| 1 |
Then
Odysseus, of many wiles, answered him, and said:
"Lord Alcinous, renowned above all men, verily this is a good
thing, to listen to a minstrel such as this man is, like unto the
gods in voice. For myself I declare that there is no greater fulfilment
of delight than when joy possesses a whole people, and banqueters
in the halls listen to a minstrel as they sit in order due, and
by them tables are laden with bread and meat, and the cup-bearer
draws wine from the bowl and bears it round and pours it into the
cups. This seems to my mind the fairest thing there is. But thy
heart is turned to ask of my grievous woes, that I may weep and
groan the more. What, then, shall I tell thee first, what last?
for woes full many have the heavenly gods given me. First how will
I tell my name, that ye, too, may know it, and that I hereafter,
when I have escaped from the pitiless day of doom, may be your host,
though I dwell in a home that is afar. I am Odysseus, son of Laertes,
who am known among men for all manner of wiles, and my fame reaches
unto heaven. But I dwell in clear-seen Ithaca, |
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wherein is a mountain, Neriton, covered with waving forests, conspicuous
from afar; and round it lie many isles hard by one another, Dulichium,
and Same, and wooded Zacynthus. Ithaca itself lies close in to the
mainland the furthest toward the gloom, but the others lie apart
toward the Dawn and the sun—a rugged isle, but a good nurse
of young men; and for myself no other thing can I see sweeter than
one's own land. Of a truth Calypso, the beautiful goddess, sought
to keep me by her in her hollow caves, yearning that I should be
her husband; and in like manner Circe would fain have held me back
in her halls, the guileful lady of Aeaea, yearning that I should
be her husband; but they could never persuade the heart within my
breast. So true is it that naught is sweeter than a man's own land
and his parents, even though it be in a rich house that he dwells
afar in a foreign land away from his parents. But come, let me tell
thee also of my woeful home-coming, which Zeus laid upon me as I
came from Troy.
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| 39 |
"From
Ilios the wind bore me and brought me to the Cicones, to Ismarus.
There I sacked the city and slew the men; and from the city we took
their wives and great store of treasure, and divided them among
us, that so far as lay in me no man might go defrauded of an equal
share. Then verily I gave command that we should flee with swift
foot, but the others in their great folly did not hearken. But there
much wine was drunk, and many sheep they slew by the shore, and
sleek kine of shambling gait. Meanwhile the Cicones went and called
to other Cicones who were their neighbours, at once more numerous
and braver than they—men that dwelt inland and were skilled
at fighting with their foes from chariots, and, if need were, on
foot. So they came in the morning, as thick as leaves or flowers
spring up in their season; and then it was that an evil fate from
Zeus beset us luckless men, that we might suffer woes full many.
They set their battIe in array and fought by the swift ships, and
each side hurled at the other with bronze-tipped spears. Now as
long as it was morn and the sacred day was waxing, so long we held
our ground and beat them off, though they were more than we. But
when the sun turned to the time for the unyoking of oxen, then the
Cicones prevailed and routed the Achaeans, and six of my well-greaved
comrades perished from each ship; but the rest of us escaped death
and fate.
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| 62 |
"Thence
we sailed on, grieved at heart, glad to have escaped from death,
though we had lost our dear comrades; nor did I let my curved ships
pass on till we had called thrice on each of those hapless comrades
of ours who died on the plain, cut down by the Cicones. But against
our ships Zeus, the cloud-gatherer, roused the North Wind with a
wondrous tempest, and hid with clouds the land and the sea alike,
and night rushed down from heaven. Then the ships were driven headlong,
and their sails were torn to shreds by the violence of the wind.
So we lowered the sails and stowed them aboard, in fear of death,
and rowed the ships hurriedly toward the land. There for two nights
and two days continuously we lay, eating our hearts for weariness
and sorrow. But when now fair-tressed Dawn brought to its birth
the third day, we set up the masts and hoisted the white sails,
and took our seats, and the wind and the helmsmen steered the ships.
And now all unscathed should I have reached my native land, but
the wave and the current and the North Wind beat me back as I was
rounding Malea, and drove me from my course past Cythera.
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| 82 |
"Thence
for nine days' space I was borne by direful winds over the teeming
deep; but on the tenth we set foot on the land of the Lotus-eaters,
who eat a flowery food. There we went on shore and drew water, and
straightway my comrades took their meal by the swift ships.
