1Book II
2
3Telemachus complains in vain, and borrowing a ship, goes
4secretly to Pylos by night. And how he was there received.
5
6Now so soon as early Dawn shone forth, the rosy-fingered,
7the dear son of Odysseus gat him up from his bed, and put
8on his raiment and cast his sharp sword about his shoulder,
9and beneath his smooth feet he bound his goodly sandals,
10and stept forth from his chamber in presence like a god.
11And straightway he bade the clear-voiced heralds to call
12the long-haired Achaeans to the assembly. And the heralds
13called the gathering, and the Achaeans were assembled
14quickly. Now when they were gathered and come together, he
15went on his way to the assembly holding in his hand a spear
16of bronze,--not alone he went, for two swift hounds bare
17him company. Then Athene shed on him a wondrous grace, and
18all the people marvelled at him as he came. And he sat him
19in his father's seat and the elders gave place to him.
20
21Then the lord Aegyptus spake among them first; bowed was he
22with age, and skilled in things past number. Now for this
23reason he spake that his dear son, the warrior Antiphus,
24had gone in the hollow ships to Ilios of the goodly steeds;
25but the savage Cyclops slew him in his hollow cave, and
26made of him then his latest meal. Three other sons Aegyptus
27had, and one consorted with the wooers, namely Eurynomus,
28but two continued in their father's fields; yet even so
29forgat he not that son, still mourning and sorrowing. So
30weeping for his sake he made harangue and spake among them:
31
32'Hearken now to me, ye men of Ithaca, to the word that I
33shall say. Never hath our assembly or session been since
34the day that goodly Odysseus departed in the hollow ships.
35And now who was minded thus to assemble us? On what man
36hath such sore need come, of the young men or of the elder
37born? Hath he heard some tidings of the host now returning,
38which he might plainly declare to us, for that he first
39learned thereof, or doth he show forth and tell some other
40matter of the common weal? Methinks he is a true man--good
41luck be with him! Zeus vouchsafe him some good thing in his
42turn, even all his heart's desire!'
43
44So spake he, and the dear son of Odysseus was glad at the
45omen of the word; nor sat he now much longer, but he burned
46to speak, and he stood in mid assembly; and the herald
47Peisenor, skilled in sage counsels, placed the staff in his
48hands. Then he spake, accosting the old man first:
49
50'Old man, he is not far off, and soon shalt thou know it
51for thyself, he who called the folk together, even I: for
52sorrow hath come to me in chief. Neither have I heard any
53tidings of the host now returning, which I may plainly
54declare to you, for that I first learned thereof; neither
55do I show forth or tell any other matter of the common
56weal, but mine own need, for that evil hath befallen my
57house, a double woe. First, I have lost my noble sire, who
58sometime was king among you here, and was gentle as a
59father; and now is there an evil yet greater far, which
60surely shall soon make grievous havoc of my whole house and
61ruin all my livelihood. My mother did certain wooers beset
62sore against her will, even the sons of those men that here
63are the noblest. They are too craven to go to the house of
64her father Icarius, that he may himself set the bride-price
65for his daughter, and bestow her on whom he will, even on
66him who finds favour in his sight. But they resorting to
67our house day by day sacrifice oxen and sheep and fat
68goats, and keep revel, and drink the dark wine recklessly,
69and lo, our great wealth is wasted, for there is no man now
70alive such as Odysseus was, to keep ruin from the house. As
71for me I am nowise strong like him to ward mine own; verily
72to the end of my days {*} shall I be a weakling and all
73unskilled in prowess. Truly I would defend me if but
74strength were mine; for deeds past sufferance have now been
75wrought, and now my house is wasted utterly beyond pretence
76of right. Resent it in your own hearts, and have regard to
77your neighbours who dwell around, and tremble ye at the
78anger of the gods, lest haply they turn upon you in wrath
79at your evil deeds. {Or, lest they bring your evil deeds in
80wrath on your own heads.} I pray you by Olympian Zeus and
81by Themis, who looseth and gathereth the meetings of men,
82let be, my friends, and leave me alone to waste in bitter
83grief;-- unless it so be that my father, the good Odysseus,
84out of evil heart wrought harm to the goodly-greaved
85Achaeans, in quittance whereof ye now work me harm out of
86evil hearts, and spur on these men. Better for me that ye
87yourselves should eat up my treasures and my flocks. Were
88YE so to devour them, ere long would some recompense be
89made, for we would urge our plea throughout the town,
90begging back our substance, until all should be restored.
