is warm'd,
And ev'ry Hand with kindled Firrs is arm'd.
From the fir'd Pines the scatt'ring Sparkles fly;
Fat Vapours mix'd with Flames involve the Sky.
What Pow'r, O Muses, cou'd avert the Flame
Which threaten'd, in the Fleet, the Trojan Name!
Tell: For the Fact thro' length of Time obscure,
Is hard to Faith; yet shall the Fame endure.
 'Tis said, that when the Chief prepar'd his flight,
And fell'd his Timber from Mount Ida 's height,
The Grandam Goddess then approach'd her Son,
And with a Mother's Majesty begun.
Grant me, she said, the sole Request I bring,
Since conquer'd Heav'n has own'd you for its King:
On Ida 's Brows, for Ages past, there stood,
With Firrs and Maples fill'd, a shady Wood:
And on the Summit rose a Sacred Grove,
Where I was worshipp'd with Religious Love;
Those Woods, that Holy Grove, my long delight,
I gave the Trojan Prince, to speed his flight.
Now fill'd with Fear, on their behalf I come;
Let neither Winds o'reset, nor Waves intomb
The floating Forests of the Sacred Pine;
But let it be their Safety to be mine.
Then thus reply'd her awful Son; who rowls
The radiant Stars, and Heav'n and Earth controuls;
How dare you, Mother, endless Date demand,
For Vessels moulded by a Mortal Hand?
What then is Fate? Shall bold Æneas ride
Of Safety certain, on th' uncertain Tide?
Yet what I can, I grant: When, wafted o're,
The Chief is landed on the Latian Shore,
Whatever Ships escape the raging Storms,
At my Command shall change their fading Forms
To Nymphs Divine: and plow the wat'ry Way,
Like Dotis , and the Daughters of the Sea.
 To seal his sacred Vow, by Styx he swore,
The Lake of liquid Pitch, the dreery Shore;
And Phlegethon 's innavigable Flood,
And the black Regions of his Brother God:
He said; and shook the Skies with his Imperial Nod.
 And now at length the number'd Hours were come,
Prefix'd by Fate's irrevocable Doom,
When the great Mother of the Gods was free
To save her Ships, and finish Jove 's Decree.
First, from the Quarter of the Morn, there sprung
A Light that sign'd the Heav'ns, and shot along:
Then from a Cloud, fring'd round with Golden Fires,
Were Timbrels heard, and Berecynthian Quires:
And last a Voice, with more than Mortal Sounds,
Both Hosts in Arms oppos'd, with equal Horrour wounds.
 O Trojan Race, your needless Aid forbear;
And know my Ships are my peculiar Care.
With greater ease the bold Rutulian may,
With hissing Brands, attempt to burn the Sea,
Than sindge my sacred Pines. But you my Charge,
Loos'd from your crooked Anchors lanch at large,
Exalted each a Nymph: Forsake the Sand,
And swim the Seas, at Cybele 's Command.
No sooner had the Goddess ceas'd to speak,
When lo, th' obedient Ships, their Haulsers break;
And, strange to tell, like Dolphins in the Main,
They plunge their Prows, and dive, and spring again:
As many beauteous Maids the Billows sweep,
As rode before tall Vessels on the Deep.
The Foes, surpriz'd with Wonder, stood aghast,
Messapus curb'd his fiery Courser's haste;
Old Tyber roar'd; and raising up his Head,
Call'd back his Waters to their Oozy Bed.
Turnus alone, undaunted, bore the Shock;
And with these Words his trembling Troops bespoke.
These Monsters for the Trojans Fate are meant,
And are by Jove for black Presages sent.
He takes the Cowards last Relief away;
For fly they cannot; and, constrain'd to stay,
Must yield unsought, a base inglorious Prey.
The liquid half of all the Globe, is lost;
Heav'n shuts the Seas, and we secure the Coast.
Theirs is no more, than that small spot of Ground,
Which Myryads of our Martial Men surround.
Their Fates I fear not; or vain Oracles;
'Twas given to Venus , they shou'd cross the Seas:
And land secure upon the Latian Plains,
Their promis'd Hour is pass'd, and mine remains.
'Tis in the Fate of Turnus , to destroy
With Sword and Fire the faithless Race of Troy .
Shall such Affronts as these, alone inflame
The Grecian Brothers, and the Grecian Name?
My Cause and theirs is one; a fatal Strife,
And final Ruin, for a ravish'd Wife.
Was't not enough, that, punish'd for the Crime,
They fell; but will they fall a second Time?
One wou'd have thought they paid enough before,
To curse the costly Sex; and durst offend no more.
Can they securely trust their feeble Wall,
A slight Partition, a thin Interval,
Betwixt their Fate and them; when Troy , tho' built
By Hands Divine, yet perish'd by their Guilt?
Lend me, for once, my Friends, your valiant Hands,
To force from out their Lines these dastard Bands.
Less than a thousand Ships will end this War;
Nor Vulcan needs his fated Arms prepare.
Let all the Tuscans , all th' Arcadians join,
Nor these, nor those shall frustrate my Design.
Let them not fear the Treasons of the Night;
The robb'd Palladium , the pretended flight:
Our Onset shall be made in open Light.
No wooden Engine shall their Town betray,
Fires they shall have around, but Fires by Day.
No Grecian Babes before their Camp appear,
Whom Hector 's Arms detain'd, to the tenth tardy Year.
Now, since the Sun is rowling to the West ,
Give we the silent Night to needful Rest:
Refresh your Bodies, and your Arms prepare,
The Morn shall end the small Remains of War.
 The Post of Honour to Messapus falls,
To keep the Nightly Guard; to watch the Walls;
To pitch the Fires at Distances around,
And close the Trojans in their scanty Ground.
Twice seven Rutulian Captains ready stand;
And twice seven hundred Horse these Chiefs command:
All clad in shining Arms the Works invest;
Each with a radiant Helm, and waving Crest.
Stretch'd at their length, they press the grassy Ground;
They laugh, they sing, the jolly Bowls go round:
With Lights, and chearful Fires renew the Day;
And pass the wakeful Night in Feasts and Play.
