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By Ovid
Translated by Sir Samuel Garth, John Dryden, et al
The Story of Orpheus and Eurydice
Thence,
in his saffron robe, for distant Thrace,
Hymen departs, thro'
air's unmeasur'd space;
By Orpheus call'd, the nuptial Pow'r
attends,
But with ill-omen'd augury descends;
Nor chearful
look'd the God, nor prosp'rous spoke,
Nor blaz'd his torch, but
wept in hissing smoke.
In vain they whirl it round, in vain they
shake,
No rapid motion can its flames awake.
With dread these
inauspicious signs were view'd,
And soon a more disastrous end
ensu'd;
For as the bride, amid the Naiad train,
Ran joyful,
sporting o'er the flow'ry plain,
A venom'd viper bit her as she
pass'd;
Instant she fell, and sudden breath'd her last.
When
long his loss the Thracian had deplor'd,
Not by superior Pow'rs
to be restor'd;
Inflam'd by love, and urg'd by deep despair,
He
leaves the realms of light, and upper air;
Daring to tread the
dark Tenarian road,
And tempt the shades in their obscure abode;
Thro' gliding spectres of th' interr'd to go,
And phantom
people of the world below:
Persephone he seeks, and him who
reigns
O'er ghosts, and Hell's uncomfortable plains.
Arriv'd,
he, tuning to his voice his strings,
Thus to the king and queen
of shadows sings.
Ye Pow'rs, who under Earth your realms
extend,
To whom all mortals must one day descend;
If here
'tis granted sacred truth to tell:
I come not curious to explore
your Hell;
Nor come to boast (by vain ambition fir'd)
How
Cerberus at my approach retir'd.
My wife alone I seek; for her
lov'd sake
These terrors I support, this journey take.
She,
luckless wandring, or by fate mis-led,
Chanc'd on a lurking
viper's crest to tread;
The vengeful beast, enflam'd with fury,
starts,
And thro' her heel his deathful venom darts.
Thus was
she snatch'd untimely to her tomb;
Her growing years cut short,
and springing bloom.
Long I my loss endeavour'd to sustain,
And
strongly strove, but strove, alas, in vain:
At length I yielded,
won by mighty love;
Well known is that omnipotence above!
But
here, I doubt, his unfelt influence fails;
And yet a hope within
my heart prevails.
That here, ev'n here, he has been known of
old;
At least if truth be by tradition told;
If fame of
former rapes belief may find,
You both by love, and love alone,
were join'd.
Now, by the horrors which these realms surround;
By
the vast chaos of these depths profound;
By the sad silence which
eternal reigns
O'er all the waste of these wide-stretching
plains;
Let me again Eurydice receive,
Let Fate her
quick-spun thread of life re-weave.
All our possessions are but
loans from you,
And soon, or late, you must be paid your due;
Hither we haste to human-kind's last seat,
Your endless
empire, and our sure retreat.
She too, when ripen'd years she
shall attain,
Must, of avoidless right, be yours again:
I but
the transient use of that require,
Which soon, too soon, I must
resign entire.
But if the destinies refuse my vow,
And no
remission of her doom allow;
Know, I'm determin'd to return no
more;
So both retain, or both to life restore.
Thus,
while the bard melodiously complains,
And to his lyre accords his
vocal strains,
The very bloodless shades attention keep,
And
silent, seem compassionate to weep;
Ev'n Tantalus his flood
unthirsty views,
Nor flies the stream, nor he the stream pursues;
Ixion's wond'ring wheel its whirl suspends,
And the voracious
vulture, charm'd, attends;
No more the Belides their toil bemoan,
And Sisiphus reclin'd, sits list'ning on his stone.
Then
first ('tis said) by sacred verse subdu'd,
The Furies felt their
cheeks with tears bedew'd:
Nor could the rigid king, or queen of
Hell,
Th' impulse of pity in their hearts repell.
Now,
from a troop of shades that last arriv'd,
Eurydice was call'd,
and stood reviv'd:
Slow she advanc'd, and halting seem to feel
The fatal wound, yet painful in her heel.
Thus he obtains the
suit so much desir'd,
On strict observance of the terms requir'd:
For if, before he reach the realms of air,
He backward cast
his eyes to view the fair,
The forfeit grant, that instant, void
is made,
And she for ever left a lifeless shade.
Now
thro' the noiseless throng their way they bend,
And both with
pain the rugged road ascend;
Dark was the path, and difficult,
and steep,
And thick with vapours from the smoaky deep.
They
well-nigh now had pass'd the bounds of night,
And just approach'd
the margin of the light,
When he, mistrusting lest her steps
might stray,
And gladsome of the glympse of dawning day,
His
longing eyes, impatient, backward cast
To catch a lover's look,
but look'd his last;
For, instant dying, she again descends,
While he to empty air his arms extends.
Again she dy'd, nor
yet her lord reprov'd;
What could she say, but that too well he
lov'd?
One last farewell she spoke, which scarce he heard;
So
soon she drop'd, so sudden disappear'd.
All stunn'd he stood,
when thus his wife he view'd
By second Fate, and double death
subdu'd:
Not more amazement by that wretch was shown,
Whom
Cerberus beholding, turn'd to stone;
Nor Olenus cou'd more
astonish'd look,
When on himself Lethaea's fault he took,
His
beauteous wife, who too secure had dar'd
Her face to vye with
Goddesses compar'd:
Once join'd by love, they stand united still,
Turn'd to contiguous rocks on Ida's hill.
Now to repass
the Styx in vain he tries,
Charon averse, his pressing suit
denies.
Sev'n days entire, along th' infernal shores,
Disconsolate, the bard Eurydice deplores;
Defil'd with filth
his robe, with tears his cheeks,
No sustenance but grief, and
cares, he seeks:
Of rigid Fate incessant he complains,
And
Hell's inexorable Gods arraigns.
This ended, to high Rhodope he
hastes,
And Haemus' mountain, bleak with northern blasts.
And
now his yearly race the circling sun
Had thrice compleat thro'
wat'ry Pisces run,
Since Orpheus fled the face of womankind,
And
all soft union with the sex declin'd.
Whether his ill success
this change had bred,
Or binding vows made to his former bed;
Whate'er the cause, in vain the nymphs contest,
With rival
eyes to warm his frozen breast:
For ev'ry nymph with love his
lays inspir'd,
But ev'ry nymph repuls'd, with grief retir'd.
A
hill there was, and on that hill a mead,
With verdure thick, but
destitute of shade.
Where, now, the Muse's son no sooner sings,
No sooner strikes his sweet resounding strings.
But distant
groves the flying sounds receive,
And list'ning trees their
rooted stations leave;
Themselves transplanting, all around they
grow,
And various shades their various kinds bestow.
Here,
tall Chaonian oaks their branches spread,
While weeping poplars
there erect their head.
