The Odyssey(Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition)

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The Odyssey(Penguin Classics Deluxe Edition) Page 10

by Robert Fagles


  the bewitching nymph, the lustrous goddess, held him back,

  deep in her arching caverns, craving him for a husband.

  But then, when the wheeling seasons brought the year around,

  20 that year spun out by the gods when he should reach his home,

  21 Ithaca —though not even there would he be free of trials,

  even among his loved ones —then every god took pity,

  23 all except Poseidon. He raged on, seething against

  24 the great Odysseus till he reached his native land.

  But now

  25 Poseidon had gone to visit the Ethiopians worlds away,

  Ethiopians off at the farthest limits of mankind,

  a people split in two, one part where the Sungod sets

  and part where the Sungod rises. There Poseidon went

  to receive an offering, bulls and rams by the hundred —

  30 far away at the feast the Sea-lord sat and took his pleasure.

  But the other gods, at home in Olympian Zeus’s halls,

  met for full assembly there, and among them now

  the father of men and gods was first to speak,

  34 sorely troubled, remembering handsome Aegisthus,

  35 the man Agamemnon’s son, renowned Orestes, killed.

  Recalling Aegisthus, Zeus harangued the immortal powers:

  37 “Ah how shameless —the way these mortals blame the gods.

  From us alone, they say, come all their miseries, yes,

  but they themselves, with their own reckless ways,

  40 compound their pains beyond their proper share.

  Look at Aegisthus now . . .

  42 above and beyond his share he stole Atrides’ wife,

  he murdered the warlord coming home from Troy

  though he knew it meant his own total ruin.

  Far in advance we told him so ourselves,

  46 dispatching the guide, the giant-killer Hermes.

  ‘Don’t murder the man,’ he said, ‘don’t court his wife.

  Beware, revenge will come from Orestes, Agamemnon’s son,

  that day he comes of age and longs for his native land.’

  50 So Hermes warned, with all the good will in the world,

  but would Aegisthus’ hardened heart give way?

  Now he pays the price —all at a single stroke.”

  53 And sparkling-eyed Athena drove the matter home:

  54 “Father, son of Cronus, our high and mighty king,

  surely he goes down to a death he earned in full!

  Let them all die so, all who do such things.

  But my heart breaks for Odysseus,

  that seasoned veteran cursed by fate so long —

  far from his loved ones still, he suffers torments

  60 off on a wave-washed island rising at the center of the seas.

  A dark wooded island, and there a goddess makes her home,

  62 a daughter of Atlas, wicked Titan who sounds the deep

  in all its depths, whose shoulders lift on high

  the colossal pillars thrusting earth and sky apart.

  Atlas’ daughter it is who holds Odysseus captive,

  luckless man —despite his tears, forever trying

  to spellbind his heart with suave, seductive words

  and wipe all thought of Ithaca from his mind.

  But he, straining for no more than a glimpse

  70 of hearth-smoke drifting up from his own land,

  Odysseus longs to die . . .

  Olympian Zeus,

  have you no care for him in your lofty heart?

  Did he never win your favor with sacrifices

  burned beside the ships on the broad plain of Troy?

  75 Why, Zeus, why so dead set against Odysseus?”

  “My child,” Zeus who marshals the thunderheads replied,

  “what nonsense you let slip through your teeth. Now,

  how on earth could I forget Odysseus? Great Odysseus

  who excels all men in wisdom, excels in offerings too

  80 he gives the immortal gods who rule the vaulting skies?

  No, it’s the Earth-Shaker, Poseidon, unappeased,

  82 forever fuming against him for the Cyclops

  83 whose giant eye he blinded: godlike Polyphemus,

  towering over all the Cyclops’ clans in power.

  85 The nymph Thoosa bore him, daughter of Phorcys,

  lord of the barren salt sea —she met Poseidon

  once in his vaulted caves and they made love.

  And now for his blinded son the earthquake god —

  though he won’t quite kill Odysseus —

  90 drives him far off course from native land.

  But come, all of us here put heads together now,

  work out his journey home so Odysseus can return.

  Lord Poseidon, I trust, will let his anger go.

  How can he stand his ground against the will

  of all the gods at once —one god alone?”

  Athena, her eyes flashing bright, exulted,

  “Father, son of Cronus, our high and mighty king!

  If now it really pleases the blissful gods

  that wise Odysseus shall return —home at last —

  100 let us dispatch the guide and giant-killer Hermes

  101 down to Ogygia Island, down to announce at once

  to the nymph with lovely braids our fixed decree:

  Odysseus journeys home —the exile must return!

  While I myself go down to Ithaca, rouse his son

  105 to a braver pitch, inspire his heart with courage

  106 to summon the flowing-haired Achaeans to full assembly,

  speak his mind to all those suitors, slaughtering on and on

  his droves of sheep and shambling longhorn cattle.

  109 Next I will send him off to Sparta and sandy Pylos,

  110 there to learn of his dear father’s journey home.

