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Book
I
Tell me, O muse, of that ingenious hero who travelled
far and wide after he had sacked the famous town of Troy. Many cities
did he visit, and many were the nations with whose manners and customs
he was acquainted; moreover he suffered much by sea while trying
to save his own life and bring his men safely home; but do what
he might he could not save his men, for they perished through their
own sheer folly in eating the cattle of the Sun-god Hyperion; so
the god prevented them from ever reaching home. Tell me, too, about
all these things, O daughter of Jove, from whatsoever source you
may know them.
So now all who escaped death in battle or by shipwreck
had got safely home except Ulysses, and he, though he was longing
to return to his wife and country, was detained by the goddess Calypso,
who had got him into a large cave and wanted to marry him. But as
years went by, there came a time when the gods settled that he should
go back to Ithaca; even then, however, when he was among his own
people, his troubles were not yet over; nevertheless all the gods
had now begun to pity him except Neptune, who still persecuted him
without ceasing and would not let him get home.
Now Neptune had gone off to the Ethiopians, who
are at the world's end, and lie in two halves, the one looking West
and the other East. He had gone there to accept a hecatomb of sheep
and oxen, and was enjoying himself at his festival; but the other
gods met in the house of Olympian Jove, and the sire of gods and
men spoke first. At that moment he was thinking of Aegisthus, who
had been killed by Agamemnon's son Orestes; so he said to the other
gods:
"See now, how men lay blame upon us gods for
what is after all nothing but their own folly. Look at Aegisthus;
he must needs make love to Agamemnon's wife unrighteously and then
kill Agamemnon, though he knew it would be the death of him; for
I sent Mercury to warn him not to do either of these things, inasmuch
as Orestes would be sure to take his revenge when he grew up and
wanted to return home. Mercury told him this in all good will but
he would not listen, and now he has paid for everything in full."
Then Minerva said, "Father, son of Saturn,
King of kings, it served Aegisthus right, and so it would any one
else who does as he did; but Aegisthus is neither here nor there;
it is for Ulysses that my heart bleeds, when I think of his sufferings
in that lonely sea-girt island, far away, poor man, from all his
friends. It is an island covered with forest, in the very middle
of the sea, and a goddess lives there, daughter of the magician
Atlas, who looks after the bottom of the ocean, and carries the
great columns that keep heaven and earth asunder. This daughter
of Atlas has got hold of poor unhappy Ulysses, and keeps trying
by every kind of blandishment to make him forget his home, so that
he is tired of life, and thinks of nothing but how he may once more
see the smoke of his own chimneys. You, sir, take no heed of this,
and yet when Ulysses was before Troy did he not propitiate you with
many a burnt sacrifice? Why then should you keep on being so angry
with him?"
And Jove said, "My child, what are you talking
about? How can I forget Ulysses than whom there is no more capable
man on earth, nor more liberal in his offerings to the immortal
gods that live in heaven? Bear in mind, however, that Neptune is
still furious with Ulysses for having blinded an eye of Polyphemus
king of the Cyclopes. Polyphemus is son to Neptune by the nymph
Thoosa, daughter to the sea-king Phorcys; therefore though he will
not kill Ulysses outright, he torments him by preventing him from
getting home. Still, let us lay our heads together and see how we
can help him to return; Neptune will then be pacified, for if we
are all of a mind he can hardly stand out against us."
And Minerva said, "Father, son of Saturn,
King of kings, if, then, the gods now mean that Ulysses should get
home, we should first send Mercury to the Ogygian island to tell
Calypso that we have made up our minds and that he is to return.
In the meantime I will go to Ithaca, to put heart into Ulysses'
son Telemachus; I will embolden him to call the Achaeans in assembly,
and speak out to the suitors of his mother Penelope, who persist
in eating up any number of his sheep and oxen; I will also conduct
him to Sparta and to Pylos, to see if he can hear anything about
the return of his dear father- for this will make people speak well
of him."
So saying she bound on her glittering golden sandals,
imperishable, with which she can fly like the wind over land or
sea; she grasped the redoubtable bronze-shod spear, so stout and
sturdy and strong, wherewith she quells the ranks of heroes who
have displeased her, and down she darted from the topmost summits
of Olympus, whereon forthwith she was in Ithaca, at the gateway
of Ulysses' house, disguised as a visitor, Mentes, chief of the
Taphians, and she held a bronze spear in her hand. There she found
the lordly suitors seated on hides of the oxen which they had killed
and eaten, and playing draughts in front of the house. Men-servants
and pages were bustling about to wait upon them, some mixing wine
with water in the mixing-bowls, some cleaning down the tables with
wet sponges and laying them out again, and some cutting up great
quantities of meat.
