| 1 |
So
goodly Odysseus was left behind in the hall, planning with Athene's
aid the slaying of the wooers, and he straightway spoke winged words
to Telemachus:
|
|
| 4 |
"Telemachus,
the weapons of war thou must needs lay away within one and all,
and when the wooers miss them and question thee, thou must beguile
them with gentle words, saying:
|
|
|
|
|
|
| 7 |
'Out
ot the smoke have I laid them, since they are no longer like those
which of old Odysseus left behind him, when he went forth to Troy,
but are all befouled, so far as the breath of fire has reached them.
And furthermore this greater fear has a god put in my heart, lest
haply, when heated with wine, you may set a quarrel afoot among
you, and wound one another, and so bring shame on your feast and
on your wooing. For of itself does the iron draw a man to it.' "
|
|
| 14 |
So
he spoke, and Telemachus hearkened to his dear father, and calling
forth the nurse Eurycleia, said to her:
|
|
| 16 |
"Nurse,
come now, I bid thee, shut up the women in their rooms, while I
lay away in the store-room the weapons of my father, the goodly
weapons which all uncared-for the smoke bedims in the hall since
my father went forth, and I was still a child. But now I am minded
to lay them away, where the breatn of the fire will not come upon
them."
|
|
| 21 |
Then
the dear nurse Eurycleia answered him:
|
|
| 22 |
"Aye,
child, I would thou mightest ever take thought to care for the house
and guard all its wealth. But come, who then shall fetch a light
and bear it for thee, since thou wouldest not suffer the maids,
who might have given light, to go before thee?"
|
|
| 26 |
Then
wise Telemachus answered her:
|
|
| 27 |
"This
stranger here; for I will suffer no man to be idle who touches my
portion of meal, even though he has come from afar."
|
|
| 29 |
So
he spoke, but her word remained unwinged, and she locked the doors
of the stately hall.
|
|
| 31 |
Then
the two sprang up, Odysseus and his glorious son, and set about
bearing within the helmets and the bossy shields and the sharp-pointed
spears; and before them Pallas Athene, bearing a golden lamp, made
a most beauteous light.
|
|
| 35 |
Then
Telemachus suddenly spoke to his father, and said:
|
|
| 36 |
"Father,
verily this is a great marvel that my eyes behold; certainly the
walls of the house and the fair beams and cross-beams of fir and
the pillars that reach on high, glow in my eyes as with the light
of blazing fire. Surely some god is within, one of those who hold
broad heaven."
|
|
| 41 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered him, and said:
|
|
| 42 |
"Hush,
check thy thought, and ask no question; this, I tell thee, is the
way of the gods that hold Olympus. But do thou go and take thy rest
and I will remain behind here, that I may stir yet more the minds
of the maids and of thy mother; and she with weeping shall ask me
of each thing separately."
|
|
| 47 |
So
he spoke, .md Telemachus went forth through the hall by the light
of blazing torches to go to his chamber to lie down, where he had
heretofore been wont to rest, when sweet sleep came upon him. There
now too he lay down and waited for the bright Dawn.
|
|
| 51 |
But
goodly Odysseus was left behind in the hall, planning with Athene's
aid the slaying of the wooers.
|
|
| 53 |
Then
wise Penelope came forth from her chamber like unto Artemis or golden
Aphrodite, and for her they set by the fire, where she was wont
to sit, a chair inlaid with spirals of ivory and silver, which of
old the craftsman Icmalius had made, and had set beneath it a foot-stool
for the feet, that was part of the chair, and upon it a great fleece
was wont to be laid. On this then wise Penelope sat down, and the
white-armed maids came forth from the women's hall. These began
to take away the abundant food, the tables, and the cups from which
the lordly men had been drinking, and they cast the embers from
the braziers on to the floor, and piled upon the braziers fresh
logs in abundance, to give light and warmth.
|
|
| 65 |
But
Melantho began again a second time to rate Odysseus, saying:
|
|
| 66 |
"Stranger,
wilt thou even now still be a plague to us through the night, roaming
through the house, and wilt thou spy upon the women? Nay, get thee
forth, thou wretch, and be content with thy supper, or straightway
shalt thou even be smitten with a torch, and so go forth."
|
|
| 70 |
Then
with an angry glance from beneath his brows Odysseus of many wiles
answered her:
|
|
| 71 |
"Good
woman, why, pray, dost thou thus assail me with angry heart? Is
it because I am foul and wear mean raiment on my body, and beg through
the land? Aye, for necessity compels me. Of such sort are beggars
and vagabond folk. For I too once dwelt in a house of my own among
men, a rich man in a wealthy house, and full often I gave gifts
to a wanderer, whosoever he was and with whatsoever need he came.
