Camilla in Battle
Name: Vergil Date: 70 – 19 BCE Region: Mantua [modern northern Italy] Citation: Aeneid 11.648 – 663 |
The Amazon Camilla was reveling in the midst of battle
With half her chest bare and a quiver on her back.
First, she’s rapid-firing spears by hand.
Next, she’s deftly wielding her battle-ax
With boundless energy.
Her golden bow, the weapon of Diana,
Twanged from her shoulder.
And now, attacked from behind,
Even while in retreat, Camilla kept firing her arrows.
Surrounded by her elite companions,
The maiden Larina, Tulla, and bronze-ax wielding Tarpeia,
Italian-born women whom divine Camilla
Chose for herself to be her honor-guard,
Were excellent companions in peace and war.
These women fought the way that Amazons
Wearing their multi-color armor
On the banks of the Thermodon River fought,
Battling alongside Hippolyte
Or accompanying Penthesilea’s chariot
As she returned from battle
With a great war-cry
They reveled, an army of women,
Lifting their half-moon shaped shields.
Camilla
in Battle
unum exserta latus pugnae, pharetrata Camilla,
et nunc lenta manu spargens hastilia denset,
nunc validam dextra rapit indefessa bipennem;
illa etiam, si quando in tergum pulsa recessit,
spicula converso fugientia derigit arcu.
At circum lectae comites, Larinaque virgo
Tullaque et aeratam quatiens Tarpeia securim,
Italides, quas ipsa decus sibi dia Camilla
delegit pacisque bonas bellique ministras:
quales Threiciae cum flumina Thermodontis
pulsant et pictis bellantur Amazones armis,
seu circum Hippolyten seu cum se Martia curru
Penthesilea refert, magnoque ululante tumultu
feminea exsultant lunatis agmina peltis.
Vergil, also known as Virgil, [Publius Vergilius Maro; 70
– 19 BCE, modern Italy] was born in Mantua, Cisalpine Gaul, and lived during
the tumultuous transition of Roman government from republic to monarchy. His
writing talent earned him a place of honor among Maecenas’ fellow authors under
Augustan rule. He was friends with numerous famous authors of the time period,
including Horace and Asinius Pollio. His former slave Alexander was the most
influential romantic partner in his life, and the poet memorialized his love
for him under the pseudonym “Alexis” in Eclogue 2. His masterpiece, the Aeneid,
tells the story of Aeneas’ migration from Troy to Italy; it was used for
centuries as the pinnacle of Roman literature.
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