Book XXIV
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| | 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. | |
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| | 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. | |
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| | 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: | |
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| | "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?" | |
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|
| | "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 unguents 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." | |
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|
| | "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.' | |
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| | "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. | |
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|
| | "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 Antinous: 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. | |
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| | "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." | |
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| | "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." | |
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| | 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. | |
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| | 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; | |
| | To search the woods for sets of flowery thorn, | |
| | Their orchard bounds to strengthen and adorn. | |
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| | But all alone the hoary king he found; | |
| | His habit course, but warmly wrapp'd around; | |
| | His head, that bow'd with many a pensive care, | |
| | Fenced with a double cap of goatskin hair: | |
| | His buskins old, in former service torn, | |
| | But swell repair'd; and gloves against the thorn. | |
| | In this array the kingly gardener stood, | |
| | And clear'd a plant, encumber'd with its wood. | |
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| | Beneath a neighbouring tree, the chief divine | |
| | Gazed o'er his sire, retracing every line, | |
| | The ruins of himself, now worn away | |
| | With age, yet still majestic in decay! | |
| | Sudden his eyes released their watery store; | |
| | The much-enduring man could bear no more. | |
| | Doubtful he stood, if instant to embrace | |
| | His aged limbs, to kiss his reverend face, | |
| | With eager transport to disclose the whole, | |
| | And pour at once the torrent of his soul.— | |
| | Not so: his judgment takes the winding way | |
| | Of question distant, and of soft essay; | |
| | More gentle methods on weak age employs: | |
| | And moves the sorrows to enhance the joys. | |
| | Then, to his sire with beating heart he moves, | |
| | And with a tender pleasantry reproves; | |
| | Who digging round the plant still hangs his bead, | |
| | Nor aught remits the work, while thus he said: | |
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| | "Great is thy skill, O father! great thy toil, | |
| | Thy careful hand is stamp'd on all the soil, | |
| | Thy squadron'd vineyards well thy art declare, | |
| | The olive green, blue fig, and pendent pear; | |
| | And not one empty spot escapes thy care. | |
| | On every plant and tree thy cares are shown, | |
| | Nothing neglected, but thyself alone. | |
| | Forgive me, father, if this fault I blame; | |
| | Age so advanced, may some indulgence claim. | |
| | Not for thy sloth, I deem thy lord unkind: | |
| | Nor speaks thy form a mean or servile mind; | |
| | I read a monarch in that princely air, | |
| | The same thy aspect, if the same thy care; | |
| | Soft sleep, fair garments, and the joys of wine, | |
| | These are the rights of age, and should be thine. | |
| | Who then thy master, say? and whose the land | |
| | So dress'd and managed by thy skilful hand? | |
| | But chief, oh tell me! (what I question most) | |
| | Is this the far-famed Ithacensian coast? | |
| | For so reported the first man I view'd | |
| | (Some surly islander, of manners rude), | |
| | Nor farther conference vouchsafed to stay; | |
| | Heedless he whistled, and pursued his way. | |
| | But thou whom years have taught to understand, | |
| | Humanely hear, and answer my demand: | |
