Page:The Lusiad (Camões, tr. Mickle, 1791), Volume 2.djvu/86

 Oh! horrid sight! yet not the ties of blood, Nor yearning memory his rage withstood; With proud disdain his honest eyes behold Whoe'er the traitor, who his king has sold. Nor want there others in the hostile band Who draw their swords against their native land; And, headlong driven, by impious rage accurst, In rank were foremost, and in fight the first. So sons and fathers, by each other slain, With horrid slaughter dyed Pharsalia's plain. Ye dreary ghosts, who now for treasons foul, Amidst the gloom of Stygian darkness howl; Thou Catiline, and, stern Sertorius, tell Your brother shades, and sooth the pains of hell; With triumph tell them, some of Lusian race Like you have earn'd the traitor's foul disgrace.


 * As waves on waves, the foes increasing weight

Bears down our foremost ranks, and shakes the fight; Yet, firm and undismay'd great Nunio stands, And braves the tumult of surrounding bands. So, from high Ceuta's rocky mountains stray'd, The ranging lion braves the shepherd's shade; The