The foodful Esculus here shoots his
leaves,
That turf soft lime-tree, this, fat beach receives;
Here, brittle hazels, lawrels here advance,
And there tough
ash to form the heroe's lance;
Here silver firs with knotless
trunks ascend,
There, scarlet oaks beneath their acorns bend.
That spot admits the hospitable plane,
On this, the maple
grows with clouded grain;
Here, watry willows are with Lotus
seen;
There, tamarisk, and box for ever green.
With double
hue here mirtles grace the ground,
And laurestines, with purple
berries crown'd.
With pliant feet, now, ivies this way wind,
Vines yonder rise, and elms with vines entwin'd.
Wild Ornus
now, the pitch-tree next takes root,
And Arbutus adorn'd with
blushing fruit.
Then easy-bending palms, the victor's prize,
And
pines erect with bristly tops arise.
For Rhea grateful still the
pine remains,
For Atys still some favour she retains;
He once
in human shape her breast had warm'd,
And now is cherish'd, to a
tree transform'd.
The Fable of Cyparissus
Amid
the throng of this promiscuous wood,
With pointed top, the taper
cypress stood;
A tree, which once a youth, and heav'nly fair,
Was of that deity the darling care,
Whose hand adapts, with
equal skill, the strings
To bows with which he kills, and harps
to which he sings.
For heretofore, a mighty stag was bred,
Which on the fertile fields of Caea fed;
In shape and size he
all his kind excell'd,
And to Carthaean nymphs was sacred held.
His beamy head, with branches high display'd,
Afforded to
itself an ample shade;
His horns were gilt, and his smooth neck
was grac'd
With silver collars thick with gems enchas'd:
A
silver boss upon his forehead hung,
And brazen pendants in his
ear-rings rung.
Frequenting houses, he familiar grew,
And
learnt by custom, Nature to subdue;
'Till by degrees, of fear,
and wildness, broke,
Ev'n stranger hands his proffer'd neck might
stroak.
Much was the beast by Caea's youth caress'd,
But
thou, sweet Cyparissus, lov'dst him best:
By thee, to pastures
fresh, he oft was led,
By thee oft water'd at the fountain's
head:
His horns with garlands, now, by thee were ty'd,
And,
now, thou on his back wou'dst wanton ride;
Now here, now there
wou'dst bound along the plains,
Ruling his tender mouth with
purple reins.
'Twas when the summer sun, at noon of day,
Thro' glowing Cancer shot his burning ray,
'Twas then, the
fav'rite stag, in cool retreat,
Had sought a shelter from the
scorching heat;
Along the grass his weary limbs he laid,
Inhaling freshness from the breezy shade:
When Cyparissus
with his pointed dart,
Unknowing, pierc'd him to the panting
heart.
But when the youth, surpriz'd, his error found,
And
saw him dying of the cruel wound,
Himself he would have slain
thro' desp'rate grief:
What said not Phoebus, that might yield
relief!
To cease his mourning, he the boy desir'd,
Or mourn
no more than such a loss requir'd.
But he, incessant griev'd: at
length address'd
To the superior Pow'rs a last request;
Praying,
in expiation of his crime,
Thenceforth to mourn to all succeeding
time.
And now, of blood exhausted he appears,
Drain'd by
a torrent of continual tears;
The fleshy colour in his body
fades,
And a green tincture all his limbs invades;
From his
fair head, where curling locks late hung,
A horrid bush with
bristled branches sprung,
Which stiffning by degrees, its stem
extends,
'Till to the starry skies the spire ascends.
Apollo
sad look'd on, and sighing, cry'd,
Then, be for ever, what thy
pray'r imply'd:
Bemoan'd by me, in others grief excite;
And
still preside at ev'ry fun'ral rite.
Thus the sweet artist in
a wondrous shade
Of verdant trees, which harmony had made,
Encircled sate, with his own triumphs crown'd,
Of listning
birds, and savages around.
Again the trembling strings he
dext'rous tries,
Again from discord makes soft musick rise.
Then
tunes his voice: O Muse, from whom I sprung,
Jove be my theme,
and thou inspire my song.
To Jove my grateful voice I oft have
rais'd,
Oft his almighty pow'r with pleasure prais'd.
I sung
the giants in a solemn strain,
Blasted, and thunder-struck on
Phlegra's plain.
Now be my lyre in softer accents mov'd,
To
sing of blooming boys by Gods belov'd;
And to relate what
virgins, void of shame,
Have suffer'd vengeance for a lawless
flame.
The King of Gods once felt the burning joy,
And
sigh'd for lovely Ganimede of Troy:
Long was he puzzled to assume
a shape
Most fit, and expeditious for the rape;
A bird's was
proper, yet he scorns to wear
Any but that which might his
thunder bear.
Down with his masquerading wings he flies,
And
bears the little Trojan to the skies;
Where now, in robes of
heav'nly purple drest,
He serves the nectar at th' Almighty's
feast,
To slighted Juno an unwelcome guest.
Hyacinthus
transform'd into a Flower
Phoebus for thee too, Hyacinth,
design'd
A place among the Gods, had Fate been kind:
Yet this
he gave; as oft as wintry rains
Are past, and vernal breezes
sooth the plains,
From the green turf a purple flow'r you rise,
And with your fragrant breath perfume the skies.
You when
alive were Phoebus' darling boy;
In you he plac'd his Heav'n, and
fix'd his joy:
Their God the Delphic priests consult in vain;
Eurotas now he loves, and Sparta's plain:
His hands the use
of bow and harp forget,
And hold the dogs, or bear the corded
net;
O'er hanging cliffs swift he pursues the game;
Each hour
his pleasure, each augments his flame.
The mid-day sun now
shone with equal light
Between the past, and the succeeding
night;
They strip, then, smooth'd with suppling oyl, essay
To
pitch the rounded quoit, their wonted play:
A well-pois'd disk
first hasty Phoebus threw,
It cleft the air, and whistled as it
flew;
It reach'd the mark, a most surprizing length;
Which
spoke an equal share of art, and strength.
Scarce was it fall'n,
when with too eager hand
Young Hyacinth ran to snatch it from the
sand;
But the curst orb, which met a stony soil,
Flew in his
face with violent recoil.
Both faint, both pale, and breathless
now appear,
The boy with pain, the am'rous God with fear.
He
ran, and rais'd him bleeding from the ground,
Chafes his cold
limbs, and wipes the fatal wound:
Then herbs of noblest juice in
vain applies;
The wound is mortal, and his skill defies.
As
in a water'd garden's blooming walk,
When some rude hand has
bruis'd its tender stalk,
A fading lilly droops its languid head,
And bends to earth, its life, and beauty fled:
So Hyacinth,
with head reclin'd, decays,
And, sickning, now no more his charms
displays.
