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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
something that gave us great relief, for she put some ambrosia under each man’s
nostrils, which was so fragrant that it killed the smell of the seals.

“We waited the whole morning and made the best of it, watching the seals come up in
hundreds to bask upon the sea shore, till at noon the old man of the sea came up too,
and when he had found his fat seals he went over them and counted them. We were
among the first he counted, and he never suspected any guile, but laid himself down to
sleep as soon as he had done counting. Then we rushed upon him with a shout and
seized him; on which he began at once with his old tricks, and changed himself first
into a lion with a great mane; then all of a sudden he became a dragon, a leopard, a
wild boar; the next moment he was running water, and then again directly he was a
tree, but we stuck to him and never lost hold, till at last the cunning old creature
became distressed, and said, Which of the gods was it, Son of Atreus, that hatched this
plot with you for snaring me and seizing me against my will? What do you want?’
“’You know that yourself, old man,’ I answered, ‘you will gain nothing by trying to put
me off. It is because I have been kept so long in this island, and see no sign of my being
able to get away. I am losing all heart; tell me, then, for you gods know everything,
which of the immortals it is that is hindering me, and tell me also how I may sail the
sea so as to reach my home?’ “Then,’ he said, ‘if you would finish your voyage and get
home quickly, you must offer sacrifices to Jove and to the rest of the gods before
embarking; for it is decreed that you shall not get back to your friends, and to your own
house, till you have returned to the heaven fed stream of Egypt, and offered holy
hecatombs to the immortal gods that reign in heaven. When you have done this they
will let you finish your voyage.’ “I was broken hearted when I heard that I must go
back all that long and terrible voyage to Egypt; nevertheless, I answered, ‘I will do all,
old man, that you have laid upon me; but now tell me, and tell me true, whether all the
Achaeans whom Nestor and I left behind us when we set sail from Troy have got home
safely, or whether any one of them came to a bad end either on board his own ship or
among his friends when the days of his fighting were done.’ “’Son of Atreus,’ he
answered, ‘why ask me? You had better not know what I can tell you, for your eyes
will surely fill when you have heard my story. Many of those about whom you ask are
dead and gone, but many still remain, and only two of the chief men among the
Achaeans perished during their return home. As for what happened on the field of
battle-you were there yourself. A third Achaean leader is still at sea, alive, but
hindered from returning. Ajax was wrecked, for Neptune drove him on to the great
rocks of Gyrae; nevertheless, he let him get safe out of the water, and in spite of all
Minerva’s hatred he would have escaped death, if he had not ruined himself by
boasting. He said the gods could not drown him even though they had tried to do so,
and when Neptune heard this large talk, he seized his trident in his two brawny hands,
and split the rock of Gyrae in two pieces. The base remained where it was, but the part
on which Ajax was sitting fell headlong into the sea and carried Ajax with it; so he
drank salt water and was drowned.

“’Your brother and his ships escaped, for Juno protected him, but when he was just
about to reach the high promontory of Malea, he was caught by a heavy gale which
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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