The Odyssey of Homer


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Whose sword was sacred to the man he loved;  
Mirror of constant faith, revered and mourn'd--  
When Troy was ruin'd, had the chief return'd,  
No Greek an equal space had ere possess'd,  
Of dear affection, in my grateful breast.  
I, to confirm the mutual joys we shared,  
For his abode a capital prepared;  
Argos, the seat of sovereign rule, I chose;  
Fair in the plan the future palace rose,  
Where my Ulysses and his race might reign,  
And portion to his tribes the wide domain,  
To them my vassals had resign'd a soil,  
With teeming plenty to reward their toil.  
There with commutual zeal we both had strove  
In acts of dear benevolence and love:  
Brothers in peace, not rivals in command,  
And death alone dissolved the friendly band!  
Some envious power the blissful scene destroys;  
Vanish'd are all the visionary joys;  
The soul of friendship to my hope is lost,  
Fated to wander from his natal coast!"  
He ceased; a gush of grief began to rise:  
Fast streams a tide from beauteous Helen's eyes;  
Fast for the sire the filial sorrows flow;  
The weeping monarch swells the mighty woe;  
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Page
81 82 83 84 85

Quick Jump
1 153 306 459 612