Eclogue 4: The Messiah -

Pollio

Sicilian Muse, begin a loftier strain!
Though lowly shrubs, and trees that shade the plain
Delight not all, if thither I repair
My song shall make 'em worth a consul's care.
The last great age foretold by sacred rhymes
Renews its finished course; Saturnian times
Roll round again, and mighty years, begun
From their first orb, in radiant circles run.
The base, degenerate iron offspring ends,
A golden progeny from heaven descends;
O chaste Lucina, speed the mother's pains,
And haste the glorious birth: thy own Apollo reigns!
The lovely boy, with his auspicious face,
Shall Pollio's consulship and triumph grace;
Majestic months set out with him to their appointed race.
The father banished virtue shall restore,
And crimes shall threat the guilty world no more.
The son shall lead the life of gods, and be
By gods and heroes seen, and gods and heroes see.
The jarring nations he in peace shall bind,
And with paternal virtues rule mankind.
Unbidden earth shall wreathing ivy bring,
And fragrant herbs, the promises of spring,
As her first off'rings to her infant King.
The goats with strutting dugs shall homeward speed,
And lowing herds secure from lions feed.
His cradle shall with rising flowers be crowned;
The serpent's brood shall die; the sacred ground
Shall weeds and pois'nous plants refuse to bear,
Each common bush shall Syrian roses wear.
But when heroic verse his youth shall raise,
And form it to hereditary praise,
Unlaboured harvests shall the fields adorn,
And clustered grapes shall blush on every thorn;
The knotted oaks shall showers of honey weep,
And through the matted grass the liquid gold shall creep.
Yet of old fraud some footsteps shall remain,
The merchant still shall plough the deep for gain;
Great cities shall with walls be compassed round,
And sharpened shares shall vex the fruitful ground.
Another Tiphys shall new seas explore,
Another Argos on th' Iberian shore
Shall land the chosen chiefs;
Another Helen other wars create,
And great Achilles shall be sent to urge the Trojan fate.
But when to ripened manhood he shall grow,
The greedy sailor shall the seas forgo;
No keel shall cut the waves for foreign ware,
For every soil shall every product bear.
The labouring hind his oxen shall disjoin,
No plough shall hurt the glebe, no pruning-hook the vine,
Nor wool shall in dissembled colours shine;
But the luxurious father of the fold
With native purple or unborrowed gold,
Beneath his pompous fleece shall proudly sweat,
And under Tyrian robes the lamb shall bleat.
The Fates, when they this happy web have spun,
Shall bless the sacred clue, and bid it smoothly run.
Mature in years, to awful honours move,
O of celestial stem! O foster son of Jove!
See, labouring Nature calls thee to sustain
The nodding frame of heaven and earth and main;
See to their base restored earth, seas and air,
And joyful ages from behind stand crowding to appear.
To sing thy praise, would heaven my breath prolong,
Infusing spirits worthy such a song,
Not Thracian Orpheus should transcend my lays,
Nor Linus crowned with never-fading bays,
Though each his heavenly parent should inspire,
The Muse instruct the voice, and Phoebus tune the lyre.
Should Pan contend with me, and thou my theme,
Arcadian judges should their god condemn.
Begin, auspicious boy, to cast about
Thy infant eyes, and with a smile thy mother single out;
Thy mother well deserves that short delight,
The nauseous qualms of ten long months and travail to requite.
Then smile: the frowning infant's doom is read,
No god shall crown the board, nor goddess bless the bed.
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Virgil
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