| | A friend I seek, a wise one and a brave: | |
| | Say, lives he yet, or moulders in the grave? | |
| | Time was (my fortunes then were at the best) | |
| | When at my house I lodged this foreign guest; | |
| | He said, from Ithaca's fair isle he came, | |
| | And old Laertes was his father's name. | |
| | To him, whatever to a guest is owed | |
| | I paid, and hospitable gifts bestow'd: | |
| | To him seven talents of pure ore I told, | |
| | Twelve cloaks, twelve vests, twelve tunics stiff with gold: | |
| | A bowl, that rich with polish'd silver flames, | |
| | And skill'd in female works, four lovely dames." | |
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| | At this the father, with a father's fears | |
| | (His venerable eyes bedimm'd with tears): | |
| | "This is the land; but ah! thy gifts are lost, | |
| | For godless men, and rude possess the coast: | |
| | Sunk is the glory of this once-famed shore! | |
| | Thy ancient friend, O stranger, is no more! | |
| | Full recompense thy bounty else had borne: | |
| | For every good man yields a just return: | |
| | So civil rights demand; and who begins | |
| | The track of friendship, not pursuing, sins. | |
| | But tell me, stranger, be the truth confess'd, | |
| | What years have circled since thou saw'st that guest? | |
| | That hapless guest, alas! for ever gone! | |
| | Wretch that he was! and that I am! my son! | |
| | If ever man to misery was born, | |
| | 'Twas his to suffer, and 'tis mine to mourn! | |
| | Far from his friends, and from his native reign, | |
| | He lies a prey to monsters of the main; | |
| | Or savage beasts his mangled relics tear, | |
| | Or screaming vultures scatter through the air: | |
| | Nor could his mother funeral unguents shed; | |
| | Nor wail'd his father o'er the untimely dead: | |
| | Nor his sad consort, on the mournful bier, | |
| | Seal'd his cold eyes, or dropp'd a tender tear! | |
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| | "But, tell me who thou art? and what thy race? | |
| | Thy town, thy parents, and thy native place? | |
| | Or, if a merchant in pursuit of gain, | |
| | What port received thy vessel from the main? | |
| | Or comest thou single, or attend thy train?" | |
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| | Then thus the son: "From Alybas I came, | |
| | My palace there; Eperitus my name | |
| | Not vulgar born: from Aphidas, the king | |
| | Of Polyphemon's royal line, I spring. | |
| | Some adverse demon from Sicania bore | |
| | Our wandering course, and drove us on your shore; | |
| | Far from the town, an unfrequented bay | |
| | Relieved our wearied vessel from the sea. | |
| | Five years have circled since these eyes pursued | |
| | Ulysses parting through the sable flood: | |
| | Prosperous he sail'd, with dexter auguries, | |
| | And all the wing'd good omens of the skies. | |
| | Well hoped we then to meet on this fair shore, | |
| | Whom Heaven, alas! decreed to meet no more." | |
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| | Quick through the father's heart these accents ran; | |
| | Grief seized at once, and wrapp'd up all the man: | |
| | Deep from his soul lie sigh'd, and sorrowing spread | |
| | A cloud of ashes on his hoary head. | |
| | Trembling with agonies of strong delight | |
| | Stood the great son, heart-wounded with the sight: | |
| | He ran, he seized him with a strict embrace, | |
| | With thousand kisses wander'd o'er his face: | |
| | "I, I am he; O father, rise! behold | |
| | Thy son, with twenty winters now grown old; | |
| | Thy son, so long desired, so long detain'd, | |
| | Restored, and breathing in his native land: | |
| | These floods of sorrow, O my sire, restrain! | |
| | The vengeance is complete; the suitor train, | |
| | Stretch'd in our palace, by these hands lie slain." | |
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| | Amazed, Laertes: "Give some certain sign | |
| | (If such thou art) to manifest thee mine." | |
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| | "Lo here the wound (he cries) received of yore, | |
| | The scar indented by the tusky boar, | |
| | When, by thyself, and by Anticlea sent, | |
| | To old Autolycus' realms I went. | |
| | Yet by another sign thy offspring know; | |
| | The several trees you gave me long ago, | |
| | While yet a child, these fields I loved to trace, | |
| | And trod thy footsteps with unequal pace; | |
