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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventures of Ulysses the Wanderer, by
-Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventures of Ulysses the Wanderer
-
-Author: Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
-
-Illustrator: W. G. Mein
-
-Release Date: January 28, 2013 [EBook #41935]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURES OF ULYSSES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mark C. Orton, Sam W. and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE
- ADVENTURES OF ULYSSES
- _THE WANDERER_
-
-
- An Old Story Retold by
- C. RANGER-GULL
-
- AUTHOR OF
- "THE HYPOCRITE," "FROM THE BOOK
- BEAUTIFUL," "BACK TO LILAC LAND,"
- ETC.
-
-
- Illustrated
- BY
- W. G. MEIN
-
-
- London
- GREENING AND COMPANY, LTD.
- 20 CECIL COURT, CHARING CROSS ROAD
- 1902
-
-
-
-
- BY THE SAME AUTHOR
-
- THE HYPOCRITE.
- Seventh Edition. 2s. 6d.
-
- BACK TO LILAC LAND.
- Second Edition. 6s.
-
- MISS MALEVOLENT.
- Second Edition. 3s. 6d.
-
- THE CIGARETTE SMOKER.
- Second Edition. 2s. 6d.
-
- FROM THE BOOK BEAUTIFUL.
- Being Old Lights Re-lit. 3s. 6d.
-
-
- IN PREPARATION.
-
- THE SERF. A Tale of the Times of
- King Stephen.
-
- HIS GRACE'S GRACE. A Story
- of Oxford Life.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration: HE STARED STEADILY AT THEM WITH HIS SINGLE EYE
- FOR A FULL MINUTE.
- _Page 32._
- _Frontispiece._]
-
-
-
-
- TO
-
- HERBERT BEERBOHM TREE
-
- IN APPRECIATION OF HIS SCHOLARSHIP
- IN ADMIRATION OF HIS ART
- TO ONE OF THE FEW GREAT ARTISTS
- WHO HAS NEVER BEEN UNTRUE
- TO THE HIGHEST IDEALS OF HIS CALLING
- AND IN SPECIAL MEMORY
- OF THE FIRST NIGHT OF "HAMLET"
- AT MANCHESTER
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
- Foreword 9
-
- Brief Account of Principal Characters
- in the Odyssey 13
-
- The First Episode--How They blinded the
- Son of Poseidon 21
-
- The Second Episode--The Adventure of
- the Palace in the Wood 39
-
- The Third Episode--How Ulysses walked
- in Hell, and of the Adventure of
- the Sirens and Scylla 48
-
- The Fourth Episode--How Ulysses lost
- his Merry Men and came a Waif to
- Calypso with the Shining Hair 63
-
- The Last Episode--How the King came
- Home again after the Long Years 80
-
- A Note on Homer and Ulysses 98
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- HE STARED STEADILY AT THEM WITH HIS
- SINGLE EYE FOR A FULL MINUTE _Frontispiece_
-
- THEN HE CAME SWIFTLY UPON THE
- GLEAMING PALACE _facing page_ 45
-
- THEN HE WAS, IN AN INSTANT MOMENT,
- AWARE OF A MORE THAN MORTAL PRESENCE " 49
-
- THEY CAME TO THE BRINK OF THE RIVER " 52
-
- "WHO AM I THAT I CAN COMBAT THE
- WILL OF ZEUS OR THE HARDNESS OF
- YOUR HEART?" " 78
-
- "NAY, IF YOU LOVE ME," HE SAID, "NONE
- OF THAT, MY FRIEND" " 83
-
-
-
-
-FOREWORD
-
-
-Seven fair and illustrious cities of the dim, ancient world, Argos,
-Athenĉ, Chios, Colophon, Salamis, Rhodos, Smyrna, fought a war of
-words over HOMER'S birthplace.
-
-Each claimed the honour.
-
-And if, indeed, such an accident of chance confers an honour upon a
-town, then the birthplace of the Greatest Poet of all time should be a
-place of pilgrimage.
-
-For, among the weavers of Epos, Drama, and Romance, he who was called
-Melesegenes is first of all and wears an imperishable crown.
-
-For 3000 years his fame has streamed down the ages.
-
-The world has changed. Great empires have risen, flowered and passed.
-Christianity came, flooding mankind with light, at a time when, though
-Homer was a dim tradition, his work was a living force in the world.
-When Christ was born, Homerus was dead 900 years.
-
-A man with such immensity of glory ceases to be a man. He becomes a
-Force.
-
-Of the two imperishable monuments Homer has left us, the decision of
-critical scholarship has placed the _Iliad_ first. It has been said
-that the _Iliad_ is like the midday, the _Odyssey_ like the setting
-sun. Both are of equal splendour, though the latter has lost its
-noonday heat.
-
-But I would take that adroit simile and draw another meaning from it.
-
-When deferred, expected night at last approaches, when the sun paints
-the weary west with faëry pictures of glowing seas, of golden islands
-hanging in the sky, of lonely magic waterways unsailed by mortal
-keels; then, indeed, there comes into the heart and brain another
-warmth,--the mysterious quickening of Romance.
-
-For I think that the ringing sound of arms, the vibrant thriddings of
-bows, the clash of heroes, are far less wonderful than the long,
-lonely wanderings of Ulysses.
-
-Through all the _Odyssey_ the winds are blowing, the seas moaning, and
-the estranged sad spectres of the night flit noiselessly across the
-printed page.
-
-Through new lands, among new peoples--friends and foes--touching at
-green islands set like emeralds in wine-coloured seas, the immortal
-mariner moves to the music of his creator's verse. The Sirens' voices,
-the Fairy's enchanted wine, the Twin Monsters of the Strait pass and
-are forgotten.
-
-His wife's tears bid him ever towards home.
-
-I sometimes have wondered if Vergil thought of Ulysses when he made
-his own lesser wanderer say:--
-
- "Per varios casus per tot discrimina rerum,
- Tendimus in Latium, sedes ubi fata quietas
- Ostendunt."
-
-And now, since we are to have, on that so magical a stage, a concrete
-picture: since we are to take away another storied memory from beneath
-the copper dome, I feel that the story of Ulysses may once more be
-told in English.
-
-A fine poet, a great player, are to give us an Ulysses who must
-perforce be not only full of the spirit of his own age of myth, but
-instinct with the spirit of this.
-
-That is as inevitable as it is interesting.
-
-The "Gentle Elia" (how one wishes one could find a better name for
-him--but custom makes cowards of us all) has written his own version
-of the _Odyssey_. I cannot emulate that. But I think I can at least be
-useful.
-
-There are three stages of knowing Homer: the time when one dog's ears
-and dogrells him at school, the time when one loves him, a literary
-love! at Oxford, and the time when the _va et vient_ of life in great
-capitals wakes the dormant Ulysses in the heart of every artist, and
-he begins to understand.
-
- "The long day wanes: the slow moon climbs: the deep
- Moans round with many voices. Come, my friends,
- 'Tis not too late to seek a newer world.
- Push off, and sitting well in order smite
- The sounding furrows; for my purpose holds
- To sail beyond the sunset----"
-
- _C. RANGER-GULL._
-
-
-
-
-A BRIEF ACCOUNT
-
-OF THE
-
-PRINCIPAL CHARACTERS IN THE WANDERINGS OF ULYSSES, ACCORDING TO THE
-ANCIENT WRITERS AND LEGENDS.
-
-
-ULYSSES. The hero of Homer's great poem was known to the Greeks under
-the name of Odysseus. He was king of the pastoral islands of Ithaca
-and Dulichium. Most of the petty Greek chieftains became suitors for
-the hand of the beautiful Helen, and Ulysses was among the number, but
-withdrew when he realised the smallness of his chances. He then
-married Penelope, the daughter of Icarius, and at the same time joined
-with the other unsuccessful lovers of Helen in a sworn league for her
-future protection should she ever stand in need of it. He then
-returned to Ithaca with his bride. The rape of Helen soon compelled
-him to leave Penelope and join the other Grecian princes in the great
-war against Troy. He endeavoured to avoid the summons by pretending
-madness. Yoking a horse and a bull together, he began to plough the
-sands of the sea shore. The messenger who was sent to him took
-Telemachus, the infant son of Ulysses, and placed the child in the
-direct course of the plough, in this way circumventing his design.
-Ulysses was one of the most prominent figures during the Trojan war,
-his valour, and still more his cunning, making him of supreme
-importance in the councils of the princes. After the Trojan war
-Ulysses set sail for home, and at this period of his career the story
-of the _Odyssey_ begins. He was driven by malevolent winds on to the
-shores of Africa, where he and his mariners were captured by the
-one-eyed giant, Polyphemus, who ate five of the band. Ulysses escaped
-by thrusting a stake into the giant's eye and then leaving the cave in
-which he was confined by crawling under the bellies of the sheep when
-the Cyclops led them to pasture. He next arrives at Ĉolia, and Ĉolus
-gave him, imprisoned in bags, all the evil winds which were likely to
-obstruct his safe return homewards. The sailors, curious to know what
-the bags contained, opened them, and the imprisoned winds, rushing out
-with fearful violence, destroyed the whole fleet save only the vessel
-which bore Ulysses. The ship was thrown on the shores of the Goddess
-Circe's enchanted island, and the companions of Ulysses were changed
-into swine by the enchantress. Ulysses escaped the like fate by means
-of a magic herb he had received from Mercury, and forced the goddess
-to bring his friends to their original shape. He then yielded to her
-solicitations and made her the mother of Telegonus. The next stage of
-his adventures brings him to Hades, where he goes to consult the shade
-of the wise Tiresias as to the means of reaching home in safety. He
-passes the terrible coasts of the Sirens unhurt, and escaped the
-monsters Scylla and Charybdis by a series of narrow chances. In Sicily
-his sailors, urged by extreme hunger, killed some of Apollo's cattle,
-and the Sun-God in revenge destroyed all his companions and also his
-ship. Ulysses alone escaped on a raft and swam to the shores of an
-island belonging to Calypso, with whom he lived a lotos life as
-husband for seven years. The gods eventually interfered, and Ulysses,
-once more properly equipped, set out on his travels again. However,
-Neptune (Poseidon), the lord of the sea, still remembered the injury
-done to his son, the giant Polyphemus, and wrecked this ship also.
-Ulysses was cast up on the island of the Phoeacians, where he was
-hospitably received by King Alcinous and his daughter the Princess
-Nausicaa, and at last sent home in safety to his own kingdom after an
-absence of more than twenty years. The Goddess Athene befriended him,
-and informed him that his palace was crowded with debauched and
-insolent suitors for the hand of Queen Penelope, but that his wife was
-still faithful and unceasingly mourned his loss. Adopting the advice
-of the goddess, he disguised himself in rags to see for himself the
-state of his home. He then slew the suitors and lived quietly at home
-for the remaining sixteen years of his adventurous life. Tradition
-says that he at last met his death at the hands of his illegitimate
-son Telegonus.
-
-
-PENELOPE. A famous Grĉcian princess, wife of Ulysses. She married at
-about the same time that Helen wedded King Menelaus, and returned home
-to Ithaca with her husband against the wishes of her father Icarius of
-Sparta. During the long absence of Ulysses she was besieged by suitors
-for her hand, who established themselves in the palace. She became
-practically their prisoner, and was compelled to dissimulate and put
-them off by various excuses. She managed to keep her importunate
-guests in some sort of good humour by giving out that she would make a
-choice among them as soon as she had completed a piece of tapestry on
-which she was engaged. Each night she undid the stitches she had
-worked in the daytime. On the return of Ulysses she was, of course,
-freed from the suitors by her husband. According to some ancient
-writers, after the death of Ulysses she married Telegonus, Ulysses'
-son by the Goddess Circe. Her name Penelope sprung from some
-river-birds who were called "Penelopes."
-
-
-TELEMACHUS. The son of Ulysses and Penelope. When his father left for
-the Trojan war Telemachus was but an infant, but at the close of the
-campaign he went to seek him and to obtain what information he could
-about his father's absence. When Ulysses returned home in disguise
-Athene brought son and parent together, and the two concerted means to
-rid the palace of the suitors. After the death of Ulysses, Telemachus
-is said to have gone to the island of Circe and married the
-enchantress, formerly his father's mistress. A son called Latinus
-sprung from this union.
-
-
-ATHENE (Minerva). The Goddess of Wisdom was born from Zeus' brain
-without a mother. She sprang from his head in full armour. She was the
-most powerful of the goddesses and the friend of mankind. She was the
-patroness of Ulysses, and it was believed she first invented ships.
-Her chastity was inviolable. Her worship was universal.
-
-
-ZEUS (Jupiter). Chief of all the gods. His attitude towards Ulysses
-was friendly owing to the persuasion of his daughter Athene.
-
-
-POSEIDON (Neptune) was the Sea God and next in power to Zeus. He was
-the father of the giant Polyphemus whom Ulysses blinded, and is the
-consistent enemy of Ulysses throughout the whole _Odyssey_. Neptune
-was the brother of Zeus.
-
-
-HERMES (Mercury) was the messenger of the gods and a son of Zeus. He
-was especially the patron of travellers and well disposed to Ulysses.
-
-
-TIRESIAS was in life a celebrated soothsayer and philosopher of
-Thebes. His wisdom was universal. Having inadvertently seen the
-Goddess Athene bathing in the fountain of Hippocrene, he was blinded.
-Ulysses visited his spirit in Hades, in order to obtain his advice as
-to the journey homewards to Ithaca.
-
-
-CIRCE. An enchantress celebrated for her knowledge of the magic
-properties of herbs. She was of extreme personal beauty. In girlhood
-she married the prince of Colchis, whom she murdered to obtain his
-kingdom. She was thereon banished to the fairy island of Ĉĉa. When
-Ulysses visited her shores she changed his companions into swine, but
-Ulysses was protected by the magic virtues of a herb called _moly_.
-Ulysses spent a year in the arms of Circe, and she gave birth to a son
-called Telegonus.
-
-
-CALYPSO. One of the daughters of Atlas, was known as the
-"bright-haired Goddess of Silence," and was queen of the lost island
-of Ogygia. Ulysses spent seven years with her, and she bore him two
-sons. By order of Zeus, Hermes was sent to the island ordering Ulysses
-to leave his voluptuous sloth, and Calypso, who was inconsolable at
-his loss, was forced to allow him to depart. The legend runs that the
-goddess offered him the gift of immortality if he would remain with
-her.
-
-
-SCYLLA and CHARYBDIS. Scylla was a terrible female monster who
-devoured six of Ulysses' crew, though the hero himself escaped her.
-Below the waist she was composed of creatures like dogs who never
-ceased barking. She was supported by twelve feet and had six different
-heads. The monster dwelt in a cave under the sea on one side of a
-narrow strait off the coast of Sicily. On the other side of the strait
-was the great whirlpool CHARYBDIS. It was invested with a personality
-by Homer, and Charybdis was said to be a giantess who sucked down
-ships as they passed.
