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The
Odyssey of Homer
translated from the Greek by
T. E. Lawrence
BOOK 2
So soon as
rosy-fingered morning came forth from the first grey dawn, the beloved son of
Odysseus sprang from bed, dressed, threw the sling of his cutting sword over one
shoulder, and tied the rich sandals round his nimble feet: stately as a God he
stepped out and down from his bed-chamber. On the moment he had called his
heralds and told them to sound, with their ringing voices, the assembly amongst
the longhaired Achaeans. As he bade, the heralds sounded: and as they bade, the
Achaeans assembled speedily. Telemachus waited till all had come together into
place and then, tightly gripping his copper-bladed spear, he strode through
their throng. For company he had just his two flashing-footed dogs at heel: but
Athene poured about his form so significant a glory that upon his approach the
eyes of the crowd were held at gaze. The elders yielded him way and in his
father's great chair he sat him down.
Debate was
opened by honoured Aegyptius, an aged councillor of ten thousand wiles, whose
years bowed him double. He was quick to speak because his favourite son,
Antiphos, expert with the spear, had gone away with Odysseus in the capacious
ships to Ilios, that land of good horses. To tell truth, Antiphos was even now
dead, barbarously slain in the vaulted cave by the Cyclops, who had cooked him,
too, and eaten him for his latest, and his last, feast. Aegyptius had yet three
other sons. One of them, Eurynomus, had thrown in his lot with the suitors; and
two kept the house, helping with the husbandry : but the consolation of these
did not still the old man's inward aching and outward lamentation for the one
who had not returned. Therefore it was that he now rose up and spoke through his
tears: —
"Hear now, O
men of Ithaca, and attend my words. Never once since the day that mighty
Odysseus sailed from us in his ribbed ships, has our assembly met in session.
Who is now our convenor? Is some one of the new generation in extreme urgency?
Or one of us elders? Perhaps an army approaches, of which a man has had warning
and would make us share his certain knowledge? Or is it some matter touching the
common weal, which he would disclose and expound? Anyway I judge his zeal
timely: may the event turn to his advantage, and Zeus ensure him the good thing
for which his soul yearns." — Thus far: and the dear son of Odysseus rejoiced at
the auspicious phrase. The longing to deliver his mind pricked him to his feet
in the midst of the gathering. Peisenor the herald, past master by experience of
public conduct, thrust into his hands the gavel which gave right to speak: and
Telemachus began, addressing himself first to the old councillor.
"Venerable
Sir, the man who convened the people is not far to seek. Here he stands, in your
eye. I am compelled to action by the burden of my pains. I have no word of any
army coming, no advance or exclusive news affecting that or the common estate.
The need, the motive, is personal. A two-headed evil has stricken me and struck
my house. I have lost my noble father who was once your king, the king of all
present: but also my very gentle father. And upon this harm comes far heavier
harm, one which bodes the early wasting of my home and an utter ruin of my
livelihood.
"My reluctant
mother is plagued by suitors, sons of the leading men in this and other islands.
Their honest course would be to interview her father, Icarius, and ask him to
fix his daughter's marriage terms and give her to the man he liked or found
fittest from among them. But they shrink in a twitter from such plain dealing.
Instead they have fallen to haunting our place day after day, at the expense of
my sleek cattle. Oxen and sheep and goats must be sacrificed to feast their
greed. They gulp our wine —stuff with the glint of sunlight in it — like
ordinary drink. Everything is being spent.
"Odysseus,
now, was a man who could defend his house against the spoiler: but there is
nothing of his build about us. As long as we live we shall remain feebly
untrained bodies, incapable of such defence. Not for want of willing: it is
strength I lack, to meet this intolerable provocation; the grim, slow sack of my
innocent house. Will not a fellow-feeling for people who are living beside you,
neighbours, make you share their vexation and ashamedly pity their plight? Pray
you, Sirs, begin to fear the anger of the Gods a little, lest they be aghast at
the evil already wrought and turn to requite it. I beseech you by Olympian Zeus,
and by Themis, in whose justice courts like this are gathered together and,
after session, released. No. Rather, my friends, let me be. Leave me to wear
myself out with the misery of my own grief. Perhaps Odysseus, the father who was
so good to me, in reality hated his panoplied Greeks and did them deliberate
injuries; which you now in turn deliberately repay by cheering on my afflictors.