  Perhaps he will hear some news and make his name

  throughout the mortal world.”

  So Athena vowed

  and under her feet she fastened the supple sandals,

  ever-glowing gold, that wing her over the waves

  and boundless earth with the rush of gusting winds.

  She seized the rugged spear tipped with a bronze point —

  weighted, heavy, the massive shaft she wields to break the lines

  of heroes the mighty Father’s daughter storms against.

  119 And down she swept from Olympus’ craggy peaks

  120 and lit on Ithaca, standing tall at Odysseus’ gates,

  the threshold of his court. Gripping her bronze spear,

  she looked for all the world like a stranger now,

  123 like Mentes, lord of the Taphians.

  There she found the swaggering suitors, just then

  amusing themselves with rolling dice before the doors,

  lounging on hides of oxen they had killed themselves.

  While heralds and brisk attendants bustled round them,

  some at the mixing-bowls, mulling wine and water,

  others wiping the tables down with sopping sponges,

  130 setting them out in place, still other servants

  jointed and carved the great sides of meat.

  132 First by far to see her was Prince Telemachus,

  sitting among the suitors, heart obsessed with grief.

  He could almost see his magnificent father, here . . .

  in the mind’s eye —if only he might drop from the clouds

  and drive these suitors all in a rout throughout the halls

  and regain his pride of place and rule his own domains!

  Daydreaming so as he sat among the suitors,

  he glimpsed Athena now

  140 and straight to the porch he went, mortified

  that a guest might still be standing at the doors.

  Pausing beside her there, he clasped her right hand


  and relieving her at once of her long bronze spear,

  met her with winged words: “Greetings, stranger!

  Here in our house you’ll find a royal welcome.

  Have supper first, then tell us what you need.”

  147 He led the way and Pallas Athena followed.

  Once in the high-roofed hall, he took her lance

  and fixed it firm in a burnished rack against

  150 a sturdy pillar, there where row on row of spears,

  embattled Odysseus’ spears, stood stacked and waiting.

  Then he escorted her to a high, elaborate chair of honor,

  over it draped a cloth, and here he placed his guest

  with a stool to rest her feet. But for himself

  he drew up a low reclining chair beside her,

  richly painted, clear of the press of suitors,

  concerned his guest, offended by their uproar,

  might shrink from food in the midst of such a mob.

  He hoped, what’s more, to ask her about his long-lost father.

  160 A maid brought water soon in a graceful golden pitcher

  and over a silver basin tipped it out

  so they might rinse their hands,

  then pulled a gleaming table to their side.

  A staid housekeeper brought on bread to serve them,

  appetizers aplenty too, lavish with her bounty.

  A carver lifted platters of meat toward them,

  meats of every sort, and set beside them golden cups

  and time and again a page came round and poured them wine.

  But now the suitors trooped in with all their swagger

  170 and took their seats on low and high-backed chairs.

  Heralds poured water over their hands for rinsing,

  serving maids brought bread heaped high in trays

  and the young men brimmed the mixing-bowls with wine.

  They reached out for the good things that lay at hand,

  and when they’d put aside desire for food and drink

  the suitors set their minds on other pleasures,

  song and dancing, all that crowns a feast.

  178 A herald placed an ornate lyre in Phemius’ hands,

  the bard who always performed among them there;

  they forced the man to sing.

  180 A rippling prelude —

  and no sooner had he struck up his rousing song

  than Telemachus, head close to Athena’s sparkling eyes,

  spoke low to his guest so no one else could hear:

  “Dear stranger, would you be shocked by what I say?

  Look at them over there. Not a care in the world,

  just lyres and tunes! It’s easy for them, all right,

  they feed on another’s goods and go scot-free —

  a man whose white bones lie strewn in the rain somewhere,

  rotting away on land or rolling down the ocean’s salty swells.

  190 But that man —if they caught sight of him home in Ithaca,

  by god, they’d all pray to be faster on their feet

  than richer in bars of gold and heavy robes.

  But now, no use, he’s died a wretched death.

  No comfort’s left for us . . . not even if

  someone, somewhere, says he’s coming home.

  The day of his return will never dawn.

  Enough.

  Tell me about yourself now, clearly, point by point.

  Who are you? where are you from? your city? your parents?

  What sort of vessel brought you? Why did the sailors

  200 land you here in Ithaca? Who did they say they are?

  I hardly think you came this way on foot!

  And tell me this for a fact —I need to know —

  is this your first time here? Or are you a friend of father’s,

  a guest from the old days? Once, crowds of other men

  would come to our house on visits —visitor that he was,

  when he walked among the living.”

  Her eyes glinting,

  goddess Athena answered, “My whole story, of course,

  208 I’ll tell it point by point. Wise old Anchialus

  was my father. My own name is Mentes,

  210 lord of the Taphian men who love their oars.

