THE ART OF LOVE
BOOK II
SING, and sing again Io Pæan! The quarry that I
was hot upon hath fallen into my toils. Let the joyous lover set the laurel
crown upon my brow and raise me to a loftier pinnacle than Hesiod of Ascra or
the blind old bard of Mæonia. Thus did Priam's son, crowding on all sail in his
flight from warlike Amyclæ, bear with him his ravished bride; and thus, too,
Hippodamia, did Pelops, in his victorious chariot, carry thee far from thy
native land.
Young man, why wilt thou haste so fast? Thy
vessel sails the open sea, and the harbour to which I am steering thee is still
far off. It sufficieth not that my verses have brought thy mistress to thine
arms; my art hath taught thee how to win her; it must also teach thee how to
keep her. Though it be glorious to make. conquests, it is still more glorious
to retain them. The former is sometimes the work of chance, the latter is
always the work of skill.
Queen of Cythera, and thou her son, if ever ye
looked with kindly eye upon me, ’tis, above all, to-day that of your succour I
have need. And thee too, Erato, I invoke, for ’tis, from love thou dost derive
thy name. Great is the enterprise I have in mind. I am going to tell how Love,
that fickle child, may captured be; Love that is wandering up and down in this
wide world of ours. Airy is he, possessed of wings to fly withal. How shall we
stay his flight?
Minos had left no stone unturned to prevent the
escape of his stranger-guest. Yet he dared, with wings, to cleave himself a
way. When Dædalus had imprisoned the monster half-man, half-bull, that his
erring mother had conceived, he spoke to Minos saying, "O thou who art so
just, set a term to my exile; let my native land receive my ashes. If the Fates
forbid that I should live in my own country, grant at least that I may die
there. Grant that my son may return to his home, even if his father beseeches
thee in vain. Or if thou hast no pity for the child, let thy compassion light
upon the father." Thus spake Dædalus; but in vain he tried with these and
many other words like these, to touch the heart of Minos; inexorable, he was
deaf to all his prayers. Seeing his supplications were of no avail, he said to
himself, "Behold, here is indeed a chance for thee to prove thy ingenuity.
Minos rules the land, and rules the waves; ’tis useless then on sea or land to
seek escape. There remains the air; and through the air I'll cleave me a way.
Great Jove, pardon the rashness of my under taking. ’Tis not my aim to raise
myself to the skyish dwellings of the gods; but there is for me one means, and
one alone, whereby I may escape the tyrant. If there were a way across the
Styx, the Stygian waters I would not fear to cross. Grant me then to change the
laws that rule my nature."
Misfortune ofttimes stimulates invention. Who
would ever have thought a man could voyage through the air! Nevertheless, ’tis
true that Dædalus wrought himself wings with feathers cunningly disposed like
oars, and with thread did fix his flimsy work together. The lower part he bound
with wax melted by the fire. And now behold the strange and wondrous work is
finished! The boy, with a joyous smile, handles the feathers and the wax,
witting not that the wings are destined for his own shoulders.
"Behold," cried his father, "the craft that shall bear us to our
native land; by its means we shall escape from Minos. Though Minos may have
closed all roads to us, he cannot close the highways of the air. Cleave then
the air, while still thou mayest, with this my handiwork. But take heed thou
draw not too nigh the Virgin of Tegea, or to Orion, who, girt with his sword,
doth bear Boötes company. Shape thy course on mine. I will lead the way; be
content to follow me; with me to guide thee, thou wilt have nought to fear.
For, if in our airy flight we soared too near the sun, the wax of our wings
would never bear the heat, and if we flew too low, the moisture of the sea
would weight our wings and make them over-heavy for us to move. Fly then midway
between; and O, my son, beware the winds. Whithersoever they may blow, thither
let them waft thee." Thus he spake, and fitted the wings upon his son's
young shoulders and showed him how to move them, even as the mother bird
teaches her feeble fledglings how to fly. That done, he fixes wings on to his
own shoulders and, half eager, half timid, launches himself on the unfamiliar
track. Ere he begins his flight, he kisses his son, and down the old man's
cheeks the tears unbidden flow.
Not far from there, stands a hill, which,
though less lofty than a mountain, doth yet command the plain. It was from
there that they launched themselves on their perilous flight. Dædalus, as he
moves his own wings, gazes back at his son's, yet nevertheless keeps steadily
on his airy course. At first the novelty of their flight enchants them; and ere
long, casting all fear aside, Icarus grows more daring and essays a bolder
sweet. A fisherman, about to land a fish with his slender rod, perceives them,
and straightway lets it fall. Already they have left Samos behind on the left,
and Naxos, and Paros, and Delos dear to Apollo. On their right they have
Lebinthos, Calymna shaded with woods, and Astypalæa girdled with pools where
fish abound; when lo, young Icarus, growing rash with boyish daring, steers a
loftier course and leaves his father. The bonds of his wings relax, the wax
melts as the sun grows near, and vainly he waves his arms, they cannot catch
the delicate air. Stricken with terror, he looks down from the lofty heavens
upon the sea beneath. A darkness born of panic overspreads his eyes. And now
the wax has melted, he tosses his naked arms and quakes with fear, for nought
is there to upstay him. Down and down he falls, and in his falling cries,
"Father, O Father, all is over with me!" And the green waters sealed
his mouth for ever. But the unhappy father--a father now no longer--cried,
"Icarus, where art thou? Beneath what regions of the sky steerest thou thy
flight? Icarus, Icarus," he cried and cried again, when lo, on the waste
of waters he descried his wings. The land received the bones of Icarus; the sea
retains his name.
