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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
gadfly in early summer when the days are at their longest. As eagle-beaked, crook-
taloned vultures from the mountains swoop down on the smaller birds that cower in
flocks upon the ground, and kill them, for they cannot either fight or fly, and lookers on
enjoy the sport-even so did Ulysses and his men fall upon the suitors and smite them
on every side. They made a horrible groaning as their brains were being battered in,
and the ground seethed with their blood.

Leiodes then caught the knees of Ulysses and said, “Ulysses I beseech you have mercy
upon me and spare me. I never wronged any of the women in your house either in
word or deed, and I tried to stop the others. I saw them, but they would not listen, and
now they are paying for their folly. I was their sacrificing priest; if you kill me, I shall
die without having done anything to deserve it, and shall have got no thanks for all the
good that I did.” Ulysses looked sternly at him and answered, “If you were their
sacrificing priest, you must have prayed many a time that it might be long before I got
home again, and that you might marry my wife and have children by her. Therefore
you shall die.” With these words he picked up the sword that Agelaus had dropped
when he was being killed, and which was lying upon the ground. Then he struck
Leiodes on the back of his neck, so that his head fell rolling in the dust while he was yet
speaking.

The minstrel Phemius son of Terpes-he who had been forced by the suitors to sing to
them-now tried to save his life. He was standing near towards the trap door, and held
his lyre in his hand. He did not know whether to fly out of the cloister and sit down by
the altar of Jove that was in the outer court, and on which both Laertes and Ulysses had
offered up the thigh bones of many an ox, or whether to go straight up to Ulysses and
embrace his knees, but in the end he deemed it best to embrace Ulysses’ knees. So he
laid his lyre on the ground the ground between the mixing-bowl and the silver-
studded seat; then going up to Ulysses he caught hold of his knees and said, “Ulysses, I
beseech you have mercy on me and spare me. You will be sorry for it afterwards if you
kill a bard who can sing both for gods and men as I can. I make all my lays myself, and
heaven visits me with every kind of inspiration. I would sing to you as though you
were a god, do not therefore be in such a hurry to cut my head off. Your own son
Telemachus will tell you that I did not want to frequent your house and sing to the
suitors after their meals, but they were too many and too strong for me, so they made
me.” Telemachus heard him, and at once went up to his father. “Hold!” he cried, “the
man is guiltless, do him no hurt; and we will Medon too, who was always good to me
when I was a boy, unless Philoetius or Eumaeus has already killed him, or he has fallen
in your way when you were raging about the court.” Medon caught these words of
Telemachus, for he was crouching under a seat beneath which he had hidden by
covering himself up with a freshly flayed heifer’s hide, so he threw off the hide, went
up to Telemachus, and laid hold of his knees.

“Here I am, my dear sir,” said he, “stay your hand therefore, and tell your father, or he
will kill me in his rage against the suitors for having wasted his substance and been so
foolishly disrespectful to yourself.” Ulysses smiled at him and answered, “Fear not;
Telemachus has saved your life, that you may know in future, and tell other people,
how greatly better good deeds prosper than evil ones. Go, therefore, outside the
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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