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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
such a divine voice as Phemius has; but in the morning meet me in full assembly that I
may give you formal notice to depart, and feast at one another’s houses, turn and turn
about, at your own cost. If on the other hand you choose to persist in spunging upon
one man, heaven help me, but Jove shall reckon with you in full, and when you fall in
my father’s house there shall be no man to avenge you.” The suitors bit their lips as
they heard him, and marvelled at the boldness of his speech. Then, Antinous, son of
Eupeithes, said, “The gods seem to have given you lessons in bluster and tall talking;
may Jove never grant you to be chief in Ithaca as your father was before you.”
Telemachus answered, “Antinous, do not chide with me, but, god willing, I will be
chief too if I can. Is this the worst fate you can think of for me? It is no bad thing to be a
chief, for it brings both riches and honour. Still, now that Ulysses is dead there are
many great men in Ithaca both old and young, and some other may take the lead
among them; nevertheless I will be chief in my own house, and will rule those whom
Ulysses has won for me.” Then Eurymachus, son of Polybus, answered, “It rests with
heaven to decide who shall be chief among us, but you shall be master in your own
house and over your own possessions; no one while there is a man in Ithaca shall do
you violence nor rob you. And now, my good fellow, I want to know about this
stranger. What country does he come from? Of what family is he, and where is his
estate? Has he brought you news about the return of your father, or was he on business
of his own? He seemed a well-to-do man, but he hurried off so suddenly that he was
gone in a moment before we could get to know him.” “My father is dead and gone,”
answered Telemachus, “and even if some rumour reaches me I put no more faith in it
now. My mother does indeed sometimes send for a soothsayer and question him, but I
give his prophecyings no heed. As for the stranger, he was Mentes, son of Anchialus,
chief of the Taphians, an old friend of my father’s.” But in his heart he knew that it had
been the goddess.

The suitors then returned to their singing and dancing until the evening; but when
night fell upon their pleasuring they went home to bed each in his own abode.
Telemachus’s room was high up in a tower that looked on to the outer court; hither,
then, he hied, brooding and full of thought. A good old woman, Euryclea, daughter of
Ops, the son of Pisenor, went before him with a couple of blazing torches. Laertes had
bought her with his own money when she was quite young; he gave the worth of
twenty oxen for her, and shewed as much respect to her in his household as he did to
his own wedded wife, but he did not take her to his bed for he feared his wife’s
resentment. She it was who now lighted Telemachus to his room, and she loved him
better than any of the other women in the house did, for she had nursed him when he
was a baby. He opened the door of his bed room and sat down upon the bed; as he
took off his shirt he gave it to the good old woman, who folded it tidily up, and hung it
for him over a peg by his bed side, after which she went out, pulled the door to by a
silver catch, and drew the bolt home by means of the strap. But Telemachus as he lay
covered with a woollen fleece kept thinking all night through of his intended voyage of
the counsel that Minerva had given him.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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