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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
your voyage, it shall not be long delayed; your father was such an old friend of mine
that I will find you a ship, and will come with you myself. Now, however, return
home, and go about among the suitors; begin getting provisions ready for your voyage;
see everything well stowed, the wine in jars, and the barley meal, which is the staff of
life, in leathern bags, while I go round the town and beat up volunteers at once. There
are many ships in Ithaca both old and new; I will run my eye over them for you and
will choose the best; we will get her ready and will put out to sea without delay.” Thus
spoke Minerva daughter of Jove, and Telemachus lost no time in doing as the goddess
told him. He went moodily and found the suitors flaying goats and singeing pigs in the
outer court. Antinous came up to him at once and laughed as he took his hand in his
own, saying, “Telemachus, my fine fire-eater, bear no more ill blood neither in word
nor deed, but eat and drink with us as you used to do. The Achaeans will find you in
everything-a ship and a picked crew to bootso that you can set sail for Pylos at once
and get news of your noble father.” “Antinous,” answered Telemachus, “I cannot eat in
peace, nor take pleasure of any kind with such men as you are. Was it not enough that
you should waste so much good property of mine while I was yet a boy? Now that I am
older and know more about it, I am also stronger, and whether here among this people,
or by going to Pylos, I will do you all the harm I can. I shall go, and my going will not
be in vain though, thanks to you suitors, I have neither ship nor crew of my own, and
must be passenger not captain.” As he spoke he snatched his hand from that of
Antinous. Meanwhile the others went on getting dinner ready about the buildings,
jeering at him tauntingly as they did so.

“Telemachus,” said one youngster, “means to be the death of us; I suppose he thinks he
can bring friends to help him from Pylos, or again from Sparta, where he seems bent on
going. Or will he go to Ephyra as well, for poison to put in our wine and kill us?”
Another said, “Perhaps if Telemachus goes on board ship, he will be like his father and
perish far from his friends. In this case we should have plenty to do, for we could then
divide up his property amongst us: as for the house we can let his mother and the man
who marries her have that.” This was how they talked. But Telemachus went down
into the lofty and spacious store-room where his father’s treasure of gold and bronze
lay heaped up upon the floor, and where the linen and spare clothes were kept in open
chests.

Here, too, there was a store of fragrant olive oil, while casks of old, well-ripened wine,
unblended and fit for a god to drink, were ranged against the wall in case Ulysses
should come home again after all. The room was closed with well-made doors opening
in the middle; moreover the faithful old house-keeper Euryclea, daughter of Ops the
son of Pisenor, was in charge of everything both night and day. Telemachus called her
to the store-room and said: “Nurse, draw me off some of the best wine you have, after
what you are keeping for my father’s own drinking, in case, poor man, he should
escape death, and find his way home again after all. Let me have twelve jars, and see
that they all have lids; also fill me some well-sewn leathern bags with barley meal-
about twenty measures in all. Get these things put together at once, and say nothing
about it. I will take everything away this evening as soon as my mother has gone
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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