Adventures of Odysseus and The Tales of 
Troy, The 
 
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Title: The Adventures of Odysseus and The Tales of Troy 
Author: Padriac Colum 
Illustrator: Willy Pogany 
Release Date: October 14, 2005 [EBook #16867] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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ODYSSEUS *** 
 
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[Illustration] 
THE ADVENTURES OF ODYSSEUS AND THE TALE OF TROY 
[Illustration] 
 
THE ADVENTURES OF ODYSSEUS AND THE TALE OF TROY 
BY PADRAIC COLUM
[Illustration] 
PRESENTED BY 
WILLY POGANY 
THE MACMILLAN COMPANY NEW YORK 
 
COPYRIGHT, 1918, BY THE MACMILLAN COMPANY. SET UP AND 
ELECTROTYPED. PUBLISHED NOVEMBER, 1918. 
[Illustration] 
REPRINTED JUNE, OCTOBER, 1919; OCTOBER, 1920; AUGUST, 1922; MARCH, 
1923; MAY, 1924; JUNE, 1925; MARCH, 1926; DECEMBER, 1926; AUGUST, 1927. 
Norwood Press: J.S. Cushing Co.--Berwick & Smith Co. Norwood, Massachusetts, 
U.S.A. 
 
FOR HUGHIE AND PETER 
THIS TELLING OF THE WORLD'S GREATEST STORY 
BECAUSE THEIR IMAGINATIONS 
RISE TO DEEDS AND WONDERS 
 
[Illustration] 
CONTENTS 
 
 
PART I 
HOW TELEMACHUS THE SON OF ODYSSEUS WAS MOVED TO GO ON A 
VOYAGE 
IN SEARCH OF HIS FATHER AND HOW HE HEARD FROM MENELAUS AND 
HELEN THE TALE OF TROY 1
PART II 
HOW ODYSSEUS LEFT CALYPSO'S ISLAND AND CAME TO THE LAND OF THE 
PHAEACIANS; HOW HE TOLD HE FARED WITH THE CYCLÔPES AND WENT 
PAST THE TERRIBLE SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS AND CAME TO THE ISLAND 
OF THRINACIA WHERE HIS MEN SLAUGHTERED THE CATTLE OF THE SUN; 
HOW HE WAS GIVEN A SHIP BY THE PHAEACIANS AND CAME TO HIS OWN 
LAND; HOW HE OVERTHREW THE WOOERS WHO WASTED HIS SUBSTANCE 
AND CAME TO REIGN AGAIN AS KING OF ITHAKA. 125 
 
[Illustration] 
ILLUSTRATIONS 
COLOUR PLATES 
The Judgement of Paris Frontispiece FACING PAGE The Fair Helen 30 
Achilles Victorious 106 
The Princess Threw the Ball 138 
The Sorrowing Odysseus 148 
Circe 170 
The Sirens 176 
Penelope Unravelling the Web 221 
 
 
 
PART I 
HOW TELEMACHUS THE SON OF ODYSSEUS WAS MOVED TO GO ON A 
VOYAGE IN SEARCH 
OF HIS FATHER AND HOW HE HEARD FROM MENELAUS AND HELEN THE 
TALE OF TROY
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[Illustration] 
 
I 
This is the story of Odysseus, the most renowned of all the heroes the Greek poets have 
told us of--of Odysseus, his wars and his wanderings. And this story of Odysseus begins 
with his son, the youth who was called Telemachus. 
It was when Telemachus was a child of a month old that a messenger came from 
Agamemnon, the Great King, bidding Odysseus betake himself to the war against Troy 
that the Kings and Princes of Greece were about to wage. The wise Odysseus, foreseeing 
the disasters that would befall all that entered that war, was loth to go. And so when 
Agamemnon's messenger came to the island of Ithaka where he was King, Odysseus 
pretended to be mad. And that the messenger, Palamedes, might believe he was mad 
indeed, he did a thing that no man ever saw being done before--he took an ass and an ox 
and yoked them together to the same plough and began to plough a field. And when he 
had ploughed a furrow he sowed it, not with seeds that would grow, but with salt. When 
Palamedes saw him doing this he was nearly persuaded that Odysseus was mad. But to 
test him he took the child Telemachus and laid him down in the field in the way of the 
plough. Odysseus, when he came near to where the child lay, turned the plough aside and 
thereby showed that he was not a mad man. Then had he to take King Agamemnon's 
summons. And Agamemnon's word was that Odysseus should go to Aulis where the 
ships of the Kings and Princes of Greece were being gathered. But first he was to go into 
another country to seek the hero Achilles and persuade him also to enter the war against 
Troy. 
And so Odysseus bade good-bye to his infant son, Telemachus, and to his young wife 
Penelope, and to his father, old Laertes. And he bade good-bye to his house and his lands 
and to the island of Ithaka where he was King. He summoned a council of the chief men 
of Ithaka and commended to their care his wife and his child and all his household, and 
thereafter he took his sailors and his fighting men with him and he sailed away. The years    
    
		
	
	
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