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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
pall.’ This is what she said, and we assented; whereupon we could see her working
upon her great web all day long, but at night she would unpick the stitches again by
torchlight. She fooled us in this way for three years without our finding it out, but as
time wore on and she was now in her fourth year, in the waning of moons and many
days had been accomplished, one of her maids who knew what she was doing told us,
and we caught her in the act of undoing her work, so she had to finish it whether she
would or no; and when she showed us the robe she had made, after she had had it
washed, its splendour was as that of the sun or moon.

“Then some malicious god conveyed Ulysses to the upland farm where his swineherd
lives. Thither presently came also his son, returning from a voyage to Pylos, and the
two came to the town when they had hatched their plot for our destruction.
Telemachus came first, and then after him, accompanied by the swineherd, came
Ulysses, clad in rags and leaning on a staff as though he were some miserable old
beggar. He came so unexpectedly that none of us knew him, not even the older ones
among us, and we reviled him and threw things at him. He endured both being struck
and insulted without a word, though he was in his own house; but when the will of
Aegis-bearing Jove inspired him, he and Telemachus took the armour and hid it in an
inner chamber, bolting the doors behind them.

Then he cunningly made his wife offer his bow and a quantity of iron to be contended
for by us ill-fated suitors; and this was the beginning of our end, for not one of us could
string the bow-nor nearly do so. When it was about to reach the hands of Ulysses, we
all of us shouted out that it should not be given him, no matter what he might say, but
Telemachus insisted on his having it. When he had got it in his hands he strung it with
ease and sent his arrow through the iron. Then he stood on the floor of the cloister and
poured his arrows on the ground, glaring fiercely about him. First he killed Antinous,
and then, aiming straight before him, he let fly his deadly darts and they fell thick on
one another. It was plain that some one of the gods was helping them, for they fell
upon us with might and main throughout the cloisters, and there was a hideous sound
of groaning as our brains were being battered in, and the ground seethed with our
blood. This, Agamemnon, is how we came by our end, and our bodies are lying still
un-cared for in the house of Ulysses, for our friends at home do not yet know what has
happened, so that they cannot lay us out and wash the black blood from our wounds,
making moan over us according to the offices due to the departed.” “Happy Ulysses,
son of Laertes,” replied the ghost of Agamemnon, “you are indeed blessed in the
possession of a wife endowed with such rare excellence of understanding, and so
faithful to her wedded lord as Penelope the daughter of Icarius. The fame, therefore, of
her virtue shall never die, and the immortals shall compose a song that shall be
welcome to all mankind in honour of the constancy of Penelope. How far otherwise
was the wickedness of the daughter of Tyndareus who killed her lawful husband; her
song shall be hateful among men, for she has brought disgrace on all womankind even
on the good ones.” Thus did they converse in the house of Hades deep down within the
bowels of the earth. Meanwhile Ulysses and the others passed out of the town and soon
reached the fair and well-tilled farm of Laertes, which he had reclaimed with infinite
labour. Here was his house, with a lean-to running all round it, where the slaves who
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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