The Odyssey eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Odyssey.
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The Odyssey eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 498 pages of information about The Odyssey.

’So spake Eurylochus, and the rest of the company consented thereto.  Forthwith they drave off the best of the kine of Helios that were nigh at hand, for the fair kine of shambling gait and broad of brow were feeding no great way from the dark-prowed ship.  Then they stood around the cattle and prayed to the gods, plucking the fresh leaves from an oak of lofty boughs, for they had no white barley on board the decked ship.  Now after they had prayed and cut the throats of the kine and flayed them, they cut out slices of the thighs and wrapped them in the fat, making a double fold, and thereon they laid raw flesh.  Yet had they no pure wine to pour over the flaming sacrifices, but they made libation with water and roasted the entrails over the fire.  Now after the thighs were quite consumed and they had tasted the inner parts, they cut the rest up small and spitted it on spits.  In the same hour deep sleep sped from my eyelids and I sallied forth to the swift ship and the sea-banks.  But on my way as I drew near to the curved ship, the sweet savour of the fat came all about me; and I groaned and spake out before the deathless gods: 

’"Father Zeus, and all ye other blessed gods that live for ever, verily to my undoing ye have lulled me with a ruthless sleep, and my company abiding behind have imagined a monstrous deed.”

’Then swiftly to Helios Hyperion came Lampetie of the long robes, with the tidings that we had slain his kine.  And straight he spake with angry heart amid the Immortals: 

’"Father Zeus, and all ye other blessed gods that live for ever, take vengeance I pray you on the company of Odysseus, son of Laertes, that have insolently slain my cattle, wherein I was wont to be glad as I went toward the starry heaven, and when I again turned earthward from the firmament.  And if they pay me not full atonement for the cattle, I will go down to Hades and shine among the dead.”

’And Zeus the cloud-gatherer answered him, saying:  “Helios, do thou, I say, shine on amidst the deathless gods, and amid mortal men upon the earth, the grain-giver.  But as for me, I will soon smite their swift ship with my white bolt, and cleave it in pieces in the midst of the wine-dark deep.”

’This I heard from Calypso of the fair hair; and she said that she herself had heard it from Hermes the Messenger.

’But when I had come down to the ship and to the sea, I went up to my companions and rebuked them one by one; but we could find no remedy, the cattle were dead and gone.  And soon thereafter the gods showed forth signs and wonders to my company.  The skins were creeping, and the flesh bellowing upon the spits, both the roast and raw, and there was a sound as the voice of kine.

’Then for six days my dear company feasted on the best of the kine of Helios which they had driven off.  But when Zeus, son of Cronos, had added the seventh day thereto, thereafter the wind ceased to blow with a rushing storm, and at once we climbed the ship and launched into the broad deep, when we had set up the mast and hoisted the white sails.

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The Odyssey from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.