|
The saffron morn, with early blushes spread, |
|
Now rose refulgent from Tithonus' bed; |
|
With new-born day to gladden mortal sight, |
|
And gild the courts of heaven with sacred light. |
|
Then met the eternal synod of the sky, |
|
Before the god, who thunders from on high, |
|
Supreme in might, sublime in majesty. |
|
Pallas, to these, deplores the unequal fates |
|
Of wise Ulysses and his toils relates: |
|
Her hero's danger touch'd the pitying power, |
|
The nymph's seducements, and the magic bower. |
|
Thus she began her plaint: "Immortal Jove! |
|
And you who fill the blissful seats above! |
|
Let kings no more with gentle mercy sway, |
|
Or bless a people willing to obey, |
|
But crush the nations with an iron rod, |
|
And every monarch be the scourge of God. |
|
If from your thoughts Ulysses you remove, |
|
Who ruled his subjects with a father's love, |
|
Sole in an isle, encircled by the main, |
|
Abandon'd, banish'd from his native reign, |
|
Unbless'd he sighs, detained by lawless charms, |
|
And press'd unwilling in Calypso's arms. |
|
Nor friends are there, nor vessels to convey, |
|
Nor oars to cut the immeasurable way. |
|
And now fierce traitors, studious to destroy |
|
His only son, their ambush'd fraud employ; |
|
Who, pious, following his great father's fame, |
|
To sacred Pylos and to Sparta came." |
|
|
Then thus to Hermes the command was given: |
|
"Hermes, thou chosen messenger of heaven! |
|
Go, to the nymph be these our orders borne |
|
'Tis Jove's decree, Ulysses shall return: |
|
The patient man shall view his old abodes, |
|
Nor helped by mortal hand, nor guiding gods |
|
In twice ten days shall fertile Scheria find, |
|
Alone, and floating to the wave and wind. |
|
The bold Phaecians there, whose haughty line |
|
Is mixed with gods, half human, half divine, |
|
The chief shall honour as some heavenly guest, |
|
And swift transport him to his place of rest, |
|
His vessels loaded with a plenteous store |
|
Of brass, of vestures, and resplendent ore |
|
(A richer prize than if his joyful isle |
|
Received him charged with Ilion's noble spoil), |
|
His friends, his country, he shall see, though late: |
|
Such is our sovereign will, and such is fate." |
|
|
He spoke. The god who mounts the winged winds |
|
Fast to his feet the golden pinions binds, |
|
That high through fields of air his flight sustain |
|
O'er the wide earth, and o'er the boundless main: |
|
He grasps the wand that causes sleep to fly, |
|
Or in soft slumber seals the wakeful eye; |
|
Then shoots from heaven to high Pieria's steep, |
|
And stoops incumbent on the rolling deep. |
|
So watery fowl, that seek their fishy food, |
|
With wings expanded o'er the foaming flood, |
|
Now sailing smooth the level surface sweep, |
|
Now dip their pinions in the briny deep; |
|
Thus o'er the word of waters Hermes flew, |
|
Till now the distant island rose in view: |
|
Then, swift ascending from the azure wave, |
|
he took the path that winded to the cave. |
|
Large was the grot, in which the nymph he found |
|
(The fair-hair'd nymph with every beauty crown'd). |
|
The cave was brighten'd with a rising blaze; |
|
Cedar and frankincense, an odorous pile, |
|
Flamed on the hearth, and wide perfumed the isle; |
|
While she with work and song the time divides, |
|
And through the loom the golden shuttle guides. |
|
Without the grot a various sylvan scene |
|
Appear'd around, and groves of living green; |
|
Poplars and alders ever quivering play'd, |
|
And nodding cypress form'd a fragrant shade: |
|
On whose high branches, waving with the storm, |
|
The birds of broadest wing their mansions form,— |
|
The chough, the sea-mew, the loquacious crow,— |
|
and scream aloft, and skim the deeps below. |
|
Depending vines the shelving cavern screen. |
|
With purple clusters blushing through the green. |
|
Four limped fountains from the clefts distil: |
|
And every fountain pours a several rill, |
|
In mazy windings wandering down the hill: |
|
Where bloomy meads with vivid greens were crown'd, |
|
And glowing violets threw odours round. |
|
A scene, where, if a god should cast his sight, |
|
A god might gaze, and wander with delight! |
|
Joy touch'd the messenger of heaven: he stay'd |
|
Entranced, and all the blissful haunts surveyed. |
|
Him, entering in the cave, Calypso knew; |
|
For powers celestial to each other's view |
|
Stand still confess'd, though distant far they lie |
|
To habitants of earth, or sea, or sky. |
|
But sad Ulysses, by himself apart, |
|
Pour'd the big sorrows of his swelling heard; |
|
All on the lonely shore he sate to weep, |
|
And roll'd his eyes around the restless deep: |
|
Toward his loved coast he roll'd his eyes in vain, |
