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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
for it is I who am master here.” She went wondering back into the house, and laid her
son’s saying in her heart. Then going upstairs with her handmaids into her room, she
mourned her dear husband till Minerva sent sweet sleep over her eyelids.

The swineherd now took up the bow and was for taking it to Ulysses, but the suitors
clamoured at him from all parts of the cloisters, and one of them said, “You idiot,
where are you taking the bow to? Are you out of your wits? If Apollo and the other
gods will grant our prayer, your own boarhounds shall get you into some quiet little
place, and worry you to death.” Eumaeus was frightened at the outcry they all raised,
so he put the bow down then and there, but Telemachus shouted out at him from the
other side of the cloisters, and threatened him saying, “Father Eumaeus, bring the bow
on in spite of them, or young as I am I will pelt you with stones back to the country, for
I am the better man of the two. I wish I was as much stronger than all the other suitors
in the house as I am than you, I would soon send some of them off sick and sorry, for
they mean mischief.” Thus did he speak, and they all of them laughed heartily, which
put them in a better humour with Telemachus; so Eumaeus brought the bow on and
placed it in the hands of Ulysses. When he had done this, he called Euryclea apart and
said to her, “Euryclea, Telemachus says you are to close the doors of the women’s
apartments. If they hear any groaning or uproar as of men fighting about the house,
they are not to come out, but are to keep quiet and stay where they are at their work.”
Euryclea did as she was told and closed the doors of the women’s apartments.
Meanwhile Philoetius slipped quietly out and made fast the gates of the outer court.
There was a ship’s cable of byblus fibre lying in the gatehouse, so he made the gates
fast with it and then came in again, resuming the seat that he had left, and keeping an
eye on Ulysses, who had now got the bow in his hands, and was turning it every way
about, and proving it all over to see whether the worms had been eating into its two
horns during his absence. Then would one turn towards his neighbour saying, “This is
some tricky old bow-fancier; either he has got one like it at home, or he wants to make
one, in such workmanlike style does the old vagabond handle it.” Another said, “I
hope he may be no more successful in other things than he is likely to be in stringing
this bow.” But Ulysses, when he had taken it up and examined it all over, strung it as
easily as a skilled bard strings a new peg of his lyre and makes the twisted gut fast at
both ends. Then he took it in his right hand to prove the string, and it sang sweetly
under his touch like the twittering of a swallow. The suitors were dismayed, and
turned colour as they heard it; at that moment, moreover, Jove thundered loudly as a
sign, and the heart of Ulysses rejoiced as he heard the omen that the son of scheming
Saturn had sent him.

He took an arrow that was lying upon the table-for those which the Achaeans were so
shortly about to taste were all inside the quiver-he laid it on the centrepiece of the bow,
and drew the notch of the arrow and the string toward him, still seated on his seat.
When he had taken aim he let fly, and his arrow pierced every one of the handle-holes
of the axes from the first onwards till it had gone right through them, and into the outer
courtyard. Then he said to Telemachus: “Your guest has not disgraced you,
Telemachus. I did not miss what I aimed at, and I was not long in stringing my bow. I
am still strong, and not as the suitors twit me with being. Now, however, it is time for
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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