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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
afflicted. Indeed, were I to tell you all that heaven has seen fit to lay upon me, you
would say that I was still worse off than they are. Nevertheless, let me sup in spite of
sorrow, for an empty stomach is a very importunate thing, and thrusts itself on a man’s
notice no matter how dire is his distress. I am in great trouble, yet it insists that I shall
eat and drink, bids me lay aside all memory of my sorrows and dwell only on the due
replenishing of itself. As for yourselves, do as you propose, and at break of day set
about helping me to get home. I shall be content to die if I may first once more behold
my property, my bondsmen, and all the greatness of my house.” Thus did he speak.
Every one approved his saying, and agreed that he should have his escort inasmuch as
he had spoken reasonably. Then when they had made their drink-offerings, and had
drunk each as much as he was minded they went home to bed every man in his own
abode, leaving Ulysses in the cloister with Arete and Alcinous while the servants were
taking the things away after supper.

Arete was the first to speak, for she recognized the shirt, cloak, and good clothes that
Ulysses was wearing, as the work of herself and of her maids; so she said, “Stranger,
before we go any further, there is a question I should like to ask you.

Who, and whence are you, and who gave you those clothes? Did you not say you had
come here from beyond the sea?” And Ulysses answered, “It would be a long story
Madam, were I to relate in full the tale of my misfortunes, for the hand of heaven has
been laid heavy upon me; but as regards your question, there is an island far away in
the sea which is called ‘the Ogygian.’ Here dwells the cunning and powerful goddess
Calypso, daughter of Atlas. She lives by herself far from all neighbours human or
divine.

Fortune, however, me to her hearth all desolate and alone, for Jove struck my ship with
his thunderbolts, and broke it up in mid-ocean. My brave comrades were drowned
every man of them, but I stuck to the keel and was carried hither and thither for the
space of nine days, till at last during the darkness of the tenth night the gods brought
me to the Ogygian island where the great goddess Calypso lives.

She took me in and treated me with the utmost kindness; indeed she wanted to make
me immortal that I might never grow old, but she could not persuade me to let her do
so.

“I stayed with Calypso seven years straight on end, and watered the good clothes she
gave me with my tears during the whole time; but at last when the eighth year came
round she bade me depart of her own free will, either because Jove had told her she
must, or because she had changed her mind. She sent me from her island on a raft,
which she provisioned with abundance of bread and wine. Moreover she gave me good
stout clothing, and sent me a wind that blew both warm and fair. Days seven and ten
did I sail over the sea, and on the eighteenth I caught sight of the first outlines of the
mountains upon your coast-and glad indeed was I to set eyes upon them. Nevertheless
there was still much trouble in store for me, for at this point Neptune would let me go
no further, and raised a great storm against me; the sea was so terribly high that I could
no longer keep to my raft, which went to pieces under the fury of the gale, and I had to
swim for it, till wind and current brought me to your shores.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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