|
Till, dimm'd with rising grief, they stream'd again. |
|
|
"What moves this journey from my native sky, |
|
A goddess asks, nor can a god deny. |
|
Hear then the truth. By mighty Jove's command |
|
Unwilling have I trod this pleasing land: |
|
For who, self-moved, with weary wing would sweep |
|
Such length of ocean and unmeasured deep; |
|
A world of waters! far from all the ways |
|
Where men frequent, or sacred altars blaze! |
|
But to Jove's will submission we must pay; |
|
What power so great to dare to disobey? |
|
A man, he says, a man resides with thee, |
|
Of all his kind most worn with misery. |
|
The Greeks, (whose arms for nine long year employ'd |
|
Their force on Ilion, in the tenth destroy'd,) |
|
At length, embarking in a luckless hour, |
|
With conquest proud, incensed Minerva's power: |
|
Hence on the guilty race her vengeance hurl'd, |
|
With storms pursued them through the liquid world. |
|
There all his vessels sunk beneath the wave! |
|
There all his dear companions found their grave! |
|
Saved from the jaws of death by Heaven's decree, |
|
The tempest drove him to these shores and thee. |
|
Him, Jove now orders to his native lands |
|
Straight to dismiss: so destiny commands: |
|
Impatient Fate his near return attends, |
|
And calls him to his country, and his friends." |
|
|
E'en to her inmost soul the goddess shook; |
|
Then thus her anguish, and her passion broke: |
|
"Ungracious gods! with spite and envy cursed! |
|
Still to your own ethereal race the worst! |
|
Ye envy mortal and immortal joy, |
|
And love, the only sweet of life destroy, |
|
Did ever goddess by her charms engage |
|
A favour'd mortal, and not feel your rage? |
|
So when Aurora sought Orion's love, |
|
Her joys disturbed your blissful hours above, |
|
Till, in Ortygia Dian's winged dart |
|
Had pierced the hapless hunter to the heart, |
|
So when the covert of the thrice-eared field |
|
Saw stately Ceres to her passion yield, |
|
Scarce could Iasion taste her heavenly charms, |
|
But Jove's swift lightning scorched him in her arms. |
|
And is it now my turn, ye mighty powers! |
|
Am I the envy of your blissful bowers? |
|
A man, an outcast to the storm and wave, |
|
It was my crime to pity, and to save; |
|
When he who thunders rent his bark in twain, |
|
And sunk his brave companions in the main, |
|
Alone, abandon'd, in mid-ocean tossed, |
|
The sport of winds, and driven from every coast, |
|
Hither this man of miseries I led, |
|
Received the friendless, and the hungry fed; |
|
Nay promised (vainly promised) to bestow |
|
Immortal life, exempt from age and woe. |
|
'Tis past-and Jove decrees he shall remove; |
|
Gods as we are, we are but slaves to Jove. |
|
Go then he must (he must, if he ordain, |
|
Try all those dangers, all those deeps, again); |
|
But never, never shall Calypso send |
|
To toils like these her husband and her friend. |
|
What ships have I, what sailors to convey, |
|
What oars to cut the long laborious way? |
|
Yet I'll direct the safest means to go; |
|
That last advice is all I can bestow." |
|
|
To her the power who hears the charming rod; |
|
"Dismiss the man, nor irritate the god; |
|
Prevent the rage of him who reigns above, |
|
For what so dreadful as the wrath of Jove?" |
|
Thus having said, he cut the cleaving sky, |
|
And in a moment vanished from her eye, |
|
The nymph, obedient to divine command, |
|
To seek Ulysses, paced along the sand, |
|
Him pensive on the lonely beach she found, |
|
With streaming eyes in briny torrents drown'd, |
|
And inly pining for his native shore; |
|
For now the soft enchantress pleased no more; |
|
For now, reluctant, and constrained by charms, |
|
Absent he lay in her desiring arms, |
|
In slumber wore the heavy night away, |
|
On rocks and shores consumed the tedious day; |
|
There sate all desolate, and siqhed alone, |
|
With echoing sorrows made the mountains groan. |
|
And roll'd his eyes o'er all the restless main, |
|
Till, dimmed with rising grief, they streamed again. |
|
|
Here, on his musing mood the goddess press'd, |
|
Approaching soft, and thus the chief address'd: |
|
"Unhappy man! to wasting woes a prey, |
|
No more in sorrows languish life away: |
|
Free as the winds I give thee now to rove: |
|
Go, fell the timber of yon lofty grove, |
|
And form a raft, and build the rising ship, |
|
Sublime to bear thee o'er the gloomy deep. |
|
To store the vessel let the care be mine, |
|
With water from the rock and rosy wine, |
|
And life-sustaining bread, and fair array, |
|
And prosperous gales to waft thee on the way. |
|
These, if the gods with my desire comply |
|
(The gods, alas, more mighty far than I, |
|
And better skill'd in dark events to come), |
