Thomas Naogeorgus’s Infernal Satire: Text, Translation, and Commentary to Satyrarum libri quinque priores III.1 (1555)
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Thomas Naogeorgus’s Satires
3. Satirical Language and Genre
4. Book 3—Satire 1
- Ignibus inuictis coelum, solidoque adamante
- In gyro cingens, reditum illis obstruit omnem,
- Ipse quoad coelo vitales carperet auras.
- Decernit quoque, transierint quum tempora mundi,
- Conatus huius praui bellique nefandi
- Aeternas soluant flammis et carcere poenas.
- After having expelled them all, the Creator of heaven and earth,
- Circled the heaven with unconquerable fires, and with solid adamantine
- Ring, obstructs all return for them,
- For as long as He Himself takes vital breathes from heaven.
- He also decrees, that when all the ages of the world have passed,
- The endeavours of this vicious and impious war
- Is to be paid back with eternal punishments in flames and in prison.
- Hurled headlong flaming from the ethereal sky
- With hideous ruin and combustion down
- To bottomless perdition, there to dwell
- In adamantine chains and penal fire,
- Who durst defy the omnipotent to arms.
- O progeny of heaven, empyreal thrones,
- With reason hath deep silence and demur
- Seized us, though undismayed: long is the way
- And hard, that out of hell leads up to light;
- Our prison strong, this huge convex of fire,
- Outrageous to devour, immures us round
- Ninefold, and gates of burning adamant
- Barred over us prohibit all egress.
5. Pride and Epic Similes
- qualis ubi abruptis fugit praesepia uinclis
- tandem liber equus, campoque potitus aperto
- aut ille in pastus armentaque tendit equarum
- aut adsuetus aquae perfundi flumine noto
- emicat, arrectisque fremit cervicibus alte
- luxurians luduntque iubae per colla, per armos.
- As when a horse free at last, having broken its tethers flees the stalls, having gained the open field either makes for the pastures and herds of mares, or accustomed to bathing in a familiar river, leaps forth, and neighs with his head held high, and gamboling, his manes frolic over his neck and shoulders.
6. Editorial Notes
6.1. Latin Text
Liber Tertius—Satyra Prima
Quum Dominus coelum quondam terramque crearet, | |
Spiritibus coelum angelicis extemplo repleuit, | |
Qui sibi praesto essent, fidique ad iussa ministri, | |
In2 coelis si quid foret aut tellure gerendum. | |
Illis splendorem dederat, summumque decorem, | |
Cuncta creata, inter praestantis gloria formae3 | |
Uni cedebat Domino, superabat caetera longe, | |
Non tantum propter naturae munera, quantum | |
Iugem ob conuictum Domini, intuitumque propinquum. | |
Hinc autem, multis prima immutata uoluntas | 10 |
Continuo, inque tumorem animi creuere superbi. | |
Quamlibet ingenti nolebant sorte teneri. | |
Excelsam Domini sedem, regnumque polorum, | |
Atque affectabant mundi totius habenas. | |
Quos inter praestans, summoque ex ordine quidam | |
(Cui post ob facinus nomen, motumque superbum, | |
Aut Satanae fuit, aut colubro toruoue draconi) | |
Collecto coetu sic dicitur esse locutus: | |
“Vix equidem tenui tam longa silentia, fratres, | |
Et uestrum nulli patefeci abscondita cordis | 20 |
Hactenus, aut graue seruitium, quod nocte dieque | |
Vobiscum excubiis et iugi suffero cantu, | |
Abieci, aut maius quicquam, vobisque mihique | |
Dignius, et cultu nostro ac splendore superbo, | |
Prospexi quod4 uestra haud dum mihi nota uoluntas, | |
Nec sat erat perspecta fides, animosaque uirtus, | |
At nunc, quum uideam uobis sublimia cordi, | |
Vosque huiusce pigere status, sortisque malignae, | |
Audiam et assiduo uestrum per compita murmur, | |
Seruitium propter durum, multosque labores, | 30 |
Audacter dicam mecum quae corde uoluto. | |
Nostra haec maiestas, hic cultus, summaque uirtus, | |
Quis nos aequales Domino uel cernitis ipsi, | |
Coelestes potius tractare merentur habenas, | |
Supremumque habitare thronum, dulcique potenter | |
Libertate frui, quam ferre iugum, atque subesse | |
Cuiusquam imperio, tolerareque herilia iussa. | |
Nobiliori haud est indignum nobilis ut se | |
Sternat, maiorique minor concedat ubique: | |
At qui cuncta queunt, cur subsint cuncta potenti? | 40 |
Cur illi, qui re similes cernuntur in omni? | |
Quid Dominus nouit, quod non noscamus et ipsi? | |
Quid sapit, aut quid habet, quod non luculentius ipsi? | |
Denique re prorsus nulla praestare uidetur. | |
Hinc penitus mihi res illo deducere certum, | |
Si modo non desunt uestrae suffragia dextrae, | |
Ut nobiscum aeque Deus imperiumque thronumque | |
Diuidat, atque parem nobis concedat honorem. | |
At non facturum nostro, puto, talia suasu, | |
Vis adhibenda erit, atque armis pugnaque parandum | 50 |
Imperium, res tanta ingenti digna periclo est. | |
Vincemus, socii, quid uobis caetera dicam? | |
Omnia uictorum nostro sub iure uehentur, | |
Cogeturque Deus nostras perferre catenas. | |
Haec ego; vos eadem plane sentitis opinor, | |
Si me non uestrae mentes et lumina fallunt. | |
Libertatem igitur stabilem, et subducere duro | |
Colla iugo, atque a perpetuo requiescere cantu, | |
Rerumque excelsa condigne sede locari | |
Si cupitis, fortes mecum coniungite dextras. | 60 |
Tenditis huc sensu certe, totisque medullis: | |
Dux tantum uobis deest, et moliminis autor. | |
Illum ego praestabo, mihi si paretis, abunde. | |
Sunt uires mihi; sunt artes ter mille nocendi, | |
Insidias noui, sunt arma animique feroces, | |
Ut nihil addubitem quin sit uictoria nostra, | |
Nostrumque imperium. Securus, cernitis, ille | |
Armorum bellique sedet, circum atria uero | |
Imbelles turbae, quas nec procul arma tueri | |
Posse reor, ne dum uires sufferre ruentis | 70 |
Agminis adversi, gladiisque occurrere strictis. | |
Si modo tardatis prohibente pudore, metuue, | |
An uobis unquam contingat deinde facultas | |
Ponendi obsequii, libertatisque parandae, | |
Consimilisque mei ductoris copia detur, | |
Haud scio saepe solet fieri, ut quae oblata recuses, | |
Post lacrymis frustra multis cupiasque, rogesque”. | |
Addidit his dictis, promptae calcaria turbae, | |
Incenditque animos, ut si quis forte camino | |
Ingentes cupiens flammas infundat oliuum. | 80 |
Confestim ergo ducem statuunt, regemque salutant. | |
Coniurant raptim, inque nouum dant nomina bellum. | |
Arma parant, spirantque minas, rebusque, Deoque | |
Exitium intentant extremum, et magna loquuntur: | |
Omnibus infensi laturis fida Tonanti | |
Auxilia, atque suo posituris claustra furori, | |
Aut remoras, quasi et ad certos transiret honores | |
Quisque, foretque adeo in manibus uictoria clausis: | |
Sic odere moras cupidi, sic praelia poscunt. | |
Senserat extemplo motum hunc rerum pater et rex, | 90 |
Quem res nulla latere potest, abscondita quamuis, | |
Multumque ingratis animis et corde superbo, | |
Spirituumque illo furioso excanduit ausu. | |
Mox ergo spaciosi armamentaria coeli | |
Recludi, sanas et adhuc capere arma cohortes, | |
Viribus et totis contra pugnare rebelles | |
Imperat, et cunctis Michaelem praefecit5 armis. | |
Nec mora, quassatur magno coelum omne tumultu, | |
Armataeque ruunt acies decernere ferro. | |
Hos mandata urgent, spes contra accenderat illos | 100 |
Feruens imperii, libertatisque cupido. | |
Fortibus hinc animis concurritur, atque furentis | |
Ambiguo Mauortis opus certamine feruet, | |
Neutra acie meditante fugam, coelestia donec | |
Omnipotens multo concussit regna tonitru, | |
Ignesque intorsit crebros, flammasque uorantes, | |
Impiaque irato perterruit agmina uultu, | |
Arreptumque ducem coelo deiecit ab alto. | |
Non ita praecipiti rumpit globus aëra cursu, | |
Bombardae horrisonae, quem uis Vulcania torquet; | 110 |
Non ita nunc etiam iactat sua tela Creator, | |
Excelsas plectens turres, aedesque superbas. | |
Amisso duce, mox reliquorum frigidus ossa | |
Inuadit tremor, et spaciosa per aequora coeli | |
Defugiunt cursim, latebras tempusque pusillum, | |
Quo reuocare ducem possint, et praelia tentent | |
Altera, quaerentes. At lux clarissima prodit | |
Omnia, nec locus ullus adest per plana latebris, | |
Insuper et legio uictrix instatque premitque. | |
Ergo quum fugerent hi, persequerentur et illi, | 120 |
Circuituque nouem pariter traherentur in orbes, | |
Nec pauidae auderet turbae consistere quisquam, | |
Omnibus e coelo portis per inane feruntur | |
Aëra in impurum, terrasque et triste barathrum | |
Praecipites, triduo ceu nix largissima Phoebi | |
Auferat aspectum, tectisque et frondibus altis | |
Pendeat, et late terras hominesque ferasque | |
Opprimat, atque metu sua cedere cogat in antra. | |
Aut ueluti complent importunae omnia muscae, | |
Igneus in proprio uehitur cum sidere Titan, | 130 |
Quum mensas super atque dapes et pocula Bacchi | |
Inuolitant, gustantque saporum dulcia primae, | |
Nec raro patinis auidae merguntur in ipsis, | |
Et saturae optato saepe immoriuntur Iaccho. | |
Quin etiam coenantum infestant ora manusque, | |
Cunctaque perturbant grauibus coenacula bombis, | |
Nec pulsae discunt ullis parere flabellis, | |
Nec turbam possis ulla exhaurire medela. | |
Protinus in casu flagranti numinis ira | |
Pristina cunctorum facies et forma recessit. | 140 |
Sordidus Aethiopum deturpat corpora nigror, | |
Et spurcis horrent squamis, uillisue ferinis. | |
Terribile ignitumque caput, cui parte ab utraque | |
Cornua bina insunt toruae minitantia fronti, | |
Unde ater mistis scintillis fumus in auras | |
Surgit. Gorgonei uoluuntur cornua circum | |
Exertis angues linguis, ac ore patenti | |
Iugiter ad morsus et eisdem texta superne | |
Crista minas spirat, rutilantia lumina flammis | |
In Cyclopaeos orbes uindicta redegit. | 150 |
Non ita serpentem dicas, Martemue tueri, | |
Non ita Titanas, Lybicis nec Gorgonas oris. | |
Aures dependent longe lateque per armos, | |
Quales esse canum dicas, qui nare sagaci | |
Vestigare solent silvis6 spelaea ferarum: | |
Has tamen7 arbitrio tolluntque premuntque vicissim. | |
Falcatus nasus, longeque proboscidis instar | |
Nigrantis barri. latis e naribus atra | |
Promanat pix, sulpureasque proboscide stillas | |
Spargunt, infecta quibus aut tellure, mariue. | 160 |
Pisces ac laetis pecudes moriuntur in herbis. | |
Subter diducto uaste amplo ad tempora rictu, | |
Horrendum frendent incuruis dentibus apri: | |
Inde ignes ac immedicabile uirus echidnae, | |
Pestiferasque uomunt tumidis pulmonibus auras. | |
Pannosae pendent setoso pectore mammae, | |
Quales esse solent partus post octo lupinae. | |
His rabiem immulgent gnatis, odiumque superni | |
Principis, et spurcam stipant in corda saliuam. | |
Occiput et turpes clunes tergumque draconum | 170 |
Ora tenent medio prodit longissima cauda | |
Podice, nulla tulit qualem alti belua Nili. | |
Forma pedum manuumque palustri proxima rarae, | |
Unguibus exceptis, quos credas esse leonum. | |
Talem traxerunt illi post praelia formam. | |
Omnibus expulsis, coeli terraeque Creator, | |
Ignibus inuictis coelum, solidoque adamante | |
In gyro cingens, reditum illis obstruit omnem, | |
Ipse quoad coelo vitales carperet auras. | |
Decernit quoque, transierint quum tempora mundi, | 180 |
Conatus huius praui bellique nefandi | |
Aeternas soluant flammis et carcere poenas. | |
Haec firmans nutu, totum concussit Olympum. | |
Hoc tanto casu, poenisque in fine luendis | |
Haud meriti tantum Satanas, iustique doloris, | |
Immensae quantum rabidus conceperat irae. | |
Dispersos ergo socios contraxit in unum, | |
Et postquam in mediis sedem conscenderat altam, | |
Alloquitur moesto ducens suspiria corde. | |
“Heu socii, quam nos infausta pugna fefellit, | 190 |
Euentusque rei, quam nacti infausta duelli | |
Tempora, rem nostram sorti permisimus omnem, | |
Magnaque perdidimus, digni maioribus, ast hoc | |
Soletur, quod non nostra uictoria culpa | |
Hostibus accessit, res omnis gesta profecto, | |
Quantum consilio potuit, uel uiribus ullis, | |
Praesentiue geri corde. Adversaeque cohortes | |
Non nos praestanti uicerunt robore belli, | |
Sed numero tantum, dignosque premente bonosque | |
Fortuna, indignos uero tollente uicissim. | 200 |
Nostras haec etiam modo res confregit inique, | |
Abstulit et formam, clarique habitacula coeli. | |
Sexaginta etiam dirae post saecula poenae | |
Nos8 omnis diuina manent decreta secundum, | |
Tanta forent animis multumque diuque pusillis | |
Deploranda quidem. at nos nec maioribus unquam | |
Frangi animo decet, aut suspendia saeua pacisci: | |
Verum agite o socii, simul haec quos damna lacessunt, | |
Aeterno nobis hoc esto foedere sanctum, | |
Donec terra subest coelis, et sidera cursum | 210 |
Seruant, oceanusque uagus circumfluit orbem, | |
Nullus ut esse Dei iuratus desinat hostis, | |
Ne quis amet metuatue, aut ulla obtemperet in re, | |
Neu gratum quicquam faciat, contrarius ito | |
Quisque, ut perpetuos merito trudatur in ignes. | |
Este uiri, atque Deum uultu contemnite toruo. | |
Non adamas nec stans rabiosa per aequora cautes | |
Vestrum duricie caput aut praecordia uincat, | |
Nullum poeniteat cassi moliminis unquam. | |
Huc nos ira furorque uocat, uindictaque dulcis, | 220 |
Quam praetermittet sapiens (me iudice) nemo”. | |
Sic ait: assensuque omnes, simul ore fremebant, | |
Irarum pleni, coeloque Deoque minantes. | |
Ut globus in deuexo leui propellitur ictu, | |
Et sonipes liber nullis calcaribus actus, | |
Iactans colla iubasque, aequor metitur apertum. | |
Per terrenum igitur coniurant aera cuncti, | |
Per terras, Stygiumque lacum, Lethesque fluenta, | |
Ire Deum contra uerbis fastisque scelestis, | |
Nullius et noxae ueniam scelerumque precari, | 230 |
Ut ne Cocyti frustra mergantur in undis. |
6.2. English Translation
Book 3—Satire 1
When the Lord created heaven and earth, | |
At the same time he filled heaven with angelic souls, | |
Who were at his disposal, to be faithful and administer to his commands, | |
If anything needed to be done in heaven or on earth. | |
He had given them splendour and the highest beauty, | |
Amidst all things made, the glory of surpassing form | |
Yielded to the one Lord, surpassing the rest by far, | |
Not only on account of the gifts of nature, but on account of | |
The constant companionship and the close presence of the Lord. | |
Henceforth, however, the original will of many was changed | 10 |
And at once the swelling of a proud spirit was born inside them. | |
However remarkable was their lot, they did not wish to be bound. | |
They desired the exalted seat of the Lord, and the kingdom | |
Of the poles of the earth, and the reins of the entire world. | |
One was preeminent among them, and of the highest order | |
(Whose name after, on account of his crime and proud impulse, | |
Was Satan, or the serpent or the pitiless dragon). | |
When they were gathered together he is said to have spoken thus: | |
“For my part I have seldom held such long silences, brothers, | |
And have revealed to no one the secrets of your heart | 20 |
Up till now: either the weighty servitude, which night and day | |
I suffer in vigil with you and in constant song, | |
I have cast away, rather something greater, more worthy for both you | |
And myself, and with our devotion and proud splendour, | |
I have anticipated your will before it was known to me. | |
Nor was your faith and courageous virtue sufficiently evident. | |
But now, when I see the sublime thoughts in your hearts, | |
And that you chafe at this condition, and malignant fate, | |
And I hear constantly your murmuring by the cross-roads, | |
Because of your hard servitude and many labours, | 30 |
I will boldly state what it is that my heart desires. | |
This majesty of ours, this devotion, and highest virtue, | |
Who among you discerns that we ourselves are equals to the Lord, | |
Celestial beings better deserve to wield the reins, | |
And to inhabit the supreme throne, and to enjoy sweet and potent | |
Freedom, rather than to bear the yoke, and to be subject | |
To the rule of anyone, and endure lordly commands. | |
It is not unworthy that the noble prostrate to | |
One more noble than himself, everywhere the lesser yields to the greater: | |
But why should all, who are capable of everything, be subject to the powerful? | |
Why those, who seem alike in everything? | 41 |
What does the Lord know that we ourselves do not also know? | |
What does he understand or what does he grasp, that we don’t understand more clearly ourselves? | |
Ultimately he seems in no way superior at all. | |
Henceforth, I am firmly resolved to get to the heart of the matter, | |
If only the assent of your right hand is not lacking, | |
That God share with us equally his authority and throne, | |
And concede equal honour to us. | |
But I do not think he will do such things through our persuasion: | |
Force will have to be used, and power obtained through arms | 50 |
And battle, for so great a thing is worth great risk. | |
We shall prevail, comrades, what more can I say to you? | |
All the victors’ spoiled shall be borne under our command, | |
And God will be forced to bear our chains. | |
This I say, and I think that you feel the same way, | |
If your minds and eyes do not deceive me. | |
Therefore, if you desire steadfast freedom, | |
And to withdraw the hard yoke from your neck, and rest from perpetual song, | |
And to be placed in a worthy seat elevated over all things, | |
Unite your strong right hands to mine. | 60 |
You surely incline to this with your senses and in your very marrow: | |
You merely lack a leader, and a sponsor of the endeavour. | |
I myself will be that leader, if you submit to me, completely. | |
I have the strength; I have the arts to inflict three thousand injuries, | |
I know the snares; there are arms and warlike spirits, | |
So I will not allow anything to prevent our victory | |
And our command. He sits, you see, unconcerned with | |
Arms and wars, while around his halls are gathered | |
Unwarlike throngs, whom I doubt could even defend themselves from distant | |
Arms, much less possess the strength to endure the onslaught | 70 |
Of an opposing army and resist against drawn swords. | |
If you delay now, held back by shame, or fear, | |
Whether ever again you will have the opportunity | |
To cast off servility, and obtain freedom, | |
And be given the opportunity of a leader like me, | |
I know not what is wont to happen when you refuse what is offered, | |
that you desire and implore for, in vain after many tears”. | |
With these words he spurred on the eager crowd, | |
And inflamed their minds, as if someone desiring a great blaze | |
Were to pour olive-oil into the furnace. | 80 |
Then at once they decide upon a leader and salute the king. | |
Hastily they conspire, and enlist themselves to a new war. | |
They prepare arms, and breathe threats, and against God. | |
They threaten extreme destruction, and speak boldly: | |
Hostile to all who would bring loyal aid | |
To the Thunderer, and would lay barricades against their fury, | |
Or delays, as if each one would go to certain | |
Honours, and victory would truly be in their clenched fists: | |
They are so keen they hate delays, so they demand battles. | |
The father and king of all things had at once perceived this disturbance, | |
For nothing can elude from him, however well hidden, | 91 |
And with a sense of great ingratitude and a proud heart, | |
And he blazed with rage at the furious audacity of the spirits. | |
Then soon after he commanded the arsenals of spacious heaven | |
Opened, and sober cohorts seized their weapons, | |
To fight against the rebels with all their might, | |
And Michael was in command of all their arms. | |
Without delay, the entire sky was shaken by a great tumult, | |
Armed lines rush to settle the score with iron. | |
Orders press one side onward, hope stirs up the other side against them | 100 |
Seething with longing for power, for liberty. | |
With brave souls they fight, and the work of | |
Raging Mars seethes in uncertain combat, | |
Neither army contemplated retreat, until the Almighty | |
Shook the heavenly realms with thunder, | |
And hurled dense fires, and devouring flames, | |
And terrified the impious throngs with his wrathful visage, | |
And cast down their leader snatched out of high heaven. | |
And so the mass of ear-splitting bombardment, hurled with Vulcanic force, | |
Does not break the skies in its swift course; | 110 |
Thus now the Creator hurls his own projectiles, | |
Striking tall towers, and proud buildings. | |
With their leader lost, soon frigid tremors invade | |
The bones of those remaining, and through the specious surfaces of the heaven | |
They flee in haste, seeking hiding places and brief respite, | |
Where they can call back their leader and attempt new | |
Battles. But the brightest light uncovers | |
All, and there is no hiding place throughout the plains, | |
And what is more, the victorious legion presses hard and presses on. | |
Then while one side fled, the other pursued, | 120 |
And they were drawn together into nine circles, | |
And none of the fearful crowd dared to linger, | |
From all the gates they were carried through the empty air from heaven | |
Into the filth and the downcast lands and the sad | |
Abyss, just as the heaviest snow of Phoebus steals | |
Away sight for three days, hanging on roofs and high | |
Leaves, and overwhelming the lands and men and beasts | |
Far and wide, and forces them to retreat into caves in fear. | |
Or just as troublesome flies fill every space, | |
When the fiery Titan passes with his star, | 130 |
When they hover over the tables and feasts and cups | |
Of Bacchus, and they taste the sweetness of flavours first, | |
And not infrequently are they drowned in greedy dishes, | |
And often, sated by what they desire, they die of Iacchus. | |
Why they even molest the mouths and hands of diners, | |
And disturb all the dining halls with their oppressive buzzing, | |
Nor when struck do they learn to heed any flyflaps, | |
Nor can you exhaust their commotion by any remedy. | |
At once in the blazing fall | |
The faces and forms of all withdrew from God’s wrath. | 140 |
The filthy blackness of the Ethiopians disfigures their bodies, | |
And they bristle with foul scales and bestial hairs. | |
A terrible and fiery head, on either side of which | |
Are twin threatening horns on a savage brow, | |
From which black smoke mixed with sparks rises | |
Into the air. The Gorgons whirl around their horns, | |
With their tongues thrust out like snakes, and with an open mouth | |
Constantly ready to bite and with a plaited crest above | |
Breathes threats; eyes glowing with flames | |
He reduced to Cyclopean orbs as punishment. | 150 |
So you would not say you are looking at a serpent, or Mars, | |
Nor Titans or Gorgons by the Libyan shore. | |
Their ears hang far and wide over their shoulders, | |
You might say they are like dogs, who with wise noses | |
Are accustomed to search the wood for the dens of beasts: | |
Yet these they raise and press down again in turn at will. | |
A falcate nose, long and like the black proboscis | |
Of an elephant. Black pitch pours from | |
Wide nostrils, and with his proboscis sprinkles | |
Sulphurous drops, with which he infects either the earth or the sea. | 160 |
Fish and happy cattle die in the grass. | |
Beneath a gaping-wide jaw spread out to the temples, | |
The crooked teeth of a boar gnash terribly: | |
From there come the fires and the incurable venom of a viper, | |
And they vomit pestilence-filled airs from swollen lungs. | |
Ragged udders hang from bristly breasts, | |
Like the offspring of a wolf after eight weeks. | |
They milk madness into their offspring and hatred of the eternal | |
Prince, and they press polluted saliva into their hearts. | |
The back of the head, nasty buttocks and the back of the dragons | 170 |
Hold mouths, from the middle of the anus protrudes a very long | |
Tail, unlike any other beast of the long Nile. | |
The shape of their feet and hands is akin to a rare marsh creature, | |
Except for the claws which you might consider those of a lion. | |
They took such a form after the battles. | |
After having expelled them all, the Creator of heaven and earth, | |
Circled the heaven with unconquerable fires, and with solid adamantine | |
Ring, obstructs all return for them, | |
For as long as He Himself takes vital breathes from heaven. | |
He also decrees, that when all the ages of the world have passed, | 180 |
The endeavours of this vicious and impious war | |
Is to be paid back with eternal punishments in flames and in prison. | |
Affirming this with a nod, he shook all Olympus. | |
In this great downfall, and in the end Satan suffered punishment, | |
Not so much of deserved and just pain, | |
As for the immense rage he had adopted in his madness. | |
Then he gathered his comrades together, | |
And after he ascended a high seat in their midst, | |
Taking a deep breath from a sorrowful heart, he spoke to them. | |
“Alas, comrades, for how the unlucky battle has befallen, | 190 |
And the outcome of events, how ill-fated are the times of war | |
We faced, after we entrusted our whole affair to chance, | |
And we, worthy of greater, have lost a great deal, but this | |
Is a comfort, that victory did not come to our enemies | |
Though our fault. Indeed all deeds were done, | |
As much as could be done through strategy, or any strength, | |
Or a resolute heart. And the opposing cohorts | |
Did not defeat us through superior strength in combat, | |
But only by sheer numbers, after fortune overwhelmed the worthy | |
And the good, and in turn raised up the unworthy. | 200 |
This fate shattered our late cause unjustly, | |
And has snatched away our form, and the abodes of bright heaven. | |
Even after sixty ages of terrible punishments | |
Divine judgments endure for us all, | |
Such would be much and long lamented indeed | |
For faint-hearted spirits. It behooves us greater ones not | |
To be broken in spirit, or to come to terms through cruel suicides: | |
Come now, comrades, whoever is roused by these injuries, | |
Let this be our holy and everlasting covenant, | |
That as long as the earth is under the heavens, and the stars | 210 |
Maintain their course, and the straying ocean flows around the world, | |
Let no one relinquish being the sworn enemy of God, | |
Let no one love or stand in fear, or show obedience in any matter, | |
Or do anything pleasing, but be adversaries, | |
In all things, that he may be deservedly thrust into the perpetual fires. | |
Be men, and despise God with your pitiless countenance. | |
Let neither adamant nor steadfast crag by the raging seas | |
Conquer your head or heart through adversity, | |
Let no one ever regret our fruitless effort. | |
Here anger and fury beckon us, and sweet vengeance, | 220 |
Which no wise fellow (in my estimation) will let pass”. | |
So he spoke, and all in assent roared with one voice, | |
Full of wrath, threatening both heaven and God. | |
Just like a ball is propelled down a slippery slope by a stroke, | |
And like a free steed driven by no spurs, | |
Tossing neck and mane, races across the open plain, | |
So they all took oaths together through the land and the air, | |
Through the earth, and Stygian lagoon, and streams of Lethe, | |
To go against God in words and wicked deeds, | |
And never to plead for pardon for any crime or calamity | 230 |
So that they are not plunged in the waters of Cocytus in vain. |
7. Commentary
1–4 The Bible provides no definitive information on when God created the angels. Naogeorgus places it on the first day of creation. Cf. Genesis 1:1. |
1 caelum terramque: Virgil, Aeneid, I.133. |
3 ad iussa ministri: Valerius Flaccus, Argonautica, I.689. |
5 summumque decorem: Giovanni Battista Mantovano, Parthenice prima sive Mariana, (Mantovano 1957, p. 155). |
6 cuncta creata: A common phrase in hymns and theological writings. gloria formae. Appendix Vergiliana, Culex, 405, where it is used to describe the mythic Narcissus. |
10 uoluntas […] prima: Different theologians have offered different interpretations of the Divine Will. The ‘primary will’ or sometimes ‘antecedent will’ refers to God’s will that all be saved and that all actions of His creations be good. In contrast, ‘consequent will’ refers to God’s will in response to the circumstances of a situation or action. Naogeorgus emphasizes that the first will of the angels was in accordance with God’s, but in the case of Satan and his followers, it was corrupted by pride. |
11 tumorem animi: cf. Deuteronomy 18: 22 (Vulgate): sed per tumorem animi sui propheta confinxit (’but the prophet has devised it by pride of his mind’). Tumor can refer to the excitement of the mind by any emotion, often pride as is emphasized here. This verse provides a test for discerning those who speak true prophecies from false ones. |
13 polorum: ‘of the poles’. In traditional cosmology, this refers to the axes of the celestial sphere. |
14 mundi totius habenas: Apollo or Helios held the reins of a chariot when pulling the sun across the sky. One of many classical images repurposed for the Christian narrative. |
15–17 Christians traditionally interpreted the serpent from the Garden of Eden as Satan. Both Catholics and Protestants in the early modern period emphasized the devil’s power and conscious will directed against God. |
15 ex ordine quidam: The Seraphim: the highest choir of angels. |
18 Speeches before an assembly are common in epic poetry. |
19 longa silentia: Ovid, Fasti, I.183. |
20 abscondita cordis: Psalm 43: 22 (Vulgate). |
22 The Seraphim, the preeminent order of angels, lead the endless praises to God in heaven. This duty is one of Satan’s complaints in the poem, mentioned again in Satan’s first speech (line 58). Naogeorgus contrasts the long silence of Satan’s discontent with the constant singing of the angelic choirs. |
26 animosaque uirtus: Appendix Vergiliana, Aetna, 416; Silius Italicus, Punica, XVI.109. |
30 multosque labores: ‘and many labours’. Virgil, Georgica, IV.8: ‘multosque per annos’ [‘and through many years’]. |
38ff. Satan inveighs against his subordination to God. In Milton’s Paradise Lost, Lucifer is driven by envy of being subordinate to the Son of God (V.662ff). |
38 ut se: Ending a hexameter with two monosyllabic words is common in Roman satirical poetry, especially when used to start a clause in the following verse as is the case here (Raven 1965, p. 102). |
40–43 A string of rhetorical questions spoken by the satirist is a common feature of Roman and neo-Latin satire, though Satan is hardly acting in the role of the traditional moralist of satire. |
50 armis pugnaque: Virgil, Aeneid, X.259: armis pugnaeque [’for arms and battles’]. |
51–52 Though the diction and circumstances differ, in Paradise Lost, Moloch speaks in favour of war a renewed against Heaven: ‘I should be much for open war, O peers […]’ (I.119). In both works, the fallen angels share a deluded belief in the potential for defeating God through open warfare. In Milton’s work, the conflict is more directly between Michael and Lucifer and their respective forces and occurs over three days before Michael’s final victory, while the conflict itself is more abrupt and God directly intervenes (Revard 1980, p. 182). |
54 perferre catenas: Silius Italicus, Punica, XVII.367. |
57 Libertatem […] stabilem: cf. Livy, Ab urbe condita, VI.10: ‘Si eo perventum sit, tum populum Romanum vere exactos ex urbe reges et stabilem libertatem suam existimaturum’ (‘If this were achieved, then the Roman people would believe that the kings had truly been driven from the city and that their freedom was secure’). |
61 totisque medullis: Prosper Aquitanus, Epigrammata, 69.11. |
75 copia detur: Ovid, Metamorphoses, VI.545. |
79 Incenditque animos. Virgil, Aeneid, VI.889: ‘incenditque animum’ [’he inflamed [his] mind’]. |
85 Tonanti: this epithet of Jupiter is frequently applied to the Christian god in early modern Latin poetry. |
90 rerum pater: Boethius, De consolatione philosophiae, 3.6.2. |
97 Michael the archangel, chief of the angels, is often depicted in art and poetry as a warrior fighting Satan or a dragon. |
98 magno […] tumultu: Virgil, Aeneid, VI.857: ‘magno turbante tumultu’ [’with great turmoil disturbing’]. |
103 Mavors: An archaic name for Mars, god of war. |
108–10 Loosely based on Luke 10:18 (Douay-Rheims) ‘And he said to them: I saw Satan like lightning falling from heaven.’ |
110 Bombardae: A neo-Latin word. As in John Milton’s Paradise Lost, gunpowder is a Satanic invention. Revard notes early modern texts represent Satan as the ‘fabled inventor of gunpowder’ a topos taken up in Milton and many others in their poetry on the Gunpowder plot (Revard 1980, p. 88). |
116 praelia tentent: Virgil, Aeneid, XI.912. Naogeorgus’s spelling is consistent with early modern editions of Virgil but modern editions are likely to read ‘proelia temptent’. |
123 per inane feruntur: Lucretius, II.217; 2.226. |
130 Titan: Refers to Helios, the Titan god who, crowned with the aureole of the sun, drives a chariot drawn by four winged horses across the sky. |
131 mensas super atque dapes et pocula: cf. Virgil, Aeneid, XI.738: ‘dapes et plenae pocula mensae’ [feasts and cups on a full table’]. |
140 facies et forma recessit: cf. Lucretius, V.1175, ‘facies et forma’ and Virgil, Aeneid, XI.70, ‘sua forma recessit’. |
141 Some early modern writers refer to anyone with black skin as ‘Ethiopian’. Representations of the devil as being Ethiopian or having black skin go as far back as the Patristic period (Hood 1994, p. 85). |
145 fumus in auras: Virgil, Georgics, V.499; Aeneid, V.740. This tag of Virgil was also adapted by Dante his Inferno, 24.49–51: |
sanza la qual chi sua vita consuma, |
cotal vestigio in terra di sé lascia, |
qual fummo in aere e in acqua la schiuma. |
[’without which he who consumes his life/leaves such a vestige of himself on earth/as smoke in the air and foam in the water’.] |
152 Ovid’s Metamorphoses (IV.617–620) describes the blood from the gorgon’s head turning into snakes on the sandy Libyan shore. An allusion to this myth also occurs in Milton’s Paradise Lost 10, 526–27: ‘Not so thick swarmed once the Soil/Bedropped with blood of Gorgon’. |
154 nare sagaci: Ennius, Annales, 340, describing a hunting dog. |
165 Pannosae pendent setoso pectore mammae: cf. Martial, Epigrammata, 3.72.3: ‘pannosae dependent pectore mamma’ [’ragged udders hang from the breast’]. Naogeorgus’s source here is a sexually explicit epigram, though he abstains from repeating obscene vocabulary, such as the verb futuo (‘fuck’ 3.72.1) or cunnus (‘cunt’ 3.72.6) from Martial; this is a clear indication of his opting for more prudent diction. |
170 clunes: A mild term for a posterior; Naogeorgus avoids obscenity, even in his grotesque descriptions. As noted in the Introduction, Naogeorgus avoids Juvenalian obscenity in his satires. |
177 solidoque adamante: cf. Vergil describes the gates of Tartarus as gated with adamant pillars: ‘porta adversa ingens solidoque adamante columnae’, [’in front a great gate and columns of solid adamant’] Aeneid, VI.552. Also Aeschylus, Prometheus 6; Statius, Thebaid, IV.534–35: ‘solidoque intorta adamante Gigantum/vincula’ [the chains of Giants twisted in solid adamant’] describing monsters bound in Hades. For a useful discussion of the imagery of adamantine chains, see (Butler 1996, pp. 167–70). |
182 The model for this is from Homer’s Iliad (I.524–530), where Zeus nods his head as a promise to support Thesis’s request on behalf of her son Achilles and Mount Olympian shakes. Homer’s Zeus’s nod is a sign of his irrevocable decision but here God compares favourably in his decisiveness with the Homeric Zeus, who is anxious to avoid his wife Hera’s jealousy and in fact, acts slower on his final decision. |
189 suspiria corde: Silius Italicus, Punica, VIII.209. |
190–221 Satan’s second speech ascribes their defeat to chance and Heaven’s superior numbers and swears for vengeance. The theme is vaguely similar to the one where Milton’s Satan urges his followers to seek vengeance through guile and covert war (I.622–662). Naogeorgus’s Satan repeatedly refers to fate as if is a force separate from God’s will, as does Milton’s counterpart, when he states: |
Under thy conduct, and in dreadful deeds |
Fearless, endangered heaven’s perpetual king; |
And put to proof his high supremacy, |
Whether upheld by strength, or chance, or fate (I.130–133). |
Though Milton has God affirm a corrective ‘what I will is fate’ (VII.173), Naogeorgus leaves this implicit. |
198 robore belli: Ennius, Annales, 373. |
205 animis […] pusillis: ‘pusillanimous’. |
207 suspendia saeua: Martial, Epigrammata, I.115.6. |
209: Aeterno […] foedere. Virgil, Aeneid, XI.356. |
210 sidera cursum: Ausonius, Eclogues, 5.16. |
211 oceanusque uagus circumfluit: cf. ‘Oceanus circumvagus’, Horace, Epodes, 16.41. The ocean is depicted as fully surrounding the lands on earth. |
216 uultu […] toruo: cf. ‘voltu torvo ferus’ [‘fierce with a grim visage’], Horace, Epistles, 1.19.12. |
220 ira furorque: Statius, Thebaid, IV.661. |
226 colla iubasque: Silius Italicus, Punica, XVI.237. |
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
1 | ‘Virgil’s similes can thus be read with an eye on their Homeric, Apollonian, or Ennian precedents in sequence; such a serial reading of texts in a particular order is a strategy potentially available to ancient as well as modern interpreters’ (Harrison 2020, p. 27). |
2 | 1555: n. |
3 | 1612: famae. |
4 | 1555 prospex: iquod. |
5 | 1555: praeficit. |
6 | 1616: sylvis. |
7 | 1555: tamem. |
8 | 1612: non. |
References
- Alighieri, Dante. 2005. La Divina Commedia. Edited by Anna Maria Chiavacci Leonardi. 3 vols, Milan: Oscar Mondadori. [Google Scholar]
- Butler, George F. 1996. Statius and Milton’s “Adamantine Chains”: The “Thebaid” and “Paradise Lost” 1.48. Milton Quarterly 30: 167–70. [Google Scholar]
- Currell, David. 2022. Milton Among the Satirists. In Changing Satire: Transformations and Continuities in Europe, 1600–1830. Edited by Cecilia Rosengren, Per Sivefors and Rikard Wingård. Manchester: Manchester University Press, pp. 139–61. [Google Scholar]
- Forsyth, Neil. 2003. The Satanic Epic. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Gruterus, Janus. 1612. Delitiae Poetarum Germanorum, Huius Superiorisque Aevi Illustrium. 6 vols, Frankfurt: Excudebat Nicolaus Hoffmann, Sumpibus Iacobi Fischeri. [Google Scholar]
- Haan, Estelle. 2012. Both English and Latin: Bilingualism and Biculturalism in Milton’s Neo-Latin Writings. Transactions of the American Philosophical Society 102: 1–7, 9–53, 55–93, 95–139, 141–65, 167–219. [Google Scholar]
- Harrison, Stephen. 2020. Serial Similes in the Battle-Narrative of Virgil’s Aeneid. In Imitative Series and Clusters from Classical to Early Modern Literature. Edited by Colin Burrow, Stephen J. Harrison, Martin McLaughlin and Elisabetta Tarantino. Berlin: De Gruyter, pp. 27–38. [Google Scholar]
- Hood, Robert Earl. 1994. Begrimed and Black: Christian Traditions on Blacks and Blackness. Minneapolis: Fortress Press. [Google Scholar]
- Kirkconnell, Waton. 1952. The Celestial Cycle: The Theme of Paradise Lost in World Literature with Translations of the Major Analogues. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. [Google Scholar]
- Kivistö, Sari. 2022. Neo-Latin Verse Satire, ca. 1500–1800: An Ethical Approach. Helsinki: Societas Scientiarum Fennica. [Google Scholar]
- Kühlmann, Wilhelm. 2016. Wissen als Poesie. Ein Grundriss zu Formen und Funktionen der frühneuzeitlichen Lehrdichtung im deutschen Kulturraum des 16. und 17. Jahrhunderts. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. [Google Scholar]
- Leo, Russ. 2019. Tragedy as Philosophy in the Reformation World. Oxford: Oxford University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Mantovano, Giovanni Battista. 1957. Parthenice Prima Sive Mariana. Edited by Ettore Bolisani. Padua: Tipografia Antoniana. [Google Scholar]
- Milton, John. 2013. Paradise Lost, 2nd ed. Edited by Alastair Fowler. London and New York: Routledge. [Google Scholar]
- Naogeorgus, Thomas. 1555. Satyrarum Libri Quinque Priores. Basel: Per Ioannem Oporinum. [Google Scholar]
- Porter, David Andrew. 2014. Neo-Latin Formal Verse Satire from 1420 to 1616. Unpublished Ph.D. dissertation, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK. [Google Scholar]
- Raven, David S. 1965. Latin Metre: An Introduction. London: Faber & Faber. [Google Scholar]
- Revard, Stella Purce. 1980. The War in Heaven: Paradise Lost and the Tradition of Satan’s Rebellion. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Roloff, Hans-Gert. 2003a. Thomas Naogeorg und das Problem von Humanismus und Reformation. In Kleine Schriften zur Literatur des 16. Jahrhunderts. Edited by Christiane Caemmerer, Walter Delabar, Jörg Jungmayr and Wolfgang Neuber. Leiden: Brill, pp. 317–37. [Google Scholar]
- Roloff, Hans-Gert. 2003b. Thomas Naogeorgs Satiren. In Kleine Schriften zur Literatur des 16. Jahrhunderts. Edited by Christiane Caemmerer, Walter Delabar, Jörg Jungmayr and Wolfgang Neuber. Leiden: Brill, pp. 383–400. [Google Scholar]
- Sieveke, Franz Günter. 1993. Thomas Naogeorg. In Deutsche Dichter der frühen Neuzeit (1450–1600). Ihr Leben und Werk. Edited by Stephen Füssel. Berlin: Erich Schmidt, pp. 477–93. [Google Scholar]
- Simons, Roswitha. 2013. Der poetologische Rekurs auf die römischen Vorbilder und das Selbstverständnis humanistischer Satirendichter. Zur Entwicklung des Gattungsverständnisses im 15. und 16. Jahrhundert. In Norm und Poesie: Zur expliziten und impliziten Poetik in der lateinischen Literatur der Frühen Neuzeit. Edited by Beate Hintzen and Roswitha Simons. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter, pp. 125–43. [Google Scholar]
- Theobald, Leonhard. 1908. Das Leben und Wirken des Tendenzdramatikers der Reformationszeit Thomas Naogeorgus Seit Seiner Flucht aus Sachsen. Leipzig: M. Heinsius. [Google Scholar]
- Trinkaus, Charles. 1966. The Unknown Quattrocento Poetics of Bartolommeo della Fonte. Studies in the Renaissance 13: 40–122. [Google Scholar]
- Watanabe-O’Kelly, Helen. 2015. The Renaissance Meets the Reformation: The Dramatist Thomas Naogeorg (1508–1563): Traditions, Texts and Performance. In The Reinvention of Theatre in Sixteenth-Century Europe. Edited by T. F. Earle and Catarina Fouto. Oxford and New York: Legenda, pp. 317–31. [Google Scholar]
- Werner, Friedrich. 1987. Thomas Kirchmair, genannt Naogeorgus. Lebensbild eines bedeutenden Straubingers mit einem Literaturverzeichnis zu Biographie und Werk. Jahresbericht des Historischen Vereins für Straubing und Umgebung 89: 83–140. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Porter, D.A. Thomas Naogeorgus’s Infernal Satire: Text, Translation, and Commentary to Satyrarum libri quinque priores III.1 (1555). Religions 2025, 16, 433. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040433
Porter DA. Thomas Naogeorgus’s Infernal Satire: Text, Translation, and Commentary to Satyrarum libri quinque priores III.1 (1555). Religions. 2025; 16(4):433. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040433
Chicago/Turabian StylePorter, David Andrew. 2025. "Thomas Naogeorgus’s Infernal Satire: Text, Translation, and Commentary to Satyrarum libri quinque priores III.1 (1555)" Religions 16, no. 4: 433. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040433
APA StylePorter, D. A. (2025). Thomas Naogeorgus’s Infernal Satire: Text, Translation, and Commentary to Satyrarum libri quinque priores III.1 (1555). Religions, 16(4), 433. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16040433