O thou art gone, my boy, Apollo cry'd,
Defrauded
of thy youth in all its pride!
Thou, once my joy, art all my
sorrow now;
And to my guilty hand my grief I owe.
Yet from my
self I might the fault remove,
Unless to sport, and play, a fault
should prove,
Unless it too were call'd a fault to love.
Oh
cou'd I for thee, or but with thee, dye!
But cruel Fates to me
that pow'r deny.
Yet on my tongue thou shalt for ever dwell;
Thy
name my lyre shall sound, my verse shall tell;
And to a flow'r
transform'd, unheard-of yet,
Stamp'd on thy leaves my cries thou
shalt repeat.
The time shall come, prophetick I foreknow,
When,
joyn'd to thee, a mighty chief shall grow,
And with my plaints
his name thy leaf shall show.
While Phoebus thus the laws of
Fate reveal'd,
Behold, the blood which stain'd the verdant field,
Is blood no longer; but a flow'r full blown,
Far brighter
than the Tyrian scarlet shone.
A lilly's form it took; its purple
hue
Was all that made a diff'rence to the view,
Nor stop'd he
here; the God upon its leaves
The sad expression of his sorrow
weaves;
And to this hour the mournful purple wears
Ai, Ai,
inscrib'd in funeral characters.
Nor are the Spartans, who so
much are fam'd
For virtue, of their Hyacinth asham'd;
But
still with pompous woe, and solemn state,
The Hyacinthian feasts
they yearly celebrate
The Transformations of the Cerastae
and Propoetides
Enquire of Amathus, whose wealthy ground
With veins of every metal does abound,
If she to her
Propoetides wou'd show,
The honour Sparta does to him allow?
Nor
more, she'd say, such wretches wou'd we grace,
Than those whose
crooked horns deform'd their face,
From thence Cerastae call'd,
an impious race:
Before whose gates a rev'rend altar stood,
To
Jove inscrib'd, the hospitable God:
This had some stranger seen
with gore besmear'd,
The blood of lambs, and bulls it had
appear'd:
Their slaughter'd guests it was; nor flock nor herd.
Venus these barb'rous sacrifices view'd
With just
abhorrence, and with wrath pursu'd:
At first, to punish such
nefarious crimes,
Their towns she meant to leave, her once-lov'd
climes:
But why, said she, for their offence shou'd I
My dear
delightful plains, and cities fly?
No, let the impious people,
who have sinn'd,
A punishment in death, or exile, find:
If
death, or exile too severe be thought,
Let them in some vile
shape bemoan their fault.
While next her mind a proper form
employs,
Admonish'd by their horns, she fix'd her choice.
Their
former crest remains upon their heads,
And their strong limbs an
ox's shape invades.
The blasphemous Propoetides deny'd
Worship of Venus, and her pow'r defy'd:
But soon that pow'r
they felt, the first that sold
Their lewd embraces to the world
for gold.
Unknowing how to blush, and shameless grown,
A
small transition changes them to stone.
The Story of
Pygmalion and the Statue
Pygmalion loathing their
lascivious life,
Abhorr'd all womankind, but most a wife:
So
single chose to live, and shunn'd to wed,
Well pleas'd to want a
consort of his bed.
Yet fearing idleness, the nurse of ill,
In
sculpture exercis'd his happy skill;
And carv'd in iv'ry such a
maid, so fair,
As Nature could not with his art compare,
Were
she to work; but in her own defence
Must take her pattern here,
and copy hence.
Pleas'd with his idol, he commends, admires,
Adores; and last, the thing ador'd, desires.
A very virgin in
her face was seen,
And had she mov'd, a living maid had been:
One wou'd have thought she cou'd have stirr'd, but strove
With
modesty, and was asham'd to move.
Art hid with art, so well
perform'd the cheat,
It caught the carver with his own deceit:
He knows 'tis madness, yet he must adore,
And still the more
he knows it, loves the more:
The flesh, or what so seems, he
touches oft,
Which feels so smooth, that he believes it soft.
Fir'd with this thought, at once he strain'd the breast,
And
on the lips a burning kiss impress'd.
'Tis true, the harden'd
breast resists the gripe,
And the cold lips return a kiss unripe:
But when, retiring back, he look'd again,
To think it iv'ry,
was a thought too mean:
So wou'd believe she kiss'd, and courting
more,
Again embrac'd her naked body o'er;
And straining hard
the statue, was afraid
His hands had made a dint, and hurt his
maid:
Explor'd her limb by limb, and fear'd to find
So rude a
gripe had left a livid mark behind:
With flatt'ry now he seeks
her mind to move,
And now with gifts (the pow'rful bribes of
love),
He furnishes her closet first; and fills
The crowded
shelves with rarities of shells;
Adds orient pearls, which from
the conchs he drew,
And all the sparkling stones of various hue:
And parrots, imitating human tongue,
And singing-birds in
silver cages hung:
And ev'ry fragrant flow'r, and od'rous green,
Were sorted well, with lumps of amber laid between:
Rich
fashionable robes her person deck,
Pendants her ears, and pearls
adorn her neck:
Her taper'd fingers too with rings are grac'd,
And an embroider'd zone surrounds her slender waste.
Thus
like a queen array'd, so richly dress'd,
Beauteous she shew'd,
but naked shew'd the best.
Then, from the floor, he rais'd a
royal bed,
With cov'rings of Sydonian purple spread:
The
solemn rites perform'd, he calls her bride,
With blandishments
invites her to his side;
And as she were with vital sense
possess'd,
Her head did on a plumy pillow rest.
The feast
of Venus came, a solemn day,
To which the Cypriots due devotion
pay;
With gilded horns the milk-white heifers led,
Slaughter'd
before the sacred altars, bled.
Pygmalion off'ring, first
approach'd the shrine,
And then with pray'rs implor'd the Pow'rs
divine:
Almighty Gods, if all we mortals want,
If all we can
require, be yours to grant;
Make this fair statue mine, he wou'd
have said,
But chang'd his words for shame; and only pray'd,
Give me the likeness of my iv'ry maid.
The golden
Goddess, present at the pray'r,
Well knew he meant th' inanimated
fair,
And gave the sign of granting his desire;
For thrice in
chearful flames ascends the fire.
The youth, returning to his
mistress, hies,
And impudent in hope, with ardent eyes,
And
beating breast, by the dear statue lies.
He kisses her white
lips, renews the bliss,
And looks, and thinks they redden at the
kiss;
He thought them warm before: nor longer stays,
But next
his hand on her hard bosom lays:
Hard as it was, beginning to
relent,
It seem'd, the breast beneath his fingers bent;
He
felt again, his fingers made a print;
'Twas flesh, but flesh so
firm, it rose against the dint:
The pleasing task he fails not to
renew;
Soft, and more soft at ev'ry touch it grew;
Like
pliant wax, when chasing hands reduce
The former mass to form,
and frame for use.
