| 1 |
Now
Dawn arose from her couch from beside lordly Tithonus, to bear light
to the immortals and to mortal men. And the gods were sitting down
to council, and among them Zeus, who thunders on high, whose might
is supreme. To them Athene was recounting the many woes of Odysseus,
as she called them to mind; for it troubled her that he abode in
the dwelling of the nymph:
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| 7 |
"Father
Zeus, and ye other blessed gods that are forever, never henceforward
let sceptred king with a ready heart be kind and gentle, nor let
him heed righteousness in his mind; but let him ever be harsh, and
work unrighteousness, seeing that no one remembers divine Odysseus
of the people whose lord he was; yet gentle was he as a father.
He verily abides in an island suffering grievous pains, in the halls
of the nymph Calypso, who keeps him perforce; and he cannot return
to his own land, for he has at hand no ships with oars and no comrades
to send him on his way over the broad back of the sea. And now again
they are minded to slay his well-loved son on his homeward way;
for he went in quest of tidings of his father to sacred Pylos and
to goodly Lacedaemon."
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21 |
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Then
Zeus, the cloud-gatherer, answered her, and said:
"My child, what a word has escaped the barrier of thy teeth!
Didst thou not thyself devise this plan, that verily Odysseus might
take vengeance on these men at his coming? But concerning Telemachus,
do thou guide him in thy wisdom, for thou canst, that all unscathed
he may reach his native land, and the wooers may come back in their
ship baffled in their purpose."
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| 28 |
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He
spoke, and said to Hermes, his dear son:
"Hermes, do thou now, seeing that thou art at other times our
messenger, declare to the fair-tressed nymph our fixed resolve,
even the return of Odysseus of the steadfast heart, that he may
return with guidance neither of gods nor of mortal men, but that
on a stoutly-bound raft, suffering woes, he may come on the twentieth
day to deep-soiled Scheria, the land of the Phaeacians, who are
near of kin to the gods. |
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These
shall heartily shew him all honour, as if he were a god, and shall
send him in a ship to his dear native land, after giving him stores
of bronze and gold and raiment, more than Odysseus would ever have
won for himself from Troy, if he had returned unscathed with his
due share of the spoil. For in this wise it is his fate to see his
friends, and reach his high-roofed house and his native land."
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| 43 |
So
he spoke, and the messenger, Argeïphontes, failed not to hearken.
Straightway he bound beneath his feet his beautiful sandals, immortal,
golden, which were wont to bear him over the waters of the sea and
over the boundless land swift as the blasts of the wind. And he
took the wand wherewith he lulls to sleep the eyes of whom he will,
while others again he awakens even out of slumber. With this in
his hand the strong Argeïphontes flew. On to Pieria he stepped
from the upper air, and swooped down upon the sea, and then sped
over the wave like a bird, the cormorant, which in quest of fish
over the dread gulfs of the unresting sea wets its thick plumage
in the brine. In such wise did Hermes ride upon the multitudinous
waves.
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| 55 |
But
when he had reached the island which lay afar, then forth from the
violet sea he came to land, and went his way until he came to a
great cave, wherein dwelt the fair-tressed nymph; and he found her
within. A great fire was burning on the hearth, and from afar over
the isle there was a fragrance of cleft cedar and juniper, as they
burned; but she within was singing with a sweet voice as she went
to and fro before the loom, weaving with a goldell shuttle. Round
about the cave grew a luxuriant wood, alder and poplar and sweet-smelling
cypress, wherein birds long of wing were wont to nest, owls and
falcons and sea-crows with chattering tongues, who ply their business
on the sea.
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| 68 |
And
right there about the hollow cave ran trailing a garden vine, in
pride of its prime, richly laden with clusters. And fountains four
in a row were flowing with bright water hard by one another, turned
one this way, one that. And round about soft meadows of violets
and parsley were blooming. There even an immortal, who chanced to
come, might gaze and marvel, and delight his soul;
and there
the messenger Argeïphontes stood and marvelled. But when he
had marvelled in his heart at all things, straightway he went into
the wide cave nor did Calypso, the beautiful goddess, fail to know
him, when she saw him face to face; for not unknown are the immortal
gods to one another, even though one dwells in a home far away.
