Marcus Annaeus Lucanus
The Civil War

BOOK X Caesar in Egypt

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BOOK X
Caesar in Egypt

 

 

     When Caesar, following those who bore the head,

     First trod the shore accursed, with Egypt's fates

     His fortunes battled, whether Rome should pass

     In crimson conquest o'er the guilty land,

     Or Memphis' arms should ravish from the world

     Victor and vanquished: and the warning shade

     Of Magnus saved his kinsman from the sword.

 

     First, by the crime assured, his standards borne

     Before, he marched upon the Pharian town;

10   But when the people, jealous of their laws,

     Murmured against the fasces, Caesar knew

     Their minds were adverse, and that not for him

     Was Magnus' murder wrought.  And yet with brow

     Dissembling fear, intrepid, through the shrines

     Of Egypt's gods he strode, and round the fane

     Of ancient Isis; bearing witness all

     To Macedon's vigour in the days of old.

     Yet did nor gold nor ornament restrain

    His hasting steps, nor worship of the gods,

20   Nor city ramparts: but in greed of gain

     He sought the cave dug out amid the tombs. 1

     The madman offspring there of Philip lies

     The famed Pellaean robber, fortune's friend,

     Snatched off by fate, avenging so the world.

     In sacred sepulchre the hero's limbs,

     Which should be scattered o'er the earth, repose,

     Still spared by Fortune to these tyrant days:

     For in a world to freedom once recalled,

     All men had mocked the dust of him who set

30   The baneful lesson that so many lands

     Can serve one master.  Macedon he left

     His home obscure; Athena he despised

     The conquest of his sire, and spurred by fate

     Through Asia rushed with havoc of mankind,

     Plunging his sword through peoples; streams unknown

     Ran red with Persian and with Indian blood.

     Curse of all earth and thunderbolt of ill

     To every nation!  On the outer sea 2

     He launched his fleet to sail the ocean wave:

40   Nor flame nor flood nor sterile Libyan sands

     Stayed back his course, nor Hammon's pathless shoals;

     Far to the west, where downward slopes the world

     He would have led his armies, and the poles

     Had compassed, and had drunk the fount of Nile:

     But came his latest day; such end alone

     Could nature place upon the madman king,

     Who in death as when he won the world

     His empire with him took, nor left an heir.

     Thus every city to the spoiler's hand

50   Was victim made: Yet in his fall was his

     Babylon; and Parthia feared him.  Shame on us

     That eastern nations dreaded more the lance

     Of Macedon than now the Roman spear.

     True that we rule beyond where takes its rise

     The burning southern breeze, beyond the homes

     Of western winds, and to the northern star;

     But towards the rising of the sun, we yield

     To him who kept the Arsacids in awe;

     And puny Pella held as province sure

60   The Parthia fatal to our Roman arms.

 

     Now from the stream Pelusian of the Nile,

     Was come the boyish king, taming the rage

     Of his effeminate people: pledge of peace;

     And Caesar safely trod Pellaean halls;

     When Cleopatra bribed her guard to break

     The harbour chains, and borne in little boat

     Within the Macedonian palace gates,

     Caesar unknowing, entered: Egypt's shame;

     Fury of Latium; to the bane of Rome

70   Unchaste.  For as the Spartan queen of yore

     By fatal beauty Argos urged to strife

     And Ilium's homes, so Cleopatra roused

     Italia's frenzy.  By her drum 3 she called

     Down on the Capitol terror (if to speak

     Such word be lawful); mixed with Roman arms

     Coward Canopus, hoping she might lead

     A Pharian triumph, Caesar in her train;

     And 'twas in doubt upon Leucadian 4 waves

     Whether a woman, not of Roman blood,

80   Should hold the world in awe.  Such lofty thoughts

     Seized on her soul upon that night in which

     The wanton daughter of Pellaean kings

     First shared our leaders' couches.  Who shall blame

     Antonius for the madness of his love,

     When Caesar's haughty breast drew in the flame?

     Who red with carnage, 'mid the clash of arms,

     In palace haunted by Pompeius' shade,

     Gave place to love; and in adulterous bed,

     Magnus forgotten, from the Queen impure,

90   To Julia gave a brother: on the bounds,

     Of furthest Libya permitting thus

     His foe to gather: he in dalliance base

     Waited upon his mistress, and to her

     Pharos would give, for her would conquer all.