Better hap for me, by far, if yours were the appetites emptying my store-houses
and byres. For then how soon there would be a counter-stroke! We should go
through the city with our tale, clinging as suppliants to all we met, demanding
our monies, till everything had been given back. But as it is, you heap up in my
heart these irremediable pains."
So he spoke
through his gathering rage: and here, in a gust of tears, he flung the gavel to
the ground. The audience were seized with pity and sat still and silent, all of
them, lacking face to return angry words to these words of Telemachus. Finally
Antinous gave tongue as follows: —
"Your lost
temper and haughty lips, Telemachus, conspire to smirch our conduct and link us
with disgrace. Yet I tell you it is not the suitors who are guilty, among the
Achaeans, but your respected mother, that far-fetched artful mistress. For these
three years — nay, longer: in the fourth year now — she has rapt away the wits
of the Achaean men. She has led every one of us to hope, given each his privy
assurance, let fall little messages: while her heart all this while has been
harbouring quite other designs. One trick her subtlety devised was to instal in
her apartments a huge loom, and set up on this a fine wide weave; and ever she
would say to us, 'Sweet hearts, go slow. Allay your burning intent to have me
married. The death of royal Odysseus lays on me the duty of completing this
linen shroud, to save its gossamer threads from being scattered to the winds. It
is for the burial of Laertes, the aged hero: and it must be ready against the
inevitable day when fate will pull him to the ground and death measure out his
length. If I leave it undone, and in consequence the corpse of this old,
once-wealthy man lie bare of cerement, I shall be the pointing-block of every
Achaean woman within our neighbourhood.'
"So she
protested, and our manly hearts credited her tale. Daily she laboured at the
vast loom, weaving: but each night she had torches brought in and unravelled the
day's woof. Thus for the space of three years she deceived us and cheated the
Achaeans: but when the fourth year was wearing through its sequence of seasons
one of her maids, who knew the whole truth, told on her. Then we caught her in
the act of unpicking the glorious web: and forced her against her inclination to
finish it right off. Hear, therefore, Telemachus, the suitors' reply to you:
hear and understand it to the bottom of your heart, and all the people of this
country with you. Send away your mother. Order her to be wedded straightway, as
her father will command, to the man who best pleases her.
"But if,
instead, she insists on continuing to wreak havoc among the bachelors of Achaea,
then let her do so — at the price. Athene has bestowed on her an armoury of
graces (skill in all the housewifely crafts, and such arts and airs as her
guileful wit adeptly turns to personal advantage) beyond parallel among the
famous beauties of old time: not Alcmene, nor Tyro, nor diademed Mycene could
match this Penelope in intriguing charm. Yet, for the time, you shall see that
her intrigues are not opportune. The suitors will swallow up your goods and
sustenance for just so long as she persists in this frowardness which heaven has
let possess her mind. She gains her notoriety: you regret your substance, vainly
lost. We shall not go about our business nor go home till she has made her
choice and been married to some one of us Achaeans."
With measured
words Telemachus answered him. "Antinous, in no way can I forcibly expel from
our house the mother who bore me and gave me nourishment. Besides, there is my
father somewhere in the earth —if he lives —or perhaps he is dead. At any rate,
consider the terrible expense if mine were the hand which put her away: I should
have to pay back her dowry to Icarius. And to what end? I should be evilly
entreated by her father. More evil would fall on me from above, for as she was
driven from our door my mother would imprecate against me the dread furies. Also
my fellow-men would condemn me out of their mouths. So I shall never stoop to
give her such order.
"But listen —
you and the other suitors. Do our family affairs jar your sense of niceness?