But the great-hearted Odysseus he found not within; for he sat weeping
on the shore, as his wont had been, racking his soul with tears
and groans and griefs, and he would look over the unresting sea,
shedding tears. And Calypso, the beautiful goddess, questioned Hermes,
when she had made him sit on a bright shining chair:
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| 87 |
"Why,
pray, Hermes of the golden wand, hast thou come, an honourable guest
and welcome? Heretofore thou hast not been wont to come. Speak what
is in thy mind; my heart bids me fulfil it, if fulfil it I can,
and it is a thing that hath fulfilment. But follow me further, that
I may set before thee entertainment."
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| 92 |
So
saying, the goddess set before him a table laden with ambrosia,
and mixed the ruddy nectar. So he drank and ate, the messenger Argeïphontes.
But when he had dined and satisfied his soul with food, then he
made answer, and addressed her, saying:
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| 97 |
"Thou,
a goddess, dost question me, a god, upon my coming, and I will speak
my word truly, since thou biddest me. It was Zeus who bade me come
hither against my will. Who of his own will would speed over so
great space of salt sea-water, great past telling? Nor is there
at hand any city of mortals who offer to the gods sacrifice and
choice hecatombs. But it is in no wise possible for any other god
to evade or make void the will of Zeus, who bears the aegis. He
says that there is here with thee a man most wretched above all
those warriors who around the city of Priam fought for nine years,
and in the tenth year sacked the city and departed homeward. But
on the way they sinned against Athene, and she sent upon them an
evil wind and long waves. There all the rest of his goodly comrades
perished, but as for him, the wind and the wave, as they bore him,
brought him hither. Him now Zeus bids thee to send on his way with
all speed, for it is not his fate to perish here far from his friends,
but it is still his lot to see his friends and reach his high-roofed
house and his native land."
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| 116 |
So
he spoke, and Calypso, the beautiful goddess, shuddered, and she
spoke, and addressed him with winged words:
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| 118 |
"Cruel
are ye, O ye gods, and quick to envy above all others, seeing that
ye begrudge goddesses that they should mate with men openly, if
any takes a mortal as her dear bed-fellow. Thus, when rosy-fingered
Dawn took to herself Orion, ye gods that live at ease begrudged
her, till in Ortygia chaste Artemis of the golden throne assailed
him with her gentle shafts and slew him. Thus too, when fair-tressed
Demeter, yielding to her passion, lay in love with Iasion in the
thrice-ploughed fallow land, Zeus was not long without knowledge
thereof, but smote him with his bright thunder-bolt and slew him.
And even so again do ye now begrudge me, O ye gods, that a mortal
man should abide with me. Him I saved when he was bestriding the
keel and all alone, for Zeus had smitten his swift ship with his
bright thunder-bolt, and had shattered it in the midst of the wine-dark
sea. There all the rest of his goodly comrades perished, but as
for him, the wind and the wave, as they bore him, brought him hither.
Him I welcomed kindly and gave him food, and said that I would make
him immortal and ageless all his days. But since it is in no wise
possible for any other god to evade or make void the will of Zeus
who bears the aegis, let him go his way, if Zeus thus orders and
commands, over the unresting sea. But it is not I that shall give
him convoy, for I have at band no ships with oars and no men to
send him on his way over the broad back of the sea. But with a ready
heart will I give him counsel, and will hide naught, that all unscathed
he may return to his native land."
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| 145 |
Then
again the messenger Argeïphontes answered her:
"Even so send him forth now, and beware of the wrath of Zeus,
lest haply he wax wroth and visit his anger upon thee hereafter."
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| 148 |
So
saying, the strong Argeïphontes departed, and the queenly nymph
went to the great-hearted Odysseus, when she had heard the message
of Zeus. Him she found sitting on the shore, and his eyes were never
dry of tears, and his sweet life was ebbing away, as he longed mournfully
for his return, for the nymph was no longer pleasing in his sight.
By night indeed he would sleep by her side perforce in the hollow
caves, unwilling beside the willing nymph, but by day he would sit
on the rocks and the sands, racking his soul with tears and groans
and griefs, and he would look over the unresting sea, shedding tears.
Then coming close to him, the beautiful goddess addressed him:
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| 160 |
"Unhappy
man, sorrow no longer here, I pray thee, nor let thy life pine away;
for even now with a ready heart will I send thee on thy way. Nay,
come, hew with the axe long beams, and make a broad raft, and fasten
upon it cross-planks for a deck well above it, that it may bear
thee over the misty deep. And I will place therein bread and water
and red wine to satisfy thy heart, to keep hunger from thee. And
I will clothe thee with raiment, and will send a fair wind behind
thee, that all unscathed thou mayest return to thy native land,
if it be the will of the gods who hold broad heaven; for they are
mightier than I both to purpose and to fulfil."
