BUT he, deep-musing, oer the mountains strayd | |
| Thro mazy thickets of the woodland shade, | |
| And cavernd ways, the shaggy coast along, | |
| With cliffs and nodding forests overhung. | |
| Eumæus at his sylvan lodge he sought, | 5 |
| A faithful servant, and without a fault. | |
| Ulysses found him busied, as he sate | |
| Before the threshold of his rustic gate: | |
| Around, the mansion in a circle shone, | |
| A rural portico of rugged stone | 10 |
| (In absence of his lord, with honest toil | |
| His own industrious hands had raisd the pile); | |
| The wall was stone from neighbring quarries borne, | |
| Encircled with a fence of native thorn, | |
| And strong with pales, by many a weary stroke | 15 |
| Of stubborn labour hewn from heart of oak; | |
| Frequent and thick. Within the space were reard | |
| Twelve ample cells, the lodgments of his herd. | |
| Full fifty pregnant females each containd: | |
| The males without (a smaller race) remaind; | 20 |
| Doomd to supply the suitors wasteful feast, | |
| A stock by daily luxury decreasd; | |
| Now scarce four hundred left. These to defend, | |
| Four savage dogs, a watchful guard, attend. | |
| Here sat Eumæus, and his cares applied | 25 |
| To form strong buskins of well-seasond hide. | |
| Of four assistants who his labour share, | |
| Three now were absent on the rural care: | |
| The fourth drove victims to the suitor train: | |
| But he, of ancient faith, a simple swain, | 30 |
| Sighd, while he furnishd the luxurious board, | |
| And wearied Heavn with wishes for his lord. | |
| Soon as Ulysses near th inclosure drew, | |
| With open mouths the furious mastiffs flew: | |
| Down sate the sage, and, cautious to withstand, | 35 |
| Let fall th offensive truncheon from his hand. | |
| Sudden, the master runs: aloud he calls; | |
| And from his hasty hand the leather falls; | |
| With showers of stones he drives them far away; | |
| The scattring dogs around at distance bay. | 40 |
| Unhappy stranger (thus the faithful swain | |
| Began with accent gracious and humane), | |
| What sorrow had been mine, if at my gate | |
| Thy revrend age had met a shameful fate! | |
| Enough of woes already have I known: | 45 |
| Enough my masters sorrows and my own. | |
| While here (ungrateful task!) his herds I feed, | |
| Ordaind for lawless rioters to bleed! | |
| Perhaps, supported at anothers board, | |
| Far from his country roams my hapless lord! | 50 |
| Or sighd in exile forth his latest breath, | |
| Now coverd with th eternal shade of death! | |
| But enter this my homely roof, and see | |
| Our woods not void of hospitality. | |
| Then tell me whence thou art, and what the share | 55 |
| Of woes and wandrings thou wert born to bear. | |
| He said, and, seconding the kind request, | |
| With friendly step precedes his unknown guest. | |
| A shaggy goats soft hide beneath him spread, | |
| And with fresh rushes heapd an ample bed: | 60 |
| Joy touchd the Heros tender soul, to find | |
| So just reception from a heart so kind; | |
| And Oh, ye Gods! with all your blessings grace | |
| (He thus broke forth) this friend of human race! | |
| The swain replied: It never was our guise | 65 |
| To slight the poor, or aught humane despise: | |
| For Jove unfolds our hospitable door, | |
| T is Jove that sends the stranger and the poor. | |
| Little, alas! is all the good I can; | |
| A man oppressd, dependent, yet a man: | 70 |
| Accept such treatment as a swain affords, | |
| Slave to the insolence of youthful lords! | |
| Far hence is by unequal Gods removd | |
| That man of bounties, loving and belovd! | |
| To whom whateer his slave enjoys is owd, | 75 |
| And more, had Fate allowd, had been bestowd. | |
| But Fate condemnd him to a foreign shore; | |
| Much have I sorrowd, but my master more. | |
| Now cold he lies, to Deaths embrace resignd: | |
| Ah, perish Helen! perish all her kind! | 80 |
| For whose cursd cause, in Agamemnons name, | |
| He trod so fatally the paths of Fame. | |
| His vest succinct then girding round his waist, | |
| Forth rushd the swain with hospitable haste; | |
| Straight to the lodgments of his herd he run, | 85 |
| Where the fat porkers slept beneath the sun; | |
| Of two, his cutlass launchd the spouting blood; | |
