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  Aardvark  ·  Aaron (Bible)  ·  Abaddon & Apollyon  ·  Abbey  ·  Able & Ability  ·  Abortion  ·  Abraham (Bible)  ·  Abroad  ·  Absence & Absent  ·  Absolute  ·  Abstinence  ·  Abu Dhabi  ·  Abuse (I)  ·  Abuse (II)  ·  Abyss  ·  Accident (I)  ·  Accident (II)  ·  Accountable & Accountability  ·  Accountant & Accountancy  ·  Accusation  ·  Achievement  ·  Acting & Actor  ·  Action  ·  Activism & Activist  ·  Adam & Eve & Lilith  ·  ADD & ADHD  ·  Addiction  ·  Address  ·  Adult  ·  Adultery  ·  Advantage  ·  Adventure  ·  Adversity  ·  Advertising & Advertisement  ·  Advice & Advise  ·  Aeroplane & Aircraft & Airport (I)  ·  Aeroplane & Aircraft & Airport (II)  ·  Aesthetics  ·  Affair (Romance)  ·  Affection  ·  Affliction  ·  Afghanistan & Afghanistanis  ·  Afraid  ·  Africa & Africans  ·  Age & Ageing  ·  Age & Ages (Eon)  ·  Agenda  ·  Agnostic & Agnosticism  ·  Agreement  ·  Agriculture  ·  AIDS & HIV  ·  Air  ·  Al Qaeda & Osama bin Laden  ·  Alabama  ·  Alarm  ·  Alaska  ·  Albania & Albanians  ·  Alcatraz Penitentiary  ·  Alchemy  ·  Alcohol & Alcoholic  ·  Alexander the Great  ·  Alfred the Great  ·  Algeria & Algerians  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (I)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (II)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (III)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (IV)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (V)  ·  Allergy  ·  Alliance  ·  Almas & Almasty  ·  Alone  ·  Alter Ego  ·  Alternative Medicine  ·  Altruism & Altruist  ·  Alzheimer's Disease  ·  Amateur  ·  Amazon & Amazon River  ·  Ambition  ·  Amen  ·  Amish People & Culture  ·  Ammonites  ·  Amoeba  ·  Amphetamines  ·  Amphibians  ·  Amsterdam  ·  Amusement  ·  Analogy  ·  Anarchy & Anarchism & Anarchist  ·  Ancestor & Ancestry  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (I)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (II)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (III)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (IV)  ·  Ancient Egypt (I)  ·  Ancient Egypt (II)  ·  Ancient Greece  ·  Ancient Israel & Israelites  ·  Ancient Roman Empire (I)  ·  Ancient Roman Empire (II)  ·  Ancient Rome & Romans (I)  ·  Ancient Rome & Romans (II)  ·  Angels  ·  Anger  ·  Anglo-Saxons  ·  Angola  ·  Anguish  ·  Animal Mutilation  ·  Animal Sacrifice  ·  Animals (I)  ·  Animals (II)  ·  Anne, Queen  ·  Anorexia & Anorexic  ·  Answer  ·  Antarctic & South Pole  ·  Anthrax  ·  Anthropic Principle  ·  Anti-Christ  ·  Anti-Semitism  ·  Antibiotics  ·  Antimatter  ·  Antiques & Antiquities  ·  Ants  ·  Anunnaki  ·  Anxiety & Anxious  ·  Apathy  ·  Ape  ·  Apocalypse  ·  Apocrypha  ·  Apology & Apologise  ·  Apostles  ·  Appeal  ·  Appearance  ·  Appeasement  ·  Appetite  ·  Apple  ·  Appointment  ·  Apprehension  ·  Aquarius  ·  Arab & Arabia  ·  Archaeology & Archaeologist  ·  Archery & Arrow  ·  Architecture  ·  Arctic & North Pole  ·  Area 51 & Area 52  ·  Argentina  ·  Argument  ·  Aristocracy & Aristocrat  ·  Arizona  ·  Ark of the Covenant  ·  Arkansas  ·  Armageddon  ·  Armenia  ·  Arms  ·  Army  ·  Arrest  ·  Art (I)  ·  Art (II)  ·  Art (III)  ·  Art (IV)  ·  Art (V)  ·  Art Deco  ·  Art Nouveau  ·  Artefacts  ·  Arthur, King  ·  Artificial Intelligence  ·  Artists: Abramovic, Marina  ·  Artists: Aitken, Doug  ·  Artists: Andre, Carl  ·  Artists: Bacon, Francis  ·  Artists: Banksy  ·  Artists: Basquiat, Jean-Michel  ·  Artists: Bazille, Frédéric  ·  Artists: Beardsley, Aubrey  ·  Artists: Bernini, Gian Lorenzo  ·  Artists: Bomberg, David  ·  Artists: Bosch, Hieronymus  ·  Artists: Botticelli, Sandro  ·  Artists: Bourgeois, Louise  ·  Artists: Bracquemond, Marie  ·  Artists: Bronzino – Agnolo di Cosimo  ·  Artists: Bruegel, Pieter  ·  Artists: Caillebotte, Gustave  ·  Artists: Canaletto, Giovanni Antonio Canal  ·  Artists: Caravaggio, Michelangelo Merisi  ·  Artists: Caro, Anthony  ·  Artists: Cassatt, Mary  ·  Artists: Cézanne, Paul  ·  Artists: Chadwick, Helen  ·  Artists: Chagall, Marc  ·  Artists: Chapman Brothers  ·  Artists: Close, Chuck  ·  Artists: Colquhoun, Ithell  ·  Artists: Constable, John  ·  Artists: Courbet, Gustave  ·  Artists: Da Vinci, Leonardo  ·  Artists: Dadd, Richard  ·  Artists: Dali, Salvador  ·  Artists: David, Jacques-Louis  ·  Artists: De Kooning, Willem  ·  Artists: Degas, Edgar  ·  Artists: Delacroix, Eugene  ·  Artists: Deller, Jeremy  ·  Artists: Dobson, William  ·  Artists: Duchamp, Marcel  ·  Artists: Durer, Albrecht  ·  Artists: El Greco  ·  Artists: Emin, Tracey  ·  Artists: Epstein, Jacob  ·  Artists: Ernst, Max  ·  Artists: Etty, William  ·  Artists: Francesca, Piero Della  ·  Artists: Freud, Lucian  ·  Artists: Gainsborough, Thomas  ·  Artists: Gauguin, Paul  ·  Artists: Gentileschi, Artemisia  ·  Artists: Giacometti, Alberto  ·  Artists: Gilbert & George  ·  Artists: Giotto, di Bondone  ·  Artists: Girtin, Tom  ·  Artists: Goya – Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes  ·  Artists: Grimshaw, John Atkinson  ·  Artists: Guardi, Francesco  ·  Artists: Hals, Frans  ·  Artists: Haring, Keith  ·  Artists: Hepworth, Barbara  ·  Artists: Heron, Patrick  ·  Artists: Hirst, Damien  ·  Artists: Hockney, David  ·  Artists: Hogarth, William  ·  Artists: Holbein, Hans  ·  Artists: Homer, Winslow  ·  Artists: Hopper, Edward  ·  Artists: Impressionists  ·  Artists: Kahlo, Frida  ·  Artists: Kandinsky, Wassily  ·  Artists: Klee, Paul  ·  Artists: Klein, Yves  ·  Artists: Klimt, Gustav  ·  Artists: Knight, Laura  ·  Artists: Koons, Jeff  ·  Artists: Lanyon, Peter  ·  Artists: Lawrence, Thomas  ·  Artists: Le Brun, Christopher  ·  Artists: Lewis, Percy Wyndham  ·  Artists: Lorrain, Claude  ·  Artists: Lowry, Laurence Stephen  ·  Artists: Lucas, Sarah  ·  Artists: Magritte, Rene  ·  Artists: Manet, Edouard  ·  Artists: Matisse, Henri  ·  Artists: McGill, Donald  ·  Artists: Michelangelo, di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni  ·  Artists: Minton, John  ·  Artists: Miro, Joan  ·  Artists: Modigliani, Amedeo  ·  Artists: Monaco, Lorenzo  ·  Artists: Mondrian, Pieter Cornelis  ·  Artists: Monet, Claude  ·  Artists: Moore, Henry  ·  Artists: Morisot, Berthe  ·  Artists: Munch, Edvard  ·  Artists: Nash, Paul  ·  Artists: Nevinson, Christopher  ·  Artists: Nicholson, Ben  ·  Artists: Obata, Chiura  ·  Artists: Palmer, Samuel  ·  Artists: Perry, Grayson  ·  Artists: Picasso, Pablo  ·  Artists: Piper, John  ·  Artists: Pissarro, Camille  ·  Artists: Pollock, Jackson  ·  Artists: Pop Art  ·  Artists: Pre-Raphaelites inc. Millet & Hunt & Rossetti et al  ·  Artists: Raphael  ·  Artists: Rego, Paula  ·  Artists: Rembrandt  ·  Artists: Renoir, Pierre-Auguste  ·  Artists: Reynolds, Joshua  ·  Artists: Rodin, Auguste  ·  Artists: Rothko, Mark  ·  Artists: Rubens, Peter Paul  ·  Artists: Sargent, John Singer  ·  Artists: Schiele, Egon  ·  Artists: Seurat, Georges  ·  Artists: Sickert, Walter Richard  ·  Artists: Sorolla  ·  Artists: Spencer, Stanley  ·  Artists: Stubbs, George  ·  Artists: Sutherland, Graham  ·  Artists: Tekle, Afewerk  ·  Artists: Tiepolo, Giovanni Battista  ·  Artists: Tintoretto  ·  Artists: Titian  ·  Artists: Turnbull, William  ·  Artists: Turner, Joseph Mallord William  ·  Artists: Tuymans, Luc  ·  Artists: Twombly, Cy  ·  Artists: Van Dyck, Anthony  ·  Artists: Van Eyck, Jan  ·  Artists: Van Gogh, Vincent  ·  Artists: Velázquez, Diego  ·  Artists: Vermeer, Johannes  ·  Artists: Wallis, Alfred  ·  Artists: Warhol, Andy  ·  Artists: Wei-Wei, Ai  ·  Artists: Whistler, James Abbott McNeill  ·  Artists: Whiteread, Rachel  ·  Artists: Wood, Christopher  ·  Arts & Crafts  ·  Asherah  ·  Asia  ·  Aspartame  ·  Assassinations  ·  Assassinations: Aguilera, Jaime Roldos  ·  Assassinations: Alexander of Yugoslavia  ·  Assassinations: Arafat, Yasser  ·  Assassinations: Bin Laden, Osama  ·  Assassinations: Caesar, Julius  ·  Assassinations: Calvi, Roberto  ·  Assassinations: Castro, Fidel  ·  Assassinations: Collins, Michael  ·  Assassinations: Colosio-Murrieta, Luis Donaldo  ·  Assassinations: Cooper, Bill  ·  Assassinations: Dando, Jill  ·  Assassinations: Danny Casolaro  ·  Assassinations: De Gaulle, Charles  ·  Assassinations: De Menezes, Jean Charles  ·  Assassinations: Erzberger, Matthias  ·  Assassinations: Ferdinand, Archduke Franz of Austria  ·  Assassinations: Ford, Gerald  ·  Assassinations: Gaddafi, Muammar  ·  Assassinations: Gaitan, Jorge  ·  Assassinations: Gandhi, Indira & Rajiv  ·  Assassinations: Gandhi, Mahatma  ·  Assassinations: Garfield, James  ·  Assassinations: Gibraltar 3  ·  Assassinations: Gongadze, Georgiy  ·  Assassinations: Guerin, Veronica  ·  Assassinations: Guevara, Che  ·  Assassinations: Hammarskjold, Dag  ·  Assassinations: Hampton, Fred  ·  Assassinations: Hoffa, Jimmy  ·  Assassinations: Jackson, Andrew  ·  Assassinations: Jara, Victor  ·  Assassinations: Kelly, David  ·  Assassinations: Khalaf, Hevrin  ·  Assassinations: Khashoggi, Jamal  ·  Assassinations: Kim, Jong-nam  ·  Assassinations: Kinahan, Daniel  ·  Assassinations: Lennon, John  ·  Assassinations: Litvinenko, Alexander  ·  Assassinations: Markov, Georgi  ·  Assassinations: Marley, Bob  ·  Assassinations: Marwan, Ashraf  ·  Assassinations: Maxwell, Robert  ·  Assassinations: McKinley, William  ·  Assassinations: Moro, Aldo  ·  Assassinations: Mountbatten, Louis Lord  ·  Assassinations: Mussolini, Benito  ·  Assassinations: Navalny, Alexei  ·  Assassinations: Nemtsov, Boris  ·  Assassinations: Olson, Frank  ·  Assassinations: Palme, Olof  ·  Assassinations: Patton, George  ·  Assassinations: Pope John Paul I  ·  Assassinations: Pope John Paul II  ·  Assassinations: Princes in the Tower  ·  Assassinations: Rabin, Yitzhak  ·  Assassinations: Rasputin, Grigori  ·  Assassinations: Reed, Dean  ·  Assassinations: Rohwedder, Detlev  ·  Assassinations: Sadat, Anwar  ·  Assassinations: Sikorski, Wladyslaw  ·  Assassinations: Sindona, Michele  ·  Assassinations: Skripal, Sergei  ·  Assassinations: Smalls, Biggie  ·  Assassinations: Stewart, Duncan  ·  Assassinations: Trotsky, Leon  ·  Assassinations: Tutankhamun  ·  Assassinations: Verwoerd, Hendrik  ·  Assassinations: Yushchenko, Viktor  ·  Assassinations: Zia-ul-Haq, Muhammad  ·  Assyria & Assyrians  ·  Asteroid  ·  Astrology  ·  Astronaut  ·  Astronomy & Astrophysics  ·  Atheism & Atheist  ·  Athlete & Athletics  ·  Atlanta  ·  Atlantis  ·  Atmosphere  ·  Atom & Atomic Energy & Atomic Weapons  ·  Attitude  ·  Auction  ·  Audience  ·  Australia & Australians  ·  Austria & Austrians  ·  Author  ·  Authority  ·  Autism & Asperger Syndrome  ·  Autobiography  ·  Autograph  ·  Autopsy & Post-Mortem  ·  Autumn & Fall  ·  Avarice  ·  Awake  ·  Ayahuasca  ·  Azerbaijan  ·  Aztecs  
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Adventure
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  Aardvark  ·  Aaron (Bible)  ·  Abaddon & Apollyon  ·  Abbey  ·  Able & Ability  ·  Abortion  ·  Abraham (Bible)  ·  Abroad  ·  Absence & Absent  ·  Absolute  ·  Abstinence  ·  Abu Dhabi  ·  Abuse (I)  ·  Abuse (II)  ·  Abyss  ·  Accident (I)  ·  Accident (II)  ·  Accountable & Accountability  ·  Accountant & Accountancy  ·  Accusation  ·  Achievement  ·  Acting & Actor  ·  Action  ·  Activism & Activist  ·  Adam & Eve & Lilith  ·  ADD & ADHD  ·  Addiction  ·  Address  ·  Adult  ·  Adultery  ·  Advantage  ·  Adventure  ·  Adversity  ·  Advertising & Advertisement  ·  Advice & Advise  ·  Aeroplane & Aircraft & Airport (I)  ·  Aeroplane & Aircraft & Airport (II)  ·  Aesthetics  ·  Affair (Romance)  ·  Affection  ·  Affliction  ·  Afghanistan & Afghanistanis  ·  Afraid  ·  Africa & Africans  ·  Age & Ageing  ·  Age & Ages (Eon)  ·  Agenda  ·  Agnostic & Agnosticism  ·  Agreement  ·  Agriculture  ·  AIDS & HIV  ·  Air  ·  Al Qaeda & Osama bin Laden  ·  Alabama  ·  Alarm  ·  Alaska  ·  Albania & Albanians  ·  Alcatraz Penitentiary  ·  Alchemy  ·  Alcohol & Alcoholic  ·  Alexander the Great  ·  Alfred the Great  ·  Algeria & Algerians  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (I)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (II)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (III)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (IV)  ·  Aliens & Alien Abduction (V)  ·  Allergy  ·  Alliance  ·  Almas & Almasty  ·  Alone  ·  Alter Ego  ·  Alternative Medicine  ·  Altruism & Altruist  ·  Alzheimer's Disease  ·  Amateur  ·  Amazon & Amazon River  ·  Ambition  ·  Amen  ·  Amish People & Culture  ·  Ammonites  ·  Amoeba  ·  Amphetamines  ·  Amphibians  ·  Amsterdam  ·  Amusement  ·  Analogy  ·  Anarchy & Anarchism & Anarchist  ·  Ancestor & Ancestry  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (I)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (II)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (III)  ·  Ancient Astronaut Theory (IV)  ·  Ancient Egypt (I)  ·  Ancient Egypt (II)  ·  Ancient Greece  ·  Ancient Israel & Israelites  ·  Ancient Roman Empire (I)  ·  Ancient Roman Empire (II)  ·  Ancient Rome & Romans (I)  ·  Ancient Rome & Romans (II)  ·  Angels  ·  Anger  ·  Anglo-Saxons  ·  Angola  ·  Anguish  ·  Animal Mutilation  ·  Animal Sacrifice  ·  Animals (I)  ·  Animals (II)  ·  Anne, Queen  ·  Anorexia & Anorexic  ·  Answer  ·  Antarctic & South Pole  ·  Anthrax  ·  Anthropic Principle  ·  Anti-Christ  ·  Anti-Semitism  ·  Antibiotics  ·  Antimatter  ·  Antiques & Antiquities  ·  Ants  ·  Anunnaki  ·  Anxiety & Anxious  ·  Apathy  ·  Ape  ·  Apocalypse  ·  Apocrypha  ·  Apology & Apologise  ·  Apostles  ·  Appeal  ·  Appearance  ·  Appeasement  ·  Appetite  ·  Apple  ·  Appointment  ·  Apprehension  ·  Aquarius  ·  Arab & Arabia  ·  Archaeology & Archaeologist  ·  Archery & Arrow  ·  Architecture  ·  Arctic & North Pole  ·  Area 51 & Area 52  ·  Argentina  ·  Argument  ·  Aristocracy & Aristocrat  ·  Arizona  ·  Ark of the Covenant  ·  Arkansas  ·  Armageddon  ·  Armenia  ·  Arms  ·  Army  ·  Arrest  ·  Art (I)  ·  Art (II)  ·  Art (III)  ·  Art (IV)  ·  Art (V)  ·  Art Deco  ·  Art Nouveau  ·  Artefacts  ·  Arthur, King  ·  Artificial Intelligence  ·  Artists: Abramovic, Marina  ·  Artists: Aitken, Doug  ·  Artists: Andre, Carl  ·  Artists: Bacon, Francis  ·  Artists: Banksy  ·  Artists: Basquiat, Jean-Michel  ·  Artists: Bazille, Frédéric  ·  Artists: Beardsley, Aubrey  ·  Artists: Bernini, Gian Lorenzo  ·  Artists: Bomberg, David  ·  Artists: Bosch, Hieronymus  ·  Artists: Botticelli, Sandro  ·  Artists: Bourgeois, Louise  ·  Artists: Bracquemond, Marie  ·  Artists: Bronzino – Agnolo di Cosimo  ·  Artists: Bruegel, Pieter  ·  Artists: Caillebotte, Gustave  ·  Artists: Canaletto, Giovanni Antonio Canal  ·  Artists: Caravaggio, Michelangelo Merisi  ·  Artists: Caro, Anthony  ·  Artists: Cassatt, Mary  ·  Artists: Cézanne, Paul  ·  Artists: Chadwick, Helen  ·  Artists: Chagall, Marc  ·  Artists: Chapman Brothers  ·  Artists: Close, Chuck  ·  Artists: Colquhoun, Ithell  ·  Artists: Constable, John  ·  Artists: Courbet, Gustave  ·  Artists: Da Vinci, Leonardo  ·  Artists: Dadd, Richard  ·  Artists: Dali, Salvador  ·  Artists: David, Jacques-Louis  ·  Artists: De Kooning, Willem  ·  Artists: Degas, Edgar  ·  Artists: Delacroix, Eugene  ·  Artists: Deller, Jeremy  ·  Artists: Dobson, William  ·  Artists: Duchamp, Marcel  ·  Artists: Durer, Albrecht  ·  Artists: El Greco  ·  Artists: Emin, Tracey  ·  Artists: Epstein, Jacob  ·  Artists: Ernst, Max  ·  Artists: Etty, William  ·  Artists: Francesca, Piero Della  ·  Artists: Freud, Lucian  ·  Artists: Gainsborough, Thomas  ·  Artists: Gauguin, Paul  ·  Artists: Gentileschi, Artemisia  ·  Artists: Giacometti, Alberto  ·  Artists: Gilbert & George  ·  Artists: Giotto, di Bondone  ·  Artists: Girtin, Tom  ·  Artists: Goya – Francisco Jose de Goya y Lucientes  ·  Artists: Grimshaw, John Atkinson  ·  Artists: Guardi, Francesco  ·  Artists: Hals, Frans  ·  Artists: Haring, Keith  ·  Artists: Hepworth, Barbara  ·  Artists: Heron, Patrick  ·  Artists: Hirst, Damien  ·  Artists: Hockney, David  ·  Artists: Hogarth, William  ·  Artists: Holbein, Hans  ·  Artists: Homer, Winslow  ·  Artists: Hopper, Edward  ·  Artists: Impressionists  ·  Artists: Kahlo, Frida  ·  Artists: Kandinsky, Wassily  ·  Artists: Klee, Paul  ·  Artists: Klein, Yves  ·  Artists: Klimt, Gustav  ·  Artists: Knight, Laura  ·  Artists: Koons, Jeff  ·  Artists: Lanyon, Peter  ·  Artists: Lawrence, Thomas  ·  Artists: Le Brun, Christopher  ·  Artists: Lewis, Percy Wyndham  ·  Artists: Lorrain, Claude  ·  Artists: Lowry, Laurence Stephen  ·  Artists: Lucas, Sarah  ·  Artists: Magritte, Rene  ·  Artists: Manet, Edouard  ·  Artists: Matisse, Henri  ·  Artists: McGill, Donald  ·  Artists: Michelangelo, di Lodovico Buonarroti Simoni  ·  Artists: Minton, John  ·  Artists: Miro, Joan  ·  Artists: Modigliani, Amedeo  ·  Artists: Monaco, Lorenzo  ·  Artists: Mondrian, Pieter Cornelis  ·  Artists: Monet, Claude  ·  Artists: Moore, Henry  ·  Artists: Morisot, Berthe  ·  Artists: Munch, Edvard  ·  Artists: Nash, Paul  ·  Artists: Nevinson, Christopher  ·  Artists: Nicholson, Ben  ·  Artists: Obata, Chiura  ·  Artists: Palmer, Samuel  ·  Artists: Perry, Grayson  ·  Artists: Picasso, Pablo  ·  Artists: Piper, John  ·  Artists: Pissarro, Camille  ·  Artists: Pollock, Jackson  ·  Artists: Pop Art  ·  Artists: Pre-Raphaelites inc. 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★ Adventure