Minos was powerless to stay a mortal's flight.
I am essaying to hold a winged god. If anyone deems there is any virtue in
magic or in potions, he sadly errs. Neither the herbs of Medea nor the
incantations of the Marsi will make love endure. If there were any potency in
magic, Medea would have held the son of Æson, Circe would have held Ulysses.
Philtres, too, that make the face grow pale, are useless when administered to
women. They harm the brain and bring on madness. Away with such criminal
devices! If you'd be loved, be worthy to be loved. Good looks and a good figure
are not enough for that. Though you were Nireus, praised long ago by Homer; ay,
were you young Hylas, snatched away by the guilty Naiads, if you would hold
your mistress and not one day to be taken aback and find she's left you, add
accomplishments of the mind to advantages of the person. Beauty is a fleeting
boon; it fades with the passing years, and the longer it lives, the more surely
it dies. The violets and wide-cupped lilies bloom not for ever, and, once the
rose has blown, its naked stem shows only thorns. Thus, my fair youth, thy hair
will soon grow white, and wrinkles soon will line thy face with furrows; so set
thy beauty off with talents that shall mock at time; ’tis they alone will last
unto the grave. Study the refinements of life, and enrich yourself with the
treasures of the Greek and Latin tongues. Ulysses was not handsome, but he was
eloquent, and two goddesses were tortured with love for him. How often Calypso
groaned when she beheld him preparing to depart, and how she kept telling him
that the waves would not suffer him to set sail. Times without number she asked
him to tell her o’er again the story of the fall of Troy, times without number
he would retell it in a new form. One day they were standing on the seashore: the
fair nymph was begging him to tell her how the king of Thrace met his cruel
death. Ulysses, with a twig which he chanced to have in his hand, drew her a
plan upon the sand. "See, here is Troy," he said, tracing the line of
the ramparts. "Here runs the Simois. Say this is my camp, farther along is
the plain" (and he drew it) "which we stained with the blood of Dolon
who tried to steal the horses of Achilles by night. There stood the tents of
Rhesus, king of Thrace, and it was along there that I rode back with the horses
that had been stolen from him." And so he was going on with his narrative,
when suddenly a wave came and washed away Troy and Rhesus, together with his
camp. Then said the goddess, "Seest thou what famous names these waves
have swept away, and dost thou hope they will be kind to thee when thou settest
sail?"
Well then, whoever you may be, put not too
great a trust in the deceptive charm of beauty. Take care to possess something
more than mere physical comeliness. What works wonders with the women is an
ingratiating manner. Brusqueness and harsh words only promote dislike. We hate
the hawk because it spends its life in fighting; and we hate the wolf that
falls upon the timid flocks. But man snares not the swallow because it is
gentle, and he suffers the dove to make its home in towers that he has built.
Away with all strife and bitterness of speech. Pleasant words are the food of
love. It is by quarrels that a woman estranges her husband, and a husband his
wife. They imagine that in acting so they are paying each other out in their
own coin. Leave them to it. Quarrels are the dowry which married folk bring one
another. But a mistress should only hear agreeable things. It is not the law
that has landed you in bed together. Your law, the law for you and her,
is Love. Never approach her but with soft caresses and words that soothe her
ear, so that she may always rejoice at your coming.
’Tis is not to the rich that I would teach the
art of Love. A man who can give presents has no need of any lessons I can teach
him. He has wit enough, and to spare, if he can say when he pleases,
"Accept this gift." I give him best. His means are mightier than
mine. I am the poor man's poet; because I am poor myself and I have known what
it is to be in love. Not being able to pay them in presents, I pay my
mistresses in poetry. The poor man must be circumspect in his love-affairs; he
mustn't permit himself to use strong language; he must put up with many things
that a rich lover would never endure. Once I remember in a fit of ill-temper I
ruffled my mistress's hair. It was a fit that robbed me of many and many a
happy day. I did not notice that I had torn her dress, and I do not believe I
had; but she said I had, and I was obliged to buy her another one. Good
friends, be wiser than your master; don't do as he does, or, if you do, look
out for squalls. Make war on the Parthians to your heart's content, but live at
peace with your mistress; have recourse to playfulness and to whatever may
excite love.
If your mistress is ungracious and off-hand in
her manner towards you, bear it with patience; she'll soon come round. If you
bend a branch carefully and gently, it won't break. If you tug at it suddenly
with all your might, you'll snap it off. If you let yourself go with the
stream, you'll get across the river in time, but if you try to swim against the
tide, you'll never do it. Patience will soften tigers and Numidian lions; and
slowly and surely you may accustom the bull to the rustic plough. What woman
was ever more tameless than Atalanta of Nonacris; yet, for all her arrogance,
she yielded at length to a lover's tender assiduities. They say that many a
time, beneath the trees, Milanion wept at his mishaps and at his mistress's unkindness.
