Homer on the Cyclopes

In the Odyssey, the legendary poet Homer describes many countries and islands in the seas west of Greece, visited by the prototypical traveler Odysseus after the fall of Troy. Among these islands was one that was inhabited by Cyclopes, one-eyed giants that liked to devour human beings. As soon the ancient Greeks started to comment upon the Odyssey, they argued that many places described by Homer could be identified with locations on Sicily, and it was later agreed that the Strait of Messina was the place where the two monsters Scylla and Charybdis had lived, and that the Cyclops was a native of Sicily.
Of course, this is a rather unpoetical approach of a poem, not unlike trying to find Eliot's Waste Land on a map. On the other hand, several modern scholars have argued that the Odyssey does indeed contain some echoes of the first Greek reconnaissance of the island in the west.
The following text is a description of the island of the Cyclopes; the translation was made by Robert Fitzgerald.
Homer on the Island of the Cyclopes |
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[9.119] [Odysseus saw] an orchard |