Blent with the living. Yet their camp was pitched
Hard by the breezy sea by which might come
All nations' harvests, and the northern wind
Not seldom rolled the murky air away.
Their foe, not vexed with pestilential air
Nor
stagnant waters, ample range enjoyed
Upon the
spacious uplands: yet as though
In leaguer,
famine seized them for its prey.
Scarce were the crops half grown when Caesar saw
How prone they seized upon the food of beasts,
And stripped of leaves the bushes and the groves,
And dragged from roots unknown the
doubtful herb.
Thus ate they, starving, all that teeth may bite
Or fire might
soften, or might pass their throats
Dry, parched, abraded; food unknown before
Nor placed on tables: while the leaguered foe
Was
blessed with plenty.
When Pompeius first
Was pleased to break his bonds and be at large,
No sudden dash he makes on
sleeping foe
Unarmed in shade of night; his
mighty soul
Scorns such a path to
victory" target="_blank" title="n.胜利,战胜">
victory. 'Twas his aim,
To lay the
turrets low; to mark his track,
By ruin spread afar; and with the sword
To hew a path between his slaughtered foes.
Minucius' (7)
turret was the chosen spot
Where groves of trees and thickets gave approach
Safe, unbetrayed by dust.
Up from the fields
Flashed all at once his eagles into sight
And all his trumpets blared. But ere the sword
Could win the battle, on the
hostile ranks
Dread panic fell; prone as in death they lay
Where else
upright they should
withstand the foe;
Nor more availed their
valour, and in vain
The cloud of
weapons flew, with none to slay.
Then blazing torches rolling pitchy flame
Are hurled, and
shaken nod the lofty towers
And
threaten ruin, and the bastions groan
Struck by the
frequent engine, and the troops
Of Magnus by
triumphant" target="_blank" title="a.胜利的;洋洋得意的">
triumphant eagles led
Stride o'er the
rampart, in their front the world.
Yet now that passage which not Caesar's self
Nor thousand
valiant squadrons had availed
To
rescue from their grasp, one man in arms
Steadfast till death refused them; Scaeva named
This hero soldier: long he served in fight
Waged 'gainst the
savage on the banks of Rhone;
And now centurion made, through deeds of blood,
He bore the staff before the marshalled line.
Prone to all wickedness, he little recked
How
valourous deeds in civil war may be
Greatest of crimes; and when he saw how turned
His comrades from the war and sought in
flightA
refuge, (8) "Whence," he cried, "this
impious fear
Unknown to Caesar's armies? Do ye turn
Your backs on death, and are ye not ashamed
Not to be found where slaughtered heroes lie?
Is
loyalty too weak? Yet love of fight
Might bid you stand. We are the chosen few
Through whom the foe would break. Unbought by blood
This day shall not be
theirs. 'Neath Caesar's eye,
True, death would be more happy; but this boon
Fortune denies: at least my fall shall be
Praised by Pompeius. Break ye with your breasts
Their
weapons; blunt the edges of their swords
With throats unyielding. In the distant lines
The dust is seen already, and the sound
Of
tumult and of ruin finds the ear
Of Caesar: strike; the
victory" target="_blank" title="n.胜利,战胜">
victory is ours:
For he shall come who while his soldiers die
Shall make the
fortress his." His voice called forth
The courage that the trumpets failed to rouse
When first they rang: his comrades mustering come
To watch his deeds; and, wondering at the man,
To test if
valour thus by foes oppressed,
In narrow space, could hope for aught but death.
But Scaeva
standing on the tottering bank
Heaves from the brimming
turret on the foe
The corpses of the fallen; the ruined mass
Furnishing
weapons to his hands; with beams,
And
ponderous stones, nay, with his body threats
His enemies; with poles and stakes he thrusts
The breasts advancing; when they grasp the wall
He lops the arm: rocks crush the foeman's skull
And rive the scalp
asunder: fiery bolts
Dashed at another set his hair aflame,
Till rolls the
greedy blaze about his eyes
With
hideouscrackle. As the pile of slain
Rose to the
summit of the wall he sprang,
Swift as across the nets a hunted pard,
Above the swords upraised, till in mid throng
Of foes he stood, hemmed in by densest ranks
And
ramparted by war; in front and rear,
Where'er he struck, the
victor. Now his sword
Blunted with gore congealed no more could wound,
But brake the
stricken limb; while every hand
Flung every quivering dart at him alone;
Nor missed their aim, for rang against his
shieldDart after dart unerring, and his helm
In broken fragments pressed upon his brow;
His vital parts were safeguarded by spears
That bristled in his body. Fortune saw
Thus waged a novel
combat, for there warred
Against one man an army. Why with darts,
Madmen,
assail him and with
slender shafts,
'Gainst which his life is proof? Or
ponderous stones
This
warrior chief shall
overwhelm, or bolts
Flung by the twisted thongs of
mighty slings.
