Read The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel Page 25


  till the pale king turned to consult his friend in fear:

  “Help me, dear friend! What shall I do, for my heart quakes?”

  But the lone man rejoiced to touch the iron barbs 875

  of magic charms that jangled in the sun-blond braids.

  He then recalled the old male Worm, and his mind reeled.

  The abject king asked him again, and gasped for breath:

  “Help me, dear friend! What shall I do, for my heart quakes?”

  The archer turned, gazed on him well, then flung his shaft: 880

  “Your loins are shrunk and dry! Now that new blood pours down,

  open your veins and graft them! Let fate’s will be done!”

  The king puffed up his chest, and his heart heaved with pride:

  “My strength is like a lioness who has given birth!

  Welcome, blond beasts, come step into my yawning mouth! 885

  Take fields, plow hard, but I shall gather the gold grain!

  Take slopes and plant the vineyards, but the wine is mine!

  Take women to your beds, take men, may your wombs bulge,

  but I, your Great Chief, shall corral your children yearly!

  If you’re agreed, we’ll slay a he-goat and swear oaths.” 890

  A strapping red-haired woman raised her hands on high:

  “God shouts and asks for earth, he likes your flocks and fields.

  Forward! Let’s slay black he-goats and exchange great oaths!”

  Odysseus smiled and winked to an old barbarian chief:

  “I know what god rolls down on wheels with grappling irons 895

  and from the high snow-covered peaks sweeps through these fields!”

  The old chief turned till blue and black eyes merged in stealth

  and for a long time their crossed glances sparked with fire.

  The lion had pounced upon his prey, devoured it whole,

  and soon, with his rude tongue had wiped his bloodstained chops; 900

  the lovesick sweating bear had finished his slow dance

  and in the moonlight licked his bandy paws like honey;

  so did the archer caress the old barbarian chief

  who licked his lips as though they dripped with blood and honey

  when he first heard the foolish king give up his fields. 905

  The bearers of good news set forth, grinning with glee,

  and the sharp-eyebrowed evening with her new moon smiled.

  Then the two kings, sunk deep in thought, stepped silently

  beyond the brazen threshold guarded by two aging lions,

  Tall, gracious Helen welcomed them in the great chamber, 910

  and when Odysseus raised his eyes, his heart rejoiced

  because the dress she wore spoke of their secret fight:

  a lengthy sea-blue mantle stitched with shells and stars,

  pale pearly nautili that sailed ground the hem,

  two rows of oars that plied the waves about her waist, 915

  and when she moved, the house was drowned in shining sea.

  A conch resounded sweetly in the boatman’s breast,

  but he choked down his joy, and through the skylight watched

  how night like a black panther prowled the royal groves.

  That night the famed seductress ordered the rich feast 920

  of their great secret flight spread in the men’s quarters.

  They sat on thrones and ate of the fine food in silence,

  and as the undiluted wine snaked through their grains

  the hypocrite raised high his brimming golden cup:

  “I drink this vineyard’s blood to your good health, dear friend! 925

  My words are salt and water, yet friendship stands like rock;

  our lips pour out a stream of uncontrollable words—

  the mindless wine spills some and some our wretched need,

  and some the mad wind that sweeps by and knocks us giddy,

  but the heart’s words are deep, dear friend, they need sea-divers. 930

  I speak now from the heart in separation’s hour:

  whenever I recall your eyes, the world grows sweet!”

  Tears suddenly blurred the king’s dark eyes as he replied:

  “Brother, a piercing voice of sorrow tears my heart:

  ‘Open your eyes and gaze your fill for the last time, 935

  O soul, for you shall never again look on Odysseus!’ ”

  The double-minded man’s voice choked, his throat drew tight:

  “Dear friend, I hear the same sad voice tear through my heart,

  but the tough mind won’t stoop to tears and soft caresses—

  I freely mold my fate as though it were my will; 940

  I bless, dear friend, the destiny that joined us both

  to see strange peoples, shores, and towns, that on a night

  like this we may sit drinking in your palace here

  and gaze with marveling dread on our dissembling Helen.

  But we have said enough, and our eyes overflow.” 945

  The king, however, was not consoled, and sadly thought:

  ‘The heart is not enough, it’s an unbrimming sieve

  poured full of joy both night and day, yet never full.”

  The subtle man then turned and smiled on arch-eyed Helen:

  “I drink your health, O deathless daughter of the Swan! 950

  You merge both god and beast, and on your eyebrows weigh

  earth’s savage passions and the sky’s high holy grace.

  May you be blessed because you lit in slothful souls

  a raging war that opened minds and widened seas

  till in our crude heads victory rose and sat enthroned— 955

  a small bird of sweet song and blood-bedabbled wings.

  May you be blessed on green earth and the glaucous waves;

  you burst in the unflowering grass like a great rose,

  like a great thought, all curly, flaming, many-leaved,

  O rose of earth, loved of all eyes, the black air’s joy!

  The soil blooms for your sake, poor brides grow beautiful, 960

  for every groom in darkness kisses his own Helen.

