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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
BOOK XX

ULYSSES slept in the cloister upon an undressed bullock’s hide, on the top of which he
threw several skins of the sheep the suitors had eaten, and Eurynome threw a cloak
over him after he had laid himself down. There, then, Ulysses lay wakefully brooding
upon the way in which he should kill the suitors; and by and by, the women who had
been in the habit of misconducting themselves with them, left the house giggling and
laughing with one another. This made Ulysses very angry, and he doubted whether to
get up and kill every single one of them then and there, or to let them sleep one more
and last time with the suitors. His heart growled within him, and as a bitch with
puppies growls and shows her teeth when she sees a stranger, so did his heart growl
with anger at the evil deeds that were being done: but he beat his breast and said,
“Heart, be still, you had worse than this to bear on the day when the terrible Cyclops
ate your brave companions; yet you bore it in silence till your cunning got you safe out
of the cave, though you made sure of being killed.” Thus he chided with his heart, and
checked it into endurance, but he tossed about as one who turns a paunch full of blood
and fat in front of a hot fire, doing it first on one side and then on the other, that he may
get it cooked as soon as possible, even so did he turn himself about from side to side,
thinking all the time how, single handed as he was, he should contrive to kill so large a
body of men as the wicked suitors. But by and by Minerva came down from heaven in
the likeness of a woman, and hovered over his head saying, “My poor unhappy man,
why do you lie awake in this way? This is your house: your wife is safe inside it, and so
is your son who is just such a young man as any father may be proud of.” “Goddess,”
answered Ulysses, “all that you have said is true, but I am in some doubt as to how I
shall be able to kill these wicked suitors single handed, seeing what a number of them
there always are. And there is this further difficulty, which is still more considerable.
Supposing that with Jove’s and your assistance I succeed in killing them, I must ask
you to consider where I am to escape to from their avengers when it is all over.” “For
shame,” replied Minerva, “why, any one else would trust a worse ally than myself,
even though that ally were only a mortal and less wise than I am.

Am I not a goddess, and have I not protected you throughout in all your troubles? I tell
you plainly that even though there were fifty bands of men surrounding us and eager
to kill us, you should take all their sheep and cattle, and drive them away with you. But
go to sleep; it is a very bad thing to lie awake all night, and you shall be out of your
troubles before long.” As she spoke she shed sleep over his eyes, and then went back to
Olympus.

While Ulysses was thus yielding himself to a very deep slumber that eased the burden
of his sorrows, his admirable wife awoke, and sitting up in her bed began to cry. When
she had relieved herself by weeping she prayed to Diana saying, “Great Goddess
Diana, daughter of Jove, drive an arrow into my heart and slay me; or let some
whirlwind snatch me up and bear me through paths of darkness till it drop me into the
mouths of overflowing Oceanus, as it did the daughters of Pandareus. The daughters of
Pandareus lost their father and mother, for the gods killed them, so they were left
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