Slaves too I had past counting and all other things in abundance
whereby men live well and are reputed wealthy. But Zeus, son of
Cronos, brought all to naught; so, I ween, was his good pleasure.
|
|
| 81 |
Wherefore,
woman, beware lest thou too some day lose all the glory whereby
thou now hast excellence among the handmaids; lest perchance thy
mistress wax wroth and be angry with thee, or Odysseus come home;
for there is yet room for hope. But if, even as it seems, he is
dead, and is no more to turn, yet now is his son by the favour of
Apollo such as he was—even Telemachus. Him it escapes not if any
of the women in the halls work wantonness; for he is no longer the
child he was."
|
|
| 89 |
So
he spoke, and wise Penelope heard him; and he rebuked the handmaid
and spoke, and addressed her:
|
|
| 91 |
"Be
sure, thou bold and shameless thing, that thy outrageous deed is
in no wise hid from me, and with thine own head shalt thou wipe
out its stain. Full well didst thou know, for thou hast heard it
from my own lips, that I was minded to question the stranger in
my halls concerning my husband; for I am sore distressed."
|
|
| 96 |
With
this she spoke also to the housewife Eurynome, and said:
|
|
| 97 |
"Eurynome,
bring hither a chair and a fleece upon it, that the stranger may
sit down and tell his tale, and listen to me; for I am fain to ask
him of all things."
|
|
| 100 |
So
she spoke, and Eurynome speedily brought a polished chair and set
it in place, and on it cast a fleece. Then the much-enduring, goodly
Odysseus sat down upon it, and the wise Penelope spoke first, and
said:
|
|
| 104 |
"Stranger,
this question will I myself ask thee first. Who art thou among men,
and from whence? Where is thy city, and where thy parents?"
|
|
| 106 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 107 |
"Lady,
no one of mortals upon the boundless earth could find fault with
thee, for thy fame goes up to the broad heaven, as does the fame
of some blameless king, who with the fear of the gods in his heart,
is lord over many mighty men, upholding justice; and the black earth
bears wheat and barley, and the trees are laden with fruit, the
flocks bring forth young unceasingly, and the sea yields fish, all
from his good leading; and the people prosper under him. Wherefore
question me now in thy house of all things else, but ask not concerning
my race and my native land, lest thou fill my heart the more with
pains, as I think thereon; for I am a man of many sorrows. Moreover
it is not fitting that I should sit weeping and wailing in another's
house, for it is ill to grieve ever without ceasing. I would not
that one of thy maidens or thine own self be vexed with me, and
say that I swim in tears because my mind is heavy with wine."
|
|
|
| 123 |
Then
wise Penelope answered him:
|
|
| 124 |
"Stranger,
all excellence of mine, both of beauty and of form, the immortals
destroyed on the day when the Argives embarked for Ilios, and with
them went my husband, Odysseus. If he might but come, and watch
over this life of mine, greater would be my fame and fairer. But
now I am in sorrow, so many woes has some god brought upon me. For
all the princes who hold sway over the islands—Dulichium and Same
and wooded Zacynthus—and those who dwell around in clear-seen Ithaca
itself, all these woo me against my will, and lay waste my house.
|
|
| 134 |
Wherefore
I pay no heed to strangers or to suppliants or in any wise to heralds,
whose trade is a public one; but in longing for Odysseus I waste
my heart away. So these men urge on my marriage, and I wind a skein
of wiles. First some god breathed the thought in my heart to set
up a great web in my halls and fall to weaving a robe—fine of thread
was the web and very wide; and I straightway spoke among them:
|
|
| 141 |
"'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 one of the Achaean women in the land should be
wroth with me, if he were to lie without a shroud, who had won great
possessios.'
