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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
hecatombs to all the gods in heaven, one after the other. As for myself, he said that
death should come to me from the sea, and that my life should ebb away very gently
when I was full of years and peace of mind, and my people should bless me.

All this, he said, should surely come to pass.” And Penelope said, “If the gods are
going to vouchsafe you a happier time in your old age, you may hope then to have
some respite from misfortune.”

Thus did they converse. Meanwhile Eurynome and the nurse took torches and made
the bed ready with soft coverlets; as soon as they had laid them, the nurse went back
into the house to go to her rest, leaving the bed chamber woman Eurynome to show
Ulysses and Penelope to bed by torch light. When she had conducted them to their
room she went back, and they then came joyfully to the rites of their own old bed.
Telemachus, Philoetius, and the swineherd now left off dancing, and made the women
leave off also. They then laid themselves down to sleep in the cloisters.

When Ulysses and Penelope had had their fill of love they fell talking with one another.
She told him how much she had had to bear in seeing the house filled with a crowd of
wicked suitors who had killed so many sheep and oxen on her account, and had drunk
so many casks of wine. Ulysses in his turn told her what he had suffered, and how
much trouble he had himself given to other people. He told her everything, and she
was so delighted to listen that she never went to sleep till he had ended his whole
story.

He began with his victory over the Cicons, and how he thence reached the fertile land
of the Lotus-eaters. He told her all about the Cyclops and how he had punished him for
having so ruthlessly eaten his brave comrades; how he then went on to Aeolus, who
received him hospitably and furthered him on his way, but even so he was not to reach
home, for to his great grief a hurricane carried him out to sea again; how he went on to
the Laestrygonian city Telepylos, where the people destroyed all his ships with their
crews, save himself and his own ship only. Then he told of cunning Circe and her craft,
and how he sailed to the chill house of Hades, to consult the ghost of the Theban
prophet Teiresias, and how he saw his old comrades in arms, and his mother who bore
him and brought him up when he was a child; how he then heard the wondrous
singing of the Sirens, and went on to the wandering rocks and terrible Charybdis and
to Scylla, whom no man had ever yet passed in safety; how his men then ate the cattle
of the sun-god, and how Jove therefore struck the ship with his thunderbolts, so that all
his men perished together, himself alone being left alive; how at last he reached the
Ogygian island and the nymph Calypso, who kept him there in a cave, and fed him,
and wanted him to marry her, in which case she intended making him immortal so that
he should never grow old, but she could not persuade him to let her do so; and how
after much suffering he had found his way to the Phaeacians, who had treated him as
though he had been a god, and sent him back in a ship to his own country after having
given him gold, bronze, and raiment in great abundance.

This was the last thing about which he told her, for here a deep sleep took hold upon
him and eased the burden of his sorrows.

Then Minerva bethought her of another matter. When she deemed that Ulysses had
had both of his wife and of repose, she bade gold-enthroned Dawn rise out of Oceanus
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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