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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
“And now for yourself-stay here some ten or twelve days longer, and I will then speed
you on your way. I will make you a noble present of a chariot and three horses. I will
also give you a beautiful chalice that so long as you live you may think of me whenever
you make a drink-offering to the immortal gods.”

“Son of Atreus,” replied Telemachus, “do not press me to stay longer; I should be
contented to remain with you for another twelve months; I find your conversation so
delightful that I should never once wish myself at home with my parents; but my crew
whom I have left at Pylos are already impatient, and you are detaining me from them.
As for any present you may be disposed to make me, I had rather that it should he a
piece of plate. I will take no horses back with me to Ithaca, but will leave them to adorn
your own stables, for you have much flat ground in your kingdom where lotus thrives,
as also meadowsweet and wheat and barley, and oats with their white and spreading
ears; whereas in Ithaca we have neither open fields nor racecourses, and the country is
more fit for goats than horses, and I like it the better for that. None of our islands have
much level ground, suitable for horses, and Ithaca least of all.” Menelaus smiled and
took Telemachus’s hand within his own. “What you say,” said he, “shows that you
come of good family. I both can, and will, make this exchange for you, by giving you
the finest and most precious piece of plate in all my house. It is a mixing-bowl by
Vulcan’s own hand, of pure silver, except the rim, which is inlaid with gold.
Phaedimus, king of the Sidonians, gave it me in the course of a visit which I paid him
when I returned thither on my homeward journey. I will make you a present of it.”
Thus did they converse [and guests kept coming to the king’s house. They brought
sheep and wine, while their wives had put up bread for them to take with them; so
they were busy cooking their dinners in the courts].

Meanwhile the suitors were throwing discs or aiming with spears at a mark on the
levelled ground in front of Ulysses’ house, and were behaving with all their old
insolence. Antinous and Eurymachus, who were their ringleaders and much the
foremost among them all, were sitting together when Noemon son of Phronius came up
and said to Antinous, “Have we any idea, Antinous, on what day Telemachus returns
from Pylos? He has a ship of mine, and I want it, to cross over to Elis: I have twelve
brood mares there with yearling mule foals by their side not yet broken in, and I want
to bring one of them over here and break him.” They were astounded when they heard
this, for they had made sure that Telemachus had not gone to the city of Neleus. They
thought he was only away somewhere on the farms, and was with the sheep, or with
the swineherd; so Antinous said, “When did he go? Tell me truly, and what young men
did he take with him? Were they freemen or his own bondsmen-for he might manage
that too? Tell me also, did you let him have the ship of your own free will because he
asked you, or did he take it without yourleave?” “I lent it him,” answered Noemon,
“what else could I do when a man of his position said he was in a difficulty, and asked
me to oblige him? I could not possibly refuse. As for those who went with him they
were the best young men we have, and I saw Mentor go on board as captain-or some
god who was exactly like him. I cannot understand it, for I saw Mentor here myself
yesterday morning, and yet he was then setting out for Pylos.”
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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