II Cyclops . Posidon Cyclops Only look, father, what that cursed stranger has been doing to me! He made me drunk, and set upon me whilst I was asleep, and blinded me. Posidon Who has dared to do this? Cyclops He called himself ‘Noman’ at first: but when he had got safely out of range, he said his name was Odysseus. Posidon I know—the Ithacan; on his way back from Troy. But how did he come to dosuch a thing? He is not distinguished for courage. Cyclops When I got back from the pasture, I caught a lot of the fellows in my cave. Evidently they had designs upon the sheep: because when I had blocked up my doorway (I have a great big stone for that), and kindled a fire, with a tree that I had brought home from the mountain,—there they were trying to hide themselves. I saw they were robbers, so I caught a few of them, and ate them of course, and then that scoundrel of a Noman, or Odysseus, whichever it is, gave me something to drink, with a drug in it; it tasted and smelt very good, but it was villanously heady stuff; it made everything spin round; even the cave seemed to be turning upside down, and I simply didn’t know where I was; and finally I fell off to sleep. And then he sharpened that stake, and made it hot in the fire, and blinded me in my sleep; and blind I have been ever since, father. Posidon You must have slept pretty soundly, my boy, or you would have jumped up in the middle of it. Well, and how did Odysseus get off? He couldn’t move that stone away, I know. Cyclops I took that away myself, so as to catch him as he went out. I sat down in the doorway, and felt about for him with my hands. I just let the sheep go out to pasture, and told the ram everything I wanted done. Posidon Ah! and they slipped out under the sheep? But you should have set the other Cyclopes on to him. Cyclops I did call them, and they came: but when they asked me who it was that was playing tricks with me, I said ‘Noman’; and then they thought I was mad, and went off home again. The villain! that name of his was just a trick! And what I minded most was the way in which he made game of my misfortune: ‘Not even Papa can put this right,’ he said. Posidon Never mind, my boy; I will be even with him. I may not be able to cure blindness, but he shall know that I have something to say to mariners. He is not home yet. Francis George Fowler III Posidon , Alpheus Posidon What is the meaning of this, Alpheus? unlike others, when you take your plunge you do not mingle with the brine as a river should; you do not put an end to your labours by dispersing; you hold together through the sea, keep your current fresh, and hurry along in all your original purity; you dive down to strange depths like a gull or a heron; I suppose you will come to the top again and show yourself somewhere or other. Alpheus Do not press me, Posidon; a love affair; and many is the time you have been in love yourself. Posidon Woman, nymph, or Nereid? Alpheus All wrong; she is a fountain. Posidon A fountain? and where does she flow? Alpheus She is an islander—in Sicily. Her name is Arethusa,