| These, quarterd, singed, and fixd on forks of wood, | |
| All hasty on the hissing coals he threw; | |
| And, smoking, back the tasteful viands drew, | 90 |
| Broachers and all; then on the board displayd | |
| The ready meal, before Ulysses laid | |
| With flour imbrownd; next mingled wine yet new, | |
| And luscious as the bees nectareous dew: | |
| Then sate, companion of the friendly feast, | 95 |
| With open look; and thus bespoke his guest: | |
| Take with free welcome what our hands prepare, | |
| Such food as falls to simple servants share; | |
| The best our lords consume; those thoughtless peers, | |
| Rich without bounty, guilty without fears. | 100 |
| Yet sure the Gods their impious acts detest, | |
| And honour justice and the righteous breast. | |
| Pirates and conquerors of hardend mind, | |
| The foes of peace, and scourges of mankind, | |
| To whom offending men are made a prey | 105 |
| When Jove in vengeance gives a land away; | |
| Evn these, when of their ill-got spoils possessd, | |
| Find sure tormentors in the guilty breast: | |
| Some voice of God close whispring from within, | |
| Wretch! this is villany, and this is sin. | 110 |
| But these, no doubt, some oracle explore, | |
| That tells, the great Ulysses is no more. | |
| Hence springs their confidence, and from our sighs | |
| Their rapine strengthens, and their riots rise: | |
| Constant as Jove the night and day bestows, | 115 |
| Bleeds a whole hecatomb, a vintage flows. | |
| None matchd this heros wealth, of all who reign | |
| Oer the fair islands of the neighbring main. | |
| Nor all the Monarchs whose far-dreaded sway | |
| The wide-extended continents obey: | 120 |
| First, on the mainland, of Ulysses breed | |
| Twelve herds, twelve flocks, on oceans margin feed; | |
| As many stalls for shaggy goats are reard; | |
| As many lodgments for the tusky herd; | |
| Those, foreign keepers guard: and here are seen | 125 |
| Twelve herds of goats that graze our utmost green; | |
| To native pastors is their charge assignd, | |
| And mine the care to feed the bristly kind: | |
| Each day the fattest bleeds of either herd, | |
| All to the suitors wasteful board preferrd. | 130 |
| Thus he, benevolent: his unknown guest | |
| With hunger keen devours the savry feast; | |
| While schemes of vengeance ripen in his breast. | |
| Silent and thoughtful while the board he eyed, | |
| Eumæus pours on high the purple tide; | 135 |
| The King with smiling looks his joy expressd, | |
| And thus the kind inviting host addressd: | |
| Say, now, what man is he, the man deplord, | |
| So rich, so potent, whom you style your lord? | |
| Late with such affluence and possessions blessd, | 140 |
| And now in honours glorious bed at rest. | |
| Whoever was the warrior, he must be | |
| To Fame no stranger, nor perhaps to me; | |
| Who (so the Gods and so the Fates ordaind) | |
| Have wanderd many a sea and many a land. | 145 |
| Small is the faith the Prince and Queen ascribe | |
| (Replied Eumæus) to the wandring tribe. | |
| For needy strangers still to flattry fly, | |
| And want too oft betrays the tongue to lie. | |
| Each vagrant traveller, that touches here, | 150 |
| Deludes with fallacies the royal ear, | |
| To dear remembrance makes his image rise, | |
| And calls the springing sorrows from her eyes. | |
| Such thou mayst be. But he whose name you crave | |
| Moulders in earth, or welters on the wave, | 155 |
| Or food for fish or dogs his relics lie, | |
| Or torn by birds are scatterd thro the sky. | |
| So perishd he: and left (for ever lost) | |
| Much woe to all, but sure to me the most. | |
| So mild a master never shall I find; | 160 |
| Less dear the parents whom I left behind, | |
| Less soft my mother, less my father kind. | |
| Not with such transport would my eyes run oer, | |
| Again to hail them in their native shore, | |
| As lovd Ulysses once more to embrace, | 165 |
| Restord and breathing in his natal place. | |
| That name for ever dread, yet ever dear, | |
| Evn in his absence I pronounce with fear: | |
| In my respect, he bears a Princes part; | |
| But lives a very brother in my heart. | 170 |
| Thus spoke the faithful swain, and thus rejoind | |
| The master of his grief, the man of patient mind: | |
| Ulysses friend shall view his old abodes | |
