THE SAFFRON Morn, with early blushes spread, | |
| Now rose refulgent from Tithonus bed; | |
| With new-born day to gladden mortal sight, | |
| And gild the courts of Heavn with sacred light: | |
| When baleful Eris, sent by Joves command, | 5 |
| The torch of discord blazing in her hand, | |
| Thro the red skies her bloody sign extends, | |
| And, wrappd in tempests, oer the fleet descends. | |
| High on Ulysses bark her horrid stand | |
| She took, and thunderd thro the seas and land. | 10 |
| Evn Ajax and Achilles heard the sound, | |
| Whose ships, remote, the guarded navy bound. | |
| Thence the black fury thro the Grecian throng | |
| With horror sounds the loud Orthian song: | |
| The navy shakes, and at the dire alarms | 15 |
| Each bosom boils, each warrior starts to arms: | |
| No more they sigh inglorious to return, | |
| But breathe revenge, and for the combat burn. | |
| The King of Men his hardy host inspires | |
| With loud command, with great example fires: | 20 |
| Himself first rose, himself before the rest | |
| His mighty limbs in radiant armour dressd. | |
| And first he cased his manly legs around | |
| In shining greaves, with silver buckles bound: | |
| The beaming cuirass next adornd his breast, | 25 |
| The same which once King Cinyras possessd: | |
| (The fame of Greece and her assembled host | |
| Had reachd that Monarch on the Cyprian coast; | |
| T was then, the friendship of the Chief to gain, | |
| This glorious gift he sent, nor sent in vain.) | 30 |
| Ten rows of azure steel the work infold, | |
| Twice ten of tin, and twelve of ductile gold; | |
| Three glittring dragons to the gorget rise, | |
| Whose imitated scales against the skies | |
| Reflected various light, and arching bowd, | 35 |
| Like colourd rainbows oer a showery cloud | |
| (Joves wondrous bow, of three celestial dyes, | |
| Placed as a sign to man amid the skies). | |
| A radiant baldrick, oer his shoulder tied, | |
| Sustaind the sword that glitterd at his side; | 40 |
| Gold was the hilt, a silver sheath encased | |
| The shining blade, and golden hangers graced. | |
| His bucklers mighty orb was next displayd, | |
| That round the warrior cast a dreadful shade; | |
| Ten zones of brass its ample brim surround, | 45 |
| And twice ten bosses the bright convex crownd; | |
| Tremendous Gorgon frownd upon its field, | |
| And circling terrors fill th expressive shield: | |
| Within its concave hung a silver thong, | |
| On which a mimic serpent creeps along, | 50 |
| His azure length in easy waves extends, | |
| Till in three heads th embroiderd monster ends. | |
| Last oer his brows his fourfold helm he placed, | |
| With nodding horse-hair formidably graced; | |
| And in his hands two steely javlins wields, | 55 |
| That blaze to Heavn, and lighten all the fields. | |
| That instant Juno and the Martial Maid | |
| In happy thunders promisd Greece their aid; | |
| High oer the Chief they clashd their arms in air, | |
| And, leaning from the clouds, expect the war. | 60 |
| Close to the limits of the trench and mound, | |
| The fiery coursers, to their chariots bound, | |
| The squires restraind; the foot, with those who wield | |
| The lighter arms, rush forward to the field. | |
| To second these, in close array combind, | 65 |
| The squadrons spread their sable wings behind. | |
| Now shouts and tumults wake the tardy sun, | |
| As with the light the warriors toils begun; | |
| Evn Jove, whose thunder spoke his wrath, distilld | |
| Red drops of blood oer all the fatal field; | 70 |
| The woes of men unwilling to survey, | |
| And all the slaughters that must stain the day. | |
| Near Ilus tomb in order ranged around, | |
| The Trojan lines possessd the rising ground. | |
| There wise Polydamas and Hector stood; | 75 |
| Æneas, honourd as a guardian God; | |
| Bold Polybus, Agenor the divine; | |
| The brother-warriors of Antenors line; | |
| With youthful Acamas, whose beauteous face, | |
| And fair proportions, matchd th ethereal race. | 80 |
| Great Hector, coverd with his spacious shield, | |
| Plies all the troops, and orders all the field. | |
| As the red star now shews his sanguine fires, | |
| Thro the dark clouds, and now in night retires; | |
| Thus thro the ranks appeard the godlike man, | 85 |
| Plunged in the rear, or blazing in the van; | |
| While streamy sparkles, restless as he flies, | |
| Flash from his arms, as lightning from the skies. | |
| As sweating reapers in some wealthy field, | |
| Ranged in two bands, their crooked weapons wield, | 90 |
| Bear down the furrows till their labours meet; | |
| Thick fall the heapy harvests at their feet: | |
| So Greece and Troy the field of war divide, | |
| And falling ranks are strewd on evry side. | |
| None stoopd a thought to base inglorious flight; | 95 |
| But horse to horse and man to man they fight. | |
| Not rabid wolves more fierce contest their prey; | |
| Each wounds, each bleeds, but none resign the day. | |
| Discord with joy the scene of death descries, | |
| And drinks large slaughter at her sanguine eyes: | 100 |
| Discord alone, of all th immortal train, | |
| Swells the red horrors of this direful plain: | |
| The Gods in peace their golden mansions fill, | |
| Ranged in bright order on th Olympian hill; | |
| But genral murmurs told their griefs above, | 105 |
| And each accused the partial will of Jove. | |
| Meanwhile apart, superior, and alone, | |
| Th Eternal Monarch, on his awful throne, | |
| Wrappd in the blaze of boundless glory sat: | |
| And, fixd, fulfilld the just decrees of fate. | 110 |
| On earth he turnd his all-considring eyes, | |
| And markd the spot where Ilions towers arise; | |
| The sea with ships, the field with armies spread, | |
| The victors rage, the dying, and the dead. | |
| Thus while the morning beams increasing bright | 115 |
| Oer Heavns pure azure spread the glowing light, | |
| Commutual Death the fate of War confounds, | |
| Each adverse battle gored with equal wounds. | |
| But now (what time in some sequesterd vale | |
| The weary woodman spreads his sparing meal, | 120 |
| When his tired arms refuse the axe to rear, | |
| And claim a respite from the sylvan war; | |
| But not till half the prostrate forests lay | |
| Stretchd in long ruin, and exposed to day;) | |
