[The Argonautica by Apollonius Rhodius]@TWC D-Link book
The Argonautica

BOOK IV
39/98

And all the defilements in a mass her attendants bore forth from the palace--the Naiad nymphs who ministered all things to her.

And within, Circe, standing by the hearth, kept burning atonement-cakes without wine, praying the while that she might stay from their wrath the terrible Furies, and that Zeus himself might be propitious and gentle to them both, whether with hands stained by the blood of a stranger or, as kinsfolk, by the blood of a kinsman, they should implore his grace.
(ll.

718-738) But when she had wrought all her task, then she raised them up and seated them on well polished seats, and herself sat near, face to face with them.

And at once she asked them clearly of their business and their voyaging, and whence they had come to her land and palace, and had thus seated themselves as suppliants at her hearth.

For in truth the hideous remembrance of her dreams entered her mind as she pondered; and she longed to hear the voice of the maiden, her kinswoman, as soon as she saw that she had raised her eyes from the ground.


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