POLYPHEMOS
FROM THE ODYSSEY , BOOK IX REPUBLIC
"Thence we sailed on with aching hearts, and
came to the land of the Cyclops, a rude and lawless folk, who, trusting
to the immortal gods, plant with their hands no plant, nor ever plough,
but all things spring unsown and without ploughing,, wheat, barley, and
grape-vines with wine in their heavy clusters, for rain from Zeus makes
the grape grow. Among this people no assemblies meet; they have no stable
laws. They live on the tops of lofty hills in hollow caves; each gives
the law to his own wife and children, and for each other they have little
care. "Now a rough island stretches along outside the harbor, not close
to the Cyclops' coast nor yet far out, covered with trees. On it innumerable
wild goats breed; no tread of man disturbs them; none comes here to follow
hounds, to toil through woods and climb the crests of hills. The island
is not held for flocks or tillage, but all unsown, untilled, it evermore
is bare of men and feeds the bleating goats. Among the Cyclops are no red-cheeked
ships, nor are there shipwrights who might build the well-benched ships
to do them service, sailing to foreign cities; as usually men cross the
sea in ships to one another. With ships they might have worked the well-placed
island; for it is not at all a worthless spot, but would bear all things
duly. For here are meadows on the banks of the gray sea, moist, with soft
soil; here vines could never die; here is smooth ploughing-land; a very
heavy crop, and always well in season, might be reaped, for the under soil
is rich. Here is a quiet harbor, never needing moorings,, throwing out
anchor-stones or fastening cables,, but merely to run in and wait awhile
till sailor hearts are ready and the winds are blowing. Just at the harbor's
head a spring of sparkling water flows from beneath a cave; around it poplars
grow. Here we sailed in, some god our guide, through murky night; there
was no light to see, for round the ships was a dense fog. No moon looked
out from heaven; it was shut in with clouds. So no one saw the island,
and the long waves rolling upon the shore we did not see until we beached
our well-benched ships. After the ships were beached, we lowered all our
sails and forth we went ourselves upon the shore; where falling fast asleep
we awaited sacred dawn. "But when the early rosy-fingered dawn appeared,
in wonder at the island we made a circuit round it, and nymphs, daughters
of aegis-bearing Zeus, started the mountain goats, to give my men a meal.
Forthwith we took our bending bows and our long hunting spears from out
the ships, and parted in three bands began to shoot; and soon God granted
ample game. Twelve ships were in my train; to each there fell nine goats,
while ten they set apart for me alone. Then all throughout the day till
setting sun we sat and feasted on abundant meat and pleasant wine. For
the ruddy wine of our ships was not yet spent; some still was left, because
our crews took a large store in jars the day we seized the sacred citadel
of the Ciconians. And now we looked across to the land of the neighboring
Cyclops, and marked the smoke, the sounds of men, the bleat of sheep and
goats; but when the sun went down and darkness came, we laid us down to
sleep upon the beach. Then as the early rosy-fingered dawn appeared, holding
a council, I said to all my men: "'The rest of you, my trusty crew, stay
for the present here; but I myself, with my own ship and my own crew, go
to discover who these men may be, , if they are fierce and savage, with
no regard for right, or kind to strangers and reverent toward the gods.'