| Then, nor till then, the Greeks impulsive might | 125 |
| Piercd the black phalanx, and let in the light. | |
| Great Agamemnon then the slaughter led, | |
| And slew Bienor at his peoples head; | |
| Whose squire Oïleus, with a sudden spring, | |
| Leapd from the chariot to revenge his King, | 130 |
| But in his front he felt the fatal wound, | |
| Which piercd his brain, and stretchd him on the ground: | |
| Atrides spoild, and left them on the plain: | |
| Vain was their youth, their glittring armour vain: | |
| Now soild with dust, and naked to the sky, | 135 |
| Their snowy limbs and beauteous bodies lie. | |
| Two sons of Priam next to battle move, | |
| The product one of marriage, one of love; | |
| In the same car the brother warriors ride, | |
| This took the charge to combat, that to guide: | 140 |
| Far other task, than when they went to keep, | |
| On Idas tops, their fathers fleecy sheep! | |
| These on the mountains once Achilles found, | |
| And captive led, with pliant osiers bound; | |
| Then to their sire for ample sums restord; | 145 |
| But now to perish by Atrides sword: | |
| Piercd in the breast the base-born Isus bleeds: | |
| Cleft thro the head, his brothers fate succeeds. | |
| Swift to the spoil the hasty victor falls, | |
| And, strippd, their features to his mind recalls. | 150 |
| The Trojans see the youths untimely die, | |
| But helpless tremble for themselves, and fly. | |
| So when a lion, ranging oer the lawns, | |
| Finds, on some grassy lair, the couching fawns, | |
| Their bones he cracks, their reeking vitals draws, | 155 |
| And grinds the quivring flesh with bloody jaws; | |
| The frighted hind beholds, and dares not stay, | |
| But swift thro rustling thickets bursts her way; | |
| All drownd in sweat the panting mother flies, | |
| And the big tears roll trickling from her eyes. | 160 |
| Amidst the tumult of the routed train, | |
| The sons of false Antimachus were slain, | |
| He, who for bribes his faithless counsels sold, | |
| And voted Helens stay for Paris gold. | |
| Atrides markd, as these their safety sought, | 165 |
| And slew the children for the fathers fault; | |
| Their headstrong horse unable to restrain, | |
| They shook with fear, and droppd the silken rein; | |
| Then in their chariot on their knees they fall, | |
| And thus with lifted hands for mercy call: | 170 |
| O spare our youth, and, for the life we owe, | |
| Antimachus shall copious gifts bestow; | |
| Soon as he hears, that, not in battle slain, | |
| The Grecian ships his captive sons detain, | |
| Large heaps of brass in ransom shall be told, | 175 |
| And steel well-temperd, and persuasive gold. | |
| These words, attended with a flood of tears, | |
| The youths addressd to unrelenting ears: | |
| The vengeful Monarch gave this stern reply: | |
| If from Antimachus ye spring, ye die: | 180 |
| The daring wretch who once in council stood | |
| To shed Ulysses and my brothers blood, | |
| For profferd peace! and sues his seed for grace? | |
| No, die, and pay the forfeit of your race. | |
| This said, Pisander from the car he cast, | 185 |
| And piercd his breast: supine he breathed his last. | |
| His brother leapd to earth; but, as he lay, | |
| The trenchant falchion loppd his hands away: | |
| His severd head was tossd among the throng, | |
| And rolling drew a bloody trail along. | 190 |
| Then, where the thickest fought, the victor flew; | |
| The Kings example all his Greeks pursue. | |
| Now by the foot the flying foot were slain, | |
| Horse trod by horse lay foaming on the plain. | |
| From the dry fields thick clouds of dust arise, | 195 |
| Shade the black host, and intercept the skies. | |
| The brass-hoofd steeds tumultuous plunge and bound, | |
| And the thick thunder beats the labring ground. | |
| Still, slaughtring on, the King of Men proceeds; | |
| The distanced army wonders at his deeds. | 200 |
| As when the winds with raging flames conspire, | |
| And oer the forests roll the flood of fire, | |
| In blazing heaps the groves old honours fall, | |
| And one refulgent ruin levels all: | |
| Before Atrides rage so sinks the foe, | 205 |
| Whole squadrons vanish, and proud heads lie low. | |
| The steeds fly trembling from his waving sword; | |
| And many a car, now lightend of its lord, | |
| Wide oer the fields with guideless fury rolls, | |
| Breaking their ranks, and crushing our their souls: | 210 |
| While his keen falchion drinks the warriors lives; | |
| More grateful now to vultures than their wives! | |
| Perhaps great Hector then had found his fate, | |
| But Jove and Destiny prolongd his date. | |
| Safe from the darts, the care of Heavn, he stood, | 215 |
| Amidst alarms, and death, and dust, and blood. | |
| Now past the tomb where ancient Ilus lay, | |
| Thro the mid field the routed urge their way | |
| Where the wild figs th adjoining summit crown, | |
| That path they take, and speed to reach the town. | 220 |
| As swift Atrides with loud shouts pursued, | |
| Hot with his toil, and bathed in hostile blood. | |
| Now near the beech-tree, and the Scæan gates, | |
| The hero halts, and his associates waits. | |
| Meanwhile, on evry side, around the plain, | 225 |
| Dispersd, disorderd, fly the Trojan train. | |
| So flies a herd of beeves, that hear dismayd | |
| The lions roaring thro the midnight shade: | |
| On heaps they tumble with successless haste: | |
| The savage seizes, draws, and rends the last: | 230 |
| Not with less fury stern Atrides flew, | |
| Still pressd the rout, and still the hindmost slew; | |
| Hurld from their cars the bravest Chiefs are killd, | |
| And rage, and death, and carnage, load the field. | |
| Now storms the victor at the Trojan wall; | 235 |
| Surveys the towers, and meditates their fall. | |
| But Jove, descending, shook th Idæan hills, | |
| And down their summits pourd a hundred rills: | |
| Th unkindled lightning in his hand he took, | |
| And thus the many-colourd maid bespoke: | 240 |
| Iris, with haste thy golden wings display, | |
| To godlike Hector this our word convey. | |
| While Agamemnon wastes the ranks around, | |
| Fights in the front, and bathes with blood the ground, | |
| Bid him give way; but issue forth commands, | 245 |
