Peoples
Harpyiai: a weather-watching folk of NERITON (Peljesac)


A people of NERITON (Peljesac), though likely not KEPHALLENES (occupants of NERITON (Peljesac)—and perhaps of Hittite origin?— known to Telemakhos, Eumaeos, and Penelope alike:

i, 241 (Telemakhos):
But as it is, the spirits of the storm [Harpyiai] have swept him away and left no tidings: he is gone out of sight, out of hearing, and for me he has left anguish and weeping;

xiv, 371: (Eumaios):
But as it is the spirits of the storm [Harpyiai] have swept him away, and left no tidings. I, for my part. dwell allof with the swine, nor do I go to the city, unless haply wise Penelope bids me thither, when tidings come to her from anywhere.

xx, 77 (Penelope):
-meanwhile the spirits of the storm [Harpyiai] snatched away the maidens and gave them to the hateful Erinyes to deal with.

Disliked... folks...considered a menace...
>In later times they were (see oxford classical encyclopaedia)
>It could be said, that, if the Harpyiai are an incredible people, they are much more real (ojo, bad wording) than the fantastic folks which Odysseus met: the Lotophagoi, Laistrygones, Kyklopes, Phaiakes, Seirenes, and so on.
>connection with wooers who are by al counts are not Kephalenes and strangers to
These folk-whoever they were-are likely to be connected with the westernmost tip of Neriton, an inhospitable place in the extreme buffeted by strong winds.
>connection with Penelope's wooers likened to gibbering bats, and with Daidalos, father of Penelope and Icarus who flew like a kite
identity
/quotes/
location
origins/associations


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Kyklopes: not-so-fictitious inhabitants of LEKTON (Hvar) G An unruly, cave-dwelling folk encountered by Odysseus-


    ix , 105 et pas.:
    "Thence we sailed on, grieved at heart, and we came to the land of the Cyclopes, an overweening and lawless folk, who, trusting in the immortal gods, plant nothing with their hands nor plough; but all these things spring up for them without sowing or ploughing, wheat, and barley, and vines, which bear the rich clusters of wine, and the rain of Zeus gives them increase. Neither assemblies for council have they dwell on the peaks of lofty mountains in hollow caves, and each one is lawgiver to his children and his wives, and they reck nothing one of another.
    "Now there is a level isle that stretches aslant outside the harbour, neither close to the shore of the land of the Cyclopes, nor yet far off, a wooded isle. Therein live wild goats innumerable, for the tread of men scares them not away, nor are hunters wont to come thither, men who endure toils in the woodland as they course over the peaks of the mountains. Neither with flocks is it held, nor with ploughed lands, but unsown and untilled all the days it knows naught of men, but feeds the bleating goats. For the Cyclopes have at hand no ships with vermilion cheeks, nor are there ship-wrights in their land who might build them well benched shops, which should perform all their wants, passing to the cities of other folk, as men often cross the sea in ships to visit one another-craftsmen, who would have made of this isle also a fair settlement. For the isle is nowise poor, but would bear all things in season. In it are meadows by the shores of the grey sea, well-watered meadows and soft, where vines would never fail, and in it level plough land, whence they might reap from season to season harvests excceding deep, so rich is the soil beneath; and in it, too, is a harbour giving safe anchorage, where there is no need of moorings, either to throw out anchor-stones or to make fast stern cables, but one may beach one's ship and wait until the sailors' minds bid them put out, and the breezes blow fair. Now at the head of the harbour a spring of bright water flows forth from beneath a cave, and round about it poplars grow. Thither we sailed in, and some god guided us through the murky night; for there was no light to see, but a mist lay deep about the ships and the moon showed no light from heaven, but was shut in by clouds. Then no man's eyes beheld that island, nor did we see the long waves rolling on the beach, until we ran our well-benched ships on shore. And when we had beached the ships we lowered all the sails and ourselves went forth on the shore of the sea, and there we fell asleep and waited for the bright Dawn.
    ...
    "So saying, I went on board the ship and bade my comrades themselves to embark, and to loose the stern cables. So they went on board straightway and sat down upon the benches, and sitting well in order smote the grey sea with their oars. But when we had reached the place, which lay close at hand, there on the land's edge hard by the sea we saw a high cave, roofed over with laurels, and there many flocks, sheep and goats alike, were wont to sleep. Round about it a high court was built with stones set deep in the earth, and with tall pines and high crested oaks. There a monstrous man was wont to sleep, who shepherded his flocks alone and afar, and mingled not with others, but lived apart, with his heart set on lawlessness. For he was fashioned a wondrous monster, and was not like a man that lives by bread, but like a wooded peak of lofty mountains, which stands out to view alone, apart from the rest.
    ...
    "Speedily we came to the cave, nor did we find him within, but he was pasturing his fat flocks in the fields. So we entered the cave and gazed in wonder at all things there. The crates were laden with cheeses, and the pens were crowed with lambs and kids. Each kind was penned separately: by themselves the firstlings, by themselves the later lambs, and by themselves again the newly yeaned. And with whey were swimming all the well-wrought vessels, the milk-pails and the bowls into which he milked. Then my comrades spoke and besought me first of all to take of the cheeses and depart, and thereafter speedly to drive to the swift ship the kids and lambs from out the pens, and to sail over the salt water. But I did not listen to them-verily it would have been better far-to the end that I might see the man himself, and whether he would give me gifts of entertainment. Yet, as it fell, his appearing was not to prove a joy to my conmrades.
    "Then we kindled a fire and offered sacrifice, and ourselves, too, took of the cheeses and ate, and thus we sat in the cave and waited for him until he came back, herding his flocks. He bore a mighty weight of dry wood to serve him at supper time, and flung it down with a crash inside the cave, but we, seized with terror, shrank back into a recess of the cave. But he drove his fat flocks into the wide cavern-all those that he milked; but the males-the rams and the goats-he left without in the deep court. Then he lifted on high and set in place the great door stone, a mighty rock; two and twenty stout four wheeled waggons could not lift it from the ground, such a towering mass of rock he set in the doorway Thereafter he sat down and milked the ewes and bleating goats all in turn, and beneath each dam he placed her young. Then presently he curdled half the white milk, and gathered it in wicker baskets and laid it away, and the other half he set in vessels that he might have it to take and drink, and that it might serve him for supper.