-
-
-THE SIRENS. Monsters with sweet alluring voices who inhabited a small
-island near Sicily. They had bodies like great birds, according to
-some writers, with the heads of beautiful women. Whosoever heard their
-magic song must go to them and remain with them for ever. Ulysses
-escaped the enchantment by causing himself to be bound to the ship's
-mast.
-
-
-POLYPHEMUS. The son of Poseidon. He was the giant king of the
-Cyclopes who were workers in the forge of Vulcan and made armour for
-the gods. Ulysses and his companions blinded him in order to escape
-from the cavern where he had imprisoned them.
-
-
-ANTINOUS. A native gentleman of Ithaca, one of Penelope's most
-persistent suitors. When Ulysses came home disguised as a beggar
-Antinous struck him. He was the first to fall by Ulysses' bow.
-
-
-EURYCLEA. The nurse of Ulysses in his infancy, and one of the first to
-recognise him on his return from his wanderings. She was in her youth
-the lovely daughter of Ops of Ithaca.
-
-
-EUMĈUS. The herdsman and steward of Ulysses who knew his master on his
-return after an absence of twenty years. He was the king's right-hand
-man in the plot against, and fight with, the suitors of Penelope.
-
-
-
-
-THE ADVENTURES OF ULYSSES
-
-
-
-
-THE FIRST EPISODE
-
-HOW THEY BLINDED THE SON OF POSEIDON
-
-
-A warm mild wind, laden with sweet scents, blew over the sailors from
-the island, which now lay far astern.
-
-In the weary west the charmed sunset still lingered over Lotus Land.
-
-A rosy flush lay on the snow-capped mountains which were yet spectral
-in the last lights of the day, but looking out over the bows the sky
-was dark purple changing into black, and where it met the sea there
-was a white gleam of foam.
-
-The companions of Ulysses sat idle from the oars, for the wind filled
-the belly of the sail and there was no need for rowing. A curious
-silence brooded over them all. No one spoke to his fellow. The faces
-of all were sad, and in the eyes of some the fire of an unutterable
-regret burnt steadily.
-
-The heads of all were turned towards the island, which was fast
-disappearing from their view. Some of the men shaded their eyes with
-their hands in one last long look of farewell.
-
-As the curtain of the dark fell upon the sea, the warm offshore wind
-died away. A colder breeze, full of the sea-smell itself, came down
-over the port bow; it moaned through the cordage, and little waves
-began to hiss under the cutwater.
-
-Every now and again the wind freshened rapidly. The mournful whistling
-became a sudden snarling of trumpets. The ship and crew seemed to have
-passed over the limits of a tableau. Not only was it a quick elemental
-change of scene, but the change had its influence with the spectators.
-
-The sad fire--if the glow of regret is indeed a fire--died out of
-heavy eyes half veiled by weary lids. The sea-light dawned once more
-upon the faces of the mariners, the bright warm blood moved swiftly in
-their veins.
-
-One man ran to the steering oar to give an aid to the helmsman as the
-ship went about on the starboard tack, three more stood by the sheet,
-a hum of talk rose from the waist of the boat. Ulysses stood in the
-bows looking forward into the night. His tall, lean figure was bent
-forward, and his arm was thrown round the gilded boss of the prow. His
-eyes were deep set in his head, and his brow was furrowed with the
-innumerable wrinkles which come to the man who lives a life of
-hardship and striving.
-
-Yet the long years of battle and wandering, a life of shocks! had only
-intensified the alertness of his pose. He seemed, as he looked out
-into the night, a personification of "readiness." A crisp dark beard
-grew round his throat, and the veins on his bare brown arms were like
-blue enamel round a column of bronze.
-
-When the ship went about again he came down into the body of the ship
-and helped to pull upon the brace. Though he was no taller than many
-of his men, and leaner than most, in physical strength as well as in
-intellect he was first and chief. The mighty muscles leapt up on his
-arms as he strained on the taut rope.
-
-The ship slanted away down the wind into the night. The men gathered
-round their captain. "Comrades," he said to them in a singularly sweet
-and musical voice, "once more we adventure the deep, and no man knows
-what shall befall us. To our island home in the west, to dear Ithaca!
-if the gods so will it. Our wives weep for us on our deserted
-hearthstone. Our little ones are noble youths ere now, and may Zeus
-bring us safe home at last. Yet much it misdoubts me that there are
-other perils in store for us ere we hear the long breakers beat upon
-the shores of Ithaca and see the morning sun run down the wooded sides
-of Neriton. Be that as the Fates will it, let us keep always courage,
-gaiety, and the quiet mind."
-
-"We are well away from there," said one of the men, nodding vaguely
-towards the stern.
-
-"That are we," said another; "that cursed fruit is honeysweet in my
-mouth still. It stole away our brains and made us as women, we! the
-men who fought in Troyland."
-
-"Of what profit is it to look to the past, Phocion?" said Ulysses. "We
-did eat and sleep and forget, but it is over. The sea wind is salt
-once more upon our faces. Let us eat the night meal, and then I will
-choose a watch and the rest may sleep. Hand me the cup--To to-morrow's
-dawn!"
-
-Then one of the sailors took dried goat's flesh and fruit from a
-locker in the stern, and by the light of a torch of sawn sandal wood
-they fell to eating. Great bunches of purple grapes lay before each
-sailor, but they had brought none of the magic lotus fruit with them
-to steal away their vigour and thicken their blood.
-
-Then they lay down to sleep under coverings of skins. Two men went to
-the great steering oar, three men watched amidship by the braces, and
-Ulysses himself wrapped a woollen cloak round him and went once more
-into the bows.
-
-Alone there with the wind his thoughts once more went back to his far
-distant home. He thought with longing of his old father Laertes, of
-the child Telemachus playing in the marble courtyard of the sunny
-palace on the hill. A deep sigh shuddered out from his lips as his
-thoughts fell upon the lonely Queen Penelope. "Wife of mine," he
-thought, "shall I ever lie beside you more? Is there silver in your
-bright hair now? Are your thoughts to mewards as mine to you?
-Perchance another rules in my palace and sits at my seat. Are your
-lips another's now? The great tears are blinding me. Courage!"
-
-Bending his head upon his breast, Ulysses prayed long and earnestly to
-his awful patroness, the Goddess Athene, that she would still keep
-ward over his fortunes and guide him safely home.
-
-The night wore on and became very silent. The ship seemed to be
-moving swiftly and surely, though the wind had dropped and the voice
-of the waves was hushed. It seemed to the watcher in the bows that the
-ship was moving in the path of some strong current.
-
-A curious white mist suddenly rolled over the still surface of the
-sea, thick and ghostly. The mast and sail, which was now drooping and
-lifeless, swayed through it like giant spectres. Ulysses could see
-none of his companions, but when he hailed the watch the voice of
-Phocion came back to him through the ghostly curtain, curiously thick
-and muffled.
-
-"The mist thickens, my captain," said the sailor. "Can you see aught
-ahead?"
-
-"I can see nothing, Phocion," shouted Ulysses; "the mist is like wool.
-But I think it is a land mist come out to meet us. There should be
-land ahead."
-
-"I hear no surf or the rolling of waves," said Phocion. "May Zeus
-guide the boat, for mortal men are of no avail to-night."
-
-The ship moved on swiftly as if guided by invisible hands towards some
-goal, and still the expectant mariners heard no sound.
-
-Quite suddenly, and without the slightest warning, a vivid
-copper-coloured flash of lightning illuminated the ship. For an
-instant in the hard lurid light Ulysses saw the whole of the vessel in
-a distinct picture.
-
-Every detail was manifest--the mast, the cordage, the sleeping
-sailors below, the watching group by the shrouds, and, right away
-astern, the startled helmsmen motionless as statues of bronze.
-
-Then with a long grinding noise the ship seemed suddenly lifted up in
-the water, jerked forward, and then dropped again. She began to heel
-over a little out of the perpendicular, and then remained still,
-stranded upon an unknown and mysterious shore, where the waves were
-all asleep. Still the white mist circled round them.
-
-"Comrades," said Ulysses, "we are brought here by no chance of wind
-and waves. Some god has done this thing, but whether for weal or woe I
-cannot tell. Let us land upon the beach and lie down with our weapons
-within sound of the sea till dawn. At sunrise we shall know where the
-god has brought us."
-
-They landed at the order, and with the supreme indifference of the
-adventurer lay upon the shore and slept out the remainder of the
-night. But Ulysses had a prescience of harm, and was full of sinister
-forebodings. He did not sleep, but paced through the mist all night in
-a little beaten track among the boulders. He prayed long and earnestly
-to Athene.
-
-When the first faint hintings of dawn brightened through the mist a
-little breeze arose, and before the sky was more than faintly flushed
-with day the night fog was blown away like thistledown.
-
-As the sun climbed up the sky the companions found that they had been
-carried to a scene of singular beauty. They were on an island, a
-small, rich place at the mouth of a great bay. Rich level grass
-meadows, green as bright enamel and brilliant with flowers, sloped
-gently down to the violet sea. Behind was a thickly-wooded hill, at
-the foot of which was a sparkling spring surrounded by a tall grove of
-poplar trees.
-
-In the leafy wood the wild goats leapt under the wild vine trees like
-Pan at play, as fearless of the intruders as if they had never seen
-men before. All the bright morning the sailors made the wood ring with
-happy laughter as they speared the goats for a feast. All trouble
-passed from their minds, and as the spears flashed swiftly through the
-green wood the shrill, jocund voices of the hunters made all the
-island musical. Ulysses plunged into a translucent pool at the foot of
-the spring, and the cool water flashed like diamonds over his strong
-brown arms, and he looked indeed as if he were some river-god and this
-his fairy home.
-
-All day long they feasted and drank wine which they had brought in
-skins from Lotus Land. When night was falling, very still and gentle,
-they saw the blue smoke of fires over the bay, on the mainland, about
-a mile away, and the bleating of many sheep and the lowing of herds
-came to them over the wine-coloured sea.
-
-Ever and again voices could be heard--strange resonant voices. "That
-must be the country of some strange gods," the sailors said to each
-other. "Those are no mortal voices. We are come into some great
-peril." Before they slept they sacrificed a goat on the seashore to
-Zeus, that he might guard them from any coming harm.
-
-In the morning the king prepared for action. It was necessary to find
-upon what shores they had arrived, to get direction of Ithaca, and if
-treasure was to be won by force or guile, to take the opportunity
-which chance or the gods had sent.
-
-Ulysses chose twelve of his men, tried veterans with nerves of steel,
-old comrades who had fought with him for Helen on the windy plains of
-Troy. With these old never-strikes he embarked on the ship. He left
-Phocion as leader of the remainder of the crew, and taking Elpenor
-with him as second in command, they got out six sweeps, three on each
-side of the ship, and rowed slowly over the glassy bay.
-
-The mainland, on the shore where they landed, was a wild rocky place,
-and there was a broad road winding away up to the higher pasture
-lands. The road was made of great rocks beaten into smoothness, and
-fresh spoor of cattle showed that not long since a great herd had
-passed to the upland feeding grounds.
-
-Directly in front of them as they landed was a high cave. It was
-fringed with laurel bushes, which grew on ledges in the cliff side.
-
-Before the cave a great wall had been built in a square, forming a
-courtyard. The wall was built with enormous masses of rock, and fenced
-with a palisade of pine trunks and massive boles of oak. There was no
-sign of any living thing. Slowly and cautiously the party crept up to
-the wall. Their weapons were in readiness as they stole through the
-gateway. Within the square formed by the wall they could see that it
-was a vast cattle pen. "This must be the dwelling of some giant," said
-Elpenor; "men do not build like this. On what strange place have we
-chanced?" He looked inquiringly at Ulysses when he had spoken, and a
-ring of eager faces turned towards him whose wisdom was never at
-fault, the favourite of Athene.
-
-"I think, comrades," said Ulysses, "that we have been driven to the
-shores of the Cyclopes. They are mighty giants, who work in the forge
-of Vulcan making armour for the gods. Now this cave must be the
-dwelling of one of them, and I like not where we are. Let us but go
-within for a short time and take what we can find, and then hasten
-back to the island. The Cyclopes have no boats and cannot follow us.
-But it would go hard with us were we found, for they are crafty and
-cruel monsters."
-
-With hasty, curious footsteps they crossed the echoing flags of the
-courtyard and entered the cave. As the shadow of the entrance fell
-upon them and the chill of the air inside struck on their faces, more
-than one would have gladly stayed in the warm outside sunshine. It was
-an ill-omened, sinister place this lair of giants.
-
-A pungent ammoniacal smell made them cough and shudder as they crossed
-the threshold. Ulysses turned with a grim smile to his followers.
-"Thank the gods we are seamen and sons of the fresh wind. This Cyclops
-lives like a swine in a stye." The large entrance to the cave gave a
-fair light within, and their eyes soon became accustomed to it. Along
-one side of the cave were folds of fat lambs and kids who bleated
-lustily at them. At the end of the cave was a great couch of skins by
-the ashes of a pine fire. Bones and scraps of flesh were piled round,
-relics of some great orgy, and a sickly stench of decay came from the
-_débris_.
-
-Piles of wicker baskets were loaded with huge yellow cheeses, and
-there were many copper milk pails and bowls brimful of whey.
-
-The sailors rejoiced at such an abundance of good cheer, and they
-killed one of the fattest of the lambs and lit a fire to roast it.
-
-"The giant will not return till even," said Elpenor, "and by then we
-shall be far away. We will make a good meal now, and then load the
-ship with cheeses and drive off the best of the lambs. Our comrades
-will welcome us home this night, for we shall be full-handed!"
-
-So, careless of danger, they sat them down in that perilous place and
-made merry on the giant's cheer. They had brought skins of wine with
-them, and they drank in mockery to their absent host.
-
-In the middle of the feast one of the men suddenly laid down his cup.
-"Hearken," he said uneasily, "do you hear anything, friends?"
-
-"I hear nothing," said Ulysses. "What sound did you hear?"
-
-"A distant sound, I thought," answered the man, "as if the earth
-shook."
-
-"There is nothing," said a third at length; but a certain constraint
-fell upon them all, and anxiety clouded their faces.
-
-"Let us begone," said Ulysses at length. "There is what I do not like
-in the air. I fear evil."
-
-He had but hardly made an end of speaking when all of them there were
-struck rigid with apprehension. A distant but rapidly-nearing sound
-assailed their ears, a heavy crunching sound like the blows of a great
-hammer upon the earth, save that each succeeding blow was louder than
-the last. They stood irresolute for one fatal moment, and then started
-to run towards the mouth of the cave.
-
-The noise filled all the air, which hummed and trembled with it. They
-reached the entrance, but too late. Even as the first man came out
-into the afternoon sunlight, a great herd of cattle came pouring into
-the courtyard. Behind them, towering over the wall, as tall as the
-tallest pine on the slopes of Hymettus, strode Polyphemus, the giant
-king of the Cyclopes, son of the God Poseidon.
