Perseus · Tufts
All Greek and Roman Materials
Collections: Classics · Papyri · Renaissance · London · California · Upper Midwest · Chesapeake · Boyle · Tufts History
Configure display · Help · Tools · Copyright · FAQ · Publications · Collaborations · Support Perseus
Classics:
Classics collection contents
About the Classics collection

Greek Hist. Overview
Art & Arch. Catalogs

Other Tools & Lexica

Plot:
  • sites on this page
  • sites in this book
  • sites in this document

    Display text chunked by:
    book
    card (default)

    Contents:
  • Book 1
  • Book 2
  • Book 3
  • Book 4
  • Book 5
  • Book 6
  • Book 7
  • Book 8
  • Book 9
  • Book 10
  • Book 11
  • Book 12
  • Book 13
  • Book 14
  • Book 15
  • Book 16
  • Book 17
  • Book 18
  • Book 19
  • Book 20
  • Book 21
  • Book 22
  • Book 23
  • Book 24
  • Homer, Odyssey

    Editions and translations: Greek | English | English (ed. Samuel Butler)
    Your current position in the text is marked in red. Click anywhere on the line to jump to another position.
    book=1:card=80 book=1:card=178 book=1:card=280 book=1:card=365 book=2:card=39 book=2:card=177 book=2:card=267 book=2:card=388 book=3:card=51 book=3:card=141 book=3:card=276 book=3:card=371 book=4 book=4:card=100 book=4:card=183 book=4:card=315 book=4:card=398 book=4:card=512 book=4:card=625 book=4:card=715 book=5:card=1 book=5:card=92 book=5:card=192 book=5:card=313 book=5:card=408 book=6:card=1 book=6:card=127 book=6:card=251 book=7:card=1 book=7:card=107 book=7:card=198 book=7:card=317 book=8:card=83 book=8:card=165 book=8:card=295 book=8:card=385 book=8:card=469 book=9:card=1 book=9:card=116 book=9:card=231 book=9:card=318 book=9:card=409 book=9:card=536 book=10:card=87 book=10:card=178 book=10:card=302 book=10:card=388 book=10:card=503 book=11:card=1 book=11:card=138 book=11:card=225 book=11:card=361 book=11:card=440 book=11:card=567 book=12:card=1 book=12:card=111 book=12:card=234 book=12:card=327 book=12:card=426 book=13:card=93 book=13:card=184 book=13:card=287 book=13:card=416 book=14:card=48 book=14:card=147 book=14:card=285 book=14:card=360 book=14:card=494 book=15:card=48 book=15:card=130 book=15:card=265 book=15:card=380 book=15:card=454 book=16:card=1 book=16:card=135 book=16:card=225 book=16:card=308 book=16:card=434 book=17:card=45 book=17:card=166 book=17:card=290 book=17:card=380 book=17:card=505 book=18:card=1 book=18:card=88 book=18:card=206 book=18:card=290 book=18:card=394 book=19:card=89 book=19:card=190 book=19:card=277 book=19:card=405 book=19:card=499 book=20:card=1 book=20:card=91 book=20:card=226 book=20:card=299 book=21:card=42 book=21:card=118 book=21:card=256 book=21:card=354 book=22:card=1 book=22:card=126 book=22:card=255 book=22:card=330 book=22:card=465 book=23:card=49 book=23:card=129 book=23:card=263 book=24:card=1 book=24:card=85 book=24:card=191 book=24:card=327 book=24:card=412

    Table of ContentsGo to Previous Next

    [290] Thus they spoke to one another. And a hound that lay there raised his head and pricked up his ears, Argos, the hound of Odysseus, of the steadfast heart, whom of old he had himself bred, but had no joy of him, for ere that he went to sacred Ilios. In days past the young men were wont to take the hound to hunt [295] the wild goats, and deer, and hares; but now he lay neglected, his master gone, in the deep dung of mules and cattle, which lay in heaps before the doors, till the slaves of Odysseus should take it away to dung his wide lands. [300] There lay the hound Argos, full of vermin; yet even now, when he marked Odysseus standing near, he wagged his tail and dropped both his ears, but nearer to his master he had no longer strength to move. Then Odysseus looked aside and wiped away a tear, [305] easily hiding from Eumaeus what he did; and straightway he questioned him, and said: “Eumaeus, verily it is strange that this hound lies here in the dung. He is fine of form, but I do not clearly know whether he has speed of foot to match this beauty or whether he is merely as table-dogs [310] are, which their masters keep for show.” To him then, swineherd Eumaeus, didst thou make answer and say: “Aye, verily this is the hound of a man that has died in a far land. If he were but in form and in action such as he was when Odysseus left him and went to Troy, [315] thou wouldest soon be amazed at seeing his speed and his strength. No creature that he started in the depths of the thick wood could escape him, and in tracking too he was keen of scent. But now he is in evil plight, and his master has perished far from his native land, and the heedless women give him no care. [320] Slaves, when their masters lose their power, are no longer minded thereafter to do honest service: for Zeus, whose voice is borne afar, takes away half his worth from a man, when the day of slavery comes upon him.” So saying, he entered the stately house [325] and went straight to the hall to join the company of the lordly wooers. But as for Argos, the fate of black death seized him straightway when he had seen Odysseus in the twentieth year. Now as the swineherd