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Translation of: The Odyssey of Homer: Book VII

    By William Cowper



    ARGUMENT

    Nausicaa returns from the river, whom Ulysses follows. He halts, by her direction, at a small distance from the palace, which at a convenient time he enters. He is well received by Alcinoüs and his Queen; and having related to them the manner of his being cast on the shore of Scheria, and received from Alcinoüs the promise of safe conduct home, retires to rest.


            Such pray'r Ulysses, toil-worn Chief renown'd,
            To Pallas made, meantime the virgin, drawn
            By her stout mules, Phæacia's city reach'd,
            And, at her father's house arrived, the car
            Stay'd in the vestibule; her brothers five,
            All godlike youths, assembling quick around,
            Released the mules, and bore the raiment in.
            Meantime, to her own chamber she return'd,
            Where, soon as she arrived, an antient dame
            Eurymedusa, by peculiar charge
            Attendant on that service, kindled fire.
            Sea-rovers her had from Epirus brought
            Long since, and to Alcinoüs she had fall'n
            By public gift, for that he ruled, supreme,
            Phæacia, and as oft as he harangued
            The multitude, was rev'renced as a God.
            She waited on the fair Nausicaa, she
            Her fuel kindled, and her food prepared.
            And now Ulysses from his seat arose
            To seek the city, around whom, his guard
            Benevolent, Minerva, cast a cloud,
            Lest, haply, some Phæacian should presume
            T' insult the Chief, and question whence he came.
            But ere he enter'd yet the pleasant town,
            Minerva azure-eyed met him, in form
            A blooming maid, bearing her pitcher forth.
            She stood before him, and the noble Chief
            Ulysses, of the Goddess thus enquired.
                Daughter! wilt thou direct me to the house
            Of brave Alcinoüs, whom this land obeys?
            For I have here arrived, after long toil,
            And from a country far remote, a guest
            To all who in Phæacia dwell, unknown.
                To whom the Goddess of the azure-eyes.
            The mansion of thy search, stranger revered!
            Myself will shew thee; for not distant dwells
            Alcinoüs from my father's own abode:
            But hush! be silent--I will lead the way;
            Mark no man; question no man; for the sight
            Of strangers is unusual here, and cold
            The welcome by this people shown to such.
            They, trusting in swift ships, by the free grant
            Of Neptune traverse his wide waters, borne
            As if on wings, or with the speed of thought.
                So spake the Goddess, and with nimble pace
            Led on, whose footsteps he, as quick, pursued.
            But still the seaman-throng through whom he pass'd
            Perceiv'd him not; Minerva, Goddess dread,
            That sight forbidding them, whose eyes she dimm'd
            With darkness shed miraculous around
            Her fav'rite Chief. Ulysses, wond'ring, mark'd
            Their port, their ships, their forum, the resort
            Of Heroes, and their battlements sublime
            Fenced with sharp stakes around, a glorious show!
            But when the King's august abode he reach'd,
            Minerva azure-eyed, then, thus began.
                My father! thou behold'st the house to which
            Thou bad'st me lead thee. Thou shalt find our Chiefs
            And high-born Princes banqueting within.
            But enter fearing nought, for boldest men
            Speed ever best, come whencesoe'er they may.
            First thou shalt find the Queen, known by her name
            Areta; lineal in descent from those
            Who gave Alcinoüs birth, her royal spouse.
            Neptune begat Nausithoüs, at the first,
            On Peribæa, loveliest of her sex,
            Latest-born daughter of Eurymedon,
            Heroic King of the proud giant race,
            Who, losing all his impious people, shared
            The same dread fate himself. Her Neptune lov'd,
            To whom she bore a son, the mighty prince
            Nausithoüs, in his day King of the land.
            Nausithoüs himself two sons begat,
            Rhexenor and Alcinoüs. Phoebus slew
            Rhexenor at his home, a bridegroom yet,
            Who, father of no son, one daughter left,
            Areta, wedded to Alcinoüs now,
            And whom the Sov'reign in such honour holds,
            As woman none enjoys of all on earth
            Existing, subjects of an husband's pow'r.