-
-The giant was naked to the waist, where he wore a girdle of skins. One
-great eye burned in the centre of his forehead, and a row of sharp,
-white teeth were framed by thick dribbling lips, like the lips of a
-cow.
-
-Under his arm Polyphemus carried a bundle of young sapling trees,
-which he had brought for faggots for his fire. He threw them on the
-floor of the courtyard by the mouth of the cave with a great crash.
-The adventurers crouched away at the back of the cave in the darkness
-as the giant entered.
-
-He drove all the ewes of his flock before him, leaving the rams
-outside in the court. Then he took a great hole of rock, which scarce
-twenty teams of horses could have moved, and closed the mouth of the
-cave.
-
-With a great sigh of weariness, which echoed like a hissing wind and
-blew the silent bats which hung to the roof this way and that in a
-frightened eddy of wings, he sank down upon his couch of skins. The
-giant had brought some of the firewood into the cave with him and he
-threw it into the embers.
-
-A resinous piece of wood suddenly caught the flame and flared up,
-filling the cavern with red light. One of the sailors dropped his
-spear with a loud clatter as the flames made plain the figure of the
-monster.
-
-Polyphemus turned his head and saw them.
-
-He stared steadily at them with his single eye for full a minute. A
-cruel smile played on his face.
-
-"Who are you, strangers?" he said at length, in a thick, low voice
-like the swell of a great organ. "Merchants, are you? Pirates? And
-whence come you along the paths of the sea?"
-
-Then Ulysses spoke in a smooth voice of conciliation. "We are Greeks,
-oh lord, soldiers of Agamemnon's army, bound for home over the seas
-from Troy. Bad weather has driven us out of our course, and so we have
-come to you and beg you to be our honoured host. Oh, great lord, have
-reverence for the gods, for Zeus himself is the god of hospitality."
-
-Then the giant smiled cunningly. "You are a man of little wit,
-stranger," he said, "or else you have indeed come from the very end of
-the world. I pay no heed to Zeus, for I am stronger than he. But now,
-tell me, where is your ship?"
-
-But Ulysses, the wary one, saw the snare and answered humbly, "The
-great Poseidon, god of the deep, wrecked our ship upon the rocks, and
-we alone survive of all our company."
-
-The giant looked fixedly at the trembling band for a moment. Then,
-with a sudden movement, he snatched among the mariners and grasped two
-of them in his mighty hand.
-
-The swift horror remained with them in all their after life. He
-stripped the clothes from each like a man strips the scales from a
-prawn with one quick twirl of his fingers.
-
-Then he dashed the quivering bodies upon the ground so that the yellow
-paste of the brains smeared the stone--save for the horrid crunching
-of bone and flesh, and the liquid gurgle of the monster's throat as he
-made his frightful meal, there was no sound in the cave.
-
-Then he fell into a foul sleep.
-
-Three times during the long night did Ulysses draw his sword to
-plunge it into the monster's heart, three times did he sheathe it
-again. For in his wisdom he knew that if he killed Polyphemus no one
-could ever move away the great stone which shut them from the outside
-world.
-
-In the morning Elpenor and one other died, and the giant drove his
-flocks to pasture and closed up the heroes in the cave.
-
-Then Ulysses comforted the dying hearts of his men, and as Polyphemus
-strode away over the hills whistling to his cattle, he made a plan for
-one last bid for freedom.
-
-Leaning against the wall of the cave was a great club of hard wood
-which the monster had put there to dry. It was an olive-tree trunk as
-big as the great spar of a ship.
-
-This they took and sharpened with their swords, and hardened it in the
-flame of the fire and hid it carefully away. Then very sadly the
-sailors cast lots as to who should be the four to help the captain.
-All day long they sat in the foetid cave and prayed to the gods for an
-alms of aid. And their hearts were leaden for love of their valiant
-comrades.
-
-At eventime two more heroes died.
-
-Then Ulysses rose, and though his knees were weak and his face
-blanched with agony, he spoke in a smooth voice. "My Lord Cyclops," he
-said, "I have filled this bowl with wine which we brought with us. I
-pray you drink, and perchance your heart may be touched and you will
-let us go."
-
-So the giant took the bowl from the king, and as Ulysses went near
-him his breath reeked of carrion and blood. He drank the wine, which
-was a sweet and drowsy vintage from the Lotus Island. "Give me more,"
-he cried thickly, "and say how you are named, for I will grant you a
-favour."
-
-Ulysses filled the bowl for him three times. "Oh, my lord," he said,
-"my friends and parents call me Noman, for that is my name. Now, great
-lord, your boon."
-
-The giant leered at the hero with drunken cunning. "Noman, since that
-is your name Noman, you shall die last of all, and the others first.
-That is your boon!"
-
-And once more he sank into his sleep, gorged with blood and wine.
-
-The hours wore on and the flames of the fire sank into a bright red
-glow. The loud stertorous breathing of the monster became more deep
-and regular. Very silently the five rose from among the rest and stole
-towards the fire with the great stake. They pressed it into the heart
-of the white hot embers and sat watching it change from black to
-crimson, while little sparks ran up and down the sides like flies upon
-the wall.
-
-When the spar was just about to burst into flame they drew it out, and
-with quick, nervous footsteps carried it to where Polyphemus lay
-sleeping. The glow from the hot hard wood played upon that vast
-blood-smeared countenance and the yellow wrinkled lid which veiled the
-cruel eye.
-
-Ulysses directed the point to the exact centre of the foul skin, and
-then with their old battle cry of "Helen!" the five heroes pressed it
-home through the hissing, steaming eyeball, turning it round and round
-until everything was burned away.
-
-They had just time to leap aside when the giant rose in horrid agony.
-His cries of rage and pain were like the cries of a thousand tortured
-beasts, and the din was so great that pieces of rock began to fall
-from the roof of the cave. He spun round in his torture, beating upon
-the walls with his arms and head until they were a raw and bleeding
-wound.
-
-At this awful sound mighty footsteps were heard outside the cave as
-the other giants rushed down from the hills. There came great and
-terrible voices shouting together, and it was as though a great storm
-was racing through the world.
-
-"What ails you, brother, that you call us from sleep in the night?"
-cried the giants.
-
-"Help! help! brothers. Noman is murdering me. I die!"
-
-A chorus of thunderous laughter came rolling back. "If Noman harms
-thee, then how should we aid thee, brother? 'Tis the gods who have
-sent thee a sickness which thou must endure."
-
-And now, through an aperture high up in the cave, the light began to
-whiten, and showed day was at hand. The footsteps of the Cyclopes grew
-faint and ceased, but Polyphemus lay moaning by the great stone which
-closed the entrance.
-
-The morning light grew stronger, and a breeze stole in, fresh and
-clean, and played upon the faces of the prisoners.
-
-The ewes began to bleat, for their milking time was at hand, and the
-rams cried out for freedom and the green pastures of the hill.
-
-The giant moved aside the stone to let them go and in the morning
-sunlight the sailors could see that he felt over them with his hands
-so that no men should mingle with them and so escape.
-
-First the ewes went out and then the young rams, and last of all the
-great old rams, patriarchs of the flock, began to move slowly towards
-the door.
-
-Then courage came back to Ulysses, and with it all his cunning.
-Stooping low under the belly of a great beast, he motioned to his
-friends to do likewise, and, slowly, in this way, holding to the
-fleece of the rams, they moved out of the cave. They could feel the
-rams tremble when the giant's hands ranged over the wool of their
-backs, but nevertheless they came safely out into the light, and stole
-down to where their ship yet lay at anchor.
-
-The air of the morning was like wine to them, and the face of the
-water as dear as the face of a well-beloved wife as they ran over the
-bright yellow sand.
-
-Then from the stern of the boat Ulysses cried out in a great voice of
-triumph. At that sound the monster came stumbling from his cave,
-reeling like a drunken man, and calling on his father Poseidon, Lord
-of the Sea, to avenge him on his enemies. He took up the stone that
-had barred the cave and threw it far out into the water, but it
-overshot the boat and did not harm the heroes, though the wave of its
-descent flung the ship from side to side as if it were a piece of
-driftwood. The mariners bent to the oars, and the vessels moved away
-from that accursed shore, slowly at first but more swiftly as their
-tired arms grew strong with the chance of safety, and the wine of hope
-flowed in their veins once more.
-
-They saw the sightless face of Polyphemus working horribly, his mouth
-opening and shutting like a dying fish as he looked heavenwards and
-implored his mighty father's aid.
-
-And after a space of mourning for the brave dead the heroes set out
-again over the sad grey seas, seeking Ithaca.
-
-But the heart of King Ulysses was sick and weary, for he dreaded the
-wrath to come, and most of all he longed for home.
-
-
-
-
-THE SECOND EPISODE
-
-THE ADVENTURE OF THE PALACE IN THE WOOD
-
-
-Ulysses slowly mounted the wooded hill. The path which rose towards
-the summit wound in and out through thick undergrowth, and his feet
-made no sound upon the green moss of the track.
-
-He had his spear ready for any game that he might chance on, but for
-half a day he saw no living thing save a few mailed lizards that lay
-open-eyed upon a stone.
-
-No birds twittered in the forest on the mountainside, only the wild
-bees sang in the stillness like jewels with voices.
-
-How beautiful the wood was! and how mysterious also. Ulysses felt a
-quickening of the pulses which did not come from fear, and a strange
-excitement possessed him which arose from he knew not what cause.
-
-The trees in the forest were very old and grew thickly together. The
-trunks were painted delicate greens, greys and browns by lichens, and
-the foliage overhead met and made a roof of bright leaves. Beneath
-this canopy there was a sort of twilight like the gloom in the temple
-of Zeus at Sparta.
-
-Ulysses toiled on and up. After a time the trees began to open out
-and grow less thickly. The moss-carpet began to be rocky and uneasy to
-walk upon, so that Ulysses knew that he must be nearing the top.
-
-At last he climbed a few worn boulders and stood alone upon the peak.
-From that great height he could discern the sea on all sides of the
-island. Beyond the thick woodlands below, the yellow sands of the
-shore went out to meet the water, and the king could see the ship
-riding at anchor and a small boat plying from it to a tiny group of
-black dots upon the beach.
-
-Ulysses sent his gaze circling slowly over the unbroken green of the
-woods. When his roving glance fell upon the very centre of the island
-he started suddenly and shaded his eyes from the sunlight with both
-hands. A thick column of blue smoke was rising from among the trees,
-and looking more intently than before he could see the gleam of white
-marble here and there through the greenwood, and catch the sunlight
-glinting upon copper.
-
-He had learned what he came to know; there was life upon the island.
-But of what kind? Did some fearful monster lurk yonder, three miles
-away in the forest. Another Cyclops, perchance, or some angry god
-wroth at a disturbance of his privacy.
-
-The still smoke rose into the soft air and a great calm seemed to
-brood over the place. No birds flew about the roofs.
-
-He began to retrace his steps down towards his comrades on the shore
-to tell them what he had seen.
-
-The wood was as still as before, but when he came to the meadow lands
-below he dropped quickly behind a clump of fern, for his keen eyes had
-seen a smooth brown flank not far away. A great stag was drinking at a
-little stream which sang its way down from the mountain to the sea.
-They had touched at the island with very little food left, and the
-king had promised that he would return with spoils from hunting.
-
-Just as the beast raised his head from the water the spear flashed
-like a gleam of light from the clump of fern, and the quarry stumbled,
-clattering among the stones with a sob.
-
-Then Ulysses made a rope of willow twigs and tied the stag's feet
-together and brought him to the ship.
-
-Only half the crew were upon the shore, for the rest had gone to
-explore the inward parts of the island with Eurylochus as their
-leader.
-
-They skinned the stag and made a fire, and roasted the sweet flesh
-upon their spear points. While they sat eating, a man with a white
-face came running over the shore towards them, and as they saw him
-come they rose with their arms in fear, for they knew that once more
-they had come to some dangerous and evil place, and that a deadly
-peril lurked in the forest.
-
-They saw he who ran was Eurylochus, and that he ran in terror.
-
-But none followed him in pursuit, nor did any arrow come singing like
-a bee from the shelter of the neighbouring trees.
-
-Eurylochus rushed up to them and sank exhausted by the fire. Ulysses
-gave him wine, and motioned the others to ask no questions but to let
-the man tell his tale in his own way. For he knew it would be more
-vivid so.
-
-"More evil, comrades!" he sobbed out at last, "and good men and true
-lost to us for ever. Know you where we have landed? This accursed
-place is Ĉĉa, the home of the Goddess Circe, and I have seen her face
-to face."
-
-Ulysses started violently, and despair crept into his eyes as he
-motioned Eurylochus to proceed.
-
-"We went up through the valleys," said the lieutenant, "and entered
-the wood. After we had walked long, and were thirsty and weary, we
-came to an open glade in which stood the house of Circe. It was built
-of polished marble with copper roofs, and the trees made a thick wall
-on all sides of the glade. A very strange, silent place! All round the
-house were lions and mountain wolves playing with each other. We
-turned to fly in fear, but the beasts fawned upon us with gentle paws
-and waving tails, and we saw their eyes were sad and tame, and they
-were all unlike the beasts of the field. They were as dogs at supper
-begging for food from their masters. But it was an awful sight
-nevertheless.
-
-"Now, as we stood waiting in the porch, we heard a sweet low song
-inside the palace, sweeter than any mortal song, like the flutes and
-harps of the gods. Then we looked in, and we saw the goddess weaving
-at a golden loom, and going up and down before it as she sang. And
-Polites--oh, dear Polites!--called out to her, and the song ceased,
-and Circe came out to us, and bade us enter, and her beauty was like
-moonlight. Then the men went in, but I remained, mindful of the
-Cyclops and fearing harm. So I sat down in the wood, and the beasts
-played round me, and the lions licked my hands with their hard rough
-tongues. But I could see what was toward in the palace hall.
-
-"The goddess led them to rich couches and chairs, and she prepared a
-drink for them of golden honey and purple wine, white fresh cheese,
-and meal of corn. But she poured a brew of magic herbs into the drink,
-and when they had passed the bowl from hand to hand and drunk she
-waved a wand of cedar wood over them."
-
-He stopped, choking with emotion and shaking with horror at what he
-had seen. He covered his face with his hands.
-
-Ulysses placed a firm hand upon his shoulder, and he took up his tale
-once more. "And when she waved her wand behold a horror! For suddenly
-my comrades dwindled, and were changed to swine. The bristles of swine
-grew out upon them, and they grunted like swine, but still the souls
-of men shone out of their eyes. And she drove them away into a pen,
-and threw them beech nuts, laughing most musically. And I, the
-unhappy one, fled and am come hither with my tale."
-
-Ulysses rose with a pale set face, and stern hard lines flashed out
-round his lips. For a moment he prayed in silence to Athene. Then he
-slung his strung bow upon his shoulder, and loosened the arrows in the
-quiver, testing each one for a flaw in the shaft. He took his great
-silver-studded sword and buckled it round his waist. "I alone, my
-comrades, must go to the palace of the enchantress," he said. "I have
-no choice but to go and strive. May the gods preserve you, friends."
