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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
yesterday’s festivities. Go, then, one or other of you to the plain, tell the stockman to
look me out a heifer, and come on here with it at once. Another must go to
Telemachus’s ship, and invite all the crew, leaving two men only in charge of the
vessel. Some one else will run and fetch Laerceus the goldsmith to gild the horns of the
heifer. The rest, stay all of you where you are; tell the maids in the house to prepare an
excellent dinner, and to fetch seats, and logs of wood for a burnt offering. Tell them
also-to bring me some clear spring water.” On this they hurried off on their several
errands. The heifer was brought in from the plain, and Telemachus’s crew came from
the ship; the goldsmith brought the anvil, hammer, and tongs, with which he worked
his gold, and Minerva herself came to the sacrifice. Nestor gave out the gold, and the
smith gilded the horns of the heifer that the goddess might have pleasure in their
beauty. Then Stratius and Echephron brought her in by the horns; Aretus fetched water
from the house in a ewer that had a flower pattern on it, and in his other hand he held a
basket of barley meal; sturdy Thrasymedes stood by with a sharp axe, ready to strike
the heifer, while Perseus held a bucket. Then Nestor began with washing his hands and
sprinkling the barley meal, and he offered many a prayer to Minerva as he threw a lock
from the heifer’s head upon the fire.

When they had done praying and sprinkling the barley meal Thrasymedes dealt his
blow, and brought the heifer down with a stroke that cut through the tendons at the
base of her neck, whereon the daughters and daughters-in-law of Nestor, and his
venerable wife Eurydice (she was eldest daughter to Clymenus) screamed with delight.
Then they lifted the heifer’s head from off the ground, and Pisistratus cut her throat.
When she had done bleeding and was quite dead, they cut her up. They cut out the
thigh bones all in due course, wrapped them round in two layers of fat, and set some
pieces of raw meat on the top of them; then Nestor laid them upon the wood fire and
poured wine over them, while the young men stood near him with five-pronged spits
in their hands. When the thighs were burned and they had tasted the inward meats,
they cut the rest of the meat up small, put the pieces on the spits and toasted them over
the fire.

Meanwhile lovely Polycaste, Nestor’s youngest daughter, washed Telemachus. When
she had washed him and anointed him with oil, she brought him a fair mantle and
shirt, and he looked like a god as he came from the bath and took his seat by the side of
Nestor. When the outer meats were done they drew them off the spits and sat down to
dinner where they were waited upon by some worthy henchmen, who kept pouring
them out their wine in cups of gold. As soon as they had had had enough to eat and
drink Nestor said, “Sons, put Telemachus’s horses to the chariot that he may start at
once.” Thus did he speak, and they did even as he had said, and yoked the fleet horses
to the chariot. The housekeeper packed them up a provision of bread, wine, and
sweetmeats fit for the sons of princes. Then Telemachus got into the chariot, while
Pisistratus gathered up the reins and took his seat beside him. He lashed the horses on
and they flew forward nothing loth into the open country, leaving the high citadel of
Pylos behind them. All that day did they travel, swaying the yoke upon their necks till
the sun went down and darkness was over all the land. Then they reached Pherae
where Diocles lived, who was son to Ortilochus and grandson to Alpheus. Here they
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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