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Complete Works of Homer Page 397

by Homer

They feast, they dance, and raise the mirthful song

  Till now, declining towards the close of day,

  The sun obliquely shot his dewy ray.

  BOOK XVIII.

  ARGUMENT.

  THE FIGHT OF ULYSSES AND IRUS.

  The beggar Irus insults Ulysses; the suitors promote the quarrel, in which Irus is worsted, and miserably handled. Penelope descends, and receives the presents of the suitors. The dialogue of Ulysses with Eurymachus.

  While fix'd in thought the pensive hero sate,

  A mendicant approach'd the royal gate;

  A surly vagrant of the giant kind,

  The stain of manhood, of a coward mind:

  From feast to feast, insatiate to devour,

  He flew, attendant on the genial hour.

  Him on his mother's knees, when babe he lay,

  She named Arnaeus on his natal day:

  But Irus his associates call'd the boy,

  Practised the common messenger to fly;

  Irus, a name expressive of the employ.

  From his own roof, with meditated blows,

  He strove to drive the man of mighty woes:

  "Hence, dotard! hence, and timely speed thy way,

  Lest dragg'd in vengeance thou repent thy stay;

  See how with nods assent yon princely train!

  But honouring age, in mercy I refrain:

  In peace away! lest, if persuasions fail,

  This arm with blows more eloquent prevail."

  To whom, with stern regard: "O insolence,

  Indecently to rail without offence!

  What bounty gives without a rival share;

  I ask, what harms not thee, to breathe this air:

  Alike on alms we both precarious live:

  And canst thou envy when the great relieve?

  Know, from the bounteous heavens all riches flow,

  And what man gives, the gods by man bestow;

  Proud as thou art, henceforth no more be proud,

  Lest I imprint my vengeance in thy blood;

  Old as I am, should once my fury burn,

  How would'st thou fly, nor e'en in thought return!"

  "Mere woman-glutton! (thus the churl replied;)

  A tongue so flippant, with a throat so wide!

  Why cease I gods! to dash those teeth away,

  Like some wild boar's, that, greedy of his prey,

  Uproots the bearded corn? Rise, try the fight,

  Gird well thy loins, approach, and feel my might:

  Sure of defeat, before the peers engage:

  Unequal fight, when youth contends with age!"

  Thus in a wordy war their tongues display

  More fierce intents, preluding to the fray;

  Antinous hears, and in a jovial vein,

  Thus with loud laughter to the suitor train:

  "This happy day in mirth, my friends, employ,

  And lo! the gods conspire to crown our joy;

  See ready for the fight, and hand to hand,

  Yon surly mendicants contentious stand:

  Why urge we not to blows!" Well pleased they spring

  Swift from their seats, and thickening form a ring.

  To whom Antinous: "Lo! enrich'd with blood,

  A kid's well-fatted entrails (tasteful food)

  On glowing embers lie; on him bestow

  The choicest portion who subdues his foe;

  Grant him unrivall'd in these walls to stay,

  The sole attendant on the genial day."

  The lords applaud: Ulysses then with art,

  And fears well-feign'd, disguised his dauntless heart.

  "Worn as I am with age, decay'd with woe;

  Say, is it baseness to decline the foe?

  Hard conflict! when calamity and age

  With vigorous youth, unknown to cares, engage!

  Yet, fearful of disgrace, to try the day

  Imperious hunger bids, and I obey;

  But swear, impartial arbiters of right,

  Swear to stand neutral, while we cope in fight."

  The peers assent: when straight his sacred head

  Telemachus upraised, and sternly said:

  "Stranger, if prompted to chastise the wrong

  Of this bold insolent, confide, be strong!

  The injurious Greek that dares attempt a blow,

  That instant makes Telemachus his foe;

  And these my friends shall guard the sacred ties

  Of hospitality, for they are wise."