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| 171 |
So
she spoke, and much-enduring goodly Odysseus shuddered, and he spoke,
and addressed her with winged words:
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| 173 |
"Some
other thing, goddess, art thou planning in this, and not my sending,
seeing that thou biddest me cross on a raft the great gulf of the
sea, dread and grievous, over which not even the shapely, swift-faring
ships pass, rejoicing in the wind of Zeus. But I will not set foot
on a raft in thy despite, unless thou, goddess, wilt bring thyself
to swear a mighty oath that thou wilt not plot against me any fresh
mischief to my hurt."
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| 180 |
So
he spoke, but Calypso, the beautiful goddess, smiled, and stroked
him with her hand, and spoke, and addressed him:
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| 182 |
"Verily
thou art a knave, and not stunted in wit, that thou hast bethought
thee to utter such a word. Now therefore let earth be witness to
this, and the broad heaven above, and the down-flowing water of
the Styx, which is the greatest and most dread oath for the blessed
gods, that I will not plot against thee any fresh mischief to thy
hurt. Nay, I have such thoughts in mind, and will give such counsel,
as I should devise for mine own self; if such need should come on
me. For I too have a mind that is righteous, and the heart in this
breast of mine is not of iron, But hath compassion."
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| 192 |
So
saying, the beautiful goddess led the way quickly, and he followed
in the footsteps of the goddess. And they came to the hollow cave,
the goddess and the man, and he sat down upon the chair from which
Hermes had arisen, and the nymph set before him all manner of food
to eat and drink, of such sort as mortal men eat. But she herself
sat over against divine Odysseus, and before her the handmaids set
ambrosia and nectar. So they put forth their hands to the good cheer
lying ready before them. But when they had had their fill of food
and drink, Calypso, the beautiful goddess, was the first to speak,
and said:
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| 203 |
"Son
of Laertes, sprung from Zeus, Odysseus of many devices, would'st
thou then fare now forthwith home to thy dear native land! Yet,
even so fare thee well. Howbeit if in thy heart thou knewest all
the measure of woe it is thy fate to fulfil before thou comest to
thy native land thou wouldest abide here and keep this house with
me, and wouldest be immortal, for all thy desire to see thy wife
for whom thou longest day by day. Surely not inferior to her do
I declare myself to be either in form or stature, for in no wise
is it seemly that mortal women should vie with immortals in form
or comeliness."
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| 214 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
"Mighty goddess, be not wroth with me for this. I know full
well of myself that wise Penelope is meaner to look upon than thou
in comeliness and in stature, for she is a mortal, while thou art
immortal and ageless. But even so I wish and long day by day to
reach my home, and to see the day of my return. And if again some
god shall smite me on the wine-dark sea, I will endure it, having
in my breast a heart that endures affliction. For ere this I have
suffered much and toiled much amid the waves and in war; let this
also be added unto that."
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| 225 |
So
he spoke, and the sun set and darkness came on. And the two went
into the innermost recess of the hollow cave, and took their joy
of love, abiding each by the other's side.
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| 228 |
As
soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, straightway Odysseus
put on a cloak and a tunic, and the nymph clothed herself in a long
white robe, finely woven and beautiful, and about her waist she
cast a fair girdle of gold, and on her head a veil above. Then she
set herself to plan the sending of the great-hearted Odysseus. She
gave him a great axe, well fitted to his hands, an axe of bronze,
sharpened on both sides; and in it was a beautiful handle of olive
wood, securely fastened; and thereafter she gave him a polished
adze. Then she led the way to the borders of the island where tall
trees were standing, alder and poplar and fir, reaching to the skies,
long dry and well-seasoned, which would float for him lightly. But
when she had shewn him where the tall trees grew, Calypso, the beautiful
goddess, returned homewards, but he fell to cutting timbers, and
his work went forward apace. Twenty trees in all did he fell, and
trimmed them with the axe; then he cunningly smoothed them all and
made them straight to the line. Meanwhile, Calypso, the beautiful
goddess, brought him augers; and he bored all the pieces and fitted
them to one another, and with pegs and morticings did he hammer
it together. Wide as a man well-skilled in carpentry marks out the
curve of the hull of a freight-ship, broad of beam, even so wide
did Odysseus make his raft. And he set up the deck-beams, bolting
them to the close set ribs, and laboured on; and he finished the
raft with long gunwales. In it he set a mast and a yard-arm, fitted
to it, and furthermore made him a steering-oar, wherewith to steer.
