<SPAN name="book04"></SPAN>
<h3> GEORGIC IV<br/> </h3>
<p class="poem">
Of air-born honey, gift of heaven, I now<br/>
Take up the tale. Upon this theme no less<br/>
Look thou, Maecenas, with indulgent eye.<br/>
A marvellous display of puny powers,<br/>
High-hearted chiefs, a nation's history,<br/>
Its traits, its bent, its battles and its clans,<br/>
All, each, shall pass before you, while I sing.<br/>
Slight though the poet's theme, not slight the praise,<br/>
So frown not heaven, and Phoebus hear his call.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">First find your bees a settled sure abode,</SPAN><br/>
Where neither winds can enter (winds blow back<br/>
The foragers with food returning home)<br/>
Nor sheep and butting kids tread down the flowers,<br/>
Nor heifer wandering wide upon the plain<br/>
Dash off the dew, and bruise the springing blades.<br/>
Let the gay lizard too keep far aloof<br/>
His scale-clad body from their honied stalls,<br/>
And the bee-eater, and what birds beside,<br/>
And Procne smirched with blood upon the breast<br/>
From her own murderous hands. For these roam wide<br/>
Wasting all substance, or the bees themselves<br/>
Strike flying, and in their beaks bear home, to glut<br/>
Those savage nestlings with the dainty prey.<br/>
But let clear springs and moss-green pools be near,<br/>
And through the grass a streamlet hurrying run,<br/>
Some palm-tree o'er the porch extend its shade,<br/>
Or huge-grown oleaster, that in Spring,<br/>
Their own sweet Spring-tide, when the new-made chiefs<br/>
Lead forth the young swarms, and, escaped their comb,<br/>
The colony comes forth to sport and play,<br/>
The neighbouring bank may lure them from the heat,<br/>
Or bough befriend with hospitable shade.<br/>
O'er the mid-waters, whether swift or still,<br/>
Cast willow-branches and big stones enow,<br/>
Bridge after bridge, where they may footing find<br/>
And spread their wide wings to the summer sun,<br/>
If haply Eurus, swooping as they pause,<br/>
Have dashed with spray or plunged them in the deep.<br/>
And let green cassias and far-scented thymes,<br/>
And savory with its heavy-laden breath<br/>
Bloom round about, and violet-beds hard by<br/>
Sip sweetness from the fertilizing springs.<br/>
For the hive's self, or stitched of hollow bark,<br/>
Or from tough osier woven, let the doors<br/>
Be strait of entrance; for stiff winter's cold<br/>
Congeals the honey, and heat resolves and thaws,<br/>
To bees alike disastrous; not for naught<br/>
So haste they to cement the tiny pores<br/>
That pierce their walls, and fill the crevices<br/>
With pollen from the flowers, and glean and keep<br/>
To this same end the glue, that binds more fast<br/>
Than bird-lime or the pitch from Ida's pines.<br/>
Oft too in burrowed holes, if fame be true,<br/>
They make their cosy subterranean home,<br/>
And deeply lodged in hollow rocks are found,<br/>
Or in the cavern of an age-hewn tree.<br/>
Thou not the less smear round their crannied cribs<br/>
With warm smooth mud-coat, and strew leaves above;<br/>
But near their home let neither yew-tree grow,<br/>
Nor reddening crabs be roasted, and mistrust<br/>
Deep marish-ground and mire with noisome smell,<br/>
Or where the hollow rocks sonorous ring,<br/>
And the word spoken buffets and rebounds.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">What more? When now the golden sun has put</SPAN><br/>
Winter to headlong flight beneath the world,<br/>
And oped the doors of heaven with summer ray,<br/>
Forthwith they roam the glades and forests o'er,<br/>
Rifle the painted flowers, or sip the streams,<br/>
Light-hovering on the surface. Hence it is<br/>
With some sweet rapture, that we know not of,<br/>
Their little ones they foster, hence with skill<br/>
Work out new wax or clinging honey mould.<br/>
So when the cage-escaped hosts you see<br/>
Float heavenward through the hot clear air, until<br/>
You marvel at yon dusky cloud that spreads<br/>
And lengthens on the wind, then mark them well;<br/>
For then 'tis ever the fresh springs they seek<br/>
And bowery shelter: hither must you bring<br/>
The savoury sweets I bid, and sprinkle them,<br/>
Bruised balsam and the wax-flower's lowly weed,<br/>
And wake and shake the tinkling cymbals heard<br/>
By the great Mother: on the anointed spots<br/>
Themselves will settle, and in wonted wise<br/>
Seek of themselves the cradle's inmost depth.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">But if to battle they have hied them forth-</SPAN><br/>
For oft 'twixt king and king with uproar dire<br/>
Fierce feud arises, and at once from far<br/>
You may discern what passion sways the mob,<br/>