He would believe, but yet is still in pain,
And tries his argument of sense again,
Presses the pulse, and
feels the leaping vein.
Convinc'd, o'erjoy'd, his studied thanks,
and praise,
To her, who made the miracle, he pays:
Then lips
to lips he join'd; now freed from fear,
He found the savour of
the kiss sincere:
At this the waken'd image op'd her eyes,
And
view'd at once the light, and lover with surprize.
The Goddess,
present at the match she made,
So bless'd the bed, such
fruitfulness convey'd,
That ere ten months had sharpen'd either
horn,
To crown their bliss, a lovely boy was born;
Paphos his
name, who grown to manhood, wall'd
The city Paphos, from the
founder call'd.
The Story of of Cinyras and Myrrha
Nor him alone produc'd the fruitful queen;
But Cinyras,
who like his sire had been
A happy prince, had he not been a
sire.
Daughters, and fathers, from my song retire;
I sing of
horror; and could I prevail,
You shou'd not hear, or not believe
my tale.
Yet if the pleasure of my song be such,
That you
will hear, and credit me too much,
Attentive listen to the last
event,
And, with the sin, believe the punishment:
Since
Nature cou'd behold so dire a crime,
I gratulate at least my
native clime,
That such a land, which such a monster bore,
So
far is distant from our Thracian shore.
Let Araby extol her happy
coast,
Her cinamon, and sweet Amomum boast,
Her fragrant
flow'rs, her trees with precious tears,
Her second harvests, and
her double years;
How can the land be call'd so bless'd, that
Myrrha bears?
Nor all her od'rous tears can cleanse her crime;
Her Plant alone deforms the happy clime:
Cupid denies to have
inflam'd thy heart,
Disowns thy love, and vindicates his dart:
Some Fury gave thee those infernal pains,
And shot her
venom'd vipers in thy veins.
To hate thy sire, had merited a
curse;
But such an impious love deserv'd a worse.
The
neighb'ring monarchs, by thy beauty led,
Contend in crowds,
ambitious of thy bed:
The world is at thy choice; except but one,
Except but him, thou canst not chuse, alone.
She knew it too,
the miserable maid,
Ere impious love her better thoughts
betray'd,
And thus within her secret soul she said:
Ah
Myrrha! whither wou'd thy wishes tend?
Ye Gods, ye sacred laws,
my soul defend
From such a crime as all mankind detest,
And
never lodg'd before in human breast!
But is it sin? Or makes my
mind alone
Th' imagin'd sin? For Nature makes it none.
What
tyrant then these envious laws began,
Made not for any other
beast, but Man!
The father-bull his daughter may bestride,
The
horse may make his mother-mare a bride;
What piety forbids the
lusty ram,
Or more salacious goat, to rut their dam?
The hen
is free to wed the chick she bore,
And make a husband, whom she
hatch'd before.
All creatures else are of a happier kind,
Whom
nor ill-natur'd laws from pleasure bind,
Nor thoughts of sin
disturb their peace of mind.
But Man a slave of his own making
lives;
The fool denies himself what Nature gives:
Too-busie
senates, with an over-care,
To make us better than our kind can
bear,
Have dash'd a spice of envy in the laws,
And straining
up too high, have spoil'd the cause.
Yet some wise nations break
their cruel chains,
And own no laws, but those which love
ordains;
Where happy daughters with their sires are join'd,
And
piety is doubly paid in kind.
O that I had been born in such a
clime,
Not here, where 'tis the country makes the crime!
But
whither wou'd my impious fancy stray?
Hence hopes, and ye
forbidden thoughts away!
His worth deserves to kindle my desires,
But with the love, that daughters bear to sires.
Then had not
Cinyras my father been,
What hinder'd Myrrha's hopes to be his
queen?
But the perverseness of my fate is such,
That he's not
mine, because he's mine too much:
Our kindred-blood debars a
better tie;
He might be nearer, were he not so nigh.
Eyes,
and their objects, never must unite;
Some distance is requir'd to
help the sight:
Fain wou'd I travel to some foreign shore,
Never
to see my native country more,
So might I to my self my self
restore;
So might my mind these impious thoughts remove,
And
ceasing to behold, might cease to love.
But stay I must, to feed
my famish'd sight,
To talk, to kiss, and more, if more I might:
More, impious maid! What more canst thou design?
To make a
monstrous mixture in thy line,
And break all statutes human and
divine!
Can'st thou be call'd (to save thy wretched life)
Thy
mother's rival, and thy father's wife?
Confound so many sacred
names in one,
Thy brother's mother! Sister to thy son!
And
fear'st thou not to see th' infernal bands,
Their heads with
snakes; with torches arm'd their hands
Full at thy face th'
avenging brands to bear,
And shake the serpents from their
hissing hair;
But thou in time th' increasing ill controul,
Nor
first debauch the body by the soul;
Secure the sacred quiet of
thy mind,
And keep the sanctions Nature has design'd.
Suppose
I shou'd attempt, th' attempt were vain,
No thoughts like mine,
his sinless soul profane;
Observant of the right: and o that he
Cou'd cure my madness, or be mad like me!
Thus she: but
Cinyras, who daily sees
A crowd of noble suitors at his knees,
Among so many, knew not whom to chuse,
Irresolute to grant,
or to refuse.
But having told their names, enquir'd of her
Who
pleas'd her best, and whom she would prefer.
The blushing maid
stood silent with surprize,
And on her father fix'd her ardent
eyes,
And looking sigh'd, and as she sigh'd, began
Round
tears to shed, that scalded as they ran.
The tender sire, who saw
her blush, and cry,
Ascrib'd it all to maiden modesty,
And
dry'd the falling drops, and yet more kind,
He stroak'd her
cheeks, and holy kisses join'd.
She felt a secret venom fire her
blood,
And found more pleasure, than a daughter shou'd;
And,
ask'd again what lover of the crew
She lik'd the best, she
answer'd, One like you.
Mistaking what she meant, her pious will
He prais'd, and bid her so continue still:
The word of pious
heard, she blush'd with shame
Of secret guilt, and cou'd not bear
the name.
'Twas now the mid of night, when slumbers close
Our eyes, and sooth our cares with soft repose;
But no repose
cou'd wretched Myrrha find,
Her body rouling, as she roul'd her
mind:
Mad with desire, she ruminates her sin,
And wishes all
her wishes o'er again:
Now she despairs, and now resolves to try;
Wou'd not, and wou'd again, she knows not why;
Stops, and
returns; makes, and retracts the vow;
Fain wou'd begin, but
understands not how.
As when a pine is hew'd upon the plains,
And the last mortal stroke alone remains,
Lab'ring in pangs
of death, and threatning all,
This way, and that she nods,
consid'ring where to fall:
So Myrrha's mind, impell'd on either
side,
Takes ev'ry bent, but cannot long abide;
Irresolute on
which she shou'd relie,
At last, unfix'd in all, is only fix'd to
die.