Often upon his neck he bore, as he was bid, the treacherous toils; and often
with his spear he pierced the savage boars. He was even struck by the arrows of
Hylæus, but other darts, which were, alas, but too well known to him, had dealt
him sorer wounds than that.
I do not bid thee climb, armed with thy bow,
the woody heights of Mænalus, or carry heavy nets upon thy back. I do not bid
thee bare thy breast to a foeman's arrows. If only thou art prudent, thou wilt
find my precepts are not over-hard to carry out. If she's obstinate, let her
have her way, and you'll get the better of her in the end. Only whatever she
tells you to do, be sure you do it. Blame what she blames; like what she likes;
say what she says; deny what she denies. If she smiles, smile too; if she sheds
tears, shed them too. In a word, model your mood on hers. If she wants to play
draughts, play badly on purpose and let her win the game. If you're playing
dice, don't let her be piqued at losing, but make it look as though your luck
was always out. If your battle-field's the chessboard, see to it that your men
of glass are mown down by the foe.
Be sure and hold her parasol over her; and
clear a way for her if she's hemmed in by the crowd; fetch a stool to help her
on to the couch; and unlace or lace up the sandals on her dainty feet. And
then, though you perish with cold yourself, you will often have to warm your
mistress's icy hands in your bosom. And you mustn't mind, although it does seem
a little undignified, holding up her mirror, like any slave, for her to look
in. Why Hercules himself, who performed such mighty feats of bravery and
strength, who won a seat in the Olympian realms he had carried on his
shoulders, is said to have dwelt among the Ionian maids as one of them, to have
held the work-basket and have spun coarse wool. The Tirynthian hero obeyed his
mistress's commands; and will you hesitate to endure what he endured?
If your lady-love arranges to meet you in the
Forum, be there well before the appointed time, and wait and wait till the very
last minute. If she asks you to meet her somewhere else, leave everything and
hurry off; don't let the crowd hinder you. If, at night, after she's been
dining out, she calls a slave to see her home, be quick, offer your services.
If you are in the country, and she writes saying, " Come at once," go
to her, for Love brooks no delay. If you can't get a conveyance, then you must
foot it. Nothing should stop you: thunder, heat, snow, nothing!
Love is like warfare. "Faint heart never won
fair lady"; poltroons are useless in Love's service. The night, winter,
long marches, cruel suffering, painful toil, all these things have to be borne
by those who fight in Love's campaigns. Apollo, when he tended the herds of
Admetus, dwelt, so ’tis said, in a humble cottage. Who would blush to do as
Apollo did? If you would love long and well, you must put away pride. If the
ordinary, safe route to your mistress is denied you, if her door is shut
against you, climb up on to the roof and let yourself down by the chimney, or
the skylight. How it will please her to know the risks you've run for her sake!
'Twill be an earnest of your love. Leander could often have done without his
mistress, but he swam the strait to prove his courage.
Nor must you think it beneath your dignity to
ingratiate yourself with her servants, even the humblest of them; greet each of
them by name, and take their servile hands in yours. Give them (it will not
cost you much) such presents as you can afford; and when the festival of Juno
Caprotina comes round, make a handsome present to the lady's-maid. Get on good
terms with the occupants of the servants' hall, and don't forget the porter or
the slave that sleeps beside your lady's door.
I don't advise you to make costly presents to
your mistress; offer her a few trifles, but let them be well chosen and
appropriate to the occasion. When the country is displaying all its lavish
riches, and the branches of the trees are bending beneath their load, set some
young slave to leave a basket of fruit at her door. You can say they come from
your place in the country, though in reality you purchased them in Rome. Send
her grapes or chestnuts beloved of Amaryllis; though the modern Amaryllis is no
longer satisfied with chestnuts. Or, again, a present of thrushes or pigeons
will prove that you have her still in mind. I know, of course, that this same
policy is followed by the expectant legatees of some rich and childless dame.
Out on such mean and calculating generosity, say I! Shall I also advise you to
send poetry as well? Alas, verses don't count for much. Verses come in for
praise; but they really like gifts that are more substantial than that. Even a
barbarian, if only he is rich, is sure to find favour. This is the golden age
in very truth. Gold will buy the highest honours; and gold will purchase love.
Homer himself, even if he came attended by the nine Muses, would promptly be
shown the door if he brought no money to recommend him. Nevertheless, there are
some cultured women, but they are rare. There are others who are not cultured
but who wish to appear so. You must praise them both in your poetry. Whatever the
quality of your lines, you may make them sound well if you know how to read
them with effect. Indeed, if the lines be well composed and well delivered, the
ladies will perhaps deign to regard them as a trifling, a very trifling,
present.
Now, when you have determined to do something
that you think will be of service, persuade your mistress to ask you to do it.
If you have made up your mind to free one of your slaves, see that he addresses
his petition to her; if you've resolved not to punish another slave for some
neglect of duty, see that it is she who gets the credit for this act of
clemency. You'll get the benefit, she'll get the glory. You'll lose nothing,
and she'll think she can twist you round her little finger.