And how their hearts are throbbing for the strife;<br/>
Hark! the hoarse brazen note that warriors know<br/>
Chides on the loiterers, and the ear may catch<br/>
A sound that mocks the war-trump's broken blasts;<br/>
Then in hot haste they muster, then flash wings,<br/>
Sharpen their pointed beaks and knit their thews,<br/>
And round the king, even to his royal tent,<br/>
Throng rallying, and with shouts defy the foe.<br/>
So, when a dry Spring and clear space is given,<br/>
Forth from the gates they burst, they clash on high;<br/>
A din arises; they are heaped and rolled<br/>
Into one mighty mass, and headlong fall,<br/>
Not denselier hail through heaven, nor pelting so<br/>
Rains from the shaken oak its acorn-shower.<br/>
Conspicuous by their wings the chiefs themselves<br/>
Press through the heart of battle, and display<br/>
A giant's spirit in each pigmy frame,<br/>
Steadfast no inch to yield till these or those<br/>
The victor's ponderous arm has turned to flight.<br/>
Such fiery passions and such fierce assaults<br/>
A little sprinkled dust controls and quells.<br/>
And now, both leaders from the field recalled,<br/>
Who hath the worser seeming, do to death,<br/>
Lest royal waste wax burdensome, but let<br/>
His better lord it on the empty throne.<br/>
One with gold-burnished flakes will shine like fire,<br/>
For twofold are their kinds, the nobler he,<br/>
Of peerless front and lit with flashing scales;<br/>
That other, from neglect and squalor foul,<br/>
Drags slow a cumbrous belly. As with kings,<br/>
So too with people, diverse is their mould,<br/>
Some rough and loathly, as when the wayfarer<br/>
Scapes from a whirl of dust, and scorched with heat<br/>
Spits forth the dry grit from his parched mouth:<br/>
The others shine forth and flash with lightning-gleam,<br/>
Their backs all blazoned with bright drops of gold<br/>
Symmetric: this the likelier breed; from these,<br/>
When heaven brings round the season, thou shalt strain<br/>
Sweet honey, nor yet so sweet as passing clear,<br/>
And mellowing on the tongue the wine-god's fire.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">But when the swarms fly aimlessly abroad,</SPAN><br/>
Disport themselves in heaven and spurn their cells,<br/>
Leaving the hive unwarmed, from such vain play<br/>
Must you refrain their volatile desires,<br/>
Nor hard the task: tear off the monarchs' wings;<br/>
While these prove loiterers, none beside will dare<br/>
Mount heaven, or pluck the standards from the camp.<br/>
Let gardens with the breath of saffron flowers<br/>
Allure them, and the lord of Hellespont,<br/>
Priapus, wielder of the willow-scythe,<br/>
Safe in his keeping hold from birds and thieves.<br/>
And let the man to whom such cares are dear<br/>
Himself bring thyme and pine-trees from the heights,<br/>
And strew them in broad belts about their home;<br/>
No hand but his the blistering task should ply,<br/>
Plant the young slips, or shed the genial showers.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">And I myself, were I not even now</SPAN><br/>
Furling my sails, and, nigh the journey's end,<br/>
Eager to turn my vessel's prow to shore,<br/>
Perchance would sing what careful husbandry<br/>
Makes the trim garden smile; of Paestum too,<br/>
Whose roses bloom and fade and bloom again;<br/>
How endives glory in the streams they drink,<br/>
And green banks in their parsley, and how the gourd<br/>
Twists through the grass and rounds him to paunch;<br/>
Nor of Narcissus had my lips been dumb,<br/>
That loiterer of the flowers, nor supple-stemmed<br/>
Acanthus, with the praise of ivies pale,<br/>
And myrtles clinging to the shores they love.<br/>
For 'neath the shade of tall Oebalia's towers,<br/>
Where dark Galaesus laves the yellowing fields,<br/>
An old man once I mind me to have seen-<br/>
From Corycus he came- to whom had fallen<br/>
Some few poor acres of neglected land,<br/>
And they nor fruitful' neath the plodding steer,<br/>
Meet for the grazing herd, nor good for vines.<br/>
Yet he, the while his meagre garden-herbs<br/>
Among the thorns he planted, and all round<br/>
White lilies, vervains, and lean poppy set,<br/>
In pride of spirit matched the wealth of kings,<br/>
And home returning not till night was late,<br/>
With unbought plenty heaped his board on high.<br/>
He was the first to cull the rose in spring,<br/>
He the ripe fruits in autumn; and ere yet<br/>
Winter had ceased in sullen ire to rive<br/>
The rocks with frost, and with her icy bit<br/>
Curb in the running waters, there was he<br/>
Plucking the rathe faint hyacinth, while he chid<br/>
Summer's slow footsteps and the lagging West.<br/>