 

     Then Cleopatra, trusting to her charms,

     Tearless approached him, though in form of grief;

     Her tresses loose as though in sorrow torn,

     So best becoming her; and thus began:

     "If, mighty Caesar, aught to noble birth

100  Be due, give ear.  Of Lagian race am I

     Offspring illustrious; from my father's throne

     Cast forth to banishment; unless thy hand

     Restore to me the sceptre: then a Queen

     Falls at thy feet embracing.  To our race

     Bright star of justice thou!  Nor first shall I

     As woman rule the cities of the Nile;

     For, neither sex preferring, Pharos bows

     To queenly governance.  Of my parted sire

     Read the last words, by which 'tis mine to share

110  With equal rights the kingdom and the bed.

     And loves the boy his sister, were he free;

     But his affections and his sword alike

     Pothinus orders.  Nor wish I myself

     To wield my father's power; but this my prayer:

     Save from this foul disgrace our royal house,

     Bid that the king shall reign, and from the court

     Remove this hateful varlet, and his arms.

     How swells his bosom for that his the hand

     That shore Pompeius' head!  And now he threats

120  Thee, Caesar, also; which the Fates avert!

     'Twas shame enough upon the earth and thee

     That of Pothinus Magnus should have been

     The guilt or merit."

 

                              Caesar's ears in vain

     Had she implored, but aided by her charms

     The wanton's prayers prevailed, and by a night

     Of shame ineffable, passed with her judge,

     She won his favour.

 

                              When between the pair 5

     Caesar had made a peace, by costliest gifts

     Purchased, a banquet of such glad event

130  Made fit memorial; and with pomp the Queen

     Displayed her luxuries, as yet unknown

     To Roman fashions.  First uprose the hall

     Like to a fane which this corrupted age

     Could scarcely rear: the lofty ceiling shone

     With richest tracery, the beams were bound

     In golden coverings; no scant veneer

     Lay on its walls, but built in solid blocks

     Of marble, gleamed the palace.  Agate stood

     In sturdy columns, bearing up the roof;

140  Onyx and porphyry on the spacious floor

     Were trodden 'neath the foot; the mighty gates

     Of Maroe's throughout were formed,

     He mere adornment; ivory clothed the hall,

     And fixed upon the doors with labour rare

     Shells of the tortoise gleamed, from Indian seas,

     With frequent emeralds studded.  Gems of price

     And yellow jasper on the couches shone.

     Lustrous the coverlets; the major part

     Dipped more than once within the vats of Tyre

150  Had drunk their juice: part feathered as with gold;

     Part crimson dyed, in manner as are passed

     Through Pharian leash the threads.  There waited slaves

     In number as a people, some in ranks

     By different blood distinguished, some by age;

     This band with Libyan, that with auburn hair

     Red so that Caesar on the banks of Rhine

     None such had witnessed; some with features scorched

     By torrid suns, their locks in twisted coils

     Drawn from their foreheads.  Eunuchs too were there,

160  Unhappy race; and on the other side

     Men of full age whose cheeks with growth of hair

     Were hardly darkened.

 

                              Upon either hand

     Lay kings, and Caesar in the midst supreme.

     There in her fatal beauty lay the Queen

     Thick daubed with unguents, nor with throne content

     Nor with her brother spouse; laden she lay

     On neck and hair with all the Red Sea spoils,

     And faint beneath the weight of gems and gold.

     Her snowy breast shone through Sidonian lawn

170  Which woven close by shuttles of the east

     The art of Nile had loosened.  Ivory feet

     Bore citron tables brought from woods that wave 6

     On Atlas, such as Caesar never saw

     When Juba was his captive.  Blind in soul

     By madness of ambition, thus to fire

     By such profusion of her wealth, the mind

     Of Caesar armed, her guest in civil war!