-
-He was preparing to move away when they all entreated him to remain
-with them, but he would not listen, and as he moved away and was lost
-to their sight they broke out into loud praises of him among
-themselves.
-
-It was ever thus. Their father and captain was first in wisdom and
-courage, and had always seemed to them more god than man.
-
-Ulysses passed over the meadows with slow sure step, thinking deeply.
-The forest closed about him, dark and lonely, and his walk changed. He
-became alert, walking warily and softly. His keen eyes roved over the
-untrodden paths, seeking to pierce the mystery of the greenwood.
-
-He had halted by a brook for a moment, debating which path he should
-venture, when help came to him.
-
-There was a crash in the tree tops above him, a glittering ball of
-light fell through the green, and a wind rushed among the leaves,
-suddenly rousing all the voices of the wood.
-
- [Illustration: THEN HE CAME SWIFTLY UPON THE GLEAMING PALACE.
- _Page 45._]
-
-A young and beautiful man, holding a golden rod, with a slight down
-upon his lip, came towards him.
-
-Ulysses knew that the God Hermes had flashed down from heaven to be
-his counsellor. He fell upon his knees before the divine messenger.
-
-"The great Athene has sent me to you, king," said the god, "for she
-heard your prayer upon the shore, and will deliver you from the forest
-danger. Here is a sprig of the magic herb moly. Take it in your hand
-for a safeguard against the wiles of Circe.
-
-"When you go into the palace she will mix you her enchanted potion,
-and strike you with her wand. Do you draw your sword, and make as
-though to slay her. Then she will fear greatly and swear to do you no
-harm."
-
-Ulysses took the white flowered talisman, and Hermes vanished among
-the trees.
-
-Then he came swiftly upon the gleaming palace, and going up to the
-marble porch struck upon it with his sword hilt, and called to the
-goddess.
-
-She glimmered towards him. Her hair was like a young horse-chestnut
-fresh from the pod. Her eyes were like pools of violet water, her neck
-was a tower of ivory, and her lips were red as sunset.
-
-The flower of evil, the goddess of strange sins!
-
-She smiled at the hero, and led him by the hand to a table on which
-was a golden cup, proffering it to him in welcome.
-
-Ulysses bowed low before her loveliness, and as he drank there was a
-strange smile in his eyes.
-
-The enchantress looked at him steadily. For a single moment a ripple
-of doubt crossed her face, but suddenly she seized her cedarn rod and
-smote his side, crying, "Get you to the stye, and lie there in filth
-with your companions."
-
-Ulysses drew his great sword, and held it over her with menacing eyes.
-She drooped to him, a very woman! and clung round him, weeping, and he
-could feel her warm heart beating, beating close to his. Her lovely
-hair fell around her in a golden cloud, and tears streamed down her
-cheeks as she swore by the gods on the Holy Hill never to harm him.
-
-And looking on her sinful loveliness the brain of Ulysses burned for
-her, and he took her lithe body in his strong arms and pressed the
-blossom of her lips to his. Her arms stole round him, and she called
-him lord and king.
-
-Then with a soft smile she led him to the courtyard where the swine
-lay sleeping in the sun. When the foul beasts saw Ulysses they set up
-a horrid chorus of grunting, and he raged to see his valiant friends
-so degraded. But clinging to him, the goddess raised her hand, and the
-swine vanished, and the goodly mariners stood up among the straw, more
-straight and tall than before, with all the marks of hardship and
-travel smoothed from their faces.
-
-That night the other mariners came up from the shore, guided by
-Ulysses. And the amber lamps flared in the hall, and all night till
-daybreak they made a great feast. They sang in praise of love and
-wine, and Circe sat at the right hand of the King of Ithaca.
-
-When the rosy dawn rushed up the sky, the goddess rose.
-
-The lamps paled in the fresh new light, and the feast was over.
-
-The mariners lay in sleep about the board, and the purple wine was
-spilt about them.
-
-Only the Goddess and the Hero were awake.
-
-Then she said, "Lord and love, the night is over. The sun climbs the
-sky, the woodlands awake. But let us go into my scented chamber, my
-purple chamber where the day never comes. There will we lie in love
-and sleep and forget the day."
-
-She led him by the hand over the cool marble floor. The purple
-curtains fell behind them with a soft noise of falling. All sound was
-hushed in the courts of the palace, and the whole house was still.
-
-
-
-
-THE THIRD EPISODE
-
-HOW ULYSSES WALKED IN HELL, AND OF THE ADVENTURE OF THE SIRENS AND
-SCYLLA
-
-
-The King of Ithaca stood all alone on a gloomy barren shore, spear in
-hand. The sky lowered black overhead, and from the vast yawning hole
-in the terrible cliff which rose up before him he seemed to hear
-strange wailings and faint cries coming, so it seemed, from a great
-distance.
-
-Had he at last broken away from the loving arms of Circe for this
-horror? Stung once more by the latent manhood in his blood, he had
-roused his energies and left the enchanted island to set out once more
-upon the weary quest for home. He had bade the goddess farewell and
-sailed away from the island of sweet lust to seek a ghostly counsellor
-and to drink deep at that fountain of wisdom which was once the glory
-of Thebes.
-
-When Circe had bade him, if he would indeed get back to Ithaca and
-leave her arms, seek the dead Tiresias in the place of the dead it had
-seemed an easy thing.
-
-What were pale ghosts to a warrior of Troyland and the vanquisher of
-Polyphemus? If the old seer alone could tell him how to conquer the
-wrath of Poseidon and win to his wife's arms once more, should he not
-go with a will?
-
- [Illustration: THEN HE WAS, IN AN INSTANT MOMENT, AWARE OF A
- MORE THAN MORTAL PRESENCE.
- _Page 49._]
-
-And he had set out with his crew, and the magic wind which Circe gave
-them had brought them hither over grey sad seas, while they had
-touched nor oars nor helm.
-
-And now Ulysses went slowly up to the fissure in the rock, but a long
-solitary cry made him reel back trembling as his brave heart had never
-done before.
-
-Then he was, in an instant moment, aware of a more than mortal
-presence. Into that dread place came the awful majesty of the Queen of
-Heaven, and he fell to the ground before Athene.
-
-The full flowing river of her speech came down upon him.
-
-"If thou wouldst hold thy wife once more, Ulysses, and see thy rocky
-western home, then must thou dare this peril. None can help thee now
-save thou thyself. So it is decreed by the gods. If so be it that thy
-courage fails thee now then wilt thou be a wanderer for ever."
-
-"Lady of Heaven," he said, "I dare not go. Oh, anything but that."
-
-"Penelope!" she murmured sweetly.
-
-"I cannot face the dead."
-
-"Ithaca."
-
-"Oh, listen to those wailings in the abyss!"
-
-"Thy father Laertes weeps yet for the wanderer."
-
-"The dead! The dead are waiting there!"
-
-"Men call thee Ulysses!" said the goddess, and at that word something
-moved within him and his limbs began to stiffen, and once more the
-hero felt the spear-shank hard and cold within his grasp.
-
-He raised his face, and there was once more the old proud light upon
-it. Athene had gone, and big with his new resolve he stepped towards
-the blackness.
-
-A voice came to him, thin, and far down.
-
-"Ulysses! Ulysses! son of Laertes, I wait to guide thee. Hermes, son
-of Zeus, is with thee. Take courage in both hands and come."
-
-The king moved forward, and the dark swallowed him up. He stumbled
-along a descending rock-strewn pathway. In the increasing gloom it
-seemed to him that he was on the side of a steep hill. A moaning wind
-encircled him. Now and again a slight gleam was visible from the
-golden helmet of the god.
-
-Far far down he saw the leaden livid river of death, and on the sullen
-tide floated the stately funeral barge of Charon, the ferryman of the
-dead.
-
-The wind grew even more mournful and sad as they trod the meadows of
-asphodel and the grey lilies of the underworld towards the marge of
-Styx.
-
-Then the god called out aloud to the ferryman. As his voice echoed
-over the water, the dusky night became full of the sound of wings, and
-dark shapes filled the air. The spirits of the dead flapped round them
-in continual movement.
-
-The ghosts began to call and cry to the living hero. Some had little
-squeaky voices like bats, others made a louder and more hollow sound.
-
-The howlings of the formless increased all round Ulysses.
-
-The inarticulate found utterance in the indefinite.
-
-The waves of weird and hopeless voices rose, fell, undulated, now loud
-and shrill, now sobbing into silence. Little eager whispers filled the
-hero's ear.
-
-And to the terror of these great murmurs were added the sight of
-superhuman outlines, which melted away in the gloom almost as they
-appeared. Alecto and Tisiphone, the Furies, circled round Ulysses, and
-Megeara flew through the dark to her sisters.
-
-A cold hand seemed placed upon the hero's soul. Cries from precipice
-to precipice, from air to water, went on unceasingly--the melancholy
-vociferations of the lost!
-
-The loquacity of Hell!
-
-And in deadly fear, but resolute still, Ulysses struggled on through
-this great twilight world, open on all sides. As he walked on, the
-flying outlaws of the tomb seemed to be swarming over him and pressing
-him to the ground. He struggled beneath the weight of lost souls, but
-his whirling arms struck nothing but the empty air.
-
-Fresh clouds of spirits pricked the twilight, increased in size,
-amalgamated, thickened, and hurried towards him, crying.
-
-They came to the brink of the river. Before them, as they looked out
-over the water, was no horizon, but an opaque lividity like a wan,
-moving precipice, a cliff of the night.
-
-Then the old man Charon bowed to the commands of the gods and embarked
-them on his barge. He gazed on Ulysses with his keen wicked eyes, and
-his long white beard wagged in hideous mockery at this mortal among
-the dead.
-
-The thin pole dipped in and out of the water, and the drops which fell
-from it were the colour of leaden bullets, for there is no life in the
-water of Styx.
-
-Ulysses knelt in the bottom of the boat and shut out Hell from his
-eyes with his hand. He prayed to Athene for help to endure, and that
-he might have an answer from the old Seer Tiresias that would lead him
-safely home at last.
-
-And now the other bank of the river began to loom up before them and
-the air began to be silent.
-
-On the bank, as it seemed to welcome them, stood a tall old man with a
-golden sceptre in his hand. His face was full of an unutterable
-sadness, and his eyes were horny and dim with blindness. But his magic
-staff conducted him safely to the river brink, and in a high shivering
-voice he hailed Ulysses.
-
-"Why hast thou come here, O wise one, leaving the happy daylight for
-this cheerless shore? Noble son of Laertes, I know thy quest, and thus
-make answer. Father Zeus gave me power, which still remains, and I,
-an old blind ghost, can see into the future even on the shores of
-Styx. Thou seekest to know if thou wilt ever catch thy wife in thy
-strong arms once more, and tread the well-beloved fields of Ithaca.
-The mighty god of the sea, Poseidon, is wroth with thee and a
-malevolent god. For even now his son Polyphemus stumbles a bruised and
-sightless way among his native hills. But yet you may return after
-long woes and heavy toil. But one thing bear well in mind, O king,
-else wilt thou suffer unbelievable things. When thy ship touches at
-the Island Thrinacia, great herds of cattle will be feeding there on
-the fresh sweet grass which grows in the goodly upper world. These be
-the beeves and steers of the divine Helios, the Sun-God, and must be
-inviolate to men. But if one sacred beast is slain, then thy ship and
-all thy company will perish.
-
-"Perchance thou thyself may win Ithaca forlorn, and to find others in
-thy place, but that I know not. I have spoken."
-
- [Illustration: THEY CAME TO THE BRINK OF THE RIVER.
- _Page 52._]
-
-Then with a long melancholy cry the figure vanished into the dark.
-
-But in its place came a shadowy form which made the heart of the hero
-leap and beat, so it seemed all Hades was filled with the tumult.
-
-His mother Anticlea stood before him.
-
-Stretching out her cold, thin hands she spoke.
-
-"My boy that I suckled, why hast thou come into Hades not yet being
-dead, for I see that the flesh is still warm upon thee for which I
-drank to Zeus?"
-
-"Mother of mine, I sought Tiresias the Theban prophet. I have not
-even yet won Ithaca nor seen the dear ones there. A god is against me.
-So I came through the spirits of the unburied, and over the dark river
-to seek counsel of the seer. Knowest thou in this beyond-earth if the
-beloved Penelope still holds me in her heart? or is she perhaps here
-with thee, lost to the sunlight?"
-
-The mother of Ulysses answered, "Penelope is as faithful and true as
-on thy wedding day, but she is in a peril, so haste ye home. And now
-farewell." Where Ulysses had seen his mother, was but a little grey
-vapour which swayed and vanished.
-
-Then the hero called roughly to Charon, and bade him take the pole and
-urge the barge back to the starting-place. This time, though the
-multitude of the dead circled over him with cries, begging his help to
-take them out of Hades, he felt no fear, for his mind was burning with
-other thoughts.
-
-He mounted the long cliff side, and at last in the distance saw a
-faint gleam of light stealing down towards him. In the pale gleam the
-figure of Hermes was manifest for a moment flitting up to the day
-before him.
-
-The cries grew fainter and more faint. The light changed from grey to
-primrose, from primrose to yellow. The little star which was the mouth
-of the cave became a sun and then a world, and the yellow turned into
-the white hot sunshine as Hell faded utterly away.
-
-On the beach the little blue waves sang on the yellow sand. The black
-divers rose lazily on the swell, and the shields round the prow of the
-ship shone like white fire.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Once more the vessel of heroes swam over the seas. And now there was
-another quality in the wind for them, and the world was a new world.
-
-Their leader had told them that if they obeyed his commands they would
-win home once more. The news he had brought back from Hades made them
-sturdy and strong of heart, and they vowed that in all things they
-would trust in the king who had dared the perils of the underworld.
-
-Their thoughts turned with a lover's thirst to images of their native
-land, tranquil skies, the old-remembered meadows, cool brooks, and
-eternal peace after their long wandering.
-
-Hope beat high in the heart of Ulysses also. The grey nightmare of
-Hell was over and in the past, one more memory when in his own halls
-he would weave his saga.
-
-He had been near to the awful thing Death.
-
-He had found that after all it was only Death.
-
-The ship with a fair wind ran up a lane of light into the setting sun,
-and when at length the moon had risen and silvered all the sea,
-Ulysses called the men round him.
-
-"Comrades," he said, "with the dawn, if I have kept the reckoning
-aright, we shall come to the island where the Sirens dwell. Now the
-Lady Circe warned me against the Sirens, the singers who charm all men
-with their song. He who listens to Parthenope, Ligeia and Leucosia
-must stay with them for ever, listening spellbound to the song until
-he dies. And the island is covered with the bones of dead men. To
-listen is to die. But I wish to hear the voices and to escape the
-enchantment, and so obey my commands. When we near the island do you
-all close your ears with wax so that no sound can reach your brains.