Therefore he too with earliest brooding bees<br/>
And their full swarms o'erflowed, and first was he<br/>
To press the bubbling honey from the comb;<br/>
Lime-trees were his, and many a branching pine;<br/>
And all the fruits wherewith in early bloom<br/>
The orchard-tree had clothed her, in full tale<br/>
Hung there, by mellowing autumn perfected.<br/>
He too transplanted tall-grown elms a-row,<br/>
Time-toughened pear, thorns bursting with the plum<br/>
And plane now yielding serviceable shade<br/>
For dry lips to drink under: but these things,<br/>
Shut off by rigorous limits, I pass by,<br/>
And leave for others to sing after me.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">Come, then, I will unfold the natural powers</SPAN><br/>
Great Jove himself upon the bees bestowed,<br/>
The boon for which, led by the shrill sweet strains<br/>
Of the Curetes and their clashing brass,<br/>
They fed the King of heaven in Dicte's cave.<br/>
Alone of all things they receive and hold<br/>
Community of offspring, and they house<br/>
Together in one city, and beneath<br/>
The shelter of majestic laws they live;<br/>
And they alone fixed home and country know,<br/>
And in the summer, warned of coming cold,<br/>
Make proof of toil, and for the general store<br/>
Hoard up their gathered harvesting. For some<br/>
Watch o'er the victualling of the hive, and these<br/>
By settled order ply their tasks afield;<br/>
And some within the confines of their home<br/>
Plant firm the comb's first layer, Narcissus' tear,<br/>
And sticky gum oozed from the bark of trees,<br/>
Then set the clinging wax to hang therefrom.<br/>
Others the while lead forth the full-grown young,<br/>
Their country's hope, and others press and pack<br/>
The thrice repured honey, and stretch their cells<br/>
To bursting with the clear-strained nectar sweet.<br/>
Some, too, the wardship of the gates befalls,<br/>
Who watch in turn for showers and cloudy skies,<br/>
Or ease returning labourers of their load,<br/>
Or form a band and from their precincts drive<br/>
The drones, a lazy herd. How glows the work!<br/>
How sweet the honey smells of perfumed thyme<br/>
Like the Cyclopes, when in haste they forge<br/>
From the slow-yielding ore the thunderbolts,<br/>
Some from the bull's-hide bellows in and out<br/>
Let the blasts drive, some dip i' the water-trough<br/>
The sputtering metal: with the anvil's weight<br/>
Groans Etna: they alternately in time<br/>
With giant strength uplift their sinewy arms,<br/>
Or twist the iron with the forceps' grip-<br/>
Not otherwise, to measure small with great,<br/>
The love of getting planted in their breasts<br/>
Goads on the bees, that haunt old Cecrops' heights,<br/>
Each in his sphere to labour. The old have charge<br/>
To keep the town, and build the walled combs,<br/>
And mould the cunning chambers; but the youth,<br/>
Their tired legs packed with thyme, come labouring home<br/>
Belated, for afar they range to feed<br/>
On arbutes and the grey-green willow-leaves,<br/>
And cassia and the crocus blushing red,<br/>
Glue-yielding limes, and hyacinths dusky-eyed.<br/>
One hour for rest have all, and one for toil:<br/>
With dawn they hurry from the gates- no room<br/>
For loiterers there: and once again, when even<br/>
Now bids them quit their pasturing on the plain,<br/>
Then homeward make they, then refresh their strength:<br/>
A hum arises: hark! they buzz and buzz<br/>
About the doors and threshold; till at length<br/>
Safe laid to rest they hush them for the night,<br/>
And welcome slumber laps their weary limbs.<br/>
But from the homestead not too far they fare,<br/>
When showers hang like to fall, nor, east winds nigh,<br/>
Confide in heaven, but 'neath the city walls<br/>
Safe-circling fetch them water, or essay<br/>
Brief out-goings, and oft weigh-up tiny stones,<br/>
As light craft ballast in the tossing tide,<br/>
Wherewith they poise them through the cloudy vast.<br/>
This law of life, too, by the bees obeyed,<br/>
Will move thy wonder, that nor sex with sex<br/>
Yoke they in marriage, nor yield their limbs to love,<br/>
Nor know the pangs of labour, but alone<br/>
From leaves and honied herbs, the mothers, each,<br/>
Gather their offspring in their mouths, alone<br/>
Supply new kings and pigmy commonwealth,<br/>
And their old court and waxen realm repair.<br/>
Oft, too, while wandering, against jagged stones<br/>
Their wings they fray, and 'neath the burden yield<br/>
Their liberal lives: so deep their love of flowers,<br/>
So glorious deem they honey's proud acquist.<br/>
Therefore, though each a life of narrow span,<br/>
Ne'er stretched to summers more than seven, befalls,<br/>
