| 1 |
Soon
as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, up from his bed arose
the dear son of Odysseus and put on his clothing. About his shoulder
he slung his sharp sword, and beneath his shining feet bound his
fair sandals, and went forth from his chamber like a god to look
upon. Straightway he bade the clear-voiced heralds to summon to
the assembly the long-haired Achaeans. And the heralds made the
summons, and the Achaeans assembled full quickly. Now when they
were assembled and met together, Telemachus went his way to the
place of assembly, holding in his hand a spear of bronze—not
alone, for along with him two swift hounds followed; and wondrous
was the grace that Athene shed upon him, and all the people marvelled
at him as he came. But he sat down in his father's seat, and the
elders gave place.
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| 15 |
Then
among them the lord Aegyptius was the first to speak, a man bowed
with age and wise with wisdom untold. Now he spoke, because his
dear son had gone in the hollow ships to Ilius, famed for its horses,
in the company of godlike Odysseus, even the warrior Antiphus. But
him the savage Cyclops had slain in his hollow cave, and made of
him his latest meal. Three others there were; one, Eurynomus, consorted
with the wooers, and two ever kept their father's farm. Yet, even
so, he could not forget that other, mourning and sorrowing;
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24 |
and
weeping for him he addressed the assembly, and spoke among them:
"Hearken now to me, men of Ithaca, to the word that I shall
say. Never have we held assembly or session since the day when goodly
Odysseus departed in the hollow ships. And now who has called us
together? On whom has such need come either of the young men or
of those who are older? Has he heard some tidings of the army's
return, which he might tell us plainly, seeing that he has first
learned of it himself? Or is there some other public matter on which
he is to speak and address us? A good man he seems in my eyes, a
blessed man. May Zeus fulfil unto him himself some good, even whatsoever
he desires in his heart."
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| 35 |
So
he spoke, and the dear son of Odysseus rejoiced at the word of omen;
nor did he thereafter remain seated, but was fain to speak. So he
took his stand in the midst of the assembly, and the stall was placed
in his hands by the herald Peisenor, wise in counsel. Then he spoke,
addressing first the old man:
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| 40 |
"Old
man, not far off, as thou shalt soon learn thyself, is that man
who has called the host together— even I; for on me above
all others has sorrow come. I have neither heard any tidings of
the army's return, which I might tell you plainly, seeing that I
had first learned of it myself, nor is there any other public matter
on which I am to speak and address you. Nay, it is mine own need,
for that evil has fallen upon my house in two-fold wise. First,
I have lost my noble sire who was once king among you here, and
was gentle as a father; and now there is come an evil yet greater
far, which will presently altogether destroy my house and ruin all
my livelihood. My mother have wooers beset against her will, the
sons of those men who are here the noblest. They shrink from going
to the house of her father, Icarius, that he may himself exact the
bride-gifts for his daughter, and give her to whom he will, even
to him who meets his favour, but thronging our house day after day
they slay our oxen and sheep and fat goats, and keep revel, and
drink the sparkling wine recklessly; and havoc is made of all this
wealth. For there is no man here, such as Odysseus was, to ward
off ruin from the house. As for me, I am no wise such as he to ward
it off. Nay verily, even if I try I shall be found a weakling and
one knowing naught of valour. Yet truly I would defend myself, if
I had but the power; for now deeds past all enduring have been wrought,
and past all that is seemly has my house been destroyed. Take shame
upon yourselves, and have regard to your neighbours who dwell round
about, and fear the wrath of the gods, lest haply they turn against
you in anger at your evil deeds. I pray you by Olympian Zeus, and
by Themis who looses and gathers the assemblies of men, forbear,
my friends, and leave me alone to pine in bitter grief—unless
indeed my father, goodly Odysseus, despitefully wrought the well-greaved
Achaeans woe, in requital whereof ye work me woe despitefully by
urging these men on. For me it were better that ye should yourselves
eat up my treasures and my flocks. If ye were to devour them, recompense
would haply be made some day; for just so long should we go up and
down the city, pressing our suit and asking back our goods, until
all was given back. But now past cure are the woes ye put upon my
heart."
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| 80 |
Thus
he spoke in wrath, and dashed the staff down upon the ground, bursting
into tears; and pity fell upon all the people. Then all the others
kept silent, and no man had the heart to answer Telemachus with
angry words. Antinous alone answered him, and said:
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| 85 |
"Telemachus,
thou braggart,unrestrained in daring, what a thing hast thou said,
putting us to shame, and wouldest fain fasten reproach upon us!
Nay, I tell thee, it is not the Achaean wooers who are anywise at
fault, but thine own mother, for she is crafty above all women.
