Aeneas meets Andromache by Wenceslaus Hollar (Plate 306 - Scenes from Virgil) 1607-1677

"Then to Chaonia’s port our course we bend,
And, landed, to Buthrotus’ heights ascend.
Here wondrous things were loudly blaz’d fame:
How Helenus reviv’d the Trojan name,
And reign’d in Greece; that Priam’s captive son
Succeeded Pyrrhus in his bed and throne;
And fair Andromache, restor’d by fate,
Once more was happy in a Trojan mate.
I leave my galleys riding in the port,
And long to see the new Dardanian court.
By chance, the mournful queen, before the gate,
Then solemniz’d her former husband’s fate.
Green altars, rais’d of turf, with gifts she crown’d,
And sacred priests in order stand around,
And thrice the name of hapless Hector sound.
The grove itself resembles Ida’s wood;
And Simois seem’d the well-dissembled flood.
But when at nearer distance she beheld
My shining armour and my Trojan shield,
Astonish’d at the sight, the vital heat
Forsakes her limbs; her veins no longer beat:
She faints, she falls, and scarce recov’ring strength,
Thus, with a falt’ring tongue, she speaks at length"

-Virgil, The Aeneid, Book 3

 

Aeneas meets Andromache by Wenceslaus Hollar (Plate 306) 1607-1677.



Source:

https://hollar.library.utoronto.ca/islandora/object/hollar%3AHollar_k_0317

https://hollar.library.utoronto.ca/islandora/object/hollar%3AHollar_k_0316

https://hollar.library.utoronto.ca/islandora/object/hollar%3AHollar_k_0315


Quote:

https://www.gutenberg.org/files/228/228-h/228-h.htm

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