 The Trojans , from above, their Foes beheld;
And with arm'd Legions all the Rampires fill'd:
Seiz'd with Affright, their Gates they first explore,
Join Works to Works with Bridges; Tow'r to Tow'r:
Thus all things needful for Defence, abound;
Mnestheus , and brave Seresthus walk the round:
Commission'd by their Absent Prince, to share
The common Danger, and divide the Care.
The Souldiers draw their Lots; and as they fall,
By turns relieve each other on the Wall.
 Nigh where the Foes their utmost Guards advance,
To watch the Gate, was warlike Nisus chance.
His Father Hyrtacus of Noble Blood;
His Mother was a Hunt'ress of the Wood:
And sent him to the Wars; well cou'd he bear
His Lance in fight, and dart the flying Spear:
But better skill'd unerring Shafts to send:
Beside him stood Euryalus his Friend.
Euryalus , than whom the Trojan Hoast
No fairer Face, or sweeter Air could boast.
Scarce had the Down to shade his Cheeks begun;
One was their Care, and their Delight was one.
One Common hazard in the War they shar'd;
And now were both by choice upon the Guard.
 Then Nisus , thus: Or do the Gods inspire
This warmth, or make we Gods of our Desire?
A gen'rous ardour boils within my Breast,
Eager of Action, Enemy to Rest:
This urges me to fight, and fires my Mind,
To leave a memorable Name behind.
Thou see'st the Foe secure: how faintly shine
Their scatter'd Fires! the most in Sleep supine;
Along the ground, an easie Conquest lye;
The wakeful few, the fuming Flaggon ply:
All hush'd around. Now hear what I revolve;
A thought unripe; and scarcely yet resolve.
Our absent Prince both Camp and Council mourn;
By Message both wou'd hasten his return:
If they confer what I demand, on thee,
(For Fame is Recompence enough for me)
Methinks, beneath yon Hill, I have espy'd
A way that safely will my passage guide.
  Euryalus stood list'ning while he spoke;
With love of Praise, and noble Envy struck;
Then to his ardent Friend expos'd his Mind:
All this alone, and leaving me behind,
Am I unworthy, Nisus , to be join'd?
Think'st thou I can my share of Glory yield,
Or send thee unassisted to the Field?
Not so my Father taught my Childhood Arms;
Born in a Siege, and bred among Alarms!
Nor is my Youth unworthy of my Friend,
Nor of the Heav'n-born Heroe I attend.
The thing call'd Life, with ease I can disclaim;
And think it oversold to purchase Fame.
 Then Nisus , thus; alas! thy tender years
Wou'd minister new matter to my Fears:
So may the Gods, who view this friendly Strife,
Restore me to thy lov'd Embrace with life,
Condemn'd to pay my Vows (as sure I trust,)
This thy Request is Cruel and Unjust.
But if some Chance, as many Chances are,
And doubtful Hazards in the deeds of War;
If one shou'd reach my Head, there let it fall,
And spare thy Life; I wou'd not perish all.
Thy bloomy Youth deserves a longer date;
Live thou to mourn thy Love's unhappy Fate:
To bear my mangled Body from the Foe;
Or buy it back, and Fun'ral Rites bestow.
Or if hard Fortune shall those Dues deny,
Thou canst at least an empty Tomb supply.
O let not me the Widows Tears renew;
Nor let a Mother's Curse my Name pursue;
Thy Pious Parent, who, for love of thee,
Forsook the Coasts of Friendly Sicily ,
Her Age, committing to the Seas and Wind,
When ev'ry weary Matron staid behind.
To this, Euryalus , you plead in vain,
And but protract the Cause you cannot gain:
No more delays, but haste. With that he wakes
The nodding Watch; each to his Office takes.
The Guard reliev'd, the gen'rous Couple went
To find the Council at the Royal Tent.
All Creatures else forgot their daily Care;
And Sleep, the common Gift of Nature, share:
Except the Trojan Peers, who wakeful sate
In nightly Council for th' indanger'd State.
They vote a Message to their absent Chief;
Shew their Distress; and beg a swift Relief.
Amid the Camp a silent Seat they chose,
Remote from Clamour, and secure from Foes.
On their left Arms their ample Shields they bear,
The right reclin'd upon the bending Spear.
Now Nisus and his Friend approach the Guard,
And beg Admission, eager to be heard:
Th' Affair important, not to be deferr'd.
Ascanius bids 'em be conducted in;
Ord'ring the more experienc'd to begin.
Then Nisus thus. Ye Fathers lend your Ears;
Nor judge our bold Attempt beyond our Years.
The Foe securely drench'd in Sleep and Wine,
Neglect their Watch; the Fires but thinly shine:
And where the Smoke, in cloudy Vapours flies,
Cov'ring the Plain, and curling to the Skies,
Betwixt two Paths, which at the Gate divide,
Close by the Sea, a Passage we have spy'd
Which will our way to great Æneas guide.
Expect each Hour to see him safe again,
Loaded with Spoils of Foes in Battel slain.
Snatch we the lucky Minute while we may:
Nor can we be mistaken in the way;
For hunting in the Vale, we both have seen
The rising Turrets, and the Stream between;
And know the winding Course, with ev'ry Ford.
He ceas'd: And old Alethes took the Word.
 Our Country Gods, in whom our Trust we place,
Will yet from Ruin save the Trojan Race;
While we behold such dauntless Worth appear
In dawning Youth; and Souls so void of Fear.
Then, into Tears of Joy the Father broke;
Each in his longing Arms by Turns he took:
Panted and paus'd; and thus again he spoke.
Ye brave young Men, what equal Gifts can we,
In recompence of such Desert, decree?
The greatest, sure, and best you can receive,
The Gods, and your own conscious Worth will give.
The rest our grateful Gen'ral will bestow;
And young Ascanius 'till his Manhood owe.
 And I, whose Welfare in my Father lies,
Ascanius adds, by the great Deities,
By my dear Country, by my household Gods,
By hoary Vesta 's Rites, and dark Abodes,
Adjure you both; (on you my Fortune stands,
That and my Faith I plight into your Hands:)
Make me but happy in his safe Return,
Whose wanted Presence I can only mourn;
Your common Gift shall two large Goblets be,
Of Silver, wrought with curious Imagery;
And high emboss'd, which, when old Priam reign'd,
My conqu'ring Sire at sack'd Arisba gain'd.