Yet deathless doth the race endure, and still<br/>
Perennial stands the fortune of their line,<br/>
From grandsire unto grandsire backward told.<br/>
Moreover, not Aegyptus, nor the realm<br/>
Of boundless Lydia, no, nor Parthia's hordes,<br/>
Nor Median Hydaspes, to their king<br/>
Do such obeisance: lives the king unscathed,<br/>
One will inspires the million: is he dead,<br/>
Snapt is the bond of fealty; they themselves<br/>
Ravage their toil-wrought honey, and rend amain<br/>
Their own comb's waxen trellis. He is the lord<br/>
Of all their labour; him with awful eye<br/>
They reverence, and with murmuring throngs surround,<br/>
In crowds attend, oft shoulder him on high,<br/>
Or with their bodies shield him in the fight,<br/>
And seek through showering wounds a glorious death.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">Led by these tokens, and with such traits to guide,</SPAN><br/>
Some say that unto bees a share is given<br/>
Of the Divine Intelligence, and to drink<br/>
Pure draughts of ether; for God permeates all-<br/>
Earth, and wide ocean, and the vault of heaven-<br/>
From whom flocks, herds, men, beasts of every kind,<br/>
Draw each at birth the fine essential flame;<br/>
Yea, and that all things hence to Him return,<br/>
Brought back by dissolution, nor can death<br/>
Find place: but, each into his starry rank,<br/>
Alive they soar, and mount the heights of heaven.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">If now their narrow home thou wouldst unseal,</SPAN><br/>
And broach the treasures of the honey-house,<br/>
With draught of water first toment thy lips,<br/>
And spread before thee fumes of trailing smoke.<br/>
Twice is the teeming produce gathered in,<br/>
Twofold their time of harvest year by year,<br/>
Once when Taygete the Pleiad uplifts<br/>
Her comely forehead for the earth to see,<br/>
With foot of scorn spurning the ocean-streams,<br/>
Once when in gloom she flies the watery Fish,<br/>
And dips from heaven into the wintry wave.<br/>
Unbounded then their wrath; if hurt, they breathe<br/>
Venom into their bite, cleave to the veins<br/>
And let the sting lie buried, and leave their lives<br/>
Behind them in the wound. But if you dread<br/>
Too rigorous a winter, and would fain<br/>
Temper the coming time, and their bruised hearts<br/>
And broken estate to pity move thy soul,<br/>
Yet who would fear to fumigate with thyme,<br/>
Or cut the empty wax away? for oft<br/>
Into their comb the newt has gnawed unseen,<br/>
And the light-loathing beetles crammed their bed,<br/>
And he that sits at others' board to feast,<br/>
The do-naught drone; or 'gainst the unequal foe<br/>
Swoops the fierce hornet, or the moth's fell tribe;<br/>
Or spider, victim of Minerva's spite,<br/>
Athwart the doorway hangs her swaying net.<br/>
The more impoverished they, the keenlier all<br/>
To mend the fallen fortunes of their race<br/>
Will nerve them, fill the cells up, tier on tier,<br/>
And weave their granaries from the rifled flowers.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">Now, seeing that life doth even to bee-folk bring</SPAN><br/>
Our human chances, if in dire disease<br/>
Their bodies' strength should languish- which anon<br/>
By no uncertain tokens may be told-<br/>
Forthwith the sick change hue; grim leanness mars<br/>
Their visage; then from out the cells they bear<br/>
Forms reft of light, and lead the mournful pomp;<br/>
Or foot to foot about the porch they hang,<br/>
Or within closed doors loiter, listless all<br/>
From famine, and benumbed with shrivelling cold.<br/>
Then is a deep note heard, a long-drawn hum,<br/>
As when the chill South through the forests sighs,<br/>
As when the troubled ocean hoarsely booms<br/>
With back-swung billow, as ravening tide of fire<br/>
Surges, shut fast within the furnace-walls.<br/>
Then do I bid burn scented galbanum,<br/>
And, honey-streams through reeden troughs instilled,<br/>
Challenge and cheer their flagging appetite<br/>
To taste the well-known food; and it shall boot<br/>
To mix therewith the savour bruised from gall,<br/>
And rose-leaves dried, or must to thickness boiled<br/>
By a fierce fire, or juice of raisin-grapes<br/>
From Psithian vine, and with its bitter smell<br/>
Centaury, and the famed Cecropian thyme.<br/>
There is a meadow-flower by country folk<br/>
Hight star-wort; 'tis a plant not far to seek;<br/>
For from one sod an ample growth it rears,<br/>
Itself all golden, but girt with plenteous leaves,<br/>
Where glory of purple shines through violet gloom.<br/>
With chaplets woven hereof full oft are decked<br/>
Heaven's altars: harsh its taste upon the tongue;<br/>
Shepherds in vales smooth-shorn of nibbling flocks<br/>
