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But
as the nation beset betwixt doom and a shameful surrender
Waited
mute for a voice that could lead and a heart to encourage,
Up
in the silence deep Laocoon rose up, far-heard, -
Heard
by the gods in their calm and heard by men in their passion
–
Cloud-haired,
clad in mystic red, flamboyant, sombre,
Priam’s
son Laocoon, fate-darkened seer of Apollo.
As
when the soul of the Ocean arises rapt in the dawning
And
mid the rocks and the foam uplifting the voice of its musings
Opens
the chant of its turbulent harmonies, so rose the far-borne
Voice
of Laocoon soaring mid columns of Ilion’s glories,
Claiming
the earth and the heavens for the field of its confident rumour.
“Trojans,
deny your hearts to the easeful flutings of Hades!
Live,
O nation!” he thundered forth and Troy’s hearts and her pillars
Sent
back their fierce response. Restored to her leonine spirits
Ilion
rose in her agora filling the heavens with shoutings,
Bearing
a name to the throne of Zeus in her mortal defiance.
As
when a sullen calm of the heavens discourages living,
Nature
and man feel the pain of the lightnings repressed in their bosoms,
Dangerous
and dull is the air, then suddenly strong from the anguish
Zeus
of the thunders starts into glories releasing his storm-voice,
Earth
exults in the kiss of the rain and the life-giving laughters,
So
from the silence broke forth the thunder of Troya arising;
Fiercely
she turned from prudence and wisdom and turned back to greatness,
Casting
her voice to the heavens from the depths of her fathomless spirit.
Raised
by those clamours, triumphant once more in this scene of his greatness,
Tool
of the gods, but he deemed of his strength as a leader in Nature,
Took
for his own a voice that was given and dreamed that he fashioned
Fate
that fashions us all, Laocoon stood mid the shouting
Leaned
on the calm of an ancient pillar. In eyes self-consuming
Kindled
the flame of the prophet that blinds at once and illumines;
Quivering
thought-besieged lips and shaken locks of the lion,
Lifted
his gaze the storm-led enthusiast. Then as the shouting
Tired
of itself at last disappeared in the bosom of silence,
Once
more he started erect and his voice o'er the hearts of his hearers
Swept
like Ocean's impatient cry when it calls from its surges,
Page-424
Ocean
loud with a thought sublime in its measureless marching.
Each
man felt his heart like foam in the rushing of waters.
“Ilion
is vanquished then! she abases her grandiose spirit
Mortal
found in the end to the gods and the Greeks and Antenor,
And
when a barbarous chieftain’s menace and insolent mercy
Bring
here their pride to insult the columned spirit of Ilus,
Trojans
have sat and feared! For a man has arisen and spoken,
One
whom the gods in their anger have hired. Since the Argive prevailed not,
Armed,
with his strength and his numbers, in Troya they sought for her
slayer,
Gathered
their wiles in a voice and they chose a man famous and honoured,
Summoned
Ate to aid and corrupted the heart of Antenor.
Flute
of the breath of the Hell-witch, always he scatters among you
Doubt,
affliction and weakness chilling the hearts of the fighters,
Always
his voice with its cadenced and subtle possession for evil
Breaks
the constant will and maims the impulse heroic.
Therefore
while yet her heroes fight and her arms are unconquered,
Troy
in your hearts is defeated! The souls of your Fathers have heard you
Dallying,
shamefast, with vileness, lured by the call of dishonour.
Such
is the power Zeus gave to the winged words of a mortal!
Foiled
in his will, disowned by the years that stride on for ever,
Yet
in the frenzy cold of his greed and his fallen ambition
Doom
from heaven he calls down on his countrymen, Trojan abuses
Troy,
his country, extolling her enemies, blessing her slayers.
Such
are the gods Antenor has made in his heart’s own image
That
if one evil man have not way for his greed and his longing
Cities
are doomed and kings must be slain and a nation must perish!
But
from the mind of the free and the brave I will answer thy bodings,
Gold-hungry
raven of Troy who croakst from thy nest at her princes.
Only
one doom irreparable treads down the soul of a nation,
Only
one downfall endures; ’tis the ruin of greatness and virtue,
Mourning
when Freedom departs from the life and the heart of a people,
Into
her room comes creeping the mind of the slave and it poisons
Manhood
and joy and the voice to lying is trained and subjection
Easy
feels to the neck of man who is next to the godheads.
Not
of the fire am I terrified, not of the sword and its slaying;
Vileness
of men appals me, baseness I fear and its voices.
What
can man suffer direr or worse than enslaved from a victor
Boons
to accept, to take safety and ease from the foe and the stranger,
Fallen
from the virtue stern that heaven permits to a mortal?
Page-425
Death
is not keener than this nor the slaughter of friends and our dear ones.
Out
and alas! earth’s greatest are earth and they fail in the testing,
Conquered
by sorrow and doubt, fate’s hammerers, fires of her furnace.
God
in their souls they renounce and submit to their clay and its
promptings.
Else
could the heart of Troya have recoiled from the loom of the shadow
Cast
by Achilles’ spear or shrunk at the sound of his car-wheels?
