The Poetical Works of Andrew Lang | ||
113
THE WAR
I
For ten long years the Argive leaguer layRound Priam's folk, and wrought them many woes,
While, as a lion crouch'd above his prey,
The Trojans yet made head against their foes;
And as the swift sea-water ebbs and flows
Between the Straits of Hellé and the main,
Even so the tide of battle sank and rose,
And fill'd with waifs of war the Ilian plain.
114
II
And horse on horse was driven, as wave on wave;Like rain upon the deep the arrows fell;
And like the wind, the war-cry of the brave
Rang out above the battle's ebb and swell,
And long the tale of slain, and sad to tell;
Yet seem'd the end scarce nearer than of yore,
When nine years pass'd and still the citadel
Frown'd on the Argive huts beside the shore.
III
And still the watchers on the city's crownAfar from sacred Ilios might spy
The flame from many a fallen subject town
Flare on the starry verges of the sky,
And still from rich Mæonia came the cry
Of cities sack'd where'er Achilles led.
Yet none the more men deem'd the end was nigh
While knightly Hector fought unvanquished.
115
IV
But ever as each dawn bore grief afar,And further back, wax'd Paris glad and gay,
And on the fringes of the cloud of war
His arrows, like the lightning, still would play;
Yet fled he Menelaus on a day,
And there had died, but Aphrodite's power
Him in a golden cloud did safe convey
Within the walls of Helen's fragrant bower.
V
But she, in longing for her lord and home,And scorn of her wild lover, did withdraw
From all men's eyes: but in the night would roam
Till drowsy watchmen of the city saw
A shadowy shape that chill'd the night with awe,
Treading the battlements; and like a ghost,
She stretch'd her lovely arms without a flaw,
In shame and longing, to the Argive host.
116
VI
But all day long within her bower she wept,Still dreaming of the dames renown'd of old,
Whom hate or love of the Immortals swept
Within the toils of Atê manifold;
And most she loved the ancient tales that told
How the great gods, at length to pity stirr'd,
Changed Niobe upon the mountains cold,
To a cold stone; and Procne to a bird,
VII
And Myrrha to an incense-breathing tree;—‘And ah’, she murmur'd, ‘that the gods were kind,
And bade the Harpies lay their hands on me,
And bear me with the currents of the wind
To the dim end of all things, and the blind
Land where the Ocean turneth in his bed:
Then should I leave mine evil days behind,
And Sleep should fold his wings above my head’.
117
VIII
And once she heard a Trojan woman blessThe fair-haired Menelaus, her good lord,
As brave among brave men, not merciless,
Not swift to slay the captives of his sword,
Nor wont was he to win the gold abhorr'd
Of them that sell their captives over sea.
And Helen sighed, and bless'd her for that word,
‘Yet will he ne'er be merciful to me!’
IX
In no wise found she comfort; to abideIn Ilios was to dwell with shame and fear,
And if unto the Argive host she hied,
Then should she die by him that was most dear.
And still the days dragg'd on with bitter cheer,
Till even the great gods had little joy,
So fast their children fell beneath the spear,
Below the windy battlements of Troy.
118
X
Yet many a prince of south lands, or of east,For dark Cassandra's love came trooping in;
And Priam made them merry at the feast,
And all night long they dream'd of wars to win.
And with the morning hurl'd into the din,
And cried their lady's name for battle-cry,
And won no more than this: for Paris' sin,
By Diomede's or Aias' hand to die.
XI
But for one hour within the night of woesThe hope of Troy burn'd steadfast as a star;
When strife among the Argive lords arose,
And dread Achilles held him from the war;
Yea, and Apollo from his golden car
And silver bow his shafts of evil sped,
And all the plain was darken'd, near and far,
With smoke above the pyres of heroes dead.
119
XII
And many a time through vapour of that smokeThe shafts of Troy fell fast; and on the plain
All night the Trojan watch fires burn'd and broke
Like evil stars athwart a mist of rain.
