The Odyssey eBook

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

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

Then thus Telemachus:  “Some god I find
With pleasing frenzy has possess’d my mind;
When a loved mother threatens to depart,
Why with this ill-timed gladness leaps my heart? 
Come then, ye suitors! and dispute a prize
Richer than all the Achaian state supplies,
Than all proud Argos, or Mycaena knows,
Than all our isles or continents inclose;
A woman matchless, and almost divine,
Fit for the praise of every tongue but mine. 
No more excuses then, no more delay;
Haste to the trial—­Lo!  I lead the way.

“I too may try, and if this arm can wing
The feather’d arrow through the destined ring,
Then if no happier night the conquest boast,
I shall not sorrow for a mother lost;
But, bless’d in her, possess those arms alone,
Heir of my father’s strength, as well as throne.”

He spoke; then rising, his broad sword unbound,
And cast his purple garment on the ground. 
A trench he open’d:  in a line he placed. 
The level axes, and the points made fast
(His perfect skill the wondering gazers eyed,
The game as yet unseen, as yet untried). 
Then, with a manly pace, he took his stand: 
And grasp’d the bow, and twang’d it in his hand. 
Three times, with beating heart, he made essay: 
Three times, unequal to the task, gave way;
A modest boldness on his cheek appear’d: 
And thrice he hoped, and thrice again he fear’d. 
The fourth had drawn it.  The great sire with joy
Beheld, but with a sign forbade the boy. 
His ardour straight the obedient prince suppress’d,
And, artful, thus the suitor-train address’d: 

“O lay the cause on youth yet immature! 
(For heaven forbid such weakness should endure!)
How shall this arm, unequal to the bow,
Retort an insult, or repel a foe? 
But you! whom Heaven with better nerves has bless’d,
Accept the trial, and the prize contest.”

He cast the bow before him, and apart
Against the polish’d quiver propp’d the dart. 
Resuming then his seat, Eupithes’ son,
The bold Antinous, to the rest begun: 
“From where the goblet first begins to flow,
From right to left in order take the bow;
And prove your several strengths.”  The princes heard
And first Leiodes, blameless priest’d, appear’d: 
The eldest born of Oenops’ noble race,
Who next the goblet held his holy place: 
He, only he, of all the suitor throng,
Their deeds detested, and abjured the wrong. 
With tender hands the stubborn horn he strains,
The stubborn horn resisted all his pains! 
Already in despair he gives it o’er: 
“Take it who will (he cries), I strive no more,
What numerous deaths attend this fatal bow! 
What souls and spirits shall it send below! 
Better, indeed, to die, and fairly give
Nature her debt, than disappointed live,
With each new sun to some new hope a prey,
Yet still to-morrow falser than to-day. 
How long in vain Penelope we sought! 
This bow shall ease us of that idle thought,
And send us with some humbler wife to live,
Whom gold shall gain, or destiny shall give.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Odyssey from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.