Графични страници
PDF файл
ePub

The spreading fire o'er-runs their unctuous fides,
And, nimbly mounting, on the top-maft rides :
Planks, yards and cordage, feed the dreadful blaze;
The drowning veffel hiffes in the feas;

While floating arms and men, promifcuous ftrow'd, 730 Hide the whole furface of the azure flood.

735

Nor dwells deftruction on their fleet alone,
But, driven by winds, invades the neighbouring town:
On rapid wings the fheety flames they bear,
In wavy lengths, along the reddening air.
Not much unlike, the fhooting meteors fly,
In gleamy trails, athwart the midnight sky.
Soon as the croud behold their city burn,
Thither, all headlong, from the siege they turn.
But Cæfar, prone to vigilance and haste,
To fnatch the juft occafion ere it pass'd,

Hid in the friendly night's involving shade,
A fafe retreat to Pharos timely made.
In elder times of holy Proteus' reign,
An isle it stood, incompass'd by the main :
Now by a mighty mole the town it joins,
And from wide feas the fafer port confines.
Of high importance to the chief it lies,
To him brings aid, and to the foe denies :
In close restraint the captive town is held,
While free behind he views the watery field.
There fafe, with curs'd Pothinus in his power,
Cæfar defers the villain's doom no more.

740

745

750

Yet, ah! by means too gentle he expires ;

No gashing knives he feels, no fcorching fires;

755

Nor

Nor were his limbs by grinning tigers torn,
Nor pendent on the horrid cross are borne:.
Beneath the fword the wretch refigns his breath,
And dies too glorioufly by Pompey's death.

Mean-while, by wily Ganymede convey'd,
Arfinoë, the younger royal maid,

Fled to the camp; and with a daring hand
Affumes the fceptre of fupreme command:
And, for her feeble brother was not there,
She calls herfelf the fole Lagaan heir.

760

765

770

Then, fince he dares difpute her right to reign,
She dooms the fierce Achillas to be flain.
With just remorfe, repenting fortune paid
This fecond victim to her Pompey's fhade.
But oh! nor this, nor Ptolemy, nor all
The race of Lagos doom'd at once to fall,
Not hecatombs of tyrants fhall fuffice,
Till Brutus ftrikes, and haughty Cæfar dies.
Nor yet the rage of war was hush'd in peace,
Nor would that storm, with him who rais'd it, cease.
A fecond eunuch to the task fucceeds,

And Ganymede the power of Egypt leads :
He chears the drooping Pharians with success,
And urg'd the Roman chief with new diftrefs.
Such dangers did one dreadful day afford,
As annals might to latest times record,
And confecrate to fame the warrior's fword.
While to their barks his faithful band defcends,
Cæfar the mole's contracted space defends.
Part from the crouded key aboard were pafs'd,
The careful chief remain'd among the last;

}

785

When

When fudden Ægypt's furious powers unite,
And fix on him alone th' unequal fight.
By land the numerous foot, by fea the fleet,
At once furround him, and prevent retreat.
No means for fafety or escape remain,
To fight, or fly, were equally in vain :
A vulgar period on his wars attends,
And his ambitious life obfcurely ends.
No feas of gore, no mountains of the flain,
Renown the fight on fome diftinguish'd plain :
But meanly in a tumult must he die,

And, over-borne by crouds, inglorious lie:
No room was left to fall as Cæfar fhould,

790

795

So little were the hopes, his foes and fate allow'd. 800
At once the place and danger he furveys,

The rifing mound, and the near neighbouring feas:
Some fainting ftruggling doubts as yet remain :
Can he, perhaps, his navy ftill regain ?

Or fhall he die, and end th' uncertain pain?
At length, while madly thus perplex'd he burns,
His own brave Scava to his thought returns ;
Scava, who in the breach undaunted stood,
And fingly made the dreadful battle good;
Whose arm advancing Pompey's hoft repell'd,
And, coop'd within a wall, the captive leader held.
Strong in his foul the glorious image rose,

And taught him, fudden, to difdain his foes;
The force oppos'd in equal fcales to weigh,
Himself was Cæfar, and Ægyptians they;
To trust that fortune, and those gods, once more,
That never fail'd his daring hopes before.

4

}

810

815

Threatening

Threatening, aloft his flaming blade he shook, And through the throng his course resistless took : and helmed heads before him fly,

820

825

Hands, arms,
While mingling screams and groans ascend the sky.
So winds, imprison'd, force their furious way,
Tear up the earth, and drive the foamy sea.
Just on the margin of the mound he stay'd,
And for a moment, thence, the flood survey'd :
Fortune divine! be prefent now, he cry'd;
And plung'd, undaunted, in the foamy tide.
Th' obedient deep, at fortune's high command,
Receiv'd the mighty master of the land;
Her fervile waves officious Tethys spread,
To raise with proud fupport his awful head.
And, for he fcorn'd th' inglorious race of Nile
Should pride themselves in aught of Cæfar's spoil,
In his left hand, above the water's power,
Papers and fcrolls of high import he bore;
Where his own labours faithfully record
The battles of ambition's ruthlefs fword:
Safe in his right, the deadly steel he held,

830

835

And plow'd, with many a stroke, the liquid field;
While his fix'd teeth tenaciously retain

840

His ample Tyrian robe's imperial train;

Th' incumber'd folds the curling furface fweep,
Come flow behind, and drag along the deep.
From the high mole, from every Pharian prow,
A thoufand hands a thousand javelins throw;
The thrilling points dip bloodless in the waves,
While he their idle wrath fecurely braves.

845

So

So when fome mighty ferpent of the main
Rolls his huge length athwart the liquid plain,
Whether he range voracious for the prey,
Or to the funny shore directs his way,
Him if by chance the fishers view from far,
With flying darts they wage a distant war :
But the fell monfter, unappall'd with dread,
Above the feas exerts his poisonous head;
He rears his livid crest and kindling eyes,
And, terrible, the feeble foe defies;

850

855

His fwelling breast a foamy path divides,
And, careless, o'er the murmuring flood he glides. '
Some loofer Muse, perhaps, who lightly treads 860
The devious paths where wanton fancy leads,

In heaven's high court, would feign the queen of love,
Kneeling in tears before the throne of Jove,
Imploring, fad, th' almighty father's grace,
For the dear offspring of her Julian race.
While to the just recording Romans eyes,
Far other forms, and other gods arife;

865

The guardian furies round him rear their heads,
And Nemefis the fhield of safety spreads;

Juftice and fate the floating chief convey,

870

And Rome's glad genius wafts him on his way;
Freedom and laws the Pharian darts withstand,
And fave him for avenging Brutus' hand.
His friends, unknowing what the gods decree,
With joy receive him from the swelling sea ;
In peals on peals their fhouts triumphant rise,
Roll o'er the distant flood, and thunder to the skies.

875

CON

« ПредишнаНапред »