91But now without remedy are the pains that ye lay up in my
92heart.'
93
94{* Cf. B. xxi. 131. For the use of the 1st pers. pl. like
95our ROYAL plural, cf. B. xvi.44, Il. vii. 190.}
96
97So spake he in wrath, and dashed the staff to the ground,
98and brake forth in tears; and pity fell on all the people.
99Then all the others held their peace, and none had the
100heart to answer Telemachus with hard words, but Antinous
101alone made answer, saying:
102
103'Telemachus, proud of speech and unrestrained in fury, what
104is this thou hast said to put us to shame, and wouldest
105fasten on us reproach? Behold the fault is not in the
106Achaean wooers, but in thine own mother, for she is the
107craftiest of women. For it is now the third year, and the
108fourth is fast going by, since she began to deceive the
109minds of the Achaeans in their breasts. She gives hope to
110all, and makes promises to every man, and sends them
111messages, but her mind is set on other things. And she hath
112devised in her heart this wile besides; she set up in her
113halls a mighty web, fine of woof and very wide, whereat she
114would weave, and anon she spake among us:
115
116'"Ye princely youths, my wooers, now that the goodly
117Odysseus is dead, do ye abide patiently, how eager soever
118to speed on this marriage of mine, till I finish the robe.
119I would not that the threads perish to no avail, even this
120shroud for the hero Laertes, against the day when the
121ruinous doom shall bring him low, of death that lays men at
122their length. So shall none of the Achaean women in the
123land count it blame in me, as well might be, were he to lie
124without a winding-sheet, a man that had gotten great
125possessions."
126
127'So spake she, and our high hearts consented thereto. So
128then in the day time she would weave the mighty web, and in
129the night unravel the same, when she had let place the
130torches by her. Thus for the space of three years she hid
131the thing by craft and beguiled the minds of the Achaeans;
132but when the fourth year arrived and the seasons came
133round, then at the last one of her women who knew all
134declared it, and we found her unravelling the splendid web.
135Thus she finished it perforce and sore against her will.
136But as for thee, the wooers make thee answer thus, that
137thou mayest know it in thine own heart, thou and all the
138Achaeans! Send away thy mother, and bid her be married to
139whomsoever her father commands, and whoso is well pleasing
140unto her. But if she will continue for long to vex the sons
141of the Achaeans, pondering in her heart those things that
142Athene hath given her beyond women, knowledge of all fair
143handiwork, yea, and cunning wit, and wiles--so be it! Such
144wiles as hers we have never yet heard that any even of the
145women of old did know, of those that aforetime were
146fair-tressed Achaean ladies, Tyro, and Alcmene, and Mycene
147with the bright crown. Not one of these in the imaginations
148of their hearts was like unto Penelope, yet herein at least
149her imagining was not good. For in despite of her the
150wooers will devour thy living and thy substance, so long as
151she is steadfast in such purpose as the gods now put within
152her breast: great renown for herself she winneth, but for
153thee regret for thy much livelihood. But we will neither go
154to our own lands, nor otherwhere, till she marry that man
155whom she will of the Achaeans.'
156
157Then wise Telemachus answered him, saying: 'Antinous, I may
158in no wise thrust forth from the house, against her will,
159the woman that bare me, that reared me: while as for my
160father he is abroad on the earth, whether he be alive or
161dead. Moreover it is hard for me to make heavy restitution
162to Icarius, as needs I must, if of mine own will I send my
163mother away. For I shall have evil at his hand, at the hand
164of her father, and some god will give me more besides, for
165my mother will call down the dire Avengers as she departs
166from the house, and I shall have blame of men; surely then
167I will never speak this word. Nay, if your own heart, even
168yours, is indignant, quit ye my halls, and busy yourselves
169with other feasts, eating your own substance, and going in
170turn from house to house. But if ye deem this a likelier
171and a better thing, that one man's goods should perish
172without atonement, then waste ye as ye will: and I will
173call upon the everlasting gods, if haply Zeus may grant
174that acts of recompense be made: so should ye hereafter
175perish in the halls without atonement.'