Now
he has graven an oath austere in his spirit unpliant
Victor
at last to constrain in his stride the walls of Apollo
Burning
Troy ere he sleeps. ’Tis the vow of a high-crested nature;
Shall
it break ramparted Troy? Yea, the soul of a man too is mighty
More
than the stones and the mortar! Troy had a soul once, O Trojans,
Firm
as her god-built ramparts. When in the hour of his passion¹ When
Sarpedon fell and Zeus averted his visage,
Xanthus
red to the sea ran sobbing with bodies of Trojans,
When
in the day of the silence of heaven the far-glancing helmet
Ceased
from the ways of the fight, and panic slew with Achilles
Hosts
who were left unshepherded pale at the fall of their greatest,
Godlike
Troy lived on. Do we speak mid a city’s ruins?
Lo!
she confronts her heavens as when Tros and Laomedon ruled her.
All
now is changed, these mutter and sigh to you, all now is ended;
Strength
has renounced you, Fate has finished the thread of her spinning.
Hector
is dead, he walks in the shadows; Troilus fights not;
Resting
his curls on the asphodel he has forgotten his country;
Strong
Sarpedon lies in Bellerophon’s city sleeping:
Memnon
is slain and the blood of Rhesus has dried on the Troad:
All
of the giant Asius sums in a handful of ashes.
Grievous² are these
things; our hearts still keep all the pain of them treasured,
Hard
though they grow by use and iron caskets of sorrow.
Hear
yet, O fainters in wisdom snared by your pathos,
Know
this iron world we live in where Hell casts its shadow.
Blood
and grief are the ransom of men for the joys of their transience,
For
we are mortals bound in our strength and beset in our labour.
This
is our human destiny; every moment of living
Toil
and loss have gained in the constant siege of our bodies.
Men
must sow earth with their lives³and their tears that their country may prosper;
¹(i)
in the hour of his uplifting (ii)
by the Fates (gods) (spears)
overtaken,
²Wretched/Miserable
³hearts
Page-426
Earth
who bore and devours us that life may be born from our remnants
Then
shall the Sacrifice reap¹
its fruits when the war-shout is silent,
Nor
shall the blood be in vain that our mother has felt on her bosom
Nor
shall the seed of the mighty fail when Death is the sower.
Still
from the loins of the mother eternal are heroes engendered,
Still
Deiphobus shouts in the war-front trampling the Argives,
Strong
Aeneas’ far-borne voice is heard from our ramparts,
Paris’
hands are swift and his feet in the chases of Ares.
Lo,
when deserted we fight² by Asia’s soon-wearied peoples,
Men
ingrate who enjoyed the protection and loathed the protector,
Heaven
has sent us replacing a continent Penthesilea!
Low
has the heart of Achaia sunk since it shook at her war-cry.
Ajax
has bit at the dust; it is all he shall have of the Troad;
Tall
Meriones lies and measures his portion of booty.
Who
is the fighter in Ilion thrills not rejoicing to hearken
Even
her name on unwarlike lips, much more in the mellay
Shout
of the daughter of battles, armipotent Penthesilea?
If
there were none but these only, if hosts came not surging behind them,
Young
men burning-eyed to outdare all the deeds of their elders,
Each
in his beauty a Troilus, each in his valour a Hector,
Yet
were the measures poised in the equal balance of Ares.
Who
then compels you, O people unconquered, to sink down abjuring
All
that was Troy? For O, if she yield, let her use not for ever
One
of her titles! shame not the shade of Teucer and Ilus,
Soil
not Tros! Are you awed by the strength of the swift-foot Achilles?
Is
it a sweeter lure in the cadenced voice of Antenor?
Or
are you weary of Time and the endless roar of the battle?
Wearier
still are the Greeks! their eyes look out o'er the waters
Nor
with the flight of their spears is the wing of their hopes towards Troya.
Dull
are their hearts; they sink from the war-cry and turn from the spear-stroke
Sullenly
dragging backwards, desiring the paths of the Ocean,
Dreaming
of hearths that are far and the children growing to manhood
Who
are small infant faces still in the thoughts of their fathers.
Therefore
these call you to yield lest they wake and behold in the dawn-light
All
Poseidon whitening lean to the west in his waters
Thick
with the sails of the Greeks departing beaten to Hellas.
Who
is it calls? Antenor the statesman, Antenor the patriot,
Thus
who loves his country and worships the soil of his fathers!
¹gather
²fought
Page-427
Which
of you loves like him Troya? which of the children of heroes
Yearns
for the touch of a yoke on his neck and desires the aggressor?
If
there be any so made by the gods in the nation of Ilus,
Leaving
this city which freemen have founded, freemen have dwelt in,
Far
on the beach let him make his couch in the tents of Achilles,
Not
in this mighty Ilion, not with the lioness fighting,
Guarding
the lair of her young and roaring back at her hunters.
We
who are souls descended from Ilus and seeds of his making,
Other-hearted
shall march from our gates to answer Achilles.
What!
shall this ancient Ilion welcome the day of the conquered?
She
who was head of the world, shall she live in the guard of the Hellene
Cherished
as slave-girls are, who are taken in war, by their captors?
Europe
shall walk in our streets with the pride and the gait of the victor?
Greeks
shall enter our homes and prey on our mothers and daughters?
This
Antenor desires and this Ucalegon favours.
