A Lay Sung at the Banquet in the Capitol, on the Day Whereon Manius Curius Dentatus, a Second Time Consul, Triumphed Over King Pyrrhus and the Tarentines, in the Year of the City CCCCLXXIX
I
- Now slain is King Amulius,
- Of the great Sylvian line,
- Who reigned in Alba Longa,
- On the throne of Aventine.
- Slain is the Ponfiff Camers,
- Who spake the words of doom:
- ``The children to the Tiber,
- The mother to the tomb.''
II
- In Alba's lake no fisher
- His net to-day is flinging;
- On the dark rind of Alba's oaks
- To-day no axe is ringing;
- The yoke hangs o'er the manger;
- The scythe lies in the hay:
- Through all the Alban villages
- No work is done to-day.
III
- And every Alban burgher
- Hath donned his whitest gown;
- And every head in Alba
- Weareth a poplar crown;
- And every Alban door-post
- With boughs and flowers is gay,
- For to-day the dead are living,
- The lost are found to-day.
IV
- They were doomed by a bloody king,
- They were doomed by a lying priest,
- They were cast on the raging flood,
- They were tracked by the raging beast;
- Raging beast and raging flood
- Alike have spared the prey;
- And to-day the dead are living,
- The lost are found to-day.
V
- The troubled river knew them,
- And smoothed his yellow foam,
- And gently rocked the cradle
- That bore the fate of Rome.
- The ravening she-wolf knew them,
- And licked them o'er and o'er,
- And gave them of her own fierce milk,
- Rich with raw flesh and gore.
- Twenty winters, twenty springs,
- Since then have rolled away;
- And to-day the dead are living:
- The lost are found to-day.
VI
- Blithe it was to see the twins,
- Right goodly youths and tall,
- Marching from Alba Longa
- To their old grandsire's hall.
- Along their path fresh garlands
- Are hung from tree to tree:
- Before them stride the pipers,
- Piping a note of glee.
VII
- On the right goes Romulus,
- With arms to the elbows red,
- And in his hand a broadsword,
- And on the blade a head--
- A head in an iron helmet,
- With horse-hair hanging down,
- A shaggy head, a swarthy head,
- Fixed in a ghastly frown--
- The head of King Amulius
- Of the great Sylvian line,
- Who reigned in Alba Longa,
- On the throne of Aventine.
VIII
- On the left side goes Remus,
- With wrists and fingers red,
- And in his hand a boar-spear,
- And on the point a head--
- A wrinkled head and aged,
- With silver beard and hair,
- And holy fillets round it,
- Such as the pontiffs wear--
- The head of ancient Camers,
- Who spake the words of doom:
- ``The children to the Tiber;
- The mother to the tomb.''
IX
- Two and two behind the twins
- Their trusty comrades go,
- Four and forty valiant men,
- With club, and axe, and bow.
- On each side every hamlet
- Pours forth its joyous crowd,
- Shouting lads and baying dogs,
- And children laughing loud,
- And old men weeping fondly
- As Rhea's boys go by,
- And maids who shriek to see the heads,
- Yet, shrieking, press more nigh.
X
- So marched they along the lake;
- They marched by fold and stall,
- By cornfield and by vineyard,
- Unto the old man's hall.
XI
- In the hall-gate sat Capys,
- Capys, the sightless seer;
- From head to foot he trembled
- As Romulus drew near.
- And up stood stiff his thin white hair,
- And his blind eyes flashed fire:
- ``Hail! foster child of the wondrous nurse!
- Hail! son of the wondrous sire!''
XII
- ``But thou--what dost thou here
- In the old man's peaceful hall?
- What doth the eagle in the coop,
- The bison in the stall?
- Our corn fills many a garner;
- Our vines clasp many a tree;
- Our flocks are white on many a hill:
- But these are not for thee.
XIII
- ``For thee no treasure ripens
- In the Tartessian mine;
- For thee no ship brings precious bales
- Across the Libyan brine;
- Thou shalt not drink from amber;
- Thou shalt not rest on down;
- Arabia shall not steep thy locks,
- Nor Sidon tinge thy gown.
XIV
- ``Leave gold and myrrh and jewels,
- Rich table and soft bed,
- To them who of man's seed are born,
- Whom woman's milk have fed.
- Thou wast not made for lucre,
- For pleasure, nor for rest;
- Thou, that art sprung from the War-god's loins,
- And hast tugged at the she-wolf's breast.
XV
- ``From sunrise unto sunset
- All earth shall hear thy fame:
- A glorious city thou shalt build,
- And name it by thy name:
- And there, unquenched through ages,
- Like Vesta's sacred fire,
- Shall live the spirit of thy nurse,
- The spirit of thy sire.
XVI
- ``The ox toils through the furrow,
- Obedient to the goad;
- The patient ass, up flinty paths,
- Plods with his weary load:
- With whine and bound the spaniel
- His master's whistle hears;
- And the sheep yields her patiently
- To the loud-clashing shears.
XVII
- ``But thy nurse will hear no master,
- Thy nurse will bear no load;
- And woe to them that shear her,
- And woe to them that goad!
