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The Odyssey | Homer, Butler Tr. | |
FOOTNOTES |
Page 17 of 17 |
"A ship's cable. I don't know how big a ship she meant, but it must have been a very small one indeed if its 'cable' could be used to tie tightly round a woman's neck, and still more round a dozen of them 'in a row,' besides being strong enough to hold them and pull them all up. "A dozen average women would need the weight and strength of more than a dozen strong heavy men even over the best pulley hung to the roof over them; and the idea of pulling them up by a rope hung anyhow round a pillar [Greek] is absurdly impossible; and how a dozen of them could be hung dangling round one post is a problem which a senior wrangler would be puzzled to answer... She had better have let Telemachus use his sword as he had intended till she changed his mind for him." {179} Then they had all been in Ulysses' service over twenty years; perhaps the twelve guilty ones had been engaged more recently. {180} Translation very doubtful--cf. "It." xxiv. 598. {181} But why could she not at once ask to see the scar, of which Euryclea had told her, or why could not Ulysses have shown it to her? {182} The people of Ithaca seem to have been as fond of carping as the Phaeacians were in vi. 273, etc. {183} See note {156}. Ulysses's bed room does not appear to have been upstairs, nor yet quite within the house. Is it possible that it was "the domed room" round the outside of which the erring maids were, for aught we have heard to the contrary, still hanging? |
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The Odyssey Homer, Butler Tr. |
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