|
The
Odyssey of Homer
translated from the Greek by
T. E. Lawrence
BOOK 3
Forth from
the lovely waters sprang the sun into its firmament of brass, thence to shine
upon the Immortals, as also upon mortal men walking amid the corn-fields of
earth; while the ship drew into Pylos, the stately citadel of Neleus. There upon
the fore-shore were gathered the inhabitants, doing sacrifice to the
Earth-shaker, Poseidon, the dark-tressed God. Nine congregations they made, each
five hundred strong: and every congregation had offered nine victims, jet-black
bulls free from any fleck of colour, to the God: in whose honour the leg-bones
were now burning with fire while the assembly ate of the entrails and organs.
Straight towards this beach the tight ship was steered. The crew brailed up and
furled: then moored her. Afterwards they all issued forth (including Telemachus)
in the train of grey-eyed Athene. She turned to him and said, " Telemachus, here
is no room for false modesty: no room at all. Have you not come oversea in quest
of your father, expressly to learn where the earth is hiding him or what doom he
has drawn upon himself ? So you must go up straight, now, to this horse-proud
Nestor, and make him yield to you the inmost secrets of his heart. Implore him,
yourself, to speak perfect truth: and then he will not deceive us: for his mind
is compact with wisdom."
The cautious Telemachus protested thus: " Mentor, how dare I approach him, how
cling to him in supplication, when I am all unversed in speeches of subtle
appeal? It is only right for a young man to be diffident when he importunes an
elder." The Goddess rejoined, " Your heart will prompt you in part: and other
things the spirit will teach you to say. I think if ever anyone was conceived
and grew to manhood with the fostering care of the gods, it was yourself."
Pallas led on swiftly while she spoke. Telemachus followed her divine steps,
till they encountered the throng of the men of Pylos. There sat Nestor amongst
his sons, with his followers busied about him, arranging the feast or roasting
joints of beef or skewering choice morsels on the spits. Yet no sooner did they
spy strangers than one and all crowded forward with welcoming hands, to have
them take place in the gathering. Peisistratus, Nestor's son, reached them
first. He took a hand of Athene and a hand of Telemachus and led them to fleecy
sheepskins spread over the sand of the beach beside the platters, where sat
Thrasymedes, his own brother, and Nestor their father. He gave them portions of
the beasts' inwards: and pouring wine into a gold tankard he raised it to Pallas
Athene, daughter of aegis-bearing Zeus, with these words:
"Offer a prayer, O guest, to our lord Poseidon, upon whose feast you have
chanced in visiting us now. And after you have made your drink-offering and
prayed the due prayer, then pass the honeyed wine to this your friend, that he
may offer: for I deem that he, like you, will wish to supplicate the eternal
Gods, for lack of whom the hearts of all the world would go desolate. If I give
the embossed cup to you, before him, it is only because he is younger, a man of
my own generation."
Thereupon he put the sweet wine into her hand: Athene was gladdened by the right
instinct of the man, who had preferred her in serving the storied golden cup;
and presently she uttered to kingly Poseidon all her desire in prayer.
"Hear us, World-girdler, nor refuse, as greedy, our prayers for the gaining of
our end. Entail upon Nestor, greatest of his line, as for the sons which follow
after him, glory. Give to all in Pylos a bountiful return for these hundred
victims they have so largely sacrificed. Grant further that when Telemachus and
I go back, it may be with a happy issue to the purposes for which we have sailed
here in our swift, black ship." So she prayed, and all the while was bringing
her own prayer to pass. Then she gave the rich loving-cup to the dear son of
Odysseus and he repeated her prayer.
By now the others had roasted the flesh-meat of the victims and drawn the
gobbets off their spits. Portions were shared out to all: and they ate their
fill of the noble spread. But when at last the appetites for food and drink had
been relieved, to them Nestor, Gerenia's knight, began to speak:
"When strangers are fully satisfied with food, as now, it is fair to make
enquiry of them and find out who they are. Tell us therefore of yourselves, O
guests! Where did your journey over the sea-ways begin? Is yours a business
venture, or do you cruise at random like those pirates who quarter the salt
waves and risk their souls to profit by what others lose?"