| | To every plant in order as we came, | |
| | Well-pleased, you told its nature and its name, | |
| | Whate'er my childish fancy ask'd, bestow'd: | |
| | Twelve pear-trees, bowing with their pendent load, | |
| | And ten, that red with blushing apples glow'd; | |
| | Full fifty purple figs; and many a row | |
| | Of various vines that then began to blow, | |
| | A future vintage! when the Hours produce | |
| | Their latent buds, and Sol exalts the juice." | |
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| | Smit with the signs which all his doubts explain, | |
| | His heart within him melt; his knees sustain | |
| | Their feeble weight no more: his arms alone | |
| | Support him, round the loved Ulysses thrown; | |
| | He faints, he sinks, with mighty joys oppress'd: | |
| | Ulysses clasps him to his eager breast. | |
| | Soon as returning life regains its seat, | |
| | And his breath lengthens, and his pulses beat: | |
| | "Yes, I believe (he cries) almighty Jove! | |
| | Heaven rules us yet, and gods there are above. | |
| | 'Tis so—the suitors for their wrongs have paid— | |
| | But what shall guard us, if the town invade? | |
| | If, while the news through every city flies, | |
| | All Ithaca and Cephalenia rise?" | |
| | To this Ulysses: "As the gods shall please | |
| | Be all the rest: and set thy soul at ease. | |
| | Haste to the cottage by this orchard's side, | |
| | And take the banquet which our cares provide; | |
| | There wait thy faithful band of rural friends, | |
| | And there the young Telemachus attends." | |
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| | Thus, having said, they traced the garden o'er | |
| | And stooping entered at the lowly door. | |
| | The swains and young Telemachus they found. | |
| | The victim portion'd and the goblet crown'd. | |
| | The hoary king, his old Sicilian maid | |
| | Perfum'd and wash'd, and gorgeously arrayed. | |
| | Pallas attending gives his frame to shine | |
| | With awful port, and majesty divine; | |
| | His gazing son admires the godlike grace, | |
| | And air celestial dawning o'er his face. | |
| | "What god (he cried) my father's form improves! | |
| | How high he treads and how enlarged he moves!" | |
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| | "Oh! would to all the deathless powers on high, | |
| | Pallas and Jove, and him who gilds the sky! | |
| | (Replied the king elated with his praise) | |
| | My strength were still, as once in better days: | |
| | When the bold Cephalens the leaguer form'd. | |
| | And proud Nericus trembled as I storm'd. | |
| | Such were I now, not absent from your deed | |
| | When the last sun beheld the suitors bleed, | |
| | This arm had aided yours, this hand bestrown | |
| | Our shores with death, and push'd the slaughter on; | |
| | Nor had the sire been separate from the son." | |
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| | They communed thus; while homeward bent their way | |
| | The swains, fatigued with labours of the day: | |
| | Dolius, the first, the venerable man; | |
| | And next his sons, a long succeeding train. | |
| | For due refection to the bower they came, | |
| | Call'd by the careful old Sicilian dame, | |
| | Who nursed the children, and now tends the sire, | |
| | They see their lord, they gaze, and they admire. | |
| | On chairs and beds in order seated round, | |
| | They share the gladsome board; the roofs resound, | |
| | While thus Ulysses to his ancient friend: | |
| | "Forbear your wonder, and the feast attend: | |
| | The rites have waited long." The chief commands | |
| | Their love in vain; old Dolius spreads his hands, | |
| | Springs to his master with a warm embrace, | |
| | And fastens kisses on his hands and face; | |
| | Then thus broke out: "O long, O daily mourn'd! | |
| | Beyond our hopes, and to our wish return'd! | |
| | Conducted sure by Heaven! for Heaven alone | |
| | Could work this wonder: welcome to thy own! | |
| | And joys and happiness attend thy throne! | |
| | Who knows thy bless'd, thy wish'd return? oh say, | |
| | To the chaste queen shall we the news convey? | |
| | Or hears she, and with blessings loads the day?" | |
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|
| | "Dismiss that care, for to the royal bride | |
| | Already is it known" (the king replied, | |
| | And straight resumed his seat); while round him bows | |
| | Each faithful youth, and breathes out ardent vows: | |