If you want to keep your mistress's love, you
must make her think you're dazzled with her charms. If she wears a dress of
Tyrian purple, tell her there's nothing like Tyrian purple. If she's wearing a
gown of Coan stuff, tell her that there's nothing becomes her so enchantingly.
If she's ablaze with gold, tell her that you think gold's less brilliant than
her charms. If she's clad in winter furs, tell her they're lovely; if she
appears in a flimsy tunic, tell her she sets you on fire, and say you hope she
won't catch cold. If she wears her hair parted on her forehead, say you like
that style. If she has it frizzed and fuzzy, say, "How I love it frizzed!"
Praise her arms when she dances, her voice when she sings, and when she ceases,
say how sorry you are it came to an end so soon. If she admits you to her bed,
adore the seat of all your bliss, and in tones trembling with delight tell her
what a heaven she makes for you. Why, even if she were grimmer than the
terrible Medusa, she would grow soft and docile for her love. Be a good
dissembler and never let your face belie your words. Artifice is a fine thing
when it's not perceived; once it's discovered, discomfiture follows. Confidence
is gone for ever. Often when the autumn is at hand,
when the earth is adorned with all its charms, when the ruddy grape swells with
its purple juice, when we feel alternately a nipping cold or an oppressive
heat, this variation of temperature throws us into a state of languor. May your
mistress then retain her health. But if some indisposition should compel her to
keep her bed, if she falls a victim to the evil effects of the season, then is
the time for you to show her how attentive and loving you can be; then is the
time to sow the seeds of the harvest you may gather later on. Be not deterred
by the attentions her malady demands. Render her whatever services she will
deign to accept; let her behold you shedding tears of compassion; never let her
see you do not want to kiss her, and let her parched lips be moistened with
your tears; say how you hope she'll soon be well again, and be sure to let her
hear you saying it, and always be prepared to tell her you have had a dream of
happy augury. Let some old grandam, with trembling hands, come and sweeten her
bed and purify her room with sulphur and the expiatory eggs. She will store up
the memory of these kindnesses in her heart. Many a time have people had
legacies bequeathed them for such trifling things as that. But be careful not
to display too much anxiety. Do not be over-busy. Your affection and solicitude
should have their limits. Don't make it your business to restrict her diet, or
tell her she mustn't eat this or that. Don't bring her nasty medicine to drink;
leave all that to your rival.
But the wind to which you spread your sails
when leaving port is not the wind you need when you are sailing the open sea.
Love is delicate at birth; it becomes stronger with use. Feed it with the
proper food, and it will grow sturdy in time. The bull that frightens you
to-day, you used to stroke when it was young. The tree that shelters you
beneath its shade was once but a frail sapling. A slender rivulet at its source,
the river gathers size little by little, and, as it flows, is swollen with
innumerable tributaries. See to it that thy mistress grows accustomed to thee:
nothing is so potent as habit. To win her heart, let no trouble be too great.
Let her see you continually; let her hear none but you. Day and night be
present to her sight. But when you are sure that she will long for you, then
leave her alone, so that your absence may give her some anxiety. Let her repose
awhile: the soil that is given a rest renders with usury the seed that's
planted in it, and the ground that is parched greedily soaks in the water from
the skies. As long as Phyllis had Demophoön at her side, her love for him was
lukewarm. No sooner had he set sail, than she was consumed with passion for
him. Ulysses, shrewd man, tortured Penelope by his absence, and with thy tears,
Laodamia, didst thou yearn for the return of Protesilaus.
But be on the safe side; don't stay away too
long; time softens the pangs of longing. Out of sight, out of mind. The absent
lover is soon forgotten, and another takes his place. When Menelaus had
departed, Helen grew weary of her lonely couch and sought warmth and consolation
in the arms of her guest. Ah! Menelaus, what a fool wast thou! Alone didst thou
depart, leaving thy wife beneath the same roof with a stranger. Fool, ’twas
like delivering up the timid dove to the devouring kite, or surrendering the
lamb to the hungry wolf. No, Helen was not to blame; her lover was not guilty;
she was afraid to lie alone. Let Menelaus think what he will; Helen, in my
view, was not to blame; all she did was to profit by her most accommodating
husband.
But the fierce boar, in its wildest rage, when,
making his last stand, he rolls the fleet hounds over and over; the lioness,
when she offers her dugs to the cubs that she is suckling; the viper that the
wayfarer has trodden upon with careless foot--all are less redoubtable than the
woman who has caught another woman in her husband's bed. Her face is distorted
with fury. The sword, the firebrand, anything that comes to her hand, she will
seize. Casting all restraint aside, she will rush at her foe like a Mænad
driven mad by the Aonian god. The barbarous Medea took vengeance on her own
children for Jason's misdeeds and for his violation of the nuptial bond; that
swallow that you see yonder was also an unnatural mother. See, her breast still
bears the stain of blood. Thus do the happiest, the most firmly welded, unions
fail. A cautious lover should beware of exciting these jealous furies.