And through the arms and blood, and through the slain,
Like wolves among the fragments of the fight,
Crept spies to slay whoe'er forgat his pain
One hour, and fell on slumber in the night.
XIII
And once, when wounded chiefs their tents did keep,And only Aias might his weapons wield,
Came Hector with his host, and smiting deep,
Brake bow and spear, brake axe and glaive and shield;
Bulwark and battlement must rend and yield.
And by the ships he smote the foe and cast
Fire on the ships; and o'er the stricken field,
The Trojans saw that flame arise at last!
120
XIV
But when Achilles saw the soaring flame,And knew the ships in peril, suddenly
A change upon his wrathful spirit came,
Nor will'd he that the Danaans should die:
But call'd his Myrmidons, and with a cry
They follow'd where, like foam on a sea-wave
Patroclus' crest was dancing white and high,
Above the tide that back the Trojans drave.
XV
But like a rock amid the shifting sands,And changing springs, and tumult of the deep,
Sarpedon stood, till 'neath Patroclus' hands,
Smitten he fell; then Death and gentle Sleep
Bare him from forth the battle to the steep
Where shines his castle o'er the Lycian dell;
There hath he burial due, while all folk weep
Around the kindly prince that loved them well.
121
XVI
Not unavenged he fell, nor all aloneTo Hades did his soul indignant fly,
For soon was keen Patroclus overthrown
By Hector, and the god of archery;
And Hector stripp'd his shining panoply,
Bright arms Achilles lent: ah! naked then,
Forgetful wholly of his chivalry,
Patroclus lay, nor heard the strife of men.
XVII
Then Hector from the war a little spaceWithdrew, and clad him in Achilles' gear,
And braced the gleaming helmet o'er his face,
And grasp'd the shield; but not the Pelian spear
He won—the lance that makes the boldest fear;
And home his comrades bare his arms of gold,
Those Priam once had worn, his father dear,
But in his father's arms he waxed not old!
122
XVIII
Then round Patroclus' body, like a tideThat storms the swollen outlet of a stream
When the winds blow, and the rains fall, and wide
The river runs, and white the breakers gleam—
Trojans and Argives battled till the beam
Of Helios was sinking to the wave,
And now they near'd the ships: yet few could deem
That arms of Argos might the body save.
XIX
But even then the tidings sore were borneTo great Achilles, of Patroclus dead,
And all his goodly raiment hath he torn,
And cast the dust upon his golden head,
And many a tear and bitter did he shed.
Ay; there by his own sword had he been slain,
But swift his goddess-mother, Thetis, sped
Forth with her lovely sea-nymphs from the main.
123
XX
For, as a mother when her young child callsHearkens to that, and hath no other care:
So Thetis, from her green and windless halls
Rose, at the first word of Achilles' prayer,
To comfort him, and promise gifts of fair
New armour wrought by an immortal hand;
Then like a silver cloud she scaled the air,
Where bright the dwellings of Olympus stand.
XXI
But, as a beacon from a 'leaguer'd townWithin a sea-girt isle, leaps suddenly,
A cloud by day; but when the sun goes down,
The tongues of fire flash out, and soar on high,
To summon warlike men that dwell thereby
And bid them bring a rescue over-seas—
So now Athene sent a flame to fly
From brow and temples of Æacides.
124
XXII
Then all unarm'd he sped, and through the throng,He pass'd to the dyke's edge, beyond the wall;
Nor leap'd the ranks of fighting men among,
But shouted clearer than the clarion's call
When foes on a beleaguer'd city fall.
Three times he cried, and terror fell on these
That heard him; and the Trojans, one and all,
Fled from that shouting of Æacides.
XXIII
Backward the Trojans reel'd in headlong flight,Chariots and men, and left their bravest slain;
And the sun fell; but Troy through all the night
Watch'd by her fires upon the Ilian plain,
For Hector did the sacred walls disdain
Of Ilios; nor knew that he should stand
Ere night return'd, and burial crave in vain,
Unarm'd, forsaken, at Achilles' hand.