|
In peace shall land thee at thy native home." |
|
|
With sighs Ulysses heard the words she spoke, |
|
Then thus his melancholy silence broke: |
|
"Some other motive, goddess! sways thy mind |
|
(Some close design, or turn of womankind), |
|
Nor my return the end, nor this the way, |
|
On a slight raft to pass the swelling sea, |
|
Huge, horrid, vast! where scarce in safety sails |
|
The best-built ship, though Jove inspires the gales. |
|
The bold proposal how shall I fulfil, |
|
Dark as I am, unconscious of thy will? |
|
Swear, then, thou mean'st not what my soul forebodes; |
|
Swear by the solemn oath that binds the gods." |
|
|
Him, while he spoke, with smiles Calypso eyed, |
|
And gently grasp'd his hand, and thus replied: |
|
"This shows thee, friend, by old experience taught, |
|
And learn'd in all the wiles of human thought, |
|
How prone to doubt, how cautious, are the wise! |
|
But hear, O earth, and hear, ye sacred skies! |
|
And thou, O Styx! whose formidable floods |
|
Glide through the shades, and bind the attesting gods! |
|
No form'd design, no meditated end, |
|
Lurks in the counsel of thy faithful friend; |
|
Kind the persuasion, and sincere my aim; |
|
The same my practice, were my fate the same. |
|
Heaven has not cursed me with a heart of steel, |
|
But given the sense to pity, and to feel." |
|
|
"Ulysses! (with a sigh she thus began;) |
|
O sprung from gods! in wisdom more than man! |
|
Is then thy home the passion of thy heart? |
|
Thus wilt thou leave me, are we thus to part? |
|
Farewell! and ever joyful mayst thou be, |
|
Nor break the transport with one thought of me. |
|
But ah, Ulysses! wert thou given to know |
|
What Fate yet dooms these still to undergo, |
|
Thy heart might settle in this scene of ease. |
|
And e'en these slighted charms might learn to please. |
|
A willing goddess, and immortal life. |
|
Might banish from thy mind an absent wife. |
|
Am I inferior to a mortal dame? |
|
Less soft my feature less august my frame? |
|
Or shall the daughters of mankind compare |
|
Their earth born beauties with the heavenly fair?" |
|
|
"Alas! for this (the prudent man replies) |
|
Against Ulysses shall thy anger rise? |
|
Loved and adored, O goddess as thou art, |
|
Forgive the weakness of a human heart. |
|
Though well I see thy graces far above |
|
The dear, though mortal, object of my love, |
|
Of youth eternal well the difference know, |
|
And the short date of fading charms below; |
|
Yet every day, while absent thus I roam, |
|
I languish to return and die at home. |
|
Whate'er the gods shall destine me to bear; |
|
In the black ocean or the watery war, |
|
'Tis mine to master with a constant mind; |
|
Inured to perils, to the worst resign'd, |
|
By seas, by wars, so many dangers run; |
|
Still I can suffer; their high will he done!" |
|
|
Thus while he spoke, the beamy sun descends, |
|
And rising night her friendly shade extends, |
|
To the close grot the lonely pair remove, |
|
And slept delighted with the gifts of love. |
|
When rose morning call'd them from their rest, |
|
Ulysses robed him in the cloak and vest. |
|
The nymph's fair head a veil transparent graced, |
|
Her swelling loins a radiant zone embraced |
|
With flowers of gold; an under robe, unbound, |
|
In snowy waves flow'd glittering on the ground. |
|
Forth issuing thus, she gave him first to wield |
|
A weighty axe with truest temper steeled, |
|
And double-edged; the handle smooth and plain, |
|
Wrought of the clouded olive's easy grain; |
|
And next, a wedge to drive with sweepy sway |
|
Then to the neighboring forest led the way. |
|
On the lone island's utmost verge there stood |
|
Of poplars, pine, and firs, a lofty wood, |
|
Whose leafless summits to the skies aspire, |
|
Scorch'd by the sun, or seared by heavenly fire |
|
(Already dried). These pointing out to view, |
|
The nymph just show'd him, and with tears withdrew. |
|
|
Now toils the hero: trees on trees o'erthrown |
|
Fall crackling round him, and the forests groan: |
|
Sudden, full twenty on the plain are strow'd, |
|
And lopp'd and lighten'd of their branchy load. |
|
At equal angles these disposed to join, |
|
He smooth'd and squared them by the rule and line, |
|
(The wimbles for the work Calypso found) |
|
With those he pierced them and with clinchers bound. |
|
Long and capacious as a shipwright forms |
|
Some bark's broad bottom to out-ride the storms, |
|
So large he built the raft; then ribb'd it strong |
|
From space to space, and nail'd the planks along; |
|
These form'd the sides: the deck he fashion'd last; |
|
Then o'er the vessel raised the taper mast, |
|
With crossing sail-yards dancing in the wind; |
|
And to the helm the guiding rudder join'd |