| (Distrustful as thou art), nor doubt the Gods. | |
| Nor speak I rashly, but with faith averrd, | 175 |
| And what I speak attesting Heavn has heard. | |
| If so, a cloak and vesture be my meed; | |
| Till his return, no title shall I plead, | |
| Tho certain be my news, and great my need; | |
| Whom want itself can force untruths to tell, | 180 |
| My soul detests him as the gates of Hell. | |
| Thou first be witness, hospitable Jove! | |
| And evry God inspiring social love! | |
| And witness evry household Power that waits, | |
| Guard of these fires, and angel of these gates! | 185 |
| Ere the next moon increase, or this decay, | |
| His ancient realms Ulysses shall survey, | |
| In blood and dust each proud oppressor mourn, | |
| And the lost glories of his house return. | |
| Nor shall that meed be thine, nor evermore | 190 |
| Shall lovd Ulysses hail this happy shore | |
| (Replied Eumæus): to the present hour | |
| Now turn thy thought, and joys within our power. | |
| From sad reflection let my soul repose; | |
| The name of him awakes a thousand woes. | 195 |
| But guard him, Gods! and to these arms restore! | |
| Not his true consort can desire him more; | |
| Not old Laërtes, broken with despair; | |
| Not young Telemachus, his blooming heir. | |
| Alas, Telemachus! my sorrows flow | 200 |
| Afresh for thee, my second cause of woe! | |
| Like some fair plant set by a heavnly hand, | |
| He grew, he flourishd, and he blessd the land; | |
| In all the youth his fathers image shined, | |
| Bright in his person, brighter in his mind. | 205 |
| What man, or God, deceivd his better sense, | |
| Far on the swelling seas to wander hence? | |
| To distant Pylos hapless is he gone, | |
| To seek his fathers fate, and find his own! | |
| For traitors wait his way, with dire design | 210 |
| To end at once the great Arcesian line. | |
| But let us leave him to their wills above; | |
| The fates of men are in the hand of Jove. | |
| And now, my venerable Guest! declare | |
| Your name, your parents, and your native air: | 215 |
| Sincere from whence begun your course relate, | |
| And to what ship I owe the friendly freight? | |
| Thus he: and thus (with prompt invention bold) | |
| The cautious Chief his ready story told: | |
| On dark reserve what better can prevail, | 220 |
| Or from the fluent tongue produce the tale, | |
| Than when two friends, alone, in peaceful place | |
| Confer, and wines and cates the table grace; | |
| But most, the kind inviters cheerful face? | |
| Thus might we sit, with social goblets crownd, | 225 |
| Till the whole circle of the year goes round; | |
| Not the whole circle of the year would close | |
| My long narration of a life of woes. | |
| But such was Heavns high will! Know then, I came | |
| From sacred Crete, and from a sire of fame: | 230 |
| Castor Hylacides (that name he bore), | |
| Belovd and honourd in his native shore; | |
| Blessd in his riches, in his children more. | |
| Sprung of a handmaid, from a bought embrace, | |
| I shared his kindness with his lawful race: | 235 |
| But when that Fate, which all must undergo, | |
| From earth removd him to the shades below, | |
| The large domain his greedy sons divide, | |
| And each was portiond as the lots decide. | |
| Little, alas! was left my wretched share, | 240 |
| Except a house, a covert from the air: | |
| But what by niggard Fortune was denied, | |
| A willing widows copious wealth supplied. | |
| My valour was my plea, a gallant mind | |
| That, true to honour, never laggd behind | 245 |
| (The sex is ever to a soldier kind). | |
| Now wasting years my former strength confound, | |
| And added woes have bowd me to the ground; | |
| Yet by the stubble you may guess the grain, | |
| And mark the ruins of no vulgar man. | 250 |
| Me Pallas gave to lead the martial storm, | |
| And the fair ranks of battle to deform; | |
| Me Mars inspired to turn the foe to flight, | |
| And tempt the secret ambush of the night. | |
| Let ghastly Death in all his forms appear, | 255 |
| I saw him not, it was not mine to fear. | |
| Before the rest I raisd my ready steel; | |
| The first I met, he yielded, or he fell. | |
| But works of peace my soul disdaind to bear, | |
| The rural labour, or domestic care. | 260 |