Then get out of my guest-quarters. Arrange to entertain each other from your own
resources, turn and turn about among your houses. Yet, if you find it pleasanter
and better to go on scathelessly destroying the entire livelihood of a lone man
—then go on. Meanwhile I shall be praying to the everlasting Gods, if perchance
Zeus may grant that due penalties be paid. For then will our house, unscathed,
see all of you destroyed within its walls."
So did
Telemachus invoke Zeus: and the All-seeing, in answer to his prayer, sent forth
two eagles from his mountain top. Swift as the storm-blast they flew, wing-tip
to wing in lordly sweep of pinions, until they were over the midmost of the
many-tongued assembly. There they wheeled in full flight, with quivering,
outstretched, strong wings, and glazed down with fatal eyes upon the upturned
faces. Next they ripped with tearing claws, each at the other's head and neck,
swooping quickly to the right over the houses of the citizens. So long as eye
could follow them everyone stood wondering at the birds and musing what future
history this sign from heaven could mean.
While they
mused came the voice of Halitherses, son of Mastor, an elder of great standing
who surpassed all his generation in science of bird-reading and the foretelling
of dooms. Out of this deep of knowledge he now held forth: "Hear me, islanders
of Ithaca: hear me out. Especially the suitors, for what I portend concerns them
most. Great evils are rolling down upon them. Odysseus will not longer remain
sundered from his people. Even now, it may be, he approaches, carrying within
him the seeds of bloody doom for every suitor. He will be deadly, too, for many
others of us substantial men in this island of the pellucid skies. Wherefore
before the event let us devise a plan by which the offence of the suitors shall
be removed—unless they forthwith remove their own offence, which, did they study
their interests, would be their wiser choice.
"I speak of
what I know surely. This is not my first essay in divination. Everything has
come to pass of what I prophesied to Odysseus, when that resourceful leader was
sailing for Ilios with the Argive host. I foretold that after enduring many
disasters and the loss by death of his whole fellowship, he would at the last
find himself again made free of a home, where no one knew his face, in the
twentieth year from his setting out: and today all this mounts to its
fulfilment."
Him, in turn,
Eurymachus son of Polybus denied. "Come, come, dotard. You will do better to
stay at home and prophesy to your children, saving them from this wrath to come.
In practical affairs I am the master-prophet. Multitudes of birds flit hither
and thither in our bright sunshine: but not all bear messages from heaven.
Odysseus, of whom you prate, died long ago and far enough away. If only you had
gone and died with him! Then we should have escaped these oracles of yours, and
you would not have had this chance of perhaps making future capital for your
family by egging on the vexed Telemachus to publish his griefs.
"Yet, I fear,
your family will never receive from him the reward you envisage. I am about to
speak hardly: but what I say shall surely be. When an elder of long and wide
worldly experience prostitutes his stored wisdom to abet a young man's anger;
then, in first instance, the consequences are very grievous for the young man,
who finds himself impotent to bend his hearers to his will. And secondly, for
you too, Ancient, the regrets will be bitter. Upon you we shall lay such fine as
will make your heart ache to pay it.
"Now, before
you all, I have advice for Telemachus. He must order this mother of his back to
her parents, for them to decide her re-marriage and assess the sumptuous
interchange of
gifts which go with a dear daughter. I assure you that till then the cadets of
the Achaeans will
not desist from their irksome and exigent wooing. Why should they ? We fear no
one on
earth: certainly not Telemachus with his bluster. Nor are we to be moved by the
soothsayings
which you, old man, mouth over at us, without end — save to make yourself ever
more
generally detested. Telemachus' goods shall be ruthlessly devoured, and no fair
deal come his
way while Penelope thwarts the people in this matter of her re-marriage and
keeps us dancing
attendance on her, day in, day out; our passions too excited by the chance of
winning so
admirable a bride to cultivate any of the ordinary women who would make us
fitting mates."