By Mella's winding waters gather it.<br/>
The roots of this, well seethed in fragrant wine,<br/>
Set in brimmed baskets at their doors for food.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">But if one's whole stock fail him at a stroke,</SPAN><br/>
Nor hath he whence to breed the race anew,<br/>
'Tis time the wondrous secret to disclose<br/>
Taught by the swain of Arcady, even how<br/>
The blood of slaughtered bullocks oft has borne<br/>
Bees from corruption. I will trace me back<br/>
To its prime source the story's tangled thread,<br/>
And thence unravel. For where thy happy folk,<br/>
Canopus, city of Pellaean fame,<br/>
Dwell by the Nile's lagoon-like overflow,<br/>
And high o'er furrows they have called their own<br/>
Skim in their painted wherries; where, hard by,<br/>
The quivered Persian presses, and that flood<br/>
Which from the swart-skinned Aethiop bears him down,<br/>
Swift-parted into sevenfold branching mouths<br/>
With black mud fattens and makes Aegypt green,<br/>
That whole domain its welfare's hope secure<br/>
Rests on this art alone. And first is chosen<br/>
A strait recess, cramped closer to this end,<br/>
Which next with narrow roof of tiles atop<br/>
'Twixt prisoning walls they pinch, and add hereto<br/>
From the four winds four slanting window-slits.<br/>
Then seek they from the herd a steer, whose horns<br/>
With two years' growth are curling, and stop fast,<br/>
Plunge madly as he may, the panting mouth<br/>
And nostrils twain, and done with blows to death,<br/>
Batter his flesh to pulp i' the hide yet whole,<br/>
And shut the doors, and leave him there to lie.<br/>
But 'neath his ribs they scatter broken boughs,<br/>
With thyme and fresh-pulled cassias: this is done<br/>
When first the west winds bid the waters flow,<br/>
Ere flush the meadows with new tints, and ere<br/>
The twittering swallow buildeth from the beams.<br/>
Meanwhile the juice within his softened bones<br/>
Heats and ferments, and things of wondrous birth,<br/>
Footless at first, anon with feet and wings,<br/>
Swarm there and buzz, a marvel to behold;<br/>
And more and more the fleeting breeze they take,<br/>
Till, like a shower that pours from summer-clouds,<br/>
Forth burst they, or like shafts from quivering string<br/>
When Parthia's flying hosts provoke the fray.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">Say what was he, what God, that fashioned forth</SPAN><br/>
This art for us, O Muses? of man's skill<br/>
Whence came the new adventure? From thy vale,<br/>
Peneian Tempe, turning, bee-bereft,<br/>
So runs the tale, by famine and disease,<br/>
Mournful the shepherd Aristaeus stood<br/>
Fast by the haunted river-head, and thus<br/>
With many a plaint to her that bare him cried:<br/>
"Mother, Cyrene, mother, who hast thy home<br/>
Beneath this whirling flood, if he thou sayest,<br/>
Apollo, lord of Thymbra, be my sire,<br/>
Sprung from the Gods' high line, why barest thou me<br/>
With fortune's ban for birthright? Where is now<br/>
Thy love to me-ward banished from thy breast?<br/>
O! wherefore didst thou bid me hope for heaven?<br/>
Lo! even the crown of this poor mortal life,<br/>
Which all my skilful care by field and fold,<br/>
No art neglected, scarce had fashioned forth,<br/>
Even this falls from me, yet thou call'st me son.<br/>
Nay, then, arise! With thine own hands pluck up<br/>
My fruit-plantations: on the homestead fling<br/>
Pitiless fire; make havoc of my crops;<br/>
Burn the young plants, and wield the stubborn axe<br/>
Against my vines, if there hath taken the<br/>
Such loathing of my greatness." But that cry,<br/>
Even from her chamber in the river-deeps,<br/>
His mother heard: around her spun the nymphs<br/>
Milesian wool stained through with hyaline dye,<br/>
Drymo, Xantho, Ligea, Phyllodoce,<br/>
Their glossy locks o'er snowy shoulders shed,<br/>
Cydippe and Lycorias yellow-haired,<br/>
A maiden one, one newly learned even then<br/>
To bear Lucina's birth-pang. Clio, too,<br/>
And Beroe, sisters, ocean-children both,<br/>
Both zoned with gold and girt with dappled fell,<br/>
Ephyre and Opis, and from Asian meads<br/>
Deiopea, and, bow at length laid by,<br/>
Fleet-footed Arethusa. But in their midst<br/>
Fair Clymene was telling o'er the tale<br/>
Of Vulcan's idle vigilance and the stealth<br/>
Of Mars' sweet rapine, and from Chaos old<br/>
Counted the jostling love-joys of the Gods.<br/>
Charmed by whose lay, the while their woolly tasks<br/>
With spindles down they drew, yet once again<br/>
Smote on his mother's ears the mournful plaint<br/>
Of Aristaeus; on their glassy thrones<br/>
Amazement held them all; but Arethuse<br/>
