The Odyssey of Homer


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'Tis mine with food the hungry to supply,  
And clothe the naked from the inclement sky.  
Here dwell in safety from the suitors' wrongs,  
And the rude insults of ungovern'd tongues.  
For should'st thou suffer, powerless to relieve,  
I must behold it, and can only grieve.  
The brave, encompass'd by an hostile train,  
O'erpower'd by numbers, is but brave in vain."  
To whom, while anger in his bosom glows,  
With warmth replies the man of mighty woes:  
"Since audience mild is deign'd, permit my tongue  
At once to pity and resent thy wrong.  
My heart weeps blood to see a soul so brave  
Live to base insolence or power a slave,  
But tell me, dost thou, prince, dost thou behold,  
And hear their midnight revels uncontroll'd?  
Say, do thy subjects in bold faction rise,  
Or priests in fabled oracles advise?  
Or are thy brothers, who should aid thy power,  
Turn'd mean deserters in the needful hour?  
Oh that I were from great Ulysses sprung,  
Or that these wither'd nerves like thine were strung,  
Or, heavens! might he return! (and soon appear  
He shall, I trust; a hero scorns despair:)  
Might he return, I yield my life a prey  
404  


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402 403 404 405 406

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612