|
|
| 148 |
"So
I spoke, and their proud hearts consented. Then day by day I would
weave at the great web, but by night would unravel it, when I had
let place torches by me.
|
|
| 151 |
Thus
for three years I kept the Achaeans from knowing, and beguiled them;
but when the fourth year came, as the seasons rolled on, as the
months waned, and the many days were brought in their course, then
verily by the help of my maidens, shameless creatures and reckless,
they came upon me and caught me, and upbraided me loudly. So I finished
the web against my will perforce. And now I can neither escape the
marriage nor devise any counsel more, and my parents are pressing
me to marry, and my son frets, while these men devour his livelihood,
as he takes note of it all; for by now he is a man, and fully able
to care for a household to which Zeus grants honour. Yet even so
tell me of thy stock from whence thou art; for thou art not sprung
from an oak of ancient story, or from a stone."
|
|
| 164 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 165 |
"Honoured
wife of Odysseus, son of Laertes, wilt thou never cease to ask me
of my lineage? Well, I will tell thee; though verily thou wilt give
me over to pains yet more than those by which I am now held in thrall;
for so it ever is, when a man has been far from his country as long
as I have now, wandering through the many cities of men in sore
distress. Yet even so will I tell thee what thou dost ask and enquire.
|
|
| 172 |
There
is a land called Crete, in the midst of the wine-dark sea, a fair,
rich land, begirt with water, and therein are many men, past counting,
and ninety cities. They have not all the same speech, but their
tongues are mixed. There dwell Achaeans, there great-hearted native
Cretans, there Cydonians, and Dorians of waving plumes, and goodly
Pelasgians. Among their cities is the great city Cnosus, where Minos
reigned when nine years old, he that held converse with great Zeus,
and was father of my father, great-hearted Deucalion. Now Deucalion
begat me and prince Idomeneus. Idomeneus had gone forth in his beaked
ships to Ilios with the sons of Atreus; but my famous name is Aethon;
I was the younger by birth, while he was the elder and the better
man.
|
|
| 185 |
There
it was that I saw Odysseus and gave him gifts of entertainment;
for the force of the wind had brought him too to Crete, as he was
making for the land of Troy, and drove him out of his course past
Malea. So he anchored his ships at Amnisus, where is the cave of
Eilithyia, in a difficult harbour, and hardly did he escape the
storm. Then straightway he went up to the city and asked for Idomeneus;
for he declared that he was his friend, beloved and honoured. But
it was now the tenth or the eleventh dawn since Idomeneus had gone
in his beaked ships to Ilios. So I took him to the house, and gave
him entertainment with kindly welcome of the rich store that was
in the house, and to the rest of his comrades who followed with
him I gathered and gave out of the public store barley meal and
flaming wine and bulls for sacrifice, that their hearts might be
satisfied. There for twelve days the goodly Achaeans tarried, for
the strong North Wind penned them there, and would not suffer them
to stand upon their feet on the land, for some angry god had roused
it. But on the thirteenth day the wind fell and they put to sea."
|
|
| 203 |
He
spoke, and made the many falsehoods of his tale seem like the truth,
and as she listened her tears flowed and her face melted as the
snow melts on the lofty mountains, the snow which the East Wind
thaws when the West Wind has strewn it, and as it melts the streams
of the rivers flow full:
|
|
| 208 |
so
her fair cheeks melted as she wept and mourned for her husband,
who even then was sitting by her side. And Odysseus in his heart
had pity for his weeping wife, but his eyes stood fixed between
his lids as though they were horn or iron, and with guile he hid
his tears.
|
|
| 213 |
But
she, when she had had her fill of tearful wailing, again answered
him and spoke, saying:
|
|
| 215 |
"Now
verily, stranger, am I minded to put thee to the test, whether or
no thou didst in very truth entertain there in thy halls my husband
with his godlike comrades, even as thou sayest. Tell me what manner
of raiment he wore about his body, and what manner of man he was
himself; and tell me of the comrades who followed him."