I am Ulysses son of Laertes, renowned among mankind for all manner of subtlety, so that my fame ascends to heaven.  I live in Ithaca, where there is a high mountain called Neritum, covered with forests; and not far from it there is a group of islands very near to one another Dulichium, Same, and the wooded island of Zacynthus.  It lies squat on the horizon, all highest up in the sea towards the sunset, while the others lie away from it towards dawn.  It is a rugged island, but it breeds brave men, and my eyes know none that they better love to look upon.  The goddess Calypso kept me with her in her cave, and wanted me to marry her, as did also the cunning Aeaean goddess Circe; but they could neither of them persuade me, for there is nothing dearer to a man than his own country and his parents, and however splendid a home he may have in a foreign country, if it be far from father or mother, he does not care about it.  Now, however, I will tell you of the many hazardous adventures which by Joves will I met with on my return from Troy.  ibid.  VIII 

 

‘When I had got the men together I said to them, “You think you are about to start home again, but Circe has explained to me that instead of this, we have got to go to the house of Hades and Proserpine to consult the ghost of the Theban prophet Teiresias.” 

‘The men were broken-hearted as they heard me, and threw themselves on the ground groaning and tearing their hair, but they did not mend matters by crying.  When we reached the sea shore, weeping and lamenting our fate, Circe brought the ram and the ewe, and we made them fast hard by the ship.  She passed through the midst of us without our knowing it, for who can see the comings and goings of a god, if the god does not wish to be seen?’  ibid.  X  Ulysses 

