The Odyssey eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Odyssey.
Related Topics

The Odyssey eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 455 pages of information about The Odyssey.

“’Go then (she cried), ah go! yet think, not I,
Not Circe, but the Fates, your wish deny. 
Ah, hope not yet to breathe thy native air! 
Far other journey first demands thy care;
To tread the uncomfortable paths beneath,
And view the realms of darkness and of death. 
There seek the Theban bard, deprived of sight;
Within, irradiate with prophetic light;
To whom Persephone, entire and whole,
Gave to retain the unseparated soul: 
The rest are forms, of empty ether made;
Impassive semblance, and a flitting shade.’

“Struck at the word, my very heart was dead: 
Pensive I sate:  my tears bedew’d the bed: 
To hate the light and life my soul begun,
And saw that all was grief beneath the sun: 
Composed at length the gushing tears suppress’d,
And my toss’d limbs now wearied into rest. 
’How shall I tread (I cried), ah, Circe! say,
The dark descent, and who shall guide the way? 
Can living eyes behold the realms below? 
What bark to waft me, and what wind to blow?’

“’Thy fated road (the magic power replied),
Divine Ulysses! ask no mortal guide. 
Rear but the mast, the spacious sail display,
The northern winds shall wing thee on thy way. 
Soon shalt thou reach old Ocean’s utmost ends,
Where to the main the shelving shore descends;
The barren trees of Proserpine’s black woods,
Poplars and willows trembling o’er the floods: 
There fix thy vessel in the lonely bay,
And enter there the kingdoms void of day,
Where Phlegethon’s loud torrents, rushing down,
Hiss in the flaming gulf of Acheron;
And where, slow rolling from the Stygian bed,
Cocytus’ lamentable waters spread: 
Where the dark rock o’erhangs the infernal lake,
And mingling streams eternal murmurs make. 
First draw thy falchion, and on every side
Trench the black earth a cubit long and wide: 
To all the shades around libations pour,
And o’er the ingredients strew the hallow’d flour: 
New wine and milk, with honey temper’d bring,
And living water from the crystal spring. 
Then the wan shades and feeble ghosts implore,
With promised offerings on thy native shore;
A barren cow, the stateliest of the isle,
And heap’d with various wealth, a blazing pile: 
These to the rest; but to the seer must bleed
A sable ram, the pride of all thy breed. 
These solemn vows and holy offerings paid
To all the phantom nations of the dead,
Be next thy care the sable sheep to place
Full o’er the pit, and hellward turn their face: 
But from the infernal rite thine eye withdraw,
And back to Ocean glance with reverend awe. 
Sudden shall skim along the dusky glades
Thin airy shoals, and visionary shades. 
Then give command the sacrifice to haste,
Let the flay’d victims in the flame be cast,
And sacred vows and mystic song applied
To grisly Pluto and his gloomy bride. 
Wide o’er the pool thy falchion waved around
Shall drive the spectres from unbidden ground: 
The sacred draught shall all the dead forbear,
Till awful from the shades arise the seer. 
Let him, oraculous, the end, the way,
The turns of all thy future fate display,
Thy pilgrimage to come, and remnant of thy day.’

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Odyssey from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.