|
|
| 220 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 221 |
"Lady,
hard is it for one that has been so long afar to tell thee this,
for it is now the twentieth year since he went thence and departed
from my country. But I will tell thee as my mind pictures him. A
fleecy cloak of purple did goodly Odysseus wear, a cloak of double
fold, but the brooch upon it was fashioned of gold with double clasps,
and on the front it was curiously wrought: a hound held in his fore
paws a dappled fawn, and pinned it in his jaws as it writhed. And
at this all men marvelled, how, though they were of gold, the hound
was pinning the fawn and strangling it, and the fawn was writhing
with its feet and striving to flee. And I noted the tunic about
his body, all shining as is the sheen upon the skin of a dried onion,
so soft it was; and it glistened like the sun. Verily many women
gazed at him in wonder. And another thing will I tell thee, and
do thou lay it to heart. I know not whether Odysseus was thus clothed
at home, or whether one of his comrades gave him the raiment when
he went on board the swift ship, or haply even some stranger, since
to many men was Odysseus dear, for few of the Achaeans were his
peers.
|
|
| 241 |
I,
too, gave him a sword of bronze, and a fair purple cloak of double
fold, and a fringed tunic, and with all honour sent him forth on
his benched ship. Furthermore, a herald attended him, a little older
than he, and I will tell thee of him too, what manner of man he
was. He was round-shouldered, dark of skin, and curly-haired, and
his name was Eurybates; and Odysseus honoured him above his other
comrades, because he was like-minded with himself."
|
|
| 249 |
So
he spoke, and in her heart aroused yet more the desire of weeping,
as she recognized the sure tokens that Odysseus told her. But she,
when she had had her fill of tearful wailing, made answer and said
to him:
|
|
| 253 |
"Now
verily, stranger, though before thou wast pitied, shalt thou be
dear and honoured in my halls, for it was I that gave him this raiment,
since thou describest it thus, and folded it, and brought it forth
from the store-room, and added thereto the shining brooch to be
a thing of joy to him. But my husband I shall never welcome back,
returning home to his dear native land. Wherefore it was with an
evil fate that Odysseus went forth in the hollow ship to see evil
Ilios, that should never be named."
|
|
| 261 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 262 |
"Honoured
wife of Odysseus, son of Laertes, mar not now thy fair face any
more, nor waste thy heart at all in weeping for thy husband. I count
it indeed no blame in thee; for any woman weeps when she has lost
her wedded husband, to whom she has borne children in her love,
though he were far other than Odysseus, who, they say, is like unto
the gods. Yet do thou cease from weeping, and hearken to my words;
for I will tell thee with sure truth, and will hide nothing, how
but lately I heard of the return of Odysseus, that he is near at
hand in the rich land of the Thesprotians, and yet alive, and he
is bringing with him many rich treasures, as he begs through the
land. But he lost his trusty comrades and his hollow ship on the
wine-dark sea, as he journeyed from the isle Thrinacia; for Zeus
and Helios waxed wroth against him because his comrades had slain
the kine of Helios. So they all perished in the surging sea, but
he on the keel of his ship was cast forth by the wave on the shore,
on the land of the Phaeacians, who are near of kin to the gods.
These heartily showed him all honour, as if he were a god, and gave
him many gifts, and were fain themselves to send him home unscathed.
Yea, and Odysseus would long since have been here, only it seemed
to his mind more profitable to gather wealth by roaming over the
wide earth; so truly does Odysseus beyond all mortal men know many
gainful ways, nor could any mortal beside vie with him. Thus Pheidon,
king of the Thesprotians, told me the tale. Moreover he swore in
my own presence, as he poured libations in his halls, that the ship
was launched and the men ready who were to convey him to his dear
native land. But me he sent forth first, for a ship of the Thesprotians
chanced to be setting out for Dulichium, rich in wheat. And he showed
me all the treasure that Odysseus had gathered; verily unto the
tenth generation would it feed his children after him, so great
was the wealth that lay stored for him in the halls of the king.
|
|
| 296 |
But
Odysseus, he said, had gone to Dodona to hear the will of Zeus from
the high-crested oak of the god, even how he might return to his
dear native land after so long an absence, whether openly or in
secret.