 

‘My mother answered, “Your wife still remains in your house, but she is in great distress of mind and spends her whole time in tears both night and day.  No-one as yet has got possession of your fine property, and Telemachus still holds your lands undisturbed.  He has to entertain largely, as of course he must, considering his position as a magistrate, and how every one invites him; your father remains at his old place in the country and never goes near the town.  He has no comfortable bed nor bedding; in the winter he sleeps on the floor in front of the fire with the men and goes about all in rags, but in summer, when the warm weather comes on again, he lies out in the vineyard on a bed of vine leaves thrown anyhow upon the ground.  He grieves continually about your never having come home, and suffers more and more as he grows older.”’  ibid.  XI

 

‘On this Hercules went down again into the house of Hades, but I stayed where I was in case some other of the mighty dead should come to me.  And I should have seen still other of them that are gone before, whom I would fain have seen  Theseus and Pirithous glorious children of the gods, but so many thousands of ghosts came round me and uttered such appalling cries, that I was panic stricken lest Proserpine should send up from the house of Hades the head of that awful monster Gorgon.  On this I hastened back to my ship and ordered my men to go on board at once and loose the hawsers; so they embarked and took their places, whereon the ship went down the stream of the river Oceanus.  We had to row at first, but presently a fair wind sprang up.’  ibid.  XI 

