Page:Aeneid (Conington 1866).djvu/250

226 From Corythus he went, and now

He suns him on Olympus' brow,

And when to heaven our altars fume,

'Mid other powers he claims his room.'

'Great King' Ilioneus made reply

'Sage Faunus' princely progeny,

We come not to your friendly coast

By random gale o'er ocean tost,

Nor land nor star has made us stray

From our determined line of way:

Of steady purpose one and all

We flock beneath your city wall,

Driven from an empire, greater none

Within the circuit of the sun.

Jove is our sire: to Jove's high race

We, Dardans born, our lineage trace:

Jove's seed, the monarch we obey,

Æneas, sends us here to-day.

How fierce a storm from Argos sent

On Ida's plains its fury spent,

How Fate in dire collision hurled

The eastern and the western world,

E'en he has heard, whom earth's last verge

Just separates from the circling surge,

And he who, to his kind unknown,

Dwells midmost 'neath the torrid zone.

Swept by that deluge o'er the foam

For our lorn gods we ask a home:

A belt of sand is all we crave,

And man's free birthright, air and wave.

We shall not shame your Latin crown,

Nor light shall be your own renown,

Nor time obliterate the debt,

Nor Italy the hour regret

When Troy with outstretched arms she met.