The Story of the Odyssey

Alfred J. Church
The Story of the Odyssey

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Title: The Story Of The Odyssey
Author: The Rev. Alfred J. Church
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THE STORY OF THE ODYSSEY
BY THE REV. ALFRED J. CHURCH, M.A.

CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION
THE ODYSSEY:
I. THE COUNSEL OF ATHENE
II. THE ASSEMBLY
III. NESTOR'S TALE
IV. IN SPARTA
V. MENELAUS'S TALE
VI. ULYSSES ON HIS RAFT
VII. NAUSICAA
VIII. ALCINOUS
IX. THE PHAEACIANS
X. THE CYCLOPS
XI. AEOLUS; THE LAESTRYGONS; CIRCE
XII. THE DWELLINGS OF THE DEAD
XIII. THE SIRENS; SCYLLA; THE OXEN OF THE SUN
XIV. ITHACA
XV. EUMAEUS, THE SWINEHERD
XVI. THE RETURN OF TELEMACHUS
XVII. ULYSSES AND TELEMACHUS
XVIII. ULYSSES IN HIS HOME
XIX. ULYSSES IN HIS HOME (_continued_)
XX. ULYSSES IS DISCOVERED BY HIS NURSE
XXI. THE TRIAL OF THE BOW
XXII. THE SLAYING OF THE SUITORS

XXIII. THE END OF THE WANDERING
XXIV. THE TRIUMPH OF ULYSSES
PRONUNCIATION OF PROPER NAMES

INTRODUCTION
Three thousand years ago the world was still young. The western
continent was a huge wilderness, and the greater part of Europe was
inhabited by savage and wandering tribes. Only a few nations at the
eastern end of the Mediterranean and in the neighbouring parts of Asia
had learned to dwell in cities, to use a written language, to make laws
for themselves, and to live in a more orderly fashion. Of these nations
the most brilliant was that of the Greeks, who were destined in war, in
learning, in government, and in the arts, to play a great part in the
world, and to be the real founders of our modern civilization. While
they were still a rude people, they had noble ideals of beauty and
bravery, of duty and justice. Even before they had a written language,
their singers had made songs about their heroes and their great deeds;
and later these songs, which fathers had taught to children, and these
children to their children, were brought together into two long and
wonderful poems, which have ever since been the delight of the world,
the Iliad and the Odyssey.
The Iliad is the story of the siege of Ilium, or Troy, on the western
coast of Asia Minor. Paris, son of the king of Troy, had enticed Helen,
the most beautiful of Grecian women, and the wife of a Grecian king,
to leave her husband's home with him; and the kings and princes of the
Greeks had gathered an army and a fleet and sailed across the Aegean
Sea to rescue her. For ten years they strove to capture the city.
According to the fine old legends, the gods themselves took a part in
the war, some siding with the Greeks, and some with the Trojans. It
was finally through Ulysses, a famous Greek warrior, brave and fierce
as well as wise and crafty, that the Greeks captured the city.
The second poem, the Odyssey, tells what befell Ulysses, or Odysseus,
as the Greeks called him, on his homeward way. Sailing from Troy
with his little fleet of ships, which were so small that they used oars as
well as sails, he was destined to wander for ten years longer before he
could return to his rocky island of Ithaca, on the west shore of Greece,
and to his faithful wife, Penelope.

He had marvellous adventures, for the gods who had opposed the
Greeks at Troy had plotted to bring him ill-fortune. Just as his ships
were safely rounding the southern cape of Greece, a fierce storm took
them out of their course, and
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