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| 87 |
But
when we had tasted food and drink, I sent forth some of my comrades
to go and learn who the men were, who here ate bread upon the earth;
two men I chose, sending with them a third as a herald. So they
went straightway and mingled with the Lotus-eaters, and the Lotus-eaters
did not plan death for my comrades, but gave them of the lotus to
taste. And whosoever of them ate of the honey-sweet fruit of the
lotus, had no longer any wish to bring back word or to return, but
there they were fain to abide among the Lotus-eaters, feeding on
the lotus, and forgetful of their homeward way. These men, therefore,
I brought back perforce to the ships, weeping, and dragged them
beneath the benches and bound them fast in the hollow ships; and
I bade the rest of my trusty comrades to embark with speed on the
swift ships, lest perchance anyone should eat of the lotus and forget
his homeward way. So they went on board straightway and sat down
upon the benches, and sitting well in order smote the grey sea with
their oars.
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| 105 |
"Thence
we sailed on, grieved at heart, and we came to the land of the Cyclopes,
an overweening and lawless folk, who, trusting in the immortal gods,
plant nothing with their hands nor plough; but all these things
spring up for them without sowing or ploughing, wheat, and barley,
and vines, which bear the rich clusters of wine, and the rain of
Zeus gives them increase.
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| 112 |
Neither
assemblies for council have they, nor appointed laws, but they dwell
on the peaks of lofty mountains in hollow caves, and each one is
lawgiver to his children and his wives, and they reck nothing one
of another.
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| 116 |
"Now
there is a level isle that stretches aslant outside the harbour,
neither close to the shore of the land of the Cyclopes, nor yet
far off, a wooded isle. Therein live wild goats innumerable, for
the tread of men scares them not away, nor are hunters wont to come
thither, men who endure toils in the woodland as they course over
the peaks of the mountains. Neither with flocks is it held, nor
with ploughed lands, but unsown and untilled all the days it knows
naught of men, but feeds the bleating goats. For the Cyclopes have
at hand no ships with vermilion cheeks, nor are there shipwrights
in their land who might build them well-benched ships, which should
perform all their wants, passing to the cities of other folk, as
men often cross the sea in ships to visit one another—craftsmen,
who woold have made of this isle also a fair settlement. For the
isle is nowise poor, but would bear all things in season. In it
are meadows by the shores of the grey sea, well-watered meadows
and soft, where vines would never fail, and in it level plough-land,
whence they might reap from season to season harvests exceeding
deep, so rich is the soil beneath; and in it, too, is a harbour
giving safe anchorage, where there is no need of moorings, either
to throw out anchor-stones or to make fast stern cables, but one
may beach one's ship and wait until the sailors' minds bid them
put out, and the breezes blow fair.
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| 140 |
Now
at the head of the harbour a spring of bright water flows forth
from beneath a cave, and round about it poplars grow. Thither we
sailed in, and some god guided us through the murky night; for there
was no light to see, but a mist lay deep about the ships and the
moon showed no light from heaven, but was shut in by clouds. Then
no man's eyes beheld that island, nor did we see the long waves
rolling on the beach, until we ran our well-benched ships on shore.
And when we had beached the ships we lowered all the sails and ourselves
went forth on the shore of the sea, and there we fell asleep and
waited for the bright Dawn.
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| 152 |
"As
soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, we roamed throughout
the isle marvelling at it; and the nymphs, the daughters of Zeus
who bears the aegis, roused the mountain goats, that my comrades
might have whereof to make their meal. Straightway we took from
the ships our curved bows and long javelins, and arrayed in three
bands we fell to smiting; and the god soon gave us game to satisfy
our hearts. The ships that followed me were twelve, and to each
nine goats fell by lot, but for me alone they chose out ten.
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| 161 |
"So
then all day long till set of sun we sat feasting on abundant flesh
and sweet wine. For not yet was the red wine spent from out our ships,
but some was still left; for abundant store had we drawn in jars for
each crew when we took the sacred citadel of the Cicones. And we looked
across to the land of the Cyclopes, who dwelt close at hand, and marked
the smoke, and the voice of men, and of the sheep, and of the goats.
But when the sun set and darkness came on, then we lay down to rest
on the shore of the sea.
