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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
beheld her the suitors were so overpowered and became so desperately enamoured of
her, that each one prayed he might win her for his own bed fellow.

“Telemachus,” said she, addressing her son, “I fear you are no longer so discreet and
well conducted as you used to be. When you were younger you had a greater sense of
propriety; now, however, that you are grown up, though a stranger to look at you
would take you for the son of a well-to-do father as far as size and good looks go, your
conduct is by no means what it should be. What is all this disturbance that has been
going on, and how came you to allow a stranger to be so disgracefully ill-treated? What
would have happened if he had suffered serious injury while a suppliant in our house?
Surely this would have been very discreditable to you.” “I am not surprised, my dear
mother, at your displeasure,” replied Telemachus, “I understand all about it and know
when things are not as they should be, which I could not do when I was younger; I
cannot, however, behave with perfect propriety at all times. First one and then another
of these wicked people here keeps driving me out of my mind, and I have no one to
stand by me. After all, however, this fight between Irus and the stranger did not turn
out as the suitors meant it to do, for the stranger got the best of it. I wish Father Jove,
Minerva, and Apollo would break the neck of every one of these wooers of yours, some
inside the house and some out; and I wish they might all be as limp as Irus is over
yonder in the gate of the outer court. See how he nods his head like a drunken man; he
has had such a thrashing that he cannot stand on his feet nor get back to his home,
wherever that may be, for has no strength left in him.” Thus did they converse.
Eurymachus then came up and said, “Queen Penelope, daughter of Icarius, if all the
Achaeans in Iasian Argos could see you at this moment, you would have still more
suitors in your house by tomorrow morning, for you are the most admirable woman in
the whole world both as regards personal beauty and strength of understanding.” To
this Penelope replied, “Eurymachus, heaven robbed me of all my beauty whether of
face or figure when the Argives set sail for Troy and my dear husband with them. If he
were to return and look after my affairs, I should both be more respected and show a
better presence to the world. As it is, I am oppressed with care, and with the afflictions
which heaven has seen fit to heap upon me. My husband foresaw it all, and when he
was leaving home he took my right wrist in his hand-‘Wife, ‘he said, ‘we shall not all
of us come safe home from Troy, for the Trojans fight well both with bow and spear.
They are excellent also at fighting from chariots, and nothing decides the issue of a
fight sooner than this. I know not, therefore, whether heaven will send me back to you,
or whether I may not fall over there at Troy. In the meantime do you look after things
here. Take care of my father and mother as at present, and even more so during my
absence, but when you see our son growing a beard, then marry whom you will, and
leave this your present home. This is what he said and now it is all coming true. A
night will come when I shall have to yield myself to a marriage which I detest, for Jove
has taken from me all hope of happiness. This further grief, moreover, cuts me to the
very heart. You suitors are not wooing me after the custom of my country.

When men are courting a woman who they think will be a good wife to them and who
is of noble birth, and when they are each trying to win her for himself, they usually
bring oxen and sheep to feast the friends of the lady, and they make her magnificent
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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