On that sad thought she rests, resolv'd on death,
She
rises, and prepares to choak her breath:
Then while about the
beam her zone she ties,
Dear Cinyras farewell, she softly cries;
For thee I die, and only wish to be
Not hated, when thou
know'st die I for thee:
Pardon the crime, in pity to the cause:
This said, about her neck the noose she draws.
The nurse, who
lay without, her faithful guard,
Though not the words, the
murmurs over-heard;
And sighs, and hollow sounds: surpriz'd with
fright,
She starts, and leaves her bed, and springs a light;
Unlocks the door, and entring out of breath,
The dying saw,
and instruments of death;
She shrieks, she cuts the zone with
trembling haste,
And in her arms her fainting charge embrac'd:
Next (for she now had leisure for her tears),
She weeping
ask'd, in these her blooming years,
What unforeseen misfortune
caus'd her care,
To loath her life, and languish in despair!
The
maid, with down-cast eyes, and mute with grief
For death
unfinish'd, and ill-tim'd relief,
Stood sullen to her suit: the
beldame press'd
The more to know, and bar'd her wither'd breast,
Adjur'd her by the kindly food she drew
From those dry
founts, her secret ill to shew.
Sad Myrrha sigh'd, and turn'd her
eyes aside:
The nurse still urg'd, and wou'd not be deny'd:
Nor
only promis'd secresie, but pray'd
She might have leave to give
her offer'd aid.
Good-will, she said, my want of strength
supplies,
And diligence shall give what age denies:
If strong
desires thy mind to fury move,
With charms and med'cines I can
cure thy love:
If envious eyes their hurtuful rays have cast,
More pow'rful verse shall free thee from the blast:
If Heav'n
offended sends thee this disease,
Offended Heav'n with pray'rs we
can appease.
What then remains, that can these cares procure?
Thy house is flourishing, thy fortune sure:
Thy careful
mother yet in health survives,
And, to thy comfort, thy kind
father lives.
The virgin started at her father's name,
And
sigh'd profoundly, conscious of the shame
Nor yet the nurse her
impious love divin'd,
But yet surmis'd that love disturb'd her
mind:
Thus thinking, she pursu'd her point, and laid,
And
lull'd within her lap the mourning maid;
Then softly sooth'd her
thus; I guess your grief:
You love, my child; your love shall
find relief.
My long-experienc'd age shall be your guide;
Rely
on that, and lay distrust aside.
No breath of air shall on the
secret blow,
Nor shall (what most you fear) your father know.
Struck once again, as with a thunder-clap,
The guilty virgin
bounded from her lap,
And threw her body prostrate on the bed.
And, to conceal her blushes, hid her head;
There silent lay,
and warn'd her with her hand
To go: but she receiv'd not the
command;
Remaining still importunate to know:
Then Myrrha
thus: Or ask no more, or go;
I pr'ythee go, or staying spare my
shame;
What thou would'st hear, is impious ev'n to name.
At
this, on high the beldame holds her hands,
And trembling both
with age, and terror stands;
Adjures, and falling at her feet
intreats,
Sooths her with blandishments, and frights with
threats,
To tell the crime intended, or disclose
What part of
it she knew, if she no farther knows.
And last, if conscious to
her counsel made,
Confirms anew the promise of her aid.
Now
Myrrha rais'd her head; but soon oppress'd
With shame, reclin'd
it on her nurse's breast;
Bath'd it with tears, and strove to
have confess'd:
Twice she began, and stopp'd; again she try'd;
The falt'ring tongue its office still deny'd.
At last her
veil before her face she spread,
And drew a long preluding sigh,
and said,
O happy mother, in thy marriage-bed!
Then groan'd,
and ceas'd. The good old woman shook,
Stiff were her eyes, and
ghastly was her look:
Her hoary hair upright with horror stood,
Made (to her grief) more knowing than she wou'd.
Much she
reproach'd, and many things she said,
To cure the madness of th'
unhappy maid,
In vain: for Myrrha stood convict of ill;
Her
reason vanquish'd, but unchang'd her will:
Perverse of mind,
unable to reply;
She stood resolv'd, or to possess, or die.
At
length the fondness of a nurse prevail'd
Against her better
sense, and virtue fail'd:
Enjoy, my child, since such is thy
desire,
Thy love, she said; she durst not say, thy sire:
Live,
though unhappy, live on any terms;
Then with a second oath her
faith confirms.
The solemn feast of Ceres now was near,
When
long white linnen stoles the matrons wear;
Rank'd in procession
walk the pious train,
Off'ring first-fruits, and spikes of yellow
grain:
For nine long nights the nuptial-bed they shun,
And
sanctifying harvest, lie alone.
Mix'd with the crowd, the
queen forsook her lord,
And Ceres' pow'r with secret rites
ador'd:
The royal couch, now vacant for a time,
The crafty
crone, officious in her crime,
The first occasion took: the king
she found
Easie with wine, and deep in pleasures drown'd,
Prepar'd for love: the beldame blew the flame,
Confess'd the
passion, but conceal'd the name.
Her form she prais'd; the
monarch ask'd her years;
And she reply'd, The same thy Myrrha
bears.
Wine, and commended beauty fir'd his thought;
Impatient,
he commands her to be brought.
Pleas'd with her charge perform'd,
she hies her home,
And gratulates the nymph, the task was
overcome.
Myrrha was joy'd the welcome news to hear;
But
clog'd with guilt, the joy was unsincere:
So various, so
discordant is the mind,
That in our will a diff'rent will we
find.
Ill she presag'd, and yet pursu'd her lust;
For guilty
pleasures give a double gust.
'Twas depth of night:
Arctophylax had driv'n
His lazy wain half round the northern
Heav'n,
When Myrrha hasten'd to the crime desir'd:
The moon
beheld her first, and first retir'd:
The stars amaz'd, ran
backward from the sight,
And (shrunk within their sockets) lost
their light.
Icarius first withdraws his holy flame:
The
virgin sign, in Heav'n the second name,
Slides down the belt, and
from her station flies,
And night with sable clouds involves the
skies.
Bold Myrrha still pursues her black intent;
She
stumbled thrice (an omen of th' event);
Thrice shriek'd the
fun'ral owl, yet on she went,
Secure of shame, because secure of
sight;
Ev'n bashful sins are impudent by night.
Link'd hand
in hand, th' accomplice, and the dame,
Their way exploring, to
the chamber came:
The door was ope; they blindly grope their way,
Where dark in bed th' expecting monarch lay.
Thus far her
courage held, but here forsakes;
Her faint knees knock at ev'ry
step she makes.
