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Background
In the tenth year of the Trojan War, the Greeks tricked
the enemy into bringing a colossal wooden horse within
the walls of Troy. The Trojans had no idea that Greek
soldiers were hidden inside, under the command of
Odysseus. That night they emerged and opened the city
gates to the Greek army. Troy was destroyed. Now it was
time for Odysseus and the other Greeks to return to their
kingdoms across the sea. Here begins the tale of the
Odyssey, as sung by the blind minstrel Homer.
Book One
"Oh Goddess of Inspiration, help me sing of wily
Odysseus, that master of schemes!" So Homer begins
his epic, though the hero himself is still offstage. We
are treated to a glimpse of life among the supreme gods
on Mount Olympus. Urged on by Athena, the goddess of war,
they decide that Odysseus has been marooned too long on
the island of the nymph Calypso.
Book Two
Meanwhile, the mansion of Odysseus is infested with
suitors for the hand of his wife Penelope. Everyone
assumes Odysseus is dead. His son Telemachus calls an
assembly to ask for help, and Zeus sends an omen of the
suitors' doom. Two eagles swoop down, tearing throats and
necks with their talons. Afterwards Telemachus sets sail
for the mainland to seek news of his father.
Book Three
Telemachus consults King Nestor, who led a contingent in
the Trojan War when he was in his nineties. Nestor tells
what he knows of the Greeks' return from Troy: "It
started out badly because of Athena's anger. Half the
army, your father included, stayed behind at Troy to try
to appease her. The rest of us made it home safely -- all
except Menelaus, who was blown off course to Egypt, where
he remained for seven years. Seek advice from Menelaus. I'll
lend you a chariot to travel to his kingdom."
Book Four
Menelaus tells what he learned of Odysseus while stranded
in Egypt after the war. He was advised by a goddess to
disguise himself and three members of his crew in seal
pelts and then pounce on the Old Man of the Sea. If they
could hold him down while he transformed himself into
various animals and shapes, he would send them on their
homeward way and give news of their companions. Menelaus
did as instructed and was informed that Odysseus was
presently being held against his will by the nymph
Calypso.
Book Five
Zeus, the King of the Gods, sends his messenger Hermes
skimming over the waves on magic sandals to Calypso's
island. Though the goddess isn't happy about it, she
agrees to let Odysseus go. But the raft on which he sets
sail is destroyed by his enemy, the god Poseidon, who
lashes the sea into a storm with his trident. Odysseus
barely escapes with his life and washes ashore days later,
half-drowned. He staggers into an olive thicket and falls
asleep.
Book Six
Odysseus awakens to the sound of maidens laughing.
Princess Nausicaa of the Phaeacians has come down to the
riverside to wash her wedding dress. Now she and her
handmaids are frolicking after the chore. Odysseus
approaches as a suppliant, and Nausicaa is kind enough to
instruct him how to get the king's help in returning to
his home. Odysseus follows her into town.
Book Seven
Odysseus stops on the palace threshhold, utterly dazzled.
The very walls are covered in shining bronze and trimmed
with lapis lazuli. The blacksmith god Hephaestus has even
provided two brazen hounds to guard the entrance.
Odysseus goes right up to the queen and puts his case to
her as a suppliant. The king knows better than to refuse
hospitality to a decent petitioner. He invites Odysseus
to the banquet which is in progress and promises him safe
passage home after he has been suitably entertained.
Book Eight
The next day is declared a holiday in honor of the guest,
whose name the king still does not know. An athletic
competition is held, with foot races, wrestling and the
discus. Odysseus is invited to join in but begs off,
prompting someone to suggest that he lacks the skills.
Angered, he takes up a discus and throws it with such
violence that everyone drops to the ground. That night at
a banquet, as the court bard entertains with songs of the
Trojan War, Odysseus is heard sobbing. "Enough!"
shouts the king. "Our friend finds this song
displeasing. Won't you tell us your name, stranger, and
where you hail from?"
Book Nine
"My name is Odysseus of Ithaca, and here is my tale
since setting out from Troy. We sacked a city first off,
but then reinforcements arrived and we lost many comrades.
