Complete Works of Homer

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by Homer


  The king alternate a dire tale relates,

  Of wars, of triumphs, and disastrous fates;

  All he unfolds; his listening spouse turns pale

  With pleasing horror at the dreadful tale;

  Sleepless devours each word; and hears how slain

  Cicons on Cicons swell the ensanguined plain;

  How to the land of Lote unbless'd he sails;

  And images the rills and flowery vales!

  How dash'd like dogs, his friends the Cyclops tore

  (Not unrevenged), and quaff'd the spouting gore;

  How the loud storms in prison bound, he sails

  From friendly Aeolus with prosperous gales:

  Yet fate withstands! a sudden tempest roars,

  And whirls him groaning from his native shores:

  How on the barbarous Laestrigonian coast,

  By savage hands his fleet and friends lie lost;

  How scarce himself survived: he paints the bower,

  The spells of Circe, and her magic power;

  His dreadful journey to the realms beneath,

  To seek Tiresias in the vales of death;

  How in the doleful mansions lie survey'd

  His royal mother, pale Anticlea's shade;

  And friends in battle slain, heroic ghosts!

  Then how, unharm'd, he pass'd the Syren-coasts,

  The justling rocks where fierce Charybdis raves,

  And howling Scylla whirls her thunderous waves,

  The cave of death! How his companions slay

  The oxen sacred to the god of day.

  Till Jove in wrath the rattling tempest guides,

  And whelms the offenders in the roaring tides:

  How struggling through the surge lie reach'd the shores

  Of fair Ogygia and Calypso's bowers;

  Where the bay blooming nymph constrain'd his stay,

  With sweet, reluctant, amorous delay;

  And promised, vainly promised, to bestow

  Immortal life, exempt from age and woe:

  How saved from storms Phaeacia's coast he trod,

  By great Alcinous honour'd as a god,

  Who gave him last his country to behold,

  With change of raiment, brass, and heaps of gold

  He ended, sinking into sleep, and shares

  A sweet forgetfulness of all his cares.

  Soon as soft slumber eased the toils of day,

  Minerva rushes through the aerial way,

  And bids Aurora with her golden wheels

  Flame from the ocean o'er the eastern hills;

  Uprose Ulysses from the genial bed,

  And thus with thought mature the monarch said:

  "My queen, my consort! through a length of years

  We drank the cup of sorrow mix'd with tears;

  Thou, for thy lord; while me the immortal powers

  Detain'd reluctant from my native shores.

  Now, bless'd again by Heaven, the queen display,

  And rule our palace with an equal sway.

  Be it my care, by loans, or martial toils,

  To throng my empty folds with gifts or spoils.

  But now I haste to bless Laertes' eyes

  With sight of his Ulysses ere he dies;

  The good old man, to wasting woes a prey,

  Weeps a sad life in solitude away.

  But hear, though wise! This morning shall unfold

  The deathful scene, on heroes heroes roll'd.

  Thou with thy maids within the palace stay,

  From all the scene of tumult far away!"

  He spoke, and sheathed in arms incessant flies

  To wake his son, and bid his friends arise.

  "To arms!" aloud he cries; his friends obey,

  With glittering arms their manly limbs array,

  And pass the city gate; Ulysses leads the way.

  Now flames the rosy dawn, but Pallas shrouds

  The latent warriors in a veil of clouds.

  BOOK XXIV.

  ARGUMENT.

  The souls of the suitors are conducted by Mercury to the infernal shades. Ulysses in the country goes to the retirement of his father, Laertes; he finds him busied in his garden all alone; the manner of his discovery to him is beautifully described. They return together to his lodge, and the king is acknowledged by Dolius and the servants. The Ithacensians, led by Eupithes, the father of Antinous, rise against Ulysses, who gives them battle in which Eupithes is killed by Laertes: and the goddess Pallas makes a lasting peace between Ulysses and his subjects, which concludes the Odyssey.

