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Front Page Titles (by Subject) LIB. VII. - The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey)
LIB. VII. - Homer, The English Works, vol. X (Iliad and Odyssey) [1839]Edition used:The English Works of Thomas Hobbes of Malmesbury; Now First Collected and Edited by Sir William Molesworth, Bart., (London: Bohn, 1839-45). 11 vols. Vol. 10.
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LIB. VII.
- Nausicaa straight to her chamber went;
- Eurymedusa made a fire therein;
- Who, ta’en by rovers on the continent,
- Was given to the king Alcinous,
- 10That like a God was honour’d by the nation
- Of the Phœacians at home. And thus
- She of Nausicaa had th’ education.
- A fire she made her, and her supper brought.
- Ulysses then into the city went,
- 15Pallas of air had made him such a coat,
- As he could not be seen; lest insolent
- And sturdy townsmen should him mock and jeer,
- Or ask him questions, who, what, or why.
- But when he was unto the gate come near,
- 20Pallas appeared to him openly,
- Like a young maid with pail upon her head.
- Ulysses then spake to her, and said thus:
- Sweet pretty girl, will you be pleas’d to lead
- Me to the house of king Alcinous?
- 25For I a stranger come, and no man know,
- Nor ever in my life was here before.
- Yes, then said Pallas, I will you it show,
- For ’tis the next unto my father’s door.
- Go softly, thus, and I will lead the way,
- 30For our folk strangers do not well endure;
- But in good ships their honour wholly lay,
- And the wide sea to pass themselves inure:
- For Neptune given to them has this gift,
- That their good ships fly like to thought or wind.
- 35This said, the Goddess led with motion swift;
- And on her steps he treading went behind.
- And through the people so he pass’d unseen.
- For why, the Goddess Pallas, for good will,
- A wondrous mist of air had wrapt him in.
- 40Then looking at the house he there stood still.
- The havens and the ships he wonder’d at;
- The market-place, and walls so thick and high.
- Then Pallas said, Alcinous’ house is that.
- There sup the king and queen now merrily.
- 45Though you a stranger be, fear not, go in;
- The bold than fearful always better speed.
- And first of all the house you’ll find the queen,
- Arete is her name. Both from one seed
- Descended are she and Alcinous,
- 50In Perrhæa, child of Eurimedon.
- Alcinous and she in wedlock join’d;
- And he to her so much respect doth bear,
- As no man living to a wife bears more,
- And honour’d is by all her children dear.
- 60The people like a Goddess her adore,
- And bless her when she comes into the street;
- And loving to them all is also she,
- For a wise woman is she and discreet.
- When they fall out she makes them to agree.
- 65If you her favour can but once obtain,
- You need not fear but you your friends shall see,
- And safely to your country come again.
- And when she this had said, away went she
- O’er sea to Marathon in Attica,
- 70T’ Erectheus’ house. And he now was to enter
- Into the house. But long he laid the law
- Unto himself before he would adventure.
- Ent’ring he saw the walls lin’d round with brass,
- And fring’d about with colour of the sky.
- 75The door within golden all over was,
- And all appear’d like heaven to the eye.
- The door-posts silver, glorious to behold,
- The lintle-tree upon them silver too;
- The sill was brass, the ring to pull it, gold.
- 80And by the door great dogs were standing two,
- Of silver one, the other was of gold,
- As watch before the royal gate to stay,
- Immortal dogs that never can grow old.
- And round about them all, thrones ev’ry way,
- 85All cover’d with a dainty stuff and fine,
- The work of women’s hand. There us’d to eat
- The king and lords, and drink and make good cheer.
- His riches was a never-dying teat.
- About the altar were set boys of gold,
- 90That to the guests, as soon as it was night,
- With burning torches they the light might hold;
- For now the sun had borne away his light.
- Fifty maid-servants were at work within,
- Some at the mill were grinding wheat for bread,
- 95And others with their distaffs sat to spin,
- And others cloth were weaving with the thread;
- Like to the leaves of a high aspen tree
- Their fingers went. So much they did excel
- In all the works, that taught by Pallas be,
- 100The women that in other places dwell;
- As do these men all other men surpass
- In all things that belong to navigation;
- For wit and art more Pallas given has
- To them, than women of another nation.