The nearer to her crime, the more within
She
feels remorse, and horror of her sin;
Repents too late her
criminal desire,
And wishes, that unknown she could retire.
Her
lingring thus, the nurse (who fear'd delay
The fatal secret might
at length betray)
Pull'd forward, to compleat the work begun,
And said to Cinyras, Receive thy own.
Thus saying, she
deliver'd kind to kind,
Accurs'd, and their devoted bodies
join'd.
The sire, unknowing of the crime, admits
His bowels,
and prophanes the hallow'd sheets;
He found she trembled, but
believ'd she strove
With maiden modesty against her love,
And
sought with flatt'ring words vain fancies to remove.
Perhaps he
said, My daughter, cease thy fears
(Because the title suited with
her years);
And, Father, she might whisper him again,
That
names might not be wanting to the sin.
Full of her sire, she
left th' incestuous bed,
And carry'd in her womb the crime she
bred.
Another, and another night she came;
For frequent sin
had left no sense of shame:
'Till Cinyras desir'd to see her
face,
Whose body he had held in close embrace,
And brought a
taper; the revealer, light,
Expos'd both crime, and criminal to
sight.
Grief, rage, amazement, could no speech afford,
But
from the sheath he drew th' avenging sword:
The guilty fled: the
benefit of night,
That favour'd first the sin, secur'd the
flight.
Long wand'ring thro' the spacious fields, she bent
Her
voyage to th' Arabian continent;
Then pass'd the region which
Panchaea join'd,
And flying, left the palmy plains behind.
Nine
times the moon had mew'd her horns; at length
With travel weary,
unsupply'd with strength,
And with the burden of her womb
oppress'd,
Sabaean fields afford her needful rest:
There,
loathing life, and yet of death afraid,
In anguish of her spirit,
thus she pray'd:
Ye Pow'rs, if any so propitious are
T'
accept my penitence, and hear my pray'r;
Your judgments, I
confess, are justly sent;
Great sins deserve as great a
punishment:
Yet since my life the living will profane,
And
since my death the happy dead will stain,
A middle state your
mercy may bestow,
Betwixt the realms above, and those below:
Some other form to wretched Myrrha give,
Nor let her wholly
die, nor wholly live.
The pray'rs of penitents are never
vain;
At least she did her last request obtain:
For while she
spoke, the ground began to rise,
And gather'd round her feet, her
legs, and thighs;
Her toes in roots descend, and spreading wide,
A firm foundation for the trunk provide:
Her solid bones
convert to solid wood,
To pith her marrow, and to sap her blood:
Her arms are boughs, her fingers change their kind,
Her
tender skin is harden'd into rind.
And now the rising tree her
womb invests,
Now shooting upwards still, invades her breasts,
And shades the neck; when weary with delay,
She sunk her head
within, and met it half the way.
And tho' with outward shape she
lost her sense,
With bitter tears she wept her last offence;
And
still she weeps, nor sheds her tears in vain;
For still the
precious drops her name retain.
Mean-time the mis-begotten infant
grows,
And ripe for birth, distends with deadly throes
The
swelling rind, with unavailing strife,
To leave the wooden womb,
and pushes into life.
The mother-tree, as if oppress'd with pain,
Writhes here, and there, to break the bark, in vain;
And,
like a lab'ring woman, wou'd have pray'd,
But wants a voice to
call Lucina's aid:
The bending bole sends out a hollow sound,
And trickling tears fall thicker on the ground.
The mild
Lucina came uncall'd, and stood
Beside the struggling boughs, and
heard the groaning wood;
Then reach'd her midwife-hand to speed
the throes,
And spoke the pow'rful spells, that babes to birth
disclose.
The bark divides, the living load to free,
And safe
delivers the convulsive tree.
The ready nymphs receive the crying
child,
And wash him in the tears the parent plant distill'd.
They swath'd him with their scarfs; beneath him spread
The
ground with herbs; with roses rais'd his head.
The lovely babe
was born with ev'ry grace,
Ev'n envy must have prais'd so fair a
face:
Such was his form, as painters when they show
Their
utmost art, on naked loves bestow:
And that their arms no
diff'rence might betray,
Give him a bow, or his from Cupid take
away.
Time glides along with undiscover'd haste,
The future
but a length behind the past;
So swift are years. The babe, whom
just before
His grandsire got, and whom his sister bore;
The
drop, the thing, which late the tree inclos'd,
And late the
yawning bark to life expos'd;
A babe, a boy, a beauteous youth
appears,
And lovelier than himself at riper years.
Now to the
queen of love he gave desires,
And, with her pains, reveng'd his
mother's fires.
The Story of Venus and Adonis
For
Cytherea's lips while Cupid prest,
He with a heedless arrow raz'd
her breast,
The Goddess felt it, and with fury stung,
The
wanton mischief from her bosom flung:
Yet thought at first the
danger slight, but found
The dart too faithful, and too deep the
wound.
Fir'd with a mortal beauty, she disdains
To haunt th'
Idalian mount, or Phrygian plains.
She seeks not Cnidos, nor her
Paphian shrines,
Nor Amathus, that teems with brazen mines:
Ev'n
Heav'n itself with all its sweets unsought,
Adonis far a sweeter
Heav'n is thought.
On him she hangs, and fonds with ev'ry art,
And never, never knows from him to part.
She, whose soft
limbs had only been display'd
On rosie beds beneath the myrtle
shade,
Whose pleasing care was to improve each grace,
And add
more charms to an unrival'd face,
Now buskin'd, like the virgin
huntress, goes
Thro' woods, and pathless wilds, and
mountain-snows
With her own tuneful voice she joys to cheer
The
panting hounds, that chace the flying deer.
She runs the
labyrinth of fearful hares,
But fearless beasts, and dang'rous
prey forbears,
Hunts not the grinning wolf, or foamy boar,
And
trembles at the lion's hungry roar.
Thee too, Adonis, with a
lover's care
She warns, if warn'd thou wou'dst avoid the snare,
To furious animals advance not nigh,
Fly those that follow,
follow those that fly;
'Tis chance alone must the survivors save,
Whene'er brave spirits will attempt the brave.
O! lovely
youth! in harmless sports delight;
Provoke not beasts, which,
arm'd by Nature, fight.
For me, if not thy self, vouchsafe to
fear;
Let not thy thirst of glory cost me dear.
Boars know
not bow to spare a blooming age;
No sparkling eyes can sooth the
lion's rage.
Not all thy charms a savage breast can move,
Which
have so deeply touch'd the queen of love.
When bristled boars
from beaten thickets spring,
In grinded tusks a thunderbolt they
bring.
The daring hunters lions rouz'd devour,
Vast is their
fury, and as vast their pow'r:
Curst be their tawny race! If thou
would'st hear
What kindled thus my hate, then lend an ear:
The
wond'rous tale I will to thee unfold,
How the fell monsters rose
from crimes of old.
