The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel

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The Odyssey: A Modern Sequel Page 27

by Nikos Kazantzakis

then turned his fevered face toward hers as though just then 60

  he’d carried to his forge and on his anvil placed

  bronze metal white-hot from the fire for murderous swords.

  Their Captain roared, “Quick, fellows, rig the sails, be off!

  Our task is done!” Then all, wing-footed, rushed down toward the beach.

  Evening had not yet faded, as on mountain slopes 65

  night stepped with crimson feet like a wild partridge, slowly.

  The tranquil evening veiled the world with sweet delight,

  each heart in the breast’s branches perched like a calm bird

  and sang night-long all it had feared to sing by day.

  A girl sighed in her loneliness, and all leaves swayed, 70

  a widow sent her longings out to browse at night,

  and old king Menelaus fell on his terraced roof

  and slowly shook his head like an exhausted hare.

  He turned his crown in his pale hands and played with it

  for many speechless hours while his mind raced far 75

  on desolate shores, on steeds, on laughter, on white roads.

  His motionless dry eyes looked southward steadily

  as though they followed an unceasing falling star.

  At that same hour the comrades leapt into their ship

  and placed star-breasted Helen gently by the prow. 80

  “Welcome, foam-born, our vessel’s gorgon figurehead

  with your fate-written crystal on your warring breasts!”

  Thus spoke the enduring archer, and his heart rejoiced

  because the unknown far future always stormed and tossed him;

  he never wanted earth to lose her virtue, raped by mind. 85

  The sails and rigging creaked, the painted prow’s eyes glared,

  till like a swimming steed the vessel plunged in foam

  and reared with upright haunches in the streaming sea.

  Astride the bowsprit, the light-headed piper yelled:

  “Hey, fellows, may this holy voyage never end! 90

  Ho, for a slender ship, for Helen at your side,

  to sail the seas without a country endlessly!”

  But Helen watched in silence the sea’s emerald wash,

  the curly momentary foam, and joyed to feel

  the seawind thrusting at her breasts like a man’s hands 95

  and cool her deep down to her foam-smooth rosy heels,

  nor turned her head at the port’s mouth to see that isle

  which sweetly spread its shade and flowering grass for her 97

  when once she twined limbs lovingly with handsome Paris

  and shamed her household gods in an erotic swoon. 100

  As the world-wanderer held the tiller, he recalled

  far-distant shores, and wondered where to set his course.

  Then as the warm stars glowed and thickened round the masts,

  the men pressed close about the narrow deck to eat,

  and the brave crew had never tasted bread more sweet 105

  nor had a cooler mistral ever flicked their brows.

  Man-loving Helen sighed with joy, for once again

  men’s heavy odors rose, great cities shook once more,

  and freedom’s wind blew once again about her brow.

  She had not tasted such sweet bread for many years, 110

  for many years no wind so sweet had touched her brow.

  Strengthened with food, the gallants sat astride the thwarts

  and all life in their entrails laughed like cooling wells

  till in their minds fate blossomed like a crimson rose

  and they, like scarabs, plundered all its golden honey. 115

  These were not waves, nor this a scudding ship they rowed,

  but they were wandering leaf by leaf a fragrant rose

  till all their thighs and bellies filled with pollened gold.

  Their minds shook in their haughty heads, the wide world shook,

  though life was not a cooling waterdrop, nor fate a rose, 120

  but they breathed Helen’s misty breath, and their minds shook.

  Then Kentaur stroked his beard, opened his he-goat lips,

  and with a wily voice spun truths and shameless lies

  in a close web of slaves, rich wine, and golden castles, 125

  and as he talked life turned to legend in his mind:

  how slaves caressed him as he sprawled amid the wine-jugs,

  how from the tower’s roof their master’s laughter plunged

  and ate the strong foundations like a river’s rush,

  then how he swooped on Helen with his eagle claws.

  The horses scattered in the fields, doves in the courts, 130

  until his comrades’ skulls struck sparks, echoed like stones,

  so much had their blood-brother swept them with his guile.

  But Rocky stood apart, leaning above the gunwale,

  admiring flocks of black-white sheep, the goats that ran,

  and other curly herds that pushed behind: a sea 135

  packed full of sheep, the perifold of a Shepherd King.

  Meanwhile their skipper spun strange cities in his mind;

  he thought of sailing through waste seas of the far North

  and like the male worm hang his beard with crystal ice;

  of turning his prow boldly toward the distant South, 140

  toward that dark land of savage beasts and crinkly men

  for which the Cretan bard once opened the iron doors.

  He longed for the black, aromatic shores of Africa,

  land where the sun bakes bread and the full moon is milked.

  “Welcome and hail, black brothers! I did not want to fall 145

  and vanish beyond the waves before I bade goodbye.

  I’ve heard that earth hangs down your neck like a huge drum;

  now raise your hands, my brothers, beat it until it bursts!”

  Thus murmured the deceiving mind of the world-roamer;

  all things seemed beautiful, earth spread before his eyes, 150

  a hand with five roads, luring onward toward the waves.