-And take a stout rope and bind me to the mast so that I can in no wise
-loose myself. And howsoever I may order or entreat you to let me go to
-the Sirens, if their magic song enchants me, take no heed, but row
-steadily onwards until the island is far astern. Then only may you set
-me free."
-
-As dawn came, a faint grey line upon the horizon showed itself on the
-starboard bow. At the sight, with some laughter, for it was difficult
-to believe in the perils of sweet music!--even for men who had seen
-the wonders that they had seen--the men began to press yellow wax from
-the honeycomb into each other's ears.
-
-Then when no one among them could hear the flapping of the sail or the
-voice of the sea, nor could tell the meaning of his neighbour's voice,
-they went up to Ulysses, and with many light-hearted jests bound him
-to the mast, and because his strength was well known to them they
-reeved the rope with a treble hitch. No living man could have escaped
-from such bonds.
-
-As sailors will, they treated the whole thing as a huge jest, making a
-mock mutiny of it as they bound the captain. Ulysses could not help
-smiling at their mirth.
-
-After such wise precaution he had no fear, and in his heart of hearts
-he did not believe that the song of the Sirens would affect him much,
-though he followed the advice of Circe and made himself a prisoner.
-
-But a fierce curiosity possessed him. He cursed the slowness of the
-wind, for, as they bound him, the island was still a low line without
-colour on the water, and called out to the men to row faster,
-forgetting that they could not hear him.
-
-Slowly the grey island became purple, then brown, and at last showed
-itself a green, low, pleasant land, a place of meadows.
-
-The wind was behind them, and until they came quite close under the
-lee of the island Ulysses could hear no voices but those of the wind
-and waves. Then faintly at first, but rapidly becoming more sonorous
-and sweet, he heard the magic voices which were to ring in his ears in
-all his after life.
-
-No words of his at any time could express the loveliness of those
-voices, of the unutterable sweetness of it, nothing.
-
-The strains floated over the still sea like harps of heaven.
-
-All that man had known or desired in life, all the emotions which had
-stirred the human heart, were blended in those magic voices. The world
-had nothing more to give; here, here at last, was the absolute
-fulfilment of beauty.
-
-Louder and more piercingly sweet, as the unconscious sailors bent to
-the oars in earnest, and the sweat ran down their bare brown backs.
-
- "Whither away, whither away, whither away? Fly no more.
- Whither away from the high green field, and the happy
- blossoming shore?
- Day and night to the billow the fountain calls:
- Down shower the gambolling waterfalls
- From wandering over the lea."
-
-The face of Ulysses grew wan and grey as the ship passed a projecting
-point of rock. On the smooth green turf the three singers were
-standing. In face and form they were sweet and lovely girls.
-
-Naked to the waist, they wore long flowing draperies below, and as
-they sung the rosy bosoms rose and fell with the music, and the lucid
-throats rippled with song.
-
- "Mariner, mariner, furl your sails,
- For here are blissful downs and dales,
- And merrily, merrily carol the gales,
- And the spangle dances in bight and bay,
- And the rainbow forms and flies on the land
- Over the islands free;
- And the rainbow lives in the curve of the sand;
- Hither, come hither and see."
-
-And still the ship went on, but more slowly, as it were some force
-were at work deadening the arms of the rowers.
-
-Then the shrill loveliness fired the hero's blood, and he knew that he
-must go to the three lovely singers on the strand. Earth held nothing
-better than this--to lie for ever with that music in his ears.
-
- "Whither away? listen and stay: mariner, mariner, fly no more."[1]
-
- [1] These few lines of the Sirens' song have been taken from
- Lord Tennyson's beautiful poem "The Sea Fairies."
-
-Then, as if drawn by the long cadenced notes as by cords, Ulysses
-gathered up his mighty strength and strove with his bonds.
-
-But the sailors had done their work too well, and the rope only cut
-deeply into the flesh.
-
-The white arms were stretched out to him in supplication, the song
-grew more full of unearthly beauty than before--and the ship was
-slowly passing by.
-
-Ulysses called out to the crew in an agony of command and entreaty.
-
-One of the men happened to look up and saw his face. He grinned,
-nudged his companion, and turned away.
-
-The song grew fainter, the three tall figures dwindled. The face of
-Ulysses grew ashen, and when at length they came to him and cut the
-ropes he said no word.
-
-He went alone to the prow of the vessel and looked out over the fair
-sun-bathed sea, and there were tears in his eyes, and his mouth was
-softer and more tremulous than it was wont to be.
-
-So they came away from Parthenope, Ligeia and Leucosia, the Sirens.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The next day Ulysses called the crew together as before and told them
-of the new peril that awaited them. For the wise Circe had warned him
-that after the island of the Sirens he must needs encounter the
-terrible Scylla, for the ship must pass by her lair on its passage
-towards Home.
-
-But Ulysses knew that it was impossible to fight the monster, and that
-some of the crew were fated to die, but in his wisdom he did not tell
-them that.
-
-He finished his speech as follows:--"And so, my friends, the gods
-ordain that we must face Scylla, and the whirlpool Charybdis. There is
-no other way. But courage! always have courage. I who brought you safe
-from out of the cave of the Cyclops will bring you safe from this
-also. And so onward and have stout hearts."
-
-It was a misty day, and everything was shadowy and faint, but the ship
-moved slowly along a sheer wall of black cliff which towered up above
-them for a thousand feet or more. The top was lost in the mist. It was
-a lowering, frightful place.
-
-One of the sailors gave a shout which echoed back to them in mournful
-mockery through the mist.
-
-They rowed on steadily, hugging the cliff. Ulysses stood in the prow
-of the boat. He had put on armour and took two spears in his hand.
-
-His eyes searched the face of the cliff till they ached from the
-minute scrutiny.
-
-This waiting for the inevitable was terribly unnerving. Ulysses
-himself, knowing that some must die, was heavy and sad at heart as
-they glided along the side of the cliff.
-
-To the left the great whirlpool seethed and boiled, its outermost
-convolution scarce a bow-shot away. When it threw up the water the
-spray dashed up a hundred feet and fell in showers over the sailors,
-and as the water ran back in the ebb Ulysses could see, far down the
-black and spinning sides, to where the old witch Charybdis dwelt on
-the dark sand of the sea bottom.
-
-Suddenly the end came. A loud barking and howling startled them all so
-that each man paused on his oar. A pack of hounds were unkenneled, so
-it seemed, somewhere on the cliff face in the mist.
-
-Then a sickly musky smell enveloped them, so foul and stale that they
-coughed and spat even as their blood ran cold with fear.
-
-Through the curtain of mist, which had suddenly grown very thick, six
-objects loomed right over the boat.
-
-Six long tentacles swayed and quivered over the sailors, and at the
-end of each was a grinning head set with cruel fangs and a little red
-eager tongue that flickered in and out.
-
-For a moment the heads hung poised, and then each sought and found its
-victim.
-
-Six sailors were slowly drawn out of the boat, shrieking the name of
-Ulysses for the last time in their death agony. And all the time the
-barking of the hounds in the obscene womb of the monster went on
-unceasingly.
-
-Then the fury of flight came upon them. With bursting brains and red
-fire before their eyes they laboured at the great oars until the wood
-bent and shook and the ship leaped forward like a driven horse.
-
-And they left the strait of death and came out of the mist into a wide
-sunlit sea. But still a sound of distant barking came down the wind.
-
-So Scylla took her horrid toll of heroes.
-
-But Ulysses called them to prayer and lamentation for the dead.
-
-
-
-
-THE FOURTH EPISODE
-
-HOW ULYSSES LOST HIS MERRY MEN AND CAME A WAIF TO CALYPSO WITH THE
-SHINING HAIR
-
-
-The crew sat round a fire of driftwood.
-
-There was shelter where they sat, in a natural alcove of rock, but
-outside the great winds thundered and the wrack flew before the storm
-and a mighty unceasing roar filled the air.
-
-The faces of all the sailors wore a sullen look. Hunger had begun to
-suck the colour from their cheeks, their eyes were prominent and
-strained, their movements without energy or vigour.
-
-A rude shelter of sailcloth and various _débris_ that was scattered
-about seemed to show that for some time, at least, they had made their
-home in this place where the winds did not come.
-
-Ulysses was not among them. They were talking in low, discontented
-tones among themselves.
-
-"A whole month," said Eurylochus, "a whole month have we been sea
-bound in this accursed island. I am sick of islands!"
-
-"Never have we put to shore without some evil thing befalling," said
-another. "Oh, for Ithaca!"
-
-"I doubt we shall ever see Ithaca again," said a third. "We will be
-wanderers till we die; that is what I think. And this place is like to
-be the grave of all of us. I never knew a wind so furious to blow so
-long. We should sink in an hour did we but put out."
-
-"There is only food for one day more, and that sparse," said
-Eurylochus. "For my part, my limbs are heavy as brass and the strength
-is all gone from me. I could not move an oar now. Man needs meat and
-wine or the fires of hunger burn the sinews and dry the blood. Brown
-meat and red wine! I could fill my belly till the skin cracked!"
-
-"The rich brown meat, mate! Dost mind the soft kids on Circe's island?
-By Zeus, I can taste them now!"
-
-"Ay and the fat cows, roast till the blood ran out of them like liquid
-life."
-
-"I can even smell the smell of the roasting meat now. A welcome smell
-to a hungry man."
-
-"Would that we had never left Circe. 'Twas a kind queen, meet for our
-master! but her girls were kindly in love also."
-
-"To Hades with the girls!" said Eurylochus. "Thy talk of meat makes me
-heave with desire."
-
-He looked round cautiously before he continued.
-
-"Friends," he said in a low, rapid whisper, "tell me, are ye purposing
-to starve in the midst of plenty? Saw ye ever such fat oxen and cows
-as graze in the pastures above?"
-
-"Never did I see such cattle," answered another hungry wight. "Gods!
-they would make a feast for kings."
-
-"And yet pain and sickness is all over us, and we lust for food till
-we know not what we do!"
-
-"Captain's orders!"
-
-"Ulysses has lost his cunning for sure, and hunger has turned his
-brain. He is no more the brave leader of old. He goes wandering alone
-among the rocks and sleeps all day. And his eye is clouded and courage
-has left his voice. Friends, shall we die thus? No man of ye loveth
-Ulysses better than I love him. Is he not my kinsman indeed? He
-brought us from the Cyclops' cave and dared the perils of Hell. All
-this I know and say before you now. But the king is distraught and
-moody. He does not know what he is doing. He would be the first to
-join us with the merry and grateful word were he to come back and find
-the good red beef roasting on the fire and smell the savoury smoke."
-
-"Ay, captain was never one set against a feast! He loves good cheer,
-as becomes a proper fighting man."
-
-"My mind doubts me, comrades," said another. "Should we not rather
-trust the king even unto this last thing? Have we ever found him
-wanting yet? Did he not make us promise? Zeus knows if the thought of
-hot meat does not tickle my belly as well as thine--more, friend, for
-thou hast a paunch yet and none have I--but I for one trust in the
-captain. He knows."
-
-Then Eurylochus took up his spear as if he had decided and the
-discussion was over.
-
-"Listen, men," he said. "In all shapes death is a terrible thing. But
-I would rather die quickly at Scylla's hands than fade into Hades
-through famine. Hunger is the worst death of all. Come with me and
-bring your spears. We will choose the best of the herd and sacrifice
-to the gods. When we reach home again, can we not build a great temple
-to Helios, and fill it with rich gifts? The Sun-God, who gives light
-to all the world, will not grudge us a cow or two. Not he. 'Tis a more
-genial god than that. Ay, and though we indeed anger the god and he
-wreck us in the deep! I put ye this question--Would ye not rather
-swallow the cold salt water for a moment and so die, than die for days
-among the rocks?"
-
-His pale face worked with the force of his words. His eyes glistened
-with a terrible eagerness. As he spoke in a high, quivering nervous
-tenor, shaking his spear at them, the eagerness crept into their eyes
-also.
-
-Famine strangely transforms the human face. They became men with
-brute's eyes.
-
-Eurylochus marched away out of the shelter towards the pasture lands,
-and the others followed him. New strength seemed to come to them as
-they walked towards the herd, which could be seen, a red brown mass,
-grazing on a plain some half-mile away.
-
-The full force of the wind struck and retarded them as they emerged
-into the open, but it brought the lowing of the cattle to their ears
-and they pressed on.
-
-Ulysses lay sleeping about a quarter of a mile from the cove.
-
-He had wandered away from his companions in great despondency. For
-four long weeks the gale had roared past the island away to the north.
-The rain had fallen like spears, the thunder stammered its awful
-message, the green and white lightning snapped like whips of light. In
-all this the king saw the finger of evil. He knew that the mighty
-Poseidon still watched his fortunes with cruel, angry eyes. For this
-storm was no chance warring of the elements, but came, he knew,
-directed against him and his fated crew.
-
-Food had got lower and lower, the men began to grumble, and black
-looks of reproach met his eyes on every side.
-
-And all the time the fat cattle of Apollo cropped the tender shoots of
-the grass, the full udder dropped with creamy milk, and the shining
-flanks of the great beasts sent an alluring message to the starving
-men.
-
-Often Ulysses withdrew into some lonely place and prayed to Athene,
-but she seemed asleep or weary of his woes, for there came no
-answering sign.
-
-On this day hope seemed to have utterly departed from him. There was
-no break in the leaden clouds of the future.
-
-He had wandered away along the seashore, and fallen asleep from
-languor and grief, lulled by the great singing of the gale overhead.
-
-In his sleep he dreamed vividly. He saw the interior of the island.
-Suddenly, from among a clump of trees, a bright beam of golden light
-shot up heavenwards. He knew that one of the shepherd nymphs of Apollo
-went with some message for the god, and he shivered and moaned in his
-slumber.
-
-Then it seemed that he was in a great place of cloud, an immense
-formless world of mist. And through the mist came a terrible voice
-which turned him to stone. It was the voice of Apollo crying in anger.
-
-"Oh, Father Zeus, and all ye gods who dwell upon the hill above the
-thunder! punish the comrades of Ulysses for their crime. They have
-speared my beautiful cows that were my joy and of which I had great
-pleasure. Whenever I turned my face and shone upon the world I watched
-them feeding in my island. And now these whelps have slain the finest
-of all my herd. Vengeance! Bitter vengeance, or will I go far down
-into Hell and leave the world in gloom and shine no more upon it. I
-will make Hades a place of warmth and laughter, and the world all grey
-and full of death."
-
-In the midst Ulysses awoke with that angry cry still ringing in his
-ears. With a sick apprehension he hurried along the slippery boulders
-to the shelter place where he had left the crew.
-
-Within a hundred yards of the place he knew the worst. The wind blew
-a savoury smoke towards him, and his stomach yearned while his brain
-trembled in fear.