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| 170 |
And
as soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, I called my men
together and spoke among them all:
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| 172 |
" 'Remain
here now, all the rest of you, my trusty comrades, but I with my
own ship and my own company will go and make trial of yonder men,
to learn who they are, whether they are cruel, and wild, and unjust,
or whether they love strangers and fear the gods in their thoughts.'
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177 |
"So
saying, I went on board the ship and bade my comrades themselves
to embark, and to loose the stern cables. So they went on board
straightway and sat down upon the benches, and sitting well in order
smote the grey sea with their oars. But when we had reached the
place, which lay close at hand, there on the land's edge hard by
the sea we saw a high cave, roofed over with laurels, and there
many flocks, sheep and goats alike, were wont to sleep. Round about
it a high court was built with stones set deep in the earth, and
with tall pines and high-crested oaks. There a monstrous man was
wont to sleep, w ho shepherded his flocks alone and afar, and mingled
not with others, but lived apart, with his heart set on lawlessness.
For he was fashioned a wondrous monster, and was not like a man
that lives by bread, but like a wooded peak of lofty mountains,
which stands out to view alone, apart from the rest.
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| 193 |
"Then
I bade the rest of my trusty comrades to remain there by the ship
and to guard the ship, but I chose twelve of the best of my comrades
and went my way. With me I had a goat-skin of the dark, sweet wine,
which Maro, son of Euanthes, had given me, the priest of Apollo,
the god who used to watch over Ismarus. And he had given it me because
we had protected him with his child and wife out of reverence; for
he dwelt in a wooded grove of Phoebus Apollo. And he gave me splendid
gifts: of well-wrought gold he gave me seven talents, and he gave
me a mixing-bowl all of silver; and besides these, wine, wherewith
he filled twelve jars in all, wine sweet and unmixed, a drink divine.
Not one of his slaves nor of the maids in his halls knew thereof,
but himself and his dear wife, and one house-dame only. And as often
as they drank that honey-sweet red wine he would fill one cup and
pour it into twenty measures of water, and a smell would rise from
the mixing-bowl marvellously sweet; then verily would one not choose
to hold back. With this wine I filled and took with me a great skin,
and also provision in a scrip; for my proud spirit had a foreboding
that presently a man would come to me clothed in great might, a
savage man that knew naught of justice or of law.
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| 216 |
"Speedily
we came to the cave, nor did we find him within, but he was pasturing
his fat flocks in the fields. So we entered the cave and gazed in
wonder at all things there. The crates were laden with cheeses,
and the pens were crowded with lambs and kids. Each kind was penned
separately: by themselves the firstlings, by themselves the later
lambs, and by themselves again the newly yeaned. And with whey were
swimming all the well-wrought vessels, the milk-pails and the bowls
into which he milked. Then my comrades spoke and besought me first
of all to take of the cheeses and depart, and thereafter speedily
to drive to the swilf ship the kids and lambs from out the pens,
and to sail over the salt water. But I did not listen to them—verily
it would have been better far—to the end that I might see the man
himself, and whether he would give me gifts of entertainment. Yet,
as it fell, his appearing was not to prove a joy to my comrades.
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| 231 |
"Then
we kindled a fire and offered sacrifice, and ourselves, too, took
of the cheeses and ate, and thus we sat in the cave and waited for
him until he came back, herding his flocks. He bore a mighty weight
of dry wood to serve him at supper time, and flung it down with
a crash inside the cave, but we, seized with terror, shrank back
into a recess of the cave. But he drove his fat flocks into the
wide cavern—all those that he milked; but the males—the rams and
the goats—he left without in the deep court. Then he lifted on high
and set in place the great door-stone, A mighty rock; two and twenty
stout four-wheeled wagons could not lift it from the ground, such
a towering mass of rock he set in the doorway. Thereafter he sat
down and milked the ewes and bleating goats all in turn, and beneath
each dam he placed her young. Then presently he curdled half the
white milk, and gathered it in wicker baskets and laid it away,
and the other half he set in vessels that he might have it to take
and drink, and that it might serve him for supper.
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| 250 |
But
when he had busily performed his tasks, then he rekindled the fire,
and caught sight of us, and asked:
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| 252 |
" 'Strangers,
who are ye? Whence do ye sail over the watery ways? Is it on some
business, or do ye wander at random over the sea, even as pirates,
who wander, hazarding their lives and bringing evil to men of other
lands?'