125
XXIV
But all that night within his chamber highHephæstus made his iron anvils ring;
And, ere the dawn, had wrought a panoply,
The goodliest ever worn by mortal king.
This to the Argive camp did Thetis bring,
And when her child had proved it, like the star
That heralds day, he went forth summoning
The host Achæan to delight of war.
XXV
And as a mountain torrent leaves its bed,And seaward sweeps the toils of men in spate;
Or as a forest-fire, that overhead
Burns in the boughs, a thing insatiate,
So raged the fierce Achilles in his hate;
And Xanthus, angry for his Trojans slain,
Brake forth, while fire and wind made desolate
What war and wave had spared upon the plain.
126
XXVI
Now through the fume and vapour of the smokeBetween the wind's voice and the water's cry,
The battle shouting of the Trojans broke,
And reached the Ilian walls confusedly;
But over soon the folk that watch'd might spy
Thin broken bands that fled, avoiding death;
Yet many a man beneath the spear must die,
Ere by the sacred gateway they drew breath.
XXVII
And as when fire doth on a forest fallAnd hot winds bear it raging in its flight,
And beechen boughs, and pines are ruin'd all,
So raged Achilles' anger in that fight;
And many an empty car, with none to smite
The madden'd horses, o'er the bridge of war
Was wildly whirled, and many a maid's delight
That day to the red wolves was dearer far.
127
XXVIII
Some Muse that loved not Troy hath done thee wrong,Homer! who whisper'd thee that Hector fled
Thrice round the sacred walls he kept so long;
Nay, when he saw his people vanquishèd
Alone he stood for Troy; alone he sped
One moment, to the struggle of the spear,
And, by the gods deserted, fell and bled,
A warrior stainless of reproach and fear.
XXIX
Then all the people from the battlementBeheld what dreadful things Achilles wrought,
For on the body his revenge he spent,
The anger of the high gods heeding nought,
To whom was Hector dearest, while he fought,
Of all the Trojan men that were their joy.
But now no more their favour might be bought
By savour of his hecatombs in Troy.
128
XXX
So for twelve days rejoiced the Argive host,And now Patroclus hath to Hades won;
But Hector naked lay, and still his ghost
Must wail where waters of Cocytus run;
Till Priam did what no man born hath done,
Who dared to pass among the Argive bands,
And clasp'd the knees of him that slew his son,
And kiss'd his terrible man-slaying hands.
XXXI
At such a price was Hector's body sentTo Ilios, where the women wail'd him shrill;
And Helen's sorrow brake into lament
As bursts a lake the barriers of a hill,
For lost, lost, lost was that one friend who still
Stood by her with kind speech and gentle heart,
The sword of war, pure faith, and steadfast will,
That strove to keep all evil things apart.
129
XXXII
And so men buried Hector. But they came,The Amazons, from frozen fields afar—
A match for heroes in the dreadful game,
The women darlings of the god of war,
Whose coming was to Priam dearer far
Than light to him that is a long while blind,
When leech's hand hath taën away the bar
That vex'd him, or the healing god is kind;
XXXIII
And Troy was glad, and with the morning lightThe Amazons went forth to slay and slay;
And wondrously they drave the foe in flight,
Until the sun had wander'd half his way;
But when he stoop'd to twilight and the gray
Hour when men loose the steer beneath the yoke,
No more Achilles held him from the fray,
But dreadful through the women's ranks he broke.
130
XXXIV
Then comes eclipse upon the crescent shield,And death on them that bear it, and they fall
One here, one there, about the stricken field,
As in that art, of love memorial,
Which moulders on the holy Carian wall.
Ay, still we see, still love, still pity there
The warrior-maids, so brave, so god-like tall,
In time's despite imperishably fair.
