and lay swooning from sheer exhaustion; presently, when he had got his breath and came Parajumpers Naiset Irene Suomi to himself again, he took off the scarf that Ino had given him and threw it back into the salt stream of the river, whereon Ino received it into her hands from the wave that bore it towards her. Then he left the river, laid himself down among the rushes, and kissed the bounteous earth.
“Alas,” he cried to himself in his dismay, “what ever will become of me, and how is it all to end? If Nashville Predators Paidat I stay here upon the river bed through the long watches of the night, I am so exhausted that the Classic Bedale Waxed Takki Suomi bitter cold and damp may Miesten Pelipaidat make an end of me — for towards sunrise there will be a keen wind blowing from off the river. If, on the other hand, I Kanadanhanhi Mystique Parka Suomi climb the hill Luxury Boulder Suomi side, find shelter in the woods, and sleep in some thicket, I may escape the cold and have a good night’s rest, but some savage beast may take advantage of me and devour me.”
In the end he deemed it best to take to the woods, and he found one upon some high ground not far from the water. There he crept beneath two shoots of olive that grew from a single stock — the one an ungrafted sucker, while the other had been grafted. No wind, however squally, could break through the cover they afforded, nor could the sun’s rays pierce them, nor the rain get through them, so closely did they grow into one another. Ulysses crept under these and began to make himself a bed to lie on, for there was a great litter of dead leaves lying about — enough to make a covering for two or three men even in hard winter weather. He was glad enough to see this, so he laid himself down and heaped the leaves all round him. Then, as one who lives alone in the country, far from any neighbor, hides a brand as fire-seed in the ashes to save himself from having to get a light elsewhere, even so did Ulysses cover himself up with leaves; and Minerva Moncler Ilay Suomi shed a sweet sleep upon his eyes, closed his eyelids, and made him lose all memories of his sorrows.
BOOK VI.
SO HERE Ulysses slept, overcome by sleep and toil; |