Telemachus was inspired to answer him bravely, being heartened thereto by Athene
herself, who wished that might acquire men's respect through diligence in
seeking news of his absent father. "O Nestor, Neleus' son, chief glory of the
Achaeans! You ask whence we come. I will make all plain. We are from Ithaca,
that lies below Neion: and our motive, which I now set forth, is personal, not
public. I cast about for trace of my father, a man of universal fame, the
patient and mighty Odysseus. Rumour has it that in the sack of the Trojan
capital he fought by your side. We can tally all the others who served at Troy;
or mark just where each one died his grievous death: but Zeus has left the fate
of this last man a mystery. No one can say for sure where he was lost — on the
mainland, borne down by men who hated him, or in the deep, beneath the waves of
Amphitrite.
"Because of this I am suppliant at your knees, O Nestor: begging that you
relate his pitiful death, as you saw it with your own eyes, or learned it from
the lips of such another waif. His death, I say, for even from his mother's womb
calamity had marked him for her own. Do not in pity convey to me smooth things,
things gentler than the truth: blurt out, rather, all that met your sight. I
beseech you if (when you Achaeans were sore pressed by the men of Troy) my
father, noble Odysseus, ever pledged himself to you and fulfilled his bond — that
so you now have regard for me and give me the naked fact."
Then answered him Nestor, knight of Gerenia. "Dear lad, since you recall to my
mind those dreary memories, hear the tale of what we endured in that fatal
land — we fierce, ill-disciplined Achaeans; and of what we endured while we
strayed after booty over the misty face of the ocean wheresoever Achilles led:
as also of our struggles about the great walled city of King Priam. There our
bravest died. Aias, the lord of battles, lies there: Achilles himself: and
Patroclus, whose wisdom at the council board was godlike. And there too died my
lovely son, the strong, clean Antilochus, who was surpassingly swift-footed and
a fighter. Ever so many evils we suffered beyond this count. Mortal frailty
could not support the whole story, not though you tarried here for five years or
six enquiring into all that the Achaean chivalry there lost. Before the end you
would have faded back to your native land.
"Nine years we pegged away industriously, entangling the enemy in every kind of
evil trick: and, in the event, hardly did Zeus see it through. With one
particular man of us, all that time, no one dared compare himself, aloud, as a
master of craftiness: for manifestly in stratagems of any sort the palm was
borne off by Odysseus, your regal father — if really you are his son. A strange
wonder takes me as I gaze on you: though you have his tricks of speech. One
would have sworn that never any lad could speak so like him. See now, all the
while great Odysseus and I were together, we never, in council-chamber or in
open assembly, spoke to two briefs. It was as if we had a single heart from
which we expounded to the Argives, with forethought and ripe council, how they
should arrange it for the best.
"Even so we destroyed the tall city of Priam. It was afterwards, when the god
had dispersed the Achaeans and we had all gone down to our ships, that Zeus
contrived in his heart a sorry return for the Argives, because they had not, all
of them, been either upright or circumspect. As for the grisly doom which
swallowed so many of them up, it arose from the fatal anger of the grey-eyed
Daughter of the Great One, who set dissension between the two sons of Atreus.
Wherefore these two chiefs summoned all the host together, indecorously and not
by rule, near sundown: and they came staggering with wine, did the strong sons
of the Achaeans, to hear why the brothers so intemperately sounded the assembly.
"Then Menelaus urged that the Achaeans should be mindfull only of an immediate
return over the swelling horizon of the sea: but in this advice he did not at
all please his brother Agamemnon, whose plan was to hold back the host while he
offered hundreds of victims in sacrifice to allay that deadly wrath of Athene.