- 105Close by the house a dainty orchard is,
- Four-square and fenc’d with hedge and pale about,
- Of pear, pomegranate, apple, olive-trees,
- And fig-trees. For the season ne’er goes out
- Summer nor winter, for by Zephyrs some
- 110Are made put forth, and others ripened;
- Pears after pears, apples to apples come;
- Grapes are by grapes, figs by figs followed;
- And in it was the vineyard of the king.
- Grapes in some places by the sun were dried,
- 115In others staid till vintage ripening.
- Upon some vines no flower yet was spied,
- And grapes on some to blacken now began.
- Green beds of herbs there were on ev’ry side,
- And through it from two springs the water ran,
- 120And to and fro the one did winding glide,
- The other to the house his stream did bear,
- And under ground was to the town convey’d,
- And rose a fountain for the people there.
- And when Ulysses had all this survey’d,
- 125Then went he in, and found them in the hall
- Sitting at supper, and to Mercury
- There off’ring up of wine: which last of all
- At bed-time men do offer usually.
- And on he went up to the king and queen,
- 130And both his hands upon her knee did lay.
- Pallas had kept him in the mist unseen;
- But thither come, the mist straight fell away.
- Amaz’d they were when first they saw the man,
- And like to men that had been stricken dumb.
- 135Ulysses then t’ Arete thus began:
- O queen Arete, to your knee I come,
- And to the king, and those that with you sit:
- May the Gods grant you all much happiness,
- Long life, and your possessions to transmit
- 140T’ your children, and your honours still possess;
- And may you me send presently away
- Unto my house: long absent I have been.
- This said, he sat down by the fire. And they
- Said nothing, such amazement they were in.
- 145At last old Echineus spake, that knew
- Both what in former times and now was fit:
- O king Alcinous, is’t good, think you,
- To let the stranger in the ashes sit?
- We silent sat to see what was your will;
- 150Pray make him rise, and to a chair him bring,
- And bid the squire to temper wine and fill,
- That we to Jove may make our offering,
- Who with poor strangers keepeth company;
- And bid the maid before him set such meat
- 155As she within has in her custody.
- This said, Alcinous rose from his seat,
- T’ Ulysses went, and took him by the hand,
- And to a chair him led, where sat his son
- Laodamas, to whom he gave command
- 160To give him place, although he loved none
- So dearly as he lov’d Laodamas,
- Who next unto him us’d to sit at meat.
- Then by a maid brought in a bason was
- And ewer of gold, to wash ere he did eat;
- 165Another maid before him layed bread,
- And other good things on his table laid,
- And heartily thereon Ulysses fed.
- Alcinous then to the squire said:
- Temper the wine, Pontonous, that we
- 170Wine-offering to Jove may offer up,
- In whose protection all suppliants be,
- And round about presented be the cup.
- Then went about the wine from one to one;
- And when the sacred offering was over,
- 175Then said Alcinous: Since we have done,
- Let’s go to bed, and soon as we discover
- Aurora rising, hither come again,
- And make unto the Gods a sacrifice,
- And this our stranger farther entertain,
- 180And how to send him to his house advise,
- That safely he may go, and joyfully,
- And swiftly to the place where he would be,
- How far soever hence his dwelling lie,
- Nor on the sea delay or trouble see,
- 185Until his native country he be at:
- But what his fate is after he is there,
- Be’t good or evil, he must suffer that.
- But if it be some God that sitteth here,
- ’Tis only our devotion t’ approve;
- 190For to that end Gods let themselves be spied,
- To sit with men at holy feasts they love,
- And not themselves in caves like giants hide.
- To this Ulysses said: O king, lay by
- That thought of yours. With Gods I’ll not compare,
- 195For body or for mind. Of misery
- If man can boast, to boast ’mong them I dare;
- For I more tokens can produce of woe
- Than any man that shall with me contend,
- Though all I tell not that I can. Yet so
- 200I fain would of my supper make an end.
- No creature is so fierce as is the gut,
- And so loud barketh when it is forgot,
- That out of mind it never can be put,
- But will be heard whether one will or not.
- 205So ’tis with me, that am afflicted sore,
- Yet still my belly bids me eat and drink,
- And forget all I had endured before,
- And on my misery no more to think.
- And so, since now I hunger to go home,
- 210Forget not with a ship me to supply
- To-morrow: for were I once thither come,
- I could be well contented there to die.
- When this was said, he was by all commended.
- He speaks discreetly; let him then, said they,
- 215A speedy conduct have. When all was ended,
- The rest unto their houses went away.
