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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer
plausible stories that it is very hard to see through them, but there is a style about your
language which assures me of your good disposition. Moreover you have told the story
of your own misfortunes, and those of the Argives, as though you were a practised
bard; but tell me, and tell me true, whether you saw any of the mighty heroes who
went to Troy at the same time with yourself, and perished there. The evenings are still
at their longest, and it is not yet bed time-go on, therefore, with your divine story, for I
could stay here listening till to-morrow morning, so long as you will continue to tell us
of your adventures.” “Alcinous,” answered Ulysses, “there is a time for making
speeches, and a time for going to bed; nevertheless, since you so desire, I will not
refrain from telling you the still sadder tale of those of my comrades who did not fall
fighting with the Trojans, but perished on their return, through the treachery of a
wicked woman.

“When Proserpine had dismissed the female ghosts in all directions, the ghost of
Agamemnon son of Atreus came sadly up tome, surrounded by those who had
perished with him in the house of Aegisthus. As soon as he had tasted the blood he
knew me, and weeping bitterly stretched out his arms towards me to embrace me; but
he had no strength nor substance any more, and I too wept and pitied him as I beheld
him. ‘How did you come by your death,’ said I, ‘King Agamemnon? Did Neptune raise
his winds and waves against you when you were at sea, or did your enemies make an
end of you on the mainland when you were cattle-lifting or sheep-stealing, or while
they were fighting in defence of their wives and city?’ “’Ulysses,’ he answered, ‘noble
son of Laertes, was not lost at sea in any storm of Neptune’s raising, nor did my foes
despatch me upon the mainland, but Aegisthus and my wicked wife were the death of
me between them. He asked me to his house, feasted me, and then butchered me most
miserably as though I were a fat beast in a slaughter house, while all around me my
comrades were slain like sheep or pigs for the wedding breakfast, or picnic, or
gorgeous banquet of some great nobleman. You must have seen numbers of men killed
either in a general engagement, or in single combat, but you never saw anything so
truly pitiable as the way in which we fell in that cloister, with the mixing-bowl and the
loaded tables lying all about, and the ground reeking with our-blood. I heard Priam’s
daughter Cassandra scream as Clytemnestra killed her close beside me. I lay dying
upon the earth with the sword in my body, and raised my hands to kill the slut of a
murderess, but she slipped away from me; she would not even close my lips nor my
eyes when I was dying, for there is nothing in this world so cruel and so shameless as a
woman when she has fallen into such guilt as hers was. Fancy murdering her own
husband! I thought I was going to be welcomed home by my children and my servants,
but her abominable crime has brought disgrace on herself and all women who shall
come after-even on the good ones.’ “And I said, ‘In truth Jove has hated the house of
Atreus from first to last in the matter of their women’s counsels. See how many of us
fell for Helen’s sake, and now it seems that Clytemnestra hatched mischief against too
during your absence.’ “’Be sure, therefore,’ continued Agamemnon, ‘and not be too
friendly even with your own wife. Do not tell her all that you know perfectly well
yourself. Tell her a part only, and keep your own counsel about the rest. Not that your
wife, Ulysses, is likely to murder you, for Penelope is a very admirable woman, and
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - The Odyssey by Homer



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