"When I had spoken thus, I went on board my ship, and called my crew to
come on board and loose the cables. Quickly they came, took places at the
pins, and sitting in order smote the foaming water with their oars. But
as we reached the neighboring shore, there at the outer point, close to
the sea, we saw a cave, high, overhung with laurel. Here many flocks of
sheep and goats were nightly housed. Around was built a yard with a high
wall of deep-embedded stone, tall pines, and crested oaks. Here a man-monster
slept, who shepherded his flock alone and far apart; with others he did
not mingle, but quite aloof followed his lawless ways. Thus had he grown
to be a marvelous monster; not like a man who lives by bread, but rather
like a woody peak of the high hills, seen single, clear of others. "Now
to my other trusty men I gave command to stay there by the ship and guard
the ship; but I my. self chose the twelve best among my men and sallied
forth. I had a goat-skin bottle of the dark sweet wine given me by Maron,
son of Euanthes, priest of Apollo, who watches over Ismarus. He gave me
this because we guarded him and his son and wife, through holy fear; for
he dwelt within the shady grove of Phoebus Apollo. He brought me splendid
gifts: of fine-wrought gold he gave me seven talents, gave me a mixing-bowl
of solid silver, and afterwards filled me twelve jars with wine, sweet
and unmixed, a drink for gods. None knew that wine among the slaves and
hand-maids of his house, none but himself, his own dear wife, and one sole
house-dame. Whenever they drank the honeyed ruddy wine, he filled a cup
and poured it into twenty parts of water, and still from the bowl came
a sweet odor of a surprising strength; then to refrain had been no easy
matter. I filled a large skin full of this and took it with me, and also
took provision in a sack; for my stout heart suspected I soon should meet
a man arrayed in mighty power, a savage, ignorant of rights and laws. "Quickly
we reached the cave, but did not find him there; for he was tending his
fat flock afield. Entering the cave, we looked around. Here crates were
standing, loaded down with cheese, and here pens thronged with lambs and
kids. In separate pens each sort was folded: by themselves the older, by
themselves the later born, and by themselves the younglings. Swimming with
whey were all the vessels, the well-wrought pails and bowls in which he
milked. Here at the very first my men entreated me to take some cheeses
and depart; then quickly to drive the kids and lambs to our swift ship
out of the pens, and sail away over the briny water. But I refused,, far
better had I yielded,, hoping that I might see him and he might offer gifts.
But he was to prove, when seen, no pleasure to my men. "Kindling a fire
here, we made burnt offering and we ourselves took of the cheese and ate;
and so we sat and waited in the cave until he came from pasture. He brought
a ponderous burden of dry wood to use at supper time, and tossing it down
inside the cave raised a great din. We hurried off in terror to a corner
of the cave. But into the wide-mouthed cave he drove his sturdy flock,
all that he milked; the males, both rams and goats, he left outside in
the high yard. And now he set in place the huge door-stone, lifting it
high in air, a ponderous thing; no two and twenty carts, stanch and four-wheeled,
could start it from the ground; such was the rugged rock he set against
the door. Then sitting down, he milked the ewes and bleating goats, all
in due order, and underneath put each one's young. Straightway he curdled
half of the white milk, and gathering it in wicker baskets, set it by;
half he left standing in the pails, ready for him to take and drink, and
for his supper also. So after he had busily performed his tasks, he kindled
a fire, noticed us, and asked: "'Ha, strangers, who are you? Where do you
come from, sailing the watery ways ? Are you upon some business? Or do
you rove at random, as the pirates roam the seas, risking their lives and
bringing ill to strangers?' "As he thus spoke, our very souls were crushed
within us, dismayed by the heavy voice and by the monster's self; nevertheless
I answered thus and said: "'We are from Troy, Achaeans, driven by shifting
winds out of our course across the great gulf of the sea; homeward we fared,
but through strange ways and wanderings are come hither; so Zeus was pleased
to purpose. Subjects of Agamemnon, son of Atreus, we boast ourselves to
be, whose fame is now the widest under heaven; so great a town he sacked,
so many men he slew. But chancing here, we come before your knees to ask
that you will offer hospitality, and in other ways as well will give the
gift which is the stranger's due. O mighty one, respect the gods. We are
your suppliants, and Zeus is the avenger of the suppliant and the stranger;
he is the stranger's friend and waits on worthy strangers.' "So I spoke,
and from a ruthless heart he straightway answered: 'You are simple, stranger,
or come from far away, to bid me dread the gods or shrink before them.
The Cyclops pay no heed to aegis-bearing Zeus, nor to the blessed gods;
because we are much stronger than themselves. To shun the wrath of Zeus,
I would not spare you or your comrades, did my heart not bid. But tell
me where you left your stanch ship at your coming. At the far shore, or
near? Let me but know.' "He thought to tempt me, but he could not cheat
a knowing man like me; and I again replied with words of guile: 'The Earth-shaker,
Poseidon, wrecked my ship and cast her on the rocks at the land's end,
drifting her on a headland; the wind blew from the sea; and I with these
men here escaped impending ruin.' "So I spoke, and from a ruthless heart
he answered nothing, but starting up laid hands on my companions. He seized
on two an(l dashed them to the ground as if they had been dogs. Their brains
ran out upon the floor, and wet the earth. Tearing them limb from limb,
he made his supper, and ate as does a mountain lion, leaving nothing, entrails,
or flesh, or marrow bones. We in our tears held up our hands to Zeus, at
sight of his reckless deeds; helplessness held our hearts. But when the
Cyclops had filled his monstrous maw by eating human flesh and pouring
down pure milk, he laid himself in the cave full length among his flock.