- Only Ulysses stay’d, and by him sate
- The king and queen. Tables removed were,
- And all that to the supper did relate;
- 220The queen then marked what garments he did wear,
- And that she and her maids had made them, knew.
- Stranger, said she, who are you? whence? and more,
- The garments you have on, of whom had you?
- Had you them on, then, when you came ashore?
- 225Grievous, said he, O queen, is your command,
- That calls again, when past it is, my pain;
- Yet will I answer make to this demand.
- An island lieth far hence in the main,
- Ogygia ’tis call’d; Calypso there,
- 230The daughter fair of Atlas, lives alone,
- Nor God nor man she has to dwell with her;
- And I by fate upon that isle was thrown,
- For Jove my good ship had with thunder split:
- My fellows in the sea all perished,
- 235But I the rudder had, and held by it:
- And thus nine days and nights I wandered,
- And thrown was on that isle the tenth, at night.
- Calypso there received me, and fed;
- And immortality have had I might,
- 240If I had with her there inhabited.
- But I to that would never give consent.
- Yet there by force I stayed seven years,
- For want of ship and men, in discontent,
- Washing the clothes she gave me with my tears.
- 245The eighth year come, she did my going press,
- Whether by Jove’s command I cannot say,
- Or whether ’twere because she loved me less.
- Then on a raft of trees I came away.
- Bread and sweet wine upon the deck she laid,
- 250And garments gave me fair, and a good wind;
- And good for seventeen days the weather stay’d.
- On th’ eighteenth near your coast myself I find;
- And glad I was, though still unfortunate,
- For more I was to suffer by and by:
- 255For Neptune rais’d against me, in his hate,
- A storm of winds, with furious waves and high,
- And then I forced was the raft to quit:
- The trees asunder floated here and there,
- The storm so broken had and scatter’d it.
- 260Then swam I: ’gainst the rocks the waves me bear,
- And falling off, they cast me back again.
- Again I swam, and to the river came,
- And there I saw the landing smooth and plain,
- And from the wind defended was the same:
- 265There landed I, half dead, and now ’twas night.
- Then up I went and in a thicket lay,
- Cover’d with leaves abundance, dry and light,
- And slept till almost spent was the next day,
- For then the sun was setting. There I hear
- 270The voice of women playing by the brook;
- And going out I saw your daughter there,
- That like a Goddess come from heaven did look.
- To her I made my prayer in this distress:
- Wisely she answered, and beyond her age,
- 275(For th’ younger commonly consider less),
- And gave me food my hunger to assuage.
- Of her I had the garments I have on.
- Nay, stranger, answered Alcinous,
- ’Twas in my child an indiscretion,
- 280That she not brought you with her to my house.
- To this Ulysses answered and said:
- ’Twas not her fault we came not both together:
- She bade me, I would not; but was afraid
- What you and they would think that saw me with her,
- 285For jealous and mistrustful mortals be.
- To this again Alcinous replied:
- From such ill thoughts I always have been free.
- O Jove and Pallas make you here abide;
- Such are you, and our thoughts so well agree,
- 290That you Nausicaa should have for bride,
- If you would with me live here willingly,
- And for your house and wealth I would provide.
- But ’gainst your will I will not make you stay
- (From such iniquity the Gods me keep);
- 295To-morrow shall be ready your convey,
- And till then go you to your bed and sleep.
- And here be men, that, when the wind shall fail,
- Can row you on how far soe’er you’ll go;
- Their hands can do as much as any sail,
- 300Although beyond Eubœa they must row:
- For farther no Phœacian ever went.
- But thither once they carried Rhadamant,
- Of Tityus to see the punishment,
- Son of the earth, that terrible giant;
- 305Yet that long voyage cost them but a day
- Going and coming all the way at ease.
- But you yourself, when you are on the way,
- Will see how stoutly our men plough the seas.
- This said, Ulysses joyful was, and pray’d,
- 310Make all this good, O father Jove, said he,
- The glory of the king will be display’d,
- And quickly in my country I shall be.
- Whilst they together thus discoursing stay’d,
- Arete bade the maids to make his bed,
- 315And see fair purple rugs upon it laid,
- And under them soft woolly blankets spread.
- Then went away the maids into the porch,
- And made his bed, and soon came back again,
- And stood before Ulysses with a torch.
- 320Come stranger, said they, all is ready. Then
- Ulysses to his bed went willingly.
- Alcinous in a room lay far within,
- Where formerly he used was to lie,
- That was prepared for him by the queen.
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