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| 256 |
"So
he spoke, and in our breasts our spirit was broken for terror of
his deep voice and monstrous self; yet even so I made answer and
spoke to him, saying:
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| 259 |
" 'We,
thou must know, are from Troy, Achaeans, driven wandering by all
manner of winds over the great gulf of the sea. Seeking our home,
we have come by another way, by other paths; so, I ween, Zeus was
pleased to devise. And we declare that we are the men of Agamemnon,
son of Atreus, whose fame is now mightiest under heaven, so great
a city did he sack, and slew many people; but we on our part, thus
visiting thee, have come as suppliants to thy knees, in the hope
that thou wilt give us entertainment, or in other wise make some
present, as is the due of strangers. Nay, mightiest one, reverence
the gods; we are thy suppliants; and Zeus is the avenger of suppliants
and strangers—Zeus, the strangers' god—who ever attends
upon reverend strangers.'
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| 272 |
"So
I spoke, and he straightway made answer with pitiless heart:
'A fool art thou, stranger, or art come from afar, seeing that thou
biddest me either to fear or to shun the gods. For the Cyclopes
reck not of Zeus, who bears the aegis, nor of the blessed gods,
since verily we are better far than they. Nor would I, to shun the
wrath of Zeus, spare either thee or thy comrades, unless my own
heart should bid me. But tell me where thou didst moor thy well-wrought
ship on thy coming. Was it haply at a remote part of the land, or
close by? I fain would know.'
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| 281 |
"So
he spoke, tempting me, but he trapped me not because of my great
cunning; and I made answer again in crafty words:
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| 283 |
" 'My ship
Poseidon, the earth-shaker, dashed to pieces, casting her upon the
rocks at the border of your land; for he brought her close to the
headland, and the wind drove her in from the sea. But I, with these
men here, escaped utter destruction.'
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| 287 |
"So
I spoke, but from his pitiless heart he made no answer, but sprang
up and put forth his hands upon my comrades. Two of them at once
he seized and dashed to the earth like puppies, and the brain flowed
forth upon the ground and wetted the earth. Then he cut them limb
from limb and made ready his supper, and ate them as a mountain-nurtured
lion, leaving naught—ate the entrails, and the flesh, and the marrowy
bones. And we with wailing held up our hands to Zeus, beholding
his cruel deeds; and helplessness possessed our souls. But when
the Cyclops had filled his huge maw by eating human flesh and thereafter
drinking pure milk, he lay down within the cave, stretched out among
the sheep.
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| 299 |
And
I formed a plan in my great heart to steal near him, and draw my
sharp sword from beside my thigh and smite him in the breast, where
the midriff holds the liver, feeling for the place with my hand.
But a second thought checked me, for right there should we, too,
have perished in utter ruin. For we should not have been able to
thrust back with our hands from the high door the mighty stone which
he had set there. So then, with wailing, we waited for the bright
Dawn.
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| 307 |
"As
soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, he rekindled the
fire and milked his goodly flocks all in turn, and beneath each
dam placed her young. Then, when he had busily performed his tasks,
again he seized two men at once and made ready his meal.
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| 312 |
And
when he had made his meal he drove his fat flocks forth from the
cave, easily moving away the great door-stone; and then he put it
in place again, as one might set the lid upon a quiver.
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| 315 |
Then
with loud whistling the Cyclops turned his fat flocks toward the
mountain, and I was left there, devising evil in the deep of my
heart, if in any way I might take vengeance on him, and Athene grant
me glory.
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| 318 |
"Now
this seemed to my mind the best plan. There lay beside a sheep-pen
a great club of the Cyclops, a staff of green olive-wood, which
he had cut to carry with him when dry; and as we looked at it we
thought it as large as is the mast of a black ship of twenty oars,
a merchantman, broad of beam, which crosses over the great gulf;
so huge it was in length and in breadth to look upon. To this I
came, and cut off therefrom about a fathom's length and handed it
to my comrades, bidding them dress it down; and they made it smooth,
and I, standing by, sharpened it at the point, and then straightway
took it and hardened it in the blazing fire. Then I laid it carefully
away, hiding it beneath the dung, which lay in great heaps throughout
the cave. And I bade my comrades cast lots among them, which of
them should have the hardihood with me to lift the stake and grind
it into his eye when sweet sleep should come upon him. And the lot
fell upon those whom I myself would fain have chosen; four they
were, and I was numbered with them as the fifth.
