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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
said he, “I wish you would send some of your women to my house to take awa the
presents Menelaus gave you.” “We do not know, Piraeus,” answered Telemachus,
“what may happen. If the suitors kill me in my own house and divide my property
among them, I would rather you had the presents than that any of those people should
get hold of them.

If on the other hand I manage to kill them, I shall be much obliged if you will kindly
bring me my presents.” With these words he took Theoclymenus to his own house.
When they got there they laid their cloaks on the benches and seats, went into the
baths, and washed themselves. When the maids had washed and anointed them, and
had given them cloaks and shirts, they took their seats at table. A maid servant then
brought them water in a beautiful golden ewer, and poured it into a silver basin for
them to wash their hands; and she drew a clean table beside them. An upper servant
brought them bread and offered them many good things of what there was in the
house. Opposite them sat Penelope, reclining on a couch by one of the bearing-posts of
the cloister, and spinning. Then they laid their hands on the good things that were
before them, and as soon as they had had enough to eat and drink Penelope said:
“Telemachus, I shall go upstairs and lie down on that sad couch, which I have not
ceased to water with my tears, from the day Ulysses set out for Troy with the sons of
Atreus. You failed, however, to make it clear to me before the suitors came back to the
house, whether or no you had been able to hear anything about the return of your
father.” “I will tell you then truth,” replied her son. “We went to Pylos and saw Nestor,
who took me to his house and treated me as hospitably as though I were a son of his
own who had just returned after a long absence; so also did his sons; but he said he had
not heard a word from any human being about Ulysses, whether he was alive or dead.
He sent me, therefore, with a chariot and horses to Menelaus.

There I saw Helen, for whose sake so many, both Argives and Trojans, were in
heaven’s wisdom doomed to suffer. Menelaus asked me what it was that had brought
me to Lacedaemon, and I told him the whole truth, whereon he said, ‘So, then, these
cowards would usurp a brave man’s bed? A hind might as well lay her new-born
young in the lair of a lion, and then go off to feed in the forest or in some grassy dell.
The lion, when he comes back to his lair, will make short work with the pair of them,
and so will Ulysses with these suitors. By father Jove, Minerva, and Apollo, if Ulysses
is still the man that he was when he wrestled with Philomeleides in Lesbos, and threw
him so heavily that all the Greeks cheered him-if he is still such, and were to come near
these suitors, they would have a short shrift and a sorry wedding. As regards your
question, however, I will not prevaricate nor deceive you, but what the old man of the
sea told me, so much will I tell you in full. He said he could see Ulysses on an island
sorrowing bitterly in the house of the nymph Calypso, who was keeping him prisoner,
and he could not reach his home, for he had no ships nor sailors to take him over the
sea.’ This was what Menelaus told me, and when I had heard his story I came away; the
gods then gave me a fair wind and soon brought me safe home again.” With these
words he moved the heart of Penelope. Then Theoclymenus said to her: “Madam, wife
of Ulysses, Telemachus does not understand these things; listen therefore to me, for I
can divine them surely, and will hide nothing from you.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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