"Eurymachus," said Telemachus in deliberate reply, "I will not re-open
entreaties or
discussion upon this subject, with you or any other arrogant suitor. We have
deferred our
case, in fullest detail, to the Gods: and made it known to all the Achaeans.
Instead, I now ask
you for a clean-built ship and twenty rowers to man her. In this I purpose to go
round Sparta
and sandy Pylos, enquiring after my long-lost father. Perhaps news of his return
is to be
gleaned from men: or a whisper may come to me from Zeus, whose breath oftenest
conveys
forewarnings of truth to us mortals.
"If I learn that my father is alive and on his homeward way I can endure this
wilful
spoiling of my house for yet a space: but if it be confirmed that he is dead and
gone, then I
will turn back to this loved land of mine and heap up for him a barrow to hold
the rich tomb-furniture which is seemly for so grand a name. Afterward I will give my mother
to a man."
He ended and sat down: and there rose from the throng Mentor, the comrade to
whom stout
Odysseus, on sailing for Ilios, had committed his house; enjoining all in it to
be obedient to
the old man and in his steadfast guard. Wherefore out of his good heart Mentor
protested as
follows: "Give heed, now, men of Ithaca to what I say to you. Here is a warning
to all
sceptered kings, that they wholly abjure clemency and gentleness, and take no
thought for
just dealing. Instead let them be harsh always, and unseemly in conduct: for
glorious
Odysseus, your king and the king of all this people, was like our father in his
mildness — and
lo! not one of you remembers him. Yet I advance no plaint against these haughty
suitors, whose ill-nature has led them into deeds of such violence. Indeed this
violence I find not excessive, weighed against their risk. They have staked their heads upon a
persuasion that he
comes home no more. My complaint is rather against the rest of the people,
because you have
sat by mutely, without word of denunciation or restraint: though you are very
many, and the
suitors are but few."
Leocritus, the son of Euenor, opposed him. " Mentor, you crazy mischief-maker,
why waste
breath in pleading that the people stop our nuisance? To make war over a matter
of feasting
would be outrageous, superior numbers or no superior numbers. Even suppose that
your
Odysseus of Ithaca did arrive in person, all hot to drive from his palace the
noble suitors who
have made it their banqueting hall. His wife may yearn for his coming: but in
that way she
would have small joy of it. In his very palace he would encounter horrid fate if
he alone
attacked so many of us. You babble vainly. Enough of this. Let all the people
return to their
employments, leaving only Mentor and Halitherses (because they have long been
hangers-on
of his family) to deal with this youth's journeying. Yet I fancy he will stay
long enough in
Ithaca, news-gathering still from his chair: and the project of a voyage come to
nought."
He finished, and the assembly was speedily dissolved, the crowd streaming
homeward:
while the suitors repaired to the palace of magnificent Odysseus. But Telemachus
walked by
himself far along the margin of the sea, and there laved his hands in the
transparent sea-water
before praying to Athene. "Divine One, hear me! Yesterday you came to my house
and told
me to venture by ship across the shadow-haunted main, seeking news of my absent
father.
Now see how the Achaeans, and especially these lustful, bullying suitors, thwart
my every
turn.
While he prayed Athene drew nigh. She had put on the appearance of Mentor's
body, to the
life: and it was with Mentor's voice that she exhorted him stirringly, thus: —
"Telemachus, let
not your courage and resource fail you now. In your father deed and word notably
marched
together to their deliberate end. If your body holds a trace of his temper it
will suffice to make
this effort of yours neither bootless nor aimless. But if, on the contrary, you
are not true issue
of Odysseus and Penelope then I may abandon hope of your achieving any purpose.
Few are
the sons who attain their fathers' stature: and very few surpass them. Most fall
short in merit.
But surely this time you will not, you cannot, prove fainthearted or base: nor
can you have
failed to inherit some of Odysseus' cunning. Therefore I have good hope that you
will attain
your goal. Pay no heed to the advice or intentions of these infatuate suitors.
With them
instinct and decency are alike at fault; nor do they apprehend the death and
black fate
hovering over them, to overwhelm them all in a day.