The fool: who did not see that she was not thus to be persuaded. The face of the
everlasting Gods is not suddenly changed. So did the brothers confront each
other in full view, bitterly wrangling: till the Achaeans impatiently sprang up
with thrilling tumultuous cry and clang of armour. The opposed councils each
found advocates amongst them. Sleep, when it came to us that night, came tossed
and broken by hard thoughts of one another; while Zeus aloft brooded over us,
quickening the seeds of our iniquity.
"In the morning the faction whereof I was one drew down our ships to the good
salt sea. We loaded them with our treasures and our captives, the outlandish,
loin-girt Trojan women: while the other faction held back, keeping with
Agamemnon, shepherd of the host. We, the journeying half, then set sail and
went. Very swiftly did we sail, for the sea in all its hugeness was divinely
spread smooth for our keels till we came to Tenedos, where we made sacrifice to
the gods as beseemed men homeward bound.
"Yet did Zeus still deny us an unchequered return: indeed he was cruel and for
the second time let loose evil dissensions among us. From Tenedos, therefore,
some of us turned prow to poop, and rocked off again, back whence they had come.
Of these were the party of Odysseus, the myriad-minded, the resourceful, whose
judgement veered to favour once more Atrides-Agamemnon.
"For my part I fled away, with a fleet of vessels following me : in my heart I
felt that the God was brewing mischief. Diomedes, the fighting son of Tydeus,
fled too, and his example carried all his fellowship with him. After we two had
gone there pursued after us the high-coloured Menelaus, who found us in Lesbos
taking further counsel upon our long voyage :— whether it were best to go wide
of cliff-bound Chios, by way of the island of Psyria which we should keep upon
our left: or to pass this side of Chios, by stormy Mimas. We asked the god to
give us a lead. He answered that to cut across the central sea to Euboea would
be our quickest escape from disaster. Then there sprang up and blew a loud
following wind, before which the ships scudded fast across the fish-filled ways
till they made their landfall on Geraestus in the dead of night. We went ashore
and slew many bulls there and burnt their marrow-bones in sacrifice to Poseidon,
by token that so great a stretch of open sea was favourably passed. It was no
more than four days later that the following of Diomedes, daunter of horses,
beached their trim ships in Argos.
"I held on for Pylos, helped thereto by the friendly wind which never once let
up on us from the first day when the god caused it to blow. Thus easily, dear
lad, did I return home by myself, without learning the fate of the other
Achaeans or knowing who was saved and who was lost. What news I have gathered
since, sitting quietly in my great hall, that shall you now learn from me
without exception, as is your due.
"The Myrmidons, they say, those spearmen, got back in good order under the
renowned son of great-hearted Achilles. It was well, also, with Philoctetes,
gallant son of Poias: and Idomeneus brought back all his company to Crete :— all, that escaped the war. The sea wrested none from him. Of the fate of
Agamemnon, son of Atreus, word must have come, even to those remote fastnesses
which are your home, relating the calamity of his return to the woeful fate
Aegisthus had schemed for him. Yet Aegisthus paid a reckoning even more
terrible. How good it was that a son of the victim survived, and that he should
avenge his great father's cruel death upon Aegisthus, the sly murderer! Fortify
yourself, my tall and comely friend, upon his example: that your praises may be
sung by posterity."
Telemachus answered him gravely, "Nestor, son of Neleus, chief glory of the
Achaeans: I grant you that young Orestes took the last drop of his revenge; and
therefore shall the Achaeans indeed trumpet his fame, for ever and ever. Would
that the Gods had endowed me with strength like his, to visit upon the lawless
suitors these iniquitous presumptions with which they artfully insult my
feebleness. But when the Gods spun the web of fate for me and for my father they
made no such blissful provision of power for us. Our part is only to endure."
