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    Metamorphoses

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      260

      he doesn’t even know his horses’ names!

      And scattered everywhere throughout the sky,

      he sees the terrifying images

      of enormous beasts, which aggravate his fears.

      There is a place where two gigantic arms

      bend into bows, and arms and tail extended,

      Scorpio wholly occupies two zones:

      when the boy sees this venom-sweating monster

      bend its tail back to strike at him, his mind

      goes blank with icy fear. He drops the reins,

      270

      which slackly lie upon the horses’ backs;

      and now his steeds, completely unrestrained,

      go galloping off course through the unknown

      regions of the upper air, wherever

      impulse proposes, purposeless, and knock

      against the fixed stars set within the sky,

      dragging their chariot through trackless space.

      Now they seek heaven’s summit, now they drop

      and carry themselves closer to the earth;

      Luna now marvels at her brother’s horses

      280

      below her own, at scorched clouds trailing smoke!

      Earth at its highest point bursts into flame,

      deep fissures open up, and its juices dry;

      the ripe grain whitens, trees and leaves all burn,

      and the dry crop provides itself as fuel.

      What I lament is nothing to what comes:

      great cities perish and their walls collapse,

      entire nations are reduced to ash;

      the woods burn with their mountains: Athos burns,

      Cilician Taurus and Timolus burn,

      290

      and Oeta, too; Mount Ida, which had once

      been full of fountains, now runs dry and burns;

      Muse-haunted Helicon and Haemus (not

      yet associated with Oeagrus);

      Etna (already blazing) blazes twice;

      twin-peaked Parnassus, Eryx, Cynthus, Othrys,

      and Rhodope (about to lose its snows),

      Mymas and Dindyma, Mycale and Cithaeron

      (famed for Apollo’s rites) are now ablaze;

      Scythia’s frigid climate does not spare it;

      300

      Caucasus burns, and Ossa burns with Pindus,

      and greater than the pair of them, Olympus;

      whole ranges burn: the Alps, the Apennines.

      Then Phaëthon in truth beholds the world

      in every part aflame, and cannot bear

      the overwhelming heat; each breath he draws

      seems like an exhalation from an oven;

      his chariot is white-hot underfoot.

      Unable to endure the sparks and ashes

      whirling about him, shrouded in black smoke,

      310

      he has no way of knowing where he is,

      or where he is going through the darkness, borne

      wherever the flying horses wish to take him.

      And it was then, according to some folks,

      that the inhabitants of Ethiopia

      turned black, when blood was drawn up to their skins;

      and then that Libya became a desert,

      and nymphs lamented their lost springs and pools:

      Boeotia mourned Dirce; Argus, Amymone;

      and Corinth mourned the spring at Pirene.

      320

      Broad-channeled rivers were no better off:

      unquietly the distant Don flows, steaming;

      Old Man Peneus, Mysian Caïcus,

      swift-running Ismenus, Arcadian Erymanthus,

      and Xanthus (destined to blaze up again);

      the yellow Lycormas and the Maeander,

      that playfully meanders in its course,

      the Thracian Melas and Spartan Eurotas;

      in Babylon, the wide Euphrates burns,

      and the Orontes burns in Syria,

      330

      as do the rapid Thermodon, the Ganges,

      the river Phasis and the blue Danube;

      Alpheus blazes through Olympia,

      and the banks of Sperchios in Thessaly;

      the Tagus is so hot that its gold melts!

      In Lydia the celebrated swans

      that sing upon the Cayster have been scorched;

      the Nile in terror seeks a place of refuge

      and hides its head—where it is hidden still:

      its seven mouths lie empty, choked with dust,

      340

      its seven channels all without a stream.

      Likewise the Hebrus and the Strymon shrivel,

      as in the west, the Rhone, the Rhine, the Po,

      and—fated for later greatness—our Tiber.

      The soil cracks everywhere, and now the light

      seeps to the underworld and terrifies

      its ruler and his wife; the sea contracts,

      and what had been until quite recently

      a sheet of water is a field of sand,

      and peaks that once were covered by the waves

      350

      are new additions to the Cyclades!

      Fish seek the bottom, and no dolphins dare

      to trust their curving bodies to the air;

      the dying sea calves bob upon their backs,

      and it is said that even Nereus,

      with Doris and the Nereids, attempted

      to hide themselves in underwater caves

      from the blazing heat.

      Three times great Neptune strove

      to lift his head and torso from the waves

      and three times failed, unable to endure

      360

      the fiery air.

      Kind Mother Earth, surrounded

      by the sea and by the waters of the deep

      and by her streams, contracting everywhere

      as they took shelter in her shady womb,

      though heat-oppressed, still lifted up her head

      and placed a hand upon her fevered brow;

      and after a tremor that shook everything

      had subsided somewhat, she spoke out to Jove

      in a dry, cracked voice:

      “If it should please you

      that I merit this, greatest of all gods,

      370

      why keep your lightnings back? If I must die

      of fire, why not let me die of yours:

      knowing that you are author of my doom will make it more endurable to me.