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| 336 |
At
even then he came, herding his flocks of goodly fleece, and straightway
drove into the wide cave his fat flocks one and all, and left not
one without in the deep court, either from some foreboding or because
a god so bade him. Then he lifted on high and set in place the great
door-stone, and sitting down he milked the ewes and bleating goats
all in turn, and beneath each dam he placed her young.
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| 343 |
But
when he had busily performed his tasks, again he seized two men
at once and made ready his supper. Then I drew near and spoke to
the Cyclops, holding in my hands an ivy bowl of the dark wine:
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| 347 |
" 'Cyclops,
take and drink wine after thy meal of human flesh, that thou mayest
know what manner of drink this is which our ship contained. It was
to thee that I was bringing it as a drink offering, in the hope
that, touched with pity, thou mightest send me on my way home; but
thou ragest in a way that is past all bearing. Cruel man, how shall
any one of all the multitudes of men ever come to thee again hereafter,
seeing that thou hast wrought lawlessness?'
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| 353 |
"So
I spoke, and he took the cup and drained it, and was wondrously
pleased as he drank the sweet draught, and asked me for it again
a second time:
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| 355 |
" 'Give
it me again with a ready heart, and tell me thy name straightway,
that I may give thee a stranger's gift whereat thou mayest be glad.
For among the Cyclopes the earth, the giver of grain, bears the
rich clusters of wine, and the rain of Zeus gives them increase;
but this is a streamlet of ambrosia and nectar.'
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| 360 |
"So
he spoke, and again I handed him the flaming wine. Thrice I brought
and gave it him, and thrice he drained it in his folly. But when
the wine had stolen about the wits of the Cyclops, then I spoke
to him with gentle words:
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| 364 |
"
'Cyclops, thou askest me of my glorious name, and I will tell it
thee; and do thou give me a stranger's gift, even as thou didst
promise. Noman is my name, Noman do they call me—my mother
and my father, and all my comrades as well.'
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| 368 |
"So
I spoke, and he straightway answered me with pitiless heart:
'Noman will I eat last among his comrades, and the others before
him; this shall be thy gift.'
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| 371 |
"He
spoke, and reeling fell upon his back, and lay there with his thick
neck bent aslant, and sleep, that conquers all, laid hold on him.
And from his gullet came forth wine and bits of human flesh, and
he vomited in his drunken sleep.
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| 375 |
Then
verily I thrust in the stake under the deep ashes until it should
grow hot, and heartened all my comrades with cheering words, that
I might see no man flinch through fear. But when presently that
stake of olive-wood was about to catch fire, green though it was,
and began to glow terribly, then verily I drew nigh, bringing the
stake from the fire, and my comrades stood round me and a god breathed
into us great courage. They took the stake of olive-wood, sharp
at the point, and thrust it into his eye, while I, throwing my weight
upon it from above, whirled it round, as when a man bores a ship's
timber with a drill, while those below keep it spinning with the
thong, which they lay hold of by either end, and the drill runs
around unceasingly. Even so we took the fiery-pointed stake and
whirled it around in his eye, and the blood flowed around the heated
thing. And his eyelids wholly and his brows round about did the
flame singe as the eyeball burned, and its roots crackled in the
fire. And as when a smith dips a great axe or an adze in cold water
amid loud hissing to temper it—for therefrom comes the strength
of iron—even so did his eye hiss round the stake of olive-wood.
Terribly then did he cry aloud and the rock rang around; and we,
seized with terror, shrank back, while |
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he wrenched from his eye the stake, all befouled with blood, and
flung it from him, wildly waving his arms. Then he called aloud
to the Cyclopes, who dwelt round about him in caves among the windy
heights, and they heard his cry and came thronging from every side,
and standing around the cave asked him what ailed him:
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| 403 |
" 'What
so sore distress is thine, Polyphemus, that thou criest out thus
through the immortal night, and makest us sleepless? Can it be that
some mortal man is driving off thy flocks against thy will, or slaying
thee thyself by guile or by might?'
|
| 407 |
"Then
from out the cave the mighty Polyphemus answered them:
'My friends, it is Noman that is slaying me by guile and not by
force.'