> how the identity with Lekton is established
>the origins of these folk (?)
The name of the Kyklopes is , rather than a two-word-one-language compounded-type ethnicon (as conventionally understood, and yielding "round-face", allusive to one eye in the head), a one-word-two-languages1 compounded-type ethnicon descriptive of this folk, derived from Archaic Illyrian kuk- 'cave' or 'nest' (cognate with 'cocoon' as well as Srb-Cro. kuca, 'house', 'dwelling'), and lep- also 'cave' or 'nest' (cognate with Lepenski Vir as well as Gr. lepis, 'husk', 'shell'), thus, literally, 'cave-dwellers'.
Several caves situated on the southern shores of LEKTON (Hvar), from which a loud yell may be heard across the channel on NERITON (Peljesac) and remeniscent of the bellowing Polyphemus and shouting Odysseus, have been found to have their floor-beds paved with a thick packing of of oyster shells, which, in a way, is also remeniscent of Polyphemus loosing his one eye, gouged out by Odysseus. Such a connection between the Kyklopes and an ample supply of oysters, naturally prevalent in these waters and now of world-fame, invites further speculation that an excessive diet of such sea-food-oysters being especially rich in cholesterol-produced along with the pleasure of eating them the undesirable side-effects of a brutish mentality as well as acromegalia, a condition in which the bone structure acquires an abnormal thickness with an extra layer of tissue, not unlike a callus, making the body become unusually large and distorted, and thus accounting for their awsome aspect. However, independently of such a connection, it should be noted that-for some hitherto unexplained reason-up until relatively recent times the inhabitants of the isle of Hvar were known to be a stock of unusually though not abnormally tall people, so much so, that, by comparison with otherwise tall folk, they towered over these.
1. The notion of two languages (as opposed to two synonyms in the same language) is recurrent in several geonyms of Homeric Geography, and is disturbing, for, it suggests, that these geonyms are perhaps composites of a foreign Pelasgian language and a local Archaic Illyrian.


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Laistrygones:


    x; 80 : (verify in text)
    So for six days we sailed, night and day alike, and on the seventh we came to the lofty citadel of Lamus, even to Telepylus of the Laestrygonians, where herdsman calls to herdsman as he drives in his flock, and the other answers as he drives his forth. There a man who never slept could have earned a double wage, one by herding cattle, and one by pasturing white sheep; for the outgoings of the night and of the day are close together. When we had come thither into the goodly harbour, about which on both sides a sheer cliff runs continuously, and projecting headlands opposite to one another stretch out at the mouth, and the entrance is narrow, then all the rest steered their curved ships in, and the ships were moored within the hollow harbour close together; for therein no wave ever swelled, great or small, but all about was a bright calm. But I alone moored my black ship outside, there on the border of the land, making the cable fast to the rock. Then I climbed to a rugged height, a point of outlook, and there took my stand; from thence no works of oxen or of men appeared; smoke alone we saw springing up from the land. So then I sent forth some of my comrades to go and learn who the men were, who here ate bread upon the earth—two men I chose, and sent with them a third as a hereld. Now when they had gone ashore, they went along a smooth road by which waggons were wont to bring wood down to the city from the mountains. And before the city they ment a maiden drawing water, the goodly daughter of Laestrygonian Antiphates, who had come down to the fair-flowing spring Artacia, from whence they were wont to bear water to the town. So they came up to her and spoke to her, and asked her who was king of this folk, and who they were of whom he was lord. And she showed them forthwith the high-roofed house of her father. Now when they had entered the glorious house, they found there his wife, huge as the peak of a mountain, and they were aghast at her. At once she called from the place of assembly the glorious Antiphates, her husband, and he devised for them woeful destruction. Straightway he seized one of my comrades and made ready his meal, but the other two sprang up and came in flight to the ships. Then raised a cry throughout the city, and as they heard it the mighty Laestrygonians came thronging from all sides, a host past counting, not like men but like the Giants. They hurled at us from the cliffs with rocks huge as a man could lift, and at once there rose throughtout the ships a dreadful din, alike from men that were dying and from ships that were being crushed. And spearing them like fishes they bore them home, a loathly meal. Now while they were slaying those within the deep harbour, I mean while drew my sharp sword from beside my thigh, and cut therewith the cables of my dark-prowed ship; and quickly calling to my comrades bade them fall to their oars, that we might escape from out our evil plight. And they all tossed the sea with their oar-blades in fear of death, and joyfully seaward, away from the beetling cliffs, my ship sped on; but all those other ships were lost together there.

struge= funnel, force things through


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Lotophagoi: fictitious 'lotus'-eaters.

Lotus eaters from the environs of Enope...


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Phaiakes: inhabitants of Skheria (Scõedro)

............ many quotes here--------------


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Seirenes:
    xii, 39: (verify)
    "To the Sirens first shalt thou come [says Kirke to Odysseus], who beguile all men whosoever comes to them. Whoso in ignorance draws near to them and hears the Sirens' voice, he nevermore returns, that his wife and little children may stand at his side rejoicing, butthe Sirens beguile him with their clear-toned song, as they sit in a meadow, and about them is a great heap of bones of mouldering men, and round the bones the skin is shrivelling. But do thou row past them, and anoint the ears of thy comrades with sweet wax, which thou hast kneaded, lest any of the rest may hear. But if thou thyself hast a will to listen, let them bind thee in the swift ship hand and foot upright in the step of the mast, and let the ropes be made fast at the ends to the mast itself, that with delight thou mayest listen to the voice of the two Sirens. And if thou shalt implore and bid thy comrades to loose thee, then let them bind thee with yet more bonds."
    xii; 158, et pas.:
    "First she bade us avoid the voice of the wondrous Sirens, and their flowery meadow. Me alone she bade to listen to their voice; but do ye bind me with grievous bonds, that I may abide fast where I am, upright in the step of the mast, and let the ropes be made fast at the ends to the mast itself; and if I implore and bid you to loose me, then do ye tie me fast with yet more bonds.

    "Thus I rehearsed all these things and told them to my comrades. Meanwhile the well-built ship speedly came to the isle of the two Sirens, for a fair and gentle wind bore her on. Then presently the wind ceased and there was a windless calm, and a god lulled the waves to sleep. But my comrades rose up and furled the sail and stowed it in the hollow ship, and thereafter sat at the oars and made the water white with their polished oars of fir. But I with my sharp sword cut into small bits a great round cake of wax, and kneaded it with my strong hands, and soon the wax grew warm, forced by the strong pressure and the rays of the lord Helios Hyperion. Then I anointed with this the ears of all my comrades in turn; and they bound me in the ship hand and foot, upright in the step of the mast, and made the ropes fast at the ends to the mast itself; and themselves sitting down smote the grey sea with their oars. But when we were as far distant as a man can make himself heard when he shouts,driving swiftly on our way, the Sirens failed not to note the swift ship as it drew near, and they raised their clear-toned song: "'Come hither, as thou farest, renowned Odysseus, great glory of the Achaeans; stay thy ship that thou mayest listen to the voice of us two. For never yet has any man rowed past this isle in his back ship until he has heard the sweet voice from our lips. Nay, he has joy of it , and goes his way a wiser man. For we know all the toils that in wide Troy the Argives and Trojans endured through the will of the gods, and we know all things that come to pass upon the fruitful earth.'

    "So they spoke, sending forth their beautiful voice, and my heart was fain to listen, and I bade my comrades loose me, nodding to them with my brows; but they fell to their oars and rowed on. And presently Perimedes and Eurylochus arose and bound me with yet more bonds and drew them tighter. But when they had rowed past the Sirens, and we could no more hear their voice or their song, then straightway my trusty comrades took away the wax with which I had anointed their ears and loosed me from my bonds".

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