Ride on the seas and fail to find a fleet.
Urged by his sire's un
conquerable will
And mindful of his rights, mine heir shall rouse
All nations to the
conflict. One alone,
(Should he
contend for freedom) may ye serve;
Cato, none else!' Thus have I kept the faith;
Thy plot (3) prevailed upon me, and I lived
Thy
mandate to
discharge. Now through the void
Of space, and shades of Hell, if such there be,
I follow; yet how distant be my doom
I know not: first my spirit must endure
The
punishment of life, which saw thine end
And could
survive it; sighs shall break my heart,
Tears shall
dissolve it: sword nor noose I need
Nor
headlongplunge. 'Twere
shameful since thy death,
Were aught but grief required to cause my own."
She seeks the cabin, veiled, in
funeral garb,
In tears to find her
solace, and to love
Grief in her husband's room; no prayers were hers
For life, as were the sailors'; nor their shout
Roused by the
height of peril, moved her soul,
Nor angered waves: but sorrowing there she lay,
Resigned to death and welcoming the storm.
First reached they Cyprus on the foamy brine;
Then as the eastern
breeze more
gently held
The favouring deep, they touched the Libyan shore
Where stood the camp of Cato. Sad as one
Who deep in fear presages ills to come,
Cnaeus
beheld his brother and his band
Of
patriot comrades. Swift into the wave
He leaps and cries, "Where, brother, is our sire?
Still stands our country
mistress of the world,
Or are we fallen, Rome with Magnus' death
Rapt to the shades?" Thus he: but Sextus said
"Oh happy thou who by report alone
Hear'st of the deed that chanced on yonder shore!
These eyes that saw, my brother, share the guilt.
Not Caesar
wrought the murder of our sire,
Nor any captain
worthy in the fray.
He fell beneath the orders of a king
Shameful and base, while
trusting to the gods
Who
shield the guest; a king who in that land
By his
concession ruled: (this the reward
For favours erst bestowed). Within my sight
Pierced through with wounds our noble father fell:
Yet deeming not the petty
prince of Nile
So fell a deed would dare, to Egypt's strand
I thought great Caesar come. But worse than all,
Worse than the wounds which gaped upon his frame
Struck me with
horror to the inmost heart,
Our murdered father's head, shorn from the trunk
And borne aloft on
javelin; this sight,
As rumour said, the cruel
victor asked
To feast his eyes, and prove the
bloody deed.
For whether ravenous birds and Pharian dogs
Have torn his corse
asunder, or a fire
Consumed it, which with stealthy flame arose
Upon the shore, I know not. For the parts
Devoured by
destiny I only blame
The gods: I weep the part preserved by men."
Thus Sextus spake: and Cnaeus at the words
Flamed into fury for his father's shame.
"Sailors,
launch forth our navies, by your oars
Forced through the deep though wind and sea oppose:
Captains, lead on: for civil
strife ne'er gave
So great a prize; to lay in earth the limbs
Of Magnus, and
avenge him with the blood
Of that unmanly
tyrant. Shall I spare
Great Alexander's fort, nor sack the shrine
And
plunge his body in the tideless marsh?
Nor drag Amasis from the Pyramids,
And all their ancient Kings, to swim the Nile?
Torn from his tomb, that god of all mankind
Isis, unburied, shall
avenge thy shade;
And veiled Osiris shall I hurl abroad
In mutilated fragments; and the form
Of
sacred Apis; (4) and with these their gods
Shall light a
furnace, that shall burn the head
They held in
insult. Thus their land shall pay
The fullest
penalty for the
shameful deed.
No husbandman shall live to till the fields
Nor reap the benefit of brimming Nile.
Thou only, Father, gods and men alike
Fallen and perished, shalt possess the land."
Such were the words he spake; and soon the fleet
Had dared the angry deep: but Cato's voice
While praising, calmed the
youthful chieftain's rage.
Meanwhile, when Magnus' fate was known, the air
Sounded with lamentations which the shore
Re-echoed; never through the ages past,
By history recorded, was it known
That thus a people mourned their ruler's death.
Yet more when worn with tears, her pallid cheek
Veiled by her loosened tresses, from the ship
Cornelia came, they wept and beat the breast.
The friendly land once gained, her husband's garb,
His arms and spoils, embroidered deep in gold,
Thrice worn of old upon the
sacred hill (5)
She placed upon the flame. Such were for her
The ashes of her
spouse: and such the love
Which glowed in every heart, that soon the shore
Blazed with his obsequies. Thus at winter-tide
By
frequent fires th' Apulian
herdsman seeks
To render to the fields their verdant growth;
Till blaze Garganus' uplands and the meads
Of Vultur, and the
pasture of the herds
By warm Matinum.
Yet Pompeius' shade
Nought else so gratified, not all the blame
The people dared to heap upon the gods,
For him their hero slain, as these few words
From Cato's noble breast
instinct with truth:
"Gone is a citizen who though no peer (6)
Of those who disciplined the state of yore
In due
submission to the bounds of right,
Yet in this age irreverent of law
Has played a noble part. Great was his power,
But freedom safe: when all the plebs was prone
To be his slaves, he chose the private gown;
So that the Senate ruled the Roman state,
The Senate's ruler:
nought by right of arms
He e'er demanded:
willing took he gifts
Yet from a
willing giver:
wealth was his
Vast, yet the coffers of the State he filled
Beyond his own. He seized upon the sword,
Knew when to
sheath it; war did he prefer
To arts of peace, yet armed loved peace the more.