  We weep and cry till in our minds the swan’s child smiles

  and on the peak of darkness shines like mother’s bosom

  till the distracted mind laughs like a suckling babe, 965

  The flower of Lethe, Lady, blooms between your breasts.”

  Helen laughed silverly to hear her praises sung:

  “The great all-knowing goddesses on their cool beds

  taught you nightlong your many blandishments, your spells,

  and how to unlock the double bolted woman’s heart, 970

  till now, in truth, you hold us like a full-blown rose,

  and when you talk, I’m deeply glad to be alive!

  A woman’s beauties are her gifts and dear adornments,

  but only when a great man’s hands enjoy them and caress them.”

  The king then raised his tearstained face and softly touched 975

  his comrade’s knees and smiled upon him tenderly:

  “My heart bids me give you a precious, parting gift

  to hold deep in your heart and to recall your friend,

  for if I fade from your bright mind, I shall soon perish!”

  He spoke, then left to open his huge treasure chests. 980

  With cunning craft the archer watched him fade in dark

  and vanish in the labyrinthine palace vaults,

  then turned in time to catch the smile on Helen’s lips

  and in a sudden shock his heart ached for his friend:

  “Doesn’t your marble heart feel for him, Lady, now?” 985

  But the uncompassionate seed of god and beast replied:

  “My marble heart feels no compassion, for that’s gone;

  life can create with him nor fruit nor flower now.”

  He sighed with heavy heart, for in the woman
’s eyes

  he saw man lying supine, decked out with funeral gifts, 990

  and shuddered, for he felt he too might one day lie

  like a dead man in both her starry, nightborn eyes,

  for woman’s breast is a sweet refuge, a safe harbor.

  He shook his still ungiddy head from her sweet glance:

  “My own heart throbs to fall in his good arms with love; 995

  I hold his body in my hands, and my heart breaks

  as though I grasped sand slipping slowly down to earth.”

  Meanwhile the king bent low and soon ransacked his chests

  till his deep palms with gold and silver treasure brimmed

  and with ecstatic greed and joy caressed the wealth 1000

  his crude forebears had heaped with so much blood and war.

  He chose at length his most illustrious prize and raised

  it high in the lamp’s spluttering flame to glut his eyes.

  Within his hands there flashed the small yet golden form

  of that trustworthy god who screens and safeguards friendship: 1005

  in, his right hand he held the lightning bolt of vengeance,

  and in his left a flaming ruby, man’s own heart.

  Trembling, the king caressed the god and begged with fervor:

  “Keep well, almighty dreadful God, in my friend’s heart,

  keep there my memory green, let not my shadow fade; 1010

  I have none better on earth to whom my soul may cleave.”

  Still praying to the god, he placed him for remembrance,

  and his last hope, in his friend’s double-dealing palms:

  “Dear friend, there’s no more lustrous gift in all my chests.

  That night when God embraced my lovely mother-in-law, 1015

  he flapped his wings like a great swan, and fled forever.

  The god-kissed bride tore at her hair and begged a sign

  for solace that a god had taken her first flower,

  and as she wailed, she felt this gold shape lie in her lap.

  On my blessed wedding night, the Swan’s celestial mate 1020

  placed it upon my hearth that the dread god might guard me.

  Now I rejoice to place it in your palm, Odysseus.”

  Then the arch-cunning merchant, learned in all merchandise

  of heaven and earth, weighed in his palm the gift with skill:

  “Brother, I love the goldsmith’s hands that fashioned this; 1025

  it must be worth a huge shipload of wine and grain.

  May God who holds the keys to man’s heart witness this,

  and may I never again know joy nor my own land,

  but may my entrails heave and sway like the sea’s waves

  if my mind ever lets you fall in Lethe’s well. 1030

  I call on you, pure patron of great friendship, hear me!”

  Thus did the perjurer speak, and the god squirmed in dark

  until a voice buzzed in the heart-seducer’s ears:

  “Ah, cunning, sly, perfidious fox, have you no shame?

  If I should rise to tell all that I know of you, 1035

  mocker of gods, the stones of earth would rise to stone you!”

  The treacherous man scowled angrily and shouted back:

  “Sit on your eggs, you deathless scarecrow; don’t get smart!

  If I should rise and to the quaking mob disclose

  all that I know of you, O fool, you’re a lost wretch!” 1040

  A quivering voice pled secretly in whispers then:

  “Swallow your tongue, dear friend, hold our old secret fast;

  don’t let the fools get wind of us, keep all your wits!”

  The arrogant man laughed loudly, and in calloused hands

  tossed high the terror-stricken god like burning coals. 1045

  The king was startled to hear the loud indecent laughs,

  but the sly man embraced his friend with feigned concern

  and for the second time swore friendship’s deathless oath:

  “I’ll not forget you, friend, even though my dust turn dust;

  all my life long you’ll live, too, in my memory 1050

  until my body stoops and spills its brains in mud

  and you and I descend like moles or shades to Hades.”

  But the king groaned, for such need seemed but bitter balm:

  “Alas, my mind rejects the thought, my heart can’t bear

  to touch and talk with its old friend and then to turn 1055

  and find him suddenly vanished in the empty air.”