Then said Nestor of Gerenia, master of the horse: "Friend, now you open this
matter and make mention of it to me, let me admit that I have heard how your
palace is beset by a mob of those who would marry your mother: and that they
plot to your disadvantage, in your despite. Tell me, do you willingly yield to
them? Or is it that some divine will has made the people of your part to turn
against you? Who knows, perhaps one day HE will arrive and reward their violence
with violence upon themselves: as he can do equally, whether he come alone or
with the might of Achaea at his back. Furthermore, should the grey-eyed Athene
single you out to cherish, with the loving care she bore famous Odysseus in the Troad where we Achaeans suffered — never saw I such open affection on the part of
the Gods as was there displayed by Pallas, who would stand openly by his side
— if Pallas will so love you and vex her heart for you, then may one or two of
them be distracted clean out of the idea of marriage!" Telemachus replied
sadly, "Reverend Sir, I do not think this word of yours can live. Your saying
is too great. So much too great that I grow afraid. Not all my hoping, not the
good-will of the Gods, could bring it about."
Here Goddess Athene broke in. "Telemachus, it is unseemly to let such words
escape past the barriers of your lips. When a God wishes, it is idly easy for
him to preserve a man, even in the ends of the earth. For my part I should
choose to be vexed with every sort of pain on my way home, so that I reached
there at last and enjoyed my return: rather than get back just to meet death at
my fireside, as Agamemnon died through the treachery of his wife and Aegisthus.
Yet I grant you that not the immortal gods themselves can for ever shield the
man they love from the common meed of death, or continually avert that fatal
decree which lays every man prone in the grave at the end."
Telemachus answered after his wont, "Mentor, we will speak no more of it. Why
harrow ourselves imagining returns for him, when already the Deathless Ones have
given him death and the dark which follows it? But see, I wish to change the
topic; and ask another word of Nestor, as from one whose rulings and conclusions
have final authority. They tell me he has been King for thrice the span of
ordinary generations. By this virtue he seems to my gaze almost an immortal
himself. So Nestor, son of Neleus, give me more true history — how died that
great king, Agamemnon, son of Atreus? By what subtleties of device did Aegisthus
snare into death a man so much better than himself? Where was Menelaus in the
business, that Aegisthus dared to kill? Absent perhaps, wandering abroad in the
world far from Achaean Argos?"
Nestor of Gerenia, the exceeding rich in horses, answered, "My child, I can tell
you the whole truth of it. You have rightly guessed how it would have been had
tawny Menelaus Agamemnon's brother, come back from Troy to find Aegisthus alive
in his brother's place. There would have been no corpse to need the kindly rites
of burial. Dogs and carrion crows would have torn the carcase to tatters in the
open fields beyond the city walls: nor would any of our women have keened over
him, so abhorrent was the man's crime.
"We were away, you see, fighting our great fights at this siege, while he,
comfortable in the heart of Argos and its green horse-pastures, was ever
speaking in the ear of Agamemnon's wife, trying to steal her love. For long she
would not abide the foul thing, Clytemnestra the divinely fair, the
noble-minded. Besides there was ever at her side the family minstrel, whom Atrides, before he left for Troy, had told off to protect his wife.
"Yet the doom of the Gods linked her with disaster all. Aegisthus lured the
singing man to a desert island and there abandoned him to be a spoil and booty
for the birds of prey. Whereupon her lust matched her lover's, and he took her
into his house. Many thigh-bones of oxen he burned to the gods on their holy
altars: and many dedications of tapestries or gold he made, in thankfulness for
the momentous success he had achieved beyond his heart's hope.
"Then we came sailing back together, Atrides-Menelaus and I, fast friends. But
at Sunium, the sacred headland of Athens, Phoebus Apollo shed down his gentle
darts upon Menelaus' navigator and ended his life. He dropped dead, with the
steering oar of the moving ship yet within his hands. This Phrontis, son of
Onetor, excelled all the men of his trade in skilfully holding a ship to her
course when squalls bore down thick and heavy. So Menelaus was delayed there, in
spite of his anxiety to be moving, till he had given due and rich burial to his
henchman. Then at last he got away across the wine-dark ocean, at the best pace
of his hollow ships, as far as the steep slope of Maleia. There however, Zeus
the far-seeing swept him grievously astray by loosing upon the fleet a blast of
piercing winds and monster waves which grew mountainous.