But by long toils I faint: see!
wide-display'd,
A grateful poplar courts us with a shade.
The
grassy turf, beneath, so verdant shows,
We may secure
delightfully repose.
With her Adonis here be Venus blest;
And
swift at once the grass and him she prest.
Then sweetly smiling,
with a raptur'd mind,
On his lov'd bosom she her head reclin'd,
And thus began; but mindful still of bliss,
Seal'd the soft
accents with a softer kiss.
Perhaps thou may'st have heard a
virgin's name,
Who still in swiftness swiftest youths o'ercame.
Wondrous! that female weakness should outdo
A manly strength;
the wonder yet is true.
'Twas doubtful, if her triumphs in the
field
Did to her form's triumphant glories yield;
Whether her
face could with more ease decoy
A crowd of lovers, or her feet
destroy.
For once Apollo she implor'd to show
If courteous
Fates a consort would allow:
A consort brings thy ruin, he
reply'd;
O! learn to want the pleasures of a bride!
Nor shalt
thou want them to thy wretched cost,
And Atalanta living shall be
lost.
With such a rueful Fate th' affrighted maid
Sought
green recesses in the wood-land glade.
Nor sighing suiters her
resolves could move,
She bad them show their speed, to show their
love.
He only, who could conquer in the race,
Might hope the
conquer'd virgin to embrace;
While he, whose tardy feet had
lagg'd behind,
Was doom'd the sad reward of death to find.
Tho'
great the prize, yet rigid the decree,
But blind with beauty, who
can rigour see?
Ev'n on these laws the fair they rashly sought,
And danger in excess of love forgot.
There sat
Hippomenes, prepar'd to blame
In lovers such extravagance of
flame.
And must, he said, the blessing of a wife
Be dearly
purchas'd by a risk of life?
But when he saw the wonders of her
face,
And her limbs naked, springing to the race,
Her limbs,
as exquisitely turn'd, as mine,
Or if a woman thou, might vie
with thine,
With lifted hands, he cry'd, forgive the tongue
Which durst, ye youths, your well-tim'd courage wrong.
I knew
not that the nymph, for whom you strove,
Deserv'd th' unbounded
transports of your love.
He saw, admir'd, and thus her spotless
frame
He prais'd, and praising, kindled his own flame.
A
rival now to all the youths who run,
Envious, he fears they
should not be undone.
But why (reflects he) idly thus is shown
The fate of others, yet untry'd my own?
The coward must not
on love's aid depend;
The God was ever to the bold a friend.
Mean-time the virgin flies, or seems to fly,
Swift as a
Scythian arrow cleaves the sky:
Still more and more the youth her
charms admires.
The race itself t' exalt her charms conspires.
The golden pinions, which her feet adorn,
In wanton
flutt'rings by the winds are born.
Down from her head, the long,
fair tresses flow,
And sport with lovely negligence below.
The
waving ribbands, which her buskins tie,
Her snowy skin with
waving purple die;
As crimson veils in palaces display'd,
To
the white marble lend a blushing shade.
Nor long he gaz'd, yet
while he gaz'd, she gain'd
The goal, and the victorious wreath
obtain'd.
The vanquish'd sigh, and, as the law decreed,
Pay
the dire forfeit, and prepare to bleed.
Then rose Hippomenes,
not yet afraid,
And fix'd his eyes full on the beauteous maid.
Where is (he cry'd) the mighty conquest won,
To distance
those, who want the nerves to run?
Here prove superior strength,
nor shall it be
Thy loss of glory, if excell'd by me.
High my
descent, near Neptune I aspire,
For Neptune was grand-parent to
my sire.
From that great God the fourth my self I trace,
Nor
sink my virtues yet beneath my race.
Thou from Hippomenes,
o'ercome, may'st claim
An envy'd triumph, and a deathless fame.
While thus the youth the virgin pow'r defies,
Silent she
views him still with softer eyes.
Thoughts in her breast a
doubtful strife begin,
If 'tis not happier now to lose, than win.
What God, a foe to beauty, would destroy
The promis'd
ripeness of this blooming boy?
With his life's danger does he
seek my bed?
Scarce am I half so greatly worth, she said.
Nor
has his beauty mov'd my breast to love,
And yet, I own, such
beauty well might move:
'Tis not his charms, 'tis pity would
engage
My soul to spare the greenness of his age.
What, that
heroick conrage fires his breast,
And shines thro' brave disdain
of Fate confest?
What, that his patronage by close degrees
Springs from th' imperial ruler of the seas?
Then add the
love, which bids him undertake
The race, and dare to perish for
my sake.
Of bloody nuptials, heedless youth, beware!
Fly,
timely fly from a too barb'rous fair.
At pleasure chuse; thy love
will be repaid
By a less foolish, and more beauteous maid.
But
why this tenderness, before unknown?
Why beats, and pants my
breast for him alone?
His eyes have seen his num'rous rivals
yield;
Let him too share the rigour of the field,
Since, by
their fates untaught, his own he courts,
And thus with ruin
insolently sports.
Yet for what crime shall he his death receive?
Is it a crime with me to wish to live?
Shall his kind passion
his destruction prove?
Is this the fatal recompence of love?
So
fair a youth, destroy'd, would conquest shame,
Aud nymphs
eternally detest my fame.
Still why should nymphs my guiltless
fame upbraid?
Did I the fond adventurer persuade?
Alas! I
wish thou would'st the course decline,
Or that my swiftness was
excell'd by thine.
See! what a virgin's bloom adorns the boy!
Why wilt thou run, and why thy self destroy?
Hippomenes! O
that I ne'er had been
By those bright eyes unfortunately seen!
Ah! tempt not thus a swift, untimely Fate;
Thy life is worthy
of the longest date.
Were I less wretched, did the galling chain
Of rigid Gods not my free choice restrain,
By thee alone I
could with joy be led
To taste the raptures of a nuptial bed.
Thus she disclos'd the woman's secret heart,
Young,
innocent, and new to Cupid's dart.
Her thoughts, her words, her
actions wildly rove,
With love she burns, yet knows not that 'tis
love.
Her royal sire now with the murm'ring crowd
Demands
the race impatiently aloud.
Hippomenes then with true fervour
pray'd,
My bold attempt let Venus kindly aid.
By her sweet
pow'r I felt this am'rous fire,
Still may she succour, whom she
did inspire.
A soft, unenvious wind, with speedy care,
Wafted
to Heav'n the lover's tender pray'r.
Pity, I own, soon gain'd the
wish'd consent,
And all th' assistance he implor'd I lent.
The
Cyprian lands, tho' rich, in richness yield
To that, surnam'd the
Tamasenian field.
That field of old was added to my shrine,
And
its choice products consecrated mine.
A tree there stands, full
glorious to behold,
Gold are the leafs, the crackling branches
gold.