  Cylenius now to Pluto's dreary reign

  Conveys the dead, a lamentable train!

  The golden wand, that causes sleep to fly,

  Or in soft slumber seals the wakeful eye,

  That drives the ghosts to realms of night or day,

  Points out the long uncomfortable way.

  Trembling the spectres glide, and plaintive vent

  Thin, hollow screams, along the deep descent.

  As in the cavern of some rifted den,

  Where flock nocturnal bats, and birds obscene;

  Cluster'd they hang, till at some sudden shock

  They move, and murmurs run through all the rock!

  So cowering fled the sable heaps of ghosts,

  And such a scream fill'd all the dismal coasts.

  And now they reach'd the earth's remotest ends,

  And now the gates where evening Sol descends,

  And Leucas' rock, and Ocean's utmost streams,

  And now pervade the dusky land of dreams,

  And rest at last, where souls unbodied dwell

  In ever-flowing meads of asphodel.

  The empty forms of men inhabit there,

  Impassive semblance, images of air!

  Naught else are all that shined on earth before:

  Ajax and great Achilles are no more!

  Yet still a master ghost, the rest he awed,

  The rest adored him, towering as he trod;

  Still at his side is Nestor's son survey'd,

  And loved Patroclus still attends his shade.

  New as they were to that infernal shore,

  The suitors stopp'd, and gazed the hero o'er.

  When, moving slow, the regal form they view'd

  Of great Atrides: him in pomp pursued

  And solemn sadness through the gloom of hell,

  The train of those who by AEgysthus fell:

  "O mighty chief! (Pelides thus began)

  Honour'd by Jove above the lot of man!

  King of a hundred kings! to whom resign'd

  The strongest, bravest, greatest of mankind

  Comest thou the first, to view this dreary state?

  And was the noblest, the first mark of Fate,

  Condemn'd to pay the great arrear so soon,

  The lot, which all lament, and none can shun!

  Oh! better hadst thou sunk in Trojan ground,

  With all thy full-blown honours cover'd round;

  Then grateful Greece with streaming eyes might raise

  Historic marbles to record thy praise:

  Thy praise eternal on the faithful stone

  Had with transmissive glories graced thy son.

  But heavier fates were destined to attend:

  What man is happy, till he knows his end?"

  "O son of Peleus! greater than mankind!

  (Thus Agamemnon's kingly shade rejoin'd)

  Thrice happy thou, to press the martial plain

  'Midst heaps of heroes in thy quarrel slain:

  In clouds of smoke raised by the noble fray,

  Great and terrific e'en in death you lay,

  And deluges of blood flow'd round you every way.

  Nor ceased the strife till Jove himself opposed,

  And all in Tempests the dire evening closed.

  Then to the fleet we bore thy honour'd load,

  And decent on the funeral bed bestow'd;

  Then ungu
ents sweet and tepid streams we shed;

  Tears flow'd from every eye, and o'er the dead

  Each clipp'd the curling honours of his head.

  Struck at the news, thy azure mother came,

  The sea-green sisters waited on the dame:

  A voice of loud lament through all the main

  Was heard; and terror seized the Grecian train:

  Back to their ships the frighted host had fled;

  But Nestor spoke, they listen'd and obey'd

  (From old experience Nestor's counsel springs,

  And long vicissitudes of human things):

  'Forbear your flight: fair Thetis from the main

  To mourn Achilles leads her azure train.'

  Around thee stand the daughters of the deep,

  Robe thee in heavenly vests, and round thee weep:

  Round thee, the Muses, with alternate strain,

  In ever-consecrating verse, complain.

  Each warlike Greek the moving music hears,

  And iron-hearted heroes melt in tears.

  Till seventeen nights and seventeen days return'd

  All that was mortal or immortal mourn'd,

  To flames we gave thee, the succeeding day,

  And fatted sheep and sable oxen slay;

  With oils and honey blazed the augmented fires,

  And, like a god adorn'd, thy earthly part expires.

