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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
hand, you elect 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.” As he spoke Jove sent two eagles from the top of the mountain, and
they flew on and on with the wind, sailing side by side in their own lordly flight. When
they were right over the middle of the assembly they wheeled and circled about,
beating the air with their wings and glaring death into the eyes of them that were
below; then, fighting fiercely and tearing at one another, they flew off towards the right
over the town. The people wondered as they saw them, and asked each other what an
this might be; whereon Halitherses, who was the best prophet and reader of omens
among them, spoke to them plainly and in all honesty, saying: “Hear me, men of
Ithaca, and I speak more particularly to the suitors, for I see mischief brewing for them.
Ulysses is not going to be away much longer; indeed he is close at hand to deal out
death and destruction, not on them alone, but on many another of us who live in Ithaca.
Let us then be wise in time, and put a stop to this wickedness before he comes. Let the
suitors do so of their own accord; it will be better for them, for I am not prophesying
without due knowledge; everything has happened to Ulysses as I foretold when the
Argives set out for Troy, and he with them. I said that after going through much
hardship and losing all his men he should come home again in the twentieth year and
that no one would know him; and now all this is coming true.” Eurymachus son of
Polybus then said, “Go home, old man, and prophesy to your own children, or it may
be worse for them. I can read these omens myself much better than you can; birds are
always flying about in the sunshine somewhere or other, but they seldom mean
anything. Ulysses has died in a far country, and it is a pity you are not dead along with
him, instead of prating here about omens and adding fuel to the anger of Telemachus
which is fierce enough as it is.

I suppose you think he will give you something for your family, but I tell youand it
shall surely be-when an old man like you, who should know better, talks a young one
over till he becomes troublesome, in the first place his young friend will only fare so
much the worse-he will take nothing by it, for the suitors will prevent this-and in the
next, we will lay a heavier fine, sir, upon yourself than you will at all like paying, for it
will bear hardly upon you. As for Telemachus, I warn him in the presence of you all to
send his mother back to her father, who will find her a husband and provide her with
all the marriage gifts so dear a daughter may expect. Till we shall go on harassing him
with our suit; for we fear no man, and care neither for him, with all his fine speeches,
nor for any fortunetelling of yours. You may preach as much as you please, but we
shall only hate you the more. We shall go back and continue to eat up Telemachus’s
estate without paying him, till such time as his mother leaves off tormenting us by
keeping us day after day on the tiptoe of expectation, each vying with the other in his
suit for a prize of such rare perfection. Besides we cannot go after the other women
whom we should marry in due course, but for the way in which she treats us.” Then
Telemachus said, “Eurymachus, and you other suitors, I shall say no more, and entreat
you no further, for the gods and the people of Ithaca now know my story. Give me,
then, a ship and a crew of twenty men to take me hither and thither, and I will go to
Sparta and to Pylos in quest of my father who has so long been missing. Some one may
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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