And more, two Tripods cast in antick Mould,
With two great Talents of the finest Gold:
Beside a costly Bowl, ingrav'd with Art,
Which Dido gave, when first she gave her Heart.
But if in conquer'd Italy we reign,
When Spoils by Lot the Victor shall obtain;
Thou saw'st the Courser by proud Turnus press'd,
That, Nisus , and his Arms, and nodding Crest,
And Shield, from Chance exempt, shall be thy Share;
Twelve lab'ring Slaves, twelve Handmaids young and fair,
All clad in rich Attire, and train'd with Care.
And last, a Latian Field with fruitful Plains;
And a large Portion of the King's Domains.
But thou, whose Years are more to mine ally'd,
No Fate my vow'd Affection shall divide
From thee, Heroick Youth; be wholly mine:
Take full Possession; all my Soul is thine.
One Faith, one Fame, one Fate shall both attend;
My Life's Companion and my Bosom Friend.
My Peace shall be committed to thy Care,
And to thy Conduct, my Concerns in War.
 Then thus the young Euryalus reply'd;
Whatever Fortune, good or bad betide,
The same shall be my Age, as now my Youth;
No time shall find me wanting to my Truth.
This only from your Goodness let me gain;
(And this ungranted, all Rewards are vain)
Of Priam 's Royal Race my Mother came;
And sure the best that ever bore the Name:
Whom neither Troy , nor Sicily cou'd hold
From me departing, but o'respent, and old,
My Fate she follow'd; ignorant of this,
Whatever Danger, neither parting Kiss,
Nor pious Blessing taken, her I leave;
And, in this only Act of all my Life deceive.
By this right Hand, and conscious Night I swear,
My Soul so sad a farewel could not bear.
Be you her Comfort; fill my vacant place,
(Permit me to presume so great a Grace)
Support her Age, forsaken and distress'd,
That hope alone will fortifie my Breast
Against the worst of Fortunes, and of Fears.
He said: The mov'd Assistants melt in Tears.
 Then thus Ascanius , (wonder-struck to see
That Image of his filial Piety;)
So great Beginnings, in so green an Age,
Exact the Faith, which I again ingage.
Thy Mother all the Dues shall justly claim
Creusa had; and only want the Name.
Whate're Event thy bold Attempt shall have,
'Tis Merit to have born a Son so brave.
Now by my Head, a sacred Oath, I swear,
(My Father us'd it) what returning here
Crown'd with Success, I for thy self prepare,
That, if thou fail, shall thy lov'd Mother share.
 He said; and weeping while he spoke the Word,
From his broad Belt he drew a shining Sword,
Magnificent with Gold. Lycaon made,
And in an Iv'ry Scabbard sheath'd the Blade:
This was his Gift: Great Mnestheus gave his Friend
A Lyon's Hide, his Body to defend:
And good Alethes furnish'd him beside,
With his own trusty Helm, of Temper try'd.
 Thus arm'd they went. The Noble Trojans wait
Their issuing forth, and follow to the Gate.
With Prayers and Vows, above the rest appears
Ascanius , manly far beyond his Years.
And Messages committed to their Care,
Which all in winds were lost, and flitting Air.
 The Trenches first they pass'd: Then took their Way
Where their proud Foes in pitch'd Pavilions lay;
To many fatal, e're themselves were slain:
They found the careless Hoast dispers'd upon the Plain.
Who gorg'd, and drunk with Wine, supinely snore;
Unharnass'd Chariots stand along the Shore:
Amidst the Wheels and Reins, the Goblet by,
A Medly of Debauch and War they lye.
Observing Nisus shew'd his Friend the sight;
Behold a Conquest gain'd without a Fight.
Occasion offers, and I stand prepar'd;
There lies our Way; be thou upon the Guard,
And look around; while I securely go,
And hew a Passage, thro' the sleeping Foe.
Softly he spoke; then striding, took his way,
With his drawn Sword, where haughty Rhamnes lay:
His Head rais'd high, on Tapestry beneath,
And heaving from his Breast, he drew his Breath:
A King and Prophet by King Turnus lov'd;
But Fate by Prescience cannot be remov'd.
Him, and his sleeping Slaves he slew. Then spies
Where Rhemus , with his rich Retinue lies:
His Armor-bearer first, and next he kills
His Charioteer, intrench'd betwixt the Wheels
And his lov'd Horses: Last invades their Lord;
Full on his Neck he drives the fatal Sword:
The gasping Head flies off; a Purple flood
Flows from the Trunk, that welters in the Blood:
Which by the spurning Heels, dispers'd around,
The Bed besprinkles, and bedews the Ground.
Lamus the bold, and Lamyrus the strong,
He slew; and then Serranus fair and young:
From Dice and Wine the Youth retir'd to Rest,
And puff'd the fumy God from out his Breast:
Ev'n then he dreamt of Drink and lucky Play;
More lucky had it lasted 'till the Day.
 The famish'd Lyon thus, with Hunger bold;
O'releaps the Fences of the Nightly Fold;
And tears the peaceful Flocks: With silent Awe
Trembling they lye, and pant beneath his Paw.
 Nor with less Rage Euryalus employs
The wrathful sword, or fewer Foes destroys:
But on th' ignoble Crowd his Fury flew:
He Fadus , Hebesus , and Rhœtus slew.
Oppress'd with heavy Sleep the former fall,
But Rhœtus wakeful, and observing all:
Behind a spacious Jarr he slink'd for fear;
The fatal Iron found, and reach'd him there.
For as he rose, it pierc'd his naked side;
And reeking, thence return'd in Crimson dy'd.
The Wound pours out a Stream of Wine and Blood,
The Purple Soul comes floating in the flood.
 Now where Messapus Quarter'd they arrive;
The Fires were fainting there, and just alive.