| And trust the war to less important hands: | |
| But when, or wounded by the spear or dart, | |
| That Chief shall mount his chariot and depart: | |
| Then Jove shall string his arm, and fire his breast, | |
| Then to her ships shall flying Greece be pressd, | 250 |
| Till to the main the burning sun descend, | |
| And sacred night her awful shade extend. | |
| He spoke, and Iris at his word obeyd; | |
| On wings of winds descends the various Maid. | |
| The Chief she found amidst the ranks of war, | 255 |
| Close to the bulwarks, on his glittring car. | |
| The Goddess then: O son of Priam, hear! | |
| From Jove I come, and his high mandate bear. | |
| While Agamemnon wastes the ranks around, | |
| Fights in the front, and bathes with blood the ground, | 260 |
| Abstain from fight, yet issue forth commands, | |
| And trust the war to less important hands: | |
| But when, or wounded by the spear or dart, | |
| The Chief shall mount his chariot, and depart; | |
| Then Jove shall string thy arm, and fire thy breast, | 265 |
| Then to her ships shall flying Greece be pressd, | |
| Till to the main the burning sun descend, | |
| And sacred night her awful shade extend. | |
| She said, and vanishd: Hector with a bound, | |
| Springs from his chariot on the trembling ground, | 270 |
| In clanging arms: he grasps in either hand | |
| A pointed lance, and speeds from band to band; | |
| Revives their ardour, turns their steps from flight, | |
| And wakes anew the dying flames of fight. | |
| They stand to arms; the Greeks their onset dare, | 275 |
| Condense their powers, and wait the coming war. | |
| New force, new spirit, to each breast returns; | |
| The fight renewd, with fiercer fury burns: | |
| The King leads on; all fix on him their eye, | |
| And learn, from him, to conquer, or to die. | 280 |
| Ye sacred Nine, celestial Muses! tell, | |
| Who faced him first, and by his prowess fell? | |
| The great Iphidamas, the bold and young: | |
| From sage Antenor and Theano sprung; | |
| Whom from his youth his grandsire Cisseus bred, | 285 |
| And nursd in Thrace, where snowy flocks are fed. | |
| Scarce did the down his rosy cheeks invest, | |
| And early honour warm his genrous breast, | |
| When the kind sire consignd his daughters charms | |
| (Theanos sister) to his youthful arms: | 290 |
| But, calld by glory to the wars of Troy, | |
| He leaves untasted the first fruits of joy; | |
| From his lovd bride departs with melting eyes, | |
| And swift to aid his dearer country flies. | |
| With twelve black ships he reachd Percopes strand, | 295 |
| Thence took the long laborious march by land. | |
| Now fierce for Fame, before the ranks he springs, | |
| Towring in arms, and braves the King of Kings. | |
| Atrides first discharged the missive spear; | |
| The Trojan stoopd, the javlin passd in air. | 300 |
| Then near the corslet, at the Monarchs heart, | |
| With all his strength the youth directs his dart: | |
| But the broad belt, with plates of silver bound, | |
| The point rebated, and repelld the wound. | |
| Encumberd with the dart, Atrides stands, | 305 |
| Till, graspd with force, he wrenchd it from his hands. | |
| At once his weighty sword discharged a wound | |
| Full on his neck, that felld him to the ground. | |
| Stretchd in the dust th unhappy warrior lies, | |
| And sleep eternal seals his swimming eyes. | 310 |
| Oh worthy better fate! oh early slain! | |
| Thy countrys friend; and virtuous, tho in vain! | |
| No more the youth shall join his consorts side, | |
| At once a virgin, and at once a bride! | |
| No more with presents her embraces meet, | 315 |
| Or lay the spoils of conquest at her feet, | |
| On whom his passion, lavish of his store, | |
| Bestowd so much, and vainly promisd more! | |
| Unwept, uncoverd, on the plain he lay, | |
| While the proud victor bore his arms away. | 320 |
| Coön, Antenors eldest hope, was nigh: | |
| Tears at the sight came starting from his eye, | |
| While piercd with grief the much-lovd youth he viewd, | |
| And the pale features now deformd with blood. | |
| Then with his spear, unseen, his time he took, | 325 |
| Aimd at the King, and near his elbow struck. | |
| The thrilling steel transpiercd the brawny part, | |
| And thro his arm stood forth the barbed dart. | |
| Surprised the Monarch feels, yet void of fear | |
| On Coön rushes with his lifted spear: | 330 |
| His brothers corpse the pious Trojan draws, | |
| And calls his country to assert his cause, | |
| Defends him breathless on the sanguine field, | |
| And oer the body spreads his ample shield. | |
| Atrides, marking an unguarded part, | 335 |
| Transfixd the warrior with his brazen dart; | |
| Prone on his brothers bleeding breast he lay | |
| The Monarchs falchion loppd his head away: | |
| The social shades the same dark journey go, | |
| And join each other in the realms below. | 340 |
| The vengeful victor rages round the fields, | |
| With evry weapon art or fury yields: | |
| By the long lance, the sword, or pondrous stone, | |
| Whole ranks are broken, and whole troops oerthrown. | |
| This, while yet warm, distilld the purple flood; | 345 |
| But when the wound grew stiff with clotted blood, | |
| Then grinding tortures his strong bosom rend; | |
| Less keen those darts the fierce Ilythiæ send | |
| (The Powers that cause the teeming matrons throes, | |
| Sad mothers of unutterable woes!), | 350 |
| Stung with the smart, all panting with the pain, | |
| He mounts the car, and gives his squire the rein: | |
| Then with a voice which fury made more strong, | |
| And pain augmented, thus exhorts the throng: | |
| O friends! O Greeks! assert your honours won; | 355 |
| Proceed, and finish what this arm begun: | |
| Lo! angry Jove forbids your Chief to stay, | |
| And envies half the glories of the day. | |
| He said, the driver whirls his lengthful thong: | |
| The horses fly, the chariot smokes along | 360 |
| Clouds from their nostrils the fierce coursers blow, | |
| And from their sides the foam descends in snow; | |
| Shot thro the battle in a moments space, | |
| The wounded Monarch at his tent they place. | |
| No sooner Hector saw the King retired, | 365 |
| But thus his Trojans and his aids he fired: | |
| Hear, all ye Dardan, all ye Lycian race! | |