 

Ulysses went back to his own place, and Eumaeus strewed some green brushwood on the floor and threw a sheepskin on top of it for Telemachus to sit upon.  Then the swineherd brought them platters of cold meat, the remains from what they had eaten the day before, and he filled the bread baskets with bread as fast as he could.  He mixed wine also in bowls of ivy-wood, and took his seat facing Ulysses.  Then they laid their hands on the good things that were before them, and as soon as they had had enough to eat and drink Telemachus said to Eumaeus, ‘Old friend, where does this stranger come from?  How did his crew bring him to Ithaca, and who were they?  for assuredly he did not come here by land.’  ibid.  XVI

 

‘Good heavens,’ said he, ‘see how the gods have saved this man from destruction.  We kept a succession of scouts upon the headlands all day long, and when the sun was down we never went on shore to sleep, but waited in the ship all night till morning in the hope of capturing and killing him; but some god has conveyed him home in spite of us.  Let us consider how we can make an end of him.  He must not escape us; our affair is never likely to come off while is alive, for he is very shrewd, and public feeling is by no means all on our side.  We must make haste before he can call the Achaeans in assembly; he will lose no time in doing so, for he will be furious with us, and will tell all the world how we plotted to kill him, but failed to take him.  The people will not like this when they come to know of it; we must see that they do us no hurt, nor drive us from our own country into exile.  Let us try and lay hold of him either on his farm away from the town, or on the road hither.  Then we can divide up his property amongst us, and let his mother and the man who marries her have the house. If this does not please you, and you wish Telemachus to live on and hold his fathers property, then we must not gather here and eat up his goods in this way, but must make our offers to Penelope each from his own house, and she can marry the man who will give the most for her, and whose lot it is to win her.’  ibid.  XVI

 

When Euryclea heard this she unfastened the door of the womens room and came out, following Telemachus.  She found Ulysses among the corpses bespattered with blood and filth like a lion that has just been devouring an ox, and his breast and both his cheeks are all bloody, so that he is a fearful sight; even so was Ulysses besmirched from head to foot with gore.  When she saw all the corpses and such a quantity of blood, she was beginning to cry out for joy, for she saw that a great deed had been done; but Ulysses checked her, ‘Old woman,’ said he, ‘rejoice in silence; restrain yourself, and do not make any noise about it; it is an unholy thing to vaunt over dead men.  Heavens doom and their own evil deeds have brought these men to destruction, for they respected no man in the whole world, neither rich nor poor, who came near them, and they have come to a bad end as a punishment for their wickedness and folly.  Now, however, tell me which of the women in the house have misconducted themselves, and who are innocent.’  ibid.  XXII

 

When she heard the sure proofs Ulysses now gave her, she fairly broke down.  She flew weeping to his side, flung her arms about his neck, and kissed him.  ‘Do not be angry with me Ulysses,’ she cried, ‘you, who are the wisest of mankind.  We have suffered, both of us.  Heaven has denied us the happiness of spending our youth, and of growing old, together; do not then be aggrieved or take it amiss that I did not embrace you thus as soon as I saw you.  I have been shuddering all the time through fear that someone might come here and deceive me with a lying story; for there are many very wicked people going about.’  ibid.  XXIII

 

‘Happy Ulysses, son of Laertes,’ replied the ghost of Agamemnon, ‘you are indeed blessed in the possession of a wife endowed with such rare excellence of understanding, and so faithful to her wedded lord as Penelope the daughter of Icarius.  The fame, therefore, of her virtue shall never die, and the immortals shall compose a song that shall be welcome to all mankind in honour of the constancy of Penelope.  How far otherwise was the wickedness of the daughter of Tyndareus who killed her lawful husband; her song shall be hateful among men, for she has brought disgrace on all womankind even on the good ones.’  ibid.  XXIV

 

 

The wrath sing, goddess, of Peleus son, Achilles, that destructive wrath which brought countless woes upon the Achaeans, and sent forth to Hades many valiant souls of heroes, and made them themselves spoil for dogs and every bird; thus the plan of Zeus came to fulfilment, from the time when first they parted in strife Atreus son, king of men, and brilliant Achilles.