"As for this journey of your heart, it shall not be too long denied you.
Because I was a
friend of your father's, therefore I am myself obtaining you the fast ship: and
I shall be of
your company aboard her. For the moment do you go back to your house, and mingle
cheerfully with the suitors: while you get ready the victuals. Pack everything
securely. Let the
wine be in wine-jars and the barley meal (the marrow of men's strength) in tough
skins. I will
very quickly gather from the town our crew of willing fellows. Sea-girdled
Ithaca is rich in
ships, new and old. I go to survey them and choose the fittest; which we will
presently equip
and launch into the open sea."
So said Athene, the daughter of Zeus. Telemachus, hearing the divine accent,
made no
delay but returned straight home with his heart-ache, to find the suitor-lords
in guest-hall or
fore court, where they were stripping the skins off his slaughtered goats and
singeing his fat
pigs for the cooking fire.
Antinous, with a laugh and loudly calling his name, swaggered up to him and took
his
hand. "Telemachus," said he, "you have just now given your enmity too free
tongue against
us. Instead, will you not henceforward banish from your mind these thoughts of
doing us hurt
and forget your injurious words and eat and drink with us as of yore ? Meanwhile
the
Achaeans will be making quite ready for you all you want in the way of ship and
crew, to
take you most quickly to hallowed Pylos for news of your august father."
Well-advised was the reply of Telemachus, as he gently drew his hand from the
grasp of
Antinous. " It is not possible for me to dine softly in your too-proud company:
to be at ease
and merry-make. O suitors, was it not grief enough that in my callow childhood
you shore
from me so much of my precious goods? Today I am a grown man and hear from
others all
this tale; and verily my swelling heart prompts me to visit upon you every evil
I can contrive,
whether from Pylos or in this place. Therefore will I most surely go on my
journey: nor shall
it be a barren quest, though by your crafty precaution I travel but as a
passenger, without ship
or rowers of: my own."
The suitors went on feasting their hardest, where they , till he had spoken.
Then they
hooted and jeered at him. One graceless cockerell held forh after this strain:
"Really,
Telemachus does mean to kill us all. He now hates us so terribly that he may
bring back
avengers with him from the sands of Pylos or from far-away Sparta. Or perhaps he
plans to
visit the luxuriant fields of Ephyra, and procure some life-destroying drug to
mix into our
wine-bowl and cut us all off together! "
And another youth of the same sort cried out, "I tell you what, if he goes off
in the inside of
a ship, perhaps he will wander away from his friends, like Odysseus, and get
lost. Then what
extra work we poor creatures will have, dividing up all his belongings among
ourselves. I
vote we give the house-property to his mother, for the man who makes her his
wife."
Thus they japed: but Telemachus went from them to his father's store-chamber.
Under its
high, wide dome lay heaped up the gold and the copper: also great chests of
clothing, and an
abundance of pleasant-smelling olive oil. Secured against the wall in ranks,
stood jar upon jar
of old delicious wine, every jar filled with pure liquor, fit for the Gods but
awaiting the day of
Odysseus' home-coming — if he was ever to come home, through his toils and
pains. This
treasure-room had swinging double doors, strong and tight, always shut: and
between them,
day and night alike, there lodged the woman-guardian, old Eurycleia, the
daughter of Ops,
Peisenor's son. She in her sagacity stood watch over all its wealth.
Telemachus called her into the chamber and said to her, "Good mother, pray draw
off for
me in jars some sweet wine: your second best, that which comes next after the
very special
vintage you are reserving for him, the unfortunate one, godlike Odysseus, in
case he
somehow tricks death and fate and wins his way back. Fill me twelve jars,
sealing each with
its stopper. Then run barley meal into stout-sewn leather sacks. Twenty measures
let there be,
of your well-kerned barley groats. See that no one spies what you do: but heap
up all the
things together in one place, whence I can fetch them this evening after my
mother has gone
up to her room in preparation for bed. I am going to Sparta and sandy Pylos,
hoping to learn
something of my father's return."
