Wond'ring to find a body free by Fate
From steel, and which could ev'n that steel rebate: Amazed, their admiration they renew;
And scarce Pelides could believe it true.
THE nymph Cænis, having suffered violence from Neptune, prevails on her ravisher to change her sex, and make her invulnerable.
THEN Nestor thus: What once this age has known, In fated Cycnus, and in him alone,
These eyes have seen in Cæneus long before,
Whose body not a thousand swords could bore. Cæneus in courage and in strength excell'd; And still his Othrys with his fame is fill'd: But what did most his martial deeds adorn,- (Though since he changed his sex) a woman born.' A novelty so strange, and full of fate, His listening audience ask'd him to relate. Achilles thus commends their common suit: 'O father, first for prudence in repute, Tell, with that eloquence so much thy own, What thou hast heard, or what of Cæneus known: What was he; whence his change of sex begun : What trophies, join'd in wars with thee, he won: Who conquer'd him; and in what fatal strife The youth, without a wound, could lose his life?'
Neleides then: Though tardy age and time Have shrunk my sinews and decay'd my prime; Though much I have forgotten of my store, Yet, not exhausted, I remember more. Of all that arms achieved, or peace design'd, That action still is fresher in my mind
Than aught beside. If reverend age can give To faith a sanction, in my third I live.
"'Twas in my second century I survey'd Young Canis, then a fair Thessalian maid: Canis the bright, was born to high command; A princess, and a native of thy land, Divine Achilles: every tongue proclaim'd' Her beauty, and her eyes all hearts inflamed. Peleus, thy sire, perhaps had sought her bed, Among the rest; but he had either led Thy mother then, or was by promise tied: But she to him, and all, alike her love denied.
It was her fortune once to take her way
Along the sandy margin of the sea:
The power of ocean view'd her as she pass'd,
And, loved as soon as seen, by force embraced : Then thus, transported, to the nymph he cried:
'Ask what thou wilt, no prayer shall be denied:' 275 This also Fame relates. The haughty fair,
Who not the rape ev'n of a god could bear,
This answer, proud, return'd: 'To mighty wrongs A mighty recompense, of right, belongs: Give me no more to suffer such a shame, But change the woman for a better name; One gift for all:' she said; and while she spoke, A stern, majestic, manly tone she took:
A man she was: and, as the godhead swore,
To Cæneus turn'd, who Cænis was before.
To this the lover adds, without request,
No force of steel should violate his breast. Glad of the gift, the new-made warrior goes,
And arms among the Greeks, and longs for equal foes.'
SKIRMISH BETWEEN THE CENTAURS AND
THE marriage of Pirithous, king of the Lapithæ, with Hippodamia, is rendered memorable by a furious contest with their centaur guests, who endeavor to seize the bride, but are defeated.
Now brave Pirithous, bold Ixion's son,
The love of fair Hippodame had won.
The cloud-begotten race, half men, half beast, Invited, came to grace the nuptial feast:
In a cool cave's recess the treat was made,
Whose entrance trees with spreading boughs o'ershade.
They sat; and, summon'd by the bridegroom, came, To mix with those the Lapithæan name: Nor wanted I. The roofs with joy resound; And, Hymen, Io Hymen,' rung around. Raised altars shone with holy fires: the bride, Lovely herself (and lovely, by her side, A bevy of bright nymphs, with sober grace), Came glittering like a star, and took her place: Her heavenly form beheld, all wish'd her joy ;
And little wanted; but in vain their wishes all em
'For one, most brutal of the brutal brood,
Or whether wine or beauty fired his blood,
Or both at once, beheld with joyful eyes
The bride, at once resolved to make his prize.
Down went the board; and, fastening on her hair, 310 He seized with sudden force the frighted fair.
'Twas Eurytus began his bestial kind
His crime pursued; and each, as pleased his mind, Or her whom chance presented, took: the feast An image of a taken town express'd.
'The cave resounds with female shrieks; we rise, Mad with revenge, to make a swift reprise:
And Theseus first: What frensy has possess'd,
O Eurytus,' he cried, 'thy brutal breast, To wrong Pirithous, and not him alone, But while I live, two friends conjoin'd in one?' To justify his threat, he thrusts aside The crowd of centaurs, and redeems the bride. The monster naught replied; for words were vain, And deeds could only deeds unjust maintain; But answers with his hand, and forward press'd, With blows redoubled, on his face and breast. An ample goblet stood, of antique mould, And rough with figures of the rising gold; The hero snatch'd it up, and toss'd in air
Full at the front of the foul ravisher: He falls, and falling, vomits forth a flood
Of wine, and foam, and brains, and mingled blood. Half roaring, and half neighing, through the hall, 'Arms! arms!' the double-form'd with fury call; 335 To wreak their brother's death: a medley-flight Of bowls and jars at first supply the fight; Once instruments of feasts, but now of fate: Wine animates their rage, and arms their hate.
Bold Amycus from the robb'd vestry brings
The chalices of heaven, and holy things
Of precious weight: a sconce that hung on high, With tapers fill'd, to light the sacristy,
Torn from the cord, with his unhallow'd hand,
He threw amid the Lapithæan band.
On Celadon the ruin fell, and left
His face of feature, and of form bereft:
So, when some brawny sacrificer knocks, Before an altar led, an offer'd ox,
His eyeballs, rooted out, are thrown to ground; 350 His nose, dismantled, in his mouth is found;
His jaws, cheeks, front, one undistinguish'd wound. This Belates, the avenger, could not brook, But, by the foot, a maple-board he took, And hurl'd at Amycus: his chin it bent Against his chest, and down the centaur sent; Whom, sputtering bloody teeth, the second blow Of his drawn sword despatch'd to shades below. 'Grineus was near, and cast a furious look On the side-altar, censed with sacred smoke, And bright with flaming fires:
The gods,' he cried, Have with their holy trade our hands supplied: Why use we not their gifts?' Then from the floor An altar stone he heaved, with all the load it bore: Altar, and altar's freight, together flew,
Where thickest throng'd the Lapithæan crew,
And at once Broteas and Oryus slew.
Oryus' mother, Mycale, was known
Down from her sphere to draw the laboring moon. 'Exadius cried: Unpunish'd shall not go
This fact, if arms are found against the foe. He look'd about, where on a pine were spread The votive horns of a stag's branching head: At Grineus these he throws; so just they fly, That the sharp antlers stuck in either eye: Breathless and blind he fell, with blood besmear'd; His eyeballs, beaten out, hung dangling on his beard. Fierce Rhætus from the hearth a burning brand Selects, and whirling waves, till from his hand
The fire took flame, then dash'd it on the right, 380 On fair Charaxus' temples, near the sight:
The whistling pest came on, and pierced the bone, And caught the yellow hair, that shrivell'd while it
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