Before the rest put forth her auburn head,<br/>
Peering above the wave-top, and from far<br/>
Exclaimed, "Cyrene, sister, not for naught<br/>
Scared by a groan so deep, behold! 'tis he,<br/>
Even Aristaeus, thy heart's fondest care,<br/>
Here by the brink of the Peneian sire<br/>
Stands woebegone and weeping, and by name<br/>
Cries out upon thee for thy cruelty."<br/>
To whom, strange terror knocking at her heart,<br/>
"Bring, bring him to our sight," the mother cried;<br/>
"His feet may tread the threshold even of Gods."<br/>
So saying, she bids the flood yawn wide and yield<br/>
A pathway for his footsteps; but the wave<br/>
Arched mountain-wise closed round him, and within<br/>
Its mighty bosom welcomed, and let speed<br/>
To the deep river-bed. And now, with eyes<br/>
Of wonder gazing on his mother's hall<br/>
And watery kingdom and cave-prisoned pools<br/>
And echoing groves, he went, and, stunned by that<br/>
Stupendous whirl of waters, separate saw<br/>
All streams beneath the mighty earth that glide,<br/>
Phasis and Lycus, and that fountain-head<br/>
Whence first the deep Enipeus leaps to light,<br/>
Whence father Tiber, and whence Anio's flood,<br/>
And Hypanis that roars amid his rocks,<br/>
And Mysian Caicus, and, bull-browed<br/>
'Twixt either gilded horn, Eridanus,<br/>
Than whom none other through the laughing plains<br/>
More furious pours into the purple sea.<br/>
Soon as the chamber's hanging roof of stone<br/>
Was gained, and now Cyrene from her son<br/>
Had heard his idle weeping, in due course<br/>
Clear water for his hands the sisters bring,<br/>
With napkins of shorn pile, while others heap<br/>
The board with dainties, and set on afresh<br/>
The brimming goblets; with Panchaian fires<br/>
Upleap the altars; then the mother spake,<br/>
"Take beakers of Maconian wine," she said,<br/>
"Pour we to Ocean." Ocean, sire of all,<br/>
She worships, and the sister-nymphs who guard<br/>
The hundred forests and the hundred streams;<br/>
Thrice Vesta's fire with nectar clear she dashed,<br/>
Thrice to the roof-top shot the flame and shone:<br/>
Armed with which omen she essayed to speak:<br/>
"In Neptune's gulf Carpathian dwells a seer,<br/>
Caerulean Proteus, he who metes the main<br/>
With fish-drawn chariot of two-footed steeds;<br/>
Now visits he his native home once more,<br/>
Pallene and the Emathian ports; to him<br/>
We nymphs do reverence, ay, and Nereus old;<br/>
For all things knows the seer, both those which are<br/>
And have been, or which time hath yet to bring;<br/>
So willed it Neptune, whose portentous flocks,<br/>
And loathly sea-calves 'neath the surge he feeds.<br/>
Him first, my son, behoves thee seize and bind<br/>
That he may all the cause of sickness show,<br/>
And grant a prosperous end. For save by force<br/>
No rede will he vouchsafe, nor shalt thou bend<br/>
His soul by praying; whom once made captive, ply<br/>
With rigorous force and fetters; against these<br/>
His wiles will break and spend themselves in vain.<br/>
I, when the sun has lit his noontide fires,<br/>
When the blades thirst, and cattle love the shade,<br/>
Myself will guide thee to the old man's haunt,<br/>
Whither he hies him weary from the waves,<br/>
That thou mayst safelier steal upon his sleep.<br/>
But when thou hast gripped him fast with hand and gyve,<br/>
Then divers forms and bestial semblances<br/>
Shall mock thy grasp; for sudden he will change<br/>
To bristly boar, fell tigress, dragon scaled,<br/>
And tawny-tufted lioness, or send forth<br/>
A crackling sound of fire, and so shake of<br/>
The fetters, or in showery drops anon<br/>
Dissolve and vanish. But the more he shifts<br/>
His endless transformations, thou, my son,<br/>
More straitlier clench the clinging bands, until<br/>
His body's shape return to that thou sawest,<br/>
When with closed eyelids first he sank to sleep."<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">So saying, an odour of ambrosial dew</SPAN><br/>
She sheds around, and all his frame therewith<br/>
Steeps throughly; forth from his trim-combed locks<br/>
Breathed effluence sweet, and a lithe vigour leapt<br/>
Into his limbs. There is a cavern vast<br/>
Scooped in the mountain-side, where wave on wave<br/>
By the wind's stress is driven, and breaks far up<br/>
Its inmost creeks- safe anchorage from of old<br/>
For tempest-taken mariners: therewithin,<br/>
Behind a rock's huge barrier, Proteus hides.<br/>
Here in close covert out of the sun's eye<br/>
The youth she places, and herself the while<br/>
Swathed in a shadowy mist stands far aloof.<br/>
And now the ravening dog-star that burns up<br/>
The thirsty Indians blazed in heaven; his course<br/>
