Public Domain Poetry And Stories - Translation of: The Odyssey of Homer: Book XVII by William Cowper
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Translation of: The Odyssey of Homer: Book XVII

    By William Cowper



    ARGUMENT

    Telemachus returns to the city, and relates to his mother the principal passages of his voyage; Ulysses, conducted by Eumæus, arrives there also, and enters among the suitors, having been known only by his old dog Argus, who dies at his feet. The curiosity of Penelope being excited by the account which Eumæus gives her of Ulysses, she orders him immediately into her presence, but Ulysses postpones the interview till evening, when the suitors having left the palace, there shall be no danger of interruption. Eumæus returns to his cottage.


            Now look'd Aurora from the East abroad,
            When the illustrious offspring of divine
            Ulysses bound his sandals to his feet;
            He seiz'd his sturdy spear match'd to his gripe,
            And to the city meditating quick
            Departure now, the swine-herd thus bespake.
                Father! I seek the city, to convince
            My mother of my safe return, whose tears,
            I judge, and lamentation shall not cease
            Till her own eyes behold me. But I lay
            On thee this charge. Into the city lead,
            Thyself, this hapless guest, that he may beg
            Provision there, a morsel and a drop
            From such as may, perchance, vouchsafe the boon.
            I cannot, vext and harass'd as I am,
            Feed all, and should the stranger take offence,
            The worse for him. Plain truth is my delight.
                To whom Ulysses, ever-wise, replied.
            Nor is it my desire to be detained.
            Better the mendicant in cities seeks
            His dole, vouchsafe it whosoever may,
            Than in the villages. I am not young,
            Nor longer of an age that well accords
            With rural tasks, nor could I all perform
            That it might please a master to command.
            Go then, and when I shall have warm'd my limbs
            Before the hearth, and when the risen sun
            Shall somewhat chase the cold, thy servant's task
            Shall be to guide me thither, as thou bidd'st,
            For this is a vile garb; the frosty air
            Of morning would benumb me thus attired,
            And, as ye say, the city is remote.
                He ended, and Telemachus in haste
            Set forth, his thoughts all teeming as he went
            With dire revenge. Soon in the palace-courts
            Arriving, he reclined his spear against
            A column, and proceeded to the hall.
            Him Euryclea, first, his nurse, perceived,
            While on the variegated seats she spread
            Their fleecy cov'ring; swift with tearful eyes
            She flew to him, and the whole female train
            Of brave Ulysses swarm'd around his son,
            Clasping him, and his forehead and his neck
            Kissing affectionate; then came, herself,
            As golden Venus or Diana fair,
            Forth from her chamber to her son's embrace,
            The chaste Penelope; with tears she threw
            Her arms around him, his bright-beaming eyes
            And forehead kiss'd, and with a murmur'd plaint
            Maternal, in wing'd accents thus began.
                Thou hast return'd, light of my eyes! my son!
            My lov'd Telemachus! I had no hope
            To see thee more when once thou hadst embark'd
            For Pylus, privily, and with no consent
            From me obtain'd, news seeking of thy sire.
            But haste; unfold. Declare what thou hast seen.
                To whom Telemachus, discrete, replied.
            Ah mother! let my sorrows rest, nor me
            From death so lately 'scaped afflict anew,
            But, bathed and habited in fresh attire,
            With all the maidens of thy train ascend
            To thy superior chamber, there to vow
            A perfect hecatomb to all the Gods,
            When Jove shall have avenged our num'rous wrongs.
            I seek the forum, there to introduce
            A guest, my follower from the Pylian shore,
            Whom sending forward with my noble band,
            I bade Piræus to his own abode
            Lead him, and with all kindness entertain
            The stranger, till I should myself arrive.
                He spake, nor flew his words useless away.
            She, bathed and habited in fresh attire,
            Vow'd a full hecatomb to all the Gods,
            Would Jove but recompense her num'rous wrongs.
            Then, spear in hand, went forth her son, two dogs
            Fleet-footed following him. O'er all his form
            Pallas diffused a dignity divine,
            And ev'ry eye gazed on him as he pass'd.
            The suitors throng'd him round, joy on their lips
            And welcome, but deep mischief in their hearts.