-
-The men were in high glee when he came round the corner of rock among
-them, great joints turned upon rough spits, skins and horns encumbered
-the ground, and the rich fat dropped hissing into the fire.
-
-A sudden silence fell upon their merriment as the captain came. He
-spread out his hands with a gesture of despair.
-
-"Comrades," he said sorrowfully, "ye have chosen to do this thing
-against my advice, and now it is done we must abide by the deed. I
-cannot reproach you. Still, I know that we must pay heavily for this
-sin against the Sun-God. Farewell, Ithaca! And now it is over let us
-eat of our unhallowed spoil. It may be that this is our last meal
-together, comrades."
-
-As he had finished speaking a strange and ominous thing happened. The
-blood-stained skins began to creep about like live things upon the
-ground.
-
-The red meat over the fire withered and moaned as if in pain. The air
-was filled with a lowing as of cows.
-
-Then in mad fear and riotous despair they fell upon the horrid meal
-with eager, tremulous hands. Ulysses was taken with the madness like
-the rest, and until sundown they gorged the dripping meat till they
-could eat no more, and their faces were bloated and their eyes were
-strained.
-
-As the sun sank into the sea with a red and angry face the wind
-dropped and ceased. A great calm spread over the waters. When the moon
-rose the ocean was like a sheet of still silver.
-
-Very hurriedly, whispering among themselves, as though they were
-afraid of their own voices, they launched the ship and rowed out into
-the moonlight, racing away from the accursed isle.
-
-And now the last scene of all came very quickly.
-
-Ulysses was wont to say that of all the things he had witnessed in his
-life this was the saddest and most terrible.
-
-A sudden crackle of thunder pealed over the sky. A fantastic network
-of lightning played round the ship like lace.
-
-A dark cloud formed itself directly over the boat, not two mast's
-lengths above, and all the waves below became like ink in the shadow.
-For a time it hung there motionless, and then suddenly a mighty wind
-swooped down on them like a hawk drops out of the sky. The mast
-snapped like a pipe-stem and crashed upon the deck, braining the
-helmsman in its fall. A smooth green wave, just slightly bubbling with
-froth on the crest, but like a hill of oil, rose and swept over the
-ship.
-
-Ulysses clung to a stanchion with all his mighty strength, and was
-just able to battle against the flood. When it passed over him he saw
-that every man of the crew was in the water. For a few moments they
-floated round him with sad cries of farewell, and then one by one they
-were swept into the Ultimate.
-
-The timbers of the ship broke away and she fell to pieces. With a loud
-cry to Athene, Ulysses launched himself on the waves clinging to a
-great log which had formed part of the keel. A swift current urged him
-along far away from the scene of the wreck.
-
-The purpose of the god was accomplished, and the waves fell, and the
-moonlight shone out clear and still once more.
-
-On all the waste of waters no sail, no cape nor headland broke the
-silver monotone.
-
-Loneliness descended upon the hero like a cloak; an utter abandonment
-such as he had never known before in life.
-
-The water began to grow very cold.
-
-An awful silence lay over the sea. The terrible jubilant silence of a
-god revenged!
-
-"And so all those well-known, long-tried voices were still! Never
-again would Eurylochus drain the full tankard in a kindly health."
-
-Ulysses bowed his head, and bitter tears welled up into his eyes.
-
-"Never again would grey old Diphilos stand at the helm of the good
-ship, sending his keen eyes out over the sounding wastes. How the last
-mournful cry of Jamenos had echoed through the storm. Young, straight
-Jamenos who had approached the Cyclops with him, beautiful young
-Jamenos, with the bold eyes and curling hair! And there was old
-Perdix too, old Perdix with his grin and chuckle and his tales. Never
-would Perdix sit by the fire and make merry yarns any more. The little
-twinkling rat-like eyes were stark and glazed now. Perdix stood beside
-the livid river among the rushing spirits. He would have no jests
-now."
-
-He saw them all together, in peril, storm, and quiet weather. His
-trusty men! His dear comrades!
-
-And now he alone was left, alone, alone, alone.
-
-Perhaps Athene herself was still with him and had not even yet
-forgotten her wanderer. As the thought struck along his brain a faint
-blush of hope began to flush his pallid cheek.
-
-He floated on and on. Dawn came, waxed strong, waned. Tremulous
-evening came like a shy novice about to take the veil of night. Night
-blazed in moonlit splendour once more.
-
-And at the hour when night stands still and dawn is not yet, the
-waves, kindlier than before, carried him to the island of Ogygia,
-where he heard the sea nymphs on the shore singing him a fairy
-welcome.
-
-Soft hands drew him from the deep, soft voices welcomed him; it seemed
-as if one queenly presence, a tall woman with golden hair which shone,
-towered among the rest, and he fell into a gentle swoon, a soft
-surrender to sleep.
-
- * * * * *
-
- "We watch the fleeting isles of shade
- That float upon the sea
- When 'neath the sun some cloud hath spread
- His purple canopy.
- The woodbine odours scent the air,
- The cypress' leaves are wet
- From meadow springs that rise among
- Parsley and violet.
- Here shall the Wanderer remain;
- The land of Love's Delight;
- Shall here forget the past, the old
- Sad spectres of the night."
-
-Soft and low the sea-maidens sang while Ulysses lay sleeping--even as
-they had sung nine long years ago when the sea cast him up on the
-shores of Calypso's kingdom.
-
-It was bright sunlight, a great fire of cedar wood burnt on an altar
-before the cave of the goddess who loved the hero, and the smoke
-scented all the island.
-
-Among the grove of stately trees which bordered the smooth pneumatic
-lawn in front of the cave Ulysses lay sleeping on a bed of fresh-born
-violets. A purple mantle shot with gold, woven by Calypso, was spread
-over him.
-
-The poplars and fragrant cypresses were full of sweet-voiced birds.
-
-Over the mouth of the cave grew a great vine, and the black grapes
-drooped and fell from it in their abundance.
-
-From the centre of the short emerald grass four springs of clear water
-came up in thin whips and flowed away in flashing rivulets.
-
-This was the home and kingdom of the Goddess Calypso, and was so
-beautiful a place that the fame of it had even reached Olympus, and
-the gods knew of the island.
-
-And nine long years had passed! It was nine years ago that the pale
-gaunt waif of the sea--a sad jetsam!--had swooned upon the yellow
-sand, while the bright-haired lady of Ogygia had gazed in wonder upon
-him.
-
-Circe had enthralled Ulysses for a year in her palace of wine and
-sorcery and lust. That was a time of fierce sinful pleasures, of wild
-deliriums.
-
-The fire had blazed, burnt, and died away in that still marble house
-in the wood.
-
-But how different these nine dreamy years! The mild-eyed, loving
-goddess lay in the hero's arms each night in tender love and sleep.
-She was no Circe, but a lady of quieter delights. Her spell was upon
-him, he was chained to her kind side by a magic influence, but she
-loved him, and was no Circe.
-
-Nine long years!
-
-Those old valiant mariners from the plains of Troyland were only white
-bones now, part of the sea-bed. They were far-off, remote, sweet sad
-memories.
-
-Calypso was the slow and gracious music to which his life moved now.
-Often he doubted all the past. They were phantoms all those old
-half-forgotten people.
-
-So he lay sleeping among the violets. The scented wind gave a myriad
-whispers to the poplars. The four springs sang a thin jocund song as
-they burst from the dark rich earth into the sunshine, and within her
-cave the goddess threw the golden shuttle and made a low crooning
-music as she thought of her stately warrior hard by, and sent him
-dreams of her white neck and wealth of golden hair.
-
-She knew he would never leave her now. Her spells were too strong. Her
-love too great.
-
-During the first years he had been wont to wander away to a lonely
-part of the shore. He would sit gazing with haunted eyes out over the
-sea, and his thoughts went to Penelope, and he shed a tear for old
-King Laertes and whispered to little Telemachus.
-
-But that also was over for him now. Ithaca was but a misty cloud, and
-the dear ones there but dreams in this island of dreams.
-
-The face of Ulysses was changed. The hard lines of endeavour, the
-brown painting of the wind, had gone from it. Noble and beautiful
-still, but even in sleep it could be seen to have lost its force.
-
-Suddenly, in the dim recesses of the grove, there was a silence. The
-birds stopped singing, and the murmur of the insects droned, swelled
-louder, and died away.
-
-Nothing was heard for a moment but the trickle of the streams, and
-then this also faded from sound.
-
-By the side of the sleeping hero stood the tall white figure of
-Athene. At her feet yellow flowers broke out like little flames, and
-her deep, grave eyes were bent full upon Ulysses.
-
-Perhaps he felt that unearthly majesty above him, for he turned and
-moaned in his sleep.
-
-The goddess, like a statue of white marble, stood looking down at him
-for several moments. Then with a little sigh she stooped and touched
-his forehead with her long slender fingers.
-
-The birds began a full-throated ecstasy of song, which filled the wood
-with a sound as of a myriad tiny flutes. The furry bees went swinging
-through the sunlit grove with deep organ music, the shrill tinkle of
-the streams sent its cool message once more into the hot swooning air.
-
-Where the goddess had stood there was nothing but a clump of yellow
-crocus and some violets more vivid than the rest.
-
-Ulysses awoke with sudden stammerings like a frightened child. He
-looked round him with strange troubled eyes.
-
-Then slowly he rose up and walked through the wood towards the cave of
-Calypso.
-
-Forgotten fingers were upon the latch of his brain, old scenes began
-to move through it in swift familiar panorama, he was as a man who
-wakened from a sleep of years.
-
-One word burst from his lips--"Penelope!" His face cleared as though a
-mist had suddenly dispersed before it, and his walk quickened into a
-firm, long stride as he came out on to the lawn.
-
-He stopped short as he saw the mouth of the cave. Calypso was pacing
-up and down with her sinuous graceful step, and at her side walked a
-tall young man with a golden wand in his hand and winged sandals upon
-his feet.
-
-And Ulysses knew him for the God Hermes who had given him the sacred
-herb in Circe's island and who had led him down the gloomy ways of
-Hades.
-
-They turned and came towards him.
-
-"He will never wish to go, Hermes," he heard Calypso say as they drew
-near.
-
-"King," said the god, "I am come to you with a message from Father
-Zeus. He hath seen you lying in this island with the goddess, and bids
-me tell you of Ithaca and home once more, that your heart may beat
-strong within you and you may adventure forth and find your wife
-Penelope in your ancestral house. And the father promises you divine
-protection. Your long wanderings shall be at an end, and you shall
-come safely to the land of your heart's desire. Is it your will to go
-and leave the lady?"
-
-The goddess laughed a little musical laugh of certain triumph.
-
-"Go!" she cried. "Ah, he will not go, Hermes. Could he not have left
-me any time these nine long years of love? Go! No, my mariner loves
-too well the soft couches of Ogygia, and these weak arms can yet hold
-his wisdom captive. How will you answer, my heart's love?"
-
-"To Ithaca?" said Ulysses.
-
-"Yes, to Penelope thy wife, who sorroweth for thee and is in peril,"
-answered the god.
-
-A bright light flashed into Ulysses' eyes and his cheek was flushed
-with hope.
-
-"Now have I tarried too long in this place," he cried. "I know not
-why, but never before has my heart burned within me as now. Yes, to
-Ithaca! back to my father and my wife and the old hills of home! Zeus
-be praised, for I who was asleep waken this day, and manhood is mine
-once more."
-
-Then Calypso drooped her lovely head like a tired flower as the God
-Hermes flashed up into the sky like a beam of light.
-
-"I see something of which I know not has come over you, lord of my
-heart," she said sadly. "I have no more power, save only the power of
-my deep love for you which you have forgotten. Who am I that I can
-combat the will of Zeus or the hardness of your heart? I have loved
-you well and cherished you, and shall I love you less now? No, I am no
-cruel goddess. Go, and my heart be with you; and what power is mine to
-aid you that shall you have. I doubt," she said, with a sudden burst
-of anger, "I doubt you have some greater goddess than I at your side,
-some lovelier lady, else how could my spell be broken? But now come
-within and make a farewell feast with me. My heart is sick and I would
-die. But one thing I can give you if you will not go. Would you be
-immortal? Stay with your lover and that gift is yours. Never shall
-death touch you or age. I am a goddess and can never die. Am I less
-beautiful than Penelope, or less kind?"
-
-Ulysses answered her pleadings slowly and painfully.
-
- [Illustration: "WHO AM I THAT I CAN COMBAT THE WILL OF ZEUS
- OR THE HARDNESS OF YOUR HEART?"
- _Page 78._]
-
-"My queen and goddess, I know indeed that Penelope can never compare
-with such immortal loveliness as yours. Yes, she will grow old and
-wrinkled, and must die. Yet night and day all my heart must go out to
-her, and I would endure a thousand storms and sorrows to see home once
-more."
-
-"Because of my great love for you, go, and may all the gods shower
-blessings on you and protect you," she said in a low voice, and her
-eyes were all blind with tears.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On a red evening Calypso stood alone on a rock that jutted out into
-the sea.
-
-A black speck against the setting sun showed clear and far away.
-
-Then the night fell, and she wandered weeping through her scented
-avenues.
-
-But her heart was away on the moaning sea, away with Ulysses the
-departed.
-
-
-
-
-THE LAST EPISODE
-
-HOW THE KING CAME HOME AGAIN AFTER THE LONG YEARS
-
-
-With the tears blinding his eyes, with shaking hands, speechless with
-the happy thoughts surging in his brain, Ulysses knelt and kissed the
-dear, dear shores of his own country.
-
-The same rocky coasts, the same great mountain in the centre of the
-island raising its head into the clouds, everywhere eternally the
-same, and how beloved! was it not all mist and dreams--the long past?
-How he heard the Sirens sing, seen the swaying arms of the foul
-Scylla, and dwelt in love and slumber with Calypso?
-
-And by his side once more stood the goddess, serene and beautiful in
-her benevolent but awful calm. From her lips he had heard that here,
-even here in his own land, in the fields of his inheritance, one more
-supreme effort awaited him. He had learnt how his palace was full of
-riotous princes, who wooed his wife, the Queen Penelope. He knew how
-his son, the goodly Prince Telemachus, was least in his own house, and
-how wild revel and wantonness ate up his substance. The queen in
-peril! Penelope all but given up to the desires of lust and greed. All
-his great heart burnt with anger and hate against the suitors, and
-yet, with a strange dual emotion, beat high with pride for his dear
-and stainless lady, who still mourned for her husband, and longed
-against hope for his return.
-
-He kissed the kindly home-ground, and at that sacred contact a sense
-of strength and power came to him, a god-like power, that in all his
-long toils and wanderings he had never known before.
-
-He became conscious that Athene was speaking to him. "And remember
-ever, my Ulysses, that now thou hast need of all thy wit and cunning.
-In all the chances of thy life before never hadst thou need to walk as
-warily as now. For mere strength and valour unallied to wisdom and
-cunning will avail one nothing against the hundred. But at the hour of
-need I will be once more with thee if thou doest well and wisely.