Do not imagine that I am going to act the rigid
moralist and condemn you to love but one mistress. The gods forbid. Even a
married woman finds it difficult to keep such a vow as that. Take your fill of
amusement, but cast the veil of modesty over your peccadilloes. Never make a
parade of your good fortune, and never give a woman a present that another
woman will recognise. Vary the time and place of your assignations, lest one of
them catch you in some familiar place of rendezvous. When you write, be sure
and read over what you have written; many women read into a letter much more
than it is intended to convey.
Venus, when she is wounded, justly retaliates,
gives the aggressor blow for blow and makes him feel, in his turn, the pain
that he has caused. So long as Atrides was satisfied with his wife, she was
faithful to him; her husband's infidelity drove her from the narrow path. She
learned that Chryses, staff in hand and wearing the sacred fillet on his brows,
had begged that his daughter should be restored to him, and begged in vain. She
learned, O Briseis, of the abduction that pierced your heart with grief, and
for what shameful reasons the war was dragging on. Still all this was only
hearsay. But with her own eyes she had seen the daughter of Priam, she had, O
sight of shame, seen the victor become the slave of his captive. From that day
forth, the daughter of Tyndarus made Ægisthus free of her heart and bed, and
took guilty vengeance for her husband's crime. Yet if, how well soever you may
hide them, your secret amours come to light, never hesitate to deny your guilt.
Be neither sheepish nor gushing, for these are sure signs of a guilty
conscience. But spare no effort and employ all your vigour in the battle of
love. It's the only way to win peace; the only way to convince her of the
unreality of her suspicions. Some people would advise you to stimulate your
powers with noxious herbs, such as savory, pepper mixed with thistle-seed or
yellow fever-few steeped in old wine. In my view these are nothing more nor
less than poisons. The goddess, who dwells on the shady slopes of Mount Eryx,
approves not such strained and violent means to the enjoyment of her pleasures.
Nevertheless, you may take the white onion that comes from Megara and the
stimulating plant that grows in our gardens, together with eggs, honey from
Hymettus, and the apples of the lofty pine.
But wherefore, divine Erato, do we wander into
these details of the Æsculapian art? Let my chariot return to its own
particular track. Awhile ago I was counselling you to hide your infidelities:
well, turn about, blazon abroad the conquests you have made. The curved ship is
not always obedient to the same wind; she fleets o’er the waves, driven now by
the North wind, now by the East. Turn by turn, the West wind and the South will
fill her sails. Look at that driver on his chariot there. Sometimes he lets his
reins hang loose, sometimes, with skilful hand, he restrains the ardour of his
fiery steeds. There are lovers whom a hesitant indulgence ill-befriends. Their
mistresses begin to languish if the apprehension of a rival comes not to
stimulate their affections. Happiness will sometimes make us drunk and render
difficult the way of constancy. A little fire will languish if it be not fed,
and disappear beneath the grey ashes
that accumulate upon it. But add a little sulphur, and lo, fresh flames will
leap and sparkle with new splendour! Thus when the heart grows dull and torpid,
apply, if you would wake it into life, the spur of jealousy. Give your mistress
something to torment her, and bring new heat into her chilly heart. Let her
grow pale at the evidence of your inconstancy. What happiness, what untold
happiness is his, whose mistress's heart is wrung at the thought of her lover's
infidelity. Soon she hears the tidings of his fault; while yet she is fain to
hold the news untrue, she swoons and, hapless one, her cheeks grow pale as
death, her lips refuse to speak. Oh, would I were that lover! I, whose hair she
tears in her wild frenzy, whose face she fiercely scratches with her nails, at
whose sight she bursts into floods of tears, but whom she will not, cannot live
without! How long, you say, ought one to leave her in despair? Well, hasten to
comfort her lest her wrath in the end should harden into bitterness. Hasten to
fling thine arms about her snowy neck, and press her tear-stained cheek against
thy breast. Kiss away her tears, and with her tears mingle the sweet delights
of love. Soon she'll grow calm; that is the only way to soothe her wrath. When
her rage is at its height, when it is open war between you, then beg her to
ratify a peace upon her bed; she'll soon make friends. ’Tis there that, all
unarmed, sweet concord dwells; ’tis there, the cradle of forgiveness. The doves
that late were fighting, more tenderly will bill and coo; their murmurs seem to
tell how true and tender is their love.
Nature, at first, was but a weltering chaos of
sky and land and sea. But soon the heavens rose up above the earth, the sea
encircled it with a liquid girdle; and from formless chaos issued forth the
divers elements. The woods were peopled with wild things, the air with
light-wingèd birds; and the fishes hid themselves beneath the deep waters. In
those times men wandered lonely over the face of the earth, and brute strength
was their sole resource. The forest was their dwelling-place, the grass their
food, dry leaves their bed, and for a long time each man dwelt in ignorance of
his fellows. Then came the sweet delights of love, and softened, so they say,
these rugged hearts, bringing together man and woman on a single couch. No
tutor did they need to tell them what to do; Venus, without recourse to any
art, fulfilled her gentle office. The bird has his beloved mate; the fish
beneath the waters finds another fish to share his pleasures; the hind follows
the stag; the snake mates with the snake; the dog with the bitch; the ewe and
the heifer yield themselves with delight to the caresses of the ram and the
bull; the goat, noisome though he be, repels not the caresses of his lascivious
fellow; the mare, burning with the frenzy of desire, will speed o’er hill and
dale, and even through rivers, to join her stallion. Be of good cheer then and
employ this potent remedy to calm the anger of thy mistress; ’tis the only
sovran cure for her aching sorrow; ’tis a balm sweeter than the juices of
Machaon, and if you happen to have erred a little, it will surely bring you
pardon.