  He bent above the black eyes of the swan-born mutely

  to see where fate would moor them, but the godly one,

  leaning upon her crystal arms, was idly dreaming:

  a vine of thick grape-clusters grew above her head, 155

  a cool and gentle wind through azure shadows blew,

  and she, stark-naked on a black bull, ambled by, . . .

  As the all-knowing man hung on her bosom’s cliff,

  his great mind dimmed, his castle-skull began to shake,

  and he yearned suddenly to cast his friends mid-sea 160

  like dolphins, and to sail alone with Helen there;

  meanwhile his masts would sprout with clusters of crisp grapes

  and he would lie on vine leaves, fondle her with pride,

  and in her womb entrust a son that one day would surpass him.

  But as the archer horsewhipped man’s unruly passions, 165

  Captain Clam climbed the mast to spy with careful watch

  on wind and weather both amid the starry dark,

  till on the deck abruptly his wild cry rang out:

  “Fellows, take in the sails! A fierce North Wind comes plunging!”

  The archer raised his eyes and like a dragon scanned 170

  the lowering, wrathful clouds that on the billows cast

  their savage claws and blindly dragged the heaving waves.

  The hollow sound of thunder broke, and earth and sea

  was zoned with lightning as though God flashed wrathful eyes

  with fiery strokes for fear the new ship might escape, 175

  that now sighed, bitter and profound, like man’s own heart,

  Then the quick-tempered skipper bit his lips and yelled:

  “You murderer, you! How long will you breathe down my back

  or cleave
my skull with your sharp ax of lightning bolts?

  For shame! Go hide your head! Have you no honor, God, 180

  to take it out on man’s small nutshell of a ship?

  I hoped you wouldn’t come just now because I feared

  this flowering body that sails beside me here would drown;

  you know I don’t care for myself or my harsh hounds,

  but since you’ve deigned to come, hail then a thousand times!” 185

  This sharp arraignment hung still on his bitter lips

  when an enormous wave crashed on his battered head

  till all his body, fingers, lips, and nostrils stung

  as though unnumbered fiery sparks flared up and died.

  Odysseus bit his flaming mustache hard, and mocked: 190

  “That violent squall came close enough to prick me then!”

  Poor Rocky tripped and staggered, grabbed at the rail with fear

  as his proud body buckled, for these storm-tossed fields

  made his young shinbones stagger till with shame he thrust

  his face within his arms that smelled of savory still. 195

  Waves kicked and struck the piper by the mizzenmast

  and when salt blood ran from his gap-toothed mouth, he shrieked:

  “Oho! I’m for the fishes now and a watery grave!

  Spread out your hands, dear God, and save your silly songster;

  I’ll bring you first-grade oil in monstrous buffalo skins!” 200

  The coward vowed and whined, then plunged into the hold.

  Waves rose like cutting scythes, swooped down and threshed the hull

  until it buckled at the knees, reared high, plunged down,

  sighed deeply, and like light foam danced on thundering foam.

  The winds threshed at the sleepless crew all night till God 205

  at daybreak hurled the dark sun like an iron quoit,

  but still strong-souled Odysseus scoffed and gripped the tiller:

  “Blow, foam-brained blabber-lips, choke in your own rage,

  but get this through your head: you won’t eat our poor plank—

  it grips its soul between its teeth and won’t give way!” 210

  Two days and nights they fought with death, lunged down in waves

  and then shot hurtling upward, and again crashed down.

  On the third day the solid waves smashed the frail rudder

  and all the dread gods of the sea with snarling roared

  and shared with howls and laughter the still-living craft. 215

  The South Wind claimed the archer, the Northeaster Helen,

  and scornful Captain North Wind mocked at Captain Clam:

  “What a fine curly beard! I’ll thrust it full of weeds

  that eels and gudgeons may skid through and squirt their milt.

  You’ve got my dander up, and I’m out for vengeance now!” 220

  But Captain Clam flung back the words in North Wind’s teeth:

  “You dolt! I’ve yet to eat much bread and gulp much wine

  before my bones fall to your claws to be licked clean.

  Come butt our hull in vain and break your puny horns!”

  But Kentaur felt already through his hairy thighs 225

  the stinging jellyfish and the black scuttling crabs.

  Flat on his back in the drenched hold, he growled like a bull:

  “Damned if I let you gulp me down without a fight!

  When my time comes to croak, it’ll be on good firm earth!

  Ah for a fresh green branch to whittle a small swritch; 230

  you’d see then, Master Charon, how I’d lay about you!”

  Granite and the slim shepherd, that landlubbery pair,

  grabbed at each other, bit their lips, and then fell flat

  lest fear—what shame!—should slip and pass their quaking throats.

  On the third day a pointed head poked through the wineskins 235

  like a whipped short-winded dog and whined in a shrill voice:

  “Brothers, not one soul shall escape from pitch-black death;

  our crime hangs heavily like a millstone round our necks.

  God roars with thunderbolts and flashes through my head:

  ‘Give the waves sacrifice to expiate your crime!’” 240

  The shrill voice finished and the pointed head at once

  plunged in the hold and left a drenched and shaken crew;

  all glared in silence toward the savage, tossing stern

  where godly Helen lay amid the ropes entangled,

  and Helen felt their furtive looks and shook with dread, 245

  but scorned in her great pride to wail or weep or plead

  or lean her breasts as suppliant on the men’s hard knees.