|
(With yielding osiers fenced, to break the force |
|
Of surging waves, and steer the steady course). |
|
Thy loom, Calypso, for the future sails |
|
Supplied the cloth, capacious of the gales. |
|
With stays and cordage last he rigged the ship, |
|
And, roll'd on levers, launch'd her in the deep. |
|
|
Four days were pass'd, and now the work complete, |
|
Shone the fifth morn, when from her sacred seat |
|
The nymph dismiss'd him (odorous garments given), |
|
And bathed in fragrant oils that breathed of heaven: |
|
Then fill'd two goatskins with her hands divine, |
|
With water one, and one with sable wine: |
|
Of every kind, provisions heaved aboard; |
|
And the full decks with copious viands stored. |
|
The goddess, last, a gentle breeze supplies, |
|
To curl old Ocean, and to warm the skies. |
|
|
And now, rejoicing in the prosperous gales, |
|
With beating heart Ulysses spreads his sails; |
|
Placed at the helm he sate, and mark'd the skies, |
|
Nor closed in sleep his ever-watchful eyes. |
|
There view'd the Pleiads, and the Northern Team, |
|
And great Orion's more refulgent beam. |
|
To which, around the axle of the sky, |
|
The Bear, revolving, points his golden eye: |
|
Who shines exalted on the ethereal plain, |
|
Nor bathes his blazing forehead in the main. |
|
Far on the left those radiant fires to keep |
|
The nymph directed, as he sail'd the deep. |
|
Full seventeen nights he cut the foaming way: |
|
The distant land appear'd the following day: |
|
Then swell'd to sight Phaeacia's dusky coast, |
|
And woody mountains, half in vapours lost; |
|
That lay before him indistinct and vast, |
|
Like a broad shield amid the watery waste. |
|
|
But him, thus voyaging the deeps below, |
|
From far, on Solyme's aerial brow, |
|
The king of ocean saw, and seeing burn'd |
|
(From AEthiopia's happy climes return'd); |
|
The raging monarch shook his azure head, |
|
And thus in secret to his soul he said: |
|
"Heavens! how uncertain are the powers on high! |
|
Is then reversed the sentence of the sky, |
|
In one man's favour; while a distant guest |
|
I shared secure the AEthiopian feast? |
|
Behold how near Phoenecia's land he draws; |
|
The land affix'd by Fate's eternal laws |
|
To end his toils. Is then our anger vain? |
|
No; if this sceptre yet commands the main." |
|
|
"Wretch that I am! what farther fates attend |
|
This life of toils, and what my destined end? |
|
Too well, alas! the island goddess knew |
|
On the black sea what perils should ensue. |
|
New horrors now this destined head inclose; |
|
Untill'd is yet the measure of my woes; |
|
With what a cloud the brows of heaven are crown'd; |
|
What raging winds! what roaring waters round! |
|
'Tis Jove himself the swelling tempest rears; |
|
Death, present death, on every side appears. |
|
Happy! thrice happy! who, in battle slain, |
|
Press'd in Atrides' cause the Trojan plain! |
|
Oh! had I died before that well-fought wall! |
|
Had some distinguish'd day renown'd my fall |
|
(Such as was that when showers of javelins fled |
|
From conquering Troy around Achilles dead), |
|
All Greece had paid me solemn funerals then, |
|
And spread my glory with the sons of men. |
|
A shameful fate now hides my hapless head, |
|
Unwept, unnoted, and for ever dead!" |
|
|
A mighty wave rush'd o'er him as he spoke, |
|
The raft is cover'd, and the mast is broke; |
|
Swept from the deck and from the rudder torn, |
|
Far on the swelling surge the chief was borne; |
|
While by the howling tempest rent in twain |
|
Flew sail and sail-yards rattling o'er the main. |
|
Long-press'd, he heaved beneath the weighty wave, |
|
Clogg'd by the cumbrous vest Calypso gave; |
|
At length, emerging, from his nostrils wide |
|
And gushing mouth effused the briny tide; |
|
E'en then not mindless of his last retreat, |
|
He seized the raft, and leap'd into his seat, |
|
Strong with the fear of death. In rolling flood, |
|
Now here, now there, impell'd the floating wood |
|
As when a heap of gather'd thorns is cast, |
|
Now to, now fro, before the autumnal blast; |
|
Together clung, it rolls around the field; |
|
So roll'd the float, and so its texture held: |
|
And now the south, and now the north, bear sway, |
|
And now the east the foamy floods obey, |
|
And now the west wind whirls it o'er the sea. |
|
The wandering chief with toils on toils oppress'd, |
|
Leucothea saw, and pity touch'd her breast. |
|
(Herself a mortal once, of Cadmus' strain, |
|
But now an azure sister of the main) |
|
Swift as a sea-mew springing from the flood, |
|
All radiant on the raft the goddess stood; |
|
Then thus address'd him: "Thou whom heaven decrees |
|
To Neptune's wrath, stern tyrant of the seas! |
|
