The Iliad and the Odyssey (Classics of World Literature)

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The Iliad and the Odyssey (Classics of World Literature) Page 86

by Homer


  Access to town, and the renowned court

  Reach’d of her father; where, within the port,

  She stay’d her coach, and round about her came

  Her brothers, made as of immortal frame,

  Who yet disdain’d not, for her love, mean deeds,

  But took from coach her mules, brought in her weeds.

  And she ascends her chamber, where purvey’d

  A quick fire was by her old chambermaid,

  Eurymedusa, th’ Aperaean born,

  And brought by sea from Apera t’ adorn

  The court of great Alcinous, because

  He gave to all the blest Phaeacians laws,

  And, like a heav’n-born pow’r in speech, acquir’d

  The people’s ears. To one then so admir’d,

  Eurymedusa was esteem’d no worse

  Than worth the gift; yet now, grown old, was nurse

  To ivory-arm’d Nausicaa, gave heat

  To all her fires, and dress’d her privy meat.

  Then rose Ulysses, and made way to town;

  Which ere he reach’d, a mighty mist was thrown

  By Pallas round about him, in her care

  Lest, in the sway of envies popular,

  Some proud Phaeacian might foul language pass,

  Justle him up, and ask him what he was.

  Ent’ring the lovely town yet, through the cloud

  Pallas appear’d, and like a young wench show’d

  Bearing a pitcher, stood before him so

  As if objected purposely to know

  What there he needed; whom he question’d thus:

  ‘Know you not, daughter, where Alcinous,

  That rules this town, dwells? I, a poor distress’d

  Mere stranger here, know none I may request

  To make this court known to me.’ She replied:

  ‘Strange father, I will see you satisfied

  In that request. My father dwells just by

  The house you seek for; but go silently,

  Nor ask nor speak to any other; I

  Shall be enough to show your way. The men

  That here inhabit do not entertain

  With ready kindness strangers, of what worth

  Or state soever, nor have taken forth

  Lessons of civil usage or respect

  To men beyond them. They, upon their pow’rs

  Of swift ships building, top the wat’ry tow’rs,

  And Jove hath giv’n them ships, for sail so wrought

  They cut a feather, and command a thought.’

  This said, she usher’d him, and after he

  Trod in the swift steps of the deity.

  The free-sail’d seamen could not get a sight

  Of our Ulysses yet, though he forthright

  Both by their houses and their persons past,

  Pallas about him such a darkness cast.

  By her divine pow’r and her reverend care,

  She would not give the town-born cause to stare.

  He wonder’d, as he past, to see the ports;

  The shipping in them; and for all resorts

  The goodly market-steads; and aisles beside

  For the heroës; walls so large and wide;

  Rampires so high, and of such strength withal,

  It would with wonder any eye appal.

  At last they reach’d the court, and Pallas said:

  ‘Now, honour’d stranger, I will see obey’d

  Your will, to show our ruler’s house: ’tis here,

  Where you shall find kings celebrating cheer.

  Enter amongst them, nor admit a fear.

  More bold a man is, he prevails the more,

  Though man nor place he ever saw before.

  You first shall find the queen in court, whose name

  Is Arete, of parents born the same

  That was the king her spouse; their pedigree

  I can report. The great Earth-shaker, he

  Of Periboea (that her sex out-shone,

  And youngest daughter was t’ Eurymedon,

  Who of th’ unmeasur’d-minded giants sway’d

  Th’ imperial sceptre, and the pride allay’d

  Of men so impious with cold death, and died

  Himself soon after) got the magnified

  In mind Nausithous, who the kingdom’s state

  First held in supreme rule. Nausithous gat

  Rhexenor and Alcinous, now king.

  Rhexenor (whose seed did no male fruit spring,

  And whom the silver-bow-grac’d Phoebus slew

  Young in the court) his shed blood did renew

  In only Arete, who now is spouse

  To him that rules the kingdom in this house,

  And is her uncle king Alcinous,

  Who honours her past equal. She may boast

  More honour of him than the honour’d most

  Of any wife in earth can of her lord,

  How many more soever realms afford

  That keep house under husbands. Yet no more

  Her husband honours her, than her blest store

  Of gracious children. All the city cast

  Eyes on her as a goddess, and give taste

  Of their affections to her in their pray’rs,

  Still as she decks the streets; for all affairs

  Wrapt in contention she dissolves to men.

  Whom she affects, she wants no mind to deign

  Goodness enough. If her heart stand inclin’d

  To your dispatch, hope all you wish to find,

  Your friends, your longing family, and all

  That can within your most affections fall.’