| To raise the mast, the missile dart to wing, | |
| And send swift arrows from the bounding string, | |
| Were arts the Gods made grateful to my mind; | |
| Those Gods, who turn (to various ends designd) | |
| The various thoughts and talents of mankind. | 265 |
| Before the Grecians touchd the Trojan plain, | |
| Nine times commander or by land or main, | |
| In foreign fields I spread my glory far, | |
| Great in the praise, rich in the spoils of war: | |
| Thence, charged with riches, as increasd in fame, | 270 |
| To Crete returnd, an honourable name. | |
| But when great Jove that direful war decreed, | |
| Which rousd all Greece, and made the mighty bleed; | |
| Our states myself and Idomen employ | |
| To lead their fleets, and carry death to Troy. | 275 |
| Nine years we warrd; the tenth saw Ilion fall; | |
| Homeward we saild, but Heavn dispersd us all. | |
| One only month my wife enjoyd my stay; | |
| So willd the God who gives and takes away. | |
| Nine ships I mannd, equippd with ready stores, | 280 |
| Intent to voyage to th Ægyptian shores; | |
| In feast and sacrifice my chosen train | |
| Six days consumed; the sevnth we ploughd the main. | |
| Cretes ample fields diminish to our eye; | |
| Before the Boreal blast the vessels fly; | 285 |
| Safe thro the level seas we sweep our way; | |
| The steersman governs, and the ships obey. | |
| The fifth fair morn we stem th Ægyptian tide, | |
| And tilting oer the bay the vessels ride: | |
| To anchor there my fellows I command, | 290 |
| And spies commission to explore the land. | |
| But, swayd by lust of gain, and headlong will, | |
| The coasts they ravage, and the natives kill. | |
| The spreading clamour to their city flies, | |
| And horse and foot in mingled tumult rise. | 295 |
| The reddning dawn reveals the circling fields, | |
| Horrid with bristly spears, and glancing shields. | |
| Jove thunderd on their side. Our guilty head | |
| We turnd to flight; the gathring vengeance spread | |
| On all parts round, and heaps on heaps on heaps lie dead. | 300 |
| I then explord my thought, what course to prove | |
| (And sure the thought was dictated by Jove); | |
| Oh, had he left me to that happier doom, | |
| And saved a life of miseries to come! | |
| The radiant helmet from my brows unlaced, | 305 |
| And low on earth my shield and javlin cast, | |
| I meet the Monarch with a suppliants face, | |
| Approach his chariot, and his knees embrace. | |
| He heard, he saved, he placed me at his side; | |
| My state he pitied, and my tears he dried, | 310 |
| Restraind the rage the vengeful foe expressd, | |
| And turnd the deadly weapons from my breast. | |
| Pious! to guard the hospitable rite, | |
| And fearing Jove, whom mercys works delight. | |
| In Ægypt thus with peace and plenty blessd, | 315 |
| I livd (and happy still had livd) a guest. | |
| On sevn bright years successive blessings wait; | |
| The next changed all the colour of my fate. | |
| A false Phnician, of insidious mind, | |
| Versd in vile arts, and foe to humankind, | 320 |
| With semblance fair invites me to his home. | |
| I seizd the proffer (ever fond to roam): | |
| Domestic in his faithless roof I stayd, | |
| Till the swift sun his annual circle made. | |
| To Libya then he meditates the way; | 325 |
| With guileful art a stranger to betray, | |
| And sell to bondage in a foreign land: | |
| Much doubting, yet compelld, I quit the strand. | |
| Thro the mid seas the nimble pinnace sails, | |
| Aloof from Crete, before the northern gales: | 330 |
| But when remote her chalky cliffs we lost, | |
| And far from ken of any other coast, | |
| When all was wild expanse of sea and air, | |
| Then doomd high Jove due vengeance to prepare. | |
| He hung a night of horrors oer their head | 335 |
| (The shaded ocean blackend as it spread); | |
| He launchd the fiery bolt; from pole to pole | |
| Broad burst the lightnings, deep the thunders roll; | |
| In giddy rounds the whirling ship is tossd, | |
| And all in clouds of smothring sulphur lost. | 340 |
| As from a hanging rocks tremendous height, | |
| The sable crows with intercepted flight | |
| Drop endlong; scarrd and black with sulphurous hue, | |
| So from the deck are hurld the ghastly crew. | |
| Such end the wicked found! but Joves intent | 345 |
