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    Chapter 5

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    BOOK V
    Meantime the Trojan cuts his wat'ry way,
    Fix'd on his voyage, thro' the curling sea;
    Then, casting back his eyes, with dire amaze,
    Sees on the Punic shore the mounting blaze.
    The cause unknown; yet his presaging mind
    The fate of Dido from the fire divin'd;
    He knew the stormy souls of womankind,
    What secret springs their eager passions move,
    How capable of death for injur'd love.
    Dire auguries from hence the Trojans draw;
    Till neither fires nor shining shores they saw.
    Now seas and skies their prospect only bound;
    An empty space above, a floating field around.
    But soon the heav'ns with shadows were o'erspread;
    A swelling cloud hung hov'ring o'er their head:
    Livid it look'd, the threat'ning of a storm:
    Then night and horror ocean's face deform.
    The pilot, Palinurus, cried aloud:
    "What gusts of weather from that gath'ring cloud
    My thoughts presage! Ere yet the tempest roars,
    Stand to your tackle, mates, and stretch your oars;
    Contract your swelling sails, and luff to wind."
    The frighted crew perform the task assign'd.
    Then, to his fearless chief: "Not Heav'n," said he,
    "Tho' Jove himself should promise Italy,
    Can stem the torrent of this raging sea.
    Mark how the shifting winds from west arise,
    And what collected night involves the skies!
    Nor can our shaken vessels live at sea,
    Much less against the tempest force their way.
    'T is fate diverts our course, and fate we must obey.
    Not far from hence, if I observ'd aright
    The southing of the stars, and polar light,
    Sicilia lies, whose hospitable shores
    In safety we may reach with struggling oars."
    Aeneas then replied: "Too sure I find
    We strive in vain against the seas and wind:
    Now shift your sails; what place can please me more
    Than what you promise, the Sicilian shore,
    Whose hallow'd earth Anchises' bones contains,
    And where a prince of Trojan lineage reigns?"
    The course resolv'd, before the western wind
    They scud amain, and make the port assign'd.
    Meantime Acestes, from a lofty stand,
    Beheld the fleet descending on the land;
    And, not unmindful of his ancient race,
    Down from the cliff he ran with eager pace,
    And held the hero in a strict embrace.
    Of a rough Libyan bear the spoils he wore,
    And either hand a pointed jav'lin bore.

    His mother was a dame of Dardan blood;
    His sire Crinisus, a Sicilian flood.
    He welcomes his returning friends ashore
    With plenteous country cates and homely store.

    Now, when the following morn had chas'd away
    The flying stars, and light restor'd the day,
    Aeneas call'd the Trojan troops around,
    And thus bespoke them from a rising ground:
    "Offspring of heav'n, divine Dardanian race!
    The sun, revolving thro' th'
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