The fiery sun had half devoured: the blades<br/>
Were parched, and the void streams with droughty jaws<br/>
Baked to their mud-beds by the scorching ray,<br/>
When Proteus seeking his accustomed cave<br/>
Strode from the billows: round him frolicking<br/>
The watery folk that people the waste sea<br/>
Sprinkled the bitter brine-dew far and wide.<br/>
Along the shore in scattered groups to feed<br/>
The sea-calves stretch them: while the seer himself,<br/>
Like herdsman on the hills when evening bids<br/>
The steers from pasture to their stall repair,<br/>
And the lambs' bleating whets the listening wolves,<br/>
Sits midmost on the rock and tells his tale.<br/>
But Aristaeus, the foe within his clutch,<br/>
Scarce suffering him compose his aged limbs,<br/>
With a great cry leapt on him, and ere he rose<br/>
Forestalled him with the fetters; he nathless,<br/>
All unforgetful of his ancient craft,<br/>
Transforms himself to every wondrous thing,<br/>
Fire and a fearful beast, and flowing stream.<br/>
But when no trickery found a path for flight,<br/>
Baffled at length, to his own shape returned,<br/>
With human lips he spake, "Who bade thee, then,<br/>
So reckless in youth's hardihood, affront<br/>
Our portals? or what wouldst thou hence?"- But he,<br/>
"Proteus, thou knowest, of thine own heart thou knowest;<br/>
For thee there is no cheating, but cease thou<br/>
To practise upon me: at heaven's behest<br/>
I for my fainting fortunes hither come<br/>
An oracle to ask thee." There he ceased.<br/>
Whereat the seer, by stubborn force constrained,<br/>
Shot forth the grey light of his gleaming eyes<br/>
Upon him, and with fiercely gnashing teeth<br/>
Unlocks his lips to spell the fates of heaven:<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">"Doubt not 'tis wrath divine that plagues thee thus,</SPAN><br/>
Nor light the debt thou payest; 'tis Orpheus' self,<br/>
Orpheus unhappy by no fault of his,<br/>
So fates prevent not, fans thy penal fires,<br/>
Yet madly raging for his ravished bride.<br/>
She in her haste to shun thy hot pursuit<br/>
Along the stream, saw not the coming death,<br/>
Where at her feet kept ward upon the bank<br/>
In the tall grass a monstrous water-snake.<br/>
But with their cries the Dryad-band her peers<br/>
Filled up the mountains to their proudest peaks:<br/>
Wailed for her fate the heights of Rhodope,<br/>
And tall Pangaea, and, beloved of Mars,<br/>
The land that bowed to Rhesus, Thrace no less<br/>
With Hebrus' stream; and Orithyia wept,<br/>
Daughter of Acte old. But Orpheus' self,<br/>
Soothing his love-pain with the hollow shell,<br/>
Thee his sweet wife on the lone shore alone,<br/>
Thee when day dawned and when it died he sang.<br/>
Nay to the jaws of Taenarus too he came,<br/>
Of Dis the infernal palace, and the grove<br/>
Grim with a horror of great darkness- came,<br/>
Entered, and faced the Manes and the King<br/>
Of terrors, the stone heart no prayer can tame.<br/>
Then from the deepest deeps of Erebus,<br/>
Wrung by his minstrelsy, the hollow shades<br/>
Came trooping, ghostly semblances of forms<br/>
Lost to the light, as birds by myriads hie<br/>
To greenwood boughs for cover, when twilight-hour<br/>
Or storms of winter chase them from the hills;<br/>
Matrons and men, and great heroic frames<br/>
Done with life's service, boys, unwedded girls,<br/>
Youths placed on pyre before their fathers' eyes.<br/>
Round them, with black slime choked and hideous weed,<br/>
Cocytus winds; there lies the unlovely swamp<br/>
Of dull dead water, and, to pen them fast,<br/>
Styx with her ninefold barrier poured between.<br/>
Nay, even the deep Tartarean Halls of death<br/>
Stood lost in wonderment, and the Eumenides,<br/>
Their brows with livid locks of serpents twined;<br/>
Even Cerberus held his triple jaws agape,<br/>
And, the wind hushed, Ixion's wheel stood still.<br/>
And now with homeward footstep he had passed<br/>
All perils scathless, and, at length restored,<br/>
Eurydice to realms of upper air<br/>
Had well-nigh won, behind him following-<br/>
So Proserpine had ruled it- when his heart<br/>
A sudden mad desire surprised and seized-<br/>
Meet fault to be forgiven, might Hell forgive.<br/>
For at the very threshold of the day,<br/>
Heedless, alas! and vanquished of resolve,<br/>
He stopped, turned, looked upon Eurydice<br/>
His own once more. But even with the look,<br/>
Poured out was all his labour, broken the bond<br/>
Of that fell tyrant, and a crash was heard<br/>
Three times like thunder in the meres of hell.<br/>
'Orpheus! what ruin hath thy frenzy wrought<br/>
On me, alas! and thee? Lo! once again<br/>
The unpitying fates recall me, and dark sleep<br/>