-Courage! son of Laertes! 'tis but a little while till the end. Let not
-thy love and hate master thee until the appointed hour. And now, that
-thou mayest walk in thy palace and groves unknown for who thou art, I
-give thee a disguise. And so farewell until the hour of triumph."
-
-She stretched out her spear over the kneeling king. The firm flesh
-dried and wrinkled upon his arms and legs. His hair shrivelled up into
-grey sparseness and his eyes dimmed. He wore a tattered cloak, a thing
-of shreds and patches, and an old beggar's staff of ilex was in his
-hand.
-
-But beneath this seeming age and weakness was hidden the true hero as
-strong and cunning as before.
-
-The goddess turned into light and was no more, and with slow, tottering
-footsteps Ulysses took a lonely way among the well-remembered paths of
-his native hills.
-
-After an hour's travelling he came out on a smooth pasture land, with
-a little homestead nestling among a clump of trees. His heart beat
-eagerly within him, for if perchance after these long years farmer
-Eumĉus still lived, here he might gain news of his palace and perhaps
-a friend.
-
-Eumĉus was once the steward of the estates and a very faithful servant
-of his master. Ulysses approached the house. In front was a large
-courtyard, made by a fence of oak and hawthorn boughs, and within were
-twelve great pens for swine.
-
-And in the porch sat old Eumĉus himself making himself a pair of
-sandals, hardly changed in a single feature, though perhaps his eyes
-were not so bright as in the old times.
-
-Hearing footsteps, the four fierce dogs which herded the swine rushed
-out of the yard and leapt angrily at the newcomer. He might have fared
-badly, for the great beasts were lean and evil-tempered, had not the
-swineherd ran out to his help and drew them off with curses.
-
- [Illustration: "NAY, IF YOU LOVE ME," HE SAID, "NONE OF THAT,
- MY FRIEND."]
-
-He turned to Ulysses. "Thank the gods, old fellow," he cried, "that I
-was near by. A little more and you would have been torn to pieces,
-and then you would be in an evil plight but I a worse! Dead would you
-be and past caring, but I should be disgraced. Heaven knows, I have
-enough trouble to bear. Here's my lawful master gone in foreign parts
-these long years--dead as like as not--and I sit here feeding swine
-for them that are but little better themselves. But come in, come in,
-old shrew. There's a bite of food for you within, which you need I
-make no doubt, and then you can tell me your story, for I am a lonely
-man now and like a crack of talk as well as most."
-
-The garrulous old fellow pushed him in with busy geniality and sat him
-down on the goatskin, which was his bed. Then he fetched what meat and
-wine he could furnish, and they sat down to a frugal meal.
-
-"What, then, about this lord of yours?" said Ulysses. "I myself have
-wandered far these last years. Perhaps I may have met with him, and
-can give you news."
-
-The swineherd chuckled.
-
-"Nay, if you love me," he said, "none of that, my friend. Why, every
-dirty old man as comes along this way has some such tale to tell. And
-then my poor lady up in the palace--the gods save her!--she takes them
-in and gives them a new cloak or what not, and believes all they say
-until the next one comes along. No! my dear lord is dead and never
-shall I look upon the like of him again. By Zeus! but he was a man if
-you like!"
-
-"Well, my host, we shall see in the future," said Ulysses, in so
-significant a tone that the swineherd was startled for a moment.
-
-The wind had arisen and it was a black stormy night so they went to
-rest early, and Eumĉus slept soundly till dawn. But all through the
-silent hours the brain of Ulysses worked like a shuttle in a loom.
-
-At breakfast-time, while the swineherd was preparing the meal, the
-dogs began to bark loudly outside, but in a welcome manner, saluting
-one whom they knew.
-
-Footsteps were heard crossing the yard, and a tall young man with the
-first down of manhood on his lip stood in the doorway.
-
-Eumĉus dropped the bowls in which he had been mixing the wine with a
-sudden clatter and ran towards the stranger.
-
-"My young lord," he cried, "oh, my young lord, the sight of you is a
-welcome one to weary eyes. Come within my poor place. This is but a
-poor old man who shelters with me for a day or two. Don't mind him, my
-lord."
-
-It was Telemachus the son of Ulysses.
-
-The king rose humbly and offered his seat to his son.
-
-"Keep your place, old man," said the prince. "The swineherd will find
-me another. And who may you be, and what do you in Ithaca?"
-
-Then Ulysses told him a long story. He said that he was a Cretan, and
-had fought at Troy and was now destitute and a wanderer.
-
-"Could you not take him to the palace, my lord?" said Eumĉus.
-"Perhaps he might find some work there."
-
-"I will clothe him, and arm him with a sword, and give him a little to
-help him on his way," said Telemachus, "and that most gladly. But I
-cannot take him to the palace. The suitors would ill-use him because
-of his age, perhaps they would kill him for sport. I cannot restrain
-them; I am young; and what is one against so many? Moreover, so great
-is the hate they bear towards me, they would surely slay any guest of
-mine."
-
-Then Ulysses rose from his seat and bowed. "Lord," he said, "if I may
-dare to speak and you will hear, I say foul wrong is wrought against
-you in your palace, and my blood rages when I think of it."
-
-"Old fellow, you are right enough," said the boy, sadly. "Oh, for my
-dead sire! to sweep these dogs from Ithaca!"
-
-"Yes, the king!" said Eumĉus, with a deep sigh.
-
-Suddenly Ulysses saw the tall figure of Athene was standing by his
-side.
-
-The other two were looking towards him, but could see nothing of her
-presence. The goddess looked at him with kindly eyes and touched him
-with her spear.
-
-Telemachus and Eumĉus crouched trembling and speechless against the
-furthest side of the hut.
-
-The bronze came back to the face of the king, his hair fell from his
-head in all its old luxuriance, his figure filled out, and he stood
-before them in his full stature and all the glory of his manhood.
-
-Eumĉus fell upon his knees and covered his eyes with his hand.
-
-"A god! a god!" he cried, "a god has come to us! Hail, oh Immortal
-One, guest of my poor homestead!"
-
-Telemachus knelt also. "Oh, Divine stranger, a boon! Tell me of my
-dear father, if indeed he lives and knows of the peril of his house.
-And will he ever come back to sit in his own chair and rule?"
-
-Then Ulysses stepped to his son and caught him in his arms and kissed
-him.
-
-"Telemachus! Telemachus!" he said, "no god am I, but your own dear
-father come home at last, and I am come with doom and death for the
-insolent ones about my board!"
-
-And when they had all three mingled their happy tears, Telemachus
-said, "Father, I know how great a warrior you are, and all the world
-rings with the wisdom and valour of your deeds. But we two can never
-fight against so many. In all, the princes number a hundred and a
-score of men; and they are all trained fighting men, the best from
-Ithaca and all the neighbouring islands. We must have other aid."
-
-"Comfort yourself, son," said Ulysses. "Aid we have, and the mightiest
-of all. Athene herself watches over my fortunes and will come in the
-hour of need. She has brought me hither and given me this disguise,
-and in all the coming contest her voice will help and her arm be for
-us. Should we need more aid than that?"
-
-"Truly, my father," said the boy, "we are well favoured, and my heart
-leaps within me at what is to come."
-
-As he finished speaking, once more the manhood of Ulysses left him and
-only a poor old beggar man stood before the swineherd and the prince.
-
-"Now will we go to the palace," said Ulysses. "I shall seem but a poor
-old beggar man, and however the princes may ill-use me I shall do
-nothing till the time has come and we are ready, and I charge you, my
-son, and my good friend Eumĉus, that you do nothing to protect me
-however I am treated. You may check them by words if you can, but no
-more. And not even the queen herself must know that the king has come
-home again.
-
-"And now let us go. The judge is set, the doom begun; none shall stay
-it!"
-
-And the three went out from the hut over the mountain paths towards
-the palace.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The revel was at its height in the courtyard of the palace. Stone
-seats ran round the wall which enclosed the buildings. Over a low
-colonnade the orchard trees drooped into the court, and a huge vine
-trailed its weight of fruit over the marble.
-
-The hot afternoon sun sent a vivid colour over everything. Beyond the
-palace the blue mountains towered into a sky of deeper blue. Purple
-shadows from the buildings lay upon the white marble, and the long
-light glittered on a great table piled with golden cups and bowls,
-holding the _débris_ of the feast.
-
-A wild uproar and shouting filled the air.
-
-The court was filled with whirling figures of men and girls half drunk
-with wine and excitement as they moved in the figures of a lascivious
-dance.
-
-All the household girls were there with the suitors joining in the
-feast, and peals of laughter shivered through the sunny air.
-
-Telemachus sat on a seat apart watching the revel with keen eyes.
-There was a repressed excitement in his face and an eager regard. One
-of the girls noticed it as she strolled past. She was a slight, fair
-wanton creature with a mocking smile.
-
-"How, Lord Telemachus?" she said, laughing lightly, "are you not going
-to join us in the fun? You make a sorry host indeed! Is not this your
-palace, and do you leave us without your countenance. Oh, shame upon
-you for a laggard youth when wine and kisses wait you."
-
-She made an impudent grimace at him and flitted past. But a short time
-back he would have raged at this impudent salutation from a pretty
-slave girl who drew a confident strength from the protection of his
-enemies. But now he hardly heard her, but leant forward again in the
-attitude of one who watches and waits.
-
-Outside the palace gate, on the hot white road, two old men were
-approaching. One was the swineherd Eumĉus and the other a wandering
-beggar man.
-
-Just by the threshold of the courtyard an old lean dog, very grey and
-feeble, lay upon a heap of dung in the sunlight. The mailed
-horse-flies hovered round him in swarms, but he seemed too weak to
-drive them away. As the beggar approached he threw his muzzle up into
-the air with a quick movement. His sightless eyes turned towards the
-advancing footsteps. With a great effort he scrambled to his feet. The
-lean tail wagged in tremulous joy, the scarred ears were pricked in
-welcome.
-
-He stumbled to the feet of Ulysses. When he touched him the old dog
-lay down in the dust and with a long sigh he died.
-
-And this was the first welcome the king had to his palace, and as he
-went in through the gates his eyes were wet with tears.
-
-When Telemachus saw the steward he beckoned him to the table and sat
-beside him while he ate. But Ulysses crouched down by the threshold.
-Telemachus gave bread and meat to the swineherd.
-
-"Go, Eumĉus," he said aloud, "give these broken meats to that poor old
-beggar man by the gate, and tell him from me that if he lacks he
-should be bold and go to the princes and ask them for alms. By Zeus!
-he will never grow fat if he crouches by the door there!"
-
-Ulysses took the food with a low bow and packed it away in his
-wallet.
-
-He rose up grasping his staff, and went tottering among the suitors.
-His lean arms and furrowed, wrinkled face were so piteous, his whining
-appeal full of such misery, that many of the princes tossed him
-something.
-
-At the head of the table a tall and splendid young man was sitting. He
-was richly dressed in a showy, ostentatious manner. His florid,
-handsome face wore a perpetual and evil sneer. His grey eyes were
-ill-tempered and quarrelsome.
-
-"By the gods, my friends," he cried, with a sneer, "how tender-hearted
-and compassionate you are grown! With what lavishness do you bestow
-the wealth of Ulysses, or rather of the queen, upon this old
-scarecrow. Such old beasts are no use in this world. Get you gone, you
-old dog!"
-
-With that he hurled a three-legged stool at Ulysses. The stool struck
-him a heavy blow on his side.
-
-For a moment the black turmoil in the hero's heart was almost
-irrepressible. But with an enormous effort of will he overcame it. He
-stood quite still, with his head sunk upon his breast in humility.
-
-Now came the girls from out of the house carrying great jars of fresh
-wine, and copper bowls of water for the mixing, which they put upon
-the table.
-
-Here was better sport than an old beggar and his woes, and Ulysses
-moved aside and was forgotten.
-
-But one of the girls touched him on the shoulder. "Wanderer," said
-she, "the Queen Penelope has seen how Antinous used you from her room
-within the hall, and she sends me to summon you to her, for she would
-speak to you."
-
-Then, with beating heart and footsteps which trembled with no
-simulated age, the king followed the girl over the threshold of his
-own palace.
-
-As he was walking towards the chamber of the queen an old woman came
-towards them, a very old woman with a lined brown face and little,
-brilliant twinkling eyes.
-
-"Poor old man," she said, "it is a shame that they should use your
-grey hairs so, and abuse the hospitality which is the sacred right of
-strangers. My lady Penelope sends me to you, and bids me wash your
-feet in this bowl of water, so that we may purge our house of the
-stain the prince without has cast upon it. Sit on this stool and I
-will lave ye."
-
-So the old nurse Euryclea bathed the feet of her master whom she had
-dandled in her arms as a child. Suddenly Ulysses made as though he
-would draw away his foot. He remembered that on his leg he bore a
-strange-shaped scar made by a savage boar when he was a boy, and he
-feared the wise old woman would know him by that mark.
-
-But as she passed her hand along his ankle she touched the mark and
-turned his foot towards the light and saw it. She dropped his foot
-quickly, and the basin was overturned and the water ran away over the
-marble floor. She looked up into the king's face and knew him for all
-his disguise.
-
-In a fierce, hurried whisper he bade her be silent for her life and
-his and the queen's safety. As she vowed, trembling, by Zeus and the
-gods, to do his bidding, a trumpet snarled suddenly outside on the
-steps of the palace.
-
-The riot without died into silence.
-
-The clear cold voice of a herald began to speak.
-
-Thus says the Queen Penelope: "To-morrow will I make an end of all. In
-the forenoon I will choose from among the princes whom I will wed. Too
-long have ye rioted within the palace and eaten up the substance of
-myself and my son. I am aweary. And since there is no other way,
-to-morrow I will choose. Ye shall take the great bow of the King
-Ulysses from its cover. And he who can shoot an arrow through twelve
-axes in a row--even as Ulysses was wont to do--him will I wed."
-
-"Nurse!" whispered Ulysses, "the king will be here before any can bend
-that bow. Now go into the queen and tell her that the old man is sick
-and begs leave to wait upon her another time. And comfort her with an
-omen that you have seen, but tell her nothing. And now farewell. There
-is much to do ere dawn."
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was a silence of consternation in the great banqueting hall of
-the palace.
-
-Penelope from her seat upon the raised steps beneath the
-richly-decorated wall at the end smiled faintly to herself.
-
-The twelve axes stood in a row, driven into sockets in the pavement.
-The suitors stood in two long rows on either side.
-
-Antinous, the strongest of them all, held a great polished bow. His
-face blazed with anger and was red with shame.
-
-All eyes were centred on him. No one saw old Eumĉus steal out into the
-porch and silently lower the heavy bars of the door and lash them
-tight with cords.