  And here I’ve come, just now, with ship and crew,

  sailing the wine-dark sea to foreign ports of call,

  213 to Temese, out for bronze —our cargo gleaming iron.

  Our ship lies moored off farmlands far from town,

  215 riding in Rithron Cove, beneath Mount Nion’s woods.

  As for the ties between your father and myself,

  we’ve been friends forever, I’m proud to say,

  and he would bear me out

  219 if you went and questioned old lord Laertes.

  220 He, I gather, no longer ventures into town

  but lives a life of hardship, all to himself,

  off on his farmstead with an aged serving-woman

  who tends him well, who gives him food and drink

  when weariness has taken hold of his withered limbs

  from hauling himself along his vineyard’s steep slopes.

  And now I’ve come —and why? I heard that he was back . . .

  your father, that is. But no, the gods thwart his passage.

  Yet I tell you great Odysseus is not dead. He’s still alive,

  somewhere in this wide world, held captive, out at sea

  230 on a wave-washed island, and hard men, savages,

  somehow hold him back against his will.

  Wait,

  I’ll make you a prophecy, one the immortal gods

  have planted in my mind —it will come true, I think,

  though I am hardly a seer or know the flights of birds.

  He won’t be gone long from the native land he loves,

  not even if iron shackles bind your father down.

  He’s plotting a way to journey home at last;

  he’s never at a loss.

  But come, please,

  tell me about yourself now, point by point.

  240 You’re truly Odysseus’ son? You’ve sprung up so!

  Uncanny resemblance . . . the head, and the fine eyes —

  I see him now. How often we used to meet in the old days

  243 before he embarked for Troy, where other Argive captains,

  all the best men, sailed in the long curved ships.

  From then to this very day

  I’ve not set eyes on Odysseus or he on me.”

  And young Telemachus cautiously replied,

  “I’ll try, my friend, to give you a frank answer.

  249 Mother has always told me I’m his son, it’s true,

  250 but I am not so certain. Who, on his own,

  has ever really known who gave him life?

  Would to god I’d been the son of a happy man

  whom old age overtook in the midst of his possessions!

  Now, think of the most unlucky mortal ever born —

  since you ask me, yes, they say I am his son.”

  “Still,” the clear-eyed goddess reassured him,

  “trust me, the gods have not marked out your house

  for such an unsung future,

  259 not if Penelope has borne a son like you.

  260 But tell me about all this and spare me nothing.

  What’s this banqueting, this crowd carousing here?

  And what part do you play yourself? Some wedding-feast,

  some festival? Hardly a potluck supper, I would say.

  How obscenely they lounge and swagger here, look,

  gorging in your house. Why, any man of sense

  who chanced among them would be outraged,

  seeing such behavior.”

  Ready Telemachus

  took her up at once: “Well, my friend,

  seeing you want to probe and press the question,

  270 once this house was
rich, no doubt, beyond reproach

  when the man you mentioned still lived here, at home.

  Now the gods have reversed our fortunes with a vengeance —

  wiped that man from the earth like no one else before.

  I would never have grieved so much about his death

  if he’d gone down with comrades off in Troy

  or died in the arms of loved ones,

  once he had wound down the long coil of war.

  278 Then all united Achaea would have raised his tomb

  and he’d have won his son great fame for years to come.

  280 But now the whirlwinds have ripped him away, no fame for him!

  He’s lost and gone now —out of sight, out of mind —and I . . .

  he’s left me tears and grief. Nor do I rack my heart

  and grieve for him alone. No longer. Now the gods

  have invented other miseries to plague me.

  Listen.

  All the nobles who rule the islands round about,

  286 Dulichion, and Same, and wooded Zacynthus too,

  and all who lord it in rocky Ithaca as well —

  down to the last man they court my mother,

  they lay waste my house! And mother . . .

  290 she neither rejects a marriage she despises

  nor can she bear to bring the courting to an end —

  while they continue to bleed my household white.

  Soon —you wait —they’ll grind me down as well.”

  “Shameful!” —

  brimming with indignation, Pallas Athena broke out.

  “Oh how much you need Odysseus, gone so long —

  how he’d lay hands on all these brazen suitors!

  If only he would appear, now,

  at his house’s outer gates and take his stand,

  armed with his helmet, shield and pair of spears,

  300 as strong as the man I glimpsed that first time

  in our own house, drinking wine and reveling there . . .

  302 just come in from Ephyra, visiting Ilus, Mermerus’ son.

  Odysseus sailed that way, you see, in his swift trim ship,

  hunting deadly poison to smear on his arrows’ bronze heads.

  Ilus refused —he feared the wrath of the everlasting gods —

  but father, so fond of him, gave him all he wanted.

  If only that Odysseus sported with these suitors,

  a blood wedding, a quick death would take the lot!

  True, but all lies in the lap of the great gods,

  310 whether or not he’ll come and pay them back,

  here, in his own house.

  But you, I urge you,

  think how to drive these suitors from your halls.

 

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