|
| 409 |
"And
they made answer and addressed him with winged words:
'If, then, no man does violence to thee in thy loneliness, sickness
which comes from great Zeus thou mayest in no wise escape. Nay,
do thou pray to our father, the lord Poseidon.'
|
| 413 |
"So
they spoke and went their way; and my heart laughed within me that
my name and cunning device had so beguiled. But the Cyclops, groaning
and travailing in anguish, groped with his hands and took away the
stone from the door, and himself sat in the doorway with arms outstretched
in the hope of catching anyone who sought to go forth with the sheep—so
witless, forsooth, he thought in his heart to find me.
|
| 420 |
But
I took counsel how all might be the very best, if I might haply
find some way of escape from death for my comrades and for myself.
And I wove all manner of wiles and counsel, as a man will in a matter
of life and death; for great was the evil that was nigh us. And
this seemed to my mind the best plan. Rams there were, well-fed
and thick of fleece, fine beasts and large, with wool dark as the
violet. These I silently bound together with twisted withes on which
the Cyclops, that monster with his heart set on lawlessness, was
wont to sleep. Three at a time I took. The one in the middle in
each case bore a man, and the other two went, one on either side,
saving my comrades.
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| 431 |
Thus
every three sheep bore a man. But as for me—there was a ram, far
the best of all the flock; him I grasped by the back, and curled
beneath his shaggy belly, lay there face upwards with steadfast
heart, clinging fast with my hands to his wondrous fleece. So then,
with wailing, we waited for the bright dawn.
|
| 437 |
"As
soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, then the males of
the flock hastened forth to pasture and the females bleated unmilked
about the pens, for their udders were bursting. And their master,
distressed with grievous pains, felt along the backs of all the
sheep as they stood up before him, but in his folly he marked not
this, that my men were bound beneath the breasts of his fleecy sheep.
Last of all the flock the ram went forth, burdened with the weight
of his fleece and my cunning self. And mighty Polyphemus, as he
felt along his back, spoke to him, saying:
|
| 447 |
" 'Good
ram, why pray is it that thou goest forth thus through the cave
the last of the flock? Thou hast not heretofore been wont to lag
behind the sheep, but wast ever far the first to feed on the tender
bloom of the grass, moving with long strides, and ever the first
didst reach the streams of the river, and the first didst long to
return to the fold at evening. But now thou art last of all. Surely
thou art sorrowing for the eye of thy master, which an evil man
blinded along with his miserable fellows, when he had overpowered
my wits with wine, even Noman, who, I tell thee, has not yet escaped
destruction. If only thou couldst feel as I do, and couldst get
thee power of speech to tell me where he skulks away from my wrath,
then should his brains be dashed on the ground here and there throughout
the cave, when I had smitten him, and my heart should be lightened
of the woes which good-for-naught Noman has brought me.'
|
| 461 |
"So
saying, he sent the ram forth from him. And when we had gone a little
way from the cave and the court, I first loosed myself from under
the ram and set my comrades free. Speedily then we drove off those
long-shanked sheep, rich with fat, turning full often to look about
until we came to the ship.
|
| 466 |
And
welcome to our dear comrades was the sight of us who had escaped
death, but for the others they wept and wailed; yet I would not
suffer them to weep, but with a frown forbade each man. Rather I
bade them to fling on board with speed the many sheep of goodly
fleece, and sail over the salt water. So they went on board straightway
and sat down upon the benches, and sitting well in order smote the
grey sea with their oars.
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| 473 |
But
when I was as far away as a man's voice carries when he shouts,
then I spoke to the Cyclops with mocking words:
|
| 475 |
" 'Cyclops,
that man, it seems, was no weakling, whose comrades thou wast minded
to devour by brutal strength in thy hollow cave. Full surely were
thy evil deeds to fall on thine own head, thou cruel wretch, who
didst not shrink from eating thy guests in thine own house. Therefore
has Zeus taken vengeance on thee, and the other gods.'
