Complete Works of Homer

Home > Fantasy > Complete Works of Homer > Page 390
Complete Works of Homer Page 390

by Homer


  With open mouths the furious mastiffs flew:

  Down sat the sage, and cautious to withstand,

  Let fall the offensive truncheon from his hand.

  Sudden, the master runs; aloud he calls;

  And from his hasty hand the leather falls:

  With showers of stones he drives then far away:

  The scattering dogs around at distance bay.

  "Unhappy stranger! (thus the faithful swain

  Began with accent gracious and humane),

  What sorrow had been mine, if at my gate

  Thy reverend age had met a shameful fate!

  Enough of woes already have I known;

  Enough my master's sorrows and my own.

  While here (ungrateful task!) his herds I feed,

  Ordain'd for lawless rioters to bleed!

  Perhaps, supported at another's board!

  Far from his country roams my hapless lord;

  Or sigh'd in exile forth his latest breath,

  Now cover'd with the eternal shade of death!

  "But enter this my homely roof, and see

  Our woods not void of hospitality.

  Then tell me whence thou art, and what the share

  Of woes and wanderings thou wert born to bear."

  He said, and, seconding the kind request,

  With friendly step precedes his unknown guest.

  A shaggy goat's soft hide beneath him spread,

  And with fresh rushes heap'd an ample bed;

  Jove touch'd the hero's tender soul, to find

  So just reception from a heart so kind:

  And "Oh, ye gods! with all your blessings grace

  (He thus broke forth) this friend of human race!"

  The swain replied: "It never was our guise

  To slight the poor, or aught humane despise:

  For Jove unfold our hospitable door,

  'Tis Jove that sends the stranger and the poor,

  Little, alas! is all the good I can

  A man oppress'd, dependent, yet a man:

  Accept such treatment as a swain affords,

  Slave to the insolence of youthful lords!

  Far hence is by unequal gods removed

  That man of bounties, loving and beloved!

  To whom whate'er his slave enjoys is owed,

  And more, had Fate allow'd, had been bestow'd:

  But Fate condemn'd him to a foreign shore;

  Much have I sorrow'd, but my Master more.

  Now cold he lies, to death's embrace resign'd:

  Ah, perish Helen! perish all her kind!

  For whose cursed cause, in Agamemnon's name,

  He trod so fatally the paths of fame."

  His vest succinct then girding round his waist,

  Forth rush'd the swain with hospitable haste.

  Straight to the lodgments of his herd he run,

  Where the fat porkers slept beneath the sun;

  Of two, his cutlass launch'd the spouting blood;

  These quarter'd, singed, and fix'd on forks of wood,

  All hasty on the hissing coals he threw;

  And smoking, back the tasteful viands drew.

  Broachers and all then an the board display'd

  The ready meal, before Ulysses laid

  With flour imbrown'd; next mingled wine yet new,

  And luscious as the bees' nectareous dew:

  Then sate, companion of the friendly feast,

  With open look; and thus bespoke his guest:

  "Take with free welcome what our hands prepare,

  Such food as falls to simple servants' share;

  The best our lords consume; those thoughtless peers,

  Rich without bounty, guilty without fears;

  Yet sure the gods their impious acts detest,

  And honour justice and the righteous breast.

  Pirates and conquerors of harden'd mind,

  The foes of peace, and scourges of mankind,

  To whom offending men are made a prey

  When Jove in vengeance gives a land away;

  E'en these, when of their ill-got spoils possess'd,

  Find sure tormentors in the guilty breast:

  Some voice of God close whispering from within,

  'Wretch! this is villainy, and this is sin.'

  But these, no doubt, some oracle explore,

  That tells, the great Ulysses is no more.

  Hence springs their confidence, and from our sighs

  Their rapine strengthens, and their riots rise:

  Constant as Jove the night and day bestows,

  Bleeds a whole hecatomb, a vintage flows.

  None match'd this hero's wealth, of all who reign

  O'er the fair islands of the neighbouring main.

  Nor all the monarchs whose far-dreaded sway

  The wide-extended continents obey:

  First, on the main land, of Ulysses' breed

  Twelve herds, twelve flocks, on ocean's margin feed;

  As many stalls for shaggy goats are rear'd;

  As many lodgments for the tusky herd;

  Two foreign keepers guard: and here are seen

  Twelve herds of goats that graze our utmost green;

  To native pastors is their charge assign'd,

  And mine the care to feed the bristly kind;

  Each day the fattest bleeds of either herd,

  All to the suitors' wasteful board preferr'd."

  Thus he, benevolent: his unknown guest

  With hunger keen devours the savoury feast;

  While schemes of vengeance ripen in his breast.

  Silent and thoughtful while the board he eyed,

  Eumaeus pours on high the purple tide;

  The king with smiling looks his joy express'd,

  And thus the kind inviting host address'd:

  "Say now, what man is he, the man deplored,

  So rich, so potent, whom you style your lord?

  Late with such affluence and possessions bless'd,

  And now in honour's glorious bed at rest.