     Not though he aimed with pitiless hand to grasp

     The riches of a world; not though were here

180  Those ancient leaders of the simple age,

     Fabricius or Curius stern of soul,

     Or he who, Consul, left in sordid garb

     His Tuscan plough, could all their several hopes

     Have risen to such spoil.  On plates of gold

     They piled the banquet sought in earth and air

     And from the deepest seas and Nilus' waves,

     Through all the world; in craving for display,

     No hunger urging.  Frequent birds and beasts,

     Egypt's high gods, they placed upon the board:

190  In crystal goblets water of the Nile

     They handed, and in massive cups of price

     Was poured the wine; no juice of Mareot grape 7

     But noble vintage of Falernian growth

     Which in few years in Meroe's vats had foamed,

     (For such the clime) to ripeness.  On their brows

     Chaplets were placed of roses ever young

     With glistening nard entwined; and in their locks

     Was cinnamon infused, not yet in air

     Its fragrance perished, nor in foreign climes;

200  And rich amomum from the neighbouring fields.

     Thus Caesar learned the booty of a world

     To lavish, and his breast was shamed of war

     Waged with his son-in-law for meagre spoil,

     And with the Pharian realm he longed to find

     A cause of battle.

 

                         When of wine and feast

     They wearied and their pleasure found an end,

     Caesar drew out in colloquy the night

     Thus with Achoreus, on the highest couch

     With linen ephod as a priest begirt:

210  "O thou devoted to all sacred rites,

     Loved by the gods, as proves thy length of days,

     Tell, if thou wilt, whence sprang the Pharian race;

     How lie their lands, the manners of their tribes,

     The form and worship of their deities.

     Expound the sculptures on your ancient fanes:

     Reveal your gods if willing to be known:

     If to th' Athenian sage your fathers taught

     Their mysteries, who worthier than I

     To bear in trust the secrets of the world?

220  True, by the rumour of my kinsman's flight

     Here was I drawn; yet also by your fame:

     And even in the midst of war's alarms

     The stars and heavenly spaces have I conned;

     Nor shall Eudoxus' year 8 excel mine own.

     But though such ardour burns within my breast,

     Such zeal to know the truth, yet my chief wish

     To learn the source of your mysterious flood

     Through ages hidden: give me certain hope

     To see the fount of Nile -- and civil war

230  Then shall I leave."

 

                              He spake, and then the priest:

     "The secrets, Caesar, of our mighty sires 9

     Kept from the common people until now

     I hold it right to utter.  Some may deem

     That silence on these wonders of the earth

     Were greater piety.  But to the gods

     I hold it grateful that their handiwork

     And sacred edicts should be known to men.

 

     "A different power by the primal law,

     Each star possesses: 10 these alone control

240  The movement of the sky, with adverse force

     Opposing: while the sun divides the year,

     And day from night, and by his potent rays

     Forbids the stars to pass their stated course.

     The moon by her alternate phases sets

     The varying limits of the sea and shore.

     'Neath Saturn's sway the zone of ice and snow

     Has passed; while Mars in lightning's fitful flames

     And winds abounds' beneath high Jupiter

     Unvexed by storms abides a temperate air;

250  And fruitful Venus' star contains the seeds

     Of all things.  Ruler of the boundless deep

     The god 11 Cyllenian: whene'er he holds

     That part of heaven where the Lion dwells

     With neighbouring Cancer joined, and Sirius star

     Flames in its fury; where the circular path

     (Which marks the changes of the varying year)

     Gives to hot Cancer and to Capricorn

     Their several stations, under which doth lie

     The fount of Nile, he, master of the waves,

260  Strikes with his beam the waters.  Forth the stream

     Brims from his fount, as Ocean when the moon

     Commands an increase; nor shall curb his flow

     Till night wins back her losses from the sun. 12

 

     "Vain is the ancient faith that Ethiop snows 13

     Send Nile abundant forth upon the lands.

     Those mountains know nor northern wind nor star.

     Of this are proof the breezes of the South,

     Fraught with warm vapours, and the people's hue

     Burned dark by suns: and 'tis in time of spring,

270  When first are thawed the snows, that ice-fed streams

     In swollen torrents tumble; but the Nile

     Nor lifts his wave before the Dog star burns;

     Nor seeks again his banks, until the sun

     In equal balance measures night and day.