Telemachus saw her long before any one else did.
He was sitting moodily among the suitors thinking about his brave
father, and how he would send them flying out of the house, if he
were to come to his own again and be honoured as in days gone by.
Thus brooding as he sat among them, he caught sight of Minerva and
went straight to the gate, for he was vexed that a stranger should
be kept waiting for admittance. He took her right hand in his own,
and bade her give him her spear. "Welcome," said he, "to
our house, and when you have partaken of food you shall tell us
what you have come for."
He led the way as he spoke, and Minerva followed
him. When they were within he took her spear and set it in the spear-
stand against a strong bearing-post along with the many other spears
of his unhappy father, and he conducted her to a richly decorated
seat under which he threw a cloth of damask. There was a footstool
also for her feet, and he set another seat near her for himself,
away from the suitors, that she might not be annoyed while eating
by their noise and insolence, and that he might ask her more freely
about his father.
A maid servant then brought them water in a beautiful
golden ewer and poured it into a silver basin for them to wash their
hands, and she drew a clean table beside them. An upper servant
brought them bread, and offered them many good things of what there
was in the house, the carver fetched them plates of all manner of
meats and set cups of gold by their side, and a man-servant brought
them wine and poured it out for them.
Then the suitors came in and took their places
on the benches and seats. Forthwith men servants poured water over
their hands, maids went round with the bread-baskets, pages filled
the mixing-bowls with wine and water, and they laid their hands
upon the good things that were before them. As soon as they had
had enough to eat and drink they wanted music and dancing, which
are the crowning embellishments of a banquet, so a servant brought
a lyre to Phemius, whom they compelled perforce to sing to them.
As soon as he touched his lyre and began to sing Telemachus spoke
low to Minerva, with his head close to hers that no man might hear.
"I hope, sir," said he, "that you
will not be offended with what I am going to say. Singing comes
cheap to those who do not pay for it, and all this is done at the
cost of one whose bones lie rotting in some wilderness or grinding
to powder in the surf. If these men were to see my father come back
to Ithaca they would pray for longer legs rather than a longer purse,
for money would not serve them; but he, alas, has fallen on an ill
fate, and even when people do sometimes say that he is coming, we
no longer heed them; we shall never see him again. And now, sir,
tell me and tell me true, who you are and where you come from. Tell
me of your town and parents, what manner of ship you came in, how
your crew brought you to Ithaca, and of what nation they declared
themselves to be- for you cannot have come by land. Tell me also
truly, for I want to know, are you a stranger to this house, or
have you been here in my father's time? In the old days we had many
visitors for my father went about much himself."
And Minerva answered, "I will tell you truly
and particularly all about it. I am Mentes, son of Anchialus, and
I am King of the Taphians. I have come here with my ship and crew,
on a voyage to men of a foreign tongue being bound for Temesa with
a cargo of iron, and I shall bring back copper. As for my ship,
it lies over yonder off the open country away from the town, in
the harbour Rheithron under the wooded mountain Neritum. Our fathers
were friends before us, as old Laertes will tell you, if you will
go and ask him. They say, however, that he never comes to town now,
and lives by himself in the country, faring hardly, with an old
woman to look after him and get his dinner for him, when he comes
in tired from pottering about his vineyard. They told me your father
was at home again, and that was why I came, but it seems the gods
are still keeping him back, for he is not dead yet not on the mainland.
It is more likely he is on some sea-girt island in mid ocean, or
a prisoner among savages who are detaining him against his will
I am no prophet, and know very little about omens, but I speak as
it is borne in upon me from heaven, and assure you that he will
not be away much longer; for he is a man of such resource that even
though he were in chains of iron he would find some means of getting
home again. But tell me, and tell me true, can Ulysses really have
such a fine looking fellow for a son? You are indeed wonderfully
like him about the head and eyes, for we were close friends before
he set sail for Troy where the flower of all the Argives went also.
Since that time we have never either of us seen the other."
"My mother," answered Telemachus, tells
me I am son to Ulysses, but it is a wise child that knows his own
father. Would that I were son to one who had grown old upon his
own estates, for, since you ask me, there is no more ill-starred
man under heaven than he who they tell me is my father."
And Minerva said, "There is no fear of your
race dying out yet, while Penelope has such a fine son as you are.