      I’m scarcely able to pronounce these words—”

      (through choking smoke)

      “—Just look at my singed hair,

      the glowing ashes in my eyes and face!

      “Do I deserve this? Is this the reward

      for my unflagging fruitfulness? For bearing,

      year after year, the wounds of plow and mattock?

      380

      And for providing flocks with pasturage,

      the human race with ripened grain to eat,

      the gods with incense smoking on their altars?

      “But even assuming I deserve destruction,

      why is your brother equally deserving?

      Why are those waters, which were his by lot,

      so much diminished, so far now from the sky?

      “If neither Earth nor Sea deserve your favor,

      have pity on the heavens! Look around you!

      Both poles are smoking now! If flames destroy them,

      390

      the palaces of heaven will collapse!

      “Atlas is scarcely able to support

      the white-hot heavens on his bare shoulder!

      Now if the sea, the lands, the heavens perish,

      all will be plunged in chaos once again!

      “Save from the flames whatever is still left,

      take measures to preserve the universe!”

      So spoke the Earth, and with no more to say,

      unable any longer to endure the

      heat, retreated deep within herself

      400

      and to
    ok up chambers nearer the underworld.

      Before he would commit himself, however,

      the father almighty made the other gods

      (especially the god who gave his son

      the chariot) swear that the gravest fate

      hung over all, unless he should take action.

      And then he sought the pinnacle of heaven,

      whence he was wont to parcel out the rain clouds

      widely over the earth, and whence he moved

      the thunder and sent forth his lightning bolts;

      410

      but now he had no rain clouds to distribute,

      nor any rain to send down from the heavens;

      and so he thundered and released a bolt

      of lightning from beside his ear that drove

      the hapless driver from his spinning wheels

      and from his life: fires put cruel fires out.

      In consternation then, his horses reared

      and slipped their yoke and fled from their restraints; the chariot breaks up now: here the reins

      come falling from the sky, and here the pole

      420

      now breaks off from its axle, and the spokes

      of the shattered wheels fall to another spot,

      and wreckage litters a wide area.

      But Phaëthon, his bright red hair ablaze,

      is whirled headlong, and tracing out an arc,

      seems like a comet with a tail of fire,

      or like a star about to fall that doesn’t.

      In Italy, far distant from his homeland,

      the river Eridanus [now the Po]

      receives his corpse and bathes his seething face.

      430

      Italian naiads lay his broken body,

      still smoking from that three-forked thunderbolt,

      within a tomb prepared for it and carve

      this epitaph in verse upon the stone:

      YOUNG PHAËTHON LIES HERE, POOR LAD, WHO DREAMT

      OF MASTERING HIS FATHER’S SKY-BORNE CARRIAGE;

      ALTHOUGH HE SADLY DIED IN THE ATTEMPT,

      GREAT WAS HIS DARING, WHICH NONE MAY DISPARAGE.

      His miserable father, sick with grief,

      drew his cloak up around his head in mourning;

      440

      for one whole day then, if the tale is true,

      the sun was quite put out. The conflagration

      (for the world was still ablaze) provided light;

      that was a time some good came out of evil.

      After Clymene said what might be said

      of such an awful situation, she

      wandered the world, her mind quite gone with grief,

      beating her breast, and seeking first to gather

      his lifeless limbs, then to collect his bones,

      which she at last found in a foreign tomb;

      450

      collapsing, she threw herself upon the stone

      that bore his name, and bathing it in tears,

      she pressed her naked breast on the inscription.

      The Heliades

      Nor did her daughters, the Heliades,

      hold back their empty gift of lamentation;

      their cruel hands raised bruises on their breasts,

      while night and day they cried to Phaëthon

      (who would not hear their wretched wails of grief)

      and cast themselves upon his sepulcher.

      Four months went by; according to their custom

      460

      (which their persistence had established), they

      continued grieving; one day, Phaëthusa,

      the eldest of the sisters, while attempting

      to fling herself upon the tomb, complained

      of a rigidity down in her feet;

      and when a second sister, luminous

      Lampetia, attempted to approach her,

      she suddenly felt rooted to the earth.

      Now the third sister, tearing at her hair,

      grasps foliage; now this one grieves to find

      470

      her ankles sealed in wood, that one to feel

      her slender arms becoming lengthy branches;

      and as they marvel at these happenings,

      their private parts are wrapped in sheathes of bark,

      which, from their loins, move upward to surround

      their bellies, breasts and shoulders, arms and hands—

      fixed to the ground, they call out to their mother.

      What can she do? Where impulse carries her,

      she dashes off, now this way and now that,

      encouraging their kisses, while she can.

