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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
to go to.’ “Thus did they speak, but I answered sorrowfully, ‘My men have undone me;
they, and cruel sleep, have ruined me. My friends, mend me this mischief, for you can
if you will.’ “I spoke as movingly as I could, but they said nothing, till their father
answered, ‘Vilest of mankind, get you gone at once out of the island; him whom
heaven hates will I in no wise help. Be off, for you come here as one abhorred of
heaven. ”And with these words he sent me sorrowing from his door.

“Thence we sailed sadly on till the men were worn out with long and fruitless rowing,
for there was no longer any wind to help them. Six days, night and day did we toil, and
on the seventh day we reached the rocky stronghold of LamusTelepylus, the city of the
Laestrygonians, where the shepherd who is driving in his sheep and goats [to be
milked] salutes him who is driving out his flock [to feed] and this last answers the
salute. In that country a man who could do without sleep might earn double wages,
one as a herdsman of cattle, and another as a shepherd, for they work much the same
by night as they do by day.

“When we reached the harbour we found it land-locked under steep cliffs, with a
narrow entrance between two headlands. My captains took all their ships inside, and
made them fast close to one another, for there was never so much as a breath of wind
inside, but it was always dead calm. I kept my own ship outside, and moored it to a
rock at the very end of the point; then I climbed a high rock to reconnoitre, but could
see no sign neither of man nor cattle, only some smoke rising from the ground. So I sent
two of my company with an attendant to find out what sort of people the inhabitants
were.

“The men when they got on shore followed a level road by which the people draw their
firewood from the mountains into the town, till presently they met a young woman
who had come outside to fetch water, and who was daughter to a Laestrygonian named
Antiphates. She was going to the fountain Artacia from which the people bring in their
water, and when my men had come close up to her, they asked her who the king of that
country might be, and over what kind of people he ruled; so she directed them to her
father’s house, but when they got there they found his wife to be a giantess as huge as a
mountain, and they were horrified at the sight of her.

“She at once called her husband Antiphates from the place of assembly, and forthwith
he set about killing my men. He snatched up one of them, and began to make his
dinner off him then and there, whereon the other two ran back to the ships as fast as
ever they could. But Antiphates raised a hue and cry after them, and thousands of
sturdy Laestrygonians sprang up from every quarter-ogres, not men. They threw vast
rocks at us from the cliffs as though they had been mere stones, and I heard the horrid
sound of the ships crunching up against one another, and the death cries of my men, as
the Laestrygonians speared them like fishes and took them home to eat them. While
they were thus killing my men within the harbour I drew my sword, cut the cable of
my own ship, and told my men to row with alf their might if they too would not fare
like the rest; so they laid out for their lives, and we were thankful enough when we got
into open water out of reach of the rocks they hurled at us. As for the others there was
not one of them left.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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