  This said, away the grey-eyed goddess flew

  Along th’ untam’d sea, left the lovely hue

  Scheria presented, out flew Marathon,

  And ample-streeted Athens lighted on;

  Where to the house, that casts so thick a shade,

  Of Erectheus she ingression made.

  Ulysses to the lofty-builded court

  Of king Alcinous made bold resort;

  Yet in his heart cast many a thought, before

  The brazen pavement of the rich court bore

  His enter’d person. Like heav’n’s two main lights,

  The rooms illustrated both days and nights.

  On every side stood firm a wall of brass,

  Ev’n from the threshold to the inmost pass,

  Which bore a roof up that all sapphire was.

  The brazen thresholds both sides did enfold

  Silver pilasters, hung with gates of gold

  Whose portal was of silver; over which

  A golden cornice did the front enrich.

  On each side, dogs, of gold and silver fram’d,

  The house’s guard stood; which the deity lam’d

  With knowing inwards had inspired, and made

  That death nor age should their estates invade.

  Along the wall stood every way a throne,

  From th’ entry to the lobby, every one

  Cast over with a rich-wrought cloth of state;

  Beneath which the Phaeacian princes sate

  At wine and food, and feasted all the year.

  Youths forg’d of gold at every table there

  Stood holding flaming torches, that in night

  Gave through the house each honour’d guest his light.

  And, to encounter feast with housewif’ry,

  In one room fifty women did apply

  Their sev
eral tasks. Some apple-colour’d corn

  Ground in fair querns, and some did spindles turn,

  Some work in looms; no hand least rest receives,

  But all had motion, apt as aspen leaves.

  And from the weeds they wove, so fast they laid,

  And so thick thrust together thread by thread,

  That th’ oil, of which the wool had drunk his fill,

  Did with his moisture in light dews distill.

  As much as the Phaeacian men excell’d

  All other countrymen in art to build

  A swift-sail’d ship: so much the women there

  For work of webs past other women were.

  Past mean, by Pallas’ means, they understood

  The grace of good works; and had wits as good.

  Without the hall, and close upon the gate,

  A goodly orchard-ground was situate,

  Of near ten acres; about which was led

  A lofty quickset. In it flourished

  High and broad fruit trees, that pomegranates bore,

  Sweet figs, pears, olives; and a number more

  Most useful plants did there produce their store,

  Whose fruits the hardest winter could not kill,

  Nor hottest summer wither. There was still

  Fruit in his proper season all the year.

  Sweet Zephyr breath’d upon them blasts that were

  Of varied tempers. These he made to bear

  Ripe fruits, these blossoms. Pear grew after pear,

  Apple succeeded apple, grape the grape,

  Fig after fig came; time made never rape

  Of any dainty there. A spritely vine

  Spread here his root, whose fruit a hot sunshine

  Made ripe betimes; here grew another green.

  Here some were gathering, here some pressing seen.

  A large-allotted several each fruit had;

  And all th’ adorn’d grounds their appearance made

  In flower and fruit, at which the king did aim

  To the precisest order he could claim.

  Two fountains grac’d the garden; of which, one

  Pour’d out a winding stream that over-run

  The grounds for their use chiefly, th’ other went

  Close by the lofty palace gate, and lent

  The city his sweet benefit. And thus

  The gods the court deck’d of Alcinous.

  Patient Ulysses stood a while at gaze,

  But, having all observed, made instant pace

  Into the court; where all the peers he found,

  And captains of Phaeacia, with cups crown’d,

  Offering to sharp-ey’d Hermes, to whom last

  They us’d to sacrifice, when sleep had cast

  His inclination through their thoughts. But these

  Ulysses past, and forth went; nor their eyes

  Took note of him, for Pallas stopp’d the light

  With mists about him, that unstay’d he might

  First to Alcinous and Arete,

  Present his person; and, of both them, she

  By Pallas’ counsel was to have the grace

  Of foremost greeting. Therefore his embrace

  He cast about her knee. And then off flew

  The heav’nly air that hid him; when his view

  With silence and with admiration strook

  The court quite through; but thus he silence broke:

  ‘Divine Rhexenor’s offspring, Arete,

  To thy most honour’d husband and to thee

  A man whom many labours have distress’d

  Is come for comfort, and to every guest –

  To all whom heav’n vouchsafe delightsome lives,

  And after to your issue that survives

  A good resignment of the goods ye leave,

  With all the honour that yourselves receive

  Amongst your people. Only this of me

  Is the ambition, that I may but see

  (By your vouchsaf’d means, and betimes vouchsaf’d)

  My country earth, since I have long been left

  To labours and to errors barr’d from end,

  And far from benefit of any friend.’