XXXV
But, as a dove that braves a falcon, stoodPenthesilea, wrath outcasting fear,
Or as a hind, that in the darkling wood
Withstands a lion for her younglings dear;
So stood the girl before Achilles' spear;
In vain, for singing from his hand it sped,
And crash'd through shield and breastplate till the sheer
Cold bronze drank blood, and down the queen fell dead.
131
XXXVI
Then from her locks the helm Achilles toreAnd boasted o'er the slain; but lo, the face
Of her thus lying in the dust and gore
Seem'd lovelier than is the maiden grace
Of Artemis, when weary from the chase,
She sleepeth in a haunted dell unknown.
And all the Argives marvell'd for a space,
But most Achilles made a heavy moan:
XXXVII
And in his heart there came the weary thoughtOf all that was, and all that might have been;
Of all the sorrow that his sword had wrought,
Of death that now drew near him: of the green
Vales of Larissa, where, with such a queen,
With such a love as now his spear had slain,
He had been happy, who must wind the skein
Of grievous wars, and ne'er be glad again.
132
XXXVIII
Yea, now wax'd fate half weary of her game,And had no care but aye to kill and kill;
And many young kings to the battle came,
And of that joy they quickly had their fill,
And last came Memnon: and the Trojans still
Took heart, like wearied mariners that see
(Long toss'd on unknown waves at the winds' will
Through clouds the gleaming crest of Helikê.
XXXIX
For Memnon was the child of the bright dawn,A goddess wedded to a mortal king,
Who dwells for ever on the shores withdrawn
That border on the land of sun-rising;
And he was nurtured nigh the sacred spring
That is the hidden fountain of all seas,
By them that in the gods' own garden sing,
The lily-maidens call'd Hesperides.
133
XL
But him the child of Thetis in the fightMet on a windy winter day, when high
The dust was whirled, and wrapp'd them like the night
That falleth on the mountains stealthily
When the floods come, and down their courses dry
The torrents roar, and lightning flasheth far:
So rang, so shone their harness terribly
Beneath the blinding thunder-cloud of war.
XLI
Then the dawn shudder'd on her golden throne,And called unto the west wind, and he blew
And brake the cloud asunder; and alone
Achilles stood, but Memnon, smitten through,
Lay beautiful amid the dreadful dew
Of battle, and a deathless heart was fain
Of tears, to gods impossible, that drew
From mortal hearts a little of their pain.
134
XLII
But now, their leader slain, the Trojans fled,And fierce Achilles drove them in his hate,
Avenging still his dear Patroclus dead,
Nor knew the hour with his own doom was great,
Nor trembled, standing in the Scaean gate,
Where ancient prophecy foretold his fall;
Then suddenly there sped the bolt of fate,
And smote Achilles by the Ilian wall:
XLIII
From Paris' bow it sped, and even there,Even as he grasp'd the skirts of victory,
Achilles fell, nor any man might dare
From forth the Trojan gateway to draw nigh;
But, as the woodmen watch a lion die,
Pierced with the hunter's arrow, nor come near
Till death hath veil'd his eyelids utterly,
Even so the Trojans held aloof in fear.
135
XLIV
But there his fellows on his wondrous shieldLaid the fair body of Achilles slain,
And sadly bare him through the trampled field,
And lo! the deathless maidens of the main
Rose up, with Thetis, from the windy plain,
And round the dead man beautiful they cried,
Lamenting, and with melancholy strain
The sweet-voiced Muses mournfully replied.
XLV
Yea, Muses and sea-maidens sang his dirge,And mightily the chant arose and shrill;
And wondrous echoes answer'd from the surge
Of the gray sea, and from the holy hill
Of Ida; and the heavy clouds and chill
Were gathering like mourners, sad and slow,
And Zeus did thunder mightily, and fill
The dells and glades of Ida deep with snow.
136
XLVI
Now Paris was not sated with the fameAnd rich reward Troy gave his archery;
But o'er the wine he boasted that the game
That very night he deem'd to win, or die;
‘For scarce their watch the tempest will defy’,
He said, ‘and all undream'd of might we go,
And fall upon the Argives where they lie,
Unseen, unheard, amid the silent snow’.