| | Then all beneath their father take their place, | |
| | Rank'd by their ages, and the banquet grace. | |
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|
| | Now flying Fame the swift report had spread | |
| | Through all the city, of the suitors dead, | |
| | In throngs they rise, and to the palace crowd; | |
| | Their sighs were many and the tumult loud. | |
| | Weeping they bear the mangled heaps of slain; | |
| | Inhume the natives in their native plain, | |
| | The rest in ships are wafted o'er the main. | |
| | Then sad in council all the seniors sate, | |
| | Frequent and full, assembled to debate: | |
| | Amid the circle first Eupithes rose, | |
| | Big was his eye with tears, his heart with woes: | |
| | The bold Antinous was his age's pride, | |
| | The first who by Ulysses' arrow died. | |
| | Down his wan cheek the trickling torrent ran, | |
| | As mixing words with sighs he thus began: | |
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|
| | "Great deeds, O friends! this wondrous man has wrought, | |
| | And mighty blessings to his country brought! | |
| | With ships he parted, and a numerous train, | |
| | Those, and their ships, he buried in the main. | |
| | Now he returns, and first essays his hand | |
| | In the best blood of all his native land. | |
| | Haste, then, and ere to neighbouring Pyle he flies, | |
| | Or sacred Elis, to procure supplies; | |
| | Arise (or ye for ever fall), arise! | |
| | Shame to this age, and all that shall succeed! | |
| | If unrevenged your sons and brothers bleed. | |
| | Prove that we live, by vengeance on his head, | |
| | Or sink at once forgotten with the dead." | |
| | Here ceased he, but indignant tears let fall | |
| | Spoke when he ceased: dumb sorrow touch'd them all. | |
| | When from the palace to the wondering throng | |
| | Sage Medon came, and Phemius came along | |
| | (Restless and early sleep's soft bands they broke); | |
| | And Medon first the assembled chiefs bespoke; | |
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|
| | "Hear me, ye peers and elders of the land, | |
| | Who deem this act the work of mortal hand; | |
| | As o'er the heaps of death Ulysses strode, | |
| | These eyes, these eyes beheld a present god, | |
| | Who now before him, now beside him stood, | |
| | Fought as he fought, and mark'd his way with blood: | |
| | In vain old Mentor's form the god belied; | |
| | 'Twas Heaven that struck, and Heaven was on his side." | |
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|
| | A sudden horror all the assembly shook, | |
| | When slowly rising, Halitherses spoke | |
| | (Reverend and wise, whose comprehensive view | |
| | At once the present and the future knew): | |
| | "Me too, ye fathers, hear! from you proceed | |
| | The ills ye mourn; your own the guilty deed. | |
| | Ye gave your sons, your lawless sons, the rein | |
| | (Oft warn'd by Mentor and myself in vain); | |
| | An absent hero's bed they sought to soil, | |
| | An absent hero's wealth they made their spoil; | |
| | Immoderate riot, and intemperate lust! | |
| | The offence was great, the punishment was just. | |
| | Weigh then my counsels in an equal scale, | |
| | Nor rush to ruin. Justice will prevail." | |
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|
| | His moderate words some better minds persuade: | |
| | They part, and join him: but the number stay'd. | |
| | They storm, they shout, with hasty frenzy fired, | |
| | And second all Eupithes' rage inspired. | |
| | They case their limbs in brass; to arms they run; | |
| | The broad effulgence blazes in the sun. | |
| | Before the city, and in ample plain, | |
| | They meet: Eupithes heads the frantic train. | |
| | Fierce for his son, he breathes his threats in air; | |
| | Fate bears them not, and Death attends him there. | |
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|
| | This pass'd on earth, while in the realms above | |
| | Minerva thus to cloud-compelling Jove! | |
| | "May I presume to search thy secret soul? | |
| | O Power Supreme, O Ruler of the whole! | |
| | Say, hast thou doom'd to this divided state | |
| | Or peaceful amity or stern debate? | |
| | Declare thy purpose, for thy will is fate." | |
|
|
| | "Is not thy thought my own? (the god replies | |
| | Who rolls the thunder o'er the vaulted skies;) | |
| | Hath not long since thy knowing soul decreed | |