176
177So spake Telemachus, and in answer to his prayer did Zeus,
178of the far borne voice, send forth two eagles in flight,
179from on high, from the mountain-crest. Awhile they flew as
180fleet as the blasts of the wind, side by side, with
181straining of their pinions. But when they had now reached
182the mid assembly, the place of many voices, there they
183wheeled about and flapped their strong wings, and looked
184down upon the heads of all, and destruction was in their
185gaze. Then tore they with their talons each the other's
186cheeks and neck on every side, and so sped to the right
187across the dwellings and the city of the people. And the
188men marvelled at the birds when they had sight of them, and
189pondered in their hearts the things that should come to
190pass. Yea and the old man, the lord Halitherses son of
191Mastor spake among them, for he excelled his peers in
192knowledge of birds, and in uttering words of fate. With
193good will he made harangue and spake among them:
194
195'Hearken to me now, ye men of Ithaca, to the word that I
196shall say: and mainly to the wooers do I show forth and
197tell these things, seeing that a mighty woe is rolling upon
198them. For Odysseus shall not long be away from his friends,
199nay, even now, it may be, he is near, and sowing the seeds
200of death and fate for these men, every one; and he will be
201a bane to many another likewise of us who dwell in
202clear-seen Ithaca. But long ere that falls out let us
203advise us how we may make an end of their mischief; yea,
204let them of their own selves make an end, for this is the
205better way for them, as will soon be seen. For I prophesy
206not as one unproved, but with sure knowledge; verily, I
207say, that for him all things now are come to pass, even as
208I told him, what time the Argives embarked for Ilios, and
209with them went the wise Odysseus. I said that after sore
210affliction, with the loss of all his company, unknown to
211all, in the twentieth year he should come home. And behold,
212all these things now have an end.'
213
214And Eurymachus, son of Polybus, answered him, saying: 'Go
215now, old man, get thee home and prophesy to thine own
216children, lest haply they suffer harm hereafter: but herein
217am I a far better prophet than thou. Howbeit there be many
218birds that fly to and fro under the sun's rays, but all are
219not birds of fate. Now as for Odysseus, he hath perished
220far away, as would that thou too with him hadst been cut
221off: so wouldst thou not have babbled thus much prophecy,
222nor wouldst thou hound on Telemachus that is already
223angered, expecting a gift for thy house, if perchance he
224may vouchsafe thee aught. But now will I speak out, and my
225word shall surely be accomplished. If thou that knowest
226much lore from of old, shalt beguile with words a younger
227man, and rouse him to indignation, first it shall be a
228great grief to him:--and yet he can count on no aid from
229these who hear him;--while upon thee, old man, we will lay
230a fine, that thou mayest pay it and chafe at heart, and
231sore pain shall be thine. And I myself will give a word of
232counsel to Telemachus in presence of you all. Let him
233command his mother to return to her father's house; and her
234kinsfolk will furnish a wedding feast, and array the gifts
235of wooing, exceeding many, all that should go back with a
236daughter dearly beloved. For ere that, I trow, we sons of
237the Achaeans will not cease from our rough wooing, since,
238come what may, we fear not any man, no, not Telemachus,
239full of words though he be, nor soothsaying do we heed,
240whereof thou, old man, pratest idly, and art hated yet the
241more. His substance too shall be woefully devoured, nor
242shall recompense ever be made, so long as she shall put off
243the Achaeans in the matter of her marriage; while we in
244expectation, from day to day, vie one with another for the
245prize of her perfection, nor go we after other women whom
246it were meet that we should each one wed.'
