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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
to Parnassus to get the presents from Autolycus, who with his sons shook hands with
him and gave him welcome. His grandmother Amphithea threw her arms about him,
and kissed his head, and both his beautiful eyes, while Autolycus desired his sons to
get dinner ready, and they did as he told them. They brought in a five year old bull,
flayed it, made it ready and divided it into joints; these they then cut carefully up into
smaller pieces and spitted them; they roasted them sufficiently and served the portions
round. Thus through the livelong day to the going down of the sun they feasted, and
every man had his full share so that all were satisfied; but when the sun set and it came
on dark, they went to bed and enjoyed the boon of sleep.

When the child of morning, rosy-fingered Dawn, appeared, the sons of Autolycus went
out with their hounds hunting, and Ulysses went too. They climbed the wooded slopes
of Parnassus and soon reached its breezy upland valleys; but as the sun was beginning
to beat upon the fields, fresh-risen from the slow still currents of Oceanus, they came to
a mountain dell. The dogs were in front searching for the tracks of the beast they were
chasing, and after them came the sons of Autolycus, among whom was Ulysses, close
behind the dogs, and he had a long spear in his hand. Here was the lair of a huge boar
among some thick brushwood, so dense that the wind and rain could not get through
it, nor could the sun’s rays pierce it, and the ground underneath lay thick with fallen
leaves. The boar heard the noise of the men’s feet, and the hounds baying on every side
as the huntsmen came up to him, so rushed from his lair, raised the bristles on his neck,
and stood at bay with fire flashing from his eyes. Ulysses was the first to raise his spear
and try to drive it into the brute, but the boar was too quick for him, and charged him
sideways, ripping him above the knee with a gash that tore deep though it did not
reach the bone. As for the boar, Ulysses hit him on the right shoulder, and the point of
the spear went right through him, so that he fell groaning in the dust until the life went
out of him. The sons of Autolycus busied themselves with the carcass of the boar, and
bound Ulysses’ wound; then, after saying a spell to stop the bleeding, they went home
as fast as they could. But when Autolycus and his sons had thoroughly healed Ulysses,
they made him some splendid presents, and sent him back to Ithaca with much mutual
good will. When he got back, his father and mother were rejoiced to see him, and asked
him all about it, and how he had hurt himself to get the scar; so he told them how the
boar had ripped him when he was out hunting with Autolycus and his sons on Mount
Parnassus.

As soon as Euryclea had got the scarred limb in her hands and had well hold of it, she
recognized it and dropped the foot at once. The leg fell into the bath, which rang out
and was overturned, so that all the water was spilt on the ground; Euryclea’s eyes
between her joy and her grief filled with tears, and she could not speak, but she caught
Ulysses by the beard and said, “My dear child, I am sure you must be Ulysses himself,
only I did not know you till I had actually touched and handled you.” As she spoke she
looked towards Penelope, as though wanting to tell her that her dear husband was in
the house, but Penelope was unable to look in that direction and observe what was
going on, for Minerva had diverted her attention; so Ulysses caught Euryclea by the
throat with his right hand and with his left drew her close to him, and said, “Nurse, do
you wish to be the ruin of me, you who nursed me at your own breast, now that after
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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