|
| 480 |
"So
I spoke, and he waxed the more wroth at heart, and broke off the
peak of a high mountain and hurled it at us, and cast it in front
of the dark-prowed ship. And the sea surged beneath the stone as
it fell, and the backward flow, like a flood from the deep, bore
the ship swiftly landwards and drove it upon the shore. But I seized
a long pole in my hands and shoved the ship off and along the shore,
and with a nod of my head I roused my comrades, and bade them fall
to their oars that we might escape out of our evil plight. And they
bent to their oars and rowed. But when, as we fared over the sea,
we were twice as far distant, then was I fain to call to the Cyclops,
though round about me my comrades, one after another, sought to
check me with gentle words:
|
| 494 |
" 'Reckless
one, why wilt thou provoke to wrath a savage man, who but now hurled
his missile into the deep and drove our ship back to the land, and
verily we thought that we had perished there? And had he heard one
of us uttering a sound or speaking, he would have hurled a jagged
rock and crushed our heads and the timbers of our ship, so mightily
does he throw.'
|
| 500 |
"So
they spoke, but they could not persuade my great-hearted spirit;
and I answered him again with angry heart:
|
| 502 |
" 'Cyclops,
if any one of mortal men shall ask thee about the shameful blinding
of thine eye, say that Odysseus, the sacker of cities, blinded it,
even the son of Laertes, whose home is in Ithaca.'
|
| 506 |
"So
I spoke, and he groaned and said in answer:
'Lo now, verily a prophecy uttered long ago is come upon me. There
lived here a soothsayer, a good man and tall, Telemus, son of Eurymus,
who excelled all men in soothsaying, and grew old as a seer among
the Cyclopes. He told me that all these things should be brought
to pass in days to come, that by the hands of Odysseus I should
lose my sight. But I ever looked for some tall and comely man to
come hither, clothed in great might, but now one that is puny, a
man of naught and a weakling, has blinded me of my eye when he had
overpowered me with wine. Yet come hither, Odysseus, that I may
set before thee gifts of entertainment, and may speed thy sending
hence, that the glorious Earth-shaker may grant it thee. For I am
his son and he declares himself my father; and he himself will heal
me, if it be his good pleasure, but none other either of the blessed
gods or of mortal men.'
|
| 522 |
"So
he spoke, and I answered him and said:
|
| 523 |
'Would that
I were able to rob thee of soul and life, and to send thee to the
house of Hades, as surely as not even the Earth-shaker shall heal
thine eye.'
|
| 526 |
"So
I spoke, and he then prayed to the lord Poseidon, stretching out
both his hands to the starry heaven:
|
| 528 |
'Hear
me, Poseidon, earth-enfolder, thou dark-haired god, if indeed I
am thy son and thou declarest thyself my father; grant that Odysseus,
the sacker of cities, may never reach his home, even the son of
Laertes, whose home is in Ithaca; but if it is his fate to see his
friends and to reach his well-built house and his native land, late
may he come and in evil case, after losing all his comrades, in
a ship that is another's; and may he find woes in his house.'
|
| 536 |
"So
he spoke in prayer, and the dark-haired god heard him. But the Cyclops
lifted on high again a far greater stone, and swung and hurled it,
putting into the throw measureless strength. He cast it a little
behind the dark-prowed ship, and barely missed the end of the steering-oar.
And the sea surged beneath the stone as it fell, and the wave bore
the ship onward and drove it to the shore.
|
| 543 |
"Now
when we had come to the island, where our other well-benched ships
lay all together, and round about them our comrades, ever expecting
us, sat weeping, then, on coming thither, we beached our ship on
the sands, and ourselves went forth upon the shore of the sea. Then
we took from out the hollow ship the flocks of the Cyclops, and
divided them, that so far as in me lay no man might go defrauded
of an equal share. But the ram my well-greaved comrades gave to
me alone, when the flocks were divided, as a gift apart; and on
the shore I sacrificed him to Zeus, son of Cronos, god of the dark
cloods, who is lord of all, and burned the thigh-pieces. Howbeit
he heeded not my sacrifice, but was planning how all my well-benched
ships might perish and my trusty comrades.
|
| 556 |
"So,
then, all day long till set of sun we sat feasting on abundant flesh
and sweet wine; but when the sun set and darkness came on, then
we lay down to rest on the shore of the sea.
|
| 560 |
And
as soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, I roused my comrades,
and bade them themselves to embark and to loose the stern cables.
So they went on board straightway and sat down upon the benches,
and sitting well in order smote the grey sea with their oars.
|
| 565 |
"Thence
we sailed on, grieved at heart, glad to have escaped death, though
we had lost our dear comrades.
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