The Warriour-Horses ty'd in order fed;
Nisus observ'd the Discipline, and said,
Our eager thirst of Blood may both betray;
And see the scatter'd Streaks of dawning day,
Foe to Nocturnal Thefts: No more, my Friend,
Here let our glutted Execution end:
A Lane through slaughter'd Bodies we have made:
The bold Euryalus , tho' loath, obey'd.
Of Arms, and Arras, and of Plate they find
A precious load; but these they leave behind.
Yet fond of gaudy Spoils the Boy wou'd stay
To make the rich Caparison his prey,
Which on the Steed of conquer'd Rhamnes lay.
Nor did his Eyes less longingly behold
The Girdle-Belt, with Nails of burnish'd Gold.
This Present Cedicus the Rich, bestow'd
On Remulus , when Friendship first they vow'd:
And absent, join'd in hospitable tyes;
He dying, to his Heir bequeath'd the Prize:
Till by the Conqu'ring Ardean Troops oppress'd
He fell; and they the Glorious Gift possess'd.
These Glitt'ring Spoils (now made the Victor's gain)
He to his body suits; but suits in vain.
Messapus Helm he finds among the rest,
And laces on, and wears the waving Crest.
Proud of their Conquest, prouder of their Prey,
They leave the Camp; and take the ready way.
 But far they had not pass'd before they spy'd
Three hundred Horse with Volscens for their Guide.
The Queen a Legion to King Turnus sent,
But the swift Horse the slower Foot prevent;
And now advancing, sought the Leader's Tent.
They saw the Pair; for thro' the doubtful shade
His shineing Helm Euryalus betray'd,
On which the Moon with full reflexion play'd.
'Tis not for nought, cry'd Volscens , from the Crowd,
These Men go there; then rais'd his Voice aloud:
Stand, stand: why thus in Arms, and whither bent;
From whence, to whom, and on what Errand sent?
Silent they scud away, and haste their flight,
To Neighb'ring Woods, and trust themselves to night.
The speedy Horse all passages belay,
And spur their smoaking Steeds to Cross their way;
And watch each Entrance of the winding Wood;
Black was the Forest, thick with Beech it stood:
Horrid with Fern, and intricate with Thorn,
Few Paths of Humane Feet or Tracks of Beasts were worn.
The darkness of the Shades, his heavy Prey,
And Fear, mis-led the Younger from his way.
But Nisus hit the Turns with happier haste,
And thoughtless of his Friend, the Forest pass'd:
And Alban Plains, from Alba 's Name so call'd,
Where King Latinus then his Oxen stall'd.
Till turning at the length, he stood his ground,
And miss'd his Friend, and cast his Eyes around;
Ah Wretch, he cry'd, where have I left behind
Th' unhappy Youth, where shall I hope to find?
Or what way take! again He ventures back:
And treads the Mazes of his former track.
He winds the Wood, and list'ning hears the noise
Of trampling Coursers, and the Riders voice.
The sound approach'd, and suddenly he viewed
The Foes inclosing, and his Friend pursu'd:
Forelay'd and taken, while he strove in vain,
The shelter of the friendly Shades to gain.
What shou'd he next attempt! what Arms employ,
What fruitless Force to free the Captive Boy?
Or desperate shou'd he rush and lose his Life,
With odds oppress'd, in such unequal strife?
Resolv'd at length, his pointed Spear he shook;
And casting on the Moon a mournful look,
Guardian of Groves, and Goddess of the Night;
Fair Queen, he said, direct my Dart aright:
If e're my Pious Father for my sake
Did grateful Off'rings on thy Altars make;
Or I increas'd them with my Silvan toils,
And hung thy Holy Roofs, with Savage Spoils;
Give me to scatter these. Then from his Ear
He pois'd, and aim'd, and lanch'd the trembling Spear.
The deadly Weapon, hissing from the Grove,
Impetuous on the back of Sulmo drove:
Pierc'd his thin Armour, drank his Vital Blood,
And in his Body left the broken Wood.
He staggers round, his Eyeballs rowl in Death,
And with short sobs he gasps away his Breath.
All stand amaz'd; a second Jav'lin flies,
With equal strength, and quivers through the Skies;
This through thy Temples, Tagus , forc'd the way,
And in the Brain-pan warmly bury'd lay.
Fierce Volscens foams with Rage, and gazing round,
Descry'd not him who gave the Fatal Wound:
Nor knew to fix Revenge: but thou, he cries,
Shalt pay for both, and at the Pris'ner flies,
With his drawn Sword. Then struck with deep Despair,
That cruel sight the Lover cou'd not bear:
But from his Covert rush'd in open view,
And sent his Voice before him as he flew.
Me, me, he cry'd, turn all your Swords alone
On me; the Fact confess'd, the Fault my own.
He neither cou'd nor durst, the guiltless Youth;
Ye Moon and Stars bear Witness to the Truth!
His only Crime, (if Friendship can offend)
Is too much Love, to his unhappy Friend.
Too late he speaks; the Sword, which Fury guides,
Driv'n with full Force, had pierc'd his tender Sides.
Down fell the beauteous Youth; the yawning Wound
Gush'd out a Purple Stream, and stain'd the Ground.
His snowy Neck reclines upon his Breast,
Like a fair Flow'r by the keen Share oppress'd:
Like a white Poppy sinking on the Plain,
Whose heavy Head is overcharg'd with Rain.
Despair, and Rage, and Vengeance justly vow'd,
Drove Nisus headlong on the hostile Crowd:
Volscens he seeks; on him alone he bends;
Born back, and bor'd, by his surrounding Friends,
Onward he press'd: and kept him still in sight;
Then whirl'd aloft his Sword, with all his might:
Th' unerring Steel descended while he spoke;
Pierc'd his wide Mouth, and thro' his Weazon broke:
Dying, he slew; and stagg'ring on the Plain,
With swimming Eyes he sought his Lover slain:
Then quiet on his bleeding Bosom fell;
Content in Death, to be reveng'd so well.
 O happy Friends! for if my Verse can give
Immortal Life, your Fame shall ever live:
Fix'd as the Capitol's Foundation lies;
And spread, where e're the Roman Eagle flies!