|
|
| 300 |
"Thus,
as I tell thee, he is safe, and will presently come; he is very
near, and not long will he now be far from his friends and his native
land. Yet will I give thee an oath. Be Zeus my witness first, highest
and best of gods, and the hearth of noble Odysseus to which I am
come, that verily all these things shall be brought to pass even
as I tell thee. In the course of this very month shall Odysseus
come hither, as the old moon wanes and the new appears."
|
|
| 308 |
Then
wise Penelope answered him:
|
|
| 309 |
"Ah,
stranger, I would that this word of thine might be fulfilled. Then
shouldest thou straightway know of kindness and many a gift from
me, so that one who met thee would call thee blessed. Yet in my
heart I forebode it thus, even as it shall be. Neither shall Odysseus
any more come home, nor shalt thou obtain a convoy hence, since
there are not now in the house such masters as Odysseus was among
men—as sure as ever such a man there was—to send reverend strangers
on their way, and to welcome them. But still, my maidens, wash the
stranger's feet and prepare his bed—bedstead and cloaks and bright
coverlets—that in warmth and comfort he may come to the golden-throned
Dawn. And right early in the morning bathe him and anoint him, that
in our house at the side of Telemachus he may bethink him of food
as he sits in the hall. And worse shall it be for any man among
them who vexes this man's soul with pain; naught thereafter shall
he accomplish here, how fierce soever his wrath. For how shalt thou
learn of me, stranger, whether I in any wise excel other women in
wit and prudent counsel, if all unkempt and clad in poor raiment
thou sittest at meat in my halls? Men are but short-lived. If one
be himself hard, and have a hard heart, on him do all mortal men
invoke woes for the time to come, while he still lives, and when
he is dead all men mock at him. But if one be blameless and have
a blameless heart, his fame do strangers bear far and wide among
all men, and many call him a true man."
|
|
| 335 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 336 |
"Honoured
wife of Odysseus, son of Laertes, verily cloaks and bright coverlets
became hateful in my eyes on the day when first I left behind me
the snowy mountains of Crete, as I fared on my long-oared ship.
Nay, I will lie, as in time past I was wont to rest through sleepless
nights; for many a night have I lain upon a foul bed and waited
for the bright-throned Dawn. Aye, and baths for the feet give my
heart no pleasure, nor shall any woman touch my foot of all those
who are serving-women in thy hall, unless there is some old, true-hearted
dame who has suffered in her heart as many woes as I such an one
I would not grudge to touch my feet."
|
|
| 349 |
Then
wise Penelope answered him again:
|
|
| 350 |
"Dear
stranger, never yet has a man discreet as thou, of those who are
strangers from afar, come to my house as a more welcome guest, so
wise and prudent are all thy words. I have an old dame with a heart
of understanding in her breast, who lovingly nursed and cherished
my hapless husband, and took him in her arms on the day when his
mother bore him. She shall wash thy feet, weak with age though she
be.
|
|
| 357 |
Come
now, wise Eurycleia, arise and wash the feet of one of like age
with thy master. Even such as his are now haply the feet of Odysseus,
and such his hands, for quickly do men grow old in evil fortune."
|
|
| 361 |
So
she spoke, and the old woman hid her face in her hands and let fall
hot tears, uttering words of lamentation:
|
|
| 363 |
"Ah,
woe is me, child, because of thee, for that I can do naught. Surely
Zeus hated thee above all men, though thou hadst a god-fearing heart.
For never yet did any mortal burn to Zeus, who hurls the thunderbolt,
so many fat thigh-pieces or so many choice hecatombs as thou gavest
him, with prayers that thou mightest reach a sleek old age and rear
thy glorious son. But lo, now, from thee alone has he wholly cut
off the day of thy returning.
|
|
| 370 |
Even
thus, I ween, did women mock at him too, in a strange and distant
land, when he came to some man's glorious house, as these shameless
creatures here all mock at thee. It is to shun insult now from them
and their many taunts that thou dost not suffer them to wash thy
feet, but me, who am nothing loath, has the daughter of Icarius,
wise Penelope, bidden to wash thee. Therefore will I wash thy feet,
both for Penelope's own sake and for thine, for the heart within
me is stirred with sorrow. But come now, hearken to the word that
I shall speak. Many sore-tried strangers have come hither, but I
declare that never yet have I seen any man so like another as thou
in form, and in voice, and in feet art like Odysseus."