Next we visited the Lotus Eaters, and three of my crew
tasted this strange plant. They lost all desire to return
home and had to be carried off by force. On another
island we investigated a cave full of goat pens. The
herdsman turned out to be as big as a barn, with a single
glaring eye in his forehead. This Cyclops promptly ate
two of my men for dinner. We were trapped in the cave by
a boulder in the doorway that only the Cyclops could
budge, so we couldn't kill him while he slept. Instead we
sharpened a pole and used it to gouge out his eye. We
escaped his groping by clinging to the undersides of his
goats."
Book Ten
"Next we met the Keeper of the Winds, who sent us on
our way with a steady breeze. He'd given me a leather bag,
which my crew mistook for booty. They opened it and
released a hurricane that blew us back to where we'd
started. We ended up among the Laestrygonians, giants who
bombarded our fleet with boulders and gobbled down our
shipmates. The few survivors put in at the island of the
enchantress Circe. My men were entertained by her and
then, with a wave of her wand, turned into swine. Hermes
the god gave me an herb that protected me. Circe told me
that to get home I must travel to the land of Death."
Book Eleven
"At the furthest edge of Ocean's stream is the land
to which all journey when they die. Here their spirits
endure a fleshless existence. They can't even talk unless
re-animated with blood. Accordingly, I did as Circe
instructed, bleeding a sacrificed lamb into a pit.
Tiresias, the blind prophet who had accompanied us to
Troy, was the soul I had to talk to. So I held all the
other shades at bay with my sword until he had drunk from
the pit. He gave me warnings about my journey home and
told me what I must do to ensure a happy death when my
time came. I met the shades of many famous women and
heroes, including Achilles, best fighter of the Greeks at
Troy.
Book Twelve
"At sea once more we had to pass the Sirens, whose
sweet singing lures sailors to their doom. I had stopped
up the ears of my crew with wax, and I alone listened
while lashed to the mast, powerless to steer toward
shipwreck. Next came Charybdis, who swallows the sea in a
whirlpool, then spits it up again. Avoiding this we
skirted the cliff where Scylla exacts her toll. Each of
her six slavering maws grabbed a sailor and wolfed him
down. Finally we were becalmed on the island of the Sun.
My men disregarded all warnings and sacrificed his cattle,
so back at sea Zeus sent a thunderbolt that smashed the
ship. I alone survived, washing up on the island of
Calypso."
Book Thirteen
When Odysseus has finished his tale, the king orders him
sped to Ithaca. The sailors put him down on the beach
asleep. Athena casts a protective mist about him that
keeps him from recognizing his homeland. Finally the
goddess reveals herself and dispells the mist. In joy
Odysseus kisses the ground. Athena transforms him into an
old man as a disguise. Clad in a filthy tunic, he goes
off to find his faithful swineherd, as instructed by the
goddess.
Book Fourteen
Eumaeus the swineherd welcomes the bedraggled stranger.
He throws his own bedcover over a pile of boughs as a
seat for Odysseus, who does not reveal his identity.
Observing Zeus's commandment to be kind to guests,
Eumaeus slaughters a prime boar and serves it with bread
and wine. Odysseus, true to his fame as a smooth-talking
schemer, makes up an elaborate story of his origins. That
night the hero sleeps by the fire under the swineherd's
spare cloak, while Eumaeus himself sleeps outside in the
rain with his herd.
Book Fifteen
Athena summons Telemachus home and tells him how to avoid
an ambush by the suitors. Meanwhile back on Ithaca,
Odysseus listens while the swineherd Eumaeus recounts the
story of his life. He was the child of a prosperous
mainland king, whose realm was visited by Phoenician
traders. His nursemaid, a Phoenician herself, had been
carried off by pirates as a girl and sold into slavery.
In return for homeward passage with her countrymen, she
kidnapped Eumaeus. He was bought by Odysseus' father,
whose queen raised him as a member of the family.
Book Sixteen
Telemachus evades the suitors' ambush. Following Athena's
instructions, he proceeds to the farmstead of Eumaeus.
There he makes the acquaintance of the tattered guest and
sends Eumaeus to his mother to announce his safe return.
Athena restores Odysseus' normal appearance, enchancing
it so that Telemachus takes him for a god. "No god
am I," Odysseus assures him, "but your own
father, returned after these twenty years." They
fall into each other's arms. Later they plot the suitors'
doom. Concerned that the odds are fifty-to-one,
Telemachus suggests that they might need reinforcements.
"Aren't Zeus and Athena reinforcement enough?"
asks Odysseus.