Then he fenced in the whole from stem to stern with willow withes
to be a defence against the wave, and strewed much brush thereon.
Meanwhile Calypso, the beautiful goddess, brought him cloth to make
him a sail, and he fashioned that too with skill. And he made fast
in the raft braces and halyards and sheets, and then with levers
forced it down into the bright sea.
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| 262 |
Now
the fourth day came and all his work was done. And on the fifth
the beautiful Calypso sent him on his way from the island after
she had bathed him and clothed him in fragrant raiment. On the raft
the goddess put a skin of dark wine, and another, a great one, of
water, and provisions, too, in a wallet. Therein she put abundance
of dainties to satisfy his heart, and she sent forth a gentle wind
and warm.
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| 269 |
Gladly
then did goodly Odysseus spread his sail to the breeze; and he sat
and guided his raft skilfully with the steering-oar, nor did sleep
fall upon his eyelids, as he watched the Pleiads, and late-setting
Bootes, and the Bear, which men also call the Wain, which ever circles
where it is and watches Orion, and alone has no part in the baths
of Ocean. For this star Calypso, the beautiful goddess, had bidden
him to keep on the left hand as he sailed over the sea. For seventeen
days then he sailed over the sea, and on the eighteenth appeared
the shadowy mountains of the land of the Phaeacians, where it lay
nearest to him; and it shewed like unto a shield in the misty deep.
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| 282 |
But
the glorious Earth-shaker, as he came back from the Ethiopians,
beheld him from afar, from the mountains of the Solymi: for Odysseus
was seen of him sailing over the sea; and he waxed the more wroth
in spirit, and shook his head, and thus he spoke to his own heart:
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| 286 |
"Out
on it! Surely the gods have changed their purpose regarding Odysseus,
while I was among the Ethiopians. And lo, he is near to the land
of the Phaeacians, where it is his fate to escape from the great
bonds of the woe which has come upon him. Aye, but even yet, methinks,
I shall drive him to surfeit of evil."
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| 291 |
So
saying, he gathered the clouds, and seizing his trident in his hands
troubled the sea, and roused all blasts of all manner of winds,
and hid with clouds land and sea alike; and night rushed down from
heaven. Together the East Wind and the South Wind dashed, and the
fierce-blowing West Wind and the North Wind, born in the bright
heaven, rolling before him a mighty wave. Then were the knees of
Odysseus loosened and his heart melted, and deeply moved he spoke
to his own mighty spirit:
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| 299 |
"Ah
me, wretched that I am! What is to befall me at the last? I fear
me that verily all that the goddess said was true,when she declared
that on the sea, before ever I came to my native land, I should
fill up my measure of woes; and lo, all this now is being brought
to pass. In such wise does Zeus overcast the broad heaven with clouds,
and has stirred up the sea, and the blasts of all manner of winds
sweep upon me; now is my utter destruction sure. Thrice blessed
those Danaans, aye, four times blessed, who of old perished in the
wide land of Troy, doing the pleasure of the sons of Atreus. Even
so would that I had died and met my fate on that day when the throngs
of the Trojans hurled upon me bronze-tipped spears, fighting around
the body of the dead son of Peleus. Then should I have got funeral
rites, and the Achaeans would have spread my fame, but now by a
miserable death was it appointed me to be cut off."
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| 313 |
Even
as thus he spoke the great wave smote him from on high, rushing
upon him with terrible might, and around it whirled his raft. Far
from the raft he fell, and let fall the steering-oar from his hand;
but his mast was broken in the midst by the fierce blast of tumultuous
winds that came upon it, and far in the sea sail and yardarm fell.
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| 319 |
As
for him, long time did the wave hold him in the depths, nor could
he rise at once from beneath the onrush of the mighty wave, for
the garments which beautiful Calypso had given him weighed him down.
At length, however, he came up, and spat forth from his mouth the
bitter brine which flowed in streams from his head. Yet even so
he did not forget his raft, in evil case though he was, but sprang
after it amid the waves, and laid hold of it, and sat down in the
midst of it, seeking to escape the doom of death; and a great wave
ever bore the raft this way and that along its course.
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| 328 |
As
when in autumn the North Wind bears the thistle-tufts over the plain,
and close they cling to one another, so did the winds bear the raft
this way and that over the sea. Now the South Wind would fling it
to the North Wind to be driven on, and now again the East Wind would
yield it to the West Wind to drive.