For it is now the third year and the fourth will soon pass, since
she has been deceiving the hearts of the Achaeans in their breasts.
To all she offers hopes, and has promises for each man, sending
them messages, but her mind is set on other things. And she devised
in her heart this guileful thing also: she set up in her halls a
great web, and fell to weaving—fine of thread was the web
and very wide; and straightway she spoke among us:
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| 96 |
"
' Young men, my wooers, since goodly Odysseus is dead, be patient,
though eager for my marriage, until I finish this robe—I would
not that my spinning should come to naught—a shroud for the
lord Laertes, against the time when the fell fate of grievous death
shall strike him down; lest any of the Achaean women in the land should
be wroth with me, if he, who had won great possessions, were to lie
without a shroud.'
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| 103 |
"So
she spoke, and our proud hearts consented. Then day by day she would
weave at the great web, but by night would unravel it, when she
had let place torches by her. Thus for three years she by her craft
kept the Achaeans from knowing, and beguiled them; but when the
fourth year came as the seasons rolled on, even then one of her
women who knew all told us, and we caught her unravelling the splendid
web. So she finished it against her will, perforce.
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| 111 |
Therefore
to thee the wooers make answer thus, that thou mayest thyself know
it in thine heart, and that all the Achaeans may know. Send away
thy mother, and command her to wed whomsoever her father bids, and
whoso is pleasing to her. But if she shall continue long time to
vex the sons of the Achaeans, mindful in her heart of this, that
Athene has endowed her above other women with knowledge of fair
handiwork and an understanding heart, and wiles, such as we have
never yet heard that any even of the women of old knew, of those
who long ago were fair-tressed Achaean women—Tyro and Alcmene
and Mycene of the fair crown—of whom not one was like Penelope
in shrewd device; yet this at least she devised not aright. For
so long shall men devour thy livelihood and thy possessions, even
as long as she shall keep the counsel which the gods now put in
her heart. Great fame she brings on herself, but on thee regret
for thy much substance. For us, we will go neither to our lands
nor elsewhither, until she marries that one of the Achaeans whom
she will."
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| 129 |
Then
wise Telemachus answered him, and said:
"Antinous, in no wise may I thrust forth from the house against
her will her that bore me and reared me; and, as for my father,
he is in some other land, whether he be alive or dead. An evil thing
it were for me to pay back a great price to Icarius, as I must,
if of my own will I send my mother away. For from her father's hand
shall I suffer evil, and heaven will send other ills besides, for
my mother as she leaves the house will invoke the dread Avengers;
and I shall have blame, too, from men. Therefore will I never speak
this word. And for you, if your own heart is wroth hereat, get you
forth from my halls and prepare you other feasts, eating your own
substance and changing from house to house. But if this seems in
your eyes to be a better and more profitable thing, that one man's
livelihood should be ruined without atonement, waste ye it. But
I will call upon the gods that are forever, if haply Zeus may grant
that deeds of requital may be wrought. Without atonement then should
ye perish within my halls."
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| 146 |
So
spoke Telemachus, and in answer Zeus, whose voice is borne afar,
sent forth two eagles, flying from on high, from a mountain peak.
For a time they flew swift as the blasts of the wind side by side
with wings outspread; but when they reached the middle of the many-voiced
assembly, then they wheeled about, flapping their wings rapidly,
and down on the heads of all they looked, and death was in their
glare. Then they tore with their talons one another's cheeks and
necks on either side, and darted away to the right across the houses
and the city of the men. But they were seized with wonder at the
birds when their eyes beheld them, and pondered in their hearts
on what was to come to pass. Then among them spoke the old lord
Halitherses, son of Mastor, for he surpassed all men of his day
in knowledge of birds and in uttering words of fate. He with good
intent addressed their assembly, and spoke among them:
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| 161 |
"Hearken
now to me, men of Ithaca, to the word that I shall say; and to the
wooers especially do I declare and announce these things, since
on them a great woe is rolling. For Odysseus shall not long be away
from his friends, but even now, methinks, he is near, and is sowing
death and fate for these men, one and all. Aye, and to many others
of us also who dwell in clear-seen Ithaca will he be a bane. But
long ere that let us take thought how we may make an end of this—or
rather let them of themselves make an end, for this is straightway
the better course for them. Not as one untried do I prophesy, but
with sure knowledge. For unto Odysseus I declare that all things
are fulfilled even as I told him, when the Argives embarked for
Ilios and with them went Odysseus of many wiles. I declared that
after suffering many ills and losing all his comrades he would come
home in the twentieth year unknown to all; and lo, all this is now
being brought to pass."