247
248Then wise Telemachus answered him saying: 'Eurymachus, and
249ye others, that are lordly wooers, I entreat you no more
250concerning this nor speak thereof, for the gods have
251knowledge of it now and all the Achaeans. But come, give me
252a swift ship and twenty men, who shall accomplish for me my
253voyage to and fro. For I will go to Sparta and to sandy
254Pylos to inquire concerning the return of my father that is
255long afar, if perchance any man shall tell me aught, or if
256I may hear the voice from Zeus, that chiefly brings tidings
257to men. If I shall hear news of the life and the returning
258of my father, then verily I may endure the wasting for yet
259a year; but if I shall hear that he is dead and gone, let
260me then return to my own dear country, and pile his mound,
261and over it pay burial rites full many as is due, and I
262will give my mother to a husband.'
263
264So with that word he sat him down; then in the midst uprose
265Mentor, the companion of noble Odysseus. He it was to whom
266Odysseus, as he departed in the fleet, had given the charge
267over all his house, that it should obey the old man, and
268that he should keep all things safe. With good will he now
269made harangue and spake among them:
270
271'Hearken to me now, ye men of Ithaca, to the word that I
272shall say. Henceforth let not any sceptred king be kind and
273gentle with all his heart, nor minded to do righteously,
274but let him alway be a hard man and work unrighteousness:
275for behold, there is none that remembereth divine Odysseus
276of the people whose lord he was, and was gentle as a
277father. Howsoever, it is not that I grudge the lordly
278wooers their deeds of violence in the evil devices of their
279heart. For at the hazard of their own heads they violently
280devour the household of Odysseus, and say of him that he
281will come no more again. But I am indeed wroth with the
282rest of the people, to see how ye all sit thus speechless,
283and do not cry shame upon the wooers, and put them down, ye
284that are so many and they so few.'
285
286And Leocritus, son of Euenor, answered him, saying: 'Mentor
287infatuate, with thy wandering wits, what word hast thou
288spoken, that callest upon them to put us down? Nay, it is a
289hard thing to fight about a feast, and that with men who
290are even more in number than you. Though Odysseus of Ithaca
291himself should come and were eager of heart to drive forth
292from the hall the lordly wooers that feast throughout his
293house, yet should his wife have no joy of his coming,
294though she yearns for him;--but even there should he meet
295foul doom, if he fought with those that outnumbered him; so
296thou hast not spoken aright. But as for the people, come
297now, scatter yourselves each one to his own lands, but
298Mentor and Halitherses will speed this man's voyage, for
299they are friends of his house from of old. Yet after all,
300methinks, that long time he will abide and seek tidings in
301Ithaca, and never accomplish this voyage.'
302
303Thus he spake, and in haste they broke up the assembly. So
304they were scattered each one to his own dwelling, while the
305wooers departed to the house of divine Odysseus.
306
307Then Telemachus, going far apart to the shore of the sea,
308laved his hands in the grey sea water, and prayed unto
309Athene, saying: 'Hear me, thou who yesterday didst come in
310thy godhead to our house, and badest me go in a ship across
311the misty seas, to seek tidings of the return of my father
312that is long gone: but all this my purpose do the Achaeans
313delay, and mainly the wooers in the naughtiness of their
314pride.'
315
316So spake he in prayer, and Athene drew nigh him in the
317likeness of Mentor, in fashion and in voice, and she spake
318and hailed him in winged words:
319
320'Telemachus, even hereafter thou shalt not be craven or
321witless, if indeed thou hast a drop of thy father's blood
322and a portion of his spirit; such an one was he to fulfil
323both word and work. Nor, if this be so, shall thy voyage be
324vain or unfulfilled. But if thou art not the very seed of
325him and of Penelope, then have I no hope that thou wilt
326accomplish thy desire. For few children, truly, are like
327their father; lo, the more part are worse, yet a few are
328better than the sire. But since thou shalt not even
329hereafter be craven or witless, nor hath the wisdom of
330Odysseus failed thee quite, so is there good hope of thine
331accomplishing this work. Wherefore now take no heed of the
332counsel or the purpose of the senseless wooers, for they
333are in no way wise or just: neither know they aught of
334death and of black fate, which already is close upon them,
335that they are all to perish in one day. But the voyage on
336which thy heart is set shall not long be lacking to
337thee--so faithful a friend of thy father am I, who will
338furnish thee a swift ship and myself be thy companion. But
339go thou to the house, and consort with the wooers, and make
340ready corn, and bestow all in vessels, the wine in jars and
341barley-flour, the marrow of men, in well-sewn skins; and I
342will lightly gather in the township a crew that offer
343themselves willingly. There are many ships, new and old, in
344seagirt Ithaca; of these I will choose out the best for
345thee, and we will quickly rig her and launch her on the
346broad deep.'