Such was the burden of my song, when on a
sudden Apollo appeared to me and touched with his fingers the chords of a
golden lyre; in his hand he bore a branch of laurel; a laurel wreath encircled
his brow. Prophetic was his mien and prophetic the voice with which he bade me
lead my disciples into his temple. "There," said he," you will
find this inscription famous throughout the whole world, 'Man, know thyself.'
The man who knows himself follows ever in his love-affairs the precepts of
wisdom. He alone hath wit to adapt his enterprises to his powers. If he is
endowed with comely looks, if he has a beautiful skin, let him lie, when he is
in bed, with his shoulders uncovered; if he is an attractive talker, let him
not maintain a glum silence. If he can sing, let him sing; if the wine makes
him merry, let him drink. But whatever he is, orator, babbler, or fine frenzied
poet, don't let him interrupt the conversation in order to declaim his prose or
his verse." Thus spake Phœbus, and, lovers, you will do well to obey him;
nought but the truth ever issued from his god-like lips.
But, to my subject. Whosoever loves wisely and
follows the precepts of my art is sure to conquer and to attain the object of
his heart's desire. The furrows do not always repay with interest the seed that
has been sown therein; the winds do not always waft the bark - on its uncertain
course. Few pleasures, many pains--such is the lot of lovers. Harsh are the
trials which they must expect to face. As numerous as the hares on Athos, as
the bees on Hybla, as the olives on the tree of Pallas, as the shells upon the
seashore, are the sorrows that Love engenders. The arrows he aims at us are
steeped in gall. Perhaps they will tell you that your mistress is out, when you
know very well she's in, because you've seen her. Never mind, make believe she
is out and that your eyes have deceived you. She has promised to let you in at
night, and you find her door shut; be patient and lie down on the cold damp
ground. Peradventure, some lying servant will come, .and looking at you with an
insolent stare, say, "What does this fellow want, always besieging our
door like this? " Then you must turn the other cheek to this grim
seneschal and speak him fair, and not him only, but the door as well, and on
the threshold lay the roses that adorned your brow. If your mistress gives you,
leave, haste to her side; if she will none of you, withdraw. A well-bred man
ought never to make himself a burden. Would you compel her to exclaim, "Is
there no way of getting rid of this pestilent fellow?" Women often take
unreasonable whims into their head. Never mind; put up with all her insults;
never mind if she kicks you even; kiss her dainty feet.
But why linger over such minor details? Let us
turn to more important themes. I am going to sing of lofty things. Ye lovers
all, lend me yours ears. My enterprise is fraught with danger; but without
danger, where would courage be? The object I aim at is not easy of attainment. If
you have a rival, put up with him without a murmur, and your triumph is
assured. You will mount, a conqueror, to Jove's high temple. Believe me, these
are not the words of a mere mortal. They are oracles as sure as any that Dodona
ever gave. This is the very climax of the art that I impart. if your mistress
exchanges meaning glances with your rival--nods and becks and wreathèd
smiles--put up with it. If she writes him letters, never scrutinise her
tablets; let her come and go as she pleases. Hosts of husbands show this
indulgence to their lawful wives, especially when thou, soft slumber, aidest in
the deceit. Nevertheless, I confess that, in my own case, I cannot attain this
degree of perfection. What am I to do? I cannot rise to the height of my own
precepts. If I saw a rival making signs to my mistress before my very eyes, do
you think I should put up with it, and not give free rein to my wrath? I
remember one day her husband kissed her. How I raved and swore about it! Love
is made up of these unreasonable demands. This shortcoming has often been my
undoing where women are concerned. It is much cleverer of a man to let others
have the entree to his mistress. The really proper course is not to know
anything about it. Suffer her to hide her infidelities, lest forcing her to
confess them should teach her to control her blushes. Ye youthful lovers, then,
take heed not to catch your mistresses in the act, lest, while deceiving you
they should imagine you were taken in by,: their fine speeches. Two lovers, who
have been found. out, do but love each other the more ardently. When, they
share a common lot, they both persist in the conduct that brought about their
undoing.
There is a story well known throughout Olympus:
’tis the story of Mars and Venus caught in the act by Vulcan's cunning ruses.