     Nor are the laws that govern other streams

     Obeyed by Nile.  For in the wintry year

     Were he in flood, when distant far the sun,

     His waters lacked their office; but he leaves

     His channel when the summer is at height,

280  Tempering the torrid heat of Egypt's clime.

     Such is the task of Nile; thus in the world

     He finds his purpose, lest exceeding heat

     Consume the lands: and rising thus to meet

     Enkindled Lion, to Syene's prayers

     By Cancer burnt gives ear; nor curbs his wave

     Till the slant sun and Meroe's lengthening shades

     Proclaim the autumn.  Who shall give the cause?

     'Twas Parent Nature's self which gave command

     Thus for the needs of earth should flow the Nile.

 

290  "Vain too the fable that the western winds 14

     Control his current, in continuous course

     At stated seasons governing the air;

     Or hurrying from Occident to South

     Clouds without number which in misty folds

     Press on the waters; or by constant blast,

     Forcing his current back whose several mouths

     Burst on the sea; -- so, forced by seas and wind,

     Men say, his billows pour upon the land.

     Some speak of hollow caverns, breathing holes

300  Deep in the earth, within whose mighty jaws

     Waters in noiseless current underneath

     From northern cold to southern climes are drawn:

     And when hot Meroe pants beneath the sun,

     Then, say they, Ganges through the silent depths

     And Padus pass: and from a single fount

     The Nile arising not in single streams

     Pours all the rivers forth.  And rumour says

     That when the sea which girdles in the world 15

     O'erflows, thence rushes Nile, by lengthy course,

310  Softening his saltness.  More, if it be true

     That ocean feeds the sun and heavenly fires,

     Then Phoebus journeying by the burning Crab

     Sucks from its waters more than air can hold

     Upon his passage -- this the cool of night

     Pours on the Nile.

 

                         "If, Caesar, 'tis my part

     To judge such difference, 'twould seem that since

     Creation's age has passed, earth's veins by chance

     Some waters hold, and shaken cast them forth:

     But others took when first the globe was formed

320  A sure abode; by Him who framed the world

     Fixed with the Universe.

 

                                   "And, Roman, thou,

     In thirsting thus to know the source of Nile

     Dost as the Pharian and Persian kings

     And those of Macedon; nor any age

     Refused the secret, but the place prevailed

     Remote by nature.  Greatest of the kings

     By Memphis worshipped, Alexander grudged 16

     To Nile its mystery, and to furthest earth

     Sent chosen Ethiops whom the crimson zone

330  Stayed in their further march, while flowed his stream

     Warm at their feet.  Sesostris 17 westward far

     Reached, to the ends of earth; and necks of kings

     Bent 'neath his chariot yoke: but of the springs

     Which fill your rivers, Rhone and Po, he drank.

     Not of the fount of Nile.  Cambyses king

     In madman quest led forth his host to where

     The long-lived races dwell: then famine struck,

     Ate of his dead 18 and, Nile unknown, returned.

     No lying rumour of thy hidden source

340  Has e'er made mention; wheresoe'er thou art

     Yet art thou sought, nor yet has nation claimed

     In pride of place thy river as its own.

     Yet shall I tell, so far as has the god,

     Who veils thy fountain, given me to know.

     Thy progress.  Daring to upraise thy banks

     'Gainst fiery Cancer's heat, thou tak'st thy rise

     Beneath the zenith: straight towards the north

     And mid Bootes flowing; to the couch

     Bending, or to the risings, of the sun

350  In sinuous bends alternate; just alike

     To Araby's peoples and to Libyan sands.

     By Seres 19 first beheld, yet know they not

 

     Whence art thou come; and with no native stream

     Strik'st thou the Ethiop fields.  Nor knows the world

     To whom it owes thee.  Nature ne'er revealed

     Thy secret origin, removed afar.

     Nor did she wish thee to be seen of men

     While still a tiny rivulet, but preferred

     Their wonder to their knowledge.  Where the sun

360  Stays at his limit, dost thou rise in flood

     Untimely; such try right: to other lands

     Bearing try winter: and by both the poles

     Thou only wanderest.  Here men ask thy rise

     And there thine ending.  Meroe rich in soil

     And tilled by swarthy husbandmen divides

     Thy broad expanse, rejoicing in the leaves

     Of groves of ebony, which though spreading far

     Their branching foliage, by no breadth of shade

     Soften the summer sun -- whose rays direct

370  Pass from the Lion to the fervid earth. 20

     Next dost thou journey onwards past the realm

     Of burning Phoebus, and the sterile sands,

     With equal volume; now with all thy strength

     Gathered in one, and now in devious streams

     Parting the bank that crumbles at thy touch.