347
348So spake Athene, daughter of Zeus, and Telemachus made no
349long tarrying, when he had heard the voice of the goddess.
350He went on his way towards the house, heavy at heart, and
351there he found the noble wooers in the halls, flaying goats
352and singeing swine in the court. And Antinous laughed out
353and went straight to Telemachus, and clasped his hand and
354spake and hailed him:
355
356'Telemachus, proud of speech and unrestrained in fury, let
357no evil word any more be in thy heart, nor evil work, but
358let me see thee eat and drink as of old. And the Achaeans
359will make thee ready all things without fail, a ship and
360chosen oarsmen, that thou mayest come the quicker to fair
361Pylos, to seek tidings of thy noble father.'
362
363Then wise Telemachus answered him, saying, 'Antinous, in no
364wise in your proud company can I sup in peace, and make
365merry with a quiet mind. Is it a little thing, ye wooers,
366that in time past ye wasted many good things of my getting,
367while as yet I was a child? But now that I am a man grown,
368and learn the story from the lips of others, and my spirit
369waxeth within me, I will seek to let loose upon you evil
370fates, as I may, going either to Pylos for help, or abiding
371here in this township. Yea, I will go, nor vain shall the
372voyage be whereof I speak; a passenger on another's ship go
373I, for I am not to have a ship nor oarsmen of mine own; so
374in your wisdom ye have thought it for the better.'
375
376He spake and snatched his hand from out the hand of
377Antinous, lightly, and all the while the wooers were busy
378feasting through the house; and they mocked him and sharply
379taunted him, and thus would some proud youth speak:
380
381'In very truth Telemachus planneth our destruction. He will
382bring a rescue either from sandy Pylos, or even it may be
383from Sparta, so terribly is he set on slaying us. Or else
384he will go to Ephyra, a fruitful land, to fetch a poisonous
385drug that he may cast it into the bowl and make an end of
386all of us.'
387
388And again another proud youth would say: 'Who knows but
389that he himself if he goes hence on the hollow ship, may
390perish wandering far from his friends, even as Odysseus? So
391should we have yet more ado, for then must we divide among
392us all his substance, and moreover give the house to his
393mother to possess it, and to him whosoever should wed her.'
394
395So spake they; but he stepped down into the vaulted
396treasure-chamber of his father, a spacious room, where gold
397and bronze lay piled, and raiment in coffers, and fragrant
398olive oil in plenty. And there stood casks of sweet wine
399and old, full of the unmixed drink divine, all orderly
400ranged by the wall, ready if ever Odysseus should come
401home, albeit after travail and much pain. And the
402close-fitted doors, the folding doors, were shut, and night
403and day there abode within a dame in charge, who guarded
404all in the fulness of her wisdom, Eurycleia, daughter of
405Ops son of Peisenor. Telemachus now called her into the
406chamber and spake unto her, saying:
407
408'Mother, come draw off for me sweet wine in jars, the
409choicest next to that thou keepest mindful ever of that
410ill-fated one, Odysseus, of the seed of Zeus, if perchance
411he may come I know not whence, having avoided death and the
412fates. So fill twelve jars, and close each with his lid,
413and pour me barley-meal into well-sewn skins, and let there
414be twenty measures of the grain of bruised barley-meal. Let
415none know this but thyself! As for these things let them
416all be got together; for in the evening I will take them
417with me, at the time that my mother hath gone to her upper
418chamber and turned her thoughts to sleep. Lo, to Sparta I
419go and to sandy Pylos to seek tidings of my dear father's
420return, if haply I may hear thereof.'