            Like veneration she from all receives
            Unfeign'd, from her own children, from himself
            Alcinoüs, and from all Phæacia's race,
            Who, gazing on her as she were divine,
            Shout when she moves in progress through the town.
            For she no wisdom wants, but sits, herself,
            Arbitress of such contests as arise
            Between her fav'rites, and decides aright.
            Her count'nance once and her kind aid secured,
            Thou may'st thenceforth expect thy friends to see,
            Thy dwelling, and thy native soil again.
                So Pallas spake, Goddess cærulean-eyed,
            And o'er the untillable and barren Deep
            Departing, Scheria left, land of delight,
            Whence reaching Marathon, and Athens next,
            She pass'd into Erectheus' fair abode.
            Ulysses, then, toward the palace moved
            Of King Alcinoüs, but immers'd in thought
            Stood, first, and paused, ere with his foot he press'd
            The brazen threshold; for a light he saw
            As of the sun or moon illuming clear
            The palace of Phæacia's mighty King.
            Walls plated bright with brass, on either side
            Stretch'd from the portal to th' interior house,
            With azure cornice crown'd; the doors were gold
            Which shut the palace fast; silver the posts
            Rear'd on a brazen threshold, and above,
            The lintels, silver, architraved with gold.
            Mastiffs, in gold and silver, lined the approach
            On either side, by art celestial framed
            Of Vulcan, guardians of Alcinoüs' gate
            For ever, unobnoxious to decay.
            Sheer from the threshold to the inner house
            Fixt thrones the walls, through all their length, adorn'd,
            With mantles overspread of subtlest warp
            Transparent, work of many a female hand.
            On these the princes of Phæacia sat,
            Holding perpetual feasts, while golden youths
            On all the sumptuous altars stood, their hands
            With burning torches charged, which, night by night,
            Shed radiance over all the festive throng.
            Full fifty female menials serv'd the King
            In household offices; the rapid mills
            These turning, pulverize the mellow'd grain,
            Those, seated orderly, the purple fleece
            Wind off, or ply the loom, restless as leaves
            Of lofty poplars fluttering in the breeze;
            Bright as with oil the new-wrought texture shone.[25]
            Far as Phæacian mariners all else
            Surpass, the swift ship urging through the floods,
            So far in tissue-work the women pass
            All others, by Minerva's self endow'd
            With richest fancy and superior skill.
            Without the court, and to the gates adjoin'd
            A spacious garden lay, fenced all around
            Secure, four acres measuring complete.
            There grew luxuriant many a lofty tree,
            Pomegranate, pear, the apple blushing bright,
            The honied fig, and unctuous olive smooth.
            Those fruits, nor winter's cold nor summer's heat
            Fear ever, fail not, wither not, but hang
            Perennial, whose unceasing zephyr breathes
            Gently on all, enlarging these, and those
            Maturing genial; in an endless course
            Pears after pears to full dimensions swell,
            Figs follow figs, grapes clust'ring grow again
            Where clusters grew, and (ev'ry apple stript)
            The boughs soon tempt the gath'rer as before.
            There too, well-rooted, and of fruit profuse,
            His vineyard grows; part, wide-extended, basks,
            In the sun's beams; the arid level glows;
            In part they gather, and in part they tread
            The wine-press, while, before the eye, the grapes
            Here put their blossom forth, there, gather fast
            Their blackness. On the garden's verge extreme
            Flow'rs of all hues smile all the year, arranged
            With neatest art judicious, and amid
            The lovely scene two fountains welling forth,
            One visits, into ev'ry part diffus'd,
            The garden-ground, the other soft beneath
            The threshold steals into the palace-court,
            Whence ev'ry citizen his vase supplies.
                Such were the ample blessings on the house
            Of King Alcinoüs by the Gods bestow'd.
                Ulysses wond'ring stood, and when, at length,
            Silent he had the whole fair scene admired,
            With rapid step enter'd the royal gate.
            The Chiefs he found and Senators within
            Libation pouring to the vigilant spy
            Mercurius, whom with wine they worshipp'd last
            Of all the Gods, and at the hour of rest.