| Was yet to save th oppressd and innocent. | |
| Placed on the mast (the last resource of life), | |
| With winds and waves I held unequal strife; | |
| For nine long days the billows tilting oer, | |
| The tenth soft wafts me to Thesprotias shore. | 350 |
| The Monarchs son a shipwreckd wretch relievd, | |
| The Sire with hospitable rites receivd, | |
| And in his palace like a brother placed, | |
| With gifts of price and gorgeous garments graced. | |
| While here I sojournd, oft I heard the fame | 355 |
| How late Ulysses to the country came, | |
| How lovd, how honourd, in this court he stayd, | |
| And here his whole collected treasure laid; | |
| I saw myself the vast unnumberd store | |
| Of steel elabrate, and refulgent ore, | 360 |
| And brass high heapd amidst the regal dome; | |
| Immense supplies for ages yet to come! | |
| Meantime he voyaged to explore the will | |
| Of Jove, on high Dodonas holy hill, | |
| What means might best his safe return avail, | 365 |
| To come in pomp, or bear a secret sail? | |
| Full oft has Phidon, whilst he pourd the wine, | |
| Attesting solemn all the Powers divine, | |
| That soon Ulysses would return, declared, | |
| The sailors waiting, and the ships prepared. | 370 |
| But first the King dismissd me from his shores, | |
| For fair Dulichium crownd with fruitful stores; | |
| To good Acastus friendly care consignd: | |
| But other counsels pleasd the sailors mind: | |
| New frauds were plotted by the faithless train, | 375 |
| And misery demands me once again. | |
| Soon as remote from shore they plough the wave, | |
| With ready hands they rush to seize their slave; | |
| Then with these tatterd rags they wrappd me round | |
| (Strippd of my own), and to the vessel bound. | 380 |
| At eve, at Ithacas delightful land | |
| The ship arrived: forth issuing on the sand, | |
| They sought repast: while, to th unhappy kind, | |
| The pitying Gods themselves my chains unbind. | |
| Soft I descended, to the sea applied | 385 |
| My naked breast, and shot along the tide. | |
| Soon passd beyond their sight, I left the flood, | |
| And took the spreading shelter of the wood. | |
| Their prize escaped the faithless pirates mournd; | |
| But deemd inquiry vain, and to their ships returnd. | 390 |
| Screend by protecting Gods from hostile eyes, | |
| They led me to a good man and a wise, | |
| To live beneath thy hospitable care, | |
| And wait the woes Heavn dooms me yet to bear. | |
| Unhappy Guest! whose sorrows touch my mind | 395 |
| (Thus good Eumæus with a sigh rejoind), | |
| For real suffrings since I grieve sincere, | |
| Check not with fallacies the springing tear: | |
| Nor turn the passion into groundless joy | |
| For him whom Heavn has destind to destroy. | 400 |
| Oh! had he perishd on some well-fought day, | |
| Or in his friends embraces died away! | |
| That grateful Greece with streaming eyes might raise | |
| Historic marbles to record his praise; | |
| His praise, eternal on the faithful stone, | 405 |
| Had with transmissive honours graced his son. | |
| Now, snatchd by Harpies to the dreary coast, | |
| Sunk is the hero, and his glory lost! | |
| While pensive in this solitary den, | |
| Far from gay cities and the ways of men, | 410 |
| I linger life; nor to the Court repair, | |
| But when my constant Queen commands my care; | |
| Or when, to taste her hospitable board, | |
| Some guest arrives, with rumours of her lord; | |
| And these indulge their want, and those their woe, | 415 |
| And here the tears, and there the goblets flow. | |
| By many such have I been warnd; but chief | |
| By one Ætolian robbd of all belief, | |
| Whose hap it was to this our roof to roam, | |
| For murder banishd from his native home. | 420 |
| He swore, Ulysses on the coast of Crete | |
| Stayd but a season to refit his fleet; | |
| A few revolving months should waft him oer, | |
| Fraught with bold warriors, and a boundless store. | |
| O thou! whom age has taught to understand, | 425 |
| And Heavn has guided with a favring hand! | |
| On God or mortal to obtrude a lie | |
| Forbear, and dread to flatter, as to die. | |
| Not for such ends my house and heart are free, | |
| But dear respect to Jove, and charity., | 430 |
| And why, O swain of unbelieving mind! | |