Mars, having fallen madly in love with Venus, changed from the grim warrior to
the submissive lover. Venus (and never was there a goddess with a heart more
tender), Venus showed herself neither awkward nor unfeeling. How many and many
a time, they say, the wanton woman laughed at her husband's shambling gait, and
at his hands made horny by the heat of the forge and by hard toil. How charming
Mars thought her when she imitated the old blacksmith, and how her graceful motions
set off her loveliness. To begin with they took the utmost care to conceal
their intrigue, and their guilty passion was full of modesty and reserve. But
the Sun (nothing ever eludes his glance), the Sun revealed to Vulcan the
conduct of his spouse. Ah, Old Sol, what a bad example you set! Demand the
favours of the goddess; make her acquiescence the price of your silence; she
has the wherewithal to pay you. All around and about his bed Vulcan cunningly
stretches a network invisible to every eye. Then he pretends to set out for
Lemnos. The two lovers hie them to the familiar spot, and both of them, naked
as Cupid himself, are enveloped in the traitorous toils. Then Vulcan calls on
the gods to gather round and bids them gaze upon the imprisoned lovers. Venus,
so ’tis said, could scarce keep from. weeping. They could not hide their faces
in their hands, nor cover their nakedness. One of the onlookers thus spoke
jeeringly to Mars: "Valiant Mars," quoth he, if thy chains are too
heavy for thee, hand them on to me." At length, yielding to the prayers of
Neptune, Vulcan set the two captives free. Mars withdrew to Thrace; Venus to
Paphos. Say now, Vulcan, what didst thou gain thereby? Erstwhile they hid their
loves; now they freely and openly indulge their passion; they have banished all
shame. You'll soon be sorry that you were such a prying fool! Indeed they say
that even now you regret that you ever gave way to your anger.
No traps! I forbid you to use them; and Venus
herself, who was caught by her spouse, forbids you to make use of tricks,
whereof she was the victim. Don't go laying snares for your rival. Don't try
and intercept love-letters. Leave such devices, if they think it well to employ
them, to lawful husbands whose rights are hallowed by sacred fire and water. As
for me, I proclaim it yet again, I only sing of pleasures which the law
permits.
Who would dare divulge to the profane the
mysteries of Ceres and the pious rites instituted in Samothrace? It redounds
but little to our credit to keep silence when we are commanded so to do; but to
blurt out things we ought to know should be kept secret is a most grievous
thing. Rightly was Tantalus punished for his indiscretion, rightly was he
debarred from reaching the fruits that hung above his head; it served him right
that he should parch with thirst with water all around him. Cytherea,
especially, forbids that her mysteries should be revealed. I give thee warning,
no babbling knaves should ever draw near her altars. If the sacred emblems of
her worship are not concealed in mystic baskets; if no brazen cymbals are
beaten at her festivals; if she opens the doors of her temple to all, it is on
condition that none shall divulge her mysteries. Venus herself never putteth
off her veil, but with modest hand she covereth her charms. The beasts of the
field abandon themselves, in any place and in the sight of all, to the delights
of love, and often at the spectacle a young girl will turn away her head; but
for our loves we must have a secret bower, closed doors, and we must needs
cover with vesture the secret places of our body. Even if we seek not for
darkness, we like a certain dimness, at all events something a little less than
broad. daylight. Thus when men and women still went unprotected against the sun and the rain, when the oak provided them
with food and shelter, ’twas not in the open, but in caves and woods, that they
enjoyed the sweet pleasures of love, so great was the respect which mankind,
though still uncouth, entertained for the laws of modesty. Now we make a parade
of our nocturnal exploits, and people it seems, would pay a high price for the
pleasure of divulging them. Nay, isn't it the fashion nowadays to stop and talk
to a girl everywhere one goes, so as to be able to say, "You saw that
girl, she's another one I've had!" It's all because they want to have
someone to point at; so that every woman who is the object of these attentions
becomes the talk of the town. But there's nothing really in it. There are men
who invent stories which, if they were true, they would repudiate. To hear them
talk, you would think that no woman ever resisted them. If they can't touch
their person, they at least attack their good name, and though their body be
chaste, their reputation is tarnished. Go, thou hateful warder, and shut the
doors upon thy mistress; bolt her in with a hundred bolts. What avail such
precautions against the slanderer who brags with lying tongue of the favours he
has failed to obtain? Let us, on the other hand, speak sparingly of our real
amours, and hide our secret pleasures beneath an impenetrable veil.
Never speak to a woman about her defects; many
a lover has had occasion to congratulate himself on having observed this very
profitable reticence. The wingèd-footed hero, Perseus, never found fault with
Andromeda for her swarthy skin. Andromache was, in everyone's opinion, far too
tall; Hector was the only one who considered her of the average height.
Accustom yourself to the things you don't like; you'll learn to put up with them;
habit makes a lot of things acceptable. At first, Love will be put off by the
merest trifle. A freshly-grafted branch that is just beginning to draw the sap from
the green bark will fall off if the slightest breath of wind disturbs it; but
if you give it time to grow strong, it will soon resist the winds and,
developing into a sturdy branch, enrich the tree that bears it with its alien
fruit. Time effaces everything, even bodily defects, and what we once looked
upon as blemishes will one day cease to seem so. At first, our nostrils cannot
bear the smell of the hides of bulls; they grow used to it in time and bear it
without distress.