|
|
| 382 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
|
|
| 383 |
"Old
dame, so say all men whose eyes have beheld us two, that we are
very like each other, even as thou thyself dost note and say."
|
|
| 386 |
So
he spoke, and the old dame took the shining cauldron with water
wherefrom she was about to wash his feet, and poured in cold water
in plenty, and then added thereto the warm. But Odysseus sat him
down away from the hearth and straightway turned himself toward
the darkness, for he at once had a foreboding at heart that, as
she touched him, she might note a scar, and the truth be made manifest.
So she drew near and began to wash her lord, and straightway knew
the scar of the wound which long ago a boar had dealt him with his
white tusk, when Odysseus had gone to Parnassus to visit Autolycus
and the sons of Autolycus, his mother's noble father, who excelled
all men in thievery and in oaths. It was a god himself that had
given him this skill, even Hermes, for to him he was wont to burn
acceptable sacrifices of the thighs of lambs and kids; so Hermes
befriended him with a ready heart.
|
|
| 399 |
Now
Autolycus, on coming once to the rich land of Ithaca, had found
his daughter's son a babe new-born, and when he was finishing his
supper, Eurycleia laid the child upon his knees and spoke, and addressed
him:
|
|
| 403 |
"Autolycus,
find now thyself a name to give to thy child's own child; be sure
he has long been prayed for."
|
|
| 405 |
Then
Autolycus answered her, and said:
|
|
| 406 |
"My
daughter's husband and my daughter, give him whatsoever name I say.
Lo, inasmuch as I am come hither as one that has been angered with
many, both men and women, over the fruitful earth, therefore let
the name by which the child is named be Odysseus. And for my part,
when he is a man grown and come to the great house of his mother's
kin at Parnassus, where are my possessions, I will give him thereof
and send him back rejoicing."
|
|
| 413 |
It
was for this reason that Odysseus had come, that Autolycus might
give him the glorious gifts. And Autolycus and the sons of Autolycus
clasped his hands in welcome and greeted him with gentle words,
and Amphithea, his mother's mother, took Odysseus in her arms and
kissed his head and both his beautiful eyes.
|
|
| 418 |
But
Autolycus called to his glorious sons to make ready the meal, and
they hearkened to his call. At once they led in a bull, five years
old, which they flayed and dressed, and cut up all the limbs. Then
they sliced these cunningly and pierced them with spits, and roasted
them skilfully and distributed the portions.
|
|
| 424 |
So,
then, all day long till set of sun they feasted, nor did their hearts
lack aught of the eq™al feast. But when the sun set and darkness
came on they lay down to rest and took the gift of sleep.
|
|
| 428 |
But
as soon as early Dawn appeared, the rosy-fingered, they went forth
to the hunt, the hounds and the sons of Autolycus too, and with
them went goodly Odysseus. Up the steep mountain Parnassus, clothed
with forests, they climbed, and presently reached its windy hollows.
The sun was now just striking on the fields, as he rose from softly-gliding,
deep-flowing Oceanus, when the beaters came to a glade. Before them
went the hounds, tracking the scent, and behind them the sons of
Autolycus, and among these the goodly Odysseus followed, close upon
the hounds, brandishing his long spear. Now thereby a great wild
boar was lying in a thick lair, through which the strength of the
wet winds could never blow nor the rays of the bright sun beat,
nor could the rain pierce through it, so thick it was; and fallen
leaves were there in plenty.
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| 444 |
Then
about the boar there came the noise of the feet of men and dogs
as they pressed on in the chase, and forth from his lair he came
against them with bristling back and eyes flashing fire, and stood
there at bay close before them. Then first of all Odysseus rushed
on, holding his long spear on high in his stout hand, eager to smite
him; but the boar was too quick for him and struck him above the
knee, charging upon him sideways, and with his tusk tore a long
gash in the flesh, but did not reach the bone of the man. But Odysseus
with sure aim smote him on the right shoulder, and clear through
went the point of the bright spear, and the boar fell in the dust
with a cry, and his life flew from him.