     Then by our kingdom's gates, where Philae parts

     Arabian peoples from Egyptian fields

     The sluggish bosom of thy flood recalls

     Try wandering currents, which through desert wastes

380  Flow gently on to where the merchant track

     Divides the Red Sea waters from our own.

     Who, gazing, Nile, upon thy tranquil flow,

     Could picture how in wild array of foam

     (Where shelves the earth) thy billows shall be plunged

     Down the steep cataracts, in fuming wrath

     That rocks should bar the passage of thy stream

     Free from its source?  For whirled on high the spray

     Aims at the stars, and trembles all the air

     With rush of waters; and with sounding roar

390  The foaming mass down from the summit pours

     In hoary waves victorious.  Next an isle

     In all our ancient lore "untrodden" named

     Stems firm thy torrent; and the rocks we call

     Springs of the river, for that here are marked

     The earliest tokens of the coming flood.

     With mountain shores now nature hems thee in

     And shuts thy waves from Libya; in the midst

     Hence do thy waters run, till Memphis first

     Forbids the barrier placed upon thy stream

400  And gives thee access to the open fields."

 

     Thus did they pass, as though in peace profound,

     The nightly watches.  But Pothinus' mind,

     Once with accursed butchery imbued,

     Was frenzied still; since great Pompeius fell

     No deed to him was crime; his rabid soul

     Th' avenging goddesses and Magnus' shade

     Stirred to fresh horrors; and a Pharian hand

     No less was worthy, as he deemed, to shed

     That blood which Fortune purposed should bedew

410  The conquered fathers: and the fell revenge

     Due to the senate for the civil war

     This hireling almost snatched.  Avert, ye fates,

     Far hence the shame that not by Brutus' hand

     This blow be struck!  Shall thus the tyrant's fall

     Just at our hands, become a Pharian crime,

     Reft of example?  To prepare a plan

     (Fated to fail) he dares; nor veils in fraud

     A plot for murder, but with open war

     Attacks th' unconquered chieftain: from his crimes

420  He gained such courage as to send command

     To lop the head of Caesar, and to join

     In death the kinsmen chiefs.

 

                                   These words by night

     His faithful servants to Achillas bear,

     His foul associate, whom the boy had made

     Chief of his armies, and who ruled alone

     O'er Egypt's land and o'er himself her king:

     "Now lay thy limbs upon the sumptuous couch

     And sleep in luxury, for the Queen hath seized

     The palace; nor alone by her betrayed,

430  But Caesar's gift, is Pharos.  Dost delay

     Nor hasten to the chamber of thy Queen?

     Thou only?  Married to the Latian chief,

     The impious sister now her brother weds

     And hurrying from rival spouse to spouse

     Hath Egypt won, and plays the bawd for Rome.

     By amorous potions she has won the man:

     Then trust the boy!  Yet give him but a night

     In her enfondling arms, and drunk with love

     Thy life and mine he'll barter for a kiss.

440  We for his sister's charms by cross and flame

     Shall pay the penalty: nor hope of aid;

     Here stands adulterous Caesar, here the King

     Her spouse: how hope we from so stern a judge

     To gain acquittal?  Shall she not condemn

     Those who ne'er sought her favours?  By the deed

     We dared together and lost, by Magnus' blood

     Which wrought the bond between us, be thou swift

     With hasty tumult to arouse the war:

     Dash in with nightly band, and mar with death

450  Their shameless nuptials: on the very bed

     With either lover smite the ruthless Queen.

     Nor let the fortunes of the Western chief

     Make pause our enterprise.  We share with him

     The glory of his empire o'er the world.

     Pompeius fallen makes us too sublime.

     There lies the shore that bids us hope success:

     Ask of our power from the polluted wave,

     And gaze upon the scanty tomb which holds

     Not all Pompeius' ashes.  Peer to him

460  Was he whom now thou fearest.  Noble blood

     True, is not ours: what boots it?  Nor are realms

     Nor wealth of peoples given to our command.