421
422So spake he, and the good nurse Eurycleia wailed aloud, and
423making lament spake to him winged words: 'Ah, wherefore,
424dear child, hath such a thought arisen in thine heart? How
425shouldst thou fare over wide lands, thou that art an only
426child and well-beloved? As for him he hath perished,
427Odysseus of the seed of Zeus, far from his own country in
428the land of strangers. And yonder men, so soon as thou art
429gone, will devise mischief against thee thereafter, that
430thou mayest perish by guile, and they will share among them
431all this wealth of thine. Nay, abide here, settled on thine
432own lands: thou hast no need upon the deep unharvested to
433suffer evil and go wandering.'
434
435Then wise Telemachus answered her, saying: 'Take heart,
436nurse, for lo, this my purpose came not but of a god. But
437swear to tell no word thereof to my dear mother, till at
438least it shall be the eleventh or twelfth day from hence,
439or till she miss me of herself, and hear of my departure,
440that so she may not mar her fair face with her tears.'
441
442Thus he spake, and the old woman sware a great oath by the
443gods not to reveal it. But when she had sworn and done that
444oath, straightway she drew off the wine for him in jars,
445and poured barley-meal into well-sewn skins, and Telemachus
446departed to the house and consorted with the wooers.
447
448Then the goddess, grey-eyed Athene, turned to other
449thoughts. In the likeness of Telemachus she went all
450through the city, and stood by each one of the men and
451spake her saying, and bade them gather at even by the swift
452ship. Furthermore, she craved a swift ship of Noemon,
453famous son of Phronius, and right gladly he promised it.
454
455Now the sun sank and all the ways were darkened. Then at
456length she let drag the swift ship to the sea and stored
457within it all such tackling as decked ships carry. And she
458moored it at the far end of the harbour and the good
459company was gathered together, and the goddess cheered on
460all.
461
462Then the goddess, grey-eyed Athene, turned to other
463thoughts. She went on her way to the house of divine
464Odysseus; and there she shed sweet sleep upon the wooers
465and made them distraught in their drinking, and cast the
466cups from their hands. And they arose up to go to rest
467throughout the city, nor sat they yet a long while, for
468slumber was falling on their eyelids. Now grey eyed Athene
469spake unto Telemachus, and called him from out the
470fair-lying halls, taking the likeness of Mentor, both in
471fashion and in voice:
472
473'Telemachus, thy goodly-greaved companions are sitting
474already at their oars, it is thy despatch they are
475awaiting. Nay then, let us go, that we delay them not long
476from the way.'
477
478Therewith Pallas Athene led the way quickly, and he
479followed hard in the steps of the goddess. Now when they
480had come down to the ship and to the sea, they found the
481long-haired youths of the company on the shore; and the
482mighty prince Telemachus spake among them:
483
484'Come hither, friends, let us carry the corn on board, for
485all is now together in the room, and my mother knows nought
486thereof, nor any of the maidens of the house: one woman
487only heard my saying.'
488
489Thus he spake and led the way, and they went with him. So
490they brought all and stowed it in the decked ship,
491according to the word of the dear son of Odysseus. Then
492Telemachus climbed the ship, and Athene went before him,
493and behold, she sat her down in the stern, and near her sat
494Telemachus. And the men loosed the hawsers and climbed on
495board themselves and sat down upon the benches. And
496grey-eyed Athene sent them a favourable gale, a fresh West
497Wind, singing over the wine-dark sea.
498
499And Telemachus called unto his company and bade them lay
500hands on the tackling, and they hearkened to his call. So
501they raised the mast of pine tree and set it in the hole of
502the cross plank, and made it fast with forestays, and
503hauled up the white sails with twisted ropes of oxhide. And
504the wind filled the belly of the sail, and the dark wave
505seethed loudly round the stem of the running ship, and she
506fleeted over the wave, accomplishing her path. Then they
507made all fast in the swift black ship, and set mixing bowls
508brimmed with wine, and poured drink offering to the
509deathless gods that are from everlasting, and in chief to
510the grey eyed daughter of Zeus. So all night long and
511through the dawn the ship cleft her way.
512
513