| Famed in close fight, and dreadful face to face; | |
| Now call to mind your ancient trophies won, | |
| Your great forefathers virtues, and your own. | 370 |
| Behold, the genral flies, deserts his powers! | |
| Lo, Jove himself declares the conquest ours! | |
| Now on yon ranks impel your foaming steeds; | |
| And, sure of glory, dare immortal deeds. | |
| With words like these the fiery Chief alarms | 375 |
| His fainting host, and evry bosom warms. | |
| As the bold hunter cheers his hounds to tear | |
| The brindled lion, or the tusky bear, | |
| With voice and hand provokes their doubting heart, | |
| And springs the foremost with his lifted dart: | 380 |
| So godlike Hector prompts his troops to dare: | |
| Nor prompts alone, but leads himself the war. | |
| On the black body of the foes he pours; | |
| As from the clouds deep bosom, swelld with showers, | |
| A sudden storm the purple ocean sweeps, | 385 |
| Drives the wild waves, and tosses all the deeps. | |
| Say, Muse! when Jove the Trojans glory crownd, | |
| Beneath his arm what heroes bit the ground? | |
| Assæus, Dolops, and Autonous died, | |
| Opites next was added to their side, | 390 |
| Then brave Hipponous, famed in many a fight, | |
| Opheltius, Orus, sunk to endless night, | |
| Æsymnus, Agelaus; all Chiefs of name | |
| The rest were vulgar deaths, unknown to fame. | |
| As when a western whirlwind, charged with storms, | 395 |
| Dispels the gatherd clouds that Notus forms; | |
| The gust continued, violent, and strong, | |
| Rolls sable clouds in heaps on heaps along; | |
| Now to the skies the foaming billows rears, | |
| Now breaks the surge, and wide the bottom bares: | 400 |
| Thus raging Hector, with resistless hands, | |
| Oerturns, confounds, and scatters all their bands. | |
| Now the last ruin the whole host appals; | |
| Now Greece had trembled in her wooden walls; | |
| But wise Ulysses calld Tydides forth, | 405 |
| His soul rekindled, and awaked his worth: | |
| And stand we deedless, O eternal shame! | |
| Till Hectors arm involve the ships in flame? | |
| Haste, let us join, and combat side by side. | |
| The warrior thus, and thus the friend replied: | 410 |
| No martial toil I shun, no danger fear; | |
| Let Hector come; I wait his fury here. | |
| But Jove with conquest crowns the Trojan train; | |
| And, Jove our foe, all human force is vain. | |
| He sighd; but, sighing, raisd his vengeful steel, | 415 |
| And from his car the proud Thymbræus fell: | |
| Molion, the charioteer, pursued his lord, | |
| His death ennobled by Ulysses sword. | |
| There slain, they left them in eternal night; | |
| Then plunged amidst the thickest ranks of fight. | 420 |
| So two wild boars outstrip the follwing hounds, | |
| Then swift revert, and wounds return for wounds. | |
| Stern Hectors conquests in the middle plain | |
| Stood checkd awhile, and Greece respired again. | |
| The sons of Merops shone amidst the war; | 425 |
| Towring they rode in one refulgent car; | |
| In deep prophetic arts their father skilld, | |
| Had warnd his children from the Trojan field; | |
| Fate urged them on; the father warnd in vain, | |
| They rushd to fight, and perishd on the plain! | 430 |
| Their breasts no more the vital spirit warms; | |
| The stern Tydides strips their shining arms. | |
| Hypirochus by great Ulysses dies, | |
| And rich Hippodamus becomes his prize. | |
| Great Jove from Ide with slaughter fills his sight, | 435 |
| And level hangs the doubtful scale of fight. | |
| By Tydeus lance Agastrophus was slain, | |
| The far-famed hero of Pæonian strain; | |
| Wingd with his fears, on foot he strove to fly, | |
| His steeds too distant, and the foe too nigh; | 440 |
| Thro broken orders, swifter than the wind, | |
| He fled, but, flying, left his life behind. | |
| This Hector sees, as his experienced eyes | |
| Traverse the files, and to the rescue flies; | |
| Shouts, as he passd, the crystal regions rend, | 445 |
| And moving armies on his march attend. | |
| Great Diomed himself was seizd with fear, | |
| And thus bespoke his brother of the war: | |
| Mark how this way yon bending squadrons yield! | |
| The storm rolls on, and Hector rules the field: | 450 |
| Here stand his utmost forceThe warrior said: | |
| Swift at the word his pondrous javlin fled; | |
| Nor missd its aim, but, where the plumage danced, | |
| Razed the smooth cone, and thence obliquely glanced. | |
| Safe in his helm (the gift of Phbus hands) | 455 |
| Without a wound the Trojan hero stands; | |
| But yet so stunnd, that, staggring on the plain, | |
| His arm and knee his sinking bulk sustain; | |
| Oer his dim sight the misty vapours rise, | |
| And a short darkness shades his swimming eyes. | 460 |
| Tydides followd to regain his lance; | |
| While Hector rose, recoverd from the trance, | |
| Remounts his car, and herds amidst the crowd; | |
| The Greek pursues him, and exults aloud: | |
| Once more thank Phbus for thy forfeit breath, | 465 |
| Or thank that swiftness which outstrips the death. | |
| Well by Apollo are thy prayers repaid, | |
| And oft that partial power has lent his aid. | |
| Thou shalt not long the death deservd withstand, | |
| If any God assist Tydides hand. | 470 |
| Fly then, inglorious! but thy flight, this day, | |
| Whole hecatombs of Trojan ghosts shall pay. | |
| Him, while he triumphd, Paris eyed from far, | |
| (The spouse of Helen, the fair cause of war): | |
| Around the fields his featherd shafts he sent, | 475 |
| From ancient Ilus ruind monument; | |
| Behind the column placed, he bent his bow, | |
| And wingd an arrow at th unwary foe: | |
| Just as he stoopd, Agastrophuss crest | |
| To seize, and draw the corslet from his breast, | 480 |
| The bow-string twangd; nor flew the shaft in vain, | |
| But piercd his foot, and naild it to the plain. | |
| The laughing Trojan, with a joyful spring, | |
| Leaps from his ambush, and insults the King: | |
| He bleeds! (he cries) some God has sped my dart; | 485 |
| Would the same God had fixd it in his heart! | |
| So Troy, relievd from that wide-wasting hand, | |
| Should breathe from slaughter, and in combat stand, | |
| Whose sons now tremble at his darted spear, | |
| As scatterd lambs the rushing lion fear. | 490 |