     Yet have we risen to a height of power

     For deeds of blood, and Fortune to our hands

     Attracts her victims.  Lo!  a nobler now

     Lies in our compass, and a second death

     Hesperia shall appease; for Caesar's blood,

     Shed by these hands, shall give us this, that Rome

     Shall love us, guilty of Pompeius' fall.

470  Why fear these titles, why this chieftain's strength?

     For shorn of these, before your swords he lies

     A common soldier.  To the civil war

     This night shall bring completion, and shall give

     To peoples slain fit offerings, and send

     That life the world demands beneath the shades.

     Rise then in all your hardihood and smite

     This Caesar down, and let the Roman youths

     Strike for themselves, and Lagos for its King.

     Nor do thou tarry: full of wine and feast

480  Thou'lt fall upon him in the lists of love;

     Then dare the venture, and the heavenly gods

     Shall grant of Cato's and of Brutus' prayers

     To thee fulfilment."

 

                              Nor was Achillas slow

     To hear the voice that counselled him to crime.

     No sounding clarion summoned, as is wont,

     His troops to arms; nor trumpet blare betrayed

     Their nightly march: but rapidly he seized

     All needed instruments of blood and war.

     Of Latian race the most part of his train,

490  Yet to barbarian customs were their minds

     By long forgetfulness of Rome debased:

    Else had it shamed to serve the Pharian King;

     But now his vassal and his minion's word

     Compel obedience.  Those who serve in camps

     Lose faith and love of kin: their pittance earned 21

     Makes just the deed: and for their sordid pay,

     Not for themselves, they threaten Caesar's life.

     Where finds the piteous destiny of the realm

     Rome with herself at peace?  The host withdrawn

500  From dread Thessalia raves on Nilus' banks

     As all the race of Rome.  What more had dared,

     With Magnus welcomed, the Lagean house?

     Each hand must render to the gods their due,

     Nor son of Rome may cease from civil war;

     By Heaven's command our state was rent in twain;

     Nor love for husband nor regard for sire

     Parted our peoples.  'Twas a slave who stirred

     Afresh the conflict, and Achillas grasped

     In turn the sword of Rome: nay more, had won,

510  Had not the fates adverse restrained his hand

     From Caesar's slaughter.

 

                                   For the murderous pair

     Ripe for their plot were met; the spacious hall

     Still busied with the feast.  So might have flowed

     Into the kingly cups a stream of gore,

     And in mid banquet fallen Caesar's head.

     Yet did they fear lest in the nightly strife

     (The fates permitting) some incautious hand --

     So did they trust the sword -- might slay the King.

     Thus stayed the deed, for in the minds of slaves

520  The chance of doing Caesar to the death

     Might bear postponement: when the day arose

     Then should he suffer; and a night of life

     Thus by Pothinus was to Caesar given.

 

     Now from the Casian rock looked forth the Sun

     Flooding the land of Egypt with a day

     Warm from its earliest dawn, when from the walls

     Not wandering in disorder are they seen,

     But drown in close array, as though to meet

     A foe opposing; ready to receive

530  Or give the battle.  Caesar, in the town

     Placing no trust, within the palace courts

     Lay in ignoble hiding place, the gates

     Close barred: nor all the kingly rooms possessed,

     But in the narrowest portion of the space

     He drew his band together.  There in arms

     They stood, with dread and fury in their souls.

     He feared attack, indignant at his fear.

     Thus will a noble beast in little cage

     Imprisoned, fume, and break upon the bars

540  His teeth in frenzied wrath; nor more would rage

     The flames of Vulcan in Sicilian depths

     Should Etna's top be closed.  He who but now

     By Haemus' mount against Pompeius chief,

     Italia's leaders and the Senate line,

     His cause forbidding hope, looked at the fates

     He knew were hostile, with unfaltering gaze,

     Now fears before the crime of hireling slaves,

     And in mid palace trembles at the blow:

     He whom nor Scythian nor Alaun 22 had dared

550  To violate, nor the Moor who aims the dart

     Upon his victim slain, to prove his skill.

