"The G.o.ddess led them to rich couches and chairs, and she prepared a drink for them of golden honey and purple wine, white fresh cheese, and meal of corn. But she poured a brew of magic herbs into the drink, and when they had pa.s.sed the bowl from hand to hand and drunk she waved a wand of cedar wood over them."
He stopped, choking with emotion and shaking with horror at what he had seen. He covered his face with his hands.
Ulysses placed a firm hand upon his shoulder, and he took up his tale once more. "And when she waved her wand behold a horror! For suddenly my comrades dwindled, and were changed to swine. The bristles of swine grew out upon them, and they grunted like swine, but still the souls of men shone out of their eyes. And she drove them away into a pen, and threw them beech nuts, laughing most musically. And I, the unhappy one, fled and am come hither with my tale."
Ulysses rose with a pale set face, and stern hard lines flashed out round his lips. For a moment he prayed in silence to Athene. Then he slung his strung bow upon his shoulder, and loosened the arrows in the quiver, testing each one for a flaw in the shaft. He took his great silver-studded sword and buckled it round his waist. "I alone, my comrades, must go to the palace of the enchantress," he said. "I have no choice but to go and strive. May the G.o.ds preserve you, friends."
He was preparing to move away when they all entreated him to remain with them, but he would not listen, and as he moved away and was lost to their sight they broke out into loud praises of him among themselves.
It was ever thus. Their father and captain was first in wisdom and courage, and had always seemed to them more G.o.d than man.
Ulysses pa.s.sed over the meadows with slow sure step, thinking deeply.
The forest closed about him, dark and lonely, and his walk changed. He became alert, walking warily and softly. His keen eyes roved over the untrodden paths, seeking to pierce the mystery of the greenwood.
He had halted by a brook for a moment, debating which path he should venture, when help came to him.
There was a crash in the tree tops above him, a glittering ball of light fell through the green, and a wind rushed among the leaves, suddenly rousing all the voices of the wood.
[Ill.u.s.tration: THEN HE CAME SWIFTLY UPON THE GLEAMING PALACE.
_Page 45._]
A young and beautiful man, holding a golden rod, with a slight down upon his lip, came towards him.
Ulysses knew that the G.o.d Hermes had flashed down from heaven to be his counsellor. He fell upon his knees before the divine messenger.
"The great Athene has sent me to you, king," said the G.o.d, "for she heard your prayer upon the sh.o.r.e, and will deliver you from the forest danger. Here is a sprig of the magic herb moly. Take it in your hand for a safeguard against the wiles of Circe.
"When you go into the palace she will mix you her enchanted potion, and strike you with her wand. Do you draw your sword, and make as though to slay her. Then she will fear greatly and swear to do you no harm."
Ulysses took the white flowered talisman, and Hermes vanished among the trees.
Then he came swiftly upon the gleaming palace, and going up to the marble porch struck upon it with his sword hilt, and called to the G.o.ddess.
She glimmered towards him. Her hair was like a young horse-chestnut fresh from the pod. Her eyes were like pools of violet water, her neck was a tower of ivory, and her lips were red as sunset.
The flower of evil, the G.o.ddess of strange sins!
She smiled at the hero, and led him by the hand to a table on which was a golden cup, proffering it to him in welcome.
Ulysses bowed low before her loveliness, and as he drank there was a strange smile in his eyes.
The enchantress looked at him steadily. For a single moment a ripple of doubt crossed her face, but suddenly she seized her cedarn rod and smote his side, crying, "Get you to the stye, and lie there in filth with your companions."
Ulysses drew his great sword, and held it over her with menacing eyes.
She drooped to him, a very woman! and clung round him, weeping, and he could feel her warm heart beating, beating close to his. Her lovely hair fell around her in a golden cloud, and tears streamed down her cheeks as she swore by the G.o.ds on the Holy Hill never to harm him.
And looking on her sinful loveliness the brain of Ulysses burned for her, and he took her lithe body in his strong arms and pressed the blossom of her lips to his. Her arms stole round him, and she called him lord and king.
Then with a soft smile she led him to the courtyard where the swine lay sleeping in the sun. When the foul beasts saw Ulysses they set up a horrid chorus of grunting, and he raged to see his valiant friends so degraded. But clinging to him, the G.o.ddess raised her hand, and the swine vanished, and the goodly mariners stood up among the straw, more straight and tall than before, with all the marks of hardship and travel smoothed from their faces.
That night the other mariners came up from the sh.o.r.e, guided by Ulysses. And the amber lamps flared in the hall, and all night till daybreak they made a great feast. They sang in praise of love and wine, and Circe sat at the right hand of the King of Ithaca.
When the rosy dawn rushed up the sky, the G.o.ddess rose.
The lamps paled in the fresh new light, and the feast was over.
The mariners lay in sleep about the board, and the purple wine was spilt about them.
Only the G.o.ddess and the Hero were awake.
Then she said, "Lord and love, the night is over. The sun climbs the sky, the woodlands awake. But let us go into my scented chamber, my purple chamber where the day never comes. There will we lie in love and sleep and forget the day."
She led him by the hand over the cool marble floor. The purple curtains fell behind them with a soft noise of falling. All sound was hushed in the courts of the palace, and the whole house was still.
THE THIRD EPISODE
HOW ULYSSES WALKED IN h.e.l.l, AND OF THE ADVENTURE OF THE SIRENS AND SCYLLA
The King of Ithaca stood all alone on a gloomy barren sh.o.r.e, spear in hand. The sky lowered black overhead, and from the vast yawning hole in the terrible cliff which rose up before him he seemed to hear strange wailings and faint cries coming, so it seemed, from a great distance.
Had he at last broken away from the loving arms of Circe for this horror? Stung once more by the latent manhood in his blood, he had roused his energies and left the enchanted island to set out once more upon the weary quest for home. He had bade the G.o.ddess farewell and sailed away from the island of sweet l.u.s.t to seek a ghostly counsellor and to drink deep at that fountain of wisdom which was once the glory of Thebes.
When Circe had bade him, if he would indeed get back to Ithaca and leave her arms, seek the dead Tiresias in the place of the dead it had seemed an easy thing.
What were pale ghosts to a warrior of Troyland and the vanquisher of Polyphemus? If the old seer alone could tell him how to conquer the wrath of Poseidon and win to his wife"s arms once more, should he not go with a will?
[Ill.u.s.tration: THEN HE WAS, IN AN INSTANT MOMENT, AWARE OF A MORE THAN MORTAL PRESENCE.
_Page 49._]
And he had set out with his crew, and the magic wind which Circe gave them had brought them hither over grey sad seas, while they had touched nor oars nor helm.
And now Ulysses went slowly up to the fissure in the rock, but a long solitary cry made him reel back trembling as his brave heart had never done before.
Then he was, in an instant moment, aware of a more than mortal presence. Into that dread place came the awful majesty of the Queen of Heaven, and he fell to the ground before Athene.
The full flowing river of her speech came down upon him.
"If thou wouldst hold thy wife once more, Ulysses, and see thy rocky western home, then must thou dare this peril. None can help thee now save thou thyself. So it is decreed by the G.o.ds. If so be it that thy courage fails thee now then wilt thou be a wanderer for ever."
"Lady of Heaven," he said, "I dare not go. Oh, anything but that."
"Penelope!" she murmured sweetly.
"I cannot face the dead."