"The squadron was torn asunder. Some ships the God thrust almost to that part of
Crete where the Kydonians live beside the streams of Iardanus. When the wind
sets from the south-west, a long swell drives in there against the smooth wall
of cliff which sheerly fronts the mist-veiled sea, from the furthest end of
Gortyn westward to the promontory by Phaestos: where a low reef stems the whole
sweep of the tide. Upon this came the half of the fleet. The ships were
shattered by force of the waves against the crags: and the men in them narrowly
avoided death.
"As for the rest of the dark-prowed fleet, the other five vessels, — they were
borne by wind and water to the coasts of Egypt; in which strange region, with
its foreign people, Menelaius lingered, amassing great store of gold and goods,
all the while that Aegisthus at home was carrying out his dastard scheme.
Therefore it chanced that he had seven years of rule in golden Mycenae after
killing Atrides: and all the people served him. But in the eighth year there
returned from Athens the goodly Orestes to be his undoing. For Orestes killed
the traitor Aegisthus, his father's murderer: a son slaying the sire's slayer.
After perfecting his vengeance Orestes gave a funeral feast to the Argives over
the bodies of the mother he hated and despicable Aegisthus: and that self-same
day there sailed in Menelaus of the loud battle cry, laden down with all the
wealth that his ships could carry.
"Learn from this, my friend, not to wander from your home for too long,
abandoning your property, when there are men rampaging in the house likely to
share out and consume all you have: for so you would find your journey to have
defeated itself. Yet I exhort, nay I order, you to visit Menelaus who has so
newly come home from abroad, from parts so foreign that the stoutest-hearted
would despair of ever returning thence when once driven distractedly by storms
across that fearful, boundless sea: a sea so vast and dread that not even in a
twelvemonth could a bird hope to wing its way out of it.
"Wherefore I would have you visit him, sailing in your own ship with your crew:
but if you prefer the road, a chariot: and team are at your disposal, with my
own sons to guide you to tawny Menelaus, in Lacedaemon the fair. Make your
appeal to him with your own lips, for then he will heed and answer truthfully
out of his stored wisdom, not thinking to play you false."
There Nestor ceased: but now the sun was going down and the shadows deepening.
So to the company spoke the goddess, grey-eyed Athene. "Ancient, right well
have you told us your tale: but it is time to cut the tongues and mix the wine,
that we may complete our offerings to Poseidon and the other immortals: and then
must we think of our couches: for it is bedtime. The sun has sunken into the
shadow of the world and we should be going, lest we sit unmannerly long at the
table of the Gods."
Her audience approved her. The henchmen poured water on their hands and the
serving-boys filled the drinking bowls to the brims with compounded drinks. Then
they served round to each a fresh cup. The ox-tongues were cast into the fire,
and rising to his feet each man poured his libation in turn. After they had so
offered and had drunk of what was left all their hearts' desire, then Athene and
godlike Telemachus would have been going back together to their hollow ship: but
Nestor stayed them with words of protest:—
"May Zeus and the whole company of the immortals deliver me from your passing
by my house, to slight it and sleep in your ship, as if I were a naked, needy
man who had at home neither cloaks nor coverlets for the soft sleeping of
himself and his guests! Praise be, I have great store of bedding. Never, I
swear, while I live shall the beloved son of my comrade Odysseus lie out on the
bare boards of his vessel — nor while there are children of mine left in the
palace to entertain whatever guests may come under its roof."