-
-"Ah!" cried Antinous, "I know now why neither any of you nor I myself
-can bend this bow. It is not the great strength of Ulysses, for I am
-stronger than he ever was. This is Apollo's festival, the Archer-God,
-and it is useless to strive to bend this bow to-day. Let us sacrifice
-to Helios to-day, and then to-morrow come again to the trial."
-
-Then the old beggar man came forward.
-
-"My lords," he said, "I pray you give me the bow, since you have done
-your trial for to-day. I was once strong in my youth. Let me have this
-honour."
-
-Antinous scowled at him, and stepped toward him to strike such
-insolence, but the clear voice of Penelope called sharply down the
-lane of men,--
-
-"Who insults even the meanest in my palace? Have more regard, sir, for
-I am still queen here. Give the old man the bow since that is his
-whim."
-
-Antinous was cowed, but still murmured, when Telemachus stepped
-quickly up to him. The boy seemed taller, his eyes shone with a cold,
-fierce light they had never seen in them before. His voice rang with a
-new authority.
-
-"Be silent, sir!" he said in a keen, threatening voice. "The bow is
-mine, and mine alone, to give or refuse as I decide. Mother, the trial
-is over for to-day. Go with your maidens into your own chamber. I will
-see to this old man, and I am master here and will be so."
-
-With a frightened pride and wonder the queen withdrew.
-
-The suitors began to whisper to each other, wondering what this might
-mean. Their confidence seemed to be slipping away from them. Each and
-all felt uneasy. There was some strange influence in the air which
-sapped their courage and silenced the loud insolent words which were
-ever on their lips.
-
-The shadow of death was creeping into the hall.
-
-The great marble room suddenly grew cold. The old beggar came up to
-the splendid Antinous and took the bow from his unresisting hand.
-
-As he plucked the string the gods spake at last. A crash of thunder
-pealed among them. There was a moment's silence, and then the
-bow-string rang beneath the hero's touch as clear as the note of a
-swallow.
-
-And in a strange light, which glowed out from the walls and great
-pillars of bronze, the princes saw no beggar, but a noble form with
-bronzed face and flashing eyes, and they knew the king had come home
-again.
-
-Ulysses motioned to his son, and Telemachus drew his sword and with a
-great shout rushed up the hall after his father.
-
-They turned and stood on the steps.
-
-An arrow sang like a flying wasp, and Antinous lay dying on the floor.
-
-Then the princes rushed to the walls where their armour and swords
-were wont to hang, but all the pegs were bare.
-
-Only above the steps where Ulysses stood were three spears and three
-shields, and as they gazed in cold fear Eumĉus leapt upon the steps
-and the three girded on the armour.
-
-Again the great bow sang, and Amphinomus lay dead.
-
-Then Telemachus with a great shout drove his spear through the fat
-Ctessipus, and he fell gurgling his life away.
-
-But one of the suitors, Melanthius, climbed up a pillar through one of
-the lanterns of the hall and clambered over the roofs to the armoury
-unseen by Ulysses.
-
-And while the deadly arrows sped with bitter mocking words towards the
-cowering throng, he gathered a great sheaf of spears and flung them
-down among his comrades.
-
-They seized upon the spears with a fierce cry of joy, and Ulysses'
-heart failed him where he stood for there were still many living.
-
-They began to run up the hall towards the steps.
-
-Then at last Athene saw that her time had come, and she lifted her
-terrible war shield which brings death to the sons of men.
-
-And the flight of spears all went far wide of the mark, and some fell
-with a rattle upon the floor.
-
-With one cry of triumph the king leapt like light among the crowd.
-Hither and there flashed the three swords like swooping vultures, and
-Athene took all power from the princes, and one by one they screamed
-and met their doom.
-
-And soon the din of battle died away, and save for a faint moaning the
-hall was silent.
-
-And the princes, the pride of the islands, lay fallen in dust and
-blood, heaped one on the other, like a great catch of fishes turned
-out from a fisherman's nets upon the shore.
-
-Eumĉus went to the door of the hall and cut the lashings, and raised
-the bars so that the sunlight came slanting in great beams. The dust
-danced in the light rays like a powder of tiny lives.
-
-Then Ulysses called the servants and bade them carry the bodies away.
-And he ordered Euryclea to wash the blood-stained floors, and to bring
-sulphur and torches that the place might be purified.
-
-And that night great beacons flared on the hills, and far out to sea
-the fishermen saw them and said, "Surely the king has come home
-again."
-
-And while the music rang though the lighted palace and the people
-passed before the gates shouting for joy, old Euryclea spread the
-marriage bed of the king by the light of flaming torches.
-
-And when all was prepared, the old nurse went to Ulysses and Penelope
-and led them to the door of the marriage chamber, as she had led them
-twenty years before.
-
-Then the music ceased in the palace halls and silence fell over all
-the house.
-
-
-
-
-A NOTE ON HOMER AND ULYSSES
-
-
-The uncertainty which prevails as to the actual birthplace of Homer
-also extends to the exact period at which he flourished. Doubts have
-been expressed by some modern scholars as to whether the poet ever
-existed as a personality. The view that the _Iliad_ and _Odyssey_ were
-not the work of an individual, but merely a collection of old folklore
-verse welded into a whole by many hands, made compact by ages, a
-self-born epic rising from crystallised tradition, is, however, not a
-tenable one, and need not be discussed here.
-
-As far as we are able to place the poet in his period correctly, we
-can say with some certainty that he flourished at a time between 800
-and 900 years before the birth of Christ.
-
-The Arundelian marbles fix his era at 907 years before the dawn of
-Christianity. About the life of the most ancient of all poets nothing
-whatever is known. There is a tradition that he had a school of
-followers in the Island of Chios, and we have early records of
-celebrations held there in his honour every few years. But no proof
-whatever exists of the truth of the supposition, though up to quite
-modern times the islanders maintained and believed in it.
-
-In the same way must be treated the story of Homer's blindness. It is
-a legend which cannot be proved or disproved. Yet at a time when
-literature must have been almost purely oral, his blindness need have
-been no bar to the exercise of his talent. It has been said, and the
-theory is at least an interesting one, that the music and sonance of
-Homer's lines came from the fact that they were composed to be
-_spoken_ rather than _read_. That the blindness of Milton did not in
-any way detract from the grandeur of his verse is an undoubted fact,
-and yet Milton had to _speak_ every line before he could have it
-recorded by others.
-
-We can deduce something of Homer from his work. That he must have been
-a travelled man seems indubitable. To this day the modern Ulysses or
-Menelaus, standing on the bridge of his tramp steamer, can see the
-headlands, islands, and capes, unchanged from 3000 years ago. That
-Homer was a man of deep feeling, was possessed of the "artistic
-temperament" in a very marked degree, seems equally clear. Nothing can
-be more delicate and touching than his handling of Penelope. Other
-ancient writers have represented the wife of Ulysses as an abandoned
-harlot, and said that her husband repudiated her for incontinence
-during his absence. Homer, with a far surer, finer touch, made her a
-model for wives to emulate and husbands to desire. The whole of the
-home-coming scenes in the _Odyssey_ could only have been written by a
-man who was no mere materialist.
-
-When Homer wrote, human nature was much less profound a thing than it
-has since become. And yet, though men's motives were entirely
-different, men's actions sprang from less subtle causes than now.
-Homer was a psychologist of the first class. He knew his fellow-men.
-In all Romance no one can point to a finer and more consistent
-character-study than that of Ulysses. Shakespeare has drawn no more
-vivid picture of a single temperament. Homer must have mixed with
-mankind, observed them closely, been an acute and untiring observer.
-
-The absolutely original temper of his mind is extraordinary. For we
-must remember that Homer could hardly have had any models to inform
-his choice of subjects or direct his style. Yet none of his
-imitators, and there have been many, were able, even in their
-happiest moments, even to approach him. As he was the first poet, so
-he was the greatest, and we may well conclude he will remain so until
-men themselves are things of the past.
-
-In the ancient world, when we get into the actual periods of recorded
-history, we find a worship of Homer universally existing. His works
-reposed under the pillow of Alexander together with the sword which
-had made him great. The conqueror enshrined the _Iliad_ in the richest
-casket of the vanquished Persian king. Altars smoked in Homer's honour
-all over Greece, he was venerated as a god. But speculations about
-Homer have, after all, but little value. We know nothing, and we shall
-never now know anything about him.
-
-He remains a glorious and mysterious fact. We have the priceless
-legacy of this Being, and that is enough.
-
-
-ULYSSES
-
-Even Euclid, the inventor of concrete logical processes, is forced to
-begin with axioms and definitions that are absurd. Once allow them,
-and everything proceeds to a brilliant triumph of mentality; but in
-order to build a basis in a vacuum, one has to swallow a dose of
-nonsense first.
-
-It must be confessed that in order to estimate the character-drawing
-employed by Homer to create Ulysses, we must swallow the supernatural
-influences which surrounded him. Put them out of the question and the
-hero lacks perspective and becomes a doll. Let it be granted that
-Minerva stood beside the wanderer. "Her clear and bared limbs
-o'erthwarted with the brazen-headed spear." Let us but believe with
-Homer that the careless Gods lie beside their nectar on the hill, and
-hurl their bolts far below into the valleys of men, then the man
-Ulysses shines out clear and full of colour, an absolute achievement
-in Art.
-
-An ancient Norse pick-axe has been discovered, bearing the following
-inscription:--
-
- "_Either I will find a way or make one_,"
-
-and a broken helmet was once found in Battle Abbey, engraved with this
-crest:--
-
- "_L'espoir est ma force._"
-
-The Master Mariner might have owned them both. The first quality which
-we marvel at in our analysis of Ulysses' character is the
-extraordinary _resource_ which he displays throughout all his
-wanderings. His qualities of passive endurance, his enormous courage,
-his mental agility--the very cream of cunning, are all component parts
-of his unfailing readiness to take sudden advantage of his
-opportunity. For him all tides were at flood to lead on to fortune.
-
-Charybdis sucks down his stout ship into the womb of the sea, he makes
-a raft of the restored keel.
-
-He estimates the brain power of the stupid Cyclops at its exact value,
-and escapes the vengeance of his companions by a pun. And there is a
-well-defined touch of fatalism in Ulysses also. When the irreparable
-blunder has been committed by his sailors, and Apollo's sacred beeves
-are smoking on the spit, he knows that he and all his men must pay
-heavily for their disregard of Circe's warning. It is inevitable.
-Nothing can turn aside the coming anger of the Sun-God. So Ulysses,
-being hungry, though innocent of the initial sacrilege, makes his
-unhallowed meal with the rest. He must endure the pain, so plucks the
-pelf also. To enlarge upon his courage and endurance were unnecessary.
-The _Odyssey_ is one long pĉan of them both. His sagacity is manifest
-so vividly in all his actions that even Zeus, father of Heaven, says
-to Athene, "_No, daughter, I could never forget Ulysses, the wisest
-worldling of them all_." But what of Ulysses as a Sybarite? The hero
-"Mulierose," to borrow from the _Cloister and the Hearth_, the lover
-of ladies, "propt on beds of amaranth and moly," while white enchanted
-arms hold him a willing captive? I have heard it remarked that here
-the Ionian father of poets has gone astray. People have said to me
-that Ulysses loved his wife too well to dwell contented on the spicy
-downs of Lotos Land, that he was too taut and hardy a man. But Homer
-did not err in his study of temperament.
-
-How can one judge the man of 3000 years ago by the standards of
-to-day? In the ages when hosts joined in battle for the fair body of
-Helen men looked on women with other eyes than ours. Heaven and hell
-were very material places, pleasure was a very material, tangible,
-understandable thing and a lovely woman a gift from the Gods.
-
-Ulysses strove for Ithaca through storm and wrack, and when Fortune
-sent him to Calypso, or beached his ship on Circe's fairy isle, he was
-content to rest a little while. He yielded, like others of the wise.
-Socrates studied under Aspasia, and Aspasia ruled the world under the
-name of Pericles.
-
-It is in trying to fit the temperament of an ancient to a modern that
-the majority of people must always fail to understand a great piece of
-contemporary literature. One may sift the instances of modern
-temperament and comment on them, but one should not try to mould the
-residue into a like form. The Bible story paints King David, for
-example, as a truculent, bloodthirsty, canting monster--a complete
-portrait. The immorality and stupidity lies in trying to reconcile his
-Old Testament enormities with the revelations of the New.
-
-So with Ulysses, Circe, Calypso, Nausicaa, and even in later years the
-legendary Erippe, all fall truly, artistically and naturally into the
-mosaic of the hero's life.
-
-One interesting point in the pleasure-loving side of Ulysses' nature
-should by no means be disregarded. Not only did he take eagerly such
-joys as the Fates apportioned, but he was a true and discriminating
-Sybarite.
-
-We find him taking stringent precautions against disaster from the
-Sirens, yet determined to enjoy the luxury of their song. It is a
-pleasure not to be missed and not to be paid for. In after years we
-may imagine him relating his unique and delicious experience to his
-friends with an undoubted complacency.
-
-In the commendable and ancient virtues of filial love, a cardinal
-virtue in the old world, a forgotten duty to-day, Ulysses was
-singularly strong. His tenderest inquiries in Hades, the most
-passionate expressions of affection, are protested to the shade of
-Anticlea, his mother. One of the most touching scenes in the _Odyssey_
-is the meeting between Ulysses and Laertes, his father, after the long
-wanderings are over. "_He flung his arms around his father and cried
-out, 'Oh, my father, I am here indeed once more. I have come back to
-you at last! Dry your tears, for mine is the victory.'_"
-
-A many-sided man. Hard as a diamond and as bright, with every facet in
-his many-sided nature cut and polished by the hand of a master.
-
- C. R. G.
-
-
-THE END
-
-_Colston & Coy, Limited, Printers, Edinburgh_
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-Transcriber's Note
-
-The author's surname is hyphenated throughout this book, although the
-Library of Congress lists his name without the hyphen.
-
-The author varies slightly from _The Odyssey_ in places--for instance,
-the number of years Ulysses remains with Calypso. These variations are
-preserved as written.
-
-There is no page number reference on the illustration facing page 83.
-
-The author uses some variant spelling which is preserved as printed.
-This includes Phoeacians, Vergil, Melesegenes, dogrells, both Grĉcian
-and Grecian, and both lotos and lotus. These latter two variations
-appear in different sections of the book, so may well be deliberate on
-the part of the author.
-
-Minor punctuation errors have been repaired. The following amendments
-have also been made:
-
- Page 10--discrimena amended to discrimina--Per varios casus
- per tot discrimina rerum ...
-
- Page 32--smiled amended to smile--A cruel smile played on his
- face.
-
- Page 74--ago years amended to years ago--It was nine years ago
- that the pale gaunt waif of the sea ...
-
- Page 94--iufluence amended to influence--There was some
- strange influence in the air ...
-
-The frontispiece illustration has been moved to follow the title page.
-Other illustrations have been moved where necessary so that they are
-not in the middle of a paragraph.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventures of Ulysses the Wanderer, by
-Cyril Arthur Edward Ranger Gull
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