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Link to an image of this page  Link to an image of this page  [F2v p84]

Iusta vindicta.[1]

Just recompense

Dum residet Cyclops sinuosi in faucibus antri,
Haec secum teneras concinit inter oves:
Pascite vos herbas, sociis ego pascar Achivis,
Postremumque Utin viscera nostra ferent.
Audiit haec Ithacus, Cyclopaque lumine cassum
Reddidit, en poenas ut suus author habet[2]. [3]

Sitting in the mouth of his arching cave, the Cyclops sang thus to himself amidst his gentle sheep: Do you feed on grass; I shall feed on the Greek companions, and last of all my belly shall get No-man. The man from Ithaca heard this and made the Cyclops eyeless. See how the one who plotted misfortune collects it himself!

Link to an image of this page  Link to an image of this page  [F3r p85]

Juste vengeance.

Cyclops homme ayant ung seul oeil,
Chantoit en gardant ses moutons:
Moutons mangez, blette, ou cerfueil,
Je mangeray des valetons.
Ulixes qui oyt ces tons,
Luy creva loeil dune grande perche:
Ainsi ce fier Roy des gloutons
Le mal recoit, que a aultruy cherche.

Notes:

1.  Before the 1536 edition, Wechel editions used a different picture.

2.  A proverbial sentiment: cf. Erasmus, Adagia 3091, Di tibi dent tuam mentem.

3.  For the story of Ulysses (the man from Ithaca) in the Cyclops’ cave and his escape by blinding the Cyclops, see Homer, Odyssey 9.177 ff. Ulysses had told the Cyclops his name was No-man. (Utis l. 4).


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