lcimedon
approved of; and Epopeus[91] as well, the cheerer of their spirits, who
by his voice gave both rest and time to the oars; {and} so did all the
rest; so blind is the greed for booty. 'However,' I said, 'I will not
allow this ship to be damaged by this sacred freight. Here I have the
greatest share of right.' and I opposed them at the entrance.
"Lycabas, the boldest of all the number, was enraged, who, expelled from
a city of Etruria, was suffering exile as the punishment for a dreadful
murder.[92] He, while I was resisting, seized hold of my throat with his
youthful fist, and shaking me, had thrown me overboard into the sea, if
I had not, although stunned, held fast by grasping a rope. The impious
crew approved of the deed. Then at last Bacchus (for Bacchus it was), as
though his sleep had been broken by the noise, and his sense was
returning into his breast after {much} wine, said: 'What are you doing?
What is this noise? Tell me, sailors, by what means have I come hither?
Whither do you intend to carry me?' 'Lay aside thy fears,' said Proreus,
'and tell us what port thou wouldst wish to reach. Thou shalt stop at
the land that thou desirest.' 'Direct your course then to Naxos,'[93]
says Liber, 'that is my home; it shall prove a hospitable land for you.'
"In their deceit they swore by the ocean and by all the Deities, that so
it should be; and bade me give sail to the painted ship. Naxos was to
our right; {and} as I was {accordingly} setting sail for the right hand,
every one said for himself, 'What art thou about, madman? What insanity
possesses thee, Acoetes? Stand away to the left.' The greater part
signified {their meaning} to me by signs; some whispered in my ear what
they wanted. I was at a loss, and I said, 'Let some one else take the
helm;' and I withdrew myself from the execution both of their
wickedness, and of my own calling. I was reviled by them all, and the
whole crew muttered {reproaches} against me. AEthalion, among them, says,
'As if, forsooth, all our safety is centred in thee,' and he himself
comes up, and takes my duty; and leaving Naxos, he steers a different
course. Then the God, mocking them as if he had at last but that moment
discovered their knavery, looks down upon the sea from the crooked
stern; and, like one weeping, he says: 'These are not the shores,
sailors, that you have promised me; this is not the land desired by me.
By what act have I deserved this treatment? What honor is i
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