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| 177 |
Then
Eurymachus, son of Polybus, answered him, and said:
"Old man, up now, get thee home and prophesy to thy childlen,
lest haply in days to come they suffer ill. In this matter I am
better far than thou to prophesy. Many birds there are that fare
to and fro under the rays of the sun, and not all are fateful. As
for Odysseus, he has perished far away, as I would that thou hadst
likewise perished with him. Then wouldst thou not prate so much
in thy reading of signs, or be urging Telemachus on in his wrath,
hoping for some gift for thy house, if haply he shall give it. But
I will speak out to thee, and this word shall verily be brought
to pass. If thou, wise in the wisdom of old, shalt beguile with
thy talk a younger man, and set him on to be wroth, for him in the
first place it shall be the more grievous, and he will in no case
be able to do aught because of these men here, and on thee, old
man, will we lay a fine which it will grieve thy soul to pay, and
bitter shall be thy sorrow. And to Telemachus I myself, here among
all, will offer this counsel. His mother let him bid to go back
to the house of her father, and they will prepare a wedding feast
and make ready the gifts full many,—aye, all that should follow
after a well-loved daughter. For ere that, methinks, the sons of
the Achaeans will not cease from their grievous wooing, since in
any case we fear no man,—no, not Telemachus for all his many
words,—nor do we reck of any soothsaying which thou, old man,
mayest declare; it will fail of fulfilment, and thou shalt be hated
the more. Aye, and his possessions shall be devoured in evil wise,
nor shall requital ever be made, so long as she shall put off the
Achaeans in the matter of her marriage. And we on our part waiting
here day after day are rivals by reason of her excellence, and go
not after other women, whom each one might fitly wed."
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| 208 |
Then
wise Telemachus answered him:
"Eurymachus and all ye other lordly wooers, in this matter
I entreat you no longer nor speak thereof; for now the gods know
it, and all the Achaeans. But come, give me a swift ship and twenty
comrades who will accomplish my journey for me to and fro. For I
shall go to Sparta and to sandy Pylos to seek tidings of the return
of my father that has long been gone, if haply any mortal man may
tell me, or I may hear a voice from Zeus, which oftenest brings
tidings to men If so be I shall hear that my father is alive and
coming home, then verily, though I am sore afflicted, I could endure
for yet a year. But if I shall hear that he is dead and gone, then
I will return to my dear native land and heap up a mound for him,
and over it pay funeral rites, full many, as is due, and give my
mother to a husband."
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| 224 |
So
saying he sat down, and among them rose Mentor, who was a comrade
of noble Odysseus. To him, on departing with his ships, Odysseus
had given all his house in charge, that it should obey the old man
and that he should keep all things safe. He with good intent addressed
their assembly, and spoke among them:
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| 229 |
"Hearken
now to me, men of Ithaca, to the word that I shall say. Never henceforth
let sceptred king with a ready heart be kind and gentle, nor let
him heed righteousness in his heart, but let him ever be harsh and
work unrighteousness, seeing that no one remembers divine Odysseus
of the people whose lord he was; yet gentle was he as a father.
But of a truth I begrudge not the proud wooers that they work deeds
of violence in the evil contrivings of their minds, for it is at
the hazard of their own lives that they violently devour the house
of Odysseus, who, they say, will no more return. Nay, rather it
is with the rest of the folk that I am wroth, that ye all sit thus
in silence, and utter no word of rebuke to make the wooers cease,
though ye are many and they but few."
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| 242 |
Then
Leocritus, son of Euenor, answered him:
"Mentor, thou mischief-maker, thou wanderer in thy wits, what
hast thou said, bidding men make us cease? Nay, it were a hard thing
to fight about a feast with men that moreover outnumber you. For
if Ithacan Odysseus himself were to come and be eager at heart to
drive out from his hall the lordly wooers who are feasting in his
house, then should his wife have no joy at his coming, though sorely
she longed for him, but right here would he meet a shameful death,
if he fought with men that outnumbered him. Thou hast not spoken
aright. But come now, ye people, scatter, each one of you to his
own lands. As for this fellow, Mentor and Halitherses will speed
his journey, for they are friends of his father's house from of
old. But methinks he will long abide here and get his tidings in
Ithaca, and never accomplish this journey."
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| 257 |
So
he spoke, and hastily broke up the assembly. They then scattered,
each one to his own house; and the wooers went to the house of divine
Odysseus.