And I then formed the plan within my daring heart of closing on him, drawing
my sharp sword from my thigh, and stabbing him in the breast where the
midriff holds the liver, feeling the place out with my hand. Yet second
thoughts restrained me, for there we too had met with utter ruin; for we
could never with our hands have pushed from the lofty door the enormous
stone which he had set against it. Thus then with sighs we awaited sacred
dawn. "But when the early rosy-fingered dawn appeared, he kindled a fire,
milked his goodly flock, all in due order, and underneath put each one's
young. Then after he had busily performed his tasks, seizing once more
two men, he made his morning meal. And when the meal was ended, he drove
from the cave his sturdy flock, and easily moved the huge door-stone; but
afterwards he put it back as one might put the lid upon a quiver. Then
to the hills, with many a call, he turned his sturdy flock, while I was
left behind brooding on evil and thinking how I might obtain revenge, would
but Athene grant my prayer. And to my mind this seemed the wisest way.
There lay beside the pen a great club of the Cyclops, an olive stick still
green, which he had cut to be his staff when dried. Inspecting it, we guessed
its size, and thought it like the mast of a black ship of twenty oars,
some broad-built merchantman which sails the great gulf of the sea; so
huge it looked in length and thickness. I went and cut away a fathom's
length of this, laid it before my men, and bade them shape it down; they
made it smooth; I then stood by to point the tip and, laying hold, I charred
it briskly in the blazing fire. The piece I now put carefully away, hiding
it in the dung which lay about the cave in great abundance; and then I
bade my comrades fix by lot who the bold men should be to help me raise
the stake and grind it in his eye, when pleasant sleep should come. Those
drew the lot whom I myself would rather have chosen; four were they, for
a fifth I counted in myself. He came toward evening, shepherding the fleecy
flock, and forthwith drove his sturdy flock into the widemouthed cave,
all with much care; he did not leave a sheep in the high yard outside,
either through some suspicion, or God bade him so to do. Again he set in
place the huge door-stone, lifting it high in air, and, sitting down, he
milked the ewes and bleating goats, all in due order, and underneath put
each one's young. Then after he had busily performed his tasks, he seized
once more two men and made his supper. And now it was that drawing near
the Cyclops I thus spoke, holding within my hands an ivy bowl filled with
dark wine: "'Here, Cyclops, drink some wine after your meal of human flesh,
and see what sort of liquor our ship held. I brought it as an offering,
thinking that you might pity me and send me home. But you are mad past
bearing. Reckless! How should a stranger come to you again from any people,
when you have done this wicked deed?' "So I spoke; he took the cup and
drank it off, and mightily pleased he was with the taste of the sweet liquor,
and thus he asked me for it yet again: "'Give me some more, kind sir, and
straightway tell your name, that I may give a stranger's gift with which
you shall be pleased. Ah yes, the Cyclops' fruitful fields bear wine in
their heavy clusters, for rain from Zeus makes the grape grow; but this
is a bit of ambrosia and nectar.' "So he spoke, and I again offered the
sparkling wine. Three times I brought and gave; three times he drank it
in his folly. Then as the wine began to dull the Cyclops' senses, in winning
words I said to him: "'Cyclops, you asked my noble name, and I will tell
it; but do you give the stranger's gift, just as you promised. My name
is Nobody. Nobody I am called by mother, father, and by all my comrades.'
"So I spoke, and from a ruthless heart he straightway answered: 'Nobody
I eat up last, after his comrades; all the rest first; and that shall be
the stranger's gift for you.' "He spoke, and sinking back fell flat; and
there he lay, lolling his thick neck over, till sleep, that conquers all,
took hold upon him. Out of his throat poured wine and scraps of human flesh;
heavy with wine, he spewed it forth. And now it was I drove the stake under
a heap of ashes, to bring it to a heat, and with my words emboldened all
my men, that none might flinch through fear. Then when the olive stake,
green though it was, was ready to take fire, and through and through was
all aglow, I snatched it from the fire, while my men stood around and Heaven
inspired us with great courage. Seizing the olive stake, sharp at the tip,
they plunged it in his eye, and I, perched up above, whirled it around.