  She had surpassed the common lot of women, and felt ashamed.

  Hardihood rose in silence and his red stain swelled

  and thrashed his savage face like a live octopus. 250

  He strode across the thwarts toward the all-holy form

  and for a flash the weather cleared and North Wind paused.

  The great-graced lady thrust her face between her hands

  and all life passed before her like an oar-winged dream,

  a gold bird flown, a dulcet dizziness that vanished. 255

  But as the bronzesmith lunged to seize those famous locks,

  he suddenly clenched his fists and slowly turned away

  and bit his red mustache with an ill-tempered shame.

  Swift-eyed Odysseus, who ruled fate with sleepless eyes

  and weighed the souls of his ship’s crew, yelled out with joy: 260

  “Your health, O Hardihood, for in this difficult hour

  you rose up proudly like a king and flouted Death!

  Now, by the brand-new God I bear, I swear this oath:

  on the first land where we shall moor, I’ll crown you king!”

  But the boar-bristled boatman laughed with bitterness: 265

  “Man, don’t you fret! We’ll never see dry land again!

  But, even so, your words have wreathed my carrot-top

  with a gold crown, and I shall drown like a true upright king!”

  But then, as Granite seized the prow, flat on his face,

  he spied an azure peak amid the spuming waves 270

  tossing and gleaming on the heaving sea’s horizon.

  “Ho! Land ahead!” he yelled, and all eyes pierced the spume.

  Captain Clam tried for a long time to see earth’s face,

  and the world-wanderer questioned in his laughing heart

  where of all places the four winds had slung him now. 275

  All strands seemed equally good to him to test man’s soul.

  Then with great joy the old salt-tar yelled out: “It’s Crete!”

  All hearts leapt up and tossed toward the all-holy mother,

  and the sagacious man laughed low and said to his god:

  “I begged for one breadloaf: you cast me ovens full; 280

  one sip of wine: you gave me casks big as my body;

  I begged for a small belt of land, a branch to grasp:

  and lo, from waves you hand me Crete on a gold platter!

  Thanks for the bite, it just exactly suits my hunger!”

  Meanwhile the weather slowly cleared, the squalls calmed down, 285

  and the storm-battered vessel raised its prow and sailed.

  They tied their long oars to the rowlocks, the tholes creaked,

  and keeping the isle in sight, plunged toward it, oar and sail.

  Helen smiled thinly through her tears like the pale dawn;

  the black locks round her temples tossed in the land breeze 290

  as with drenched hair she gently touched the archer’s knees:

  “I have some words to say, my dear, but my voice chokes.”

  Yet as the sweet-voiced lady rose and saw his eyes,

  she paled with fear and leant her head on his soaked chest.

  De
ep in his bottomless eyes she saw Crete rise and fall 295

  and break between his eyebrows like a foundering ship.

  The leader of souls then stroked his beard in silent thought

  and his sharp smile rose in a curve to his thick ears,

  for, many-breasted, shameless, nude, Crete’s body spread

  her practiced thighs amid the waves, swarming with merchants. 300

  He’d often met their wealthy barques on distant shores

  and marveled as they sauntered on the quays adorned

  like birds with peacock plumes and bracelets of pure gold.

  These acrid captains ate and drank till their guts burst,

  they’d seen all, kissed and drained their bodies dry with lust, 305

  till drenched in fine perfumes, fluttering their feathery fans,

  they swooned now in the firm embrace of their black slaves.

  Their fingers were all rotted, but their rings remained,

  their empty loins were withered, but their thin skulls shone

  with wide-eyed sophistry and brimmed with mocking smiles. 310

  In their plush homes, the gods, demeaned to bric-a-brac,

  cooped up like parrots in their cages of gold bars,

  were hung in windows where with human voice they squawked

  and cackled back those words which they were taught to say.

  The archer nailed his eyes on the great, regal island, 315

  and saw Crete stormed and tossed amid the heavy waves

  like a rich galley overstuffed with precious wares.

  They skimmed close till the peaks of Ida flashed serene

  and towns shone white like dragon-eggs wedged in the clefts.

  When Rocky smelled the earth, his soul filled up with loam; 320

  he saw far off, high in the sun, the verdant fields

  and longed to clamber up and hear the jangling goat-bells,

  until his wedge-shaped beard perked up like a he-goat’s.

  The two landlubbers broke in song, like partridges,

  like cool cascading waters in a wooded gorge: 325

  “God, to climb hills again, to clear our heads with air,

  where blooms the haughty asphodel, where pine trees drip

  with resin, where the dappled partridge spreads its wing!

  Ah, that the girl I love might hear and bolt her door

  with a thick spray of basil, fresh mint on her breast 330

  for lookout, and the curled carnation for her sentry.”

  Thus did the mountain lads pour out their hearts in song,

  and rocks grew huge and savage, seashores opened wide

  their arms like a crab’s claw until the battered prow

  plunged groaning, like a bolting colt, in the port’s mouth. 335

 

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