            Ulysses, toil-worn Hero, through the house
            Pass'd undelaying, by Minerva thick
            With darkness circumfus'd, till he arrived
            Where King Alcinoüs and Areta sat.
            Around Areta's knees his arms he cast,
            And, in that moment, broken clear away
            The cloud all went, shed on him from above.
            Dumb sat the guests, seeing the unknown Chief,
            And wond'ring gazed. He thus his suit preferr'd.
                Areta, daughter of the Godlike Prince
            Rhexenor! suppliant at thy knees I fall,
            Thy royal spouse imploring, and thyself,
            (After ten thousand toils) and these your guests,
            To whom heav'n grant felicity, and to leave
            Their treasures to their babes, with all the rights
            And honours, by the people's suffrage, theirs!
            But oh vouchsafe me, who have wanted long
            And ardent wish'd my home, without delay
            Safe conduct to my native shores again!
                Such suit he made, and in the ashes sat
            At the hearth-side; they mute long time remain'd,
            Till, at the last, the antient Hero spake
            Echeneus, eldest of Phæacia's sons,
            With eloquence beyond the rest endow'd,
            Rich in traditionary lore, and wise
            In all, who thus, benevolent, began.
                Not honourable to thyself, O King!
            Is such a sight, a stranger on the ground
            At the hearth-side seated, and in the dust.
            Meantime, thy guests, expecting thy command,
            Move not; thou therefore raising by his hand
            The stranger, lead him to a throne, and bid
            The heralds mingle wine, that we may pour
            To thunder-bearing Jove, the suppliant's friend.
            Then let the cat'ress for thy guest produce
            Supply, a supper from the last regale.
                Soon as those words Alcinoüs heard, the King,
            Upraising by his hand the prudent Chief
            Ulysses from the hearth, he made him sit,
            On a bright throne, displacing for his sake
            Laodamas his son, the virtuous youth
            Who sat beside him, and whom most he lov'd.
            And now, a maiden charg'd with golden ew'r
            And with an argent laver, pouring, first,
            Pure water on his hands, supply'd him, next,
            With a resplendent table, which the chaste
            Directress of the stores furnish'd with bread
            And dainties, remnants of the last regale.
            Then ate the Hero toil-inured, and drank,
            And to his herald thus Alcinoüs spake.
                Pontonoüs! mingling wine, bear it around
            To ev'ry guest in turn, that we may pour
            To thunder-bearer Jove, the stranger's friend,
            And guardian of the suppliant's sacred rights.
                He said; Pontonoüs, as he bade, the wine
            Mingled delicious, and the cups dispensed
            With distribution regular to all.
            When each had made libation, and had drunk
            Sufficient, then, Alcinoüs thus began.
                Phæacian Chiefs and Senators, I speak
            The dictates of my mind, therefore attend!
            Ye all have feasted--To your homes and sleep.
            We will assemble at the dawn of day
            More senior Chiefs, that we may entertain
            The stranger here, and to the Gods perform
            Due sacrifice; the convoy that he asks
            Shall next engage our thoughts, that free from pain
            And from vexation, by our friendly aid
            He may revisit, joyful and with speed,
            His native shore, however far remote.
            No inconvenience let him feel or harm,
            Ere his arrival; but, arrived, thenceforth
            He must endure whatever lot the Fates
            Spun for him in the moment of his birth.
            But should he prove some Deity from heav'n
            Descended, then the Immortals have in view
            Designs not yet apparent; for the Gods
            Have ever from of old reveal'd themselves
            At our solemnities, have on our seats
            Sat with us evident, and shared the feast;
            And even if a single traveller
            Of the Phæacians meet them, all reserve
            They lay aside; for with the Gods we boast
            As near affinity as do themselves
            The Cyclops, or the Giant race profane.[26]
                To whom Ulysses, ever-wise, replied.
            Alcinoüs! think not so. Resemblance none
            In figure or in lineaments I bear
            To the immortal tenants of the skies,
            But to the sons of earth; if ye have known
            A man afflicted with a weight of woe
            Peculiar, let me be with him compared;
            Woes even passing his could I relate,
            And all inflicted on me by the Gods.
