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.

Meantime the queen, without reflection due,
Heart-wounded, to the bed of state withdrew: 
In her sad breast the prince’s fortunes roll,
And hope and doubt alternate seize her soul. 
So when the woodman’s toil her cave surrounds,
And with the hunter’s cry the grove resounds,
With grief and rage the mother-lion stung. 
Fearless herself, yet trembles for her young
While pensive in the silent slumberous shade,
Sleep’s gentle powers her drooping eyes invade;
Minerva, life-like, on embodied air
Impress’d the form of Iphthima the fair;
(Icarius’ daughter she, whose blooming charms
Allured Eumelus to her virgin arms;
A sceptred lord, who o’er the fruitful plain
Of Thessaly wide stretched his ample reign:)
As Pallas will’d, along the sable skies,
To calm the queen, the phantom sister flies. 
Swift on the regal dome, descending right,
The bolted valves are pervious to her flight. 
Close to her head the pleasing vision stands,
And thus performs Minerva’s high commands

“O why, Penelope, this causeless fear,
To render sleep’s soft blessing unsincere? 
Alike devote to sorrow’s dire extreme
The day-reflection, and the midnight-dream! 
Thy son the gods propitious will restore,
And bid thee cease his absence to deplore.”

To whom the queen (whilst yet in pensive mind
Was in the silent gates of sleep confined): 
“O sister to my soul forever dear,
Why this first visit to reprove my fear? 
How in a realm so distant should you know
From what deep source ceaseless sorrows flow? 
To all my hope my royal lord is lost,
His country’s buckler, and the Grecian boast;
And with consummate woe to weigh me down,
The heir of all his honours and his crown,
My darling son is fled! an easy prey
To the fierce storms, or men more fierce than they;
Who, in a league of blood associates sworn,
Will intercept the unwary youth’s return.”

“Courage resume (the shadowy form replied);
In the protecting care of Heaven confide;
On him attends the blue eyed martial maid: 
What earthly can implore a surer aid? 
Me now the guardian goddess deigns to send,
To bid thee patient his return attend.”

The queen replies:  “If in the blest abodes,
A goddess, thou hast commerce with the gods;
Say, breathes my lord the blissful realm of light,
Or lies he wrapp’d in ever-during night?”

“Inquire not of his doom, (the phantom cries,)
I speak not all the counsel of the skies;
Nor must indulge with vain discourse, or long,
The windy satisfaction of the tongue.”

Swift through the valves the visionary fair
Repass’d, and viewless mix’d with common air. 
The queen awakes, deliver’d of her woes;
With florid joy her heart dilating glows: 
The vision, manifest of future fate,
Makes her with hope her son’s arrival wait.

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