The Odyssey (Wisehouse Classics Edition). Homer

The Odyssey (Wisehouse Classics Edition) - Homer


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      The royal palace to the queen convey,

      Or him she blesses in the bridal day!”

      Meantime the lofty rooms the prince surveys,

      Where lay the treasures of the Ithacian race:

      Here ruddy brass and gold refulgent blazed;

      There polished chests embroider’d vestures graced;

      Here jars of oil breathed forth a rich perfume;

      There casks of wine in rows adorn’d the dome

      (Pure flavorous wine, by gods in bounty given

      And worthy to exalt the feasts of heaven).

      Untouch’d they stood, till, his long labours o’er,

      The great Ulysses reach’d his native shore.

      A double strength of bars secured the gates;

      Fast by the door the wise Euryclea waits;

      Euryclea, who great Ops! thy lineage shared,

      And watch’d all night, all day, a faithful guard.

      To whom the prince: “O thou whose guardian care

      Nursed the most wretched king that breathes the air;

      Untouch’d and sacred may these vessels stand,

      Till great Ulysses views his native land.

      But by thy care twelve urns of wine be fill’d;

      Next these in worth, and firm these urns be seal’d;

      And twice ten measures of the choicest flour

      Prepared, are yet descends the evening hour.

      For when the favouring shades of night arise,

      And peaceful slumbers close my mother’s eyes,

      Me from our coast shall spreading sails convey,

      To seek Ulysses through the watery way.”

      While yet he spoke, she fill’d the walls with cries,

      And tears ran trickling from her aged eyes.

      “O whither, whither flies my son (she cried)

      To realms; that rocks and roaring seas divide?

      In foreign lands thy father’s days decay’d.

      And foreign lands contain the mighty dead.

      The watery way ill-fated if thou try,

      All, all must perish, and by fraud you die!

      Then stay, my, child! storms beat, and rolls the main,

      Oh, beat those storms, and roll the seas in vain!”

      “Far hence (replied the prince) thy fears be driven:

      Heaven calls me forth; these counsels are of Heaven.

      But, by the powers that hate the perjured, swear,

      To keep my voyage from the royal ear,

      Nor uncompell’d the dangerous truth betray,

      Till twice six times descends the lamp of day,

      Lest the sad tale a mother’s life impair,

      And grief destroy what time awhile would spare.”

      Thus he. The matron with uplifted eyes

      Attests the all-seeing sovereign of the skies.

      Then studious she prepares the choicest flour,

      The strength of wheat and wines an ample store.

      While to the rival train the prince returns,

      The martial goddess with impatience burns;

      Like thee, Telemachus, in voice and size,

      With speed divine from street to street she flies,

      She bids the mariners prepared to stand,

      When night descends, embodied on the strand.

      Then to Noemon swift she runs, she flies,

      And asks a bark: the chief a bark supplies.

      And now, declining with his sloping wheels,

      Down sunk the sun behind the western hills

      The goddess shoved the vessel from the shores,

      And stow’d within its womb the naval stores,

      Full in the openings of the spacious main

      It rides; and now descends the sailor-train,

      Next, to the court, impatient of delay.

      With rapid step the goddess urged her way;

      There every eye with slumberous chains she bound,

      And dash’d the flowing goblet to the ground.

      Drowsy they rose, with heavy fumes oppress’d,

      Reel’d from the palace, and retired to rest.

      Then thus, in Mentor’s reverend form array’d,

      Spoke to Telemachus the martial maid.

      “Lo! on the seas, prepared the vessel stands,

      The impatient mariner thy speed demands.”

      Swift as she spoke, with rapid pace she leads;

      The footsteps of the deity he treads.

      Swift to the shore they move along the strand;

      The ready vessel rides, the sailors ready stand.

      He bids them bring their stores; the attending train

      Load the tall bark, and launch into the main,

      The prince and goddess to the stern ascend;

      To the strong stroke at once the rowers bend.

      Full from the west she bids fresh breezes blow;

      The sable billows foam and roar below.

      The chief his orders gives; the obedient band

      With due observance wait the chief’s command;

      With speed the mast they rear, with speed unbind

      The spacious sheet, and stretch it to the wind.

      High o’er the roaring waves the spreading sails

      Bow the tall mast, and swell before the gales;

      The crooked keel the parting surge divides,

      And to the stern retreating roll the tides.

      And now they ship their oars, and crown with wine

      The holy goblet to the powers divine:

      Imploring all the gods that reign above,

      But chief the blue-eyed progeny of Jove.

Thus all the night they stem the liquid way, And end their voyage with the morning ray. ,.

       Argument

      Telemachus, guided by Pallas in the shape of Mentor, arrives in the morning at Pylos, where Nestor and his sons are sacrificing on the sea-shore to Neptune. Telemachus declares the occasion of his coming: and Nestor relates what passed in their return from Troy, how their fleets


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