Moreover, there are words you can employ to
palliate defects. If a woman's skin is blacker than Illyrian pitch, tell her
she's a brunette. If she squints a little, tell her she's like Venus. If she's
carroty, tell her she's like Minerva. If she's so skinny you would think she
was at death's door, tell her she has a graceful figure. If she's short, so
much the better, she's all the lighter. If she's thick-waisted, why she's just
agreeably plump. Similarly, you must disguise every defect under the name of
its nearest quality. Never ask her how old she is, or who was consul when she
was born. Leave it to the Censor to perform that uncomfortable duty, especially
if she has passed the flower of her youth, if the summer of her days is over,
and if she is already compelled to pull out her grey hairs. My young friends,
that age, and even an older one than that, is not without its pleasures. It is
a field that you should sow and one day You will reap your harvest. Labour
while your strength and your youth allow. All too soon tottering eld, with
noiseless tread, will be upon you. Cleave the waters of the ocean with your
oar, or the glebe with your slough; wield with warlike arm the deadly sword, or
devote to women your vigour and your care. ’Tis but another kind of military
service, and in it, too, rich trophies may be won.
Nor should it be forgotten that women, who are
getting on in years, have experience, and it is only experience that sets the
seal of perfection on our natural gifts. They repair by their toilet the
ravages of time, and by the care they take of themselves manage to conceal
their age. They know all the different attitudes of Love and will assume them
at your pleasure. No pictured representation can rival them in voluptuousness.
With them pleasure comes naturally, without provocation, the pleasure which is
sweeter than all, the pleasure which is shared equally by the man and the
woman. I hate those embraces in which both do not consummate; that is why boys
please me but little. I hate a woman who offers herself because she ought to do
so, and, cold and dry, thinks of her sewing when she's making love. The
pleasure that is granted to me from a sense of duty ceases to be a pleasure at
all. I won't have any woman doing her duty towards me. How sweet it is to hear
her voice quaver as she tells me the joy she feels, and to hear her imploring
me to slacken my speed so as to prolong her bliss. How I love to see her, drunk
with delight, gazing with swooning eyes upon me, or, languishing with love,
keeping me a long while at arms' length.
But these accomplishments are not vouchsafed by
nature to young girls. They are reserved for women who have passed the age of
thirty-five. Let who will hasten to drink new and immature wine. Let me have a
rich mellow vintage dating back to one of our elder consuls. It is only after
many years that the plane tree affords a shelter from the scorching sun, and
fields but newly reaped hurt the naked foot. What! do you mean to tell me you
would put Hermione before Helen? And would Althaea's daughter outrival her
mother? If you would enjoy the fruits of love in their maturity, you will
obtain, if only you persevere, a reward worthy of your desires.
But already the bed, the minister of their
pleasures, has received our two lovers. Stay thy steps, my Muse, at the closed
door. They will know well enough, without thy aid, what words to say to one
another, and their hands within the bed will not be idle. Their fingers will
find the way to those secret places in which Love is wont to proclaim his
presence. ’Twas even thus that the valiant Hector, whose skill was not confined
to battle, bore himself with Andromache. Thus too the great Achilles fondled
his fair captive when, weary of fighting, he lay beside her on the downy couch.
Thou didst not fear, Briseis, to yield thyself to the caresses of those hands
that bore upon them still the stains of Trojan blood. Was there aught to
compare, voluptuous girl, with the pleasure of feeling the pressure of those
victorious hands?
If you listen to my advice, you will not be in
too great a hurry to attain the limits of your pleasure. Learn, by skilful
dallying, to reach the goal by gentle, pleasant stages. When you have found the
sanctuary of bliss, let no foolish modesty arrest your hand. Then will you see
the love-light trembling in her eyes, even as the rays of the sun sparkle on
the dancing waves. Then will follow gentle moanings mingled with murmurings of
love, soft groans and sighs and whispered words that sting and lash desire. But
now beware! Take heed lest, cramming on too much sail, you speed too swiftly
for your mistress. Nor should you suffer her to outstrip you. Speed on together
towards the promised haven. The height of bliss is reached when, unable any
longer to withstand the wave of pleasure, lover and mistress at one and the
same moment are overcome. Such should be thy rule when time is yours and fear
does not compel you to hasten your stolen pleasures. Nevertheless, if there be
danger in delay, lean well forward, and drive your spur deep into your
courser's side.
My task draws toward its end. Young lovers,
show your gratitude. Give me the palm and wreathe my brow with the fragrant
myrtle. As Podalirius was famous among the Greeks for his skill in curing
disease, Pyrrhus for his valour, Nestor for
his eloquence; as Calchas was famed for his skill in foretelling the future,
Telamon for wielding weapons, Automedon for chariot-racing, so do I excel in
the art of Love. Lovers, laud your Poet, sing my praises, so that my name may
resound throughout the world. I have given you arms. Vulcan gave arms to
Achilles. With them he was victorious. Learn ye too to conquer with mine. And
let every lover, who shall have triumphed over a doughty Amazon with the sword
I gave him, inscribe on his trophies, "Ovid was my Master."
But now the girls, look you, want me to give
them some lessons. You, my dears, shall be my instant care.
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