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| 333 |
But
the daughter of Cadmus, Ino of the fair ankles, saw him, even Leucothea,
who of old was a mortal of human speech, but now in the deeps of
the sea has won a share of honour from the gods. She was touched
with pity for Odysseus, as he wandered and was in sore travail,
and she rose up from the deep like a sea-mew on the wing, and sat
on the stoutly-bound raft, and spoke, saying:
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| 339 |
"Unhappy
man, how is it that Poseidon, the earth-shaker, has conceived such
furious wrath against thee, that he is sowing for thee the seeds
of many evils? Yet verily he shall not utterly destroy thee for
all his rage. Nay, do thou thus; and methinks thou dost not lack
understanding. Strip off these garments, and leave thy raft to be
driven by the winds, but do thou swim with thy hands and so strive
to reach the land of the Phaeacians, where it is thy fate to escape.
Come, take this veil, and stretch it beneath thy breast. It is immortal;
there is no fear that thou shalt suffer aught or perish. But when
with thy hands thou hast laid hold of the land, loose it from thee,
and cast it into the wine-dark sea far from the land, and thyself
turn away."
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| 351 |
So
saying, the goddess gave him the veil, and herself plunged again
into the surging deep, like a sea-mew; and the dark wave hid her.
Then the much-enduring, goodly Odysseus pondered, and deeply moved
he spoke to his own mighty spirit:
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| 356 |
"Woe
is me! Let it not be that some one of the immortals is again weaving
a snare for me, that she bids me leave my raft. Nay, but verily
I will not yet obey, for afar off mine eyes beheld the land, where
she said I was to escape. But this will I do, and meseems that this
is best: as long as the timbers hold firm in their fastenings, so
long will I remain here and endure to suffer affliction; but when
the wave shall have shattered the raft to pieces, I will swim, seeing
that there is naught better to devise."
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| 365 |
While
he pondered thus in mind and heart, Poseidon, the earth-shaker,
made to rise up a great wave, dread and grievous, arching over from
above, and drove it upon him. And as when a strong wind tosses a
heap of straw that is dry, and some it scatters here, some there,
even so the wave scattered the long timbers of the raft. But Odysseus
bestrode one plank, as though he were riding a horse, and stripped
off the garments which beautiful Calypso had given him. Then straightway
he stretched the veil beneath his breast, and flung himself headlong
into the sea with hands outstretched, ready to swim. And the lord,
the earth-shaker, saw him, and he shook his head, and thus be spoke
to his own heart:
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| 377 |
"So
now, after thou hast suffered many ills, go wandering over the deep,
till thou comest among the folk fostered of Zeus. Yet even so, methinks,
thou shalt not make any mock at thy suffering."
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| 380 |
So
saying, he lashed his fair-maned horses, and came to Aegae, where
is his glorious palace.
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| 382 |
But
Athene, daughter of Zeus, took other counsel. She stayed the paths
of the other winds, and bade them all cease and be lulled to rest;
but she roused the swift North Wind, and broke the waves before
him, to the end that Zeus-born Odysseus might come among the Phaeacians,
lovers of the oar, escaping from death and the fates.
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| 388 |
Then
for two nights and two days he was driven about over the swollen
waves, and full often his heart forboded destruction. But when fair-tressed
Dawn brought to its birth the third day, then the wind ceased and
there was a windless calm, and he caught sight of the shore close
at hand, casting a quick glance forward, as he was raised up by
a great wave. And even as when most welcome to his children appears
the life of a father who lies in sickness, bearing grievous pains,
long while wasting away, and some cruel god assails him, but then
to their joy the gods free him from his woe, so to Odysseus did
the land and the wood seem welcome; and he swam on, eager to set
foot on the land. But when he was as far away as a man's voice carries
when he shouts, and heard the boom of the sea upon the reefs—for
the great wave thundered against the dry land, belching upon it
in terrible fashion, and all things were wrapped in the foam of
the sea; for there were neither harbours where ships might ride,
nor roadsteads, but projecting headlands, and reefs, and cliffs
—then the knees of Odysseus were loosened and his heart melted,
and deeply moved he spoke to his own mighty spirit:
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| 408 |
"Ah
me, when Zeus has at length granted me to see the land beyond my
hopes, and lo, I have prevailed to cleave my way and to cross this
gulf, nowhere doth there appear a way to come forth from the grey
sea. For without are sharp crags, and around them the wave roars
foaming, and the rock rulls up sheer, and the water is deep close
in shore, so that in no wise is it possible to plant both feet firmly
and escape ruin. Haply were I to seek to land, a great wave may
seize me and dash me against the jagged rock, and so shall my striving
be in vain. But if I swim on yet further in hope to find shelving
beaches and harbours of the sea, I fear me lest the storm-wind may
catch me up again, and bear me, groaning heavily, over the teeming
deep; or lest some god may even send forth upon me some great monster
from out the sea—and many such does glorious Amphitrite breed.
