The Odyssey of Homer


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And sire forsaken on the verge of age;  
Beneath the sun prolong they yet their breath,  
Or range the house of darkness and of death?"  
To whom the swain: "Attend what you enquire;  
Laertes lives, the miserable sire,  
Lives, but implores of every power to lay  
The burden down, and wishes for the day.  
Torn from his offspring in the eve of life,  
Torn from the embraces of his tender wife,  
Sole, and all comfortless, he wastes away  
Old age, untimely posting ere his day.  
She too, sad mother! for Ulysses lost  
Pined out her bloom, and vanish'd to a ghost;  
(So dire a fate, ye righteous gods! avert  
From every friendly, every feeling heart!)  
While yet she was, though clouded o'er with grief.  
Her pleasing converse minister'd relief:  
With Climene, her youngest daughter, bred,  
One roof contain'd us, and one table fed.  
But when the softly-stealing pace of time  
Crept on from childhood into youthful prime,  
To Samos' isle she sent the wedded fair;  
Me to the fields; to tend the rural care;  
Array'd in garments her own hands had wove,  
Nor less the darling object of her love.  
390  


Page
388 389 390 391 392

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612