| (Thus quick replied the wisest of mankind), | |
| Doubt you my oath? yet more my faith to try, | |
| A solemn compact let us ratify, | |
| And witness evry Power that rules the sky! | 435 |
| If here Ulysses from his labours rest, | |
| Be then my prize a tunic and a vest; | |
| And, where my hopes invite me, straight transport | |
| In safety to Dulichiums friendly court. | |
| But if he greets not thy desiring eye, | 440 |
| Hurl me from yon dread precipice on high; | |
| The due reward of fraud and perjury. | |
| Doubtless, O Guest! great laud and praise were mine | |
| (Replied the swain), for spotless faith divine, | |
| If, after social rites and gifts bestowd, | 445 |
| I staind my hospitable hearth with blood. | |
| How would the Gods my righteous toils succeed, | |
| And bless the hand that made a stranger bleed? | |
| No moreth approaching hours of silent night | |
| First claim refection, then to rest invite; | 450 |
| Beneath our humble cottage let us haste, | |
| And here, unenvied, rural dainties taste. | |
| Thus communed these; while to their lowly dome | |
| The full-fed swine returnd with evning home: | |
| Compelld, reluctant, to their sevral sties, | 455 |
| With din obstreprous, and ungrateful cries. | |
| Then to the slaves: Now from the herd the best | |
| Select, in honour of our foreign guest: | |
| With him let us the genial banquet share, | |
| For great and many are the griefs we bear; | 460 |
| While those who from our labours heap their board | |
| Blaspheme their feeder, and forget their lord. | |
| Thus speaking, with despatchful hand he took | |
| A weighty axe, and cleft the solid oak; | |
| This on the earth he piled; a boar full fed, | 465 |
| Of five years age, before the pile was led: | |
| The swain, whom acts of piety delight, | |
| Observant of the Gods, begins the rite; | |
| First shears the forehead of the bristly boar, | |
| And suppliant stands, invoking evry Power | 470 |
| To speed Ulysses to his native shore. | |
| A knotty stake then aiming at his head, | |
| Down droppd he groaning, and the spirit fled. | |
| The scorching flames climb round on evry side: | |
| Then the singed members they with skill divide; | 475 |
| On these, in rolls of fat involvd with art, | |
| The choicest morsels lay from evry part. | |
| Some in the flames bestrewd with flour they threw; | |
| Some cut in fragments from the forks they drew: | |
| These, while on sevral tables they dispose, | 480 |
| A priest himself, the blameless rustic rose; | |
| Expert the destind victim to dispart | |
| In sevn just portions, pure of hand and heart. | |
| One sacred to the Nymphs apart they lay; | |
| Another to the winged son of May: | 485 |
| The rural tribe in common share the rest, | |
| The King, the chine, the honour of the feast; | |
| Who sate delighted at his servants board; | |
| The faithful servant joyd his unknown lord. | |
| O be thou dear (Ulysses cried) to Jove, | 490 |
| As well thou claimst a grateful strangers love! | |
| Be then thy thanks (the bounteous swain replied) | |
| Enjoyment of the good the Gods provide. | |
| From Gods own hand descend our joys and woes; | |
| These he decrees, and he but suffers those: | 495 |
| All power is his, and whatsoeer he wills, | |
| The will itself, omnipotent, fulfils. | |
| This said, the first-fruits to the Gods he gave; | |
| Then pourd of offerd wine the sable wave: | |
| In great Ulysses hand he placed the bowl; | 500 |
| He sate, and sweet refection cheerd his soul. | |
| The bread from canisters Mesaulius gave | |
| (Eumæus proper treasure bought this slave, | |
| And led from Taphos, to attend his board, | |
| A servant added to his absent lord); | 505 |
| His task it was the wheaten loaves to lay, | |
| And from the banquet take the bowls away. | |
| And now the rage of hunger was repressd, | |
| And each betakes him to his couch to rest. | |
| Now came the night, and darkness coverd oer | 510 |
| The face of things; the winds began to roar; | |
| The driving storm the watry west-wind pours, | |
| And Jove descends in deluges of showers. | |
| Studious of rest and warmth, Ulysses lies, | |
| Foreseeing from the first the storm would rise; | 515 |
| In mere necessity of coat and cloak, | |
| With artful preface to his host he spoke: | |