Book Seventeen
Disguised once more as an old beggar, Odysseus journeys
to town. On the trail he encounters an insolent goatherd
named Melantheus, who curses and tries to kick him. At
his castle gate, the hero is recognized by a decrepid dog
that he raised as a pup. Having seen his master again,
the old hound dies. At Athena's urging Odysseus begs food
from the suitors. One man, Antinous, berates him and
refuses so much as a crust. He even hurls his footstool
at Odysseus, hitting him in the back. This makes even the
other suitors nervous, for sometimes the gods masquerade
as mortals to test their righteousness.
Book Eighteen
Now a real beggar shows up at the palace and warns
Odysseus off his turf. This man, Irus, is always running
errands for the suitors. Odysseus says that there are
pickings enough for the two of them, but Irus threatens
fisticuffs and the suitors egg him on. Odysseus rises to
the challenge and rolls up his tunic into a boxer's belt.
The suitors goggle at the muscles revealed. Not wishing
to kill Irus with a single blow, Odysseus breaks his jaw
instead. Another suitor, Eurymachus, marks himself for
revenge by trying to hit Odysseus with a footstool as
Antinoos had done.
Book Nineteen
Odysseus has a long talk with his queen Penelope but does
not reveal his identity. Penelope takes kindly to the
stranger and orders her maid Eurycleia to bathe his feet
and anoint them with oil. Eurycleia, who was Odysseus'
nurse when he was a child, notices a scar above the hero's
knee. Odysseus had been gored by a wild boar when hunting
on Mount Parnassus as a young man. The maid recognizes
her master at once, and her hand goes out to his chin.
But Odysseus silences her lest she give away his plot
prematurely.
Book Twenty
The next morning Odysseus asks for a sign, and Zeus sends
a clap of thunder out of the clear blue sky. A servant
recognizes it as a portent and prays that this day be the
last of the suitors' abuse. Odysseus encounters another
herdsman. Like the swineherd Eumaeus, this man, who tends
the realm's cattle, swears his loyalty to the absent king.
A prophet, an exiled murderer whom Telemachus has
befriended, shares a vision with the suitors: "I see
the walls of this mansion dripping with your blood."
The suitors respond with gales of laughter
Book Twenty-One
Penelope now appears before the suitors in her glittering
veil. In her hand is a stout bow left behind by Odysseus
when he sailed for Troy. "Whoever strings this bow,"
she says, "and sends an arrow straight through the
sockets of twelve ax heads lined in a row -- that man
will I marry." The suitors take turns trying to bend
the bow to string it, but all of them lack the strength.
Odysseus asks if he might try. The suitors refuse,
fearing that they'll be shamed if the beggar succeeds.
But Telemachus insists and his anger distracts them into
laughter. As easily as a bard fitting a new string to his
lyre, Odysseus strings the bow and sends an arrow through
the ax heads. At a sign from his father, Telemachus arms
himself and takes up a station by his side.
Book Twenty-Two
Antinous, ringleader of the suitors, is just lifting a
drinking cup when Odysseus puts an arrow through his
throat. The goatherd sneaks out and comes back with
shields and spears for the suitors, but now Athena
appears. She sends the suitors' spearthrusts wide, as
Odysseus, Telemachus and the two faithful herdsmen strike
with volley after volley of lances. They finish off the
work with swords. Those of the housemaids who consorted
with the suitors are hung by the neck in the courtyard,
while the treacherous goatherd is chopped to bits.
Book Twenty-Three
The mansion is purged with fire and brimstone. Odysseus
tells everyone to dress in their finest and dance, so
that passers-by won't suspect what's happened. Even
Odysseus could not hold vengeful kinfolk at bay. Penelope
still won't accept that it's truly her husband without
some secret sign. She tells a servant to make up his bed
in the hall. "Who had the craft to move my bed?"
storms Odysseus. "I carved the bedpost myself from
the living trunk of an olive tree and built the bedroom
around it." Penelope rushes into his arms.
Book Twenty-Four
The next morning Odysseus goes upcountry to the vineyard
where his father, old King Laertes, labors like a peasant.
Meanwhile, the kin of the suitors have gathered at the
assembly ground, where the father of the suitor Antinous
fires them up for revenge. Odysseus, his father and
Telemachus meet the challenge. Laertes casts a lance
through the helmet of Antinous' father, who falls to the
ground in a clatter of armor. But the fighting stops
right there. Athena tells the contending parties to live
together in peace down through the years to come. |
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