            But let me eat, comfortless as I am,
            Uninterrupted; for no call is loud
            As that of hunger in the ears of man;
            Importunate, unreas'nable, it constrains
            His notice, more than all his woes beside.
            So, I much sorrow feel, yet not the less
            Hear I the blatant appetite demand
            Due sustenance, and with a voice that drowns
            E'en all my suff'rings, till itself be fill'd.
            But expedite ye at the dawn of day
            My safe return into my native land,
            After much mis'ry; and let life itself
            Forsake me, may I but once more behold
            All that is mine, in my own lofty abode.
                He spake, whom all applauded, and advised,
            Unanimous, the guest's conveyance home,
            Who had so fitly spoken. When, at length,
            All had libation made, and were sufficed,
            Departing to his house, each sought repose.
            But still Ulysses in the hall remain'd,
            Where, godlike King, Alcinoüs at his side
            Sat, and Areta; the attendants clear'd
            Meantime the board, and thus the Queen white-arm'd,
            (Marking the vest and mantle, which he wore
            And which her maidens and herself had made)
            In accents wing'd with eager haste began.
                Stranger! the first enquiry shall be mine;
            Who art, and whence? From whom receiv'dst thou these?
            Saidst not--I came a wand'rer o'er the Deep?
                To whom Ulysses, ever-wise, replied.
            Oh Queen! the task were difficult to unfold
            In all its length the story of my woes,
            For I have num'rous from the Gods receiv'd;
            But I will answer thee as best I may.
            There is a certain isle, Ogygia, placed
            Far distant in the Deep; there dwells, by man
            Alike unvisited, and by the Gods,
            Calypso, beauteous nymph, but deeply skill'd
            In artifice, and terrible in pow'r,
            Daughter of Atlas. Me alone my fate
            Her miserable inmate made, when Jove
            Had riv'n asunder with his candent bolt
            My bark in the mid-sea. There perish'd all
            The valiant partners of my toils, and I
            My vessel's keel embracing day and night
            With folded arms, nine days was borne along.
            But on the tenth dark night, as pleas'd the Gods,
            They drove me to Ogygia, where resides
            Calypso, beauteous nymph, dreadful in pow'r;
            She rescued, cherish'd, fed me, and her wish
            Was to confer on me immortal life,
            Exempt for ever from the sap of age.
            But me her offer'd boon sway'd not. Sev'n years
            I there abode continual, with my tears
            Bedewing ceaseless my ambrosial robes,
            Calypso's gift divine; but when, at length,
            (Sev'n years elaps'd) the circling eighth arrived,
            She then, herself, my quick departure thence
            Advised, by Jove's own mandate overaw'd,
            Which even her had influenced to a change.
            On a well-corded raft she sent me forth
            With num'rous presents; bread she put and wine
            On board, and cloath'd me in immortal robes;
            She sent before me also a fair wind
            Fresh-blowing, but not dang'rous. Sev'nteen days
            I sail'd the flood continual, and descried,
            On the eighteenth, your shadowy mountains tall
            When my exulting heart sprang at the sight,
            All wretched as I was, and still ordain'd
            To strive with difficulties many and hard
            From adverse Neptune; he the stormy winds
            Exciting opposite, my wat'ry way
            Impeded, and the waves heav'd to a bulk
            Immeasurable, such as robb'd me soon
            Deep-groaning, of the raft, my only hope;
            For her the tempest scatter'd, and myself
            This ocean measur'd swimming, till the winds
            And mighty waters cast me on your shore.
            Me there emerging, the huge waves had dash'd
            Full on the land, where, incommodious most,
            The shore presented only roughest rocks,
            But, leaving it, I swam the Deep again,
            Till now, at last, a river's gentle stream
            Receiv'd me, by no rocks deform'd, and where
            No violent winds the shelter'd bank annoy'd.
            I flung myself on shore, exhausted, weak,
            Needing repose; ambrosial night came on,
            When from the Jove-descended stream withdrawn,
            I in a thicket lay'd me down on leaves
            Which I had heap'd together, and the Gods
            O'erwhelm'd my eye-lids with a flood of sleep.