Athene replied, "Well said, old friend: and Telemachus will do your bidding, as
is most fit. Let him even now go with you to sleep in your palace. But my duty
is to order and hearten the crew of our black ship by returning to them with our
news. You see I am the one man of years in the party. All the rest are young
men, fellows in age of stout Telemachus, and they have come with us on this trip
for love's sake. Therefore with them I sleep this night through, beside the
black shell of the ship: and in the morning I shall push on to the estimable Cauconians, who for no small while have owed me no small sum. Meanwhile let it
be your care to send Telemachus, your guest, forward with one of your sons in
one of your fast chariots: choosing for him from out your stud two of the
lightest footed and deepest chested horses."
The goddess ended her say, and took flight from them, in the way of a sea-eagle.
Astonishment fell on all present and the venerable man was awed at what his eyes
saw. He seized Telemachus by the hand, crying his name and saying: "Friend
Telemachus, what fear could one have of your growing up weak or base, when from
your youth gods walk with you as guides? Of the great dwellers on Olympus this
can be no other than the Daughter of Zeus himself: the Tritonian, the
All-glorious: who also was wont to single out your great father for honour, from
among the Argives.
"O QUEEN, I pray you, be gracious unto us, and bestow upon me a goodly repute
amongst men; for me, and my sons, and for the wife I love and honour. And I vow
to you a yearling heifer, broad-browed, uncovered, and never yet subjected to
the yoke of man. This beast will I sacrifice to you, after I have caused her
horns to be covered with pure gold."
Such was the prayer that he uttered, and Pallas Athene heard him.
Then did Nestor, Gerenia's knight, lead into the fair hall his sons and his
sons-in-law; who there in the palace of that most famous sire sat them down,
orderly, each on his seat or throne: while the old lord mixed for his visitors a
cup of wine which had mellowed eleven years in its jar before the good-wife
broke the sealed wrappings and poured it forth. With such drink did the old man
have his cup blended: and he poured the first of it to Athene, praying fervently
the while to her, the daughter of aegis-bearing Zeus.
The others again made their drink-offering, and drank till their hearts were
satisfied. Then the company dispersed, each to his own quarters in search of
sleep : but for Telemachus, godlike Odysseus' son, Nestor the Gerenian
horse-lover had coverlets spread on an inlaid bedstead in the coved I entry of
the house, under its reverberant roof. For company there was Peisistratus with
his good ashen spear: Peisistratus, I though a tall man who led his rank in the
battle, was yet un-married, and so, alone of the sons, kept his father's house.
The old lord slept apart in the depths of the great building, where his lady
wife had made ready their couch and its coverings.
Day-break: and the rosy-tinted fingers of dawn crept up the sky. Nestor, knight
of Gerenia, left his bed and came forth to sit before the lofty gateway of his
house on the smooth platform there built. Its white stones, all smoothly
polished, had been the old-time seat of Neleus, that divinely-unerring
counsellor, long since subdued by Death, who had gone down to Hades leaving
Nestor as warden of the Achaeans to sit in his place and wield his sceptre of
power. About him gathered the cluster of his sons, coming from their private
houses: Echephron and Stratius and Perseus and Aretus and magnificent
Thrasymedes. Also the sixth son, brave Peisistratus came: and they brought
goodly Telemachus too, and set him there amongst themselves as Nestor began to
address them:
"Quickly, quickly, dear sons, do my bidding, that I may single out from all the
gods for reverence, divine Athene, who visited me in the flesh yesterday at the
God's solemn feast. Let one of you, therefore, run to the pastures for a heifer
to be brought as quickly as the neat-herd can drive her here. Let another hasten
to the black ship of large-hearted Telemachus and bring up all his company save
two.
Let some one else bid Laerkes the gilder come, to lap in gold the horns of the
victim. The rest of you stay in the house to see that its women busy themselves,
laying the tables in our famous hall and arranging seats and a proper provision
of fire-wood and sparkling water." So Nestor ordered and they ran to obey. The
heifer appeared from the fields and the crew of high-hearted Telemachus arrived
from their swift and goodly ship: also the smith came, carrying in his hands the
tools of his smithying by which his art was manifested—the anvil, the hammer and
the shapely tongs to work his gold.