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| 260 |
But
Telemachus went apart to the shore of the sea, and having washed
his hands in the grey sea-water, prayed to Athene:
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| 262 |
"Hear
me, thou who didst come yesterday as a god to our house, and didst
bid me go in a ship over the misty deep to seek tidings of the return
of my father, that has long been gone. Lo, all this the Achaeans
hinder, but the wooers most of all in their evil insolence.
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| 267 |
So
he spoke in prayer, and Athene drew near to him in the likeness
of Mentor, both in form and in voice; and she spoke, and addressed
him with winged words:
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| 270 |
"Telemachus,
neither hereafter shalt thou be a base man or a witless, if aught
of thy father's goodly spirit has been instilled into thee, such
a man was he to fulfil both deed and word. So then shall this journey
of thine be neither vain nor unfulfilled. But if thou art not the
son of him and of Penelope, then I have no hope that thou wilt accomplish
thy desire. Few sons indeed are like their fathers; most are worse,
few better than their fathers. But since neither hereafter shalt
thou be a base man or a witless, nor has the wisdom of Odysseus
wholly failed thee, there is therefore hope that thou wilt accomplish
this work. Now then let be the will and counsel of the wooers—
fools, for they are in no wise either prudent or just, nor do they
know aught of death or black fate, which verily is near at hand
for them, that they shall all perish in a day.
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| 285 |
But
for thyself, the journey on which thy heart is set shall not be
long delayed, so true a friend of thy father's house am I, who will
equip for thee a swift ship, and myself go with thee. But go thou
now to the house and join the company of the wooers; make ready
stores, and bestow all in vessels—wine in jars, and barley
meal, the marrow of men, in stout skins;—but I, going through
the town, will quickly gather comrades that go willingly. And ships
there are full many in sea-girt Ithaca, both new and old; of these
will I choose out for thee the one that is best, and quickly will
we make her ready and launch her on the broad deep."
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| 296 |
So
spoke Athene, daughter of Zeus, nor did Telemachus tarry long after
he had heard the voice of the goddess, but went his way to the house,
his heart heavy within him. He found there the proud wooers in the
halls, flaying goats and singeing swine in the court. And Antinous
with a laugh came straight to Telemachus, and clasped his hand,
and spoke, and addressed him:
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| 303 |
"Telemachus,
thou braggart, unrestrained in daring, let no more any evil deed
or word be in thy heart. Nay, I bid thee, eat and drink even as
before. All these things the Achaeans will surely provide for thee—the
ship and chosen oarsmen— that with speed thou mayest go to
sacred Pylos to seek for tidings of thy noble father."
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| 309 |
Then
wise Telemachus answered him:
"Antinous, in no wise is it possible for me in your overweening
company to sit at meat quietly and to make merry with an easy mind.
Is it not enough, ye wooers, that in time past ye wasted many goodly
possessions of mine, while I was still a child? But now that I am
grown, and gain knowledge by hearing the words of others, yea and
my spirit waxes within me, I will try how I may hurl forth upon
you evil fates, either going to Pylos or here in this land. For
go I will, nor shall the journey be in vain whereof I speak, though
I voyage in another's ship, since I may not be master of ship or
oarsmen. So, I ween, it seemed to you to be more to your profit.
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| 321 |
He
spoke, and snatched his hand from the hand of Antinous without more
ado, and the wooers were busy with the feast throughout the hall.
They mocked and jeered at him in their talk; and thus would one
of the proud youths speak:
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| 325 |
"Aye,
verily Telemachus is planning our murder. He will bring men to aid
him from sandy Pylos or even from Sparta, so terribly is he set
upon it. Or he means to go to Ephyre, that rich land, to bring from
thence deadly drugs, that he may cast them in the wine-bowl, and
destroy us all."
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| 331 |
And
again another of the proud youths would say:
"Who knows but he himself as he goes on the hollow ship may
perish wandering far from his friends, even as Odysseus did? So
would he cause us yet more labour; for we should have to divide
all his possessions, and his house we should give to his mother
to possess, and to him who should wed her."
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| 337 |
So
they spoke, but Telemachus went down to the high-roofed treasure-chamber
of his father, a wide room where gold and bronze lay piled, and
raiment in chests, and stores of fragrant oil. There, too, stood
great jars of wine, old and sweet, holding within them an unmixed
divine drink, and ranged in order along the wall, if ever Odysseus
should return home even after many grievous toils. Shut were the
double doors, close-fitted; and there both night and day a stewardess
abode, who guarded all in wisdom of mind, Eurycleia, daughter of
Ops, son of Peisenor. To her now Telemachus, when he had called
her to the treasure-chamber, spoke, and said:
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| 349 |
"Nurse,
draw me off wine in jars, sweet wine that is the choicest next to
that which thou guardest ever thinking upon that ill-fated one,
if haply Zeus-born Odysseus may come I know not whence, having escaped
from death and the fates. Fill twelve jars and fit them all with
covers, and pour me barley meal into well-sewn skins, and let there
be twenty measures of ground barley meal. but keep knowledge hereof
to thyself, and have all these things brought together; for at evening
I will fetch them, when my mother goes to her upper chamber and
bethinks her of her rest. For I am going to Sparta and to sandy
Pylos to seek tidings of the return of my dear father, if haply
I may hear any."
