
eBook - ePub
The Araucaniad
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
About this book
Now back in print! The first English translation of this epic masterpiece of Chilean poetry.
Frequently asked questions
Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
- Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
- Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, weāve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere ā even offline. Perfect for commutes or when youāre on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access The Araucaniad by Alonso de Ercilla Y Zuniga, Charles Maxwell Lancaster, Paul Thomas Manchester, Charles Maxwell Lancaster,Paul Thomas Manchester in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Letteratura & Poesia. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
THE ARAUCANIAD
PART ONE
CANTO I
Which declares the seat and description of the province of Chile and the state of Arauco, with the customs and methods of warfare that the natives observe, and which likewise deals with the entry and conquest of the Spaniards until Arauco grew rebellious.
Not of ladies, love, or graces
Do I sing, nor knights enamored,
Nor of gifts and shows of feeling,
Cares of love, or loveās affections;
But the valiant acts and prowess
Of those never-daunted Spaniards
Who with swords placed yokes of bond- age
On the necks of untamed Indians.
Do I sing, nor knights enamored,
Nor of gifts and shows of feeling,
Cares of love, or loveās affections;
But the valiant acts and prowess
Of those never-daunted Spaniards
Who with swords placed yokes of bond- age
On the necks of untamed Indians.
I shall dwell on deeds distinguished
Of a monarch-scorning people,
Feats of gallantry deserving
Memoryās shrine and celebration,
Rare accomplishments of merit
Crowning Spanish might with grandeur;
For the victor most is honored
By repute of vanquished hero.
Of a monarch-scorning people,
Feats of gallantry deserving
Memoryās shrine and celebration,
Rare accomplishments of merit
Crowning Spanish might with grandeur;
For the victor most is honored
By repute of vanquished hero.
I implore you, royal Philip,
That this work wear your approval.
Needing universal favor,
āTis extolled by your acceptance.
Uncorrupted my narration,
Drawn from truth and cut to measure!
Do not scorn this gift, though humble.
Let your sanction speed my verses.
That this work wear your approval.
Needing universal favor,
āTis extolled by your acceptance.
Uncorrupted my narration,
Drawn from truth and cut to measure!
Do not scorn this gift, though humble.
Let your sanction speed my verses.
Pledged unto a lord so lofty
Be it bolstered by this boldness!
When its lustre thus is vouchsafed,
All who see it will esteem it.
If it still be deemed unworthy,
Let it halt and be confounded;
For I feel, to you directed,
It secretes some mystic essence.
Be it bolstered by this boldness!
When its lustre thus is vouchsafed,
All who see it will esteem it.
If it still be deemed unworthy,
Let it halt and be confounded;
For I feel, to you directed,
It secretes some mystic essence.
Since my rearing in your household,
Credit elsewhere has enriched me,
Which may turn dull style delightful,
Lending art to crude disorder.
To the maw of Mars, the monstrous,
Flushed, I fling my quill new-quickened.
Lord, give ear to my recounting
Actions I have shared and witnessed.
Credit elsewhere has enriched me,
Which may turn dull style delightful,
Lending art to crude disorder.
To the maw of Mars, the monstrous,
Flushed, I fling my quill new-quickened.
Lord, give ear to my recounting
Actions I have shared and witnessed.
Chile, fertile province, famous
In the vast Antarctic region, -
Known to far-flung mighty nations
For her queenly grace and courage,
Has produced a race so noble,
Dauntless, bellicose, and haughty,
That by king it neāer was humbled
Nor to foreign sway submitted.
In the vast Antarctic region, -
Known to far-flung mighty nations
For her queenly grace and courage,
Has produced a race so noble,
Dauntless, bellicose, and haughty,
That by king it neāer was humbled
Nor to foreign sway submitted.
North to South, her long extension
āCoast of Southern Seasā is titled.
From the West to East her slimness
By a hundred miles encompassed,
Reaches āneath the Antarctic Circle
To degrees full twenty-seven,
Where the Oceanās sea and Chileās
Merge in bosomed straits their waters.
āCoast of Southern Seasā is titled.
From the West to East her slimness
By a hundred miles encompassed,
Reaches āneath the Antarctic Circle
To degrees full twenty-seven,
Where the Oceanās sea and Chileās
Merge in bosomed straits their waters.
Dual ocean floods, aspiring
To unite beyond their limits,
Lash the rocks with waves extended;
But their junction is impeded,
Till at last the land is riven,
And they there commune together.
Here Magellan drove a pathway,
First to find it, sire, and name it.
To unite beyond their limits,
Lash the rocks with waves extended;
But their junction is impeded,
Till at last the land is riven,
And they there commune together.
Here Magellan drove a pathway,
First to find it, sire, and name it.
Pilotās lack, or some such reason
Covered, though perhaps transcendent,
Caused this once-found secret roadstead
To remain from us fast hidden,
Whether through a draftsmanās error
Or because some isle transplanted,
By the stormy main and whirlwind
Blown aground, has choked its entrance.
Covered, though perhaps transcendent,
Caused this once-found secret roadstead
To remain from us fast hidden,
Whether through a draftsmanās error
Or because some isle transplanted,
By the stormy main and whirlwind
Blown aground, has choked its entrance.
Land runs North to South, a ribbon,
And the sea bathes western shoreline.
On the East in one direction
Stretch a thousand leagues of mountains.
In their midst warās point is sharpened
By fierce exercise and custom.
Love and Venus have no part here;
Only wrathful Mars is master.
And the sea bathes western shoreline.
On the East in one direction
Stretch a thousand leagues of mountains.
In their midst warās point is sharpened
By fierce exercise and custom.
Love and Venus have no part here;
Only wrathful Mars is master.
At this districtās demarcation,
Where ātis broadest, lies the nation
Thirty-six degrees projected.
Costly to itself and aliens,
Toll it takes of strange usurpers,
Fetters Chile in strait shackles,
And with warfare undiluted,
With sheer grit outrocks the earthquake.
Where ātis broadest, lies the nation
Thirty-six degrees projected.
Costly to itself and aliens,
Toll it takes of strange usurpers,
Fetters Chile in strait shackles,
And with warfare undiluted,
With sheer grit outrocks the earthquake.
āTis Arauco self-sufficient
That with stratagem and splendor
Holds the soil in far dominion
From the one Pole to the other,
Trapping Spaniards in crass meshes,
As my writing soon will picture.
Twenty leagues contain its landmarks.
Sixteen Toqui chiefs possess it.
That with stratagem and splendor
Holds the soil in far dominion
From the one Pole to the other,
Trapping Spaniards in crass meshes,
As my writing soon will picture.
Twenty leagues contain its landmarks.
Sixteen Toqui chiefs possess it.
Ten and six are lords and chieftains
Who control the haughty nation,
Those best versed in art of warfare,
Born of red barbaric mothers,
Bulwarks of the realm incarnate.
None who governs boasts preferment.
Other chiefs there are, but valor
Proves and crowns their choice commanders.
Who control the haughty nation,
Those best versed in art of warfare,
Born of red barbaric mothers,
Bulwarks of the realm incarnate.
None who governs boasts preferment.
Other chiefs there are, but valor
Proves and crowns their choice commanders.
Only lords are here entitled
To their vassalsā privy service,
And they may when need arises,
Use constraint to force their fealty.
āTis the Ulmenās obligation
To indoctrinate his subjects
In warās discipline and usage,
Till they master martial methods.
To their vassalsā privy service,
And they may when need arises,
Use constraint to force their fealty.
āTis the Ulmenās obligation
To indoctrinate his subjects
In warās discipline and usage,
Till they master martial methods.
As for children, those of talent,
Those endowed with agile vigor
Run a marathon of manhood
Over slopes and stony hillocks,
And the winner is rewarded,
From the race at length returning.
Strong of lung and nimble-footed,
Deer they overtake, unwinded.
Those endowed with agile vigor
Run a marathon of manhood
Over slopes and stony hillocks,
And the winner is rewarded,
From the race at length returning.
Strong of lung and nimble-footed,
Deer they overtake, unwinded.
Elders, tending passionās vineyard,
Teach them exercise from childhood.
Veterans drill them in adulthood
For a bellicose profession.
They disqualify the weaklings
From the military practice
And bestow on brilliant soldiers
Rank according to their rigor.
Teach them exercise from childhood.
Veterans drill them in adulthood
For a bellicose profession.
They disqualify the weaklings
From the military practice
And bestow on brilliant soldiers
Rank according to their rigor.
Warās preĆ«minence and honor
Here are not supplied by frailty,
Not by birth nor social status,
By inheritance nor riches.
Excellence of arm, and virtue,
These set men apart from others;
These are oils to anele perfection
And to avouch the personās value.
Here are not supplied by frailty,
Not by birth nor social status,
By inheritance nor riches.
Excellence of arm, and virtue,
These set men apart from others;
These are oils to anele perfection
And to avouch the personās value.
Warlords, all to war devoted,
Are immune from other service.
They, exempt from toil and spadework,
Are by baser folk supported;
But by law there is compulsion
That they be with arms provided,
Handling them with skilful knowledge
In their licit wars and battles.
Are immune from other service.
They, exempt from toil and spadework,
Are by baser folk supported;
But by law there is compulsion
That they be with arms provided,
Handling them with skilful knowledge
In their licit wars and battles.
Weapons used by them most often
Are comprised of pikes and halberds,
Lances, pointed arms long-handled
Of the shape and form of bodkins,
Hatchets, hammers, stout-ribbed bludgeons,
Darts and axes, sticks and arrows,
Rattan lassoes, thongs of osier,
Catapults, and throwing missiles.
Are comprised of pikes and halberds,
Lances, pointed arms long-handled
Of the shape and form of bodkins,
Hatchets, hammers, stout-ribbed bludgeons,
Darts and axes, sticks and arrows,
Rattan lassoes, thongs of osier,
Catapults, and throwing missiles.
Some of these are filched munitions,
Seized of late from Christiansā clutches.
Care and constant exercises
From each hour squeeze golden profit.
Others are by need invented.
Want is oft inventionās mother!
In all spheres a zealous lab...
Seized of late from Christiansā clutches.
Care and constant exercises
From each hour squeeze golden profit.
Others are by need invented.
Want is oft inventionās mother!
In all spheres a zealous lab...
Table of contents
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- Dedication
- HIGH FLIGHT
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTION TO THE ARAUCANIAD
- ALONSO DE ERCILLAāS DEDICATION TO PHILIP THE SECOND OF SPAIN - TO HIS ROYAL HOLY CATHOLIC MAJESTY
- PROLOGUE OF ALONSO DE ERCILLA
- ALONSO DE ERCILLAāS DECLARATION CONCERNING SOME THINGS IN THIS WORK
- THE ARAUCANIAD - PART ONE
- THE ARAUCANIAD - PART TWO
- THE ARAUCANIAD - PART THREE