Eurycleia, the foster-mother who loved him, wailed aloud at the tidings and
implored him
tearfully: " Alas, my dearest child, why has such a notion come into your head?
How should
you hope to make your way over the vast earth, you a shielded only son, when
your father
Odysseus, the descendant of gods, himself perished there very far away,
wandering in some
place unknown? Further, so soon as your back is turned these men in your
guest-hall will
think out some evil to overtake you: and thus you will die in a trap, leaving
them to share out
your goods between them. Instead, do you sit here in your proper place. It is no
duty of yours
to stray over the desolate sea in search of misfortune."
Wise Telemachus answered her: "Be brave, good nurse. This plan did not come to
me
without the prompting of Heaven. But swear not to breathe a word of it to my
dear mother till
eleven or twelve days are passed, or till she misses me and learns that I have
gone away. I
want to spare her beautiful face from being furrowed with tears." Thus he spoke,
and the old
woman swore a great oath by the Gods. He heard her swear and seal the oath: and
after it at
once she turned to drawing off his wine in jars and filling the stout leathern
wallets with
barley meal, while Telemachus returned to the living rooms and entertained the
suitors.
All this time the clear-eyed Goddess was taking thought for the next stages of
her plan. In
the guise of Telemachus she traversed the entire city and standing by each of
her men said
her say, exhorting them to muster at nightfall by the swift ship: the ship
itself she asked of
Noemon, famed son of Phronius, who granted it heartily.
The sun went down into the sea, and the streets grew obscured. Then Athene had
the fast
ship run down into the water and stowed aboard her all the gear proper to a
well-found
galley. She had her brought round to the very mouth of the harbour where the
picked crew
had rallied, every man of them inspired by the grey-eyed Goddess with her own
zest.
Athene, steadily pursuing her course, next visited the great house of Odysseus
and there
poured out upon the suitors a fond sleep and dazed them as they drank, till the
cups slipped
from their drowsy hands. Incontinently the banquet broke up, as each man
struggled
homewards to his bed in the city, with a weight of slumber bearing down his
eyelids. Then
the Goddess called Telemachus to speak with her outside the comfortable halls.
She was
again Mentor in speech and body. "Telemachus," she said, "your companions, all
armed and
ready, sit now on the thwarts abiding only your advent. Let us go, and not hold
them longer
from the journey."
With the word Pallas Athene went swiftly in the lead. He followed in her track.
When they
came out on the beach to the ship, there they found the long-haired company
waiting at the
water's edge. To them Telemachus, their appointed leader, made his first speech:
"Friends,
come with me and lend a hand with the rations. I have everything put together,
ready, in the
house: and my mother knows nothing of our business, nor do any of the
house-maids. I have
told just one woman out of them all."
He spoke and led back: and they went with him. They laded everything on their
shoulders
to the ship and put it away below, as the beloved son of Odysseus directed.
Afterwards
Telemachus went on board (Athene having preceded him) and sat down in the
stern-sheets,
quite near where she had seated herself. The crew loosed the after-warps,
clambered aboard,
and took their seats on the oar-benches.
Then did Athene, the clear-eyed, summon up for them a favouring breeze, a brisk
following West Wind which thrummed across the wine-dark sea. Telemachus roused
his
followers and bade them get sail on the vessel. They obeyed him: the fir mast
was raised aloft
and heeled through its pierced cross-beams: the stays were rigged and the white
sails hauled
up by their halyards of pliant cowhide. The wind caught the sail, bellying it
out, and the blue-shadowed waves resounded under the fore-foot of the running ship as she lay over
on her course
and raced out to sea.
They made fast all the running tackle of the swift dark hull and got out the
drinking bowls. These
they filled with wine, brim-full, and poured out as offerings to the Immortal
Gods that are for ever
and ever: honouring especially the clear-eyed Daughter of Zeus: while the ship
cleft through the long
night towards the dawn.
  
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