Traitors!
whether ’tis cowardice drives or the sceptic of virtue,
Cold-blooded
age, or gold insatiably tempts from its coffers
Pleading
for safety from foreign hands and the sack and the plunder.
Leave
them, my brothers! spare the baffled hypocrites! Failure
Sharpest
shall torture their hearts when they know that still you are Trojans.
Silence,
O reason of man! for a voice from the gods has been uttered!
Dardanus,
hearken the sound divine that comes to you mounting
Out
of the solemn ravines from the mystic seat on the tripod!
Phoebus,
the master of Truth, has promised the earth to our peoples.
Children
of Zeus, rejoice! for the Olympian brows have nodded
Regal
over the world. In earth’s rhythm of shadow and sunlight
Storm
is the dance of the locks of the God assenting to greatness,
Zeus
who with secret compulsion orders the ways of our nature;
Veiled
in events he lives and working disguised in the mortal
Builds
our strength by pain, and an empire is born out of ruins.
Then
if the tempest be loud and the thunderbolt leaping incessant
Shatters
the roof, if the lintels flame at last and each cornice
Shrieks
with pain of the blast, if the very pillars totter,
Keep
yet your faith in Zeus, hold fast to the word of Apollo.
Not
by a little pain and not by a temperate labour
Trained
is the nation chosen by Zeus for a dateless dominion.
Long
must it labour rolled in the wrath¹of the
fathomless surges,
Often
neighbour with death and ere Ares grow firm to its banners
Feel
on the pride of its Capitol tread of the triumphing victor,
¹foam
Page-428
Hear
the barbarian knock at its gates or the neighbouring foeman
Glad
of the transient smile of his fortune suffer insulting; -
They,
the nation eternal, brook their taunts who must perish!
Heaviest
toils they must bear; they must wrestle with Fate and her Titans,
And
when some leader returns from the battle sole of his thousands
Crushed
by the hammers of God, yet never despair of their country.
Dread
not the ruin, fear not the storm-blast, yield not, O Trojans.
Zeus
shall rebuild! Death ends not our days, the fire shall not triumph.
Death?
I have faced it. Fire? I have watched it climb in my vision
Over
the timeless domes and over the roof-tops of Priam,
But
I have looked beyond and have seen the smile of Apollo.
After
her glorious centuries, after her world-wide triumphs,
If,
near her ramparts outnumbered she fights, by the nations forsaken,
Lonely
again on her hill, by her streams, and her meadows and beaches,
Once
where she revelled, shake to the tramp of her countless invaders,
Testings
are these from the god. For Fate severe like a mother
Teaches
our wills by disaster and strikes down the props that would weaken,
Fate
and the Thought on high that is wiser than yearnings of mortals.
Troy
has arisen before, but from ashes, not shame, not surrender!
(Souls
that are true to themselves are immortal; the soulless for ever
Lingers
helpless in Hades a shade among shades disappointed.)
Now
is the god in my bosom mighty compelling me, Trojans,
Now
I release what my spirit has kept and it saw in its vision;
Nor
will be silent for gibe of the cynic or sneer of the traitor.
Troy
shall triumph! Hear, O ye peoples, the word of Apollo -
Hear
it and tremble, O Greece, in thy youth and the dawn of thy future;
Rather
forget while thou canst, but the gods in their hour shall remind thee.
Tremble,
nations of Asia, false to the greatness within you.
Troy
shall surge back on your realms with the sword and the yoke of the victor.
Troy
shall triumph! Though nations conspire and the gods lead her foemen,
Fate
that is born of the spirit is greater than they and will shield her.
Foemen
shall help her with war, her defeats shall be victory’s moulders.
Walls
that restrain shall be rent; she shall rise out of sessions unsettled,
Oceans
shall be her walls at the end and the desert her limit;
Indus
shall send to her envoys; her eyes shall look northward from Thule.
She
shall enring all the coasts with her strength like the kingly Poseidon,
She
shall o’ervault all the lands with her rule like the limitless azure.”
Ceasing
from speech Laocoon, girt with the shouts of a nation,
Lapsed
on his seat like one seized and abandoned and weakened; nor ended
Page-429
Only
in iron applause, but throughout with a stormy approval
Ares
broke from the hearts of his people in ominous thunder.
Savage
and dire was the sound like a wild beast’s tracked out and hunted,
Wounded,
yet trusting to tear out the entrails live of its hunters,
Savage
and cruel and threatening doom to the foe and opponent.
Yet
when the shouting sank at last, Ucalegon rose up
Trembling
with age and with wrath and in accents hurried and piping
Faltered
a senile fierceness forth on the maddened assembly.
“Ah,
it is even so far that you dare, O you children of Priam,
Favourites
vile of a people sent mad by the gods, and thou risest,
Dark
Laocoon, prating of heroes and spurning for cowards,
Smiting
for traitors the aged and wise who were grey when they spawned thee!
Imp
of destruction, mane of mischief! Ah, spur us with courage,
Thou
who hast never prevailed against even the feeblest Achaian.
Rather
twice hast thou raced in the rout to the ramparts for shelter,
Leading
the panic, and shrieked as thou ranst to the foeman for mercy
Who
were a mile behind thee, O matchless and wonderful racer.
