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.

Quick through the father’s heart these accents ran;
Grief seized at once, and wrapp’d up all the man: 
Deep from his soul lie sigh’d, and sorrowing spread
A cloud of ashes on his hoary head. 
Trembling with agonies of strong delight
Stood the great son, heart-wounded with the sight: 
He ran, he seized him with a strict embrace,
With thousand kisses wander’d o’er his face: 
“I, I am he; O father, rise! behold
Thy son, with twenty winters now grown old;
Thy son, so long desired, so long detain’d,
Restored, and breathing in his native land: 
These floods of sorrow, O my sire, restrain! 
The vengeance is complete; the suitor train,
Stretch’d in our palace, by these hands lie slain.”

Amazed, Laertes:  “Give some certain sign
(If such thou art) to manifest thee mine.”

“Lo here the wound (he cries) received of yore,
The scar indented by the tusky boar,
When, by thyself, and by Anticlea sent,
To old Autolycus’ realms I went. 
Yet by another sign thy offspring know;
The several trees you gave me long ago,
While yet a child, these fields I loved to trace,
And trod thy footsteps with unequal pace;
To every plant in order as we came,
Well-pleased, you told its nature and its name,
Whate’er my childish fancy ask’d, bestow’d: 
Twelve pear-trees, bowing with their pendent load,
And ten, that red with blushing apples glow’d;
Full fifty purple figs; and many a row
Of various vines that then began to blow,
A future vintage! when the Hours produce
Their latent buds, and Sol exalts the juice.”

Smit with the signs which all his doubts explain,
His heart within him melt; his knees sustain
Their feeble weight no more:  his arms alone
Support him, round the loved Ulysses thrown;
He faints, he sinks, with mighty joys oppress’d: 
Ulysses clasps him to his eager breast. 
Soon as returning life regains its seat,
And his breath lengthens, and his pulses beat: 
“Yes, I believe (he cries) almighty Jove! 
Heaven rules us yet, and gods there are above. 
’Tis so—­the suitors for their wrongs have paid—­
But what shall guard us, if the town invade? 
If, while the news through every city flies,
All Ithaca and Cephalenia rise?”
To this Ulysses:  “As the gods shall please
Be all the rest:  and set thy soul at ease. 
Haste to the cottage by this orchard’s side,
And take the banquet which our cares provide;
There wait thy faithful band of rural friends,
And there the young Telemachus attends.”

Thus, having said, they traced the garden o’er
And stooping entered at the lowly door. 
The swains and young Telemachus they found. 
The victim portion’d and the goblet crown’d. 
The hoary king, his old Sicilian maid
Perfum’d and wash’d, and gorgeously arrayed. 
Pallas attending gives his frame to shine
With awful port, and majesty divine;
His gazing son admires the godlike grace,
And air celestial dawning o’er his face. 
“What god (he cried) my father’s form improves! 
How high he treads and how enlarged he moves!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Odyssey from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.