| He dauntless thus: Thou conqueror of the Fair, | |
| Thou woman-warrior with the curling hair; | |
| Vain archer! trusting to the distant dart, | |
| Unskilld in arms to act a manly part! | |
| Thou hast but done what boys or women can; | 495 |
| Such hands may wound, but not incense a man. | |
| Nor boast the scratch thy feeble arrow gave, | |
| A cowards weapon never hurts the brave. | |
| Not so this dart, which thou mayst one day feel: | |
| Fate wings its flight, and death is on the steel. | 500 |
| Where this but lights, some noble life expires, | |
| Its touch makes orphans, bathes the cheeks of sires, | |
| Steeps earth in purple, gluts the birds of air, | |
| And leaves such objects as distract the fair. | |
| Ulysses hastens with a trembling heart, | 505 |
| Before him steps, and bending draws the dart: | |
| Forth flows the blood; an eager pang succeeds: | |
| Tydides mounts, and to the navy speeds. | |
| Now on the field Ulysses stands alone, | |
| The Greeks all fled, the Trojans pouring on: | 510 |
| But stands collected in himself and whole, | |
| And questions thus his own unconquerd soul: | |
| What farther subterfuge, what hopes remain? | |
| What shame, inglorious if I quit the plain? | |
| What danger, singly if I stand the ground, | 515 |
| My friends all scatterd, all the foes around? | |
| Yet wherefore doubtful? let this truth suffice: | |
| The brave meets danger, and the coward flies; | |
| To die, or conquer, proves a heros heart; | |
| And, knowing this, I know a soldiers part. | 520 |
| Such thoughts revolving in his careful breast, | |
| Near, and more near, the shady cohorts pressd; | |
| These, in the warrior, their own fate enclose: | |
| And round him deep the steely circle grows. | |
| So fares a boar, whom all the troop surrounds | 525 |
| Of shouting huntsmen, and of clamrous hounds; | |
| He grinds his ivry tusks; he foams with ire; | |
| His sanguine eyeballs glare with living fire; | |
| By these, by those, on every part is plied; | |
| And the red slaughter spreads on every side. | 530 |
| Piercd thro the shoulder, first Deiopis fell; | |
| Next Ennomus and Thoön sunk to hell; | |
| Chersidamas, beneath the navel thrust, | |
| Falls prone to earth, and grasps the bloody dust. | |
| Charops, the son of Hippasus, was near; | 535 |
| Ulysses reachd him with the fatal spear; | |
| But to his aid his brother Socus flies, | |
| Socus, the brave, the genrous, and the wise: | |
| Near as he drew, the warrior thus began: | |
| O great Ulysses, much-enduring man! | 540 |
| Not deeper skilld in every martial sleight, | |
| Than worn to toils, and active in the fight! | |
| This day two brothers shall thy conquest grace, | |
| And end at once the great Hippasian race, | |
| Or thou beneath this lance must press the field. | 545 |
| He said, and forceful piercd his spacious shield; | |
| Thro the strong brass the ringing javlin thrown, | |
| Ploughd half his side, and bared it to the bone. | |
| By Pallas care, the spear, tho deep infixd, | |
| Stoppd short of life, nor with his entrails mixd, | 550 |
| The wound not mortal wise Ulysses knew, | |
| Then furious thus (but first some steps withdrew): | |
| Unhappy man! whose death our hands shall grace! | |
| Fate calls thee hence, and finishd is thy race. | |
| No longer check my conquests on the foe: | 555 |
| But, piercd by this, to endless darkness go, | |
| And add one spectre to the realms below! | |
| He spoke, while Socus, seizd with sudden fright, | |
| Trembling gave way, and turnd his back to flight, | |
| Between his shoulders piercd the follwing dart, | 560 |
| And held its passage thro the panting heart. | |
| Wide in his breast appeard the grizzly wound; | |
| He falls: his armour rings against the ground. | |
| Then thus Ulysses, gazing on the slain: | |
| Famed son of Hippasus! there press the plain; | 565 |
| There ends thy narrow span assignd by fate: | |
| Heavn owes Ulysses yet a longer date. | |
| Ah wretch! no father shall thy corpse compose, | |
| Thy dying eyes no tender mother close, | |
| But hungry birds shall tear those balls away, | 570 |
| And hovring vultures scream around their prey. | |
| Me Greece shall honour, when I meet my doom, | |
| With solemn funerals, and a lasting tomb. | |
| Then, raging with intolerable smart, | |
| He writhes his body, and extracts the dart. | 575 |
| The dart a tide of spouting gore pursued, | |
| And gladdend Troy with sight of hostile blood. | |
| Now troops on troops the fainting Chief invade; | |
| Forced he recedes, and loudly calls for aid. | |
| Thrice to its pitch his lofty voice he rears; | 580 |
| The well-known voice thrice Menelaus hears; | |
| Alarmd, to Ajax Telamon he cried, | |
| Who shares his labours, and defends his side: | |
| O friend! Ulysses shouts invade my ear; | |
| Distressd he seems, and no assistance near: | 585 |
| Strong as he is, yet, one opposed to all, | |
| Oppressd by multitudes, the best may fall. | |
| Greece, robbd of him, must bid her host despair, | |
| And feel a loss not ages can repair. | |
| Then, where the cry directs, his course he bends, | 590 |
| Great Ajax, like the God of War, attends. | |
| The prudent Chief in sore distress they found, | |
| With bands of furious Trojans compassd round, | |
| As when some huntsman, with a flying spear, | |
| From the blind thicket wounds a stately deer; | 595 |
| Down his cleft side while fresh the blood distils, | |
| He bounds aloft, and scuds from hills to hills: | |
| Till, lifes warm vapour issuing thro the wound, | |
| Wild mountain-wolves the fainting beast surround; | |
| Just as their jaws his prostrate limbs invade, | 600 |
| The lion rushes thro the woodland shade; | |
| The wolves, tho hungry, scour dispersd away; | |
| The lordly savage vindicates his prey. | |
| Ulysses thus, unconquerd by his pains, | |
| A single warrior, half a host sustains: | 605 |
| But soon as Ajax heaves his tower-like shield, | |
| The scatterd crowds fly frighted oer the field: | |
| Atrides arm the sinking hero stays, | |
| And, saved from numbers, to his car conveys. | |
| Victorious Ajax plies the routed crew; | 610 |
| And first Doryclus, Priams son, he slew: | |
| On strong Pandocus next inflicts a wound, | |
| And lays Lysander bleeding on the ground. | |