But tell me, and tell me true, what is the meaning of all this feasting,
and who are these people? What is it all about? Have you some banquet,
or is there a wedding in the family- for no one seems to be bringing
any provisions of his own? And the guests- how atrociously they
are behaving; what riot they make over the whole house; it is enough
to disgust any respectable person who comes near them."
"Sir," said Telemachus, "as regards
your question, so long as my father was here it was well with us
and with the house, but the gods in their displeasure have willed
it otherwise, and have hidden him away more closely than mortal
man was ever yet hidden. I could have borne it better even though
he were dead, if he had fallen with his men before Troy, or had
died with friends around him when the days of his fighting were
done; for then the Achaeans would have built a mound over his ashes,
and I should myself have been heir to his renown; but now the storm-winds
have spirited him away we know not wither; he is gone without leaving
so much as a trace behind him, and I inherit nothing but dismay.
Nor does the matter end simply with grief for the loss of my father;
heaven has laid sorrows upon me of yet another kind; for the chiefs
from all our islands, Dulichium, Same, and the woodland island of
Zacynthus, as also all the principal men of Ithaca itself, are eating
up my house under the pretext of paying their court to my mother,
who will neither point blank say that she will not marry, nor yet
bring matters to an end; so they are making havoc of my estate,
and before long will do so also with myself."
"Is that so?" exclaimed Minerva, "then
you do indeed want Ulysses home again. Give him his helmet, shield,
and a couple lances, and if he is the man he was when I first knew
him in our house, drinking and making merry, he would soon lay his
hands about these rascally suitors, were he to stand once more upon
his own threshold. He was then coming from Ephyra, where he had
been to beg poison for his arrows from Ilus, son of Mermerus. Ilus
feared the ever-living gods and would not give him any, but my father
let him have some, for he was very fond of him. If Ulysses is the
man he then was these suitors will have a short shrift and a sorry
wedding.
"But there! It rests with heaven to determine
whether he is to return, and take his revenge in his own house or
no; I would, however, urge you to set about trying to get rid of
these suitors at once. Take my advice, call the Achaean heroes in
assembly to-morrow -lay your case before them, and call heaven to
bear you witness. Bid the suitors take themselves off, each to his
own place, and if your mother's mind is set on marrying again, let
her go back to her father, who will find her a husband and provide
her with all the marriage gifts that so dear a daughter may expect.
As for yourself, let me prevail upon you to take the best ship you
can get, with a crew of twenty men, and go in quest of your father
who has so long been missing. Some one may tell you something, or
(and people often hear things in this way) some heaven-sent message
may direct you. First go to Pylos and ask Nestor; thence go on to
Sparta and visit Menelaus, for he got home last of all the Achaeans;
if you hear that your father is alive and on his way home, you can
put up with the waste these suitors will make for yet another twelve
months. If on the other hand you hear of his death, come home at
once, celebrate his funeral rites with all due pomp, build a barrow
to his memory, and make your mother marry again. Then, having done
all this, think it well over in your mind how, by fair means or
foul, you may kill these suitors in your own house. You are too
old to plead infancy any longer; have you not heard how people are
singing Orestes' praises for having killed his father's murderer
Aegisthus? You are a fine, smart looking fellow; show your mettle,
then, and make yourself a name in story. Now, however, I must go
back to my ship and to my crew, who will be impatient if I keep
them waiting longer; think the matter over for yourself, and remember
what I have said to you."
"Sir," answered Telemachus, "it
has been very kind of you to talk to me in this way, as though I
were your own son, and I will do all you tell me; I know you want
to be getting on with your voyage, but stay a little longer till
you have taken a bath and refreshed yourself. I will then give you
a present, and you shall go on your way rejoicing; I will give you
one of great beauty and value- a keepsake such as only dear friends
give to one another."
Minerva answered, "Do not try to keep me,
for I would be on my way at once. As for any present you may be
disposed to make me, keep it till I come again, and I will take
it home with me. You shall give me a very good one, and I will give
you one of no less value in return."
With these words she flew away like a bird into
the air, but she had given Telemachus courage, and had made him
think more than ever about his father. He felt the change, wondered
at it, and knew that the stranger had been a god, so he went straight
to where the suitors were sitting.
Phemius was still singing, and his hearers sat
rapt in silence as he told the sad tale of the return from Troy,
and the ills Minerva had laid upon the Achaeans. Penelope, daughter
of Icarius, heard his song from her room upstairs, and came down
by the great staircase, not alone, but attended by two of her handmaids.
