<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII<br/> <span class="subhead">ODYSSEUS ESCAPES FROM THE CAVE</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Odysseus</span> was determined that he and his comrades should
escape from the cave of the dread Cyclops. Hour after hour
he pondered how he might persuade the giant to let them go,
but at length he thought, ‘I will not persuade him, I will force
him to let us go.’</p>
<p>At that moment, his eye fell upon a great staff or club in
a corner of the cave. He bade his companions make a sharp
point to it. When this was done he hardened it in the fire
and then hid it from sight.</p>
<p>The day passed slowly, but at length evening came and
Polyphemus returned to the cave. His guests shrank into
the farthest corner as the giant began his supper, but ere he
finished, he again stretched out his hand, seized two of his
prisoners, and devoured them. Then Odysseus offered him
a draught of wine which he had brought with him from
Ismarus.</p>
<p>Deep drank the giant, and ere he fell into a sound sleep he
turned to Odysseus saying, ‘<em>No Man</em>, thee will I eat last in
return for thy gift of wine.’</p>
<p>Odysseus waited until he saw that Polyphemus was fast
asleep, then he bade his comrades put the point of the great
staff in the fire. When it was red hot he told them to
thrust it deep into the eye of the giant. So great was the
pain that the Cyclops leaped up from his sleep and hurled
away the staff, uttering loud cries of agony.</p>
<p>The giants who dwelt on the mountains round about
heard the voice of Polyphemus, and together they hastened
to the doorway of the cave.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span></p>
<p>‘What hath so distressed thee, Polyphemus,’ they cried,
‘that thou criest thus aloud through the immortal night and
makest us sleepless? Surely no mortal driveth off thy flocks
against thy will; surely none slayeth thyself by force or
craft?’</p>
<p>‘<em>No Man</em> is slaying me by guile, nor at all by force,’
answered Polyphemus, proud even in his pain.</p>
<p>‘If no man is harming thee, it may be that Zeus has sent
sickness upon thee,’ answered the giants. ‘Pray thou then
to thy father Poseidon for aid. As for us, we will go back to
our slumbers.’</p>
<p>Odysseus laughed to himself as he heard their retreating
feet, for now he was sure that he would be able to save
himself and his comrades.</p>
<p>When morning dawned, Polyphemus, still groaning with
pain, groped his way to the door. Having found it he pushed
the stone a little way to the side to allow his flocks to pass out
of the cave. To make sure that his prisoners did not escape
with the animals, he sat down by the entrance and touched
the back of each ram as it passed. But Odysseus had tied
his followers with osier twigs beneath the rams, and so, in
spite of the care of the giant, all his prisoners escaped.
Odysseus himself was the last to leave the cave, holding fast
to the fleece of the largest ram.</p>
<p>No sooner had Odysseus rejoined his companions than
he loosened the twigs with which he had bound them. Then
together they ran to the shore, driving before them many of
the giant’s best sheep. These they took on board their
ship, and then rowed out some way from land.</p>
<p>Polyphemus soon found that he had been outwitted, and
he began to stumble down toward the sea.</p>
<p>When Odysseus saw him, he bade his men rest on their
oars, while he spoke to the giant in a loud voice.</p>
<p>‘Cyclops,’ he cried, ‘so thou wert not to eat the company
of a weakling by main might in thy hollow cave. Thine
evil deeds were very sure to find thee out, thou cruel man,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
who hadst no shame to eat thy guests within thy gates,
wherefore Zeus hath requited thee and the other gods.’</p>
<p>In his rage Polyphemus took a great rock off the top of a
mountain and hurled it in the direction from which the voice
came. The rock fell near to the bow of the ship, so that the
waters rose and pushed the vessel toward the shore.</p>
<p>But Odysseus seized a pole and swiftly thrust the ship
back from the land. Then he bade the sailors pull for the
open sea with might and main.</p>
<p>When the ship was once more some distance from the
shore, Odysseus taunted the giant yet again with his evil
deeds.</p>
<p>‘Cyclops,’ he cried, ‘if any one of mortal men shall ask
thee of the unsightly blinding of thine eye, say that it was
Odysseus who blinded it, the Waster of Cities, son of Laertes,
whose dwelling is in Ithaca.’</p>
<p>Then the giant, in impotent anger, stretched out his
hands to the heavens and cried, ‘Hear me, Poseidon, girdler
of the earth, god of the dark hair, if indeed I be thy son....
Grant that he may never come to his home, even Odysseus,
waster of cities, son of Laertes, whose dwelling is in Ithaca;
yet if he is ordained to see his friends and come into his well-builded
house and his own country, late may he come, and
in evil case, with the loss of all his company, in the ship of
strangers, and find sorrows in his house.’</p>
<p>And so it came to pass, even as the Cyclops prayed, for
only after many wanderings did Odysseus reach his home,
to find it in the hands of those who prayed that the king
might never return to Ithaca.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
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