(Unequal contest!) not his rage and power, |
|
Great as he is, such virtue shall devour. |
|
What I suggest, thy wisdom will perform: |
|
Forsake thy float, and leave it to the storm; |
|
Strip off thy garments; Neptune's fury brave |
|
With naked strength, and plunge into the wave. |
|
To reach Phaeacia all thy nerves extend, |
|
There Fate decrees thy miseries shall end. |
|
This heavenly scarf beneath thy bosom bind, |
|
And live; give all thy terrors to the wind. |
|
Soon as thy arms the happy shore shall gain, |
|
Return the gift, and cast it in the main: |
|
Observe my orders, and with heed obey, |
|
Cast it far off, and turn thy eyes away." |
|
|
Struck with amaze, yet still to doubt inclined, |
|
He stands suspended, and explores his mind: |
|
"What shall I do? unhappy me! who knows |
|
But other gods intend me other woes? |
|
Whoe'er thou art, I shall not blindly join |
|
Thy pleaded reason, but consult with mine: |
|
For scarce in ken appears that distant isle |
|
Thy voice foretells me shall conclude my toil. |
|
Thus then I judge: while yet the planks sustain |
|
The wild waves' fury, here I fix'd remain: |
|
But, when their texture to the tempest yields, |
|
I launch adventurous on the liquid fields, |
|
Join to the help of gods the strength of man, |
|
And take this method, since the best I can." |
|
|
While thus his thoughts an anxious council hold, |
|
The raging god a watery mountain roll'd; |
|
Like a black sheet the whelming billows spread, |
|
Burst o'er the float, and thunder'd on his head. |
|
Planks, beams, disparted fly; the scatter'd wood |
|
Rolls diverse, and in fragments strews the flood. |
|
So the rude Boreas, o'er the field new-shorn, |
|
Tosses and drives the scatter'd heaps of corn. |
|
And now a single beam the chief bestrides: |
|
There poised a while above the bounding tides, |
|
His limbs discumbers of the clinging vest, |
|
And binds the sacred cincture round his breast: |
|
Then prone an ocean in a moment flung, |
|
Stretch'd wide his eager arms, and shot the seas along. |
|
All naked now, on heaving billows laid, |
|
Stern Neptune eyed him, and contemptuous said: |
|
|
This said, his sea-green steeds divide the foam, |
|
And reach high Aegae and the towery dome. |
|
Now, scarce withdrawn the fierce earth-shaking power, |
|
Jove's daughter Pallas watch'd the favouring hour. |
|
Back to their caves she bade the winds to fly; |
|
And hush'd the blustering brethren of the sky. |
|
The drier blasts alone of Boreas away, |
|
And bear him soft on broken waves away; |
|
With gentle force impelling to that shore, |
|
Where fate has destined he shall toil no more. |
|
And now, two nights, and now two days were pass'd, |
|
Since wide he wander'd on the watery waste; |
|
Heaved on the surge with intermitting breath, |
|
And hourly panting in the arms of death. |
|
The third fair morn now blazed upon the main; |
|
Then glassy smooth lay all the liquid plain; |
|
The winds were hush'd, the billows scarcely curl'd, |
|
And a dead silence still'd the watery world; |
|
When lifted on a ridgy wave he spies |
|
The land at distance, and with sharpen'd eyes. |
|
As pious children joy with vast delight |
|
When a loved sire revives before their sight |
|
(Who, lingering along, has call'd on death in vain, |
|
Fix'd by some demon to his bed of pain, |
|
Till heaven by miracle his life restore); |
|
So joys Ulysses at the appearing shore; |
|
And sees (and labours onward as he sees) |
|
The rising forests, and the tufted trees. |
|
And now, as near approaching as the sound |
|
Of human voice the listening ear may wound, |
|
Amidst the rocks he heard a hollow roar |
|
Of murmuring surges breaking on the shore; |
|
Nor peaceful port was there, nor winding bay, |
|
To shield the vessel from the rolling sea, |
|
But cliffs and shaggy shores, a dreadful sight! |
|
All rough with rocks, with foamy billows white. |
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Fear seized his slacken'd limbs and beating heart, |
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As thus he communed with his soul apart; |
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"Ah me! when, o'er a length of waters toss'd, |
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These eyes at last behold the unhoped-for coast, |
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No port receives me from the angry main, |
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But the loud deeps demand me back again. |
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Above, sharp rocks forbid access; around |
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Roar the wild waves; beneath, is sea profound! |