  Whoever was the warrior, he must be

  To fame no stranger, nor perhaps to me:

  Who (so the gods and so the Fates ordain'd)

  Have wander'd many a sea, and many a land."

  "Small is the faith the prince and queen ascribe

  (Replied Eumaeus) to the wandering tribe.

  For needy strangers still to flattery fly,

  And want too oft betrays the tongue to lie.

  Each vagrant traveller, that touches here,

  Deludes with fallacies the royal ear,

  To dear remembrance makes his image rise,

  And calls the springing sorrows from her eyes.

  Such thou mayst be. But he whose name you crave

  Moulders in earth, or welters on the wave,

  Or food for fish or dogs his relics lie,

  Or torn by birds are scatter'd through the sky.

  So perish'd he: and left (for ever lost)

  Much woe to all, but sure to me the most.

  So mild a master never shall I find;

  Less dear the parents whom I left behind,

  Less soft my mother, less my father kind.

  Not with such transport would my eyes run o'er,

  Again to hail them in their native shore,

  As loved Ulysses once more to embrace,

  Restored and breathing in his natal place.

  That name for ever dread, yet ever dear,

  E'en in his absence I pronounce with fear:

  In my respect, he bears a prince's part;

  But lives a very brother in my heart."

  Thus spoke the faithful swain, and thus rejoin'd

  The master of his grief, the man of patient mind:

  "Ulysses, friend! shall view his old abodes

  (Distrustful as thou art), nor doubt the gods.

  Nor speak I rashly, but with faith averr'd,

  And what I speak attesting Heaven has heard.


  If so, a cloak and vesture be my meed:

  Till his return no title shall I plead,

  Though certain be my news, and great my need.

  Whom want itself can force untruths to tell,

  My soul detests him as the gates of hell.

  "Thou first be witness, hospitable Jove!

  And every god inspiring social love!

  And witness every household power that waits,

  Guard of these fires, and angel of these gates!

  Ere the next moon increase or this decay,

  His ancient realms Ulysses shall survey,

  In blood and dust each proud oppressor mourn,

  And the lost glories of his house return."

  "Nor shall that meed be thine, nor ever more

  Shall loved Ulysses hail this happy shore.

  (Replied Eumaeus): to the present hour

  Now turn thy thought, and joys within our power.

  From sad reflection let my soul repose;

  The name of him awakes a thousand woes.

  But guard him, gods! and to these arms restore!

  Not his true consort can desire him more;

  Not old Laertes, broken with despair:

  Not young Telemachus, his blooming heir.

  Alas, Telemachus! my sorrows flow

  Afresh for thee, my second cause of woe!

  Like some fair plant set by a heavenly hand,

  He grew, he flourish'd, and he bless'd the land;

  In all the youth his father's image shined,

  Bright in his person, brighter in his mind.

  What man, or god, deceived his better sense,

  Far on the swelling seas to wander hence?

  To distant Pylos hapless is he gone,

  To seek his father's fate and find his own!

  For traitors wait his way, with dire design

  To end at once the great Arcesian line.

  But let us leave him to their wills above;

  The fates of men are in the hand of Jove.

  And now, my venerable guest! declare

  Your name, your parents, and your native air:

  Sincere from whence begun, your course relate,

  And to what ship I owe the friendly freight?"

  Thus he: and thus (with prompt invention bold)

  The cautious chief his ready story told.

  "On dark reserve what better can prevail,

  Or from the fluent tongue produce the tale,

  Than when two friends, alone, in peaceful place

  Confer, and wines and cates the table grace;

  But most, the kind inviter's cheerful face?

  Thus might we sit, with social goblets crown'd,

  Till the whole circle of the year goes round:

  Not the whole circle of the year would close

  My long narration of a life of woes.

  But such was Heaven's high will! Know then, I came

  From sacred Crete, and from a sire of fame:

  Castor Hylacides (that name he bore),

  Beloved and honour'd in his native shore;

  Bless'd in his riches, in his children more.

  Sprung of a handmaid, from a bought embrace,

  I shared his kindness with his lawful race:

  But when that fate, which all must undergo,

  From earth removed him to the shades below,

  The large domain his greedy sons divide,

  And each was portion'd as the lots decide.

  Little, alas! was left my wretched share,

  Except a house, a covert from the air:

  But what by niggard fortune was denied,

  A willing widow's copious wealth supplied.

  My valour was my plea, a gallant mind,

  That, true to honour, never lagg'd behind

  (The sex is ever to a soldier kind).

  Now wasting years my former strength confound,

  And added woes have bow'd me to the ground;

  Yet by the stubble you may guess the grain,

  And mark the ruins of no vulgar man.

  Me, Pallas gave to lead the martial storm,

  And the fair ranks of battle to deform;

  Me, Mars inspired to turn the foe to flight,

  And tempt the secret ambush of the night.

  Let ghastly Death in all his forms appear,

  I saw him not, it was not mine to fear.

  Before the rest I raised my ready steel,

  The first I met, he yielded, or he fell.

  But works of peace my soul disdain'd to bear,

  The rural labour, or domestic care.