  He said no more, but left them dumb with that,

  Went to the hearth, and in the ashes sat,

  Aside the fire. At last their silence brake,

  And Echinëus, th’ old heroë, spake –

  A man that all Phaeacians pass’d in years,

  And in persuasive eloquence all the peers,

  Knew much, and us’d it well; and thus spake he:

  ‘Alcinous! It shews not decently,

  Nor doth your honour what you see admit,

  That this your guest should thus abjectly sit,

  His chair the earth, the hearth his cushion,

  Ashes as if appos’d for food. A throne,

  Adorn’d with due rites, stands you more in hand

  To see his person plac’d in, and command

  That instantly your heralds fill in wine,

  That to the god that doth in lightnings shine

  We may do sacrifice; for he is there,

  Where these his reverend suppliants appear.

  Let what you have within be brought abroad,

  To sup the stranger. All these would have show’d

  This fit respect to him, but that they stay

  For your precedence, that should grace the way.’

  When this had added to the well-inclin’d

  And sacred order of Alcinous’ mind,

  Then of the great-in-wit the hand he seiz’d,

  And from the ashes his fair person rais’d,

  Advanc’d him to a well-adorned throne,

  And from his seat rais’d his most loved son,

  Laodamas, that next himself was set,

  To give him place. The handmaid then did get

  An ewer of gold, with water fill’d, which plac’d

  Upon a cauldron, all with silver grac’d,

  She pour’d out on their hands. And then was spread

  A table, which the butler set with bread,

  As others serv’d with other food the board,

  In all the choice the present could afford.

  Ulysses meat and wine took; and then thus

  The king the herald call’d: ‘Pontonous!

  Serve wine through all the house, that all may pay

  Rites to the Lightner, who is still in way

  With humble suppliants, and them pursues

  With all benign and hospitable dues.’

  Pontonous gave act to all he will’d,

  And honey-sweetness-giving-minds wine fill’d,

  Disposing it in cups for all to drink.

  All having drunk what either’s heart could think

  Fit for due sacrifice, Alcinous said:

  ‘Hear me, ye dukes that the Phaeacians lead,

  And you our counsellors, that I may now

  Discharge the charge my mind suggests to you,

  For this our guest: feast past, and this night’s sleep,

  Next morn, our senate summon’d, we will keep

  Justs, sacred to the gods, and this our guest

  Receive in solemn court with fitting feast;

  Then think of his return, that, under hand

  Of our deduction, his natural land

  (Without more toil or care, and with delight,

  And that soon giv’n him, how far hence dissite

  Soever it can be) he may ascend;

&
nbsp; And in the mean time without wrong attend,

  Or other want, fit means to that ascent.

  What, after, austere fates shall make th’ event

  Of his life’s thread, now spinning, and began

  When his pain’d mother freed his root of man,

  He must endure in all kinds. If some god

  Perhaps abides with us in his abode,

  And other things will think upon than we,

  The gods’ wills stand, who ever yet were free

  Of their appearance to us, when to them

  We offer’d hecatombs of fit esteem,

  And would at feast sit with us, even where we

  Order’d our session. They would likewise be

  Encount’rers of us, when in way alone

  About his fit affairs went any one.

  Nor let them cloak themselves in any care

  To do us comfort; we as near them are,

  As are the Cyclops, or the impious race

  Of earthy giants, that would heav’n outface.’

  Ulysses answer’d; ‘Let some other doubt

  Employ your thoughts than what your words give out;

  Which intimate a kind of doubt that I

  Should shadow in this shape a deity.

  I bear no such least semblance, or in wit,

  Virtue, or person. What may well befit

  One of those mortals, whom you chiefly know

  Bears up and down the burthen of the woe

  Appropriate to poor man, give that to me;

  Of whose moans I sit in the most degree,

  And might say more, sustaining griefs that all

  The gods consent to, no one ’twixt their fall

  And my unpitied shoulders letting down

  The least diversion. Be the grace then shown,

  To let me taste your free-giv’n food in peace.

  Through greatest grief the belly must have ease.

  Worse than an envious belly nothing is.

  It will command his strict necessities,

  Of men most griev’d in body or in mind,

  That are in health, and will not give their kind

  A desperate wound. When most with cause I grieve,

  It bids me still, “Eat, man, and drink, and live,

  And this makes all forgot.” Whatever ill

  I ever bear, it ever bids me fill.

  But this ease is but forc’d, and will not last,

  Till what the mind likes be as well embrac’d;

  And therefore let me wish you would partake

  In your late purpose; when the morn shall make

  Her next appearance, deign me but the grace,

  Unhappy man, that I may once embrace

  My country earth. Though I be still thrust at

 

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