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No footing sure affords the faithless sand, |
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To stem too rapid, and too deep to stand. |
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If here I enter, my efforts are vain, |
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Dash'd on the cliffs, or heaved into the main; |
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Or round the island if my course I bend, |
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Where the ports open, or the shores descend, |
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Back to the seas the rolling surge may sweep, |
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And bury all my hopes beneath the deep. |
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Or some enormous whale the god may send |
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(For many such an Amphitrite attend); |
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Too well the turns of mortal chance I know, |
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And hate relentless of my heavenly foe." |
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While thus he thought, a monstrous wave upbore |
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The chief, and dash'd him on the craggy shore; |
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Torn was his skin, nor had the ribs been whole, |
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But Instant Pallas enter'd in his soul. |
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Close to the cliff with both his hands he clung, |
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And stuck adherent, and suspended hung; |
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Till the huge surge roll'd off; then backward sweep |
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The refluent tides, and plunge him in the deep. |
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As when the polypus, from forth his cave |
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Torn with full force, reluctant beats the wave, |
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His ragged claws are stuck with stones and sands; |
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So the rough rock had shagg'd Ulysses hands, |
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And now had perish'd, whelm'd beneath the main, |
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The unhappy man; e'en fate had been in vain; |
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But all-subduing Pallas lent her power, |
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And prudence saved him in the needful hour. |
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Beyond the beating surge his course he bore, |
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(A wider circle, but in sight of shore), |
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With longing eyes, observing, to survey |
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Some smooth ascent, or safe sequester'd bay. |
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Between the parting rocks at length he spied |
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A failing stream with gentler waters glide; |
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Where to the seas the shelving shore declined, |
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And form'd a bay impervious to the wind. |
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To this calm port the glad Ulysses press'd, |
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And hail'd the river, and its god address'd: |
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He pray'd, and straight the gentle stream subsides, |
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Detains the rushing current of his tides, - |
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Before the wanderer smooths the watery way, |
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And soft receives him from the rolling sea. |
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That moment, fainting as he touch'd the shore, |
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He dropp'd his sinewy arms: his knees no more |
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Perform'd their office, or his weight upheld: |
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His swoln heart heaved; his bloated body swell'd: |
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From mouth and nose the briny torrent ran; |
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And lost in lassitude lay all the man, |
