The Odyssey of Homer


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In beauty's cause illustriously he fails;  
Twelve moons the foe the captive youth detains  
In painful dungeons, and coercive chains;  
The foe at last from durance where he lay,  
His heart revering, give him back to day;  
Won by prophetic knowledge, to fulfil  
The steadfast purpose of the Almighty will.  
"With graceful port advancing now I spied,  
Leda the fair, the godlike Tyndar's bride:  
Hence Pollux sprung, who wields the furious sway  
The deathful gauntlet, matchless in the fray;  
And Castor, glorious on the embattled plain,  
Curbs the proud steeds, reluctant to the rein:  
By turns they visit this ethereal sky,  
And live alternate, and alternate die:  
In hell beneath, on earth, in heaven above,  
Reign the twin-gods, the favourite sons of Jove.  
"There Ephimedia trod the gloomy plain,  
Who charm'd the monarch of the boundless main:  
Hence Ephialtes, hence stern Otus sprung,  
More fierce than giants, more than giants strong;  
The earth o'erburden'd groan'd beneath their weight,  
None but Orion e'er surpassed their height:  
The wondrous youths had scarce nine winters told,  
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Page
283 284 285 286 287

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612