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<TEI.2><text><body><div1 n="19" type="Book" org="uniform" sample="complete"><p><milestone unit="card" n="1" />
<milestone ed="p" n="1" unit="line" />So goodly Odysseus was left behind in the hall, planning with Athena's aid the slaying of the wooers, and he straightway spoke winged words to Telemachus:
“Telemachus, the weapons of war thou must needs lay away within<milestone ed="p" n="5" unit="line" />one and all, and when the wooers miss them and question thee, thou must beguile them with gentle words, saying: ‘Out of the smoke have I laid them, since they are no longer like those which of old Odysseus left behind him, when he went forth to <placeName key="perseus,Troy" authname="perseus,Troy">Troy</placeName>, but are all befouled, so far as the breath of fire has reached them.<milestone ed="p" n="10" unit="line" />And furthermore this greater fear has a god put in my heart, lest haply, when heated with wine, you may set a quarrel afoot among you, and wound one another, and so bring shame on your feast and on your wooing. For of itself does the iron draw a man to it.’” So he spoke, and Telemachus hearkened to his dear father,<milestone ed="p" n="15" unit="line" />and calling forth the nurse Eurycleia, said to her:
“Nurse, come now, I bid thee, shut up the women in their rooms, while I lay away in the store-room the weapons of my father, the goodly weapons which all uncared-for the smoke bedims in the hall since my father went forth, and I was still a child.<milestone ed="p" n="20" unit="line" />But now I am minded to lay them away, where the breath of the fire will not come upon them.” 
Then the dear nurse Eurycleia answered him: “Aye, child, I would thou mightest ever take thought to care for the house and guard all its wealth. But come, who then shall fetch a light and bear it for thee,<milestone ed="p" n="25" unit="line" />since thou wouldest not suffer the maids, who might have given light, to go before thee?”
Then wise Telemachus answered her; “This stranger here; for I will suffer no man to be idle who touches my portion of meal,<note anchored="yes" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">1</note> even though he has come from afar.”
So he spoke, but her word remained unwinged, and she locked the doors of the stately hall.<milestone ed="p" n="30" unit="line" />Then the two sprang up, Odysseus and his glorious son, and set about bearing within the helmets and the bossy shields and the sharp-pointed spears; and before them Pallas Athena, bearing a golden lamp, made a most beauteous light.<milestone ed="p" n="35" unit="line" />Then Telemachus suddenly spoke to his father, and said:
“Father, verily this is a great marvel that my eyes behold; certainly the walls of the house and the fair beams<note anchored="yes" resp="Loeb" place="unspecified">2</note> and cross-beams of fir and the pillars that reach on high, glow in my eyes as with the light of blazing fire.<milestone ed="p" n="40" unit="line" />Surely some god is within, one of those who hold broad heaven.”
Then Odysseus of many wiles answered him, and said: “Hush, check thy thought, and ask no question; this, I tell thee, is the way of the gods that hold <placeName key="tgn,7011019" authname="tgn,7011019">Olympus</placeName>. But do thou go and take thy rest and I will remain behind here,<milestone ed="p" n="45" unit="line" />that I may stir yet more the minds of the maids and of thy mother; and she with weeping shall ask me of each thing separately.”</p></div1></body></text></TEI.2>