     The Roman world but now did not suffice

     To hold him, nor the realms from furthest Ind

     To Tyrian Gades.  Now, as puny boy,

     Or woman, trembling when a town is sacked,

     Within the narrow corners of a house

     He seeks for safety; on the portals closed

     His hope of life; and with uncertain gait

     He treads the hails; yet not without the King;

560  In purpose, Ptolemaeus, that thy life

     For his shall give atonement; and to hurl

     Thy severed head among the servant throng

     Should darts and torches fail.  So story tells

     The Colchian princess 23 with sword in hand,

     And with her brother's neck bared to the blow,

     Waited her sire, avenger of his realm

     Despoiled, and of her flight.  In the imminent risk

     Caesar, in hopes of peace, an envoy sent

     To the fierce vassals, from their absent lord

570  Bearing a message, thus: "At whose command

     Wage ye the war?"  But not the laws which bind

     All nations upon earth, nor sacred rights,

     Availed to save or messenger of peace,

     Or King's ambassador; or thee from crime

     Such as befitted thee, thou land of Nile

     Fruitful in monstrous deeds: not Juba's realm

     Vast though it be, nor Pontus, nor the land

     Thessalian, nor the arms of Pharnaces,

     Nor yet the tracts which chill Iberus girds,

580  Nor Libyan coasts such wickedness have dared,

     As thou, with all thy luxuries.  Closer now

     War hemmed them in, and weapons in the courts,

     Shaking the innermost recesses, fell.

     Yet did no ram, fatal with single stroke,

     Assail the portal, nor machine of war;

     Nor flame they called in aid; but blind of plan

     They wander purposeless, in separate bands

     Around the circuit, nor at any spot

     With strength combined attempt to breach the wall.

590  The fates forbad, and Fortune from their hands

     Held fast the palace as a battlement.

     Nor failed they to attack from ships of war

     The regal dwelling, where its frontage bold

     Made stand apart the waters of the deep:

     There, too, was Caesar's all-protecting arm;

     For these at point of sword, and those with fire 24

     He forces back, and though besieged he dares

     To storm th' assailants: and as lay the ships

     Joined rank to rank, bids drop upon their sides

600  Lamps drenched with reeking tar.  Nor slow the fire

     To seize the hempen cables and the decks

     Oozing with melting pitch; the oarsman's bench

     All in one moment, and the topmost yards

     Burst into flame: half merged the vessels lay

     While swam the foemen, all in arms, the wave;

     Nor fell the blaze upon the ships alone,

     But seized with writhing tongues the neighbouring homes,

     And fanned to fury by the Southern breeze

     Tempestuous, it leaped from roof to roof;

610  Not otherwise than on its heavenly track,

     Unfed by matter, glides the ball of light,

     By air alone aflame.

 

                              This pest recalled

     Some of the forces to the city's aid

     From the besieged halls.  Nor Caesar gave

     To sleep its season; swifter than all else

     To seize the crucial moment of the war.

     Quick in the darkest watches of the night

     He leaped upon his ships, and Pharos 25 seized,

     Gate of the main; an island in the days

620  Of Proteus seer, now bordering the walls

     Of Alexander's city.  Thus he gained

     A double vantage, for his foes were pent

     Within the narrow entrance, which for him

     And for his aids gave access to the sea.

 

     Nor longer was Pothinus' doom delayed,

     Yet not with cross or flame, nor with the wrath

     His crime demanded; nor by savage beasts

     Torn, did he suffer; but by Magnus' death,

     Alas the shame!  he fell; his head by sword

630  Hacked from his shoulders.  Next by frauds prepared

     By Ganymede her base attendant, fled

     Arsinoe 26 from the Court to Caesar's foes;

     There in the absence of the King she ruled

     As of Lagean blood: there at her hands,

     The savage minion of the tyrant boy,

     Achillas, fell by just avenging sword.

     Thus did another victim to thy shade

     Atone, Pompeius; but the gods forbid

     That this be all thy vengeance!  Not the king

640  Nor all the stock of Lagos for thy death

     Would make fit sacrifice!  So Fortune deemed;

     And not till patriot swords shall drink the blood

     Of Caesar, Magnus, shalt thou be appeased.

     Still, though was slain the author of the strife,

     Sank not their rage: with Ganymede for chief

     Again they rush to arms; in deeds of fight

     Again they conquer.  So might that one day

     Have witnessed Caesar's fate; so might its fame

     Have lived through ages.