As when a man bores shipbeams with a drill, and those below keep it in
motion with a strap held by the ends, and steadily it runs; even so we
seized the fire-pointed stake and whirled it in his eye. Blood bubbled
round the heated thing. The vapor singed off all the lids around the eye,
and even the brows, as the ball burned and its roots crackled in the flame.
As when a smith dips a great axe or adze into cold water, hissing loud,
to temper it, , for that is strength to steel,, so hissed his eye about
the olive stake. A hideous roar he raised; the rock resounded; we hurried
off in terror. He wrenched the stake from out his eye, all dabbled with
the blood, and flung it from his hands in frenzy. Then he called loudly
on the Cyclops who dwelt about him in the caves, along the windy heights.
They heard his cry, and ran from every side, and standing by the cave they
asked what ailed him: "'What has come on you, Polyphemus, that you scream
so in the immortal night, and keep us thus from sleeping? Is a man driving
off your Hocks in spite of you? Is a man murdering you by craft or force?'
"Then in his turn from out the cave big Polyphemus answered: 'Friends,
Nobody is murdering me by craft. Force there is none.' "But answering him
in winged words they said: "If nobody harms you when you are left alone,
illness which comes from mighty Zeus you cannot fly. But make your prayer
to your father, lord Poseidon.' "This said, they went their way, and in
my heart I laughed, my name, that clever notion, so deceived them. But
now the Cyclops, groaning and in agonies of anguish, by groping with his
hands took the stone off the door, yet sat himself inside the door with
hands outstretched, to catch whoever ventured forth among the sheep; for
he probably hoped in his heart that I should be so silly. But I was planning
how it all might best be ordered that I might win escape from death both
for my men and me. So many a plot and scheme I framed, as for my life;
great danger was at hand. Then to my mind this seemed the wisest way: some
rams there were of a good breed, thick in the fleece, handsome and large,
which bore a dark blue wool. These I quietly bound together with the twisted
willow withes on which the giant Cyclops slept, the brute,, taking three
sheep together. One, in the middle, carried the man; the other two walked
by the sides, keeping my comrades safe. Thus three sheep bore each man.
Then for myself, there was a ram, by far the best of all the flock, whose
back I grasped, and curled beneath his shaggy belly there I lay, and with
my hands twisted in that enormous fleece I steadily held on, with patient
heart. Thus then with sighs we awaited sacred dawn. "Soon as the early
rosy-fingered dawn appeared, the rams hastened to pasture, but the ewes
bleated unmilked about the pens, for their udders were wellnigh bursting.
Their master, racked with grievous pains, felt over the backs of all the
sheep as they stood up, but foolishly did not notice how under the breasts
of the woolly sheep men had been fastened. Last of the flock, the ram walked
to the door, cramped by his fleece and me the crafty plotter; and feeling
him over, big Polyphemus said: "'What, my pet ram 'Why do you move across
the cave hindmost of all the flock? Till now you never lagged behind, but
with your long strides you were always first to crop the tender blooms
of grass; you were the first to reach the running streams, and first to
wish to turn to the stall at night: yet here you are the last. Ah, but
you miss your master's eye, which a villain has put out,, he and his vile
companions, blunting my wits with wine. Nobody it was, not, I assure him,
safe from destruction yet. If only you could sympathize and get the power
of speech to say where he is skulking from my rage, then should that brain
of his be knocked about the cave and dashed upon the ground. So might my
heart recover from the ills which miserable Nobody brought upon me.' "So
saying, from his hand he let the ram go forth; and after we were come a
little distance from the cave and from the yard, first from beneath the
ram I freed myself and then set free my comrades. So at quick pace we drove
away those long-legged sheep, heavy with fat, many times turning round,
until we reached the ship. A welcome sight we seemed to our dear friends,
as men escaped from death. Yet for the others they began to weep and wail;
but this I did not suffer; by my frowns I checked their tears. In stead,
I bade them straightway toss the many fleecy sheep into the ship, and sail
away over the briny water. Quickly they came, took places at the pins,
and sitting in order smote the foaming water with their oars. But when
I was as far away as one can call, I shouted to the Cyclops in derision:
"'Cyclops, no weakling's comrades you were destined to devour in the deep
cave, with brutal might. But it was also destined your bad deeds should
find you out, audacious wretch, who did not hesitate to eat the guests
within your house! For this did Zeus chastise you, Zeus and the other gods.'