- When all the pack, loud baying,
- Her bloody lair surrounds,
- She dies in silence, biting hard,
- Amidst the dying hounds.
XVIII
- Pomona loves the orchard;
- And Liber loves the vine;
- And Pales loves the straw-built shed
- Warm with the breath of kine;
- And Venus loves the whispers
- Of plighted youth and maid,
- In April's ivory moonlight
- Beneath the chestnut shade.
XIX
- ``But thy father loves the clashing
- Of broadsword and of shield:
- He loves to drink the steam that reeks
- From the fresh battlefield:
- He smiles a smile more dreadful
- Than his own dreadful frown,
- When he sees the thick black cloud of smoke
- Go up from the conquered town.
XX
- ``And such as is the War-god,
- The author of thy line,
- And such as she who suckled thee,
- Even such be thou and thine.
- Leave to the soft Campanian
- His baths and his perfumes;
- Leave to the sordid race of Tyre
- Their dyeing-vats and looms;
- Leave to the sons of Carthage
- The rudder and the oar;
- Leave to the Greek his marble Nymphs
- And scrolls of wordy lore.
XXI
- ``Thine, Roman, is the pilum:
- Roman, the sword is thine,
- The even trench, the bristling mound,
- The legion's ordered line;
- And thine the wheels of triumph,
- Which with their laurelled train
- Move slowly up the shouting streets
- To Jove's eternal flame.
XXII
- Beneath thy yoke the Volscian
- Shall vail his lofty brow;
- Soft Capua's curled revellers
- Before thy chairs shall bow:
- The Lucumoes of Arnus
- Shall quake thy rods to see;
- And the proud Samnite's heart of steel
- Shall yield to only thee.
XXIII
- ``The Gaul shall come against thee
- From the land of snow and night;
- Thou shalt give his fair-haired armies
- To the raven and the kite.
XXIV
- ``The Greek shall come against thee,
- The conqueror of the East.
- Beside him stalks to battle
- The huge earth-shaking beast,
- The beast on whom the castle
- With all its guards doth stand,
- The beast who hath between his eyes
- The serpent for a hand.
- First march the bold Epirotes,
- Wedged close with shield and spear
- And the ranks of false Tarentum
- Are glittering in the rear.
XXV
- The ranks of false Tarentum
- Like hunted sheep shall fly:
- In vain the bold Epirotes
- Shall round their standards die:
- And Apennine's gray vultures
- Shall have a noble feast
- On the fat and the eyes
- Of the the huge earth-shaking beast.
XXVI
- ``Hurrah! for the good weapons
- That keep the War-god's land.
- Hurrah! for Rome's stout pilum
- In a stout Roman hand.
- Hurrah! for Rome's short broadsword
- That through the thick array
- Of levelled spears and serried shields
- Hews deep its gory way.
XXVII
- ``Hurrah! for the great triumph
- That stretches many a mile.
- Hurrah! for the wan captives
- That pass in endless file.
- Ho! bold Epirotes, whither
- Hath the Red King taken flight?
- Ho! dogs of false Tarentum,
- Is not the gown washed white?
XXVIII
- ``Hurrah! for the great triumph
- That stretches many a mile.
- Hurrah! for the rich dye of Tyre,
- And the fine web of Nile,
- The helmets gay with plumage
- Torn from the pheasant's wings,
- The belts set thick with starry gem
- That shone on Indian kings,
- The urns of massy silver,
- The goblets rough with gold,
- The many-colored tablets bright
- With loves and wars of old,
- The stone that breathes and struggles,
- The brass that seems to speak;--
- Such cunning they who dwell on high
- Have given unto the Greek.
XXIX
- ``Hurrah! for Manius Curius,
- The bravest son of Rome,
- Thrice in utmost need sent forth,
- Thrice drawn in triumph home.
- Weave, weave, for Manius Curius
- The third embroidered gown:
- Make ready the third lofty car,
- And twine the third green crown;
- And yoke the steeds of Rosea
- With necks like a bended bow,
- And deck the bull, Mevania's bull,
- The bull as white as snow.
XXX
- ``Blest and thrice blest the Roman
- Who sees Rome's brightest day,
- Who sees that long victorious pomp
- Wind down the Sacred Way,
- And through the bellowing Forum,
- And round the Suppliant's Grove,
- Up to the everlasting gates
- Of Capitolian Jove.
XXXI
- ``Then where, o'er two bright havens,
- The towers of Corinth frown;
- Where the gigantic King of Day
- On his own Rhodes looks down;
- Where oft Orontes murmurs
- Beneath the laurel shades;
- Where Nile reflects the endless length
- Of dark red colonnades;
- Where in the still deep water,
- Sheltered from waves and blasts,
- Bristles the dusky forest
- Of Byrsa's thousand masts;
- Where fur-clad hunters wander
- Amidst the northern ice;
- Where through the sand of morning-land
- The camel bears the spice;
- Where Atlas flings his shadow
- Far o'er the western foam,
- Shall be great fear on all who hear
- The might name of Rome.''
Bob Blair, Editor.
B A C K
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