  The demigod then pitied his ill-fated friend:

  “Brother, all life’s a dream; don’t let your heart grow bitter.

  Troy rose once in our brains like a resplendent toy

  fashioned of mud and women, slaughters and fat shores 1060

  that we gulped down like a deep cup of maddening wine

  till our minds reeled and set their sails for open seas.

  Don’t let the mocking spirit of wine deceive you,” friend;

  it’s not true that we once set out with our swift ships,

  that for ten years we fought to take that famous town 1065

  or that one night its dust was strewn in air like smoke;

  all these were monstrous phantoms, playthings of the brain.

  The mind of giddy man sways but in slight commotion

  and fashions shores and castles, gods, sweet bodies, ships,

  and on the highest peak of all its wealth enthrones its Helen. 1070

  These creatures shine like mist a moment in our minds

  then fade from sight abruptly when a small breath blows.”

  Thus did the double-dealing man attempt with Craft

  to calm his friend who soon would lose his light, his Helen.

  The exhausted king was startled, as though his life had drained, 1075

  but memory swiftly reared and flared high in his head:

  “Though all life were but dream and empty shadow, yet

  I held embraced the holy truth, dear friend, that day

  when all the castle burned and from the savage flames

  I crushed full-fragrant cooling Helen within my arms.” 1080

  Then Menelaus smiled with sorrow as he recalled

  how he had raised her in his arms, a fainting fawn,

  and plunged in sea up to his loins, parting the waves.

  The armies were all dazzled, and at once the ten

  long years flared like blue thunder in their heads, and vanished. 1085

  If only Zeus had crashed like lightning in that hour,

  the high peak of his life, and scorched him into cinders!

  He closed his eyes and secretly deplored his fate,

  but slow, unwilling, step by step, his drowsy mind

  slid down and fell, a lump of muddy earth, to torpid sleep. 1090

  And when the two remained alone in the men’s quarters, 1091

  the brains of the maid-snatcher gleamed like mountain peaks.

  “Helen, for ten long years, they say, we fought in vain

  to save your god-born body from inglorious shame

  the while you sat, untouched, high in a cooling cloud 1095

  and sent, they say, only your shade to both armed camps.”

  Helen sat silent in the night, rejoiced to hear

  how swift her legend spun on fantasy’s fast spindle,

  for it had been no shade that stretched on soft divans,

  no shade that cried out with delight in tight embrace; 1100

  but she said nothing, for she loved to hear how men

  bandied her name about with words dispersed by winds;

  her eyes burned with black flames and speared the archer’s eyes

  and her fine features played like the seductive sea.

  But the bird-catcher frowned and came to stand beside her: 1105

  “Today when my brain sees you through a mist of wine

  you seem the variable
morning star of shifting face;

  yet, by my body and the soul which it enfolds,

  I want to sunder truth from dream today, fair Helen.”

  The eyes of the seductress gleamed like showering lights: 1110

  “How can the shallow brain of mortals, O sage man,

  separate vapid truth from dream, or mist from mist?

  Both life and death are rich, intoxicating wines.

  Was it then I who laughed and wept on Trojan shores,

  or but my empty shade, and I in my husband’s bed 1115

  dreaming of seizures, handsome youths, and gallant deeds?

  Even now, as we sit here beside our peaceful hearth,

  the mind grows blurred, the dream blows and the palace creaks

  like a full-masted sloop and sails in the wind’s arms.”1119

  Then both fell silent, a sweet dizziness drenched the air, “ 1120

  Helen’s faint breathing smelled like cool refreshing sea,

  a water’s whispering susurration lisped far off,

  and sails sprang suddenly from their breasts, from cups of wine,

  and from the cobwebbed armor and dull mother-of-pearl

  that decked the erotic swans’ wide wings from wall to wall. 1125

  The palace rose in dance, the corner towers swayed,

  the cypress trees, tall in the courts, like rigging swished,

  and suddenly peacocks screamed like seagulls in the night.

  Odysseus rose, and his head throbbed with miracle;

  he wanted to shout, “Set sail!” but he restrained his cry 1130

  for fear the wonder might fly out like frightened birds.

  In hovering silence then they heard the king laugh low,

  for he was dreaming in sweet sleep how as a youth

  he’d played at hide-and-seek with Helen secretly.

  But they moved on nor turned their heads to look at him 1135

  and took the long unending voyage of departure.

  Again her firm-shaped lips, round as a ring, sang out:

  “I’m not a goddess, and I hate the empty skies;

  I love the earth, my heart is filled with loam and roses.

  This house constrains me now, my spirit spreads to clasp 1140

  fierce conflagrations, open seas, and wild men’s knees.

  But if I leave with you at dawn for your black ship,

  I won’t rush to the cliff’s embrace like a green girl.

  Paris passed once through the great gaping sea, and vanished!

  I, even as you, refuse to let my soul -decay.” 1145

  The mind of the quick-tempered man spun like a whirlwind

  and flung her swiftly round its apex like a rose leaf.