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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
had been set near him as being a prime part, and they laid their hands on the good
things that were before them; as soon as they had had enough to eat and drink,
Telemachus said to the son of Nestor, with his head so close that no one might hear,
“Look, Pisistratus, man after my own heart, see the gleam of bronze and gold-of
amber, ivory, and silver. Everything is so splendid that it is like seeing the palace of
Olympian Jove. I am lost in admiration.” Menelaus overheard him and said, “No one,
my sons, can hold his own with Jove, for his house and everything about him is
immortal; but among mortal menwell, there may be another who has as much wealth
as I have, or there may not; but at all events I have travelled much and have undergone
much hardship, for it was nearly eight years before I could get home with my fleet. I
went to Cyprus, Phoenicia and the Egyptians; I went also to the Ethiopians, the
Sidonians, and the Erembians, and to Libya where the lambs have horns as soon as
they are born, and the sheep lamb down three times a year. Every one in that country,
whether master or man, has plenty of cheese, meat, and good milk, for the ewes yield
all the year round. But while I was travelling and getting great riches among these
people, my brother was secretly and shockingly murdered through the perfidy of his
wicked wife, so that I have no pleasure in being lord of all this wealth. Whoever your
parents may be they must have told you about all this, and of my heavy loss in the ruin
of a stately mansion fully and magnificently furnished. Would that I had only a third of
what I now have so that I had stayed at home, and all those were living who perished
on the plain of Troy, far from Argos. I of grieve, as I sit here in my house, for one and
all of them. At times I cry aloud for sorrow, but presently I leave off again, for crying is
cold comfort and one soon tires of it. Yet grieve for these as I may, I do so for one man
more than for them all. I cannot even think of him without loathing both food and
sleep, so miserable does he make me, for no one of all the Achaeans worked so hard or
risked so much as he did. He took nothing by it, and has left a legacy of sorrow to
myself, for he has been gone a long time, and we know not whether he is alive or dead.
His old father, his long-suffering wife Penelope, and his son Telemachus, whom he left
behind him an infant in arms, are plunged in grief on his account.” Thus spoke
Menelaus, and the heart of Telemachus yearned as he bethought him of his father.
Tears fell from his eyes as he heard him thus mentioned, so that he held his cloak
before his face with both hands. When Menelaus saw this he doubted whether to let
him choose his own time for speaking, or to ask him at once and find what it was all
about.

While he was thus in two minds Helen came down from her high vaulted and
perfumed room, looking as lovely as Diana herself. Adraste brought her a seat, Alcippe
a soft woollen rug while Phylo fetched her the silver work-box which Alcandra wife of
Polybus had given her. Polybus lived in Egyptian Thebes, which is the richest city in
the whole world; he gave Menelaus two baths, both of pure silver, two tripods, and ten
talents of gold; besides all this, his wife gave Helen some beautiful presents, to wit, a
golden distaff, and a silver work-box that ran on wheels, with a gold band round the
top of it. Phylo now placed this by her side, full of fine spun yarn, and a distaff charged
with violet coloured wool was laid upon the top of it. Then Helen took her seat, put her
feet upon the footstool, and began to question her husband.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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