  Then, girding his strong loins, the king prepares

  To close in combat, and his body bares;

  Broad spread his shoulders, and his nervous thighs

  By just degrees, like well-turn'd columns, rise

  Ample his chest, his arms are round and long,

  And each strong joint Minerva knits more strong

  (Attendant on her chief): the suitor-crowd

  With wonder gaze, and gazing speak aloud:

  "Irus! alas! shall Irus be no more?

  Black fate impends, and this the avenging hour!

  Gods! how his nerves a matchless strength proclaim,

  Swell o'er his well-strong limbs, and brace his frame!"

  Then pale with fears, and sickening at the sight;

  They dragg'd the unwilling Irus to the fight;

  From his blank visage fled the coward blood,

  And his flesh trembled as aghast he stood.

  "O that such baseness should disgrace the light?

  O hide it, death, in everlasting night!

  (Exclaims Antinous;) can a vigorous foe

  Meanly decline to combat age and woe?

  But hear me wretch! if recreant in the fray

  That huge bulk yield this ill-contested day,

  Instant thou sail'st, to Eschetus resign'd;

  A tyrant, fiercest of the tyrant kind,

  Who casts thy mangled ears and nose a prey

  To hungry dogs, and lops the man away."

  While with indignant scorn he sternly spoke,

  In every joint the trembling Irus shook.

  Now front to front each frowning champion stands,

  And poises high in air his adverse hands.

  The chief yet doubts, or to the shades below

  To fell the giant at one vengeful blow,

  Or save his life, and soon his life to save

  The king resolves, for mercy sways the brave

  That instant Irus his huge arm extends,

  Full on his shoulder the rude weight descends;

  The sage Ulysses, fearful to disclose

  The hero latent in the man of woes,

  Check'd half his might; yet rising to the stroke,

  His jawbone dash'd, the crashing jawbone broke:

  Down dropp'd he stupid from the stunning wound;

  His feet extended quivering, beat the ground;

  His mouth and nostrils spout a purple flood;

  His teeth, all shatter'd, rush inmix'd with blood.

  The peers transported, as outstretch'd he lies,

  With bursts of laughter rend the vaulted skies;

  Then dragg'd along, all bleeding from the wound,

  His length of carcase trailing prints the ground:

  Raised on his feet, again he reels, he falls,

  Till propp'd, reclining on the palace walls:

  Then to his hand a staff the victor gave,

  And thus with just reproach address'd the slave:

  "There terrible, affright with dogs, and reign

  A dreaded tyrant o'er the bestial train!

  But mercy to the poor and stranger show,

  Lest Heaven in vengeance send some mightier woe."

  Scornful he spoke, and o'er his shoulder flung

  The broad-patch'd scrip in tatters hung

  Ill join'd, and knotted to a twisted thong.

  Then, turning short, disdain'd a further stay;

  But to the palace measured back the way.

  There, as he res
ted gathering in a ring,

  The peers with smiles address'd their unknown king:

  "Stranger, may Jove and all the aerial powers

  With every blessing crown thy happy hours!

  Our freedom to thy prowess'd arm we owe

  From bold intrusion of thy coward foe:

  Instant the flying sail the slave shall wing

  To Eschetus, the monster of a king."

  While pleased he hears, Antinous bears the food,

  A kid's well-fatted entrails, rich with blood;

  The bread from canisters of shining mould

  Amphinomus; and wines that laugh in gold:

  "And oh! (he mildly cries) may Heaven display

  A beam of glory o'er thy future day!

  Alas, the brave too oft is doom'd to bear

  The gripes of poverty and stings of care."

  To whom with thought mature the king replies:

  "The tongue speaks wisely, when the soul is wise:

  Such was thy father! in imperial state,

  Great without vice, that oft attends the great;

  Nor from the sire art thou, the son, declin'd;

  Then hear my words, and grace them in thy mind!