| As when a torrent, swelld with wintry rains, | |
| Pours from the mountains oer the deluged plains, | 615 |
| And pines and oaks, from their foundation torn, | |
| A countrys ruins! to the seas are borne: | |
| Fierce Ajax thus oerwhelms the yielding throng; | |
| Men, steeds, and chariots, roll in heaps along. | |
| But Hector, from this scene of slaughter far, | 620 |
| Raged on the left, and ruled the tide of war: | |
| Loud groans proclaim his progress thro the plain, | |
| And deep Scamander swells with heaps of slain. | |
| There Nestor and Idomeneus oppose | |
| The warriors fury; there the battle glows; | 625 |
| There fierce on foot, or from the chariots height, | |
| His sword deforms the beauteous ranks of fight. | |
| The spouse of Helen, dealing darts around, | |
| Had piercd Machaon with a distant wound: | |
| In his right shoulder the broad shaft appeard, | 630 |
| And trembling Greece for her physician feard. | |
| To Nestor then Idomeneus begun: | |
| Glory of Greece, old Neleus valiant son! | |
| Ascend thy chariot, haste with speed away, | |
| And great Machaon to the ships convey. | 635 |
| A wise physician, skilld our wounds to heal, | |
| Is more than armies to the public weal. | |
| Old Nestor mounts the seat. Beside him rode | |
| The wounded offspring of the healing God. | |
| He lends the lash; the steeds with sounding feet | 640 |
| Shake the dry field, and thunder toward the fleet. | |
| But now Cebriones, from Hectors car, | |
| Surveyd the various fortune of the war. | |
| While here (he cried) the flying Greeks are slain, | |
| Trojans on Trojans yonder load the plain. | 645 |
| Before great Ajax, see the mingled throng | |
| Of men and chariots drivn in heaps along! | |
| I know him well, distinguishd oer the field | |
| By the broad glittring of the sevnfold shield. | |
| Thither, O Hector, thither urge thy steeds, | 650 |
| There danger calls, and there the combat bleeds; | |
| There horse and foot in mingled deaths unite, | |
| And groans of slaughter mix with shouts of fight. | |
| Thus having spoke, the drivers lash resounds; | |
| Swift thro the ranks the rapid chariot bounds; | 655 |
| Stung by the stroke, the coursers scour the fields, | |
| Oer heaps of carcases, and hills of shields. | |
| The horses hoofs are bathed in heroes gore, | |
| And, dashing, purple all the car before: | |
| The groaning axle sable drops distils, | 660 |
| And mangled carnage clogs the rapid wheels. | |
| Here Hector, plunging thro the thickest fight, | |
| Broke the dark phalanx, and let in the light: | |
| (By the long lance, the sword, or pondrous stone, | |
| The ranks lie scatterd, and the troops oerthrown. | 665 |
| Ajax he shuns, thro all the dire debate, | |
| And fears that arm whose force he felt so late. | |
| But partial Jove, espousing Hectors part, | |
| Shot Heavn-bred horror thro the Grecians heart; | |
| Confused, unnervd in Hectors presence grown, | 670 |
| Amazed he stood, with terrors not his own. | |
| Oer his broad back his moony shield he threw, | |
| And, glaring round, by tardy steps withdrew. | |
| Thus the grim lion his retreat maintains, | |
| Beset with watchful dogs and shouting swains, | 675 |
| Repulsd by numbers from the nightly stalls, | |
| Tho rage impels him, and tho hunger calls, | |
| Long stands the showring darts, and missile fires; | |
| Then sourly slow th indignant beast retires. | |
| So turnd stern Ajax, by whole hosts repelld, | 680 |
| While his swoln heart at every step rebelld. | |
| As the slow beast, with heavy strength endued, | |
| In some wide field by troops of boys pursued, | |
| Tho round his sides a wooden tempest rain, | |
| Crops the tall harvest, and lays waste the plain; | 685 |
| Thick on his hide the hollow blows resound; | |
| The patient animal maintains his ground; | |
| Scarce from the field with all their efforts chased, | |
| And stirs but slowly when he stirs at last. | |
| On Ajax thus a weight of Trojans hung, | 690 |
| The strokes redoubled on his buckler rung; | |
| Confiding now in bulky strength he stands, | |
| Now turns, and backward bears the yielding bands; | |
| Now stiff recedes, yet hardly seems to fly, | |
| And threats his follwers with retorted eye. | 695 |
| Fixd as the bar between two warring powers, | |
| While hissing darts descend in iron showers: | |
| In his broad buckler many a weapon stood, | |
| Its surface bristled with a quivring wood; | |
| And many a javlin, guiltless on the plain, | 700 |
| Marks the dry dust, and thirsts for blood in vain. | |
| But bold Eurypylus his aid imparts, | |
| And dauntless springs beneath a cloud of darts; | |
| Whose eager javlin launchd against the foe, | |
| Great Apisaon felt the fatal blow; | 705 |
| From his torn liver the red current flowd, | |
| And his slack knees desert their dying load. | |
| The victor rushing to despoil the dead, | |
| From Paris bow a vengeful arrow fled: | |
| Fixd in his nervous thigh the weapon stood, | 710 |
| Fixd was the point, but broken was the wood. | |
| Back to the lines the wounded Greek retired, | |
| Yet thus, retreating, his associates fired: | |
| What God, O Grecians! has your hearts dismayd? | |
| Oh, turn to arms; t is Ajax claims your aid. | 715 |
| This hour he stands the mark of hostile rage, | |
| And this the last brave battle he shall wage: | |
| Haste, join your forces; from the gloomy grave | |
| The warrior rescue, and your country save. | |
| Thus urged the Chief; a genrous troop appears, | 720 |
| Who spread their bucklers, and advance their spears, | |
| To guard their wounded friend: while thus they stand | |
| With pious care, great Ajax joins the band: | |
| Each takes new courage at the heros sight; | |
| The hero rallies and renews the fight. | 725 |
| Thus raged both armies like conflicting fires, | |
| While Nestors chariot far from fight retires: | |
| His coursers steepd in sweat, and staind with gore, | |
| The Greeks preserver, great Machaon, bore. | |
| That hour, Achilles, from the topmost height | 730 |
| Of his proud fleet, oerlookd the fields of fight; | |
| His feasted eyes beheld around the plain | |
| The Grecian rout, the slaying, and the slain. | |
| His friend Machaon singled from the rest, | |