  To raise the mast, the missile dart to wing,

  And send swift arrows from the bounding string,

  Were arts the gods made grateful to my mind;

  Those gods, who turn (to various ends design'd)

  The various thoughts and talents of mankind.

  Before the Grecians touch'd the Trojan plain,

  Nine times commander or by land or main,

  In foreign fields I spread my glory far,

  Great in the praise, rich in the spoils of war;

  Thence charged with riches, as increased in fame,

  To Crete return'd, an honourable name.

  But when great Jove that direful war decreed,

  Which roused all Greece, and made the mighty bleed;

  Our states myself and Idomen employ

  To lead their fleets, and carry death to Troy.

  Nine years we warr'd; the tenth saw Ilion fall;

  Homeward we sail'd, but heaven dispersed us all.

  One only month my wife enjoy'd my stay;

  So will'd the god who gives and takes away.

  Nine ships I mann'd, equipp'd with ready stores,

  Intent to voyage to the Aegyptian shores;

  In feast and sacrifice my chosen train

  Six days consum'd; the seventh we plough'd the main.

  Crete's ample fields diminish to our eye;

  Before the Boreal blast the vessels fly;

  Safe through the level seas we sweep our way;

  The steersman governs, and the ships obey.

  The fifth fair morn we stem the Aegyptian tide,

  And tilting o'er the bay the vessels ride:

  To anchor there my fellows I command,

  And spies commission to explore the land.

  But, sway'd by lust of gain, and headlong will,

  The coasts they ravage, and the natives kill.

  The spreading clamour to their city flies,

  And horse and foot in mingled tumult rise.

  The reddening dawn reveals the circling fields,

  Horrid with bristly spears, and glancing shields.

  Jove thunder'd on their side. Our guilty head

  We turn'd to flight; the gathering vengeance spread

  On all parts round, and heaps on heaps lie dead.

  I then explored my thought, what course to prove

  (And sure the thought was dictated by Jove):

  Oh, had he left me to that happier doom,

  And saved a life of miseries to come!

  The radiant helmet from my brows unlaced,

  And low on earth my shield and javelin cast,

  I meet the monarch with a suppliant's face,

  Approach his chariot, and his knees embrace,

  He heard, he saved, he placed me at his side;

  My state he pitied, and my tears he dried,

  Restrain'd the rage the vengeful foe express'd,

  And turn'd the deadly weapons from my breast.

  Pious! to guard the hospitable rite,

  And fearing Jove, whom mercy's works delight.

  "In Aegypt thus with peace and plenty bless'd,

  I lived (and happy still have lived) a guest.

  On seven bright years successive blessings wait;

  The next changed all the colour of my fate.

  A false Phoenician, of insiduous mind,

  Versed in vile arts, and foe to human
kind,

  With semblance fair invites me to his home;

  I seized the proffer (ever fond to roam):

  Domestic in his faithless roof I stay'd,

  Till the swift sun his annual circle made.

  To Libya then he mediates the way;

  With guileful art a stranger to betray,

  And sell to bondage in a foreign land:

  Much doubting, yet compell'd I quit the strand,

  Through the mid seas the nimble pinnace sails,

  Aloof from Crete, before the northern gales:

  But when remote her chalky cliffs we lost,

  And far from ken of any other coast,

  When all was wild expanse of sea and air,

  Then doom'd high Jove due vengeance to prepare.

  He hung a night of horrors o'er their head

  (The shaded ocean blacken'd as it spread):

  He launch'd the fiery bolt: from pole to pole

  Broad burst the lightnings, deep the thunders roll;

  In giddy rounds the whirling ship is toss'd,

  An all in clouds of smothering sulphur lost.

  As from a hanging rock's tremendous height,

  The sable crows with intercepted flight

  Drop endlong; scarr'd, and black with sulphurous hue,

  So from the deck are hurl'd the ghastly crew.

  Such end the wicked found! but Jove's intent

  Was yet to save the oppress'd and innocent.

  Placed on the mast (the last resource of life)

  With winds and waves I held unequal strife:

  For nine long days the billows tilting o'er,

  The tenth soft wafts me to Thesprotia's shore.

  The monarch's son a shipwreck'd wretch relieved,

  The sire with hospitable rites received,

  And in his palace like a brother placed,

  With gifts of price and gorgeous garments graced

  While here I sojourn'd, oft I heard the fame

  How late Ulysses to the country came.

  How loved, how honour'd in this court he stay'd,

  And here his whole collected treasure laid;

  I saw myself the vast unnumber'd store

  Of steel elaborate, and refulgent ore,

  And brass high heap'd amidst the regal dome;

  Immense supplies for ages yet to come!

  Meantime he voyaged to explore the will

  Of Jove, on high Dodona's holy hill,

  What means might best his safe return avail,

  To come in pomp, or bear a secret sail?

  Full oft has Phidon, whilst he pour'd the wine,

  Attesting solemn all the powers divine,

  That soon Ulysses would return, declared

  The sailors waiting, and the ships prepared.

  But first the king dismiss'd me from his shores,

  For fair Dulichium crown'd with fruitful stores;

  To good Acastus' friendly care consign'd:

 

‹ Prev