  Of all that breathes, or grovelling creeps on earth,

  Most man in vain! calamitous by birth:

  To-day, with power elate, in strength he blooms;

  The haughty creature on that power presumes:

  Anon from Heaven a sad reverse he feels:

  Untaught to bear, 'gainst Heaven the wretch rebels.

  For man is changeful, as his bliss or woe!

  Too high when prosperous, when distress'd too low.

  There was a day, when with the scornful great

  I swell'd in pomp and arrogance of state;

  Proud of the power that to high birth belongs;

  And used that power to justify my wrongs.

  Then let not man be proud; but firm of mind,

  Bear the best humbly; and the worst resign'd;

  Be dumb when Heaven afflicts! unlike yon train

  Of haughty spoilers, insolently vain;

  Who make their queen and all her wealth a prey:

  But vengeance and Ulysses wing their way.

  O may'st thou, favour'd by some guardian power,

  Far, far be distant in that deathful hour!

  For sure I am, if stern Ulysses breathe,

  These lawless riots end in blood and death."

  Then to the gods the rosy juice he pours,

  And the drain'd goblet to the chief restores.

  Stung to the soul, o'ercast with holy dread,

  He shook the graceful honours of his head;

  His boding mind the future woe forestalls,

  In vain! by great Telemachus he falls,

  For Pallas seals his doom: all sad he turns

  To join the peers; resumes his throne, and mourns.

  Meanwhile Minerva with instinctive fires

  Thy soul, Penelope, from Heaven inspires;

  With flattering hopes the suitors to betray,

  And seem to meet, yet fly, the bridal day:

  Thy husband's wonder, and thy son's to raise;

  And crown the mother and the wife with praise.

  Then, while the streaming sorrow dims her eyes,

  Thus, with a transient smile, the matron cries:

  "Eurynome! to go where riot reigns

  I feel an impulse, though my soul disdains;

  To my loved son the snares of death to show,

  And in the traitor friend, unmask the foe;

  Who, smooth of tongue, in purpose insincere,

  Hides fraud in smiles, while death is ambush'd there."

  "Go, warn thy son, nor be the warning vain

  (Replied the sagest of the royal train);

  But bathed, anointed, and adorn'd, descend;

  Powerful of charms, bid every grace attend;

  The tide of flowing tears awhile suppress;

  Tears but indulge the sorrow, not repress.

  Some joy remains: to thee a son is given,

  Such as, in fondness, parents ask of Heaven."

  "Ah me! forbear!" returns the queen, "forbear,

  Oh! talk not, talk not of vain beauty's care;

  No more I bathe, since he no longer sees

  Those charms, for whom alone I wish to please.

  The day that bore Ulysses from this coast

  Blasted the little bloom these cheeks could boast.

  But instant bid Autonoe descend,

  Instant Hippodame our steps attend;

  Ill suits it female virtue, to be seen

  Alone, indecent, in the walks of men."

  Then while Eurynome the mandate bears,

  From heaven Minerva shoots with guardian cares;

  O'er all her senses, as the couch she press'd,

  She pours, a pleasing, deep and death-like rest,

  With every beauty every feature arms,

  Bids her cheeks glow, and lights up all her charms;

  In her love-darting eyes awakes the fires

  (Immortal gifts! to kindle soft desires);

  From limb to limb an air majestic sheds,

  And the pure ivory o'er her bosom spreads.

  Such Venus shines, when with a measured bound

  She smoothly gliding swims the harmonious round,

  When with the Graces in the dance she moves,

  And fires the gazing gods with ardent loves.

  Then to the skies her flight Minerva bends,

  And to the queen the damsel train descends;

  Waked at their steps, her flowing eyes unclose;

  The tears she wipes, and thus renews her woes:

  "Howe'er 'tis well that sleep awhile can free,

  With soft forgetfulness a wretch like me;

  Oh! were it given to yield this transient breath,

  Send, O Diana! send the sleep of death!

  Why must I waste a tedious life in tears,

  Nor bury in the silent grave my cares?

  O my Ulysses! ever honour'd name!