| A transient pity touchd his vengeful breast. | 735 |
| Straight to Mentius much-lovd son he sent; | |
| Graceful as Mars, Patroclus quits his tent: | |
| In evil hour! then Fate decreed his doom; | |
| And fixd the date of all his woes to come! | |
| Why calls my friend? thy lovd injunctions lay; | 740 |
| Whateer thy will, Patroclus shall obey. | |
| O first of friends! (Pelides thus replied) | |
| Still at my heart, and ever at my side! | |
| The time is come, when you despairing host | |
| Shall learn the value of the man they lost: | 745 |
| Now at my knees the Greeks shall pour their moan, | |
| And proud Atrides tremble on his throne. | |
| Go now to Nestor, and from him be taught | |
| What wounded warrior late his chariot brought? | |
| For, seen at distance, and but seen behind, | 750 |
| His form recalld Machaon to my mind; | |
| Nor could I, thro yon cloud, discern his face, | |
| The coursers passd me with so swift a pace. | |
| The hero said. His friend obeyd with haste; | |
| Thro intermingled ships and tents he passd; | 755 |
| The Chiefs descending from their car he found; | |
| The panting steeds Eurymedon unbound. | |
| The warriors, standing on the breezy shore, | |
| To dry their sweat, and wash away the gore, | |
| Here pausd a moment, while the gentle gale | 760 |
| Conveyd that freshness the cool seas exhale; | |
| Then to consult on farther methods went, | |
| And took their seats beneath the shady tent. | |
| The draught prescribed fair Hecamede prepares, | |
| Arsinous daughter, graced with golden hairs; | 765 |
| (Whom to his aged arms, a royal slave, | |
| Greece, as the prize of Nestors wisdom, gave;) | |
| A table first with azure feet she placed; | |
| Whose ample orb a brazen charger graced: | |
| Honey new pressd, the sacred flower of wheat, | 770 |
| And wholesome garlicks crownd the savry treat. | |
| Next her white hand an antique goblet brings, | |
| A goblet sacred to the Pylian Kings, | |
| From eldest times: embossd with studs of gold, | |
| Two feet support it, and four handles hold; | 775 |
| On each bright handle, bending oer the brink, | |
| In sculptured gold, two turtles seem to drink: | |
| A massy weight, yet heavd with ease by him, | |
| When the brisk nectar overlookd the brim. | |
| Temperd in this, the nymph of form divine | 780 |
| Pours a large portion of the Pramnian wine; | |
| With goats-milk cheese a flavrous taste bestows, | |
| And last with flour the smiling surface strews. | |
| This for the wounded Prince the dame prepares; | |
| The cordial bevrage revrend Nestor shares: | 785 |
| Salubrious draughts the warriors thirst allay, | |
| And pleasing conference beguiles the day. | |
| Meantime Patroclus, by Achilles sent, | |
| Unheard approachd, and stood before the tent. | |
| Old Nestor, rising then, the hero led | 790 |
| To his high seat; the Chief refused, and said: | |
| T is now no season for these kind delays; | |
| The great Achilles with impatience stays. | |
| To great Achilles this respect I owe; | |
| Who asks what hero, wounded by the foe, | 795 |
| Was borne from combat by thy foaming steeds? | |
| With grief I see the great Machaon bleeds. | |
| This to report, my hasty course I bend; | |
| Thou knowst the fiery temper of my friend. | |
| Can then the sons of Greece (the sage rejoind) | 800 |
| Excite compassion in Achilles mind? | |
| Seeks he the sorrows of our host to know? | |
| This is not half the story of our woe. | |
| Tell him, not great Machaon bleeds alone, | |
| Our bravest heroes in the navy groan; | 805 |
| Ulysses, Agamemnon, Diomed, | |
| And stern Eurypylus, already bleed. | |
| But ah! what flattring hopes I entertain! | |
| Achilles heeds not, but derides our pain; | |
| Evn till the flames consume our fleet he stays, | 810 |
| And waits the rising of the fatal blaze. | |
| Chief after Chief the raging foe destroys; | |
| Calm he looks on, and evry death enjoys. | |
| Now the slow course of all-impairing time | |
| Unstrings my nerves, and ends my manly prime; | 815 |
| Oh! had I still that strength my youth possessd, | |
| When this bold arm th Epeian powers oppressd, | |
| The bulls of Elis in glad triumph led, | |
| And stretchd the great Itymonæus dead! | |
| Then, from my fury fled the trembling swains, | 820 |
| And ours was all the plunder of the plains: | |
| Fifty white flocks, full fifty herds of swine, | |
| As many goats, as many lowing kine: | |
| And thrice the number of unrivalld steeds, | |
| All teeming females, and of genrous breeds. | 825 |
| These, as my first essay of arms, I won; | |
| Old Neleus gloried in his conquering son. | |
| Thus Elis forcd, her long arrears restord, | |
| And shares were parted to each Pylian lord. | |
| The state of Pyle was sunk to last despair, | 830 |
| When the proud Elians first commenced the war. | |
| For Neleus sons Alcides rage had slain; | |
| Of twelve bold brothers, I alone remain! | |
| Oppressd, we armd; and now, this conquest gaind, | |
| My sire three hundred chosen sheep obtaind. | 835 |
| (That large reprisal he might justly claim, | |
| For prize defrauded, and insulted fame; | |
| When Elis monarch at the public course | |
| Detaind his chariot, and victorious horse.) | |
| The rest the people shared; myself surveyd | 840 |
| The just partition, and due victims paid. | |
| Three days were past, when Elis rose to war, | |
| With many a courser, and with many a car; | |
| The sons of Actor at their armys head | |
| (Young as they were) the vengeful squadrons led. | 845 |
| High on a rock fair Thryoëssa stands, | |
| Our utmost frontier on the Pylian lands; | |
| Not far the streams of famed Alphæus flow; | |
| The stream they passd, and pitchd their tents below; | |
| Pallas, descending in the shades of night, | 850 |
| Alarms the Pylians, and commands the fight. | |
| Each burns for Fame, and swells with martial pride; | |
| Myself the foremost; but my sire denied; | |
| Feard for my youth, exposed to stern alarms, | |
| And stoppd my chariot, and detaind my arms. | 855 |
| My sire denied in vain: on foot I fled | |
| Amidst our chariots: for the Goddess led. | |
| Along fair Arenes delightful plain, | |
| Soft Minyas rolls his waters to the main. | |
| There, horse and foot, the Pylian troops unite, | 860 |
