Page:The Lusiad (Camões, tr. Mickle, 1791), Volume 2.djvu/84

 Such was the tempest of the dread alarms, The babes that prattled in their nurses' arms Shriek'd at the sound: with sudden cold imprest, The mothers strained their infants to the breast, And shook with horror—now, far round, begin The bow strings whizzing, and the brazen din Of arms on armour rattling; either van Are mingled now, and man opposed to man: To guard his native fields the one inspires, And one the raging lust of conquest fires: Now with fixt teeth, their writhing lips of blue, Their eye-balls glaring of the purple hue, Each arm strains swiftest to impel the blow; Nor wounds they value now, nor fear they know, Their only passion to offend the foe. In might and fury, like the warrior god, Before his troops the glorious Nunio rode: That land, the proud invaders claim'd, he sows With their spilt blood, and with their corpses strews; Their forceful volleys now the cross-bows pour, The clouds are darken'd with the arrowy shower; The