| | The chief's return should make the guilty bleed. | |
| | 'Tis done, and at thy will the Fates succeed. | |
| | Yet hear the issue: Since Ulysses' hand | |
| | Has slain the suitors, Heaven shall bless the land. | |
| | None now the kindred of the unjust shall own; | |
| | Forgot the slaughter'd brother and the son: | |
| | Each future day increase of wealth shall bring, | |
| | And o'er the past Oblivion stretch her wing. | |
| | Long shall Ulysses in his empire rest, | |
| | His people blessing, by his people bless'd. | |
| | Let all be peace."—He said, and gave the nod | |
| | That binds the Fates; the sanction of the god | |
| | And prompt to execute the eternal will, | |
| | Descended Pallas from the Olympian hill. | |
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|
| | Now sat Ulysses at the rural feast | |
| | The rage of hunger and of thirst repress'd: | |
| | To watch the foe a trusty spy he sent: | |
| | A son of Dolius on the message went, | |
| | Stood in the way, and at a glance beheld | |
| | The foe approach, embattled on the field. | |
| | With backward step he hastens to the bower, | |
| | And tells the news. They arm with all their power. | |
| | Four friends alone Ulysses' cause embrace, | |
| | And six were all the sons of Dolius' race: | |
| | Old Dolius too his rusted arms put on; | |
| | And, still more old, in arms Laertes shone. | |
| | Trembling with warmth, the hoary heroes stand, | |
| | And brazen panoply invests the band. | |
| | The opening gates at once their war display: | |
| | Fierce they rush forth: Ulysses leads the way. | |
| | That moment joins them with celestial aid, | |
| | In Mentor's form, the Jove-descended maid: | |
| | The suffering hero felt his patient breast | |
| | Swell with new joy, and thus his son address'd: | |
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|
| | "Behold, Telemachus! (nor fear the sight,) | |
| | The brave embattled, the grim front of fight! | |
| | The valiant with the valiant must contend. | |
| | Shame not the line whence glorious you descend. | |
| | Wide o'er the world their martial fame was spread; | |
| | Regard thyself, the living and the dead." | |
|
|
| | "Thy eyes, great father! on this battle cast, | |
| | Shall learn from me Penelope was chaste." | |
|
|
| | So spoke Telemachus : the gallant boy | |
| | Good old Laertes heard with panting joy. | |
| | "And bless'd! thrice bless'd this happy day! (he cries,) | |
| | The day that shows me, ere I close my eyes, | |
| | A son and grandson of the Arcesian name | |
| | Strive for fair virtue, and contest for fame!" | |
|
|
| | Then thus Minerva in Laertes' ear: | |
| | "Son of Arcesius, reverend warrior, hear! | |
| | Jove and Jove's daughter first implore in prayer, | |
| | Then, whirling high, discharge thy lance in air." | |
| | She said, infusing courage with the word. | |
| | Jove and Jove's daughter then the chief implored, | |
| | And, whirling high, dismiss'd the lance in air. | |
| | Full at Eupithes drove the deathful spear: | |
| | The brass-cheek'd helmet opens to the wound; | |
| | He falls, earth thunders, and his arms resound. | |
| | Before the father and the conquering son | |
| | Heaps rush on heaps, they fight, they drop, they run | |
| | Now by the sword, and now the javelin, fall | |
| | The rebel race, and death had swallow'd all; | |
| | But from on high the blue-eyed virgin cried; | |
| | Her awful voice detain'd the headlong tide: | |
| | "Forbear, ye nations, your mad hands forbear | |
| | From mutual slaughter; Peace descends to spare." | |
| | Fear shook the nations: at the voice divine | |
| | They drop their javelins, and their rage resign. | |
| | All scatter'd round their glittering weapons lie; | |
| | Some fall to earth, and some confusedly fly. | |
| | With dreadful shouts Ulysses pour'd along, | |
| | Swift as an eagle, as an eagle strong. | |
| | But Jove's red arm the burning thunder aims: | |
| | Before Minerva shot the livid flames; | |
| | Blazing they fell, and at her feet expired; | |
| | Then stopped the goddess, trembled and retired. | |
|
|
| | "Descended from the gods! Ulysses, cease; | |
| | Offend not Jove: obey, and give the peace." | |
|
|
| | So Pallas spoke: the mandate from above | |
| | The king obey'd. The virgin-seed of Jove, | |
| | In Mentor's form, confirm'd the full accord, | |
| | And willing nations knew their lawful lord. | |
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