The Odyssey of Homer


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The three we sent, from off the enchanting ground  
We dragg'd reluctant, and by force we bound.  
The rest in haste forsook the pleasing shore,  
Or, the charm tasted, had return'd no more.  
Now placed in order on their banks, they sweep  
The sea's smooth face, and cleave the hoary deep:  
With heavy hearts we labour through the tide,  
To coasts unknown, and oceans yet untried.  
"The land of Cyclops first, a savage kind,  
Nor tamed by manners, nor by laws confined:  
Untaught to plant, to turn the glebe, and sow,  
They all their products to free nature owe:  
The soil, untill'd, a ready harvest yields,  
With wheat and barley wave the golden fields;  
Spontaneous wines from weighty clusters pour,  
And Jove descends in each prolific shower,  
By these no statues and no rights are known,  
No council held, no monarch fills the throne;  
But high on hills, or airy cliffs, they dwell,  
Or deep in caves whose entrance leads to hell.  
Each rules his race, his neighbour not his care,  
Heedless of others, to his own severe.  
"
Opposed to the Cyclopean coast, there lay  
An isle, whose hill their subject fields survey;  
16  
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Page
214 215 216 217 218

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612