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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
orphans. But Venus took care of them, and fed them on cheese, honey, and sweet wine.
Juno taught them to excel all women in beauty of form and understanding; Diana gave
them an imposing presence, and Minerva endowed them with every kind of
accomplishment; but one day when Venus had gone up to Olympus to see Jove about
getting them married (for well does he know both what shall happen and what not
happen to every one) the storm winds came and spirited them away to become
handmaids to the dread Erinyes. Even so I wish that the gods who live in heaven
would hide me from mortal sight, or that fair Diana might strike me, for I would fain
go even beneath the sad earth if I might do so still looking towards Ulysses only, and
without having to yield myself to a worse man than he was. Besides, no matter how
much people may grieve by day, they can put up with it so long as they can sleep at
night, for when the eyes are closed in slumber people forget good and ill alike; whereas
my misery haunts me even in my dreams. This very night methought there was one
lying by my side who was like Ulysses as he was when he went away with his host,
and I rejoiced, for I believed that it was no dream, but the very truth itself.” On this the
day broke, but Ulysses heard the sound of her weeping, and it puzzled him, for it
seemed as though she already knew him and was by his side.

Then he gathered up the cloak and the fleeces on which he had lain, and set them on a
seat in the cloister, but he took the bullock’s hide out into the open. He lifted up his
hands to heaven, and prayed, saying “Father Jove, since you have seen fit to bring me
over land and sea to my own home after all the afflictions you have laid upon me, give
me a sign out of the mouth of some one or other of those who are now waking within
the house, and let me have another sign of some kind from outside.” Thus did he pray.
Jove heard his prayer and forthwith thundered high up among the from the splendour
of Olympus, and Ulysses was glad when he heard it. At the same time within the
house, a miller-woman from hard by in the mill room lifted up her voice and gave him
another sign. There were twelve millerwomen whose business it was to grind wheat
and barley which are the staff of life. The others had ground their task and had gone to
take their rest, but this one had not yet finished, for she was not so strong as they were,
and when she heard the thunder she stopped grinding and gave the sign to her master.
“Father Jove,” said she, “you who rule over heaven and earth, you have thundered
from a clear sky without so much as a cloud in it, and this means something for
somebody; grant the prayer, then, of me your poor servant who calls upon you, and let
this be the very last day that the suitors dine in the house of Ulysses. They have worn
me out with the labour of grinding meal for them, and I hope they may never have
another dinner anywhere at all.” Ulysses was glad when he heard the omens conveyed
to him by the woman’s speech, and by the thunder, for he knew they meant that he
should avenge himself on the suitors.

Then the other maids in the house rose and lit the fire on the hearth; Telemachus also
rose and put on his clothes. He girded his sword about his shoulder, bound his sandals
on his comely feet, and took a doughty spear with a point of sharpened bronze; then he
went to the threshold of the cloister and said to Euryclea, “Nurse, did you make the
stranger comfortable both as regards bed and board, or did you let him shift for
himself?- for my mother, good woman though she is, has a way of paying great
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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