Safely
counsel to others the pride and the firmness of heroes,
Thou
who wilt not die in the battle! For even swiftest Achilles
Could
not o’ertake thee, I ween, nor wind-footed Penthesilea.
Mask
of a prophet, heart of a coward, tongue of a trickster,
Timeless
Ilion thou alone ruinest, helped by the Furies.
I,
Ucalegon, first will rend off the mask from thee, traitor.
For
I believe thee suborned by the cynic wiles of Odysseus
And
thou conspirest to sack this Troy with the greed of the Cretan.”
Hasting
unstayed he pursued like a brook that scolds amid pebbles,
Voicing
angers shrill; for the people astonished were silent;
Long
he pursued not; a shouting broke from that stupor of fury,
Men
sprang pale to their feet and hurled out menaces lethal;
All
that assembly swayed like a forest swept by the storm-wind.
Obstinate,
straining his age-dimmed eyes, Ucalegon, trembling
Worse
yet with anger, clamoured feebly back at the people,
Whelmed
in their roar. Unheard was his voice like a swimmer in surges
Lost,
yet he spoke. But the anger grew in the throats of the people
Lion-voiced,
hurting the heart with sound and daunting the nature,
Till
from some stalwart hand a javelin whistling and vibrant
Missing
the silvered head of the senator rang disappointed
Out
on the distant wall of a house by the side of the market.
Not
even then would the old man hush or yield to the tempest.
Page-430
Wagging
his hoary beard and shifting his aged eyeballs,
Tossing
his hands he stood; but Antenor seized him and Aetor,
Dragged
him down on his seat though he strove, and chid him and silenced.
“Cease,
0 friend; for the gods have won. It were easier piping
High
with thy aged treble to alter the rage of the Ocean
Than
to o’erbear this people stirred by Laocoon. Leave now
Effort
unhelpful, wrap thy days in a mantle of silence;
Give
to the gods their will and dry-eyed wait for the ending.”
So
now the old men ceased from their strife with the gods and with Troya;
Cowed
by the storm of the people’s wrath they desisted from hoping.
But
though the roar long swelled, like the sea when the winds have subsided,
One
man yet rose up unafraid and beckoned for silence,
Not
of the aged, but ripe in his look and ruddy of visage,
Stalwart
and bluff and short-limbed, Halamus son of Antenor.
Forward
he stood from the press and the people fell silent and listened,
For
he was ever first in the mellay and loved by the fighters.
He
with a smile began: “Come, friends, debate is soon ended
If
there is right but of lungs and you argue with javelins. Wisdom,
Rather
pray for her aid in this dangerous hour of your fortunes.
Not
to scalp Laocoon, too much praising his swiftness,
Trojans,
I rise; for some are born brave with the spear in the war-car,
Others
bold with the tongue, nor equal gifts unto all men
Zeus
has decreed who guides his world in a round that is devious
Carried
this way and that like a ship that is tossed on the waters.
Why
should we rail then at one who is lame by the force of Cronion?
Not
by his will is he lame; he would race, if he could, with the swiftest
Yet
is the halt man no runner, nor, friends, must you rise up and slay me,
If
I should say of this priest, he is neither Sarpedon nor Hector.
Then,
if my father whom once you honoured, ancient Antenor,
Hugs
to him Argive gold which I see not, his son, in his mansion,
Me
too accusest thou, prophet Laocoon? Friends, you have watched me
Sometimes
fight; did you see with my house's allies how I gambolled,
Changed,
when with sportive spear I was tickling the ribs of my Argives,
Nudges
of friendly counsel inviting to entry in Troya?
Men,
these are visions of laekbrains; men, these are myths of the market.
Let
us have done with them, brothers and friends; hate only the Hellene.
Prophet,
I bow to the oracles. Wise are the gods in their silence,
Wise
when they speak; but their speech is other than ours and their wisdom
Hard
for a mortal mind to hold and not madden or wander;
But
for myself I see only the truth as a soldier who battles
Page-431
Judging
the strength of his foes and the chances of iron encounter.
Few
are our armies, many the Greeks, and we waste in the combat
Bound
to our numbers, - they by the Ocean hemmed from their kinsmen,
We
by our fortunes, waves of the gods that are harder to master,
They
like a rock that is chipped, but we like a mist that disperses.
Then
if Achilles, bound by an oath, bring peace to us, healing,
Bring
to us respite, help, though bought at a price, yet full-measured,
Strengths
of the North at our side and safety assured from the Achaian
For
he is true though a Greek, will you shun this mighty advantage?
Peace
at the least we shall have, though gold we lose and much glory;
Peace
we will use for our strength to breathe in, our wounds to recover,
Teaching
Time to prepare for happier wars in the future.
Pause
ere you fling from you life; you are mortals, not gods in your glory.
Not
for submission to new ally or to ancient foeman
Peace
these desire; for who would exchange wide death for subjection?
Who
would submit to a yoke? Or who shall rule Trojans in Troya?
Swords
are there still at our sides, there are warriors' hearts in our bosoms.
Peace
your senators welcome, not servitude, breathing they ask for.
But
if for war you pronounce, if a noble death you have chosen,
That
I approve. What fitter end for this warlike nation,
Knowing
that empires at last must sink and perish all cities,
Than
to preserve to the end posterity’s praise and its greatness
Ceasing
in clangour of arms and a city's flames for our death-pyre?