XLVII
So, flush'd with wine, and clad in raiment whiteAbove their mail, the young men follow'd him,
Their guide a fading camp-fire in the night,
And the sea's moaning in the distance dim;
And still with eddying snow the air did swim,
And darkly did they wend they knew not where,
White in that cursed night: an army grim,
'Wilder'd with wine, and blind with whirling air.
137
XLVIII
There was an outcast in the Argive host,One Philoctetes; whom Odysseus' wile,
(For, save he help'd, the Leaguer all was lost,)
Drew from his lair within the Lemnian isle.
But him the people, as a leper vile,
Hated, and drave to a lone hut afar,
For wounded sore was he, and many a while
His cries would wake the host foredone with war.
XLIX
Now Philoctetes was an archer wight;But in his quiver had he little store
Of arrows tipp'd with bronze, and feather'd bright;
Nay, his were blue with mould, and fretted o'er
With many a spell Melampus wrought of yore,
Singing above his task a song of bane;
And they were venom'd with the Centaur's gore,
And tipp'd with bones of men a long while slain.
138
L
This wretch for very pain might seldom sleep,And that night slept not: in the moaning blast
He deem'd the dead about his hut did creep,
And silently he rose, and round him cast
His raiment foul, and from the door he pass'd,
And peer'd into the night, and soothly heard
A whisper'd voice; then gripp'd his arrows fast
And strung his bow, and cried a bitter word:
LI
‘Art thou a gibbering ghost with war outworn,And thy faint life in Hades not begun?
Art thou a man that holdst my grief in scorn,
And yet dost live, and look upon the sun?
If man—methinks thy pleasant days are done,
And thou shalt writhe in torment worse than mine;
If ghost—new pain in Hades hast thou won,
And there with double woe shalt surely pine.’
139
LII
He spake, and drew the string, and sent a shaftAt venture through the midnight and the snow.
A little while he listen'd, then he laugh'd
Within himself, a dreadful laugh and low;
For over well the answer did he know
That midnight gave his message, the sharp cry
And armour rattling on a fallen foe
Who now was learning what it is to die.
LIII
Then Philoctetes crawl'd into his denAnd hugg'd himself against the bitter cold;
While round their leader came the Trojan men
And bound his hurt, and bare him o'er the wold,
Back to the lights of Ilios; but the gold
Of dawn was breaking on the mountains white,
Or ere they won within the guarded fold,
Long 'wilder'd in the tempest and the night.
140
LIV
And through the gate, and through the silent street,And houses where men dream'd of war no more,
The bearers wander'd with their weary feet,
And Paris to his high-roof'd house they bore.
But vainly leeches on his wound did pore,
And vain was Argive Helen's magic song;
Ah, vain her healing hands, and all her lore,
To help the life that wrought her endless wrong.
LV
Slow pass'd the fever'd hours, until the grayCold light was paling, and a sullen glow
Of livid yellow crown'd the dying day,
And brooded on the wastes of mournful snow.
Then Paris whisper'd faintly, ‘I must go
And face that wild wood-maiden of the hill;
For none but she can win from overthrow
Troy's life, and mine that guards it, if she will.’
141
LVI
So through the dumb white meadows, deep with snow,They bore him on a pallet shrouded white;
And sore they dreaded lest an ambush'd foe
Should hear him moan, or mark the moving light
That waved before their footsteps in the night;
And much they joy'd when Ida's knees were won,
And 'neath the pines upon an upland height,
They watch'd the star that heraldeth the sun.
LVII
For under woven branches of the pine,The soft dry needles like a carpet spread,
And high above the arching boughs did shine
In frosty fret of silver, that the red
New dawn fired into gold-work overhead:
Within that vale where Paris oft had been
With fair (CE)none, ere the hills he fled
To be the sinful lover of a queen.