            He, shunning all that crowd, chose to himself
            A seat, where Mentor sat, and Antiphus,
            And Halytherses, long his father's friends
            Sincere, who of his voyage much enquired.
            Then drew Piræus nigh, leading his guest
            Toward the forum; nor Telemachus
            Stood long aloof, but greeted his approach,
            And was accosted by Piræus thus.
                Sir! send thy menial women to bring home
            The precious charge committed to my care,
            Thy gifts at Menelaus' hands received.
                To whom Telemachus, discrete, replied.
            Piræus! wait; for I not yet foresee
            The upshot. Should these haughty ones effect
            My death, clandestine, under my own roof,
            And parcel my inheritance by lot,
            I rather wish those treasures thine, than theirs.
            But should I with success plan for them all
            A bloody death, then, wing'd with joy, thyself
            Bring home those presents to thy joyful friend.
                So saying, he led the anxious stranger thence
            Into the royal mansion, where arrived,
            Each cast his mantle on a couch or throne,
            And plung'd his feet into a polish'd bath.
            There wash'd and lubricated with smooth oils,
            From the attendant maidens each received
            Tunic and shaggy mantle. Thus attired,
            Forth from the baths they stepp'd, and sat again.
            A maiden, next, with golden ewer charged,
            And silver bowl, pour'd water on their hands,
            And spread the polish'd table, which with food
            Of all kinds, remnants of the last regale,
            The mistress of the household charge supplied.
            Meantime, beside a column of the dome
            His mother, on a couch reclining, twirl'd
            Her slender threads. They to the furnish'd board
            Stretch'd forth their hands, and, hunger now and thirst
            Both satisfied, Penelope began.
                Telemachus! I will ascend again,
            And will repose me on my woeful bed;
            For such it hath been, and with tears of mine
            Ceaseless bedew'd, e'er since Ulysses went
            With Atreus' sons to Troy. For not a word
            Thou would'st vouchsafe me till our haughty guests
            Had occupied the house again, of all
            That thou hast heard (if aught indeed thou hast)
            Of thy long-absent father's wish'd return.
                Her answer'd then Telemachus discrete.
            Mother, at thy request I will with truth
            Relate the whole. At Pylus shore arrived
            We Nestor found, Chief of the Pylian race.
            Receiving me in his august abode,
            He entertain'd me with such welcome kind
            As a glad father shews to his own son
            Long-lost and newly found; so Nestor me,
            And his illustrious offspring, entertain'd,
            But yet assured me that he nought had heard
            From mortal lips of my magnanimous sire,
            Whether alive or dead; with his own steeds
            He sent me, and with splendid chariot thence
            To spear-famed Menelaus, Atreus' son.
            There saw I Helen, by the Gods' decree
            Auth'ress of trouble both to Greece and Troy.
            The Hero Menelaus then enquired
            What cause had urged me to the pleasant vale
            Of Lacedæmon; plainly I rehearsed
            The occasion, and the Hero thus replied.
                Ye Gods! they are ambitious of the bed
            Of a brave man, however base themselves.
            But, as it chances when the hart hath laid
            Her fawns new-yean'd and sucklings yet, to rest
            In some resistless lion's den, she roams,
            Meantime, the hills, and in the grassy vales
            Feeds heedless, but the lion to his lair
            Returning soon, both her and hers destroys,
            So shall thy father, brave Ulysses, them.
            Jove! Pallas! and Apollo! oh that such
            As erst in well-built Lesbos, where he strove
            With Philomelides, whom wrestling, flat
            He threw, when all Achaia's sons rejoiced,
            Ulysses, now, might mingle with his foes!
            Short life and bitter nuptials should be theirs,
            But thy enquiries neither indirect
            Will I evade, nor give thee false reply,
            But all that from the Ancient of the Deep[73]
            I have received will utter, hiding nought.
            The God declared that he had seen thy sire
            In a lone island, sorrowing, and detain'd
            An inmate in the grotto of the nymph
            Calypso, wanting also means by which
            To reach the country of his birth again,
            For neither gallant barks nor friends had he
            To speed his passage o'er the boundless waves.
                So Menelaus spake, the spear-renown'd.
            My errand thus accomplish'd, I return'd--
            And by the Gods with gales propitious blest,
            Was wafted swiftly to my native shore.
                He spake, and tumult in his mother's heart
            So speaking, raised. Consolatory, next,
            The godlike Theoclymenus began.
                Consort revered of Laertiades!
            Little the Spartan knew, but list to me,
            For I will plainly prophesy and sure.
            Be Jove of all in heav'n my witness first,
            Then this thy hospitable board, and, last,
            The household Gods of the illustrious Chief
            Ulysses, at whose hearth I have arrived,[74]
            That, even now, within his native isle
            Ulysses somewhere sits, or creeps obscure,
            Witness of these enormities, and seeds
            Sowing of dire destruction for his foes;
            So sure an augury, while on the deck
            Reclining of the gallant bark, I saw,
            And with loud voice proclaim'd it to thy son.
                Him answer'd then Penelope discrete.
            Grant heav'n, my guest, that this good word of thine
            Fail not! then shalt thou soon such bounty share
            And friendship at my hands, that at first sight
            Whoe'er shall meet thee shall pronounce thee blest.
                Thus they conferr'd. Meantime the suitors hurl'd
            The quoit and lance on the smooth area spread
            Before Ulysses' gate, the custom'd scene
            Of their contentions, sports, and clamours rude.
            But when the hour of supper now approach'd,
            And from the pastures on all sides the sheep
            Came with their wonted drivers, Medon then
            (For he of all the heralds pleas'd them most,
            And waited at the board) them thus address'd.
                Enough of play, young princes! ent'ring now
            The house, prepare we sedulous our feast,
            Since in well-timed refreshment harm is none.
                He spake, whose admonition pleas'd. At once
            All, rising, sought the palace; there arrived,
            Each cast his mantle off, which on his throne
            Or couch he spread, then, brisk, to slaughter fell
            Of many a victim; sheep and goats and brawns
            They slew, all fatted, and a pastur'd ox,
            Hast'ning the banquet; nor with less dispatch
            Ulysses and Eumæus now prepared
            To seek the town, when thus the swain began.
                My guest! since thy fixt purpose is to seek
            This day the city as my master bade,
            Though I, in truth, much rather wish thee here
            A keeper of our herds, yet, through respect
            And rev'rence of his orders, whose reproof
            I dread, for masters seldom gently chide,
            I would be gone. Arise, let us depart,
            For day already is far-spent, and soon
            The air of even-tide will chill thee more.
                To whom Ulysses, ever-wise, replied.
            It is enough. I understand. Thou speak'st
            To one intelligent. Let us depart,
            And lead, thyself, the way; but give me, first,
            (If thou have one already hewn) a staff
            To lean on, for ye have described the road
            Rugged, and ofttimes dang'rous to the foot.
                So saying, his tatter'd wallet o'er his back
            He cast, suspended by a leathern twist,
            Eumæus gratified him with a staff,
            And forth they went, leaving the cottage kept
            By dogs and swains. He city-ward his King
            Led on, in form a squalid beggar old,
            Halting, and in unseemly garb attired.
            But when, slow-travelling the craggy way,
            They now approach'd the town, and had attain'd
            The marble fountain deep, which with its streams
            Pellucid all the citizens supplied,
            (Ithacus had that fountain framed of old
            With Neritus and Polyctor, over which
            A grove of water-nourish'd alders hung
            Circular on all sides, while cold the rill
            Ran from the rock, on whose tall summit stood
            The altar of the nymphs, by all who pass'd
            With sacrifice frequented, still, and pray'r)
            Melantheus, son of Dolius, at that fount
            Met them; the chosen goats of ev'ry flock,
            With two assistants, from the field he drove,
            The suitors' supper. He, seeing them both,
            In surly accent boorish, such as fired
            Ulysses with resentment, thus began.
                Ay--this is well--The villain leads the vile--
            Thus evermore the Gods join like to like.
            Thou clumsy swine-herd, whither would'st conduct
            This morsel-hunting mendicant obscene,
            Defiler base of banquets? many a post
            Shall he rub smooth that props him while he begs
            Lean alms, sole object of his low pursuit,
            Who ne'er to sword or tripod yet aspired.
            Would'st thou afford him to me for a guard
            Or sweeper of my stalls, or to supply
            My kids with leaves, he should on bulkier thewes
            Supported stand, though nourish'd but with whey.
            But no such useful arts hath he acquired,
            Nor likes he work, but rather much to extort
            From others food for his unsated maw.
            But mark my prophecy, for it is true,
            At famed Ulysses' house should he arrive,
            His sides shall shatter many a footstool hurl'd
            Against them by the offended princes there.
                He spake, and drawing nigh, with his rais'd foot,
            Insolent as he was and brutish, smote
            Ulysses' haunch, yet shook not from his path
            The firm-set Chief, who, doubtful, mused awhile
            Whether to rush on him, and with his staff
            To slay him, or uplifting him on high,
            Downward to dash him headlong; but his wrath
            Restraining, calm he suffer'd the affront.
            Him then Eumæus with indignant look
            Rebuking, rais'd his hands, and fervent pray'd.
                Nymphs of the fountains, progeny of Jove!
            If e'er Ulysses on your altar burn'd
            The thighs of fatted lambs or kidlings, grant
            This my request. O let the Hero soon,
            Conducted by some Deity, return!
            So shall he quell that arrogance which safe
            Thou now indulgest, roaming day by day
            The city, while bad shepherds mar the flocks.
                To whom the goat-herd answer thus return'd
            Melantheus. Marvellous! how rare a speech
            The subtle cur hath framed! whom I will send
            Far hence at a convenient time on board
            My bark, and sell him at no little gain.
            I would, that he who bears the silver bow
            As sure might pierce Telemachus this day
            In his own house, or that the suitors might,
            As that same wand'rer shall return no more!
                He said, and them left pacing slow along,
            But soon, himself, at his Lord's house arrived;
            There ent'ring bold, he with the suitors sat
            Opposite to Eurymachus, for him
            He valued most. The sewers his portion placed
            Of meat before him, and the maiden, chief
            Directress of the household gave him bread.
            And now, Ulysses, with the swain his friend
            Approach'd, when, hearing the harmonious lyre,
            Both stood, for Phemius had begun his song.
            He grasp'd the swine-herd's hand, and thus he said.
                This house, Eumæus! of Ulysses seems
            Passing magnificent, and to be known
            With ease for his among a thousand more.
            One pile supports another, and a wall
            Crested with battlements surrounds the court;
            Firm, too, the folding doors all force of man
            Defy; but num'rous guests, as I perceive,
            Now feast within; witness the sav'ry steam
            Fast-fuming upward, and the sounding harp,
            Divine associate of the festive board.
                To whom, Eumæus, thou didst thus reply.
            Thou hast well-guess'd; no wonder, thou art quick
            On ev'ry theme; but let us well forecast
            This business. Wilt thou, ent'ring first, thyself,
            The splendid mansion, with the suitors mix,
            Me leaving here? or shall I lead the way
            While thou remain'st behind? yet linger not,
            Lest, seeing thee without, some servant strike
            Or drive thee hence. Consider which were best.
                Him answer'd, then, the patient Hero bold.
            It is enough. I understand. Thou speak'st
            To one intelligent. Lead thou the way
            Me leaving here, for neither stripes nor blows
            To me are strange. Much exercised with pain
            In fight and on the Deep, I have long since
            Learn'd patience. Follow, next, what follow may!
            But, to suppress the appetite, I deem
            Impossible; the stomach is a source
            Of ills to man, an avaricious gulph
            Destructive, which to satiate, ships are rigg'd,
            Seas travers'd, and fierce battles waged remote.
                Thus they discoursing stood; Argus the while,
            Ulysses' dog, uplifted where he lay
            His head and ears erect. Ulysses him
            Had bred long since, himself, but rarely used,
            Departing, first, to Ilium. Him the youths
            In other days led frequent to the chace
            Of wild goat, hart and hare; but now he lodg'd
            A poor old cast-off, of his Lord forlorn,
            Where mules and oxen had before the gate
            Much ordure left, with which Ulysses' hinds
            Should, in due time, manure his spacious fields.
            There lay, with dog-devouring vermin foul
            All over, Argus; soon as he perceived
            Long-lost Ulysses nigh, down fell his ears
            Clapp'd close, and with his tail glad sign he gave
            Of gratulation, impotent to rise
            And to approach his master as of old.
            Ulysses, noting him, wiped off a tear
            Unmark'd, and of Eumæus quick enquired.
                I can but wonder seeing such a dog
            Thus lodg'd, Eumæus! beautiful in form
            He is, past doubt, but whether he hath been
            As fleet as fair I know not; rather such
            Perchance as masters sometimes keep to grace
            Their tables, nourish'd more for shew than use.
                To whom, Eumæus, thou didst thus reply.
            He is the dog of one dead far remote.
            But had he now such feat-performing strength
            As when Ulysses left him, going hence
            To Ilium, in one moment thou shouldst mark,
            Astonish'd, his agility and force.
            He never in the sylvan deep recess
            The wild beast saw that 'scaped him, and he track'd
            Their steps infallible; but he hath now
            No comfort, for (the master dead afar)
            The heedless servants care not for his dog.
            Domestics, missing once their Lord's controul,
            Grow wilful, and refuse their proper tasks;
            For whom Jove dooms to servitude, he takes
            At once the half of that man's worth away.
                He said, and, ent'ring at the portal, join'd
            The suitors. Then his destiny released
            Old Argus, soon as he had lived to see
            Ulysses in the twentieth year restored.
                Godlike Telemachus, long ere the rest,
            Marking the swine-herd's entrance, with a nod
            Summon'd him to approach. Eumæus cast
            His eye around, and seeing vacant there
            The seat which the dispenser of the feast
            Was wont to occupy while he supplied
            The num'rous guests, planted it right before
            Telemachus, and at his table sat,
            On which the herald placed for him his share
            Of meat, and from the baskets gave him bread.
            Soon after him, Ulysses enter'd slow
            The palace, like a squalid beggar old,
            Staff-propp'd, and in loose tatters foul attired.
            Within the portal on the ashen sill
            He sat, and, seeming languid, lean'd against
            A cypress pillar by the builder's art
            Polish'd long since, and planted at the door.
            Then took Telemachus a loaf entire
            Forth from the elegant basket, and of flesh
            A portion large as his two hands contained,
            And, beck'ning close the swine-herd, charged him thus.
                These to the stranger; whom advise to ask
            Some dole from ev'ry suitor; bashful fear
            Ill suits the mendicant by want oppress'd.
                He spake; Eumæus went, and where he sat
            Arriving, in wing'd accents thus began.
                Telemachus, oh stranger, sends thee these,
            And counsels thee to importune for more
            The suitors, one by one; for bashful fear
            Ill suits the mendicant by want oppress'd.
                To whom Ulysses, ever-wise, replied.
            Jove, King of all, grant ev'ry good on earth
            To kind Telemachus, and the complete
            Accomplishment of all that he desires!
                He said, and with both hands outspread, the mess
            Receiving as he sat, on his worn bag
            Disposed it at his feet. Long as the bard
            Chaunted, he ate, and when he ceas'd to eat,
            Then also ceas'd the bard divine to sing.
            And now ensued loud clamour in the hall
            And tumult, when Minerva, drawing nigh
            To Laertiades, impell'd the Chief
            Crusts to collect, or any pittance small
            At ev'ry suitor's hand, for trial's sake
            Of just and unjust; yet deliv'rance none
            From evil she design'd for any there.
            From left to right[75] his progress he began
            Petitioning, with outstretch'd hands, the throng,
            As one familiar with the beggar's art.
            They, pitying, gave to him, but view'd him still
            With wonder, and enquiries mutual made
            Who, and whence was he? Then the goat-herd rose
            Melanthius, and th' assembly thus address'd.
                Hear me, ye suitors of th' illustrious Queen!
            This guest, of whom ye ask, I have beheld
            Elsewhere; the swine-herd brought him; but himself
            I know not, neither who nor whence he is.
                So he; then thus Antinoüs stern rebuked
            The swine-herd. Ah, notorious as thou art,
            Why hast thou shewn this vagabond the way
            Into the city? are we not enough
            Infested with these troublers of our feasts?
            Deem'st it a trifle that such numbers eat
            At thy Lord's cost, and hast thou, therefore, led
            This fellow hither, found we know not where?
                To whom, Eumæus, thou didst thus reply.
            Antinoüs! though of high degree, thou speak'st
            Not wisely. What man to another's house
            Repairs to invite him to a feast, unless
            He be of those who by profession serve
            The public, prophet, healer of disease,
            Ingenious artist, or some bard divine
            Whose music may exhilarate the guests?
            These, and such only, are in ev'ry land
            Call'd to the banquet; none invites the poor,
            Who much consume, and no requital yield.
            But thou of all the suitors roughly treat'st
            Ulysses' servants most, and chiefly me;
            Yet thee I heed not, while the virtuous Queen
            Dwells in this palace, and her godlike son.
                To whom Telemachus, discrete, replied.
            Peace! answer not verbose a man like him.
            Antinoüs hath a tongue accustom'd much
            To tauntings, and promotes them in the rest.
                Then, turning to Antinoüs, quick he said--
            Antinoüs! as a father for his son
            Takes thought, so thou for me, who bidd'st me chase
            The stranger harshly hence; but God forbid![76]
            Impart to him. I grudge not, but myself
            Exhort thee to it; neither, in this cause,
            Fear thou the Queen, or in the least regard
            Whatever menial throughout all the house
            Of famed Ulysses. Ah! within thy breast
            Dwells no such thought; thou lov'st not to impart
            To others, but to gratify thyself.
                To whom Antinoüs answer thus return'd.
            High-soaring and intemp'rate in thy speech
            How hast thou said, Telemachus? Would all
            As much bestow on him, he should not seek
            Admittance here again three months to come.
                So saying, he seized the stool which, banqueting,
            He press'd with his nice feet, and from beneath
            The table forth advanced it into view.
            The rest all gave to him, with bread and flesh
            Filling his wallet, and Ulysses, now,
            Returning to his threshold, there to taste
            The bounty of the Greeks, paused in his way
            Beside Antinoüs, whom he thus address'd.
                Kind sir! vouchsafe to me! for thou appear'st
            Not least, but greatest of the Achaians here,
            And hast a kingly look. It might become
            Thee therefore above others to bestow,
            So should I praise thee wheresoe'er I roam.
            I also lived the happy owner once
            Of such a stately mansion, and have giv'n
            To num'rous wand'rers (whencesoe'er they came)
            All that they needed; I was also served
            By many, and enjoy'd all that denotes
            The envied owner opulent and blest.
            But Jove (for so it pleas'd him) hath reduced
            My all to nothing, prompting me, in league
            With rovers of the Deep, to sail afar
            To Ægypt, for my sure destruction there.
            Within th' Ægyptian stream my barks well-oar'd
            I station'd, and, enjoining strict my friends
            To watch them close-attendant at their side,
            Commanded spies into the hill-tops; but they,
            Under the impulse of a spirit rash
            And hot for quarrel, the well-cultur'd fields
            Pillaged of the Ægyptians, captive led
            Their wives and little-ones, and slew the men.
            Ere long, the loud alarm their city reach'd.
            Down came the citizens, by dawn of day,
            With horse and foot and with the gleam of arms
            Filling the plain. Then Jove with panic dread
            Struck all my people; none found courage more
            To stand, for mischiefs swarm'd on ev'ry side.
            There, num'rous by the glitt'ring spear we fell
            Slaughter'd, while others they conducted thence
            Alive to servitude; but me they gave
            To Dmetor, King in Cyprus, Jasus' son;
            He entertained me liberally, and thence
            This land I reach'd, but poor and woe-begone.
                Then answer thus Antinoüs harsh return'd.
            What dæmon introduced this nuisance here,
            This troubler of our feast? stand yonder, keep
            Due distance from my table, or expect
            To see an Ægypt and a Cyprus worse
            Than those, bold mendicant and void of shame!
            Thou hauntest each, and, inconsid'rate, each
            Gives to thee, because gifts at other's cost
            Are cheap, and, plentifully serv'd themselves,
            They squander, heedless, viands not their own.
                To whom Ulysses while he slow retired.
            Gods! how illib'ral with that specious form!
            Thou wouldst not grant the poor a grain of salt
            From thy own board, who at another's fed
            So nobly, canst thou not spare a crust to me.
                He spake; then raged Antinoüs still the more,
            And in wing'd accents, louring, thus replied.
                Take such dismission now as thou deserv'st,
            Opprobrious! hast thou dared to scoff at me?
                So saying, he seized his stool, and on the joint
            Of his right shoulder smote him; firm as rock
            He stood, by no such force to be displaced,
            But silent shook his brows, and dreadful deeds
            Of vengeance ruminating, sought again
            His seat the threshold, where his bag full-charged
            He grounded, and the suitors thus address'd.
                Hear now, ye suitors of the matchless Queen,
            My bosom's dictates. Trivial is the harm,
            Scarce felt, if, fighting for his own, his sheep
            Perchance, or beeves, a man receive a blow.
            But me Antinoüs struck for that I ask'd
            Food from him merely to appease the pangs
            Of hunger, source of num'rous ills to man.
            If then the poor man have a God t' avenge
            His wrongs, I pray to him that death may seize
            Antinoüs, ere his nuptial hour arrive!
                To whom Antinoüs answer thus return'd,
            Son of Eupithes. Either seated there
            Or going hence, eat, stranger, and be still;
            Lest for thy insolence, by hand or foot
            We drag thee forth, and thou be flay'd alive.
                He ceased, whom all indignant heard, and thus
            Ev'n his own proud companions censured him.
                Antinoüs! thou didst not well to smite
            The wretched vagabond. O thou art doom'd
            For ever, if there be a God in heav'n;[77]
            For, in similitude of strangers oft,
            The Gods, who can with ease all shapes assume,
            Repair to populous cities, where they mark
            The outrageous and the righteous deeds of men.
                So they, for whose reproof he little cared.
            But in his heart Telemachus that blow
            Resented, anguish-torn, yet not a tear
            He shed, but silent shook his brows, and mused
            Terrible things. Penelope, meantime,
            Told of the wand'rer so abused beneath
            Her roof, among her maidens thus exclaim'd.
                So may Apollo, glorious archer, smite
            Thee also. Then Eurynome replied,
                Oh might our pray'rs prevail, none of them all
            Should see bright-charioted Aurora more.
                Her answer'd then Penelope discrete.
            Nurse! they are odious all, for that alike
            All teem with mischief; but Antinoüs' looks
            Remind me ever of the gloom of death.
            A stranger hath arrived who, begging, roams
            The house, (for so his penury enjoins)
            The rest have giv'n him, and have fill'd his bag
            With viands, but Antinoüs hath bruised
            His shoulder with a foot-stool hurl'd at him.
                While thus the Queen conversing with her train
            In her own chamber sat, Ulysses made
            Plenteous repast. Then, calling to her side
            Eumæus, thus she signified her will.
                Eumæus, noble friend! bid now approach
            Yon stranger. I would speak with him, and ask
            If he has seen Ulysses, or have heard
            Tidings, perchance, of the afflicted Chief,
            For much a wand'rer by his garb he seems.
                To whom, Eumæus, thou didst thus reply.
            Were those Achaians silent, thou shouldst hear,
            O Queen! a tale that would console thy heart.
            Three nights I housed him, and within my cot
            Three days detain'd him, (for his ship he left
            A fugitive, and came direct to me)
            But half untold his hist'ry still remains.
            As when his eye one fixes on a bard
            From heav'n instructed in such themes as charm
            The ear of mortals, ever as he sings
            The people press, insatiable, to hear,
            So, in my cottage, seated at my side,
            That stranger with his tale enchanted me.
            Laertes, he affirms, hath been his guest
            Erewhile in Crete, where Minos' race resides,
            And thence he hath arrived, after great loss,
            A suppliant to the very earth abased;
            He adds, that in Thesprotia's neighbour realm
            He of Ulysses heard, both that he lives,
            And that he comes laden with riches home.
                To whom Penelope, discrete, replied.
            Haste; call him. I would hear, myself, his tale.
            Meantime, let these, or in the palace gate
            Sport jocular, or here; their hearts are light,
            For their possessions are secure; their wine
            None drinks, or eats their viands, save their own,
            While my abode, day after day, themselves
            Haunting, my beeves and sheep and fatted goats
            Slay for the banquet, and my casks exhaust
            Extravagant, whence endless waste ensues;
            For no such friend as was Ulysses once
            Have I to expel the mischief. But might he
            Revisit once his native shores again,
            Then, aided by his son, he should avenge,
            Incontinent, the wrongs which now I mourn.
                Then sneezed Telemachus with sudden force,
            That all the palace rang; his mother laugh'd,
            And in wing'd accents thus the swain bespake.
                Haste--bid him hither--hear'st thou not the sneeze
            Propitious of my son? oh might it prove
            A presage of inevitable death
            To all these revellers! may none escape!
            Now mark me well. Should the event his tale
            Confirm, at my own hands he shall receive
            Mantle and tunic both for his reward.
                She spake; he went, and where Ulysses sat
            Arriving, in wing'd accents thus began.
                Penelope, my venerable friend!
            Calls thee, the mother of Telemachus.
            Oppress'd by num'rous troubles, she desires
            To ask thee tidings of her absent Lord.
            And should the event verify thy report,
            Thy meed shall be (a boon which much thou need'st)
            Tunic and mantle; but she gives no more;
            Thy sustenance thou must, as now, obtain,[78]
            Begging it at their hands who chuse to give.
                Then thus Ulysses, Hero toil-inured.
            Eumæus! readily I can relate
            Truth, and truth only, to the prudent Queen
            Icarius' daughter; for of him I know
            Much, and have suff'red sorrows like his own.
            But dread I feel of this imperious throng
            Perverse, whose riot and outrageous acts
            Of violence echo through the vault of heav'n.
            And, even now, when for no fault of mine
            Yon suitor struck me as I pass'd, and fill'd
            My flesh with pain, neither Telemachus
            Nor any interposed to stay his arm.
            Now, therefore, let Penelope, although
            Impatient, till the sun descend postpone
            Her questions; then she may enquire secure
            When comes her husband, and may nearer place
            My seat to the hearth-side, for thinly clad
            Thou know'st I am, whose aid I first implored.
                He ceas'd; at whose reply Eumæus sought
            Again the Queen, but ere he yet had pass'd
            The threshold, thus she greeted his return.
                Com'st thou alone, Eumæus? why delays
            The invited wand'rer? dreads he other harm?
            Or sees he aught that with a bashful awe
            Fills him? the bashful poor are poor indeed.
                To whom, Eumæus, thou didst thus reply.
            He hath well spoken; none who would decline
            The rudeness of this contumelious throng
            Could answer otherwise; thee he entreats
            To wait till sun-set, and that course, O Queen,
            Thou shalt thyself far more commodious find,
            To hold thy conf'rence with the guest, alone.
                Then answer thus Penelope return'd.
            The stranger, I perceive, is not unwise,
            Whoe'er he be, for on the earth are none
            Proud, insolent, and profligate as these.
                So spake the Queen. Then (all his message told)
            The good Eumæus to the suitors went
            Again, and with his head inclined toward
            Telemachus, lest others should his words
            Witness, in accents wing'd him thus address'd.
                Friend and kind master! I return to keep
            My herds, and to attend my rural charge,
            Whence we are both sustain'd. Keep thou, meantime,
            All here with vigilance, but chiefly watch
            For thy own good, and save thyself from harm;
            For num'rous here brood mischief, whom the Gods
            Exterminate, ere yet their plots prevail!
                To whom Telemachus, discrete, replied.
            So be it, father! and (thy evening-mess
            Eaten) depart; to-morrow come again,
            Bringing fair victims hither; I will keep,
            I and the Gods, meantime, all here secure.
                He ended; then resumed once more the swain
            His polish'd seat, and, both with wine and food
            Now satiate, to his charge return'd, the court
            Leaving and all the palace throng'd with guests;
            They (for it now was evening) all alike
            Turn'd jovial to the song and to the dance.



Extra Info:
[73] Proteus.

[74] The hearth was the altar on which the lares or household-gods were worshipped.

[75] That he might begin auspiciously. Wine was served in the same direction. F.

[76] Here again +Theos+ occurs in the abstract.

[77]
+Ei dê pou tis epouranios theos esi+

Eustathius, and Clarke after him, understand an aposiopesis here, as if the speaker meant to say--what if there should be? or--suppose there should be? But the sentence seems to fall in better with what follows interpreted as above, and it is a sense of the passage not unwarranted by the opinion of other commentators. See Schaufelbergerus.

[78] This seems added by Eumæus to cut off from Ulysses the hope that might otherwise tempt him to use fiction.



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