| Hear me, my friends, who this good banquet grace; | |
| T is sweet to play the fool in time and place, | |
| And wine can of their wits the wise beguile, | 520 |
| Make the sage frolic, and the serious smile, | |
| The grave in merry measures frisk about, | |
| And many a long repented word bring out. | |
| Since to be talkative I now commence, | |
| Let Wit cast off the sullen yoke of Sense. | 525 |
| Once I was strong (would Heavn restore those days!) | |
| And with my betters claimd a share of praise. | |
| Ulysses, Menelaüs, led forth a band, | |
| And joind me with them (t was their own command); | |
| A deathful ambush for the foe to lay, | 530 |
| Beneath Troy walls by night we took our way; | |
| There, clad in arms, along the marshes spread, | |
| We made the ozier-fringed bank our bed. | |
| Full soon th inclemency of Heavn I feel, | |
| Nor had these shoulders covring, but of steel. | 535 |
| Sharp blew the north; snow whitening all the fields | |
| Froze with the blast, and, gathring, glazed our shields. | |
| There all but I, well-fencd with cloak and vest, | |
| Lay coverd by their ample shields at rest. | |
| Fool that I was! I left behind my own, | 540 |
| The skill of weather and of winds unknown, | |
| And trusted to my coat and shield alone! | |
| When now was wasted more than half the night, | |
| And the stars faded at approaching light, | |
| Sudden I joggd Ulysses, who was laid | 545 |
| Fast by my side, and shivring thus I said: | |
| Here longer in this field I cannot lie; | |
| The winter pinches, and with cold I die; | |
| And die ashamed (O wisest of mankind!), | |
| The only fool who left his cloak behind. | 550 |
| He thought and answerd; hardly waking yet, | |
| Sprung in his mind the momentary wit | |
| (That wit which, or in council or in fight, | |
| Still met th emergence, and determind right). | |
| Hush thee (he cried, soft whispring in my ear), | 555 |
| Speak not a word, lest any Greek may hear | |
| And then (supporting on his arm his head), | |
| Hear me, Companions! (thus aloud he said): | |
| Methinks too distant from the fleet we lie: | |
| Evn now a vision stood before my eye, | 560 |
| And sure the warning vision was from high: | |
| Let from among us some swift courier rise, | |
| Haste to the Genral, and demand supplies. | |
| Up started Thoas straight, Andræmons son, | |
| Nimbly he rose, and cast his garment down; | 565 |
| Instant, the racer vanishd off the ground; | |
| That instant in his cloak I wrappd me round; | |
| And safe I slept, till, brightly dawning, shone | |
| The Morn conspicuous on her golden throne. | |
| Oh were my strength as then, as then my age! | 570 |
| Some friend would fence me from the winters rage. | |
| Yet, tatterd as I look, I challenged then | |
| The honours and the offices of men: | |
| Some master, or some servant would allow | |
| A cloak and vestbut I am nothing now! | 575 |
| Well hast thou spoke (rejoind th attentive swain); | |
| Thy lips let fall no idle word or vain! | |
| Nor garment shall thou want, nor aught beside, | |
| Meet for the wandring suppliant to provide. | |
| But in the morning take thy clothes again, | 580 |
| For here one vest suffices evry swain; | |
| No change of garments to our hinds is known; | |
| But when returnd, the good Ulysses son | |
| With better hand shall grace with fit attires | |
| His guest, and send thee where thy soul desires. | 585 |
| The honest herdsman rose, as this he said, | |
| And drew before the hearth the strangers bed; | |
| The fleecy spoils of sheep, a goats rough hide | |
| He spreads: and adds a mantle thick and wide: | |
| With store to heap above him, and below, | 590 |
| And guard each quarter as the tempests blow. | |
| There lay the King, and all the rest supine; | |
| All, but the careful master of the swine: | |
| Forth hasted he to tend his bristly care; | |
| Well armd, and fencd against nocturnal air: | 595 |
| His weighty faulchion oer his shoulder tied; | |
| His shaggy cloak a mountain goat suppled: | |
| With his broad spear, the dread of dogs and men, | |
| He seeks his lodging in the rocky den. | |
| There to the tusky herd he bends his way, | 600 |
| Where, screend from Boreas, high oerarchd they lay. | |
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