  Unnumber'd warriors round the burning pile

  Urge the fleet coursers or the racer's toil;

  Thick clouds of dust o'er all the circle rise,

  And the mix'd clamour thunders in the skies.

  Soon as absorb'd in all-embracing flame

  Sunk what was mortal of thy mighty name,

  We then collect thy snowy bones, and place

  With wines and unguents in a golden vase

  (The vase to Thetis Bacchus gave of old,

  And Vulcan's art enrich'd the sculptured gold).

  There, we thy relics, great Achilles! blend

  With dear Patroclus, thy departed friend:

  In the same urn a separate space contains

  Thy next beloved, Antilochus' remains.

  Now all the sons of warlike Greece surround

  Thy destined tomb and cast a mighty mound;

  High on the shore the growing hill we raise,

  That wide the extended Hellespont surveys;

  Where all, from age to age, who pass the coast,

  May point Achilles' tomb, and hail the mighty ghost.

  Thetis herself to all our peers proclaims

  Heroic prizes and exequial games;

  The gods assented; and around thee lay

  Rich spoils and gifts that blazed against the day.

  Oft have I seen with solemn funeral games

  Heroes and kings committed to the flames;

  But strength of youth, or valour of the brave,

  With nobler contest ne'er renown'd a grave.

  Such were the games by azure Thetis given,

  And such thy honours, O beloved of Heaven!

  Dear to mankind thy fame survives, nor fades

  Its bloom eternal in the Stygian shades.

  But what to me avail my honours gone,

  Successful toils, and battles bravely won?

  Doom'd by stern Jove at home to end my life,

  By cursed Aegysthus, and a faithless wife!"

  Thus they: while Hermes o'er the dreary plain

  Led the sad numbers by Ulysses slain.

  On each majestic form they cast a view,

  And timorous pass'd, and awfully withdrew.

  But Agamemnon, through the gloomy shade,

  His ancient host Amphimedon survey'd:

  "Son of Melanthius! (he began) O say!

  What cause compell'd so many, and so gay,

  To tread the downward, melancholy way?

  Say, could one city yield a troop so fair?

  Were all these partners of one native air?

  Or did the rage of stormy Neptune sweep

  Your lives at once, and whelm beneath the deep?

  Did nightly thieves, or pirates' cruel bands,

  Drench with your blood your pillaged country's sands?

  Or well-defending some beleaguer'd wall,

  Say, — for the public did ye greatly fall?

  Inform thy guest: for such I was of yore

  When our triumphant navies touch'd your shore;

  Forced a long month the wintry seas to bear,

  To move the great Ulysses to the war."

  "O king of men! I faithful shall relate

  (Replied Amphimedon) our hapless fate.

  Ulysses absent, our ambitious aim

  With rival loves pursued his royal dame;

  Her coy reserve, and prudence mix'd with pride,

  Our common suit nor granted, nor denied;

  But close with inward hate our deaths design'd;

  Versed in all arts of wily womankind.

  Her hand, laborious, in delusion spread

  A spacious loom, and mix'd the various thread.

  'Ye peers (she cried) who press to gain my heart,

  Where dead Ulysses claims no more a part,

  Yet a short space your rival suit suspend,

  Till this funereal web my labours end:

  Cease, till to good Laertes I bequeath

  A task of grief, his ornaments of death:

  Lest when the Fates his royal ashes claim,

  The Grecian matrons taint my spotless fame;

  Should he, long honour'd with supreme command,

  Want the last duties of a daughter's hand.'

  "The fiction pleased, our generous train complies,

  Nor fraud mistrusts in virtue's fair disguise.

  The work she plied, but studious of delay,

  Each following night reversed the toils of day.

  Unheard, unseen, three years her arts prevail;

  The fourth, her maid reveal'd the amazing tale,

  And show'd as unperceived we took our stand,

  The backward labours of her faithless hand.