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Deprived of voice, of motion, and of breath; |
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The soul scarce waking in the arms of death. |
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Soon as warm life its wonted office found, |
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The mindful chief Leucothea's scarf unbound; |
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Observant of her word, he turn'd aside |
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HIs head, and cast it on the rolling tide. |
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Behind him far, upon the purple waves, |
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The waters waft it, and the nymph receives. |
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"What will ye next ordain, ye powers on high! |
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And yet, ah yet, what fates are we to try? |
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Here by the stream, if I the night out-wear, |
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Thus spent already, how shall nature bear |
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The dews descending, and nocturnal air; |
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Or chilly vapours breathing from the flood |
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When morning rises?—If I take the wood, |
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And in thick shelter of innumerous boughs |
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Enjoy the comfort gentle sleep allows; |
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Though fenced from cold, and though my toil be pass'd, |
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What savage beasts may wander in the waste? |
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Perhaps I yet may fall a bloody prey |
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To prowling bears, or lions in the way." |
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Thus long debating in himself he stood: |
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At length he took the passage to the wood, |
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Whose shady horrors on a rising brow |
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Waved high, and frown'd upon the stream below. |
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There grew two olives, closest of the grove, |
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With roots entwined, the branches interwove; |
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Alike their leaves, but not alike they smiled |
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With sister-fruits; one fertile, one was wild. |
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Nor here the sun's meridian rays had power, |
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Nor wind sharp-piercing, nor the rushing shower; |
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The verdant arch so close its texture kept: |
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Beneath this covert great Ulysses crept. |
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Of gather'd leaves an ample bed he made |
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(Thick strewn by tempest through the bowery shade); |
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Where three at least might winter's cold defy, |
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Though Boreas raged along the inclement sky. |
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This store with joy the patient hero found, |
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And, sunk amidst them, heap'd the leaves around. |
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As some poor peasant, fated to reside |
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Remote from neighbours in a forest wide, |
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Studious to save what human wants require, |
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In embers heap'd, preserves the seeds of fire: |
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Hid in dry foliage thus Ulysses lies, |
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Till Pallas pour'd soft slumbers on his eyes; |
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And golden dreams (the gift of sweet repose) |
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Lull'd all his cares, and banish'd all his woes. |
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