 The conqu'ring Party, first divide the Prey,
Then their slain Leader to the Camp convey.
With Wonder, as they went, the Troops were fill'd,
To see such Numbers whom so few had kill'd.
Serranus , Rhamnes , and the rest they found;
Vast Crowds the dying and the dead surround:
And the yet reeking Blood o'reflows the Ground.
All knew the Helmet which Messapus lost;
But mourn'd a Purchase, that so dear had cost.
Now rose the ruddy Morn from Tithon 's Bed;
And with the Dawns of Day, the Skies o'respread.
Nor long the Sun his daily Course withheld,
But added Colours to the World reveal'd.
When early Turnus wak'ning with the Light,
All clad in Armour calls his Troops to fight.
His Martial Men with fierce Harangues he fir'd;
And his own Ardor, in their Souls inspir'd.
This done, to give new Terror to his Foes,
The Heads of Nisus , and his Friend he shows,
Rais'd high on pointed Spears: A ghastly Sight;
Loud peals of Shouts ensue, and barbarous Delight.
 Mean time the Trojans run, where Danger calls,
They line their Trenches, and they man their Walls:
In Front extended to the left they stood:
Safe was the right surrounded by the Flood.
But casting from their Tow'rs a frightful view,
They saw the Faces, which too well they knew;
Tho' then disguis'd in Death, and smear'd all o're
With Filth obscene, and dropping putrid Gore.
Soon hasty Fame, thro' the sad City bears
The mournful Message to the Mother's Ears:
An icy Cold benums her Limbs: She shakes:
Her Cheeks the Blood, her Hand the Web forsakes.
She runs the Rampires round amidst the War,
Nor fears the flying Darts: She rends her Hair,
And fills with loud Laments the liquid Air.
Thus then, my lov'd Euryalus appears;
Thus looks the Prop of my declining Years!
Was't on this Face, my famish'd Eyes I fed,
Ah how unlike the living, is the dead!
And cou'dst thou leave me, cruel, thus alone,
Not one kind Kiss from a departing Son!
No look, no last adieu before he went,
In an ill-boding Hour to Slaughter sent!
Cold on the Ground, and pressing foreign Clay,
To Latian Dogs, and Fowls he lies a Prey!
Nor was I near to close his dying Eyes,
To wash his Wounds, to weep his Obsequies:
To call about his Corps his crying Friends,
Or spread the Mantle, (made for other ends,)
On his dear Body, which I wove with Care,
Nor did my daily Pains, or nightly labour spare.
Where shall I find his Corps, what Earth sustains
His Trunk dismember'd, and his cold Remains?
For this, alas, I left my needful Ease,
Expos'd my Life to Winds, and winter Seas!
If any pity touch Rutulian Hearts,
Here empty all your Quivers, all your Darts:
Or if they fail, thou Jove conclude my Woe,
And send me Thunder-struck to Shades below!
 Her Shrieks and Clamours, pierce the Trojans Ears,
Unman their Courage, and augment their Fears:
Nor young Ascanius cou'd the sight sustain,
Nor old Ilioneus his Tears restrain:
But Actor and Idæus , jointly sent,
To bear the madding Mother to her Tent.
And now the Trumpets terribly from far,
With rattling Clangor, rouze the sleepy War.
The Souldiers Shouts succeed the Brazen Sounds;
And Heav'n, from Pole to Pole, the Noise rebounds.
The Volscians bear their Shields upon their Head,
And rushing forward, form a moving Shed;
These fill the Ditch, those pull the Bulwarks down:
Some raise the Ladders, others scale the Town.
But where void Spaces on the Walls appear,
Or thin Defence, they pour their Forces there.
With Poles and missive Weapons, from afar,
The Trojans keep aloof the rising War.
Taught by their ten Years Siege defensive fight;
They rowl down Ribs of Rocks, an unresisted Weight:
To break the Penthouse with the pond'rous Blow;
Which yet the patient Volscians undergo.
But cou'd not bear th' unequal Combat long;
For where the Trojans find the thickest Throng,
The Ruin falls: Their shatter'd Shields give way,
And their crush'd Heads become an easie Prey.
They shrink for Fear, abated of their Rage,
Nor longer dare in a blind Fight engage.
Contented now to gaul them from below
With Darts and Slings, and with the distant Bow.
 Elsewhere Mezentius , terrible to view,
A blazing Pine within the Trenches threw.
But brave Messapus , Neptune 's warlike Son,
Broke down the Palisades, the Trenches Won,
And loud for Ladders calls, to scale the Town.
  Calliope begin: Ye sacred Nine,
Inspire your Poet in his high Design;
To sing what Slaughter manly Turnus made:
What Souls he sent below the Stygian Shade.
What Fame the Souldiers with their Captain share,
And the vast Circuit of the fatal War.
For you in singing Martial Facts excel;
You best remember; and alone can tell.
 There stood a Tow'r, amazing to the sight,
Built up of Beams; and of stupendous height;
Art, and the nature of the Place conspir'd,
To furnish all the Strength, that War requir'd.
To level this, the bold Italians join;
The wary Trojans obviate their design:
With weighty Stones o'rewhelm their Troops below,
Shoot through the Loopholes, and sharp Jav'lins throw.
Turnus , the Chief, toss'd from his thund'ring Hand,
Against the wooden Walls, a flaming Brand:
It stuck, the fiery Plague: The Winds were high;
The Planks were season'd, and the Timber dry.
Contagion caught the Posts: It spread along,
Scorch'd, and to distance drove the scatter'd Throng.
The Trojans fled; the Fire pursu'd amain,
Still gath'ring fast upon the trembling Train;
Till crowding to the Corners of the Wall,
Down the Defence, and the Defenders fall.
The mighty flaw makes Heav'n it self resound,
The Dead, and dying Trojans strew the Ground.
The Tow'r that follow'd on the fallen Crew,
Whelm'd o're their Heads, and bury'd whom it slew:
Some stuck upon the Darts themselves had sent;
All, the same equal Ruin underwent.
 Young Lycus and Helenor only scape;
Sav'd, how they know not, from the steepy Leap.