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| 361 |
So
he spoke, and the dear nurse, Eurycleia, uttered a shrill cry, and
weeping spoke to him winged words:
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| 363 |
"Ah,
dear child, how has this thought come into thy mind? Whither art
thou minded to go over the wide earth, thou who art an only son
and well-beloved? But he hath peristled far from his country, the
Zeus-born Odysseus, in a strange land; and these men, so soon as
thou art gone, will devise evil for thee hereafter, that thou mayest
perish by guile, and themselves divide all these possessions. Nay,
abide here in charge of what is thine; thou hast no need to suffer
ills and go a wanderer over the unresting sea."
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| 371 |
Then
wise Telemachus answered her:
"Take heart, nurse, for not without a god's warrant is this
my plan. But swear to tell naught of this to my dear mother until
the eleventh or twelfth day shall come, or until she shall herself
miss me and hear that I am gone, that she may not mar her fair flesh
with weeping."
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| 377 |
So
he spoke, and the old woman swore a great oath by the gods to say
naught. But when she had sworn and made an end of the oath, straightway
she drew for him wine in jars, and poured barley meal into well-sewn
skins; and Telemachus went to the hall and joined the company of
the wooers.
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| 382 |
Then
the goddess, flashing-eyed Athene, took other counsel. In the likeness
of Telemachus she went everywhere throughout the city, and to each
of the men she drew near and spoke her word, bidding them gather
at even beside the swift ship. Furthermore, of Noemon, the glorious
son of Phronius, she asked a swift ship, and he promised it to her
with a ready heart.
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| 388 |
Now
the sun set and all the ways grew dark. Then she drew the swift
ship to the sea and put in it all the gear that well-benched ships
carry. And she moored it at the mouth of the harbour, and round
about it the goodly company was gathered together, and the goddess
heartened each man.
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| 393 |
Then
again the goddess, flashing-eyed Athene, took other counsel. She
went her way to the house of divine Odysseus, and there began to
shed sweet sleep upon the wooers and made them to wander in their
drinking, and from their hands she cast the cups. But they rose
to go to their rest throughout the city, and remained no long time
seated, for sleep was falling upon their eyelids.
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| 399 |
But
to Telemachus spoke flashing-eyed Athene, calling him forth before
the stately hall, having likened herself to Mentor both in form
and in voice:
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| 402 |
"Telemachus,
already thy well-greaved comrades sit at the oar and await thy setting
out. Come, let us go, that we may not long delay their journey."
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| 405 |
So
saying, Pallas Athene led the way quickly, and he followed in the
footsteps of the goddess. Now when they had come down to the ship
and to the sea, they found on the shore their long-haired comrades,
and the strong and mighty Telemachus spoke among them:
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| 410 |
"Come,
friends, let us fetch the stores, for all are now gathered together
in the hall. My mother knows naught hereof, nor the handmaids either:
one only heard my word."
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| 413 |
Thus saying,
he led the way, and they went along with him. So they brought and
stowed everything in the well-benched ship, as the dear son of Odysseus
bade. Then on board the ship stepped Telemachus, and Athene went
before him and sat down in the stern of the ship, and near her sat
Telemachus, while the men loosed the stern cables and themselves
stepped on board, and sat down upon the benches. And flashing-eyed
Athene sent them a favourable wind, a strong-blowing West wind that
sang over the wine-dark sea. And Telemachus called to his men, and
bade them lay hold of the tackling, and they hearkened to his call.
The mast of fir they raised and set in the hollow socket, and made
it fast with fore-stays, and hauled up the white sail with twisted
thongs of ox-hide. So the wind filled the belly of the sail, and
the dark wave sang loudly about the stem of the ship as she went,
and she sped over the wave accomplishing her way. Then, when they
had made the tackling fast in the swift black ship, they set forth
bowls brim full of wine, and poured libations to the immortal gods
that are forever, and chiefest of all to the flashing-eyed daughter
of Zeus. So all night long and through the dawn the ship cleft her
way.
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