  For thee I mourn till death dissolves my frame."

  Thus wailing, slow and sadly she descends,

  On either band a damsel train attends:

  Full where the dome its shining valves expands,

  Radiant before the gazing peers she stands;

  A veil translucent o'er her brow display'd,

  Her beauty seems, and only seems, to shade:

  Sudden she lightens in their dazzled eyes,

  And sudden flames in every bosom rise;

  They send their eager souls with every look.

  Till silence thus the imperial matron broke:

  "O why! my son, why now no more appears

  That warmth of soul that urged thy younger years?

  Thy riper days no growing worth impart,

  A man in stature, still a boy in heart!

  Thy well-knit frame unprofitably strong,

  Speaks thee a hero, from a hero sprung:

  But the just gods in vain those gifts bestow,

  O wise alone in form, and grave in show!

  Heavens! could a stranger feel oppression's hand

  Beneath thy roof, and couldst thou tamely stand!

  If thou the stranger's righteous cause decline

  His is the sufferance, but the shame is thine."

  To whom, with filial awe, the prince returns:

  "That generous soul with just resentment burns;

  Yet, taught by time, my heart has learn'd to glow

  For others' good, and melt at others' woe;

  But, impotent those riots to repel,

  I bear their outrage, though my soul rebel;

  Helpless amid the snares of death I tread,

  And numbers leagued in impious union dread;

  But now no crime is theirs: this wrong proceeds

  From Irus, and the guilty Irus bleeds.

  Oh would to Jove! or her whose arms display
<
br />   The shield of Jove, or him who rules the day!

  That yon proud suitors, who licentious tread

  These courts, within these courts like Irus bled:

  Whose loose head tottering, as with wine oppress'd,

  Obliquely drops, and nodding knocks his breast;

  Powerless to move, his staggering feet deny

  The coward wretch the privilege to fly."

  Then to the queen Eurymachus replies:

  "O justly loved, and not more fair than wise!

  Should Greece through all her hundred states survey

  Thy finish'd charms, all Greece would own thy sway

  In rival crowds contest the glorious prize.

  Dispeopling realms to gaze upon thy eyes:

  O woman! loveliest of the lovely kind,

  In body perfect, and complete in mind."

  "Ah me! (returns the queen) when from this shore

  Ulysses sail'd, then beauty was no more!

  The gods decreed these eyes no more should keep

  Their wonted grace, but only serve to weep.

  Should he return, whate'er my beauties prove,

  My virtues last; my brightest charm is love.

  Now, grief, thou all art mine! the gods o'ercast

  My soul with woes, that long, ah long must last!

  Too faithfully my heart retains the day

  That sadly tore my royal lord away:

  He grasp'd my hand, and, 'O, my spouse! I leave

  Thy arms (he cried), perhaps to find a grave:

  Fame speaks the Trojans bold; they boast the skill

  To give the feather'd arrow wings to kill,

  To dart the spear, and guide the rushing car

  With dreadful inroad through the walks of war.

  My sentence is gone forth, and 'tis decreed

  Perhaps by righteous Heaven that I must bleed!

  My father, mother, all I trust to three;

  To them, to them, transfer the love of me:

  But, when my son grows man, the royal sway

  Resign, and happy be thy bridal day!'

  Such were his words; and Hymen now prepares

  To light his torch, and give me up to cares;

  The afflictive hand of wrathful Jove to bear:

  A wretch the most complete that breathes the air!

  Fall'n e'en below the rights to woman due!

  Careless to please, with insolence ye woo!

  The generous lovers, studious to succeed,

  Bid their whole herds and flocks in banquets bleed;

  By precious gifts the vow sincere display:

  You, only you, make her ye love your prey."

  Well-pleased Ulysses hears his queen deceive

  The suitor-train, and raise a thirst to give:

  False hopes she kindles, but those hopes betray,

  And promise, yet elude, the bridal day.

 

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