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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
BOOK VI

SO HERE Ulysses slept, overcome by sleep and toil; but Minerva went off to the
country and city of the Phaecians-a people who used to live in the fair town of
Hypereia, near the lawless Cyclopes. Now the Cyclopes were stronger than they and
plundered them, so their king Nausithous moved them thence and settled them in
Scheria, far from all other people. He surrounded the city with a wall, built houses and
temples, and divided the lands among his people; but he was dead and gone to the
house of Hades, and King Alcinous, whose counsels were inspired of heaven, was now
reigning. To his house, then, did Minerva hie in furtherance of the return of Ulysses.
She went straight to the beautifully decorated bedroom in which there slept a girl who
was as lovely as a goddess, Nausicaa, daughter to King Alcinous. Two maid servants
were sleeping near her, both very pretty, one on either side of the doorway, which was
closed with well-made folding doors. Minerva took the form of the famous sea captain
Dymas’s daughter, who was a bosom friend of Nausicaa and just her own age; then,
coming up to the girl’s bedside like a breath of wind, she hovered over her head and
said: “Nausicaa, what can your mother have been about, to have such a lazy daughter?
Here are your clothes all lying in disorder, yet you are going to be married almost
immediately, and should not only be well dressed yourself, but should find good
clothes for those who attend you. This is the way to get yourself a good name, and to
make your father and mother proud of you. Suppose, then, that we make tomorrow a
washing day, and start at daybreak. I will come and help you so that you may have
everything ready as soon as possible, for all the best young men among your own
people are courting you, and you are not going to remain a maid much longer. Ask
your father, therefore, to have a waggon and mules ready for us at daybreak, to take
the rugs, robes, and girdles; and you can ride, too, which will be much pleasanter for
you than walking, for the washing-cisterns are some way from the town.” When she
had said this Minerva went away to Olympus, which they say is the everlasting home
of the gods. Here no wind beats roughly, and neither rain nor snow can fall; but it
abides in everlasting sunshine and in a great peacefulness of light, wherein the blessed
gods are illumined for ever and ever. This was the place to which the goddess went
when she had given instructions to the girl.

By and by morning came and woke Nausicaa, who began wondering about her dream;
she therefore went to the other end of the house to tell her father and mother all about
it, and found them in their own room. Her mother was sitting by the fireside spinning
her purple yarn with her maids around her, and she happened to catch her father just
as he was going out to attend a meeting of the town council, which the Phaeacian
aldermen had convened. She stopped him and said: “Papa dear, could you manage to
let me have a good big waggon? I want to take all our dirty clothes to the river and
wash them. You are the chief man here, so it is only right that you should have a clean
shirt when you attend meetings of the council. Moreover, you have five sons at home,
two of them married, while the other three are good-looking bachelors; you know they
always like to have clean linen when they go to a dance, and I have been thinking
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