  Forced she completes it; and before us lay

  The mingled web, whose gold and silver ray

  Display'd the radiance of the night and day.

  "Just as she finished her illustrious toil,

  Ill fortune led Ulysses to our isle.

  Far in a lonely nook, beside the sea,

  At an old swineherd's rural lodge he lay:

  Thither his son from sandy Pyle repairs,

  And speedy lands, and secretly confers.

  They plan our future ruin, and resort

  Confederate to the city and the court.

  First came the son; the father nest succeeds,

  Clad like a beggar, whom Eumaeus leads;

  Propp'd on a staff, deform'd with age and care,

  And hung with rags that flutter'd in the air.

  Who could Ulysses in that form behold?

  Scorn'd by the young, forgotten by the old,

  Ill-used by all! to every wrong resigned,

  Patient he suffered with a constant mind.

  But when, arising in his wrath to obey

  The will of Jove, he gave the vengeance way:

  The scattered arms that hung around the dome

  Careful he treasured in a private room;

  Then to her suitors bade his queen propose

  The archer's strife, the source of future woes,

  And omen of our death! In vain we drew

  The twanging string, and tried the stubborn yew:

  To none it yields but great Ulysses' hands;

  In vain we threat; Telemachus commands:

  The bow he snatch'd, and in an instant bent;

  Through every ring the victor arrow went.

  Fierce on the threshold then in arms he stood;

  Poured forth the darts that thirsted for our blood,

  And frown'd before us, dreadful as a god!

  First bleeds Antinou
s: thick the shafts resound,

  And heaps on heaps the wretches strew the ground;

  This way, and that, we turn, we fly, we fall;

  Some god assisted, and unmann'd us all;

  Ignoble cries precede the dying groans;

  And battered brains and blood besmear the stones.

  "Thus, great Atrides, thus Ulysses drove

  The shades thou seest from yon fair realms above;

  Our mangled bodies now deformed with gore,

  Cold and neglected, spread the marble floor.

  No friend to bathe our wounds, or tears to shed

  O'er the pale corse! the honours of the dead."

  "Oh bless'd Ulysses! (thus the king express'd

  His sudden rapture) in thy consort bless'd!

  Not more thy wisdom than her virtue shined;

  Not more thy patience than her constant mind.

  Icarius' daughter, glory of the past,

  And model to the future age, shall last:

  The gods, to honour her fair fame, shall rise

  (Their great reward) a poet in her praise.

  Not such, O Tyndarus! thy daughter's deed,

  By whose dire hand her king and husband bled;

  Her shall the Muse to infamy prolong,

  Example dread, and theme of tragic song!

  The general sex shall suffer in her shame,

  And e'en the best that bears a woman's name."

  Thus in the regions of eternal shade

  Conferr'd the mournful phantoms of the dead;

  While from the town, Ulysses and his band

  Pass'd to Laertes' cultivated land.

  The ground himself had purchased with his pain,

  And labour made the rugged soil a plain,

  There stood his mansion of the rural sort,

  With useful buildings round the lowly court;

  Where the few servants that divide his care

  Took their laborious rest, and homely fare;

  And one Sicilian matron, old and sage,

  With constant duty tends his drooping age.

  Here now arriving, to his rustic band

  And martial son, Ulysses gave command:

  "Enter the house, and of the bristly swine

  Select the largest to the powers divine.

  Alone, and unattended, let me try

  If yet I share the old man's memory:

  If those dim eyes can yet Ulysses know

  (Their light and dearest object long ago),

  Now changed with time, with absence and with woe."

  Then to his train he gives his spear and shield;

  The house they enter; and he seeks the field,

  Through rows of shade, with various fruitage crown'd,

  And labour'd scenes of richest verdure round.

  Nor aged Dolius; nor his sons, were there,

  Nor servants, absent on another care;

 

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