The spacious vase with ample streams suffice, Heap high the wood, and bid the flames arise. The flames climb round it with a fierce embrace, The fuming waters bubble o'er the blaze. Herself the chest prepares: in order roll'd 475 The robes, the vests are rang'd, and heaps of gold: 480 Then bending with full force, around he roll'd A labyrinth of bands in fold on fold, Clos'd with Circæan art. A train attends 485 Around the bath: the bath the king ascends; (Untasted joy, since that disastrous hour, 490 He bathes; the damsels with officious toil Full where the dome its shining valves expands, With wond'ring eyes the hero she survey'd, 496 Hail godlike stranger! and when heav'n restores To thy fond wish thy long-expected shores, 500 This, ever grateful, in remembrance bear, To me thou ow'st, to me, the vital air. O royal maid, Ulysses straight returns, Whose worth the splendours of thy race adorns, 510 My life, thy gift I boast! He said, and sat, The peers encircling form an awful round. Then from the chine, Ulysses carves with art This, let the master of the lyre receive, 520 A pledge of love! 'tis all a wretch can give. The muse the bard inspires, exalts his mind; 525 The herald to his hand the charge conveys, Not fond of flatt'ry, nor unpleas'd with praise. When now the rage of hunger was allay'd, Thus to the lyrist wise Ulysses said: O more than man! thy soul the muse inspires, 530 535 Or taught the labours of the dreadful day! The song recalls past horrors to my eyes, And bids proud Ilion from her ashes rise. Once more harmonious strike the sounding string, How stern Ulysses, furious to destroy, 540 If faithful thou record the tale of fame, The god himself inspires thy breast with flame: And mine shall be the task, henceforth to raise In ev'ry land thy monument of praise. 546 Full of the god he rais'd his lofty strain, How the Greeks rush'd tumultuous to the main: How blazing tents illumin'd half the skies, While from the shores the winged navy flies: 550 How e'en in Ilion's walls, in deathful bands, Came the stern Greeks by Troy's assisting hands: All Troy up-heav'd the steed; of diff'ring mind, Various the Trojans counsell'd; part consign'd The monster to the sword, part sentence gave 555 To plunge it headlong in the whelming wave; Th' unwise award to lodge it in the tow'rs, An off'ring sacred to th' immortal pow'rs: Th' unwise prevail, they lodge it in the walls, And by the gods' decree proud Ilion falls; Destruction enters in the treach'rous wood, And vengeful slaughter, fierce for human blood. 560 He sung the Greeks stern-issuing from the steed, How Ilion burns, how all her fathers bleed : How to thy dome, Deiphobus! ascends The Spartan king; how Ithacus attends, 565 (Horrid as Mars) and how with dire alarms He fights, subdues; for Pallas strings his arms. Thus while he sung, Ulysses' griefs renew, 569 Tears bathe his cheeks, and tears the ground bedew. As some fond matron views in mortal fight Her husband falling in his country's right: Frantic through clashing swords she runs, she flies, As ghastly pale he groans, and faints, and dies; Close to his breast she grovels on the ground, 575 And bathes with floods of tears the gaping wound; She cries, she shrieks; the fierce insulting foe Relentless mocks her violence of woe: To chains condemn'd, as wildly she deplores; A widow, and a slave on foreign shores. So from the sluices of Ulysses' eyes 580 Fast fell the tears, and sighs succeeded sighs: And his great heart heaves with tumultuous woe; 590 |