Choose
then with open eyes what the dread gods offer to Troya.
Hope
not now Hector is dead and Sarpedon, Asia inconstant,
We
but a handful, Troy can prevail over Greece and Achilles.
Play
not with dreams in this hour, but sternly, like men and not children,
Choose
with a noble and serious greatness fates fit for Troya.
Stark
we will fight till buried we fall under Ilion’s ruins,
Or,
unappeased, we will curb our strength for the hope of the future.”
Not
without praise of his friends and assent of the thoughtfuller Trojans,
Halamus
spoke and ceased. But now in the Ilian forum
Bright,
of the sun-god a ray, and even before he has spoken
Sending
the joy of his brilliance into the hearts of his hearers,
Paris
arose. Not applauded his rising, but each man towards him
Eagerly
turned as if feeling that all before which was spoken
Were
but a prelude and this was the note he has waited for always.
Sweet
was his voice like a harp's, when it chants of war, and its cadence
Softened
with touches of music thoughts that were hard to be suffered,
Sweet
like a string that- is lightly struck, but it penetrates wholly.
Page-432
“Calm with the greatness you hold from your sires by the right of your nature
I
too would have you decide before Heaven in the strength of your spirits
Not
to the past and its memories moored like the thoughts of Antenor
Hating
the vivid march of the present, nor towards the future
Panting through dreams like my brother Laocoon vexed by Apollo.
Dead
is the past; the void has possessed it; its drama is ended,
Finished its music. The future is dim and remote from our knowledge,
Silent
it lies on the knees of the gods in their¹
luminous stillness.
But to our gaze God's light is a darkness, His plan is a_chaos.
Who shall foretell the event of a battle, the fall of a footstep?
Oracles, visions and prophecies voice but the dreams of the mortal,
And ‘tis our
sprit within is the Pythoness tortured
in
Dclphi.
Heavenly voices to us are a silence, those colours a whiteness.
Neither the thought of the statesman prevails nor the dream of the prophet,
Whether
one cry 'Thus devise and thy heart shall be given its wanting',
Vainly
the other 'The heavens have spoken; hear then their message'.
Who
can point out the way of the gods and the path of their travel,
Who shall impose on them bounds and an orbit? The winds have their treading,
-
They
can be followed and seized, not.
The gods when they move towards their purpose.
They
are not bound by our deeds and our thinkings. Sin exalted
Seizes
secure on the thrones of the world for her glorious portion,
Down to the bottomless pit the good man is thrust in his virtue.
Leave to the gods their godhead and, 'mortal, turn to thy labour;
Take what thou canst from the hour that is thine and be fearless in spirit;
This
is the greatness of man and the joy
of his stay in the sunlight.
Now whether over the waste of Poseidon the ships of the Argives
Empty and sad shall return or sacred Ilion perish,
Priam be slain and for ever cease this imperial nation,
These things the gods are strong to conceal from the hopings of mortals.
Neither
Antenor knows nor Laocoon. Only of one thing
Man can be sure, the will in his heart and his strength in his purpose:
This too is Fate and this too the gods, nor the meanest in Heaven.
Paris
keeps what he seized from Time and Fate while unconquered²
Life speeds
warm through his veins and his heart is assured of the sunlight.
After
'tis cold, none heeds, none hinders. Not for the dead man
Earth
and her wars and her cares, her joys and her gracious concessions,
¹the
²Paris
the Priamid keeps what he seized from Time and Fate
while
Page - 433
Whether
for ever he sleeps in the chambers of Nature unmindful
Or
into wideness wakes like a dreamer called from his visions.
Ilion
in flames I choose, not fallen from the heights of her spirit.
Great
and free has she lived since they raised her twixt billow and mountain,
Great
let her end; let her offer her freedom to fire, not the Hellene.
She
was not founded by mortals; gods erected her ramparts,
Lifted
her piles to the sky, a seat not for slaves but the mighty.
All
men marvelled at Troy; by her deeds and her spirit they knew her
Even
from afar as the lion is known by his roar and his preying.
Sole she lived-royal and fell, erect in her leonine nature.
So,
O her children, still let her live unquelled in her purpose
Either
to stand with her l feet on the world oppressing the nations
Or
in her l ashes to lie and her¹
name be forgotten for ever.
Justly
your voices approve me, armipotent children of Ilus;
Straight
from Zeus is our race and the Thunderer lives in our nature.
Long
I have suffered this²
taunt that Paris was Ilion’s ruin
Born
on a night of the gods and of Ate, clothed in a body.
Scornful
I strode on my path³ secure of the light in my bosom,
Turned
from the muttering voices of envy, their hates who are fallen,
Voices
of hate that cling round the wheels of the triumphing victor;
Now
if I speak, ’tis the strength in me answers, not to belittle,
That
excusing which most I rejoice in and glory for ever,
Tyndaris’
rape whom I seized by the will of divine Aphrodite.
Mortal
this error that Greece would have slumbered apart in her mountains,
Sunk,
by the trumpets of Fate unaroused and the morning within her,
Only
were Paris unborn and the world had not gazed upon Helen.
Fools,
who say that a spark was the cause of this giant destruction!
