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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
the cup to Telemachus and he prayed likewise. By and by, when the outer meats were
roasted and had been taken off the spits, the carvers gave every man his portion and
they all made an excellent dinner. As soon as they had had enough to eat and drink,
Nestor, knight of Gerene, began to speak.

“Now,” said he, “that our guests have done their dinner, it will be best to ask them who
they are. Who, then, sir strangers, are you, and from what port have you sailed? Are
you traders? or do you sail the seas as rovers with your hand against every man, and
every man’s hand against you?” Telemachus answered boldly, for Minerva had given
him courage to ask about his father and get himself a good name.

“Nestor,” said he, “son of Neleus, honour to the Achaean name, you ask whence we
come, and I will tell you. We come from Ithaca under Neritum, and the matter about
which I would speak is of private not public import. I seek news of my unhappy father
Ulysses, who is said to have sacked the town of Troy in company with yourself. We
know what fate befell each one of the other heroes who fought at Troy, but as regards
Ulysses heaven has hidden from us the knowledge even that he is dead at all, for no
one can certify us in what place he perished, nor say whether he fell in battle on the
mainland, or was lost at sea amid the waves of Amphitrite. Therefore I am suppliant at
your knees, if haply you may be pleased to tell me of his melancholy end, whether you
saw it with your own eyes, or heard it from some other traveller, for he was a man born
to trouble.

Do not soften things out of any pity for me, but tell me in all plainness exactly what you
saw. If my brave father Ulysses ever did you loyal service, either by word or deed,
when you Achaeans were harassed among the Trojans, bear it in mind now as in my
favour and tell me truly all.” “My friend,” answered Nestor, “you recall a time of much
sorrow to my mind, for the brave Achaeans suffered much both at sea, while
privateering under Achilles, and when fighting before the great city of king Priam. Our
best men all of them fell there-Ajax, Achilles, Patroclus peer of gods in counsel, and
my own dear son Antilochus, a man singularly fleet of foot and in fight valiant. But we
suffered much more than this; what mortal tongue indeed could tell the whole story?
Though you were to stay here and question me for five years, or even six, I could not
tell you all that the Achaeans suffered, and you would turn homeward weary of my
tale before it ended. Nine long years did we try every kind of stratagem, but the hand
of heaven was against us; during all this time there was no one who could compare
with your father in subtlety-if indeed you are his son-I can hardly believe my eyes-
and you talk just like him too-no one would say that people of such different ages
could speak so much alike. He and I never had any kind of difference from first to last
neither in camp nor council, but in singleness of heart and purpose we advised the
Argives how all might be ordered for the best.

“When however, we had sacked the city of Priam, and were setting sail in our ships as
heaven had dispersed us, then Jove saw fit to vex the Argives on their homeward
voyage; for they had Not all been either wise or understanding, and hence many came
to a bad end through the displeasure of Jove’s daughter Minerva, who brought about a
quarrel between the two sons of Atreus.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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