For I know that the glorious Earth-shaker is filled with wrath against
me."
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| 424 |
While
he pondered thus in mind and heart, a great wave bore him against
the rugged shore. There would his skin have been stripped off and
his bones broken, had not the goddess, flashing-eyed Athene, put
a thought in his mind. On he rushed and seized the rock with both
hands, and clung to it, groaning, until the great wave went by.
Thus then did he escape this wave, but in its backward flow it once
more rushed upon him and smote him, and flung him far out in the
sea. And just as, when a cuttlefish is dragged from its hole, many
pebbles cling to its suckers, even so from his strong hands were
bits of skin stripped off against the rocks; and the great wave
covered him. Then verily would hapless Odysseus have perished beyond
his fate, had not flashing-eyed Athene given him prudence. Making
his way forth from the surge where it belched upon the shore, he
swam outside, looking ever toward the land in hope to find shelving
beaches and harbours of the sea. But when, as he swam, he came to
the mouth of a fair-flowing river, where seemed to him the best
place, since it was smooth of stones, and besides there was shelter
from the wind, he knew the river as he flowed forth, and prayed
to him in his heart:
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| 445 |
"Hear
me, O king, whosoever thou art. As to one greatIy longed-for do
I come to thee, seeking to escape from out the sea from the threats
of Poseidon. Reverend even in the eyes of the immortal gods is that
man who comes as a wanderer, even as I have now come to thy stream
and to thy knees, after many toils. Nay, pity me, O king, for I
declare that I am thy suppliant."
|
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| 451 |
So
he spoke, and the god straightway stayed his stream, and checked
the waves, and made a calm before him, and brought him safely to
the mouth of the river. And he let his two knees bend and his strong
hands fall, for his spirit was crushed by the sea. And all his flesh
was swollen, and sea water flowed in streams up through his mouth
and nostrils. So he lay breathless and speechless, with scarce strength
to move; for terrible weariness had come upon him.
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| 458 |
But
when he revived, and his spirit returned again into his breast,
then he loosed from him the veil of the goddess and let it fall
into the river that murmured seaward; and the great wave bore it
back down the stream, and straightway Ino received it in her hands.
But Odysseus, going back from the river, sank down in the reeds
and kissed the earth, the giver of grain; and deeply moved he spoke
to his own mighty spirit:
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| 465 |
"Ah,
woe is me! what is to befall me? What will happen to me at the last?
If here in the river bed I keep watch throughout the weary night,
I fear that together the bitter frost and the fresh dew may overcome
me, when from feebleness I have breathed forth my spirit; and the
breeze from the river blows cold in the early morning. But if I
climb up the slope to the shady wood and lie down to rest in the
thick brushwood, in the hope that the cold and weariness might leave
me, and if sweet sleep comes over me, I fear me lest I become a
prey and spoil to wild beasts."
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| 474 |
Then, as he
pondered, this thing seemed to him the better: he went his way to
the wood and found it near the water in a clear space; and he crept
beneath two bushes that grew from the same spot, one of thorn and
one of olive. Through these the strength of the wet winds could
never blow, nor the rays of the bright sun beat, nor could the rain
pierce through them, so closely did they grow, intertwining one
with the other. Beneath these Odysseus crept and straightway gathered
with his hands a broad bed, for fallen leaves were there in plenty,
enough to shelter two men or three in winter time, however bitter
the weather. And the much-enduring goodly Odysseus saw it, and was
glad, and he lay down in the midst, and heaped over him the fallen
leaves.
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| 488 |
And
as a man hides a brand beneath the dark embers in an outlying farm,
a man who has no neighbours, and so saves a seed of fire, that he
may not have to kindle it from some other source, so Odysseus covered
himself with leaves. And Athene shed sleep upon his eyes, that it
might enfold his lids and speedily free him from toilsome weariness.
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