      480

      To no avail! Now frantic, she attempts

      to strip their bodies of this new veneer

      and breaks the little twigs off with her hands,

      releasing drops of blood, as from a wound.

      “Pray spare me, mother!” comes from each of them,

      the selfsame cry repeated: “Spare me, pray!

      It is my body wounded in this tree!

      Farewell now, mother!” The conclusive bark

      immediately weaves itself upon

      those last words of the daughters of the Sun.

      490

      Their tears continue flowing, and, sun-hardened,

      fall from the trees; borne onward by the Po,

      they will one day adorn the brides of Rome.

      [And so, in myth, mourning becomes electrum;

      the sisters’ tears are, now and forever, amber.]

      Cycnus

      Cycnus, the son of Sthenelus, observed this marvelous event, O Phaëthon!

      Although related to you through his mother,

      he was more closely joined to you by passion,

      and so your death was devastating to him.

      500

      Abandoning his kingdom (for he ruled

      the people and cities of Liguria)

      he wept and wailed along the Po’s green banks

      and in those woods so recently augmented

      by the Heliades.

      His voice becomes

      attenuated, and white feathers grow

      over the hair upon his face and body;

      a lengthy neck extends far from his chest,

      a membrane starts between his reddish toes,

      wings hide his sides, and a blunt bill, his mouth.

      510

      So Cycnus was turned into something new:

      a bird that had no faith in Jove or heaven,

      recalling all too well the thunderbolt

      unjustly hurled. His habitat is now

      the surface of a standing pond or lake;

      detesting fire, he calls water home,

      preferring flumes to flames—their opposite.

      The Sun’s complaint

      Phoebus, meanwhile, mourning his lost son,

      ignores appearances, as is his wont

      whenever he goes into an eclipse:

      520

      hating the light of day and his own being,

      he gives himself entirely to grief,

      and in his anger threatens to resign:

      “Enough!” he cries. “Why, ever since creation

      my lot has been incessant restlessness,

      work unrewarded, going on forever!

      Let someone else—whoever wishes to,

      be driver of the chariot of light!

      “If no one else of all the gods will do it,

      if none admits that he is able to,

      530

      why not just let the Governor take charge:

      at least while he is struggling with the reins

      he’ll have to put aside the thunderbolt

      fated to rob fathers of their children!

      “Then he will know—once he has gauged the mettle

      of those fire-footed horses—that my son,

      who was unable to control the team,

      did not deserve to die!”

      The other gods

      all stand around the Sun beseeching him,

      as humble s
    uppliants, to keep the darkness

      540

      from covering the world; Jove goes so far

      as to defend himself for hurling fire,

      but adds (as royals will) threats to entreaties.

      Then Phoebus gathers up his team and yokes them,

      still trembling and wild-eyed with their fear,

      and in his grief torments them with his whip

      (torments them truly!) and reproaches them,

      holding them liable for his son’s death.

      Jove, Callisto, and Arcas

      Now Jupiter omnipotent sets out

      on an inspection tour of heaven’s walls

      550

      after the fire, in order to make certain

      that nothing is in danger of collapsing.

      And once he sees that all is up to strength,

      he turns toward earth, where the affairs of men,

      their varied labors, come into his ken.

      Arcadia, his birthplace, above all

      is dearest to him; he at once restores

      her springs and streams (which had not dared to flow), gives grass back to the earth, gives leaves to trees,

      and bids the blackened woods grow green again.

      560

      And as he comes and goes about his business,

      he gets stuck on an Arcadian nymph,

      Callisto [although Ovid doesn’t name her],

      and passion burns into his deepest marrow.

      She did not spend her days before the loom

      nor in the artful styling of her hair;

      a modest brooch was her one ornament,

      and a white headband bound her otherwise

      neglected tresses; so artlessly adorned,

      with sometimes her swift javelin in hand,

      570

      sometimes a bow, she was Diana’s soldier,

      and no nymph pleased the goddess more than she did,

      there on Mount Maenalus: but influence

      cannot be counted on to last for long.

      Just as the Sun had passed his highest point,

      she set foot in that grove which had not known

      the felling of a tree since time began;

      putting aside her arrows and unstringing

      her resistant bow, she fell upon the grass

      and used her painted quiver for a pillow.

      580

      When Jupiter beheld the girl, exhausted

      and off her guard, he said, “That wife of mine

      will never learn about this escapade!

      But if she happens to discover it,

      a little scolding is small price to pay!”

      At once he was Diana in appearance,

      and greeted her: “Dear maiden of my band,

      where, on what mountain, did you hunt today?”

      The virgin sprang up from her grassy couch:

      “Hail, goddess far superior to Jove—

      590

      a judgment I would stand by in his presence!”

      He laughed to be preferred above himself,

      and joined their lips together with a kiss

     
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