Let steelshod ram or catapult remove
This
champion of the gate. No
fragile wall
Stands here for Caesar, blocking with its bulk
Pompeius' way to freedom. Now he trusts
His
shield no more, lest his
sinister hand,
Idle, give life by shame; and on his breast
Bearing a forest of spears, though spent with toil
And worn with onset, falls upon his foe
And braves alone the wounds of all the war.
Thus may an
elephant in Afric wastes,
Oppressed by
frequent darts, break those that fall
Rebounding from his horny hide, and shake
Those that find lodgment, while his life within
Lies safe, protected, nor doth spear avail
To reach the fount of blood. Unnumbered wounds
By arrow dealt, or lance, thus fail to slay
This single
warrior. But lo! from far
A Cretan archer's shaft, more sure of aim
Than vows could hope for, strikes on Scaeva's brow
To light within his eye: the hero tugs
Intrepid, bursts the nerves, and tears the shaft
Forth with the eyeball, and with
dauntless heel
Treads them to dust. Not
otherwise a bear
Pannonian,
fiercer for the wound received,
Maddened by dart from Libyan thong propelled,
Turns circling on her wound, and still pursues
The
weapon fleeing as she whirls around.
Thus, in his rage destroyed, his
shapeless face
Stood foul with
crimson flow. The
victors' shout
Glad to the sky arose; no greater joy
A little blood could give them had they seen
That Caesar's self was wounded. Down he pressed
Deep in his soul the
anguish, and, with mien,
No longer bent on fight, submissive cried,
"Spare me, ye citizens; remove the war
Far hence: no
weapons now can haste my death;
Draw from my breast the darts, but add no more.
Yet raise me up to place me in the camp
Of Magnus, living: this your gift to him;
No brave man's death my title to renown,
But Caesar's flag deserted." So he spake.
Unhappy Aulus thought his words were true,
Nor saw within his hand the
pointed sword;
And leaping forth in haste to make his own
The prisoner and his arms, in middle throat
Received the
lightning blade. By this one death
Rose Scaeva's
valour again; and thus he cried,
Such be the
punishment of all who thought
Great Scaeva vanquished; if Pompeius seeks
Peace from this reeking sword, low let him lay
At Caesar's feet his standards. Me do ye think
Such as yourselves, and slow to meet the fates?
Your love for Magnus and the Senate's cause
Is less than mine for death." These were his words;
And dust in columns proved that Caesar came.
Thus was Pompeius' glory spared the stain
Of
flight compelled by Scaeva. He, when ceased
The battle, fell, no more by rage of fight,
Or sight of blood out-pouring from his wounds,
Roused to the
combat. Fainting there he lay
Upon the shoulders of his comrades borne,
Who him adoring (as though deity
Dwelt in his bosom) for his
matchless deeds,
Plucked forth the gory shafts and took his arms
To deck the gods and
shield the breast of Mars.
Thrice happy thou with such a name achieved,
Had but the
fierce Iberian from thy sword,
Or heavy
shielded Teuton, or had fled
The light Cantabrian: with no spoils shalt thou
Adorn the Thunderer's
temple, nor upraise
The shout of
triumph in the ways of Rome.
For all thy
prowess, all thy deeds of pride
Do but prepare her lord.
Nor on this hand
Repulsed, Pompeius idly ceased from war,
Content within his bars; but as the sea
Tireless, which tempests force upon the crag
That breaks it, or which gnaws a mountain side
Some day to fall in ruin on itself;
He sought the
turrets nearest to the main,
On double onset bent; nor closely kept
His troops in hand, but on the
spacious plain
Spread forth his camp. They
joyful leave the tents
And
wander at their will. Thus Padus flows
In brimming flood, and foaming at his bounds,
Making whole districts quake; and should the bank
Fail 'neath his
swollen waters, all his stream
Breaks forth in swirling eddies over fields
Not his before; some lands are lost, the rest
Gain from his bounty.
Hardly from his tower
Had Caesar seen the fire or known the fight: