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

    By William Cowper



    ARGUMENT

    Ulysses discovers himself to the Phæacians, and begins the history of his adventures. He destroys Ismarus, city of the Ciconians; arrives among the Lotophagi; and afterwards at the land of the Cyclops. He is imprisoned by Polypheme in his cave, who devours six of his companions; intoxicates the monster with wine, blinds him while he sleeps, and escapes from him.


            Then answer, thus, Ulysses wise return'd.
            Alcinoüs! King! illustrious above all
            Phæacia's sons, pleasant it is to hear
            A bard like this, sweet as the Gods in song.
            The world, in my account, no sight affords
            More gratifying than a people blest
            With cheerfulness and peace, a palace throng'd
            With guests in order ranged, list'ning to sounds
            Melodious, and the steaming tables spread
            With plenteous viands, while the cups, with wine
            From brimming beakers fill'd, pass brisk around.
            No lovelier sight know I. But thou, it seems,
            Thy thoughts hast turn'd to ask me whence my groans
            And tears, that I may sorrow still the more.
            What first, what next, what last shall I rehearse,
            On whom the Gods have show'r'd such various woes?
            Learn first my name, that even in this land
            Remote I may be known, and that escaped
            From all adversity, I may requite
            Hereafter, this your hospitable care
            At my own home, however distant hence.
            I am Ulysses, fear'd in all the earth
            For subtlest wisdom, and renown'd to heaven,
            The offspring of Laertes; my abode
            Is sun-burnt Ithaca; there waving stands
            The mountain Neritus his num'rous boughs,
            And it is neighbour'd close by clust'ring isles
            All populous; thence Samos is beheld,
            Dulichium, and Zacynthus forest-clad.
            Flat on the Deep she lies, farthest removed
            Toward the West, while, situate apart,
            Her sister islands face the rising day;
            Rugged she is, but fruitful nurse of sons
            Magnanimous; nor shall these eyes behold,
            Elsewhere, an object dear and sweet as she.
            Calypso, beauteous Goddess, in her grot
            Detain'd me, wishing me her own espoused;
            Ææan Circe also, skill'd profound
            In potent arts, within her palace long
            Detain'd me, wishing me her own espoused;
            But never could they warp my constant mind.
            So much our parents and our native soil
            Attract us most, even although our lot
            Be fair and plenteous in a foreign land.
            But come--my painful voyage, such as Jove
            Gave me from Ilium, I will now relate.
                From Troy the winds bore me to Ismarus,
            City of the Ciconians; them I slew,
            And laid their city waste; whence bringing forth
            Much spoil with all their wives, I portion'd it
            With equal hand, and each received a share.
            Next, I exhorted to immediate flight
            My people; but in vain; they madly scorn'd
            My sober counsel, and much wine they drank,
            And sheep and beeves slew num'rous on the shore.
            Meantime, Ciconians to Ciconians call'd,
            Their neighbours summoning, a mightier host
            And braver, natives of the continent,
            Expert, on horses mounted, to maintain
            Fierce fight, or if occasion bade, on foot.
            Num'rous they came as leaves, or vernal flow'rs
            At day-spring. Then, by the decree of Jove,
            Misfortune found us. At the ships we stood
            Piercing each other with the brazen spear,
            And till the morning brighten'd into noon,
            Few as we were, we yet withstood them all;
            But, when the sun verged westward, then the Greeks
            Fell back, and the Ciconian host prevail'd.
            Six warlike Greecians from each galley's crew
            Perish'd in that dread field; the rest escaped.
                Thus, after loss of many, we pursued
            Our course, yet, difficult as was our flight,
            Went not till first we had invoked by name
            Our friends, whom the Ciconians had destroy'd.
            But cloud-assembler Jove assail'd us soon
            With a tempestuous North-wind; earth alike
            And sea with storms he overhung, and night
            Fell fast from heav'n. Their heads deep-plunging oft
            Our gallies flew, and rent, and rent again
            Our tatter'd sail-cloth crackled in the wind.
            We, fearing instant death, within the barks
            Our canvas lodg'd, and, toiling strenuous, reach'd
            At length the continent. Two nights we lay
            Continual there, and two long days, consumed
            With toil and grief; but when the beauteous morn
            Bright-hair'd, had brought the third day to a close,
            (Our masts erected, and white sails unfurl'd)
            Again we sat on board; meantime, the winds
            Well managed by the steersman, urged us on.
            And now, all danger pass'd, I had attain'd
            My native shore, but, doubling in my course
            Malea, waves and currents and North-winds
            Constrain'd me devious to Cythera's isle.
            Nine days by cruel storms thence was I borne
            Athwart the fishy Deep, but on the tenth
            Reach'd the Lotophagi, a race sustain'd
            On sweetest fruit alone. There quitting ship,
            We landed and drew water, and the crews
            Beside the vessels took their ev'ning cheer.
            When, hasty, we had thus our strength renew'd,
            I order'd forth my people to inquire
            (Two I selected from the rest, with whom
            I join'd an herald, third) what race of men
            Might there inhabit. They, departing, mix'd
            With the Lotophagi; nor hostile aught
            Or savage the Lotophagi devised
            Against our friends, but offer'd to their taste
            The lotus; of which fruit what man soe'er
            Once tasted, no desire felt he to come
            With tidings back, or seek his country more,
            But rather wish'd to feed on lotus still
            With the Lotophagi, and to renounce
            All thoughts of home. Them, therefore, I constrain'd
            Weeping on board, and dragging each beneath
            The benches, bound him there. Then, all in haste,
            I urged my people to ascend again
            Their hollow barks, lest others also, fed
            With fruit of lotus, should forget their home.
            They quick embark'd, and on the benches ranged
            In order, thresh'd with oars the foamy flood.
                Thence, o'er the Deep proceeding sad, we reach'd
            The land at length, where, giant-sized[32] and free
            From all constraint of law, the Cyclops dwell.
            They, trusting to the Gods, plant not, or plough,
            But earth unsow'd, untill'd, brings forth for them
            All fruits, wheat, barley, and the vinous grape
            Large cluster'd, nourish'd by the show'rs of Jove.
            No councils they convene, no laws contrive,
            But in deep caverns dwell, found on the heads
            Of lofty mountains, judging each supreme
            His wife and children, heedless of the rest.
            In front of the Cyclopean haven lies
            A level island, not adjoining close
            Their land, nor yet remote, woody and rude.
            There, wild goats breed numberless, by no foot
            Of man molested; never huntsman there,
            Inured to winter's cold and hunger, roams
            The dreary woods, or mountain-tops sublime;
            No fleecy flocks dwell there, nor plough is known,
            But the unseeded and unfurrow'd soil,
            Year after year a wilderness by man
            Untrodden, food for blatant goats supplies.
            For no ships crimson-prow'd the Cyclops own,
            Nor naval artizan is there, whose toil
            Might furnish them with oary barks, by which
            Subsists all distant commerce, and which bear
            Man o'er the Deep to cities far remote
            Who might improve the peopled isle, that seems
            Not steril in itself, but apt to yield,
            In their due season, fruits of ev'ry kind.
            For stretch'd beside the hoary ocean lie
            Green meadows moist, where vines would never fail;
            Light is the land, and they might yearly reap
            The tallest crops, so unctuous is the glebe.
            Safe is its haven also, where no need
            Of cable is or anchor, or to lash
            The hawser fast ashore, but pushing in
            His bark, the mariner might there abide
            Till rising gales should tempt him forth again.
            At bottom of the bay runs a clear stream
            Issuing from a cove hemm'd all around
            With poplars; down into that bay we steer'd
            Amid the darkness of the night, some God
            Conducting us; for all unseen it lay,
            Such gloom involved the fleet, nor shone the moon
            From heav'n to light us, veil'd by pitchy clouds.
            Hence, none the isle descried, nor any saw
            The lofty surge roll'd on the strand, or ere
            Our vessels struck the ground; but when they struck,
            Then, low'ring all our sails, we disembark'd,
            And on the sea-beach slept till dawn appear'd.
            Soon as Aurora, daughter of the dawn,
            Look'd rosy forth, we with admiring eyes
            The isle survey'd, roaming it wide around.
            Meantime, the nymphs, Jove's daughters, roused the goats
            Bred on the mountains, to supply with food
            The partners of my toils; then, bringing forth
            Bows and long-pointed javelins from the ships,
            Divided all into three sep'rate bands
            We struck them, and the Gods gave us much prey.
            Twelve ships attended me, and ev'ry ship
            Nine goats received by lot; myself alone
            Selected ten. All day, till set of sun,
            We eating sat goat's flesh, and drinking wine
            Delicious, without stint; for dearth was none
            Of ruddy wine on board, but much remain'd,
            With which my people had their jars supplied
            What time we sack'd Ciconian Ismarus.
            Thence looking forth toward the neighbour-land
            Where dwell the Cyclops, rising smoke we saw,
            And voices heard, their own, and of their flocks.
            Now sank the sun, and (night o'ershadowing all)
            We slept along the shore; but when again
            The rosy-finger'd daughter of the dawn
            Look'd forth, my crews convened, I thus began.
                Companions of my course! here rest ye all,
            Save my own crew, with whom I will explore
            This people, whether wild, they be, unjust,
            And to contention giv'n, or well-disposed
            To strangers, and a race who fear the Gods.
                So speaking, I embark'd, and bade embark
            My followers, throwing, quick, the hawsers loose.
            They, ent'ring at my word, the benches fill'd
            Well-ranged, and thresh'd with oars the foamy flood.
            Attaining soon that neighbour-land, we found
            At its extremity, fast by the sea,
            A cavern, lofty, and dark-brow'd above
            With laurels; in that cavern slumb'ring lay
            Much cattle, sheep and goats, and a broad court
            Enclosed it, fenced with stones from quarries hewn,
            With spiry firs, and oaks of ample bough.
            Here dwelt a giant vast, who far remote
            His flocks fed solitary, converse none
            Desiring, sullen, savage, and unjust.
            Monster, in truth, he was, hideous in form,
            Resembling less a man by Ceres' gift
            Sustain'd, than some aspiring mountain-crag
            Tufted with wood, and standing all alone.
            Enjoining, then, my people to abide
            Fast by the ship which they should closely guard,
            I went, but not without a goat-skin fill'd
            With sable wine which I had erst received
            From Maron, offspring of Evanthes, priest
            Of Phoebus guardian god of Ismarus,
            Because, through rev'rence of him, we had saved
            Himself, his wife and children; for he dwelt
            Amid the grove umbrageous of his God.
            He gave me, therefore, noble gifts; from him
            Sev'n talents I received of beaten gold,
            A beaker, argent all, and after these
            No fewer than twelve jars with wine replete,
            Rich, unadult'rate, drink for Gods; nor knew
            One servant, male or female, of that wine
            In all his house; none knew it, save himself,
            His wife, and the intendant of his stores.
            Oft as they drank that luscious juice, he slaked
            A single cup with twenty from the stream,
            And, even then, the beaker breath'd abroad
            A scent celestial, which whoever smelt,
            Thenceforth no pleasure found it to abstain.
            Charged with an ample goat-skin of this wine
            I went, and with a wallet well supplied,
            But felt a sudden presage in my soul
            That, haply, with terrific force endued,
            Some savage would appear, strange to the laws
            And privileges of the human race.
            Few steps convey'd us to his den, but him
            We found not; he his flocks pastur'd abroad.
            His cavern ent'ring, we with wonder gazed
            Around on all; his strainers hung with cheese
            Distended wide; with lambs and kids his penns
            Close-throng'd we saw, and folded separate
            The various charge; the eldest all apart,
            Apart the middle-aged, and the new-yean'd
            Also apart. His pails and bowls with whey
            Swam all, neat vessels into which he milk'd.
            Me then my friends first importuned to take
            A portion of his cheeses, then to drive
            Forth from the sheep-cotes to the rapid bark
            His kids and lambs, and plow the brine again.
            But me they moved not, happier had they moved!
            I wish'd to see him, and to gain, perchance,
            Some pledge of hospitality at his hands,
            Whose form was such, as should not much bespeak
            When he appear'd, our confidence or love.
            Then, kindling fire, we offer'd to the Gods,
            And of his cheeses eating, patient sat
            Till home he trudged from pasture. Charged he came
            With dry wood bundled, an enormous load
            Fuel by which to sup. Loud crash'd the thorns
            Which down he cast before the cavern's mouth,
            To whose interior nooks we trembling flew.
            At once he drove into his spacious cave
            His batten'd flock, all those which gave him milk,
            But all the males, both rams and goats, he left
            Abroad, excluded from the cavern-yard.
            Upheaving, next, a rocky barrier huge
            To his cave's mouth, he thrust it home. That weight
            Not all the oxen from its place had moved
            Of twenty and two wains; with such a rock
            Immense his den he closed. Then down he sat,
            And as he milk'd his ewes and bleating goats
            All in their turns, her yeanling gave to each;
            Coagulating, then, with brisk dispatch,
            The half of his new milk, he thrust the curd
            Into his wicker sieves, but stored the rest
            In pans and bowls--his customary drink.
            His labours thus perform'd, he kindled, last,
            His fuel, and discerning _us_, enquired,
                Who are ye, strangers? from what distant shore
            Roam ye the waters? traffic ye? or bound
            To no one port, wander, as pirates use,
            At large the Deep, exposing life themselves,
            And enemies of all mankind beside?
                He ceased; we, dash'd with terrour, heard the growl
            Of his big voice, and view'd his form uncouth,
            To whom, though sore appall'd, I thus replied.
                Of Greece are we, and, bound from Ilium home,
            Have wander'd wide the expanse of ocean, sport
            For ev'ry wind, and driven from our course,
            Have here arrived; so stood the will of Jove.
            We boast ourselves of Agamemnon's train,
            The son of Atreus, at this hour the Chief
            Beyond all others under heav'n renown'd,
            So great a city he hath sack'd and slain
            Such num'rous foes; but since we reach, at last,
            Thy knees, we beg such hospitable fare,
            Or other gift, as guests are wont to obtain.
            Illustrious lord! respect the Gods, and us
            Thy suitors; suppliants are the care of Jove
            The hospitable; he their wrongs resents
            And where the stranger sojourns, there is he.
                I ceas'd, when answer thus he, fierce, return'd.
            Friend! either thou art fool, or hast arrived
            Indeed from far, who bidd'st me fear the Gods
            Lest they be wroth. The Cyclops little heeds
            Jove Ægis-arm'd, or all the Pow'rs of heav'n.
            Our race is mightier far; nor shall myself,
            Through fear of Jove's hostility, abstain
            From thee or thine, unless my choice be such.
            But tell me now. Where touch'd thy gallant bark
            Our country, on thy first arrival here?
            Remote or nigh? for I would learn the truth.
                So spake he, tempting me; but, artful, thus
            I answer'd, penetrating his intent.
                My vessel, Neptune, Shaker of the shores,
            At yonder utmost promontory dash'd
            In pieces, hurling her against the rocks
            With winds that blew right thither from the sea,
            And I, with these alone, escaped alive.
                So I, to whom, relentless, answer none
            He deign'd, but, with his arms extended, sprang
            Toward my people, of whom seizing two
            At once, like whelps against his cavern-floor
            He dash'd them, and their brains spread on the ground.
            These, piece-meal hewn, for supper he prepared,
            And, like a mountain-lion, neither flesh
            Nor entrails left, nor yet their marrowy bones.
            We, viewing that tremendous sight, upraised
            Our hands to Jove, all hope and courage lost.
            When thus the Cyclops had with human flesh
            Fill'd his capacious belly, and had quaff'd
            Much undiluted milk, among his flocks
            Out-stretch'd immense, he press'd his cavern-floor.
            Me, then, my courage prompted to approach
            The monster with my sword drawn from the sheath,
            And to transfix him where the vitals wrap
            The liver; but maturer thoughts forbad.
            For so, we also had incurred a death
            Tremendous, wanting pow'r to thrust aside
            The rocky mass that closed his cavern-mouth
            By force of hand alone. Thus many a sigh
            Heaving, we watch'd the dawn. But when, at length,
            Aurora, day-spring's daughter rosy-palm'd
            Look'd forth, then, kindling fire, his flocks he milk'd
            In order, and her yeanling kid or lamb
            Thrust under each. When thus he had perform'd
            His wonted task, two seizing, as before,
            He slew them for his next obscene regale.
            His dinner ended, from the cave he drove
            His fatted flocks abroad, moving with ease
            That pond'rous barrier, and replacing it
            As he had only closed a quiver's lid.
            Then, hissing them along, he drove his flocks
            Toward the mountain, and me left, the while,
            Deep ruminating how I best might take
            Vengeance, and by the aid of Pallas win
            Deathless renown. This counsel pleas'd me most.
            Beside the sheep-cote lay a massy club
            Hewn by the Cyclops from an olive stock,
            Green, but which dried, should serve him for a staff.
            To us consid'ring it, that staff appear'd
            Tall as the mast of a huge trading bark,
            Impell'd by twenty rowers o'er the Deep.
            Such seem'd its length to us, and such its bulk.
            Part amputating, (an whole fathom's length)
            I gave my men that portion, with command
            To shave it smooth. They smooth'd it, and myself,
            Shaping its blunt extremity to a point,
            Season'd it in the fire; then cov'ring close
            The weapon, hid it under litter'd straw,
            For much lay scatter'd on the cavern-floor.
            And now I bade my people cast the lot
            Who of us all should take the pointed brand,
            And grind it in his eye when next he slept.
            The lots were cast, and four were chosen, those
            Whom most I wish'd, and I was chosen fifth.
            At even-tide he came, his fleecy flocks
            Pasturing homeward, and compell'd them all
            Into his cavern, leaving none abroad,
            Either through some surmise, or so inclined
            By influence, haply, of the Gods themselves.
            The huge rock pull'd into its place again
            At the cave's mouth, he, sitting, milk'd his sheep
            And goats in order, and her kid or lamb
            Thrust under each; thus, all his work dispatch'd,
            Two more he seiz'd, and to his supper fell.
            I then, approaching to him, thus address'd
            The Cyclops, holding in my hands a cup
            Of ivy-wood, well-charg'd with ruddy wine.
                Lo, Cyclops! this is wine. Take this and drink
            After thy meal of man's flesh. Taste and learn
            What precious liquor our lost vessel bore.
            I brought it hither, purposing to make
            Libation to thee, if to pity inclined
            Thou would'st dismiss us home. But, ah, thy rage
            Is insupportable! thou cruel one!
            Who, thinkest thou, of all mankind, henceforth
            Will visit _thee_, guilty of such excess?
                I ceas'd. He took and drank, and hugely pleas'd[33]
            With that delicious bev'rage, thus enquir'd.
                Give me again, and spare not. Tell me, too,
            Thy name, incontinent, that I may make
            Requital, gratifying also thee
            With somewhat to thy taste. We Cyclops own
            A bounteous soil, which yields _us_ also wine
            From clusters large, nourish'd by show'rs from Jove;
            But this--this is from above--a stream
            Of nectar and ambrosia, all divine!
                He ended, and received a second draught,
            Like measure. Thrice I bore it to his hand,
            And, foolish, thrice he drank. But when the fumes
            Began to play around the Cyclops' brain,
            With show of amity I thus replied.
                Cyclops! thou hast my noble name enquired,
            Which I will tell thee. Give me, in return,
            The promised boon, some hospitable pledge.
            My name is Outis,[34] Outis I am call'd
            At home, abroad; wherever I am known.
                So I; to whom he, savage, thus replied.
            Outis, when I have eaten all his friends,
            Shall be my last regale. Be that thy boon.
                He spake, and, downward sway'd, fell resupine,
            With his huge neck aslant. All-conqu'ring sleep
            Soon seized him. From his gullet gush'd the wine
            With human morsels mingled, many a blast
            Sonorous issuing from his glutted maw.
            Then, thrusting far the spike of olive-wood
            Into the embers glowing on the hearth,
            I heated it, and cheer'd my friends, the while,
            Lest any should, through fear, shrink from his part.
            But when that stake of olive-wood, though green,
            Should soon have flamed, for it was glowing hot,
            I bore it to his side. Then all my aids
            Around me gather'd, and the Gods infused
            Heroic fortitude into our hearts.
            They, seizing the hot stake rasp'd to a point,
            Bored his eye with it, and myself, advanced
            To a superior stand, twirled it about.
            As when a shipwright with his wimble bores
            Tough oaken timber, placed on either side
            Below, his fellow-artists strain the thong
            Alternate, and the restless iron spins,
            So, grasping hard the stake pointed with fire,
            We twirl'd it in his eye; the bubbling blood
            Boil'd round about the brand; his pupil sent
            A scalding vapour forth that sing'd his brow,
            And all his eye-roots crackled in the flame.
            As when the smith an hatchet or large axe
            Temp'ring with skill, plunges the hissing blade
            Deep in cold water, (whence the strength of steel)
            So hiss'd his eye around the olive-wood.
            The howling monster with his outcry fill'd
            The hollow rock, and I, with all my aids,
            Fled terrified. He, plucking forth the spike
            From his burnt socket, mad with anguish, cast
            The implement all bloody far away.
            Then, bellowing, he sounded forth the name
            Of ev'ry Cyclops dwelling in the caves
            Around him, on the wind-swept mountain-tops;
            They, at his cry flocking from ev'ry part,
            Circled his den, and of his ail enquired.
                What grievous hurt hath caused thee, Polypheme!
            Thus yelling to alarm the peaceful ear
            Of night, and break our slumbers? Fear'st thou lest
            Some mortal man drive off thy flocks? or fear'st
            Thyself to die by cunning or by force?
                Them answer'd, then, Polypheme from his cave.
            Oh, friends! I die! and Outis gives the blow.
                To whom with accents wing'd his friends without.
            If no man[35] harm thee, but thou art alone,
            And sickness feel'st, it is the stroke of Jove,
            And thou must bear it; yet invoke for aid
            Thy father Neptune, Sovereign of the floods.
                So saying, they went, and in my heart I laugh'd
            That by the fiction only of a name,
            Slight stratagem! I had deceived them all.
                Then groan'd the Cyclops wrung with pain and grief,
            And, fumbling, with stretch'd hands, removed the rock
            From his cave's mouth, which done, he sat him down
            Spreading his arms athwart the pass, to stop
            Our egress with his flocks abroad; so dull,
            It seems, he held me, and so ill-advised.
            I, pondering what means might fittest prove
            To save from instant death, (if save I might)
            My people and myself, to ev'ry shift
            Inclined, and various counsels framed, as one
            Who strove for life, conscious of woe at hand.
            To me, thus meditating, this appear'd
            The likeliest course. The rams well-thriven were,
            Thick-fleeced, full-sized, with wool of sable hue.
            These, silently, with osier twigs on which
            The Cyclops, hideous monster, slept, I bound,
            Three in one leash; the intermediate rams
            Bore each a man, whom the exterior two
            Preserved, concealing him on either side.
            Thus each was borne by three, and I, at last,
            The curl'd back seizing of a ram, (for one
            I had reserv'd far stateliest of them all)
            Slipp'd underneath his belly, and both hands
            Enfolding fast in his exub'rant fleece,
            Clung ceaseless to him as I lay supine.
            We, thus disposed, waited with many a sigh
            The sacred dawn; but when, at length, aris'n,
            Aurora, day-spring's daughter rosy-palm'd
            Again appear'd, the males of all his flocks
            Rush'd forth to pasture, and, meantime, unmilk'd,
            The wethers bleated, by the load distress'd
            Of udders overcharged. Their master, rack'd
            With pain intolerable, handled yet
            The backs of all, inquisitive, as they stood,
            But, gross of intellect, suspicion none
            Conceiv'd of men beneath their bodies bound.
            And now (none left beside) the ram approach'd
            With his own wool burthen'd, and with myself,
            Whom many a fear molested. Polypheme
            The giant stroak'd him as he sat, and said,
                My darling ram! why latest of the flock
            Com'st thou, whom never, heretofore, my sheep
            Could leave behind, but stalking at their head,
            Thou first was wont to crop the tender grass,
            First to arrive at the clear stream, and first
            With ready will to seek my sheep-cote here
            At evening; but, thy practice chang'd, thou com'st,
            Now last of all. Feel'st thou regret, my ram!
            Of thy poor master's eye, by a vile wretch
            Bored out, who overcame me first with wine,
            And by a crew of vagabonds accurs'd,
            Followers of Outis, whose escape from death
            Shall not be made to-day? Ah! that thy heart
            Were as my own, and that distinct as I
            Thou could'st articulate, so should'st thou tell,
            Where hidden, he eludes my furious wrath.
            Then, dash'd against the floor his spatter'd brain
            Should fly, and I should lighter feel my harm
            From Outis, wretch base-named and nothing-worth.
                So saying, he left him to pursue the flock.
            When, thus drawn forth, we had, at length, escaped
            Few paces from the cavern and the court,
            First, quitting my own ram, I loos'd my friends,
            Then, turning seaward many a thriven ewe
            Sharp-hoof'd, we drove them swiftly to the ship.
            Thrice welcome to our faithful friends we came
            From death escaped, but much they mourn'd the dead.
            I suffer'd not their tears, but silent shook
            My brows, by signs commanding them to lift
            The sheep on board, and instant plow the main.
            They, quick embarking, on the benches sat
            Well ranged, and thresh'd with oars the foamy flood;
            But distant now such length as a loud voice
            May reach, I hail'd with taunts the Cyclops' ear.
                Cyclops! when thou devouredst in thy cave
            With brutal force my followers, thou devour'dst
            The followers of no timid Chief, or base,
            Vengeance was sure to recompense that deed
            Atrocious. Monster! who wast not afraid
            To eat the guest shelter'd beneath thy roof!
            Therefore the Gods have well requited thee.
                I ended; he, exasp'rate, raged the more,
            And rending from its hold a mountain-top,
            Hurl'd it toward us; at our vessel's stern
            Down came the mass, nigh sweeping in its fall
            The rudder's head. The ocean at the plunge
            Of that huge rock, high on its refluent flood
            Heav'd, irresistible, the ship to land.
            I seizing, quick, our longest pole on board,
            Back thrust her from the coast and by a nod
            In silence given, bade my companions ply
            Strenuous their oars, that so we might escape.
            Procumbent,[36] each obey'd, and when, the flood
            Cleaving, we twice that distance had obtain'd,[37]
            Again I hail'd the Cyclops; but my friends
            Earnest dissuaded me on ev'ry side.
                Ah, rash Ulysses! why with taunts provoke
            The savage more, who hath this moment hurl'd
            A weapon, such as heav'd the ship again
            To land, where death seem'd certain to us all?
            For had he heard a cry, or but the voice
            Of one man speaking, he had all our heads
            With some sharp rock, and all our timbers crush'd
            Together, such vast force is in his arm.
                So they, but my courageous heart remain'd
            Unmoved, and thus again, incensed, I spake.
                Cyclops! should any mortal man inquire
            To whom thy shameful loss of sight thou ow'st,
            Say, to Ulysses, city-waster Chief,
            Laertes' son, native of Ithaca.
                I ceas'd, and with a groan thus he replied.
            Ah me! an antient oracle I feel
            Accomplish'd. Here abode a prophet erst,
            A man of noblest form, and in his art
            Unrivall'd, Telemus Eurymedes.
            He, prophesying to the Cyclops-race,
            Grew old among us, and presaged my loss
            Of sight, in future, by Ulysses' hand.
            I therefore watch'd for the arrival here,
            Always, of some great Chief, for stature, bulk
            And beauty prais'd, and cloath'd with wond'rous might.
            But now--a dwarf, a thing impalpable,
            A shadow, overcame me first by wine,
            Then quench'd my sight. Come hither, O my guest!
            Return, Ulysses! hospitable cheer
            Awaits thee, and my pray'rs I will prefer
            To glorious Neptune for thy prosp'rous course;
            For I am Neptune's offspring, and the God
            Is proud to be my Sire; he, if he please,
            And he alone can heal me; none beside
            Of Pow'rs immortal, or of men below.
                He spake, to whom I answer thus return'd.
            I would that of thy life and soul amerced,
            I could as sure dismiss thee down to Hell,
            As none shall heal thine eye--not even He.
                So I; then pray'd the Cyclops to his Sire
            With hands uprais'd towards the starry heav'n.
                Hear, Earth-encircler Neptune, azure-hair'd!
            If I indeed am thine, and if thou boast
            Thyself my father, grant that never more
            Ulysses, leveller of hostile tow'rs,
            Laertes' son, of Ithaca the fair,
            Behold his native home! but if his fate
            Decree him yet to see his friends, his house,
            His native country, let him deep distress'd
            Return and late, all his companions lost,
            Indebted for a ship to foreign aid,
            And let affliction meet him at his door.
                He spake, and Ocean's sov'reign heard his pray'r.
            Then lifting from the shore a stone of size
            Far more enormous, o'er his head he whirl'd
            The rock, and his immeasurable force
            Exerting all, dismiss'd it. Close behind
            The ship, nor distant from the rudder's head,
            Down came the mass. The ocean at the plunge
            Of such a weight, high on its refluent flood
            Tumultuous, heaved the bark well nigh to land.
                But when we reach'd the isle where we had left
            Our num'rous barks, and where my people sat
            Watching with ceaseless sorrow our return,
            We thrust our vessel to the sandy shore,
            Then disembark'd, and of the Cyclops' sheep
            Gave equal share to all. To me alone
            My fellow-voyagers the ram consign'd
            In distribution, my peculiar meed.
            Him, therefore, to cloud-girt Saturnian Jove
            I offer'd on the shore, burning his thighs
            In sacrifice; but Jove my hallow'd rites
            Reck'd not, destruction purposing to all
            My barks, and all my followers o'er the Deep.
            Thus, feasting largely, on the shore we sat
            Till even-tide, and quaffing gen'rous wine;
            But when day fail'd, and night o'ershadow'd all,
            Then, on the shore we slept; and when again
            Aurora rosy daughter of the Dawn,
            Look'd forth, my people, anxious, I enjoin'd
            To climb their barks, and cast the hawsers loose.
            They all obedient, took their seats on board
            Well-ranged, and thresh'd with oars the foamy flood.
            Thus, 'scaping narrowly, we roam'd the Deep
            With aching hearts and with diminish'd crews.



Extra Info:
[32] So the Scholium interprets in this place, the word +hyperthialos+.

[33] +Linôs+

[34] Clarke, who has preserved this name in his marginal version, contends strenuously, and with great reason, that Outis ought not to be translated, and in a passage which he quotes from the Acta eruditorum, we see much fault found with Giphanius and other interpreters of Homer for having translated it. It is certain that in Homer the word is declined not as +outis-tinos+ which signifies no man, but as +outis-tidos+ making +outin+ in the accusative, consequently as a proper name. It is sufficient that the ambiguity was such as to deceive the friends of the Cyclops. Outis is said by some (perhaps absurdly) to have been a name given to Ulysses on account of his having larger ears than common.

[35] Outis, as a name could only denote him who bore it; but as a noun, it signifies no man, which accounts sufficiently for the ludicrous mistake of his brethren.

[36]
+propesontes+
------Olli certamine summo
Procumbunt.

VIRGIL

[37] The seeming incongruity of this line with line 560, is reconciled by supposing that Ulysses exerted his voice, naturally loud, in an extraordinary manner on this second occasion. See Clarke.



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