Athene, too, came to accept her sacrifice.
Then did Nestor, the ancient knight, bring out his gold: and the craftsman
cunningly overlaid the heifer's horns in order that the goddess might be glad
when she saw the loveliness dedicated to her. Statius and noble Echephron led
the beast forward by the horns. Aretos came out from the living rooms, with a
lotus-bowl of water for lustration in one hand and the basket of barleymeal in
the other. Thrasymedes, strong in battle, stood ready, poising his sharp axe to
cut down the heifer. Perseus held the blood-basin.
Venerable Nestor opened the rite of sacrifice by dipping his hands into the
water to purify them: then he began to sprinkle the meal, praying earnestly the
while to Athene and casting hairs from the forelocks of the heifer into the
flame. Then, after they had joined in prayer and in scattering the
heave-offering of grain, suddenly the son of Nestor, ardent Thrasymedes, stepped
in and struck. His blade cut through the sinews of the neck, and the might of
the heifer was undone. The women raised their wavering cry, the prince's
daughters and his daughters-in-law and his honoured wife, Eurydice the eldest
daughter of Clymenus: while the men strained up the beast's head from the
trodden earth, that proud Peisistratus might sever her throat.
The dark blood gushed forth, and life left its bones. Very quickly they
disjointed the carcase, stripped the flesh from the thigh bones, doubled them in
the customary manner with a wrapping of the fatty parts, above and below, and
banked the raw meat over them. Then the elder set fire to his cleft billets of
wood and burned the offering while sprinkling ruddy wine upon the flames. So the
thigh bones were utterly consumed even as the young men tasted the entrail-meat,
crowding about their father with the five-pronged roasting forks in their hands.
Afterwards they chopped up the rest of the flesh into morsels which they impaled
on their points and broiled, holding the sharp spits firmly out to the fire.
During this sacrifice beautiful Polycaste, the youngest grown daughter of Nestor
son of Neleus, had given Tele-machus his bath, washing him and anointing him
with rich olive oil before she draped him in a seemly tunic and cloak: so that
he came forth from the bath-cabinet with the body of an immortal. He rejoined
Nestor, the shepherd of his people, and took place by his side. The flesh-meat
was now ready. They drew it off the fork-points and sat down to dine. Men of
standing waited on them, filling up with wine their golden beakers: and when
they had eaten and drunken till they would no more, Nestor, Gerenia's knight,
again opened his mouth and said:
"Now, my sons, it is time to harness to Telemachus' chariot the long-maned,
proud-tailed horses, that he may be upon his way." So he spoke, and heedfully
they hastened to do his bidding. Very soon the swift horses were ready beneath
the chariot's yoke. The house-keeper packed in bread and wine which she brought
from her stores, together with such dainties as kings, the spoiled darlings of
the gods, are wont to eat.
Telemachus stepped up into the stately chariot. Peisistratus, Nestor's noble
son, stepped up beside him and gathered the reins into his hands. Then he struck
the horses with the whip: and these, glad to be loosed, flew down from the steep
crag of the citadel of Pylos out on to the plain: which all day long they
steadily traversed, with the yoke nodding to and fro over their necks.
Down sank the sun. The road became blind. They were in Therae, by the house of
Diocles, son to Ortilochus, who was own son of Alpheus. With him they rested the
night, duly entertained: and at the first red pointers of dawn in the sky they
were yoking their horses to the gay chariot for their next stage.
Forth they drove through the court-yard gate past the echoing porch. Again the
driver swung his whip: again the willing horses flew forward. Presently they
entered the wheat-lands, sign that their journey drew towards its close; with
such speed had the horses pressed on. Again the sun grew low and the roads were
darkened.
  
|
|