            There under wither'd leaves, forlorn, I slept
            All the long night, the morning and the noon,
            But balmy sleep, at the decline of day,
            Broke from me; then, your daughter's train I heard
            Sporting, with whom she also sported, fair
            And graceful as the Gods. To her I kneel'd.
            She, following the dictates of a mind
            Ingenuous, pass'd in her behaviour all
            Which even ye could from an age like hers
            Have hoped; for youth is ever indiscrete.
            She gave me plenteous food, with richest wine
            Refresh'd my spirit, taught me where to bathe,
            And cloath'd me as thou seest; thus, though a prey
            To many sorrows, I have told thee truth.
                To whom Alcinoüs answer thus return'd.
            My daughter's conduct, I perceive, hath been
            In this erroneous, that she led thee not
            Hither, at once, with her attendant train,
            For thy first suit was to herself alone.
                Thus then Ulysses, wary Chief, replied.
            Blame not, O Hero, for so slight a cause
            Thy faultless child; she bade me follow them,
            But I refused, by fear and awe restrain'd,
            Lest thou should'st feel displeasure at that sight
            Thyself; for we are all, in ev'ry clime,
            Suspicious, and to worst constructions prone.
                So spake Ulysses, to whom thus the King.
            I bear not, stranger! in my breast an heart
            Causeless irascible; for at all times
            A temp'rate equanimity is best.
            And oh, I would to heav'n, that, being such
            As now thou art, and of one mind with me,
            Thou would'st accept my daughter, would'st become
            My son-in-law, and dwell contented here!
            House would I give thee, and possessions too,
            Were such thy choice; else, if thou chuse it not,
            No man in all Phæacia shall by force
            Detain thee. Jupiter himself forbid!
            For proof, I will appoint thee convoy hence
            To-morrow; and while thou by sleep subdued
            Shalt on thy bed repose, they with their oars
            Shall brush the placid flood, till thou arrive
            At home, or at what place soe'er thou would'st,
            Though far more distant than Euboea lies,
            Remotest isle from us, by the report
            Of ours, who saw it when they thither bore
            Golden-hair'd Rhadamanthus o'er the Deep,
            To visit earth-born Tityus. To that isle
            They went; they reach'd it, and they brought him thence
            Back to Phæacia, in one day, with ease.
            Thou also shalt be taught what ships I boast
            Unmatch'd in swiftness, and how far my crews
            Excel, upturning with their oars the brine.
                He ceas'd; Ulysses toil-inur'd his words
            Exulting heard, and, praying, thus replied.
                Eternal Father! may the King perform
            His whole kind promise! grant him in all lands
            A never-dying name, and grant to me
            To visit safe my native shores again!
                Thus they conferr'd; and now Areta bade
            Her fair attendants dress a fleecy couch
            Under the portico, with purple rugs
            Resplendent, and with arras spread beneath,
            And over all with cloaks of shaggy pile.
            Forth went the maidens, bearing each a torch,
            And, as she bade, prepared in haste a couch
            Of depth commodious, then, returning, gave
            Ulysses welcome summons to repose.
                Stranger! thy couch is spread. Hence to thy rest.
            So they--Thrice grateful to his soul the thought
            Seem'd of repose. There slept Ulysses, then,
            On his carv'd couch, beneath the portico,
            But in the inner-house Alcinoüs found
            His place of rest, and hers with royal state
            Prepared, the Queen his consort, at his side.



Extra Info:
[25] +Kairoseôn d' othoneôn apoleibetai hygron elaion+.

Pope has given no translation of this line in the text of his work, but has translated it in a note. It is variously interpreted by commentators; the sense which is here given of it is that recommended by Eustathius.

[26] The Scholiast explains the passage thus--We resemble the Gods in righteousness as much as the Cyclops and Giants resembled each other in impiety. But in this sense of it there is something intricate and contrary to Homer's manner. We have seen that they derived themselves from Neptune, which sufficiently justifies the above interpretation.



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