Helenor , elder of the two; by Birth,
On one side Royal, one a Son of Earth,
Whom to the Lydian King, Lycimnia bare,
And sent her boasted Bastard to the War:
(A Priviledge which none but Free-men share.)
Slight were his Arms, a Sword and Silver Shield,
No Marks of Honour charg'd its empty Field.
Light as he fell, so light the Youth arose,
And rising found himself amidst his Foes.
Nor flight was left, nor hopes to force his Way;
Embolden'd by Despair, he stood at Bay:
And like a Stag, whom all the Troop surrounds
Of eager Huntsmen, and invading Hounds;
Resolv'd on Death, he dissipates his Fears,
And bounds aloft, against the pointed Spears:
So dares the Youth, secure of Death; and throws
His dying Body, on his thickest Foes.
 But Lycus , swifter of his Feet, by far,
Runs, doubles, winds and turns, amidst the War:
Springs to the Walls, and leaves his Foes behind,
And snatches at the Beam he first can find.
Looks up, and leaps aloft at all the stretch,
In hopes the helping Hand of some kind Friend to reach.
But Turnus follow'd hard his hunted Prey,
(His Spear had almost reach'd him in the way,
Short of his Reins, and scarce a Span behind,)
Fool, said the Chief, tho' fleeter than the Wind,
Coud'st thou presume to scape, when I pursue?
He said, and downward by the Feet he drew
The trembling Dastard: at the Tug he falls,
Vast Ruins come along, rent from the smoking Walls.
Thus on some silver Swan, or tim'rous Hare,
Jove 's Bird comes sowsing down, from upper Air;
Her crooked Tallons truss the fearful Prey:
Then out of sight she soars, and wings her way.
So seizes the grim Wolf the tender Lamb,
In vain lamented by the bleating Dam.
 Then rushing onward, with a barb'rous cry,
The Troops of Turnus to the Combat fly.
The Ditch with Faggots fill'd, the daring Foe
Toss'd Firebrands to the steepy Turrets throw.
  Ilioneus , as bold Lucetius came
To force the Gate, and feed the kindling Flame,
Rowl'd down the Fragment of a Rock so right;
It crush'd him double underneath the weight.
Two more young Liger and Asylas slew;
To bend the Bow young Liger better knew;
Asylas best the pointed Jav'lin threw.
Brave Cæneus laid Ortygius on the Plain,
The Victor Cæneus was by Turnus slain.
By the same Hand, Clonius and Itys' fall,
Sagar , and Ida , standing on the Wall.
From Capys Arms his Fate Privernus found;
Hurt by Themilla first; but slight the Wound;
His Shield thrown by, to mitigate the smart,
He clap'd his Hand upon the wounded part:
The second Shaft came swift and unespy'd,
And pierc'd his Hand, and nail'd it to his side:
Transfix'd his breathing Lungs, and beating heart;
The Soul came issuing out, and hiss'd again'st the Dart.
 The Son of Arcens shone amid the rest,
In glitt'ring Armour, and a Purple Vest.
Fair was his Face, his Eyes inspiring Love,
Bred by his Father in the Martian Grove;
Where the fat Altars of Palicus flame,
And sent in Arms to purchase early Fame.
Him, when he spy'd from far the Thuscan King,
Laid by the Lance, and took him to the Sling:
Thrice whirl'd the Thong around his head, and threw:
The heated Lead half melted as it flew:
It pierc'd his hollow Temples and his Brain;
The Youth came tumbling down, and spurn'd the Plain.
 Then young Ascanius , who before this day.
Was wont in Woods to shoot the savage Prey,
First bent in Martial Strife, the twanging Bow;
And exercis'd against a Humane Foe.
With this bereft Numanus of his life,
Who Turnus younger Sister took to Wife.
Proud of his Realm, and of his Royal Bride,
Vaunting before his Troops, and lengthen'd with a Stride,
In these Insulting terms, the Trojans he defy'd.
Twice Conquer'd Cowards, now your shame is shown,
Coop'd up a second time within your Town!
Who dare not issue forth in open Field,
But hold your Walls before you for a Shield:
Thus threat you War, thus our Alliance force!
What Gods what madness hether steer'd your Course!
You shall not find the Sons of Atreus here,
Nor need the Frauds of sly Ulysses fear.
Strong from the Cradle, of a sturdy Brood,
We bear our new-born Infants to the Flood;
There bath'd amid the Stream, our Boys we hold,
With Winter harden'd, and inur'd to Cold.
They wake before the Day to range the Wood,
Kill e're they eat, nor tast unconquer'd Food.
No Sports, but what belong to War they know,
To break the stubborn Colt, to bend the Bow.
Our youth, of Labour patient, earn their Bread;
Hardly they work, with frugal Diet fed.
From Ploughs and Harrows sent to seek Renown,
They fight in Fields, and storm the shaken Town.
No part of Life from Toils of War is free;
No change in Age, or diff'rence in Degree.
We plow, and till in Arms; our Oxen feel,
Instead of Goads, the Spur, and pointed Steel:
Th' inverted Lance makes Furrows in the Plain;
Ev'n time that changes all, yet changes us in vain:
The Body, not the Mind: Nor can controul
Th' immortal Vigour, or abate the Soul.
Our Helms defend the Young, disguise the Grey:
We live by Plunder, and delight in Prey.
Your Vests embroyder'd with rich Purple shine;
In Sloth you Glory, and in Dances join.
Your Vests have sweeping Sleeves: With female Pride,
Your Turbants underneath your Chins are ty'd.
Go, Phrygians , to your Dindymus agen;
Go, less than Women, in the Shapes of Men.
Go, mix'd with Eunuchs, in the Mother's Rites,
Where with unequal Sound the Flute invites.
Sing, dance, and howl by turns in Ida 's Shade;
Resign the War to Men, who know the Martial Trade.
 This foul Reproach, Ascanius cou'd not hear
With Patience, or a vow'd Revenge forbear.
At the full stretch of both his Hands, he drew,
And almost join'd the Horns of the tough Eugh.
But first, before the Throne of Jove he stood;
And thus with lifted Hands invok'd the God.