 

                                   As the Roman Chief,

650  Crushed on the narrow surface of the mole,

     Prepared to throw his troops upon the ships,

     Sudden upon him the surrounding foes

     With all their terrors came.  In dense array

     Their navy lined the shores, while on the rear

     The footmen ceaseless charged.  No hope was left,

     For flight was not, nor could the brave man's arm

     Achieve or safety or a glorious death.

     Not now were needed for great Caesar's fall,

     Caught in the toils of nature, routed host

660  Or mighty heaps of slain: his only doubt

     To fear or hope for death: while on his brain

     Brave Scaeva's image flashed, now vainly sought,

     Who on the wall by Epidamnus' fields

     Earned fame immortal, and with single arm

     Drove back Pompeius as he trod the breach....

 

 

 





1  The body of Alexander was embalmed, and the mummy placed in a glass case.  The sarcophagus which enclosed them is stated to be now in the British Museum.



2  See Book III., 268.



3  The kettledrum used in the worship of Isis.  (See Book VIII, line 974.)



4  At the Battle of Actium.  The island of Leucas, close to the promontory of Actium, is always named by Lucan when he refers to this battle. (See also Virgil, "Aeneid", viii., 677.)



5  Between Cleopatra and her brother.



6  See Book IX., 507.



7  Yet the Mareot grape was greatly celebrated. (See Professor Rawlinson's note to Herodotus. ii., 18.)



8  The calendar introduced by Caesar, in B.C. 45, was founded on the Egyptian or solar year.  (See Herodotus, ii., 4.) Eudoxus seems to have dealt with this year and to have corrected it.  He is probably alluded to by Virgil, "Eclogue" iii., 41.



9  Herodotus was less fortunate.  For he says "Concerning the nature of the river I was not able to gain any information either from the priests or others." (ii., 19.)



10 It was supposed that the Sun and Moon and the planets (Saturn, Jupiter, Mars, Mercury, and Venus) were points which restrained the motion of the sky in its revolution. (See Book VI., 576.)



11 Mercury. (See Book IX., 777.)



12 That is, at the autumnal equinox.  The priest states that the planet Mercury causes the rise of the Nile.  The passage is difficult to follow; but the idea would seem to be that this god, who controlled the rise and fall of the waves of the sea, also when he was placed directly over the Nile caused the rise of that river.



13 So also Herodotus, Book ii., 22.  Yet modern discoveries have proved the snows.



14 So, too, Herodotus, Book ii., 20, who attributes the theory to Greeks who wish to get a reputation for cleverness.



15 See on Book V., 709.  Herodotus mentions this theory also, to dismiss it.



16 The historians state that Alexander made an expedition to the temple of Jupiter Hammon and consulted the oracle. Jupiter assisted his march, and an army of crows pointed out the path (Plutarch).  It is, however stated, in a note in Langhorne's edition, that Maximus Tyrius informs us that the object of the journey was the discovery of the sources of the Nile.



17 Sesostris, the great king, does not appear to have pushed his conquests to the west of Europe.



18 See Herodotus, iii., 17.  These Ethiopian races were supposed to live to the age of 120 years, drinking milk, and eating boiled flesh.  On Cambyses's march his starving troops cast lots by tens for the one man who was to be eaten.



19 The Seres are, of course, the Chinese.  The ancients seem to have thought that the Nile came from the east.  But it is possible that there was another tribe of this name dwelling in Africa.



20 A passage of difficulty.  I understand it to mean that at this spot the summer sun (in Leo) strikes the earth with direct rays.



21 Reading "ibi fas ubi proxima merees", with Hosius.



22 See Book VIII., 253.



23 Medea, who fled from Colchis with her brother, Absyrtus. Pursued by her father Aeetes, she killed her brother and strewed the parts of his body into the sea.  The king paused to collect them.



24 It was in this conflagration that a large part of the library of the Ptolemies was destroyed.  400,000 volumes are stated to have perished.



25 The island of Pharos, which lay over against the port of Alexandria, had been connected with the mainland in the middle by a narrow causeway.  On it stood the lighthouse.  (See Book IX, 1191.)  Proteus, the old man of the sea, kept here his flock of seals, according to the Homeric story.  ("Odyssey", Book IV, 400.)



26 Younger sister of Cleopatra.

 

 

[End of Lucan's "Pharsalia"]

 

 



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