Page:Homer - Iliad, translation Pope, 1909.djvu/89

28—76 And queen of war, in close consult engaged:

Apart they sit, their deep designs employ,

And meditate the future woes of Troy.

Though secret anger swelled Minerva's breast,

The prudent goddess yet her wrath suppressed;

But Juno, impotent of passion, broke

Her sullen silence, and with fury spoke:

"Shall then, O tyrant of the ethereal reign!

My schemes, my labours, and my hopes be vain?

Have I, for this, shook Ilion with alarms,

Assembled nations, set two worlds in arms?

To spread the war, I flew from shore to shore;

The immortal coursers scarce the labour bore.

At length ripe vengeance o'er their heads impends,

But Jove himself the faithless race defends;

Loth as thou art to punish lawless lust,

Not all the gods are partial and unjust."

The sire whose thunder shakes the cloudy skies,

Sighs from his inmost soul, and thus replies:

"Oh, lasting rancour! oh, insatiate hate

To Phrygia's monarch and the Phrygian state!

What high offence has fired the wife of Jove?

Can wretched mortals harm the Powers above,

That Troy and Troy's whole race thou wouldst confound,

And yon fair structures level with the ground?

Haste, leave the skies, fulfil thy stern desire,

Burst all her gates, and wrap her walls in fire!

Let Priam bleed! if yet thou thirst for more,

Bleed all his sons, and Ilion float with gore;

To boundless vengeance the wide realm be given

Till vast destruction glut the queen of heaven!

So let it be, and Jove his peace enjoy,

When heaven no longer hears the name of Troy.

But should this arm prepare to wreak our hate

On thy loved realms, whose guilt demands their fate,

Presume not thou the lifted bolt to stay,

Remember Troy, and give the vengeance way.

For know, of all the numerous towns that rise

Beneath the rolling sun and starry skies,

Which gods have raised, or earth-born men enjoy,

None stands so dear to Jove as sacred Troy.

No mortals merit more distinguished grace

Than godlike Priam, or than Priam's race:

Still to our name their hecatombs expire,

And altars blaze with unextinguished fire."

At this the goddess rolled her radiant eyes,

Then on the Thunderer fixed them, and replies:

Three"Three [sic] towns are Juno's on the Grecian plains,

More dear than all the extended earth contains,