第 11 节
作者:闪啊闪      更新:2023-08-28 11:48      字数:9317
  A Lay Sung at the Feast of Castor and Pollux on the
  Ides of Quintilis in the year of the City CCCCLI
  I
  Ho; trumpets; sound a war…note!                Ho; lictors; clear the way! The
  Knights will ride; in all their pride;             Along the streets to…day。 To…day
  the doors and windows                Are hung with garlands all; From Castor in
  the   Forum;           To   Mars   without   the   wall。   Each   Knight   is   robed   in
  purple;          With olive each is crowned; A gallant war…horse under each
  Paws   haughtily  the   ground。 While   flows   the Yellow   River;               While
  stands the Sacred Hill; The proud Ides of Quintilis                   Shall have such
  honor   still。   Gay   are   the   Martian   Kalends;        December's   Nones   are
  gay; But the proud Ides; when the squadron rides;                     Shall be Rome's
  whitest day。
  II
  Unto the Great Twin Brethren                We keep this solemn feast。 Swift;
  swift; the Great Twin Brethren                Came spurring from the east。 They
  came o'er wild Parthenius                Tossing in waves of pine; O'er   Cirrha's
  dome;   o'er Adria's   foam;           O'er   purple Apennine;   From   where   with
  flutes and dances            Their ancient mansion rings; In lordly Laced鎚on;
  The   City   of   two   kings;   To  where;   by   Lake   Regillus;          Under   the
  Porcian     height;   All  in  the  lands   of  Tusculum;             Was    fought    the
  glorious fight。
  III
  Now   on   the   place   of   slaughter         Are   cots   and   sheepfolds   seen;
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  And rows of vines; and fields of wheat;                 And apple…orchards green;
  The swine crush the big acorns                That fall from Corne's oaks。 Upon
  the turf by the Fair Fount             The reaper's pottage smokes。 The fisher
  baits   his   angle;        The   hunter   twangs   his   bow;   Little   they   think   on
  those strong limbs            That moulder deep below。 Little they think how
  sternly          That day the trumpets pealed; How in the slippery swamp of
  blood          Warrior and war…horse reeled; How wolves came with fierce
  gallops;          And   crows   on   eager   wings; To tear the   flesh of   captains;
  And peck the eyes of kings; How thick the dead lay scattered                    Under
  the Porcian height; How through the gates of Tusculum                      Raved the
  wild   stream   of   flight;   And   how   the   Lake   Regillus      Bubbled   with
  crimson foam; What time the Thirty Cities                  Came forth to war with
  Rome。
  IV
  But   Roman;  when thou standest                Upon that   holy  ground;  Look
  thou with heed on the dark rock               That girds the dark lake round。 So
  shalt thou see a hoof…mark               Stamped deep into the flint: It was not
  hoof of mortal steed            That made so strange a dint: There to the Great
  Twin Brethren             Vow thou thy vows; and pray That they; in tempest
  and in flight;          Will keep thy head alway。
  V
  Since   last   the   Great Twin   Brethren        Of   mortal   eyes   were   seen;
  Have   years   gone   by  an   hundred         And   fourscore   and   thirteen。 That
  summer a Virginius              Was Consul first in place; The second was stout
  Aulus;             Of    the  Posthumian      race。  The    Herald    of  the  Latines
  From Gabii came in state: The Herald of the Latines                  Passed through
  Rome's Eastern Gate: The Herald of the Latines                    Did in our Forum
  stand; And there he did his office;             A sceptre in his hand。
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  VI
  ‘‘Hear;   Senators   and   people           Of   the   good   town   of   Rome;   The
  Thirty Cities charge you               To bring the Tarquins home: And if ye still
  be   stubborn           To   work   the Tarquins   wrong; The Thirty  Cities   warn
  you;           Look your walls be strong。''
  VII
  Then spake the Consul Aulus;                  He spake a bitter jest: ‘‘Once the
  jays sent a message              Unto the eagle's nest: Now yield thou up thine
  eyrie            Unto    the   carrion…kite;   Or   come    forth   valiantly;   and   face
  The   jays   in   deadly   fight。   Forth   looked   in   wrath   the   eagle;      And
  carrion…kite   and   jay;   Soon   as   they   saw   his   beak  and   claw;          Fled
  screaming far away。''
  VIII
  The   Herald   of   the   Latines          Hath   hied   him   back   in   state:   The
  Fathers   of   the   City        Are   met   in   high   debate。 Then   spake   the   elder
  Consul;             And     ancient    man    and   wise:   ‘‘Now    harken;    Conscript
  Fathers;           To that which I advise。 In seasons of great peril                   'Tis
  good   that   one   bear   sway;   Then   choose   we   a   Dictator;         Whom   all
  men shall obey。 Camerium knows how deeply                         The sword of Aulus
  bites; And all our city calls him              The man of seventy fights。 Then let
  him be Dictator             For six months and no more; And have a Master of
  the Knights;            And axes twenty…four。''
  IX
  So Aulus was Dictator;               The man of seventy fights; He made  芺
  utius Elva            His Master of the Knights。 On the third morn thereafter;
  At downing of the day; Did Aulus and             芺 utius           Set forth with their
  array。 Sempronius Atratinus                 Was left in charge at home With boys;
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  and with gray…headed men;                 To keep the walls of Rome。 Hard by the
  Lake Regillus             Our camp was pitched at night: Eastward a mile the
  Latines     lay;        Under      the  Porcian    height。  Far   over   hill  and   valley
  Their     mighty    host   was   spread;    And    with   their   thousand    watch…fires
  The midnight sky was red。
  X
  Up rose the golden morning                 Over the Porcian height; The proud
  Ides   of   Quintilis         Marked   evermore   in   white。   Not   without   secret
  trouble           Our   bravest   saw   the   foe;   For   girt   by   threescore   thousand
  spears;              The     thirty   standards    rose。   From    every    warlike    city
  That boasts the Latian name; Fordoomed to dogs and vultures;                         That
  gallant   army   came;   From   Setia's   purple   vineyards;             From   Norba's
  ancient   wall;   From   the   white   streets   of   Tusculum;           The   proudust
  town of all; From where the Witch's Fortress                     O'er hangs the dark…
  blue   seas;   From   the   still   glassy   lake   that   sleeps     Beneath   Aricia's
  trees   Those   trees   in   whose   dim   shadow           The   ghastly   priest   doth
  reign; The   priest who slew   the slayer;               And   shall himself   be slain;
  From the drear banks of Ufens;                   Where flights of marsh…fowl play;
  And buffaloes lie wallowing                  Through the hot summer's day; From
  the gigantic watch…towers;               No work of earthly men; Whence Cora's
  sentinels     o'erlook           The     never…ending      fen;  From    the   Laurentian
  jungle;           The wild hog's reedy home; From the green steeps whence
  Anio leaps            In floods of snow…white foam。
  XI
  Aricia;   Cora;   Norba;           Velitr*;   with   the   might   Of   Setia   and   of
  Tusculum;             Were marshalled on the right: The leader was Mamilius;
  Prince   of   the   Latian   name;   Upon   his   head   a   helmet         Of   red   gold
  shone   like   flame:   High   on   a   gallant   charger        Of   dark…gray   hue   he
  rode; Over his gilded armor                A vest of purple flowed; Woven in the
  land of sunrise             By Syria's dark…browed daughters; And by the sails
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