142
LVIII
Not here they found (CE)none: ‘Nay, not here,’Said Paris, faint and low, ‘shall she be found;
Nay, bear me up the mountain, where the drear
Winds walk for ever on a haunted ground.
Methinks I hear her sighing in their sound;
Or some god calls me there, a dying man.
Perchance my latest journeying is bound
Back where the sorrow of my life began.’
LVIX
They reach'd the gateway of that highest glenAnd halted, wond'ring what the end should be;
But Paris whisper'd Helen, while his men
Fell back: ‘Here judged I gods, here shalt thou see
What judgment mine old love will pass on me.
But hide thee here; thou soon the end shalt know,
Whether the gods at length will set thee free
From that old net they wove so long ago.’
143
LX
Ah, there with wide snows round her like a pall,(CE)none crouch'd in sable robes; as still
As winter brooding o'er the summer's fall,
Or Niobe upon her haunted hill,
A woman changed to stone by grief, where chill
The rain-drops fall like tears, and the wind sighs:
And Paris deem'd he saw a deadly will
Unmoved in wild (CE)none's frozen eyes.
LXI
‘Nay, prayer to her were vain as prayer to fate’,He murmur'd, almost glad that it was so,
Like some sick man that need no longer wait,
But his pain lulls as death draws near his woe.
And Paris beckon'd to his men, and slow
They bore him dying from that fatal place,
And did not turn again, and did not know
The soft repentance on (CE)none's face.
144
LXII
But Paris spake to Helen: ‘Long ago,Dear, we were glad, who never more shall be
Together, where the west winds fainter blow
Round that Elysian island of the sea,
Where Zeus from evil days shall set thee free.
Nay, kiss me once, it is a weary while,
Ten weary years since thou hast smiled on me,
But, Helen, say good-bye, with thine old smile!’
LXIII
And as the dying sunset through the rainWill flush with rosy glow a mountain height,
Even so, at his last smile, a blush again
Pass'd over Helen's face, so changed and white;
And through her tears she smiled, his last delight,
The last of pleasant life he knew, for gray
The veil of darkness gather'd, and the night
Closed o'er his head, and Paris pass'd away.
145
LXIV
Then for one hour in Helen's heart re-born,Awoke the fatal love that was of old,
Ere she knew all; and the cold cheeks outworn,
She kiss'd; she kiss'd the hair of wasted gold,
The hands that ne'er her body should enfold;
Then slow she follow'd where the bearers led,
Follow'd dead Paris through the frozen wold
Back to the town where all men wish'd her dead.
LXV
Perchance it was a sin, I know not, this!Howe'er it be, she had a woman's heart,
And not without a tear, without a kiss,
Without some strange new birth of the old smart,
From her old love of the brief days could part
For ever; though the dead meet, ne'er shall they
Meet, and be glad by Aphrodite's art,
Whose souls have wander'd each its several way.
146
LXVI
And now was come the day when on a pyreMen laid fair Paris, in a broider'd pall,
And fragrant spices cast into the fire,
And round the flame slew many an Argive thrall.
When, like a ghost, there came among them all,
A woman, once beheld by them of yore,
When first through storm and driving rain the tall
Black ships of Argos dash'd upon the shore.
LXVII
Not now in wrath (CE)none came; but fairLike a young bride when nigh her bliss she knows;
And in the soft night of her fallen hair
Shone flowers like stars, more white than Ida's snows;
And scarce men dared to look on her, of those
The pyre that guarded; suddenly she came,
And sprang upon the pyre, and shrill arose
Her song of death, like incense through the flame.
147
LXVIII
And still the song, and still the flame went up,But when the flame wax'd fierce, the singing died;
And soon with red wine from a golden cup
Priests drench'd the pyre; but no man might divide
The ashes of the bridegroom from the bride.
Nay, they were wedded, and at rest again,
As in those old days on the mountain-side,
Before the promise of their youth was vain.
The Poetical Works of Andrew Lang | ||