My first Attempt, great Jupiter succeed;
An annual Off'ring in thy Grove shall bleed:
A snow-white Steer, before thy Altar led,
Who like his Mother bears aloft his Head,
Buts with his threatning Brows, and bellowing stands,
And dares the Fight, and spurns the yellow Sands.
  Jove bow'd the Heav'ns, and lent a gracious Ear,
And thunder'd on the left, amidst the clear.
Sounded at once the Bow; and swiftly flies
The feather'd Death, and hisses thro' the Skies.
The Steel thro' both his Temples forc'd the way:
Extended on the Ground, Numanus lay.
Go now, vain Boaster, and true Valour scorn;
The Phrygians twice subdu'd, yet make this third Return.
Ascanius said no more: The Trojans shake
The Heav'ns with Shouting, and new Vigour take.
  Apollo then bestrode a Golden Cloud,
To view the feats of Arms, and fighting Crowd;
And thus the beardless Victor, he bespoke aloud.
Advance Illustrious Youth, increase in Fame,
And wide from East to West extend thy Name.
Offspring of Gods thy self; and Rome shall owe
To thee, a Race of Demigods below.
This is the Way to Heav'n: The Pow'rs Divine
From this beginning date the Julian Line.
To thee, to them, and their victorious Heirs,
The conquer'd War is due; and the vast World is theirs.
Troy is too narrow for thy Name. He said,
And plunging downward shot his radiant Head;
Dispell'd the breathing Air, that broke his Flight,
Shorn of his Beams, a Man to Mortal sight.
Old Butes Form he took, Anchises Squire,
Now left to rule Ascanius , by his Sire:
His wrinkled Visage, and his hoary Hairs,
His Meen, his Habit, and his Arms he wears;
And thus salutes the Boy, too forward for his Years.
Suffice it thee, thy Father's worthy Son,
The warlike Prize thou hast already won:
The God of Archers gives thy Youth a part
Of his own Praise; nor envies equal Art.
Now tempt the War no more. He said, and flew
Obscure in Air, and vanish'd from their view.
The Trojans , by his Arms, their Patron know;
And hear the twanging of his Heav'nly Bow.
Then duteous Force they use; and Phœbus Name,
To keep from Fight, the Youth too fond of Fame.
Undaunted they themselves no Danger shun:
From Wall to Wall, the Shouts and Clamours run.
They bend their Bows; they whirl their Slings around:
Heaps of spent Arrows fall; and strew the Ground;
And Helms, and Shields, and ratling Arms resound.
The Combate thickens, like the Storm that flies
From Westward, when the Show'ry Kids arise:
Or patt'ring Hail comes pouring on the Main,
When Jupiter descends in harden'd Rain.
Or bellowing Clouds burst with a stormy Sound,
And with an armed Winter strew the Ground.
  Pand'rus and Bitias , Thunder-bolts of War,
Whom Hiera , to bold Alcanor bare
On Ida 's Top, two Youths of Height and Size,
Like Firrs that on their Mother Mountain rise;
Presuming on their Force, the Gates unbar,
And of their own Accord invite the War.
With Fates averse, against their King's Command,
Arm'd on the right, and on the left they stand;
And flank the Passage: Shining Steel they wear,
And waving Crests, above their Heads appear.
Thus two tall Oaks, that Padus Banks adorn,
Lift up to Heav'n their leafy Heads unshorn;
And overpress'd with Nature's heavy load,
Dance to the whistling Winds, and at each other nod.
In flows a Tyde of Latians , when they see
The Gate set open, and the Passage free.
Bold Quercens , with rash Tmarus rushing on,
Equicolus , that in bright Armour shone,
And Hæmon first, but soon repuls'd they fly,
Or in the well-defended Pass they dye.
These with Success are fir'd, and those with Rage;
And each on equal Terms at length ingage.
Drawn from their Lines, and issuing on the Plain,
The Trojans hand to hand the Fight maintain.
 Fierce Turnus in another Quarter fought,
When suddenly th' unhop'd for News was brought;
The Foes had left the fastness of their Place,
Prevail'd in Fight, and had his Men in Chace.
He quits th' Attack, and, to prevent their Fate,
Runs, where the Gyant Brothers guard the Gate.
The first he met, Antiphates the brave,
But base begotten on a Theban Slave;
Sarpedon 's Son he slew: The deadly Dart
Found Passage thro' his Breast, and pierc'd his Heart.
Fix'd in the Wound th' Italian Cornel stood;
Warm'd in his Lungs, and in his vital Blood.
Aphidnus next, and Erymanthus dies,
And Meropes , and the Gygantick Size
Of Bitias , threat'ning with his ardent Eyes.
Not by the feeble Dart he fell oppress'd,
A Dart were lost, within that roomy Breast;
But from a knotted Lance, large, heavy, strong;
Which roar'd like Thunder as it whirl'd along:
Not two Bull-hides th' impetuous Force withhold;
Nor Coat of double Male, with Scales of Gold.
Down sunk the Monster-Bulk, and press'd the Ground;
His Arms and clatt'ring Shield, on the vast Body sound.
Not with less Ruin, than the Bajan Mole,
(Rais'd on the Seas the Surges to controul,)
At once comes tumbling down the rocky Wall,
Prone to the Deep the Stones disjointed fall,
Of the vast Pile; the scatter'd Ocean flies;
Black Sands, discolour'd Froth, and mingled Mud arise.
The frighted Billows rowl, and seek the Shores:
Then trembles Prochyta , then Ischia roars:
Typhœus thrown beneath, by Jove 's Command,
Astonish'd at the Flaw, that shakes the Land,
Soon shifts his weary Side, and scarce awake,
With Wonder feels the weight press lighter on his Back.
 The Warrior God the Latian Troops inspir'd;
New strung their Sinews, and their Courage fir'd:
But chills the Trojan Hearts with cold Affright;
Then black Despair precipitates their Flight.
 When Pandarus beheld his Brother kill'd,
The Town with Fear, and wild Confusion fill'd,
He turns the Hindges of the Heavy Gate
With both his Hands; and adds his Shoulders to the weight.