Closes my swimming eyes. And now farewell:<br/>
Girt with enormous night I am borne away,<br/>
Outstretching toward thee, thine, alas! no more,<br/>
These helpless hands.' She spake, and suddenly,<br/>
Like smoke dissolving into empty air,<br/>
Passed and was sundered from his sight; nor him<br/>
Clutching vain shadows, yearning sore to speak,<br/>
Thenceforth beheld she, nor no second time<br/>
Hell's boatman brooks he pass the watery bar.<br/>
What should he do? fly whither, twice bereaved?<br/>
Move with what tears the Manes, with what voice<br/>
The Powers of darkness? She indeed even now<br/>
Death-cold was floating on the Stygian barge!<br/>
For seven whole months unceasingly, men say,<br/>
Beneath a skyey crag, by thy lone wave,<br/>
Strymon, he wept, and in the caverns chill<br/>
Unrolled his story, melting tigers' hearts,<br/>
And leading with his lay the oaks along.<br/>
As in the poplar-shade a nightingale<br/>
Mourns her lost young, which some relentless swain,<br/>
Spying, from the nest has torn unfledged, but she<br/>
Wails the long night, and perched upon a spray<br/>
With sad insistence pipes her dolorous strain,<br/>
Till all the region with her wrongs o'erflows.<br/>
No love, no new desire, constrained his soul:<br/>
By snow-bound Tanais and the icy north,<br/>
Far steppes to frost Rhipaean forever wed,<br/>
Alone he wandered, lost Eurydice<br/>
Lamenting, and the gifts of Dis ungiven.<br/>
Scorned by which tribute the Ciconian dames,<br/>
Amid their awful Bacchanalian rites<br/>
And midnight revellings, tore him limb from limb,<br/>
And strewed his fragments over the wide fields.<br/>
Then too, even then, what time the Hebrus stream,<br/>
Oeagrian Hebrus, down mid-current rolled,<br/>
Rent from the marble neck, his drifting head,<br/>
The death-chilled tongue found yet a voice to cry<br/>
'Eurydice! ah! poor Eurydice!'<br/>
With parting breath he called her, and the banks<br/>
From the broad stream caught up 'Eurydice!'"<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">So Proteus ending plunged into the deep,</SPAN><br/>
And, where he plunged, beneath the eddying whirl<br/>
Churned into foam the water, and was gone;<br/>
But not Cyrene, who unquestioned thus<br/>
Bespake the trembling listener: "Nay, my son,<br/>
From that sad bosom thou mayst banish care:<br/>
Hence came that plague of sickness, hence the nymphs,<br/>
With whom in the tall woods the dance she wove,<br/>
Wrought on thy bees, alas! this deadly bane.<br/>
Bend thou before the Dell-nymphs, gracious powers:<br/>
Bring gifts, and sue for pardon: they will grant<br/>
Peace to thine asking, and an end of wrath.<br/>
But how to approach them will I first unfold-<br/>
Four chosen bulls of peerless form and bulk,<br/>
That browse to-day the green Lycaean heights,<br/>
Pick from thy herds, as many kine to match,<br/>
Whose necks the yoke pressed never: then for these<br/>
Build up four altars by the lofty fanes,<br/>
And from their throats let gush the victims' blood,<br/>
And in the greenwood leave their bodies lone.<br/>
Then, when the ninth dawn hath displayed its beams,<br/>
To Orpheus shalt thou send his funeral dues,<br/>
Poppies of Lethe, and let slay a sheep<br/>
Coal-black, then seek the grove again, and soon<br/>
For pardon found adore Eurydice<br/>
With a slain calf for victim."<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 11.5em">No delay:</SPAN><br/>
The self-same hour he hies him forth to do<br/>
His mother's bidding: to the shrine he came,<br/>
The appointed altars reared, and thither led<br/>
Four chosen bulls of peerless form and bulk,<br/>
With kine to match, that never yoke had known;<br/>
Then, when the ninth dawn had led in the day,<br/>
To Orpheus sent his funeral dues, and sought<br/>
The grove once more. But sudden, strange to tell<br/>
A portent they espy: through the oxen's flesh,<br/>
Waxed soft in dissolution, hark! there hum<br/>
Bees from the belly; the rent ribs overboil<br/>
In endless clouds they spread them, till at last<br/>
On yon tree-top together fused they cling,<br/>
And drop their cluster from the bending boughs.<br/>
<SPAN STYLE="margin-left: 1em">So sang I of the tilth of furrowed fields,</SPAN><br/>
Of flocks and trees, while Caesar's majesty<br/>
Launched forth the levin-bolts of war by deep<br/>
Euphrates, and bare rule o'er willing folk<br/>
Though vanquished, and essayed the heights of heaven.<br/>
I Virgil then, of sweet Parthenope<br/>
The nursling, wooed the flowery walks of peace<br/>
Inglorious, who erst trilled for shepherd-wights<br/>
The wanton ditty, and sang in saucy youth<br/></p>
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