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| 455 |
Then
the dear sons of Autolycus busied themselves with the carcase, and
the wound of noble, god-like Odysseus they bound up skilfully, and
checked the black blood with a charm, and straightway returned to
the house of their dear father. And when Autolycus and the sons
of Autolycus had fully healed him, and had given him glorious gifts,
they quickly sent him back with joy to his native land, to Ithaca.
Then his father and his honoured mother rejoiced at his return,
and asked him all the story, how he got his wound; and he told them
all the truth, how, while he was hunting, a boar had struck him
with his white tusk when he had gone to Parnassus with the sons
of Autolycus.
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467 |
This scar the old dame, when she had taken the limb in the flat
of her hands, knew by the touch, and she let fall the foot. Into
the basin the leg fell, and the brazen vessel rang. Over it tilted,
and the water was spilled upon the ground.
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|
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| 471 |
Then upon her soul came joy and grief in one moment, and both her
eyes were filled with tears and the flow of her voice was checked.
But she touched the chin of Odysseus, and said:
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| 474 |
"Verily
thou art Odysseus, dear child, and I knew thee not, till I had handled
all the body of my lord."
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| 476 |
She
spoke, and with her eyes looked toward Penelope, fain to show her
that her dear husband was at home. But Penelope could not meet her
glance nor understand, for Athene had turned her thoughts aside.
But Odysseus, feeling for the woman's throat, seized it with his
right hand, and with the other drew her closer to him, and said:
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| |
|
|
| 482 |
"Mother,
why wilt thou destroy me? Thou didst thyself nurse me at this thy
breast, and now after many grievous toils I am come in the twentieth
year to my native land.
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|
| 485 |
But
since thou hast found me out, and a god has put this in thy heart,
be silent lest any other in the halls learn hereof. For thus will
I speak out to thee, and verily it shall be brought to pass: if
a god shall subdue the lordly wooers unto me, I will not spare thee,
my nurse though thou art, when I slay the other serving-women in
my halls."
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|
| 491 |
Then
wise Eurycleia answered him:
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| 492 |
"My
child, what a word has escaped the barrier of thy teeth! Thou knowest
how firm my spirit is and unyielding: I shall be as close as hard
stone or iron.
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|
| 495 |
And
another thing will I tell thee, and do thou lay it to heart. If
a god shall subdue the lordly wooers unto thee, then will I name
over to thee the women in thy halls, which ones dishonour thee,
and which are guiltless."
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| 499 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
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| 500 |
"Mother,
why, pray, wilt thou speak of them? Thou needest not at all. Of
myself will I mark them well, and come to know each one. Nay, keep
the matter to thyself, and leave the issue to the gods."
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| 503 |
So
he spoke, and the old woman went forth through the hall to bring
water for his feet, for all the first was spilled. And when she
had washed him, and anointed him richly with oil, Odysseus again
drew his chair nearer to the fire to warm himself, and hid the scar
with his rags.
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|
| 508 |
Then
wise Penelope was the first to speak, saying:
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| 509 |
"Stranger,
this little thing further will I ask thee myself, for it will soon
be the hour for pleasant rest, for him at least on whom sweet sleep
may come despite his care. But to me has a god given sorrow that
is beyond all measure, for day by day I find my joy in mourning
and lamenting, while looking to my household tasks and those of
my women in the house, but when night comes and sleep lays hold
of all, I lie upon my bed, and sharp cares, crowding close about
my throbbing heart, disquiet me, as I mourn.
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|
| 518 |
Even
as when the daghter of Pandareus, the nightingale of the greenwood,
sings sweetly, when spring is newly come, as she sits perched amid
the thick leafage of the trees, and with many trilling notes pours
forth her rich voice in wailing for her child, dear Itylus, whom
she had one day slain with the sword unwittingly, Itylus, the son
of king Zethus; even so my heart sways to and fro in doubt, whether
to abide with my son and keep all things safe, my possessions, my
slaves, and my great, high-roofed house, respecting the bed of my
husband and the voice of the people, or to go now with him whosoever
is best of the Achaeans, who woos me in the halls and offers bride-gifts
past counting. Furthermore my son, so long as he was a child and
slack of wit, would not sufler me to marry and leave the house of
my husband; but now that he is grown and has reached the bounds
of manhood, lo, he even prays me to go back again from these halls,
being vexed for his substance that the Achaeans devour to his cost.