Some happier Friends, within the Walls inclos'd;
The rest shut out, to certain Death expos'd.
Fool as he was, and frantick in his Care,
T' admit young Turnus , and include the War.
He thrust amid the Crowd, securely bold;
Like a fierce Tyger pent amid the Fold.
Too late his blazing Buckler they descry;
And sparkling Fires that shot from either Eye:
His mighty Members, and his ample Breast,
His ratt'ling Armour, and his Crimson Crest.
 Far from that hated Face the Trojans fly;
All but the Fool who sought his Destiny.
Mad Pandarus steps forth, with Vengeance vow'd
For Bitias 's Death, and threatens thus aloud.
These are not Ardea 's Walls, nor this the Town
Amata proffers with Lavinia 's Crown:
'Tis hostile Earth you tread; of hope bereft,
No means of safe Return by flight are left.
To whom with Count'nance calm, and Soul sedate,
Thus Turnus : Then begin; and try thy Fate:
My Message to the Ghost of Priam bear,
Tell him a new Achilles sent thee there.
 A Lance of tough ground-Ash the Trojan threw,
Rough in the Rind, and knotted as it grew,
With his full force he whirl'd it first around;
But the soft yielding Air receiv'd the wound:
Imperial Juno turn'd the Course before;
And fix'd the wand'ring Weapon in the door.
 But hope not thou, said Turnus , when I strike,
To shun thy Fate, our Force is not alike:
Nor thy Steel temper'd by the Lemnian God:
Then rising, on his utmost stretch he stood:
And aim'd from high: the full descending blow
Cleaves the broad Front, and beardless Cheeks in two:
Down sinks the Giant with a thund'ring sound,
His pond'rous Limbs oppress the trembling ground;
Blood, Brains, and Foam, gush from the gaping Wound.
Scalp, Face, and Shoulders, the keen Steel divides;
And the shar'd Visage hangs on equal sides.
The Trojans fly from their approaching Fate:
And had the Victor then secur'd the Gate,
And, to his Troops without, unclos'd the Barrs;
One lucky Day had ended all his Wars.
But boiling Youth, and blind Desire of Blood,
Push'd on his Fury, to pursue the Crowd:
Hamstring'd behind unhappy Gyges dy'd;
Then Phalaris is added to his side:
The pointed Jav'lins from the dead he drew,
And their Friends Arms against their Fellows threw.
Strong Halys stands in vain; weak Phlegys flies;
Saturnia , still at hand, new Force and Fire supplies.
Then Halius , Prytanis , Alcander fall;
(Ingag'd against the Foes who scal'd the Wall:)
But whom they fear'd without, they found within:
At last, tho' late, by Linceus he was seen.
He calls new Succours, and assaults the Prince,
But weak his Force, and vain is their Defence.
Turn'd to the right, his Sword the Heroe drew;
And at one blow the bold Aggressor slew.
He joints the Neck: And with a stroke so strong
The Helm flies off; and bears the Head along.
Next him, the Huntsman Amycus he kill'd,
In Darts, invenom'd, and in Poyson skill'd.
Then Clytius fell beneath his fatal Spear,
And Creteus , whom the Muses held so dear:
He fought with Courage, and he sung the fight:
Arms were his buis'ness, Verses his delight.
 The Trojan Chiefs behold, with Rage and Grief,
Their slaughter'd Friends, and hasten their Relief.
Bold Mnestheus rallies first the broken Train,
Whom brave Seresthus , and his Troop sustain.
To save the living, and revenge the dead;
Against one Warriour's Arms all Troy they led.
O, void of Sense and Courage, Mnestheus cry'd,
Where can you hope your Coward Heads to hide?
Ah, where beyond these Rampires can you run!
One Man, and in your Camp inclos'd, you shun!
Shall then a single Sword such Slaughter boast,
And pass unpunish'd from a Num'rous Hoast?
Forsaking Honour, and renouncing Fame,
Your Gods, your Country, and your King you shame.
 This just Reproach their Vertue does excite,
They stand, they joyn, they thicken to the Fight.
 Now Turnus doubts, and yet disdains to yield;
But with slow paces measures back the Field.
And Inches to the Walls, where Tyber 's Tide,
Washing the Camp, defends the weaker side.
The more he loses, they advance the more;
And tread in ev'ry Step he trod before.
They shout, they bear him back, and whom by Might
They cannot Conquer, they oppress with Weight.
 As compass'd with a Wood of Spears around,
The Lordly Lyon, still maintains his Ground;
Grins horrible, retires, and turns again;
Threats his distended Paws, and shakes his Mane;
He loses while in vain he presses on,
Nor will his Courage let him dare to run:
So Turnus fares; and unresolv'd of flight,
Moves tardy back, and just recedes from fight.
Yet twice, inrag'd, the Combat he renews;
Twice breaks, and twice his broken Foes pursues:
But now they swarm; and with fresh Troops supply'd,
Come rowling on, and rush from ev'ry side.
Nor Juno , who sustain'd his Arms before,
Dares with new strength suffice th' exhausted store.
For Jove , with sour Commands, sent Iris down,
To force th' Invader from the frighted Town.
 With Labour spent, no longer can he wield
The heavy Fauchion, or sustain the Shield:
O'rewhelmed with Darts, which from afar they fling,
The Weapons round his hollow Temples ring:
His golden Helm gives way: with stony blows
Batter'd, and flat, and beaten to his Brows.
His Crest is rash'd away; his ample Shield
Is falsify'd, and round with Jav'lins fill'd.
 The Foe now faint, the Trojans overwhelm:
And Mnestheus lays hard load upon his Helm.
Sick sweat succeeds, he drops at ev'ry pore,
With driving Dust his Cheeks are pasted o're.
Shorter and shorter ev'ry Gasp he takes,
And vain Efforts, and hurtless Blows he makes.
Arm'd as he was, at length, he leap'd from high;
Plung'd in the Flood, and made the Waters fly.
The yellow God, the welcome Burthen bore,
And wip'd the Sweat, and wash'd away the Gore:
Then gently wafts him to the farther Coast;
And sends him safe to chear his anxious Hoast.
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Virgil
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