The Odyssey of Homer


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To steer the bounding bark with steady toil,  
When the storm thickens, and the billows boil);  
While yet he exercised the steerman's art,  
Apollo touch'd him with his gentle dart;  
Even with the rudder in his hand, he fell.  
To pay whole honours to the shades of hell,  
We check'd our haste, by pious office bound,  
And laid our old companion in the ground.  
And now the rites discharged, our course we keep  
Far on the gloomy bosom of the deep:  
Soon as Malae's misty tops arise,  
Sudden the Thunderer blackens all the skies,  
And the winds whistle, and the surges roll  
Mountains on mountains, and obscure the pole.  
The tempest scatters, and divides our fleet;  
Part, the storm urges on the coast of Crete,  
Where winding round the rich Cydonian plain,  
The streams of Jardan issue to the main.  
There stands a rock, high, eminent and steep,  
Whose shaggy brow o'erhangs the shady deep,  
And views Gortyna on the western side;  
On this rough Auster drove the impetuous tide:  
With broken force the billows roll'd away,  
And heaved the fleet into the neighb'ring bay.  
Thus saved from death, the gain'd the Phaestan shores,  
With shatter'd vessels and disabled oars;  
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Page
60 61 62 63 64

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612