"So I spoke, and he was angered in his heart the more; and tearing off
the top of a high hill, he flung it at us. It fell before the dark-bowed
ship a little space, but failed to reach the rudder's tip. The sea surged
underneath the stone as it came down, and swiftly toward the land the wash
of water swept us, like a flood-tide from the deep, and forced us back
to shore. I seized a setting-pole and shoved the vessel off; then inspiriting
my men, I bade them fall to their oars that we might flee from danger,,
with my head making signs,, and bending forward, on they rowed. When we
had traversed twice the distance on the sea, again to the Cyclops would
I call; but my men, gathering round, sought with soft words to stay me,
each in his separate wise: "'O reckless man, why seek to vex this savage,
who even now, hurling his missile in the deep, drove the ship back to shore
? We verily thought that we were lost. And had he heard a man make but
a sound or speak, he would have crushed our heads and our ships' beams,
by hurling jagged granite stone; for he can throw so far.' "So they spoke,
but did not move my daring spirit; again I called aloud out of an angry
heart: ' Cyclops, if ever mortal man asks you the story of the ugly blinding
of your eye, say that Odysseus made you blind, the spoiler of cities, Laertes'
son, whose home is Ithaca.' "So I spoke, and with a groan he answered:
'Ah, surely now the ancient oracles are come upon me! Here once a prophet
lived, a prophet brave and tall, Telemus, son of Eurymus, who by his prophecies
obtained renown and in prophetic works grew old among the Cyclops. He told
me it should come to pass in aftertime that I should lose my sight by means
of one Odysseus; but I was always watching for the coming of some tall
and comely person, arrayed in mighty power; and now a little miserable
feeble creature blinded me of my eye, overcoming me with wine. nevertheless,
come here, Odysseus, and let me give the stranger's gift, and beg the famous
Land-shaker to aid you on your way. His son am I; he calls him self my
father. He, if he will, shall heal me; none else can, whether among the
blessed gods or mortal men.' "So he spoke, and answering him said I: 'Ah,
would I might as surely strip you of life and being and send you to the
house of Hades, as it is sure the Earth-shaker will never heal your eye!?'
"So I spoke, whereat he prayed to lord Poseidon, stretching his hands forth
toward the starry sky: 'Hear me, thou girder of the land, dark-haired Poseidon
'If I am truly thine, and thou art called my father, vouchsafe no coming
home to this Odysseus, spoiler of cities, Laertes' son, whose home is Ithaca.
Yet if it be his lot to see his friends once more, and reach his stately
house and native land, late let him come, in evil plight, with loss of
all his crew, on the vessel of a stranger, and may he at his home find
trouble.' "So spoke he in his prayer, and the dark-haired god gave ear.
Then once more picking up a stone much larger than before, the Cyclops
swung and sent it, putting forth stupendous power. It fell behind the dark-bowed
ship a little space, but failed to reach the rudder's tip. The sea surged
underneath the stone as it came clown, but the wave swept us forward and
forced us to the shore. "Now when we reached the island where our other
wellbenched ships waited together, while their crews sat round them sorrowing,
watching continually for us, as we ran in we beached our ship among the
sands, and forth we went ourselves upon the shore. Then taking the Cyclops'
sheep out of the hollow ship, we parted all, that none might go lacking
his proper share. The ram my mailed companions gave to me alone, a mark
of special honor in the division of the flock; and on the shore I offered
him to Zeus of the dark cloud, the son of Kronos, who is the lord of all,
burning the thighs. He did not heed the sacrifice. Instead, he purposed
that my well-benched ships should all be lost, and all my trusty comrades.
But all throughout that day till setting sun we sat and feasted on abundant
meat and pleasant wine; and when the sun went down and darkness came, we
laid us down to sleep upon the beach. Then as the early rosy-fingered dawn
appeared, inspiriting my men, I bade them come on board and loose the cables.
Quickly they came, took places at the pins, and sitting in order smote
the foaming water with their oars. "Thence we sailed on, with aching hearts,
glad to be clear of death, though missing our dear comrades."