| And, sheathed in arms, expect the dawning light. | |
| Thence, ere the sun advancd his noon-day flame, | |
| To great Alphæus sacred source we came. | |
| There first to Jove our solemn rites were paid; | |
| An untamed heifer pleasd the Blue-eyed Maid, | 865 |
| A bull Alphæus; and a bull was slain | |
| To the blue Monarch of the watry Main. | |
| In arms we slept, beside the winding flood, | |
| While round the town the fierce Epeians stood. | |
| Soon as the sun, with all-revealing ray, | 870 |
| Flamed in the front of Heavn, and gave the day, | |
| Bright scenes of arms, and works of war appear; | |
| The nations meet; there Pylos, Elis here. | |
| The first who fell, beneath my javlin bled; | |
| King Augias son, and spouse of Agamede: | 875 |
| (She that all simples healing virtues knew, | |
| And every herb that drinks the morning dew.) | |
| I seizd his car, the van of battle led; | |
| Th Epeians saw, they trembled, and they fled. | |
| The foe dispersd, their bravest warrior killd, | 880 |
| Fierce as a whirlwind now I swept the field: | |
| Full fifty captive chariots graced my train; | |
| Two Chiefs from each fell breathless to the plain. | |
| Then Actors sons had died, but Neptune shrouds | |
| The youthful heroes in a veil of clouds. | 885 |
| Oer heapy shields, and oer the prostrate throng, | |
| Collecting spoils, and slaughtring all along, | |
| Thro wide Buprasian fields we forcd the foes, | |
| Where oer the vales th Olenian rocks arose; | |
| Till Pallas stoppd us where Alisium flows. | 890 |
| Evn there, the hindmost of their rear I slay, | |
| And the same arm that led, concludes the day; | |
| Then back to Pyle triumphant take my way. | |
| There to high Jove were public thanks assignd | |
| As first of Gods; to Nestor, of mankind. | 895 |
| Such then I was, impelld by youthful blood: | |
| So provd my valour for my countrys good. | |
| Achilles with inactive fury glows, | |
| And gives to passion what to Greece he owes. | |
| How shall he grieve, when to th eternal shade | 900 |
| Her hosts shall sink, nor his the power to aid? | |
| O friend! my memory recalls the day, | |
| When, gathring aids along the Grecian sea, | |
| I, and Ulysses, touchd at Phthias port, | |
| And enterd Peleus hospitable court. | 905 |
| A bull to Jove he slew in sacrifice, | |
| And pourd libations on the flaming thighs. | |
| Thyself, Achilles, and thy revrend sire | |
| Mentius, turnd the fragments on the fire. | |
| Achilles sees us, to the feast invites; | 910 |
| Social we sit, and share the genial rites. | |
| We then explaind the cause on which we came, | |
| Urged you to arms, and found you fierce for fame. | |
| Your ancient fathers genrous precepts gave: | |
| Peleus said only this: My son! be brave, | 915 |
| Mentius thus: Tho great Achilles shine | |
| In strength superior, and of race divine, | |
| Yet cooler thoughts thy elder years attend; | |
| Let thy just counsels aid, and rule thy friend. | |
| Thus spoke your father at Thessalias court; | 920 |
| Words now forgot, tho now of vast import. | |
| Ah! try the utmost that a friend can say, | |
| Such gentle force the fiercest minds obey; | |
| Some favring God Achilles heart may move; | |
| Tho deaf to glory, he may yield to love. | 925 |
| If some dire oracle his breast alarm, | |
| If aught from Heavn withhold his saving arm; | |
| Some beam of comfort yet on Greece may shine, | |
| If thou but lead the Myrmidonian line; | |
| Clad in Achilles arms, if thou appear, | 930 |
| Proud Troy may tremble, and desist from war! | |
| Pressd by fresh forces, her oerlabourd train | |
| Shall seek their walls, and Greece respire again. | |
| This touchd his genrous heart, and from the tent | |
| Along the shore with hasty strides he went; | 935 |
| Soon as he came, where, on the crowded strand, | |
| The public mart and courts of justice stand, | |
| Where the tall fleet of great Ulysses lies, | |
| And altars to the guardian Gods arise; | |
| There sad he met the brave Evæmons son; | 940 |
| Large painful drops from all his members run; | |
| An arrows head yet rooted in his wound, | |
| The sable blood in circles markd the ground, | |
| As, faintly reeling, he confessd the smart: | |
| Weak was his pace, but dauntless was his heart. | 945 |
| Divine compassion touchd Patroclus breast, | |
| Who, sighing, thus his bleeding friend addressd: | |
| Ah, hapless leaders of the Grecian host! | |
| Thus must ye perish on a barbrous coast? | |
| Is this your fate, to glut the dogs with gore, | 950 |
| Far from your friends, and from your native shore? | |
| Say, great Eurypylus! shall Greece yet stand? | |
| Resists she yet the raging Hectors hand? | |
| Or are her heroes doomd to die with shame, | |
| And this the period of our wars and fame? | 955 |
| Eurypylus replies: No more, my friend, | |
| Greece is no more! this day her glories end. | |
| Evn to the ships victorious Troy pursues, | |
| Her force increasing as her toil renews. | |
| Those Chiefs, that used her utmost rage to meet, | 960 |
| Lie piercd with wounds, and bleeding in the fleet. | |
| But thou, Patroclus! act a friendly part, | |
| Lead to my ships, and draw this deadly dart; | |
| With lukewarm water wash the gore away, | |
| With healing balms the raging smart allay, | 965 |
| Such as sage Chiron, sire of pharmacy, | |
| Once taught Achilles, and Achilles thee. | |
| Of two famed surgeons, Podalirius stands | |
| This hour surrounded by the Trojan bands; | |
| And great Machaon, wounded in his tent, | 970 |
| Now wants that succour which so oft he lent. | |
| To whom the Chief: What then remains to do? | |
| Th event of things the Gods alone can view. | |
| Charged by Achilles great command I fly, | |
| And bear with haste the Pylian Kings reply: | 975 |
| But thy distress this instant claims relief. | |
| He said, and in his arms upheld the Chief. | |
| The slaves their masters slow approach surveyd, | |
| And hides of oxen on the floor displayed: | |
| There stretchd at length the wounded hero lay; | 980 |
| Patroclus cut the forky steel away. | |
| Then in his hands a bitter root he bruisd; | |
| The wound he washd, the styptic juice infused. | |
| The closing flesh that instant ceasd to glow, | |
| The wound to torture, and the blood to flow. | 985 |
| |