Page:The Iliad and Odyssey of Homer (IA iliadodysseyofho02home).pdf/434

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426
HOMER's ODYSSEY.
Book XVIII.

Urged by the suitors, and the stranger prov'd
Victorious; yes—heav'n knows how much I wish
That, (in the palace some, some in the court)
The suitors all sat vanquish'd, with their heads
Depending low, and with enfeebled limbs, 290
Even as that same Irus, while I speak,
With chin on bosom propp'd at the hall-gate
Sits drunkard-like, incapable to stand
Erect, or to regain his proper home.
So they; and now addressing to the Queen 295
His speech, Eurymachus thus interposed.
O daughter of Icarius! could all eyes
Throughout [1]Iäsian Argos view thy charms,
Discrete Penelope! more suitors still
Assembling in thy courts would banquet here 300
From morn to eve; for thou surpassest far
In beauty, stature, worth, all womankind.
To whom replied Penelope discrete.
The Gods, Eurymachus! reduced to nought
My virtue, beauty, stature, when the Greeks, 305
Whom my Ulysses follow'd, sail'd to Troy.
Could he, returning, my domestic charge
Himself intend, far better would my fame
Be so secured, and wider far diffused.
But I am wretched now, such storms the Gods 310

Of

  1. From Iäsus, once King of Peloponnesus.