 

Who then of the gods was it that brought these two together to contend?  The son of Leto and Zeus; for he in anger against the king roused throughout the host an evil pestilence, and the people began to perish, because upon the priest Chryses the son of Atreus had wrought dishonour.  For he had come to the swift ships of the Achaeans to free his daughter, bearing ransom past counting; and in his hands he held the wreaths of Apollo who strikes from afar, on a staff of gold; and he implored all the Achaeans, but most of all the two sons of Atreus, the marshallers of the people: Sons of Atreus, and other well-greaved Achaeans, to you may the gods who have homes upon Olympus grant that you sack the city of Priam, and return safe to your homes; but my dear child release to me, and accept the ransom out of reverence for the son of Zeus, Apollo who strikes from afar.  Homer, The Ilyad I  

 

So the wind filled the belly of the sail, and the dark wave sang loudly about the stem of the ship, as she went, and she sped over the wave, accomplishing her way.  But when they came to the wide camp of the Achaeans, they drew the black ship up on the shore, high upon the sands, and set in line the long props beneath, and themselves scattered among the tents and ships.  But he in his wrath sat beside his swift-faring ships, the Zeus-sprung son of Peleus, swift-footed Achilles.  Never did he go forth to the place of gathering, where men win glory, nor ever to war, but wasted away his own heart, as he tarried where he was; and he longed for the war-cry and the battle.  ibid.  I

 

Now when they were marshalled, the several companies with their captains, the Trojans came on with clamour and with a cry like birds, even as the clamour of cranes ariseth before the face of heaven, when they flee from wintry storms and measureless rain, and with clamour fly toward the streams of Ocean, bearing slaughter and death to Pigmy men, and in the early dawn they offer evil battle.  But the Achaeans came on in silence, breathing fury, eager at heart to bear aid each man to his fellow.  ibid.  III

 

So spake he, and they stayed them from battle, and became silent forthwith.  And Hector spake between the two hosts: ‘Hear from me, ye Trojans and well-greaved Achaeans, the words of Alexander, for whose sake strife hath been set afoot.  The other Trojans and all the Achaeans he biddeth to lay aside their goodly battle-gear upon the bounteous earth, and himself in the midst and Menelaus, dear to Ares, to do battle for Helen and all her possessions.  And whichsoever of the twain shall win, and prove him the better man, let him duly take all the wealth and the woman, and bear them to his home; but for us others, let us swear friendship and oaths of faith with sacrifice.’  ibid.  III

 

Now when they were met together and come into one place, then dashed they together shields and spears and the fury of bronze-mailed warriors; and the bossed shields closed each with each, and a great din arose.  Then were heard alike the sound of groaning and the cry of triumph of the slayers and the slain, and the earth flowed with blood.  As when winter torrents, flowing down the mountains from their great springs to a place where two valleys meet, join their mighty floods in a deep gorge, and far off amid the mountains the shepherd heareth the thunder thereof; even so from the joining of these in battle came shouting and toil.  ibid.  IV

 

So spake Sarpedon, and his word stung Hector to the heart. Forthwith he leapt in his armour from his chariot to the ground, and brandishing his two sharp spears went everywhere throughout the host, urging men to fight, and roused the dread din of battle.  So they rallied and took their stand with their faces towards the Achaeans; and the Argives in close throng abode their coming and fled not.  ibid.  V 

 

So saying, glorious Hector hastened forth from the gates, and with him went his brother Alexander; and in their hearts were both eager for war and battle.  And as a god giveth to longing seamen a fair wind when they have grown weary of beating the sea with polished oars of fir, and with weariness are their limbs fordone; even so appeared these twain to the longing Trojans.  ibid.  VII

 

Now Dawn rose from her couch from beside lordly Tithonus, to bring light to immortals and to mortal men; and Zeus sent forth Strife unto the swift ships of the Achaeans, dread Strife, bearing in her hands a portent of war.  And she took her hand by Odysseus black ship, huge of hull, that was in the midst so that a shout could reach to either end, both to the huts of Aias, son of Telamon, and to those of Achilles; for these had drawn up their shapely ships at the furthermost ends, trusting in their valour and the strength of their hands.  There stood the goddess and uttered a great and terrible shout, a shrill cry of war, and in the heart of each man of the Achaeans she put great strength to war and to fight unceasingly.  And to them forthwith war became sweeter than to return in their hollow ships to their dear native land.  ibid.  XI

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