It chanc'd, three apples in my hand I bore,
Which newly
from the tree I sportive tore;
Seen by the youth alone, to him I
brought
The fruit, and when, and how to use it, taught.
The
signal sounding by the king's command,
Both start at once, and
sweep th' imprinted sand.
So swiftly mov'd their feet, they might
with ease,
Scarce moisten'd, skim along the glassy seas;
Or
with a wondrous levity be born
O'er yellow harvests of unbending
corn.
Now fav'ring peals resound from ev'ry part,
Spirit the
youth, and fire his fainting heart.
Hippomenes! (they cry'd) thy
life preserve,
Intensely labour, and stretch ev'ry nerve.
Base
fear alone can baffle thy design,
Shoot boldly onward, and the
goal is thine.
'Tis doubtful whether shouts, like these, convey'd
More pleasures to the youth, or to the maid.
When a long
distance oft she could have gain'd,
She check'd her swiftness,
and her feet restrain'd:
She sigh'd, and dwelt, and languish'd on
his face,
Then with unwilling speed pursu'd the race.
O'er-spent
with heat, his breath he faintly drew,
Parch'd was his mouth, nor
yet the goal in view,
And the first apple on the plain he threw.
The nymph stop'd sudden at th' unusual sight,
Struck with the
fruit so beautifully bright.
Aside she starts, the wonder to
behold,
And eager stoops to catch the rouling gold.
Th'
observant youth past by, and scour'd along,
While peals of joy
rung from th' applauding throng.
Unkindly she corrects the short
delay,
And to redeem the time fleets swift away,
Swift, as
the lightning, or the northern wind,
And far she leaves the
panting youth behind.
Again he strives the flying nymph to hold
With the temptation of the second gold:
The bright temptation
fruitlessly was tost,
So soon, alas! she won the distance lost.
Now but a little interval of space
Remain'd for the decision
of the race.
Fair author of the precious gift, he said,
Be
thou, O Goddess, author of my aid!
Then of the shining fruit the
last he drew,
And with his full-collected vigour threw:
The
virgin still the longer to detain,
Threw not directly, but
a-cross the plain.
She seem'd a-while perplex'd in dubious
thought,
If the far-distant apple should be sought:
I lur'd
her backward mind to seize the bait,
And to the massie gold gave
double weight.
My favour to my votary was show'd,
Her speed I
lessen'd, and encreas'd her load.
But lest, tho' long, the rapid
race be run,
Before my longer, tedious tale is done,
The
youth the goal, and so the virgin won.
Might I, Adonis, now
not hope to see
His grateful thanks pour'd out for victory?
His
pious incense on my altars laid?
But he nor grateful thanks, nor
incense paid.
Enrag'd I vow'd, that with the youth the fair,
For
his contempt, should my keen vengeance share;
That future lovers
might my pow'r revere,
And, from their sad examples, learn to
fear.
The silent fanes, the sanctify'd abodes,
Of Cybele,
great mother of the Gods,
Rais'd by Echion in a lonely wood,
And
full of brown, religious horror stood.
By a long painful journey
faint, they chose!
Their weary limbs here secret to repose.
But
soon my pow'r inflam'd the lustful boy,
Careless of rest he
sought untimely joy.
A hallow'd gloomy cave, with moss
o'er-grown,
The temple join'd, of native pumice-stone,
Where
antique images by priests were kept.
And wooden deities securely
slept.
Thither the rash Hippomenes retires,
And gives a loose
to all his wild desires,
And the chaste cell pollutes with wanton
fires.
The sacred statues trembled with surprize,
The tow'ry
Goddess, blushing, veil'd her eyes;
And the lewd pair to Stygian
sounds had sent,
But unrevengeful seem'd that punishment,
A
heavier doom such black prophaneness draws,
Their taper figures
turn to crooked paws.
No more their necks the smoothness can
retain,
Now cover'd sudden with a yellow mane.
Arms change to
legs: each finds the hard'ning breast
Of rage unknown, and
wond'rous strength possest.
Their alter'd looks with fury grim
appear,
And on the ground their brushing tails they hear.
They
haunt the woods: their voices, which before
Were musically sweet,
now hoarsly roar.
Hence lions, dreadful to the lab'ring swains,
Are tam'd by Cybele, and curb'd with reins,
And humbly draw
her car along the plains.
But thou, Adonis, my delightful care,
Of these, and beasts, as fierce as these, beware!
The savage,
which not shuns thee, timely shun,
For by rash prowess should'st
thou be undone,
A double ruin is contain'd in one.
Thus
cautious Venus school'd her fav'rite boy;
But youthful heat all
cautions will destroy.
His sprightly soul beyond grave counsels
flies,
While with yok'd swans the Goddess cuts the skies.
His
faithful hounds, led by the tainted wind,
Lodg'd in thick coverts
chanc'd a boar to find.
The callow hero show'd a manly heart,
And pierc'd the savage with a side-long dart.
The flying
savage, wounded, turn'd again,
Wrench'd out the gory dart, and
foam'd with pain.
The trembling boy by flight his safety sought,
And now recall'd the lore, which Venus taught;
But now too
late to fly the boar he strove,
Who in the groin his tusks
impetuous drove,
On the discolour'd grass Adonis lay,
The
monster trampling o'er his beauteous prey.
Fair Cytherea,
Cyprus scarce in view,
Heard from afar his groans, and own'd them
true,
And turn'd her snowy swans, and backward flew.
But as
she saw him gasp his latest breath,
And quiv'ring agonize in
pangs of death,
Down with swift flight she plung'd, nor rage
forbore,
At once her garments, and her hair she tore.
With
cruel blows she beat her guiltless breast,
The Fates upbraided,
and her love confest.
Nor shall they yet (she cry'd) the whole
devour
With uncontroul'd, inexorable pow'r:
For thee, lost
youth, my tears, and restless pain
Shall in immortal monuments
remain,
With solemn pomp in annual rites return'd,
Be thou
for ever, my Adonis, mourn'd,
Could Pluto's queen with jealous
fury storm,
And Menthe to a fragrant herb transform?
Yet
dares not Venus with a change surprise,
And in a flow'r bid her
fall'n heroe rise?
Then on the blood sweet nectar she bestows,
The scented blood in little bubbles rose:
Little as rainy
drops, which flutt'ring fly,
Born by the winds, along a low'ring
sky.
Short time ensu'd, 'till where the blood was shed,
A
flow'r began to rear its purple head:
Such, as on Punick apples
is reveal'd,
Or in the filmy rind but half conceal'd.
Still
here the Fate of lovely forms we see,
So sudden fades the sweet
Anemonie.
The feeble stems, to stormy blasts a prey,
Their
sickly beauties droop, and pine away.
The winds forbid the
flow'rs to flourish long,
Which owe to winds their names in
Grecian song.
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