The Aeneid by Virgil (best novel books to read TXT) š
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Virgilās epic poem begins with Aeneas fleeing the ruins of Troy with his father Anchises and his young son Ascanius, with a plan to make a home in Italy. Because of a prophecy foretelling that the descendants of Aeneas will one day destroy Carthage, Junoās favorite city, Juno orders the god of the winds to unleash a terrible storm. The ships are thrown off course and arrive at an African port. As Aeneas makes his way towards his new home he encounters Dido, Carthageās queen, and falls deeply in love.
Although Charles W. Elliot stated that āthe modern appreciation of the Iliad and the Odyssey has tended to carry with it a depreciation of the Aeneid,ā this epic poem continues to inspire artists, writers, and musicians centuries after its first telling. John Drydenās translation captures the musicality of the original Latin verses while avoiding the stumbling of an English translation forced into dactylic hexameter.
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- Author: Virgil
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Here Toils, and Death, and Deathās half-brother, Sleep,
Forms terrible to view, their sentry keep;
With anxious Pleasures of a guilty mind,
Deep Frauds before, and open Force behind;
The Furiesā iron beds; and Strife, that shakes
Her hissing tresses and unfolds her snakes.
Full in the midst of this infernal road,
An elm displays her dusky arms abroad:
The God of Sleep there hides his heavy head,
And empty dreams on evāry leaf are spread.
Of various forms unnumberād spectres more,
Centaurs, and double shapes, besiege the door.
Before the passage, horrid Hydra stands,
And Briareus with all his hundred hands;
Gorgons, Geryon with his triple frame;
And vain Chimaera vomits empty flame.
The chief unsheathād his shining steel, preparād,
Thoā seizād with sudden fear, to force the guard,
Offāring his brandishād weapon at their face;
Had not the Sibyl stoppād his eager pace,
And told him what those empty phantoms were:
Forms without bodies, and impassive air.
Hence to deep Acheron they take their way,
Whose troubled eddies, thick with ooze and clay,
Are whirlād aloft, and in Cocytus lost.
There Charon stands, who rules the dreary coastā ā
A sordid god: down from his hoary chin
A length of beard descends, uncombād, unclean;
His eyes, like hollow furnaces on fire;
A girdle, foul with grease, binds his obscene attire.
He spreads his canvas; with his pole he steers;
The freights of flitting ghosts in his thin bottom bears.
He lookād in years; yet in his years were seen
A youthful vigour and autumnal green.
An airy crowd came rushing where he stood,
Which fillād the margin of the fatal flood:
Husbands and wives, boys and unmarried maids,
And mighty heroesā more majestic shades,
And youths, intombād before their fathersā eyes,
With hollow groans, and shrieks, and feeble cries.
Thick as the leaves in autumn strow the woods,
Or fowls, by winter forcād, forsake the floods,
And wing their hasty flight to happier lands;
Such, and so thick, the shivāring army stands,
And press for passage with extended hands.
Now these, now those, the surly boatman bore:
The rest he drove to distance from the shore.
The hero, who beheld with wondāring eyes
The tumult mixād with shrieks, laments, and cries,
Askād of his guide, what the rude concourse meant;
Why to the shore the thronging people bent;
What forms of law among the ghosts were usād;
Why some were ferried oāer, and some refusād.
āSon of Anchises, offspring of the gods,ā
The Sibyl said, āyou see the Stygian floods,
The sacred stream which heavānās imperial state
Attests in oaths, and fears to violate.
The ghosts rejected are thā unhappy crew
Deprivād of sepulchers and funāral due:
The boatman, Charon; those, the buried host,
He ferries over to the farther coast;
Nor dares his transport vessel cross the waves
With such whose bones are not composād in graves.
A hundred years they wander on the shore;
At length, their penance done, are wafted oāer.ā
The Trojan chief his forward pace repressād,
Revolving anxious thoughts within his breast,
He saw his friends, who, whelmād beneath the waves,
Their funāral honours claimād, and askād their quiet graves.
The lost Leucaspis in the crowd he knew,
And the brave leader of the Lycian crew,
Whom, on the Tyrrhene seas, the tempests met;
The sailors masterād, and the ship oāerset.
Amidst the spirits, Palinurus pressād,
Yet fresh from life, a new-admitted guest,
Who, while he steering viewād the stars, and bore
His course from Afric to the Latian shore,
Fell headlong down. The Trojan fixād his view,
And scarcely throā the gloom the sullen shadow knew.
Then thus the prince: āWhat envious powār, O friend,
Brought your lovād life to this disastrous end?
For Phoebus, ever true in all he said,
Has in your fate alone my faith betrayād.
The god foretold you should not die, before
You reachād, secure from seas, thā Italian shore.
Is this thā unerring powār?ā The ghost replied;
āNor Phoebus flatterād, nor his answers lied;
Nor envious gods have sent me to the deep:
But, while the stars and course of heavān I keep,
My wearied eyes were seizād with fatal sleep.
I fell; and, with my weight, the helm constrainād
Was drawn along, which yet my gripe retainād.
Now by the winds and raging waves I swear,
Your safety, more than mine, was then my care;
Lest, of the guide bereft, the rudder lost,
Your ship should run against the rocky coast.
Three blustāring nights, borne by the southern blast,
I floated, and discoverād land at last:
High on a mounting wave my head I bore,
Forcing my strength, and gathāring to the shore.
Panting, but past the danger, now I seizād
The craggy cliffs, and my tirād members easād.
While, cumberād with my dropping clothes, I lay,
The cruel nation, covetous of prey,
Stainād with my blood thā unhospitable coast;
And now, by winds and waves, my lifeless limbs are tossād:
Which O avert, by yon ethereal light,
Which I have lost for this eternal night!
Or, if by dearer ties you may be won,
By your dead sire, and by your living son,
Redeem from this reproach my wandāring ghost;
Or with your navy seek the Velin coast,
And in a peaceful grave my corpse compose;
Or, if a nearer way your mother shows,
Without whose aid you durst not undertake
This frightful passage oāer the Stygian lake,
Lend to this wretch your hand, and waft him oāer
To the sweet banks of yon forbidden shore.ā
Scarce had he said, the prophetess began:
āWhat hopes delude thee, miserable man?
Thinkāst thou, thus unintombād, to cross the floods,
To view the Furies and infernal gods,
And visit, without leave, the dark abodes?
Attend the term of long revolving years;
Fate, and the dooming gods, are deaf to tears.
This comfort of thy dire misfortune take:
The wrath of Heavān, inflicted for thy sake,
With vengeance shall pursue thā inhuman coast,
Till they propitiate thy offended ghost,
And raise a tomb, with vows and solemn prayār;
And Palinurusā name the place shall bear.ā
This calmād his cares; soothād with his future fame,
And pleasād to hear his propagated name.
Now nearer to the Stygian lake they draw:
Whom, from the shore, the surly boatman saw;
Observād their passage throā the shady wood,
And markād their near approaches to the flood.
Then thus he callād aloud, inflamād with wrath:
āMortal, whateāer, who this forbidden path
In arms presumāst to tread, I charge thee, stand,
And tell thy name, and busāness in the land.
Know this, the realm of nightā āthe Stygian shore:
My boat conveys no living bodies oāer;
Nor was I pleasād great Theseus once to bear,
Who forcād a passage with his pointed spear,
Nor strong Alcidesā āmen of mighty fame,
And from thā immortal gods their lineage came.
In fetters one
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