When she reached the suitors she stood by one of the bearing posts
that supported the roof of the cloisters with a staid maiden on
either side of her. She held a veil, moreover, before her face,
and was weeping bitterly.
"Phemius," she cried, "you know
many another feat of gods and heroes, such as poets love to celebrate.
Sing the suitors some one of these, and let them drink their wine
in silence, but cease this sad tale, for it breaks my sorrowful
heart, and reminds me of my lost husband whom I mourn ever without
ceasing, and whose name was great over all Hellas and middle Argos."
"Mother," answered Telemachus, "let
the bard sing what he has a mind to; bards do not make the ills
they sing of; it is Jove, not they, who makes them, and who sends
weal or woe upon mankind according to his own good pleasure. This
fellow means no harm by singing the ill-fated return of the Danaans,
for people always applaud the latest songs most warmly. Make up
your mind to it and bear it; Ulysses is not the only man who never
came back from Troy, but many another went down as well as he. Go,
then, within the house and busy yourself with your daily duties,
your loom, your distaff, and the ordering of your servants; for
speech is man's matter, and mine above all others- for it is I who
am master here."
She went wondering back into the house, and laid
her son's saying in her heart. Then, going upstairs with her handmaids
into her room, she mourned her dear husband till Minerva shed sweet
sleep over her eyes. But the suitors were clamorous throughout the
covered cloisters, and prayed each one that he might be her bed
fellow.
Then Telemachus spoke, "Shameless," he
cried, "and insolent suitors, let us feast at our pleasure
now, and let there be no brawling, for it is a rare thing to hear
a man with such a divine voice as Phemius has; but in the morning
meet me in full assembly that I may give you formal notice to depart,
and feast at one another's houses, turn and turn about, at your
own cost. If on the other hand you choose to persist in spunging
upon one man, heaven help me, but Jove shall reckon with you in
full, and when you fall in my father's house there shall be no man
to avenge you."
The suitors bit their lips as they heard him, and
marvelled at the boldness of his speech. Then, Antinous, son of
Eupeithes, said, "The gods seem to have given you lessons in
bluster and tall talking; may Jove never grant you to be chief in
Ithaca as your father was before you."
Telemachus answered, "Antinous, do not chide
with me, but, god willing, I will be chief too if I can. Is this
the worst fate you can think of for me? It is no bad thing to be
a chief, for it brings both riches and honour. Still, now that Ulysses
is dead there are many great men in Ithaca both old and young, and
some other may take the lead among them; nevertheless I will be
chief in my own house, and will rule those whom Ulysses has won
for me."
Then Eurymachus, son of Polybus, answered, "It
rests with heaven to decide who shall be chief among us, but you
shall be master in your own house and over your own possessions;
no one while there is a man in Ithaca shall do you violence nor
rob you. And now, my good fellow, I want to know about this stranger.
What country does he come from? Of what family is he, and where
is his estate? Has he brought you news about the return of your
father, or was he on business of his own? He seemed a well-to-do
man, but he hurried off so suddenly that he was gone in a moment
before we could get to know him."
"My father is dead and gone," answered
Telemachus, "and even if some rumour reaches me I put no more
faith in it now. My mother does indeed sometimes send for a soothsayer
and question him, but I give his prophecyings no heed. As for the
stranger, he was Mentes, son of Anchialus, chief of the Taphians,
an old friend of my father's." But in his heart he knew that
it had been the goddess.
The suitors then returned to their singing and
dancing until the evening; but when night fell upon their pleasuring
they went home to bed each in his own abode. Telemachus's room was
high up in a tower that looked on to the outer court; hither, then,
he hied, brooding and full of thought. A good old woman, Euryclea,
daughter of Ops, the son of Pisenor, went before him with a couple
of blazing torches. Laertes had bought her with his own money when
she was quite young; he gave the worth of twenty oxen for her, and
shewed as much respect to her in his household as he did to his
own wedded wife, but he did not take her to his bed for he feared
his wife's resentment. She it was who now lighted Telemachus to
his room, and she loved him better than any of the other women in
the house did, for she had nursed him when he was a baby. He opened
the door of his bed room and sat down upon the bed; as he took off
his shirt he gave it to the good old woman, who folded it tidily
up, and hung it for him over a peg by his bed side, after which
she went out, pulled the door to by a silver catch, and drew the
bolt home by means of the strap. But Telemachus as he lay covered
with a woollen fleece kept thinking all night through of his intended
voyage of the counsel that Minerva had given him.
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