War
would have stridden on Troy though Helen were still in her Sparta
Tending
an Argive loom, not the glorious prize of the Trojans,
Greece
would have banded her nations though Paris had drunk not Eurotas,
Coast
against coast I set not, nor Ilion opposite Argos.
Phryx
accuse who upreared Troy’s domes by the azure Aegean,
Curse
Poseidon who fringed with Greece the blue of his waters:
Then
was this war first decreed and then Agamemnon was fashioned;
Armed
he strode forth in the secret Thought that is womb of the future,
Fate
and Necessity guided these vessels, captained their armies.
When
they stood mailed at her gates, when they cried in the might of their union,
‘Troy,
renounce thy alliances, draw back humbly from Hellas’,
¹your
²brooked
their ³way
Page-434
Should
she have hearkened persuading her strength to a shameful compliance,
Ilian
queen of the world¹
whose voice was the breath of the storm-gods?
Should
she have drawn back her foot as it strode towards the hills of the Latins?
Thrace
left bare to her foes, recoiled from Illyrian conquests?
If
all this without battle were possible, people of Priam,
Blame
then Paris, say then that Helen was cause of the struggle.
But
I have sullied the hearth and unsealed the gaze of the Furies,
Heaven
I have armed with my sin, I have trampled the gift and the guest-rule,
So
was Tray doomed who righteous had triumphed, locked with the Argive.
Fools
or hypocrites! Meanest falsehood is this among mortals,
Veils
of purity weaving, names misplacing ideal
When
our desires we disguise and paint the lusts of our nature.
Men,
ye are men in your pride and your strength, be not sophists and tonguesters.
Lie
not! say²
not that nations live by righteousness, justice
Shields
them, gods out of heaven look down³
on the crimes of the mighty!
Known
have men what screened itself4 mouthing
these semblances. Crouching
Dire
like a beast in the green of the thicket, selfishness silent
Crunches
the bones of its prey while the priest and the statesman are glozing.
So
are the nations soothed and deceived by the clerics of virtue,
Taught
to reconcile fear of the gods with their lusts and their passions,
So
with a lie on their lips they march to the rapine and slaughter.
Truly
the vanquished were guilty! Else would their cities have perished,
Shrieked
their ravished virgins, their peasants been hewn in the vineyards?
Truly
the victors were tools of the gods and their glorious servants!
Else
would the war-cars have ground triumphant their bones whom they hated?
Servants
of God are they verily, even as the ape and the tiger.
Does
not the wild beast too triumph enjoying the flesh of his captives?
Tell
us then what was the sin of the antelope, wherefore they doomed her
Wroth
at her many crimes? Come, justify God to his creatures!
Not
to her sins was she offered, not to the Furies or justice,
But
to the strength of the lion the high gods offered a victim,
Force
that is God in the lion's breast with the forest for altar.
What,
in the cities stormed and sacked by Achilles in Troas
¹ways/world
ways ²prate
³wroth
4thing
lies screened
Page-435
Was
there no just man slain? Was Brises then a transgressor?
Hearts
that were pierced in his walls were they sinners tracked by the Furies?
No,
they were pious and just and their altars burned for Apollo,
Reverent
flamed up to Pallas who slew them aiding the Argives.
Or
if the crime of Paris they shared and his doom has embraced them,
Whom
had the island cities offended, stormed by the Locrian,
Wave-kissed
homes of peace but given to the sack and the spoiler?
Was
then King Atreus just and the house accursed of Pelops,
Tantalus’
race, whose deeds men shuddering hear and are silent?
Look!
they endure, their pillars are firm, they are regnant and triumph.
Or
are Thyestean banquets sweet to the gods in their savour?
Only
a woman’s heart is pursued in their wrath by the Furies!
No,
when the wrestlers meet and embrace in the mighty arena,
Not
at their sins and their virtues file high gods look in that trial;
Which
is the strongest, which is the subtlest, this they consider.
Nay,
there is none in the World to befriend save ourselves and our courage;
Prowess
alone in the battle is virtue, skill in the fighting
Only
helps, the gods aid only the strong and the valiant.
Put
forth your lives in the blow, you shall beat back the banded aggressors.
Neither
believe that for justice denied your subjects have left you
Nor
that for justice trampled Pallas and Hera abandon.
Two
are the angels of God whom men worship, strength and enjoyment.
Into
this life which the sunlight bounds and the greenness has cradled,
Armed
with strength we have come; as our strength is, so is our joyance.
What
but for joyance is birth and what but for joyance is living?
But
on this earth that is narrow, this stage that is crowded, increasing
One
on another we press. There is hunger for lands and for oxen,
Horses
and armour and gold required;¹
possession allures us
Adding
always as field to field some fortunate farmer.
Hearts
too and minds are our prey; we seize on men’s souls and their bodies,
Slaves
to our works and desires that our hearts may bask golden in leisure.
One
on another we prey and one by another are mighty.
This
is the world and we have not made it; if it is evil,
Blame
first the gods; but for us, we must live by its laws or we perish.
Power
is divine; divinest of all is power over mortals.