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| 535 |
But
come now, hear this dream of mine, and interpret it for me. Twenty
geese I have in the house that come forth from the water and eat
wheat, and my heart warms with joy as I watch them. But forth from
the mountain there came a great eagle with crooked beak and broke
all their necks and killed them; and they lay strewn in a heap in
the halls, while he was borne aloft to the bright sky. Now for my
part I wept and wailed, in a dream though it was, and round me thronged
the fair-tressed Achaean women, as I grieved piteously because the
eagle had slain my geese.
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| 544 |
Then
back he came and perched upon a projecting roof-beam, and with the
voice of a mortal man checked my weeping, and said:
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| 546 |
"'Be
of good cheer, daughter of far-famed Icarius; this is no dream,
but a true vision of good which shall verily find fulfilment. The
geese are the wooers, and I, that before was the eagle, am now again
come back as thy husband, who will let loose a cruel doom upon all
the wooers.'
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| |
"So
he spoke, and sweet sleep released me, and looking about I saw the
geese in the halls, feeding on wheat beside the trough, where they
had before been wont to feed."
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| 554 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her and said:
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| 555 |
"Lady,
in no wise is it possible to wrest this dream aside and give it
another meaning, since verily Odysseus himself has shewn thee how
he will bring it to pass. For the wooers' destruction is plain to
see, for one and all; not one of them shall escape death and the
fates."
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| 559 |
Then
wise Penelope answered him again:
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| 560 |
"Stranger,
dreams verily are baffling and unclear of meaning, and in no wise
do they find fulfilment in all things for men. For two are the gates
of shadowy dreams, and one is fashioned of horn and one of ivory.
Those dreams that pass through the gate of sawn ivory deceive men,
bringing words that find no fulfilment. But those that come forth
through the gate of polished horn bring true issues to pass, when
any mortal sees them. But in my case it was not from thence, methinks,
that my strange dream came. Ah, truly it would then have been welcome
to me and to my son.
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| 570 |
But another
thing will I tell thee, and do thou lay it to heart. Even now is
coming on this morn of evil name which is to cut me off from the
house of Odysseus; for now I shall appoint for a contest those axes
which he was wont to set up in line in his halls, like props of
a ship that is building, twelve in all, and he would stand afar
off and shoot an arrow through them. Now then I shall set this contest
before the wooers: whosoever shall most easily string the bow in
his hands, and shoot an arrow through all twelve axes, with him
will I go and forsake this house of my wedded life, a house most
fair and filled with livelihood, which, methinks, I shall ever remember
even in my dreams."
|
|
| 582 |
Then
Odysseus of many wiles answered her, and said:
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| 583 |
"Honoured
wife of Odysseus, son of Laertes, no longer now do thou put off
this contest in thy halls; for, I tell thee, Odysseus of many wiles
will be here, ere these men, handling this polished bow, shall have
strung it, and shot an arrow through the iron."
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|
| 588 |
Then
wise Penelope answered him:
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|
| 589 |
"If
thou couldest but wish, stranger, to sit here in my halls and give
me joy, sleep should never be shed over my eyelids. But it is in
no wise possible that men should forever be sleepless, for the immortals
have appointed a proper time for each thing upon the earth, the
giver of grain.
|
|
| 594 |
But
I verily will go to my upper chamber and lay me on my bed, which
has become for me a bed of wailings, ever bedewed with my tears,
since the day when Odysseus went to see evil Ilios, that should
never be named.
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|
| 598 |
There
will I lay me down, but do thou lie down here in the hall. vhen
thou hast strewn bedding on the floor; or let the maids set a bedstead
for thee."
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| 600 |
So
saying, she went up to her bright upper chamber, not alone, for
with her went her handmaids as well. And when she had gone up to
her upper chamber with her handmaids, she then bewailed Odysseus,
her dear husband, until flashing-eyed Athene cast sweet sleep upon
her eyelids.
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