PEOPLE of boastful Asia and of Europe, 
Hear how much, all too true, I am about, 
Through a month many-toned, from my great hall 
To prophesy; no oracle am I 
5 Of lying Ph�bus whom vain men called god, 
And further falsified by calling seer; 
But of the mighty God, whom hands of men 
Formed not like speechless idols carved of stone. 
For he has not for his abode a stone 
10 Most dumb and toothless to a temple drawn, 
Of immortals a dishonor very sore; 
For he may not be seen from earth nor measured 
By mortal eyes, nor formed by mortal hand; 
He, looking down at once on all, is seen 
15 Himself by no one; his are murky night, 
And day, and sun, and stars, and moon, and seas 
With fish, and land, and rivers, and the month 
Of springs perennial, creatures meant for life, 
And rains at once producing fruit of field 
20 And tree and vine and oil. This God a whip 
Struck through my heart within to make me tell 
Truly to men what things have now befallen 
And how much shall befall them yet again 
From the first generation to the eleventh; 
25 For he himself by bringing them to pass 
Will prove all things. But do thou in all things, 
O people, to the Sibyl give all ear, 
Who pours from hallowed mouth a truthful voice. 
Blessed of men shall they be on the earth 
30 As many as shall love the mighty God, 
Offering him praise before they drink and eat; 
Trusting in piety. When they behold 
Temples and altars, figures of dumb stones, 
[Stone images and statues made with hands] 
35 Polluted with the blood of living things 
And sacrifices of four-footed beasts, 
They will reject them all; and they will look 
To the great glory of one God and not 
Commit presumptuous murder nor dispose 
40 Of stolen gain, which things most horrid are; 
Nor shameful longing for another's bed 
Have they, nor vile and hateful lust of males. 
Their manner, piety, and character 
Shall other men, that love a shameless life, 
45 Not ever imitate; but, mocking them 
With jest and joke like babes in senselessness, 
They'll falsely charge to them as many deeds 
Blameful and wicked as they do themselves. 
For slow is the whole race of human kind 
50 To believe. But when judgment of the world 
And mortals comes which God himself shall bring 
Judging at once the impious and the pious, 
Then indeed shall he send the ungodly back 
To lower darkness [and then they shall know 
55 How much impiety they wrought]; but the pious 
Shall still remain upon the fruitful land, 
God giving to them breath and life and grace. 
But these things all in the tenth generation 
Shall come to pass; and now what things shall be 
60 From the first generation, those I'll tell. 
    First over all mortal shall Assyrians rule, 
And for six generations hold the power 
Of the world, from the time the God of heaven 
Being wroth against the cities and all men 
65 Sea with a bursting deluge covered earth. 
    Them shall the Medes o'erpower, but on the throne 
For two generations only shall exult; 
In which times those events shall come to pass: 
Dark night shall come at the mid hour of day 
40 And from the heaven the stars and circling moon 
Shall disappear; and earth in tumult shaken 
By a great earthquake shall throw many cities 
And works of men headlong; and from the deep 
They shall peer out the islands of the Sea. 
75    But when the great Euphrates shall with blood 
Be surging, then shall there be also set 
Between the Medes and Persians dreadful strife 
In battle; and the, Medes shall fall and fly 
'Neath Persian spears beyond the mighty water 
80 Of Tigris. And the Persian power shall be 
Greatest in all the world, and they shall have 
One generation of most prosperous rule. 
    And there shall be as many evil deeds 
As men shall wish away--the din of war, 
85 And murders, and disputes, and banishments, 
And overthrow of towers and waste of cities, 
When Hellas very glorious shall sail 
Over broad Hellespont, and shall convey 
To Phrygia sorrow and to Asia doom. 
90    And unto Egypt, land of many furrows, 
Shall sorry famine come, and barrenness 
Shall during twenty circling years prevail, 
What time the Nile, corn-nourisher, shall hide 
His dark wave somewhere underneath the earth. 
95    And there shall come from Asia a great king 
Bearing a spear, with ships innumerable, 
And he shall walk the wet paths of the deep, 
And shall sail after he has cut the mount 
Of lofty summit; him a fugitive 
100 From battle fearful Asia shall receive. 
    And Sicily the wretched shall a stream 
Of powerful fire set all aflame while Etna 
Her flame disgorges; and in the deep chasm 
Down shall the mighty city Croton fall. 
105    And strife shall be in Hellas; they shall rage 
Against each other, cast down many cities, 
And fighting make an end of many men; 
But equally balanced is the strife with both. 
    But, when the race of mortal men shall come 
110 To the tenth generation, also then 
Upon thc Persians shall a servile yoke 
And terror be. But when the Macedonians 
Shall boast the scepter there shall be for Thebes 
An evil conquest from behind, and Carians 
115 Shall dwell in Tyre, and Tyrians be destroyed. 
And Babylon, great to see but small to fight, 
Shall stand with walls that were in vain hopes built. 
In Bactria Macedonians shall dwell; 
But those from Susa and from Bactria 
120 Shall all into the land of Hellas flee. 
    It shall take place among those yet to be, 
When silver-eddying Pyramus his banks 
O'erpouring, to the sacred isle shall come. 
And Cibyra shall fall and Cyzicus, 
125 When, earth being shaken by earthquakes, cities fall. 
And sand shall hide all Samos under banks. 
And Delos visible no more, but things 
Of Delos shall all be invisible. 
And to Rhodes shall come evil last, but greatest. 
130    The Macedonian power shall not abide; 
But from the west a great Italian war 
Shall flourish, under which the world shall bear 
A servile yoke and the Italians serve. 
And thou, O wretched Corinth, thou shalt look 
135 Sometime upon thy conquest. And thy tower, 
O Carthage, shall press lowly on the ground. 
    Wretched Laodicea, thee sometime 
Shall earthquake lay low, casting headlong down, 
But thou, a city firmly set, again 
140 Shalt stand. O Lycia Myra beautiful, 
Thee never shall the agitated earth 
Set fast; but falling headlong down on earth 
Shalt thou, in manner like an alien, pray 
To flee away into another land, 
145 When sometime the dark water of the sea 
With thunders and earthquakes shall stop the din 
Of Patara for its impieties. 
    Also for thee, Armenia, there remains 
A slavish fate; and there shall also come 
150 To Solyma an evil blast of war 
From Italy, and God's great temple spoil. 
But when these, trusting folly, shall cast off 
Their piety and murders consummate 
Around the temple, then front Italy 
155 A mighty king shall like a runaway slave 
Flee over the Euphrates' stream unseen, 
Unknown, who shall some time dare loathsome guilt 
Of matricide, and many other things, 
Having confidence in his most wicked hands. 
160 And many for the throne with blood 
Rome's soil while he flees over Parthian land. 
   And out of Syria shall come Rome's foremost man, 
Who having burned the temple of Solyma, 
And having slaughtered many of the Jews, 
165 Shall destruction on their great broad land. 
    And then too shall an earthquake overthrow 
Both Salamis and Paphos, when dark water 
Shall dash o'er Cyprus washed by many a wave. 
    But when from deep cleft of Italian land 
170 Fire shall come flashing forth in the broad heaven, 
And many cities burn and men destroy, 
And much black ashes shall fill the great sky, 
And small drops like red earth shall fall from heaven, 
Then know the anger of the God of heaven, 
175 For that they without reason shall destroy 
The nation of the pious. And then strife 
Awakened of war shall come to the West, 
Shall also come the fugitive of Rome, 
Bearing a great spear, having marched across 
180 Euphrates with his many myriads. 
    O wretched Antioch, they shall call thee 
No more a city when around their spears 
Because of thine own follies thou shalt fall. 
And then on Scyros shall a pestilence 
185 And dreadful battle-din destruction bring. 
    Alas, alas! O wretched Cyprus, thee 
Shall a broad wave of the sea cover, thee 
Tossed on high by the whirling stormy winds. 
    And into Asia there shall come great wealth, 
190 Which Rome herself once, plundering, put away 
In her luxurious homes; and twice as much 
And more shall she to Asia render back, 
And then there shall be an excess of war. 
    And Carian cities by Mæander's waters, 
195 Girded with towers and very beautiful, 
Shall by a bitter famine be destroyed, 
When the Mæander his dark water hides. 
    But when piety shall perish from mankind, 
And faith and right be hidden in the world, 
200 . . . Fickle . . . and in unhallowed boldness 
Living shall practice wanton violence, 
And reckless evil deeds, and of the pious 
No one shall make account, but even them all 
From thoughtlessness they utterly destroy 
205 In childish folly, in their violence 
Exulting and in blood holding their bands; 
Then know thou that God is no longer mild, 
(139-159.) 
{p. 108} 
But gnashing with fury and destroying all 
The race of men by conflagration great. 
210 Ah! miserable mortals, change these things, 
Nor lead the mighty God to wrath extreme; 
Put giving up your swords and pointed knives, 
And homicides and wanton violence, 
Wash your whole body in perennial streams, 
215 And lifting up your hands to heaven seek pardon 
For former deeds and expiate with praise 
Bitter impiety; and God will give 
Repentance; he will not destroy; and wrath 
Will he again restrain, if in your hearts 
220 Ye all will practice honored piety. 
But if, ill-disposed, ye obey me not, 
But with a fondness for strange lack of sense 
Receive all these things with an evil ear, 
There shall be over all the world a fire 
225 And greatest omen with sword and with trump 
At sunrise; the whole world shall hear the roar 
And mighty sound. And he shall burn all earth, 
And destroy the whole race of men, and all 
The cities and the rivers and the sea; 
230 All things he'll burn, and it shall be black dust. 
    But when now all things shall have been reduced 
To dust and ashes, and God shall have calmed 
The fire unspeakable which he lit up, 
The bones and ashes of men God himself 
235 Again will fashion, and he will again 
Raise mortals up, even as they were before. 
And then shall be the judgment, at which God 
Himself as judge shall judge the world again; 
And all who sinned with impious hearts, even them, 
240 Shall he again hide under mounds of earth 
[Dark Tartarus and Stygian Gehenna]. 
But all who shall be pious shall again 
Live on the earth [and (shall inherit there) 
The great immortal God's unwasting bliss,] 
245 God giving spirit life and joy to them 
[The pious; and they all shall see themselves 
Beholding the sun's sweet and cheering light. 
O happy on the earth shall be that man].