Power
then the conqueror seeks and power the imperial nation,
Even
as luminous, passionless, wonderful, high over all things
Sit
in their calmness the gods and oppressing our grief-tortured nations
Stamp
their wills on the world. Nor less in our death-besieged natures
¹desired
Page-436
Gods
are and altitudes. Earth resists, but my soul in me widens
Helped
by the toil behind and the agelong effort of Nature.
Even
in the worm is a god and it writhes for a form and an outlet.
Workings
immortal obscurely struggling, hints-of a godhead
Labour
to form in this clay a divinity. Hera widens,
Pallas
aspires in me, Phoebus in flames goes battling and singing,
Ares
and Artemis chase through the fields of my soul in their hunting,
Last
in some hour of the Fates a Birth stands released and triumphant;
Poured
by its deeds over earth it rejoices fulfilled in its splendour.
Conscious
dimly of births unfinished hid in our being
Rest
we cannot; a world cries in us for space and for fullness.
Fighting
we strive by the spur of the gods who are in us and o’er us,
Stamping
our image on man and events to be Zeus or be Ares.
Love
and the need of mastery, joy and the longing for greatness
Rage
like a fire unquenchable burning the world and creating,
Nor
till humanity dies will they sink in the ashes of Nature.
All
is injustice of love or all is injustice of battle.
Man
over woman, woman o'er man, over lover and foeman
Wrestling
we strive to expand in our souls, to be wide, to be joyous.¹
If
thou wouldst only be just, then wherefore at all shouldst thou conquer?
Not
to be just, but to rule, though with kindness and high-seated mercy,
Taking
the world for our own and our will from our slaves and our subjects,
Smiting
the proud and sparing the suppliant, Trojans, is conquest.
Justice
was base of thy government? Vainly, O statesman, thou liest.
If
thou wert just, thou wouldst free thy slaves and be equal with all men.
Such
were a dream of some sage at night when he muses in fancy,
Imaging
freely a flawless world where none were afflicted,
No
man inferior, all could sublimely equal and brothers
Live
in a peace divine like the gods in their luminous regions.
This,
O Antenor, were justice known but in words to us mortals.
But
for the justice thou vauntest enslaving men to thy purpose,
Setting
an iron yoke, nor regarding their need and their nature,
Then
to say ‘I am just; I slay not save by procedure,
Rob
not save by law’ is an outrage to Zeus and his creatures.
Terms
are these feigned by the intellect making a pact with our yearnings,
Lures
of the sophist within us draping our passions with virtue.
When
thou art weak, thou art just, when thy subjects are strong and remember.
Therefore,
O Trojans, be firm in your will and, though all men abandon,
¹happy.
Page-437
Bow
not your heads to reproach nor your hearts to the sin of repentance;
For
you have done what the gods desired in your breasts and are blameless.
Proudly
enjoy the earth that they gave you, enthroning their natures,
Fight
with the Greeks and the world and trample down the rebellious,
What
you have lost recover, nor yield to the hurricane passing.
You
cannot utterly die while the Power lives untired in your bosoms;
When
’tis withdrawn, not a moment of life can be added by virtue.
Faint
not for helpers fled! Though your yoke had been mild as a father’s
They
would have gone as swiftly. Strength men desire in their masters;
I
All men worship
success and in failure and weakness abandon.
Not
for his justice they clung to Teucer, but for their safety,
Seeing
in Troy a head and by barbarous foemen afflicted.
Faint
not, 0 Trojans, cease not from battle, persist in your labour!
Conquer
the Greeks, your allies shall be yours and fresh nations your subjects.
One
care only lodge in your hearts, how to fight, how to conquer.
Peace
has smiled out of Phthia; a hand comes outstretched from the Hellene.
Who
would not join with the godlike? who would not grasp at Achilles?
There
is a price for his gifts, it is such as Achilles should ask for,
Never
this nation concede.¹
O Antenor's golden phrases
Glorifying
rest to the tired and confuting patience and courage,
Garbed
with a subtlety lax and the hopes that palliate surrender!
Charmed
men applaud the skilful purpose, the dexterous speaker,
This
they forget that a Force decides, not the wiles of the statesman.²
‘Now
let us yield,’ do you say, ‘we will rise when our masters are weakened’?
Nay,
then our master’s master shall find us an easy possession!
Easily
nations bow to a yoke when their virtue relaxes;
Hard
is the breaking fetters once worn, for the virtue has perished.
Hope
you when custom has shaped men into the mould of a vileness,
Hugging
their chains when the weak feel easier trampled than rising
Or
though they groan, yet have heart nor strength for the anguish of effort,
Then
to cast down whom, armed and strong, you prevailed not³ opposing?
Easy
is lapse into uttermost hell, not easy salvation.
Or
have you dreamed that Achilles will save, this son of the gods and the
Ocean?
Naught
else can be with the strong and the bold
4
save foeman or master.
¹endure.
²After
this line come two verses which seem to have been rejected in the manuscript:
³could
hold not / were mastered 4mighty
Page-438
Know
you so little the mood of the pursuer? Think you the lion
Only
will lick his prey, that his jaws will refrain from the banquet?
Rest
from thy bodings, Antenor! Not all the valour of Troya
Perished
with Hector, nor with polydamas vision has left her;
Troy
is not eager to slay her soul in a pyre of dishonour.
Still
she has children left who remember the mood of their mother.
Helen
none shall take from me living, gold not a drachma
Travels
from coffers of Priam to Greece. Let another and older
Pay
down his wealth if he will and his daughters serve Menelaus.
Rather
from Ilion I will go forth with my brothers and kinsmen;
Troy
I will leave and her shame and live with my heart and my honour
Refuged
with lions in Ida or build in the highlands a city
Or
in an isle of the seas or by dark-driven Pontic waters.
Dear
are the halls of our childhood, dear are the fields of our fathers,
Yet
to the soul that is free no spot on the earth is an exile.
Rather
wherever sunlight is bright, flowers bloom and the rivers
Flow
in their lucid streams to the Ocean, there is our country.
So
will I live in my soul’s wide freedom, never in Troya
Shorn
of my will and disgraced in my strength and the mock of my rival.
First
had you yielded, shame at least had not stained your surrender.
Strength
indulges the weak! But what Hector has fallen refusing,
Men!
What through ten loud years we denied with the spear for our answer,
That
what Trojan will ever renounce, though his city should perish?
Once
having fought we will fight to the end nor that end shall be evil.
Clamour
the Argive spears in our walls? Are the ladders erected?
Far
on the plain is their flight, on the farther side of the Xanthus.
Where
are the deities hostile? Vainly the eyes of the tremblers
See
them stalking vast in the ranks of the Greeks and the shoutings
Dire
of Poseidon they hear and are blind with the aegis of Pallas.
Who
then sustained so long this Troy, if the gods are against her?
Even
the hills could not stand save upheld by their concert immortal.
Now
not with Tydeus’ son, not now with
Odysseus
and Ajax
Trample
the gods in the sound of their chariot-wheels, victory leading:
Argos
falls red in her heaps to their scythes; they shelter the Trojans;
Victory
unleashed follows and fawns upon Penthesilea.
Ponder
no more, O Ilion, city of ancient Priam!
Rise,
O beloved of the gods, and go forth in thy strength to the battle.
Not
by the dreams of Laocoon strung to the faith that is febrile,
Nor
with the tremblings vain and the haunted thoughts of Antenor,
But
with a noble and serious strength and an obstinate valour
Page-439
Suffer
the shock of your foes, O nation chosen by Heaven;
Proudly
determine on victory, live by disaster unshaken.
Either Fate receive like men, nay, like gods, nay, like Trojans.”
So
like an army that, streams and that marches, speeding and pausing
Drawing
in horn and wing or widened for scouting and forage,
Bridging
the floods, avoiding the mountains, threading the valleys,
Fast
with their flashing panoply clad in gold and in iron
Moved
the array of his thoughts; and throughout delight and
approval
Followed
their march, in triumph led but like prisoners willing,
Glad
and unbound to a land they desire. Triumphant he ended,
Lord
of opinion, though by the aged frowned on and censured,
But
to this voice of their thoughts the young men vibrated wholly.
Loud
like a storm on the ocean mounted the roar of the people.
“Cease
from debate,” men cried, “arise, O thou warlike Aeneas!
Speak
for this nation, launch like a spear at the tents of the Hellene,
I1ion’s
voice of war!” Then up mid a limitless shouting
Stern
and armed from his seat like a war-god helmed Aeneas
Rose
by King Priam approved in this last of Ilion’s sessions,
Holding
the staff of the senate’s authority. “Silence, O commons,
Hear
and assent or refuse as your right is, masters of Troya,
Ancient
and sovereign people, act that your kings have determined
Sitting
in council high, their reply to the strength of Achilles.
‘Son
of the Aeacids, vain is thy offer; the pride of thy challenge
Rather
we choose; it is nearer to Dardanus, King of the Hellenes.
Neither
shall Helen be led back, the Tyndarid, weeping to Argos
Nor
down the paths of peace revisit her fathers’ Eurotas.
Death
and the fire may prevail o’er us, never our wills shall surrender
Lowering
Priam’s heights and darkening Ilion’s splendours.
Not
of such sires were we born but of kings and of gods, O Larissan.
Not
with her gold Troy traffics for safety,¹ but with her spear-points.
Stand
with thy oath in the war-front, Achilles; call on thy helpers
Armed
to descend from the calm of Olympian heights to thy succour
Hedging
thy fame from defeat; for we all desire thee in battle,
Mighty
to end thee or tame at last by the floods of the Xanthus.’ ”
So
Aeneas resonant spoke, stern, fronted like Ares,
And
with a voice that conquered the earth and invaded the heavens
Loud
they approved their doom and fulfilled their impulse immortal.
Last
Deiphobus rose in their meeting, head of their mellay:
“Proudly
and well have you answered, O nation beloved of Apollo;
¹seeks
out her foemen
Page-440
Fearless
of death they
must walk who would live and be mighty for ever.
Now,
for the sun is
hastening up the empyrean azure,
Hasten
we also. Tasting of food round the call of your captains
Meet
in your armed
companies, chariots and hoplites and archers,
Strong
be your
hearts, let your courage be stern like the sun when it blazes;
Fierce
will the shock
be today ere he sink blood-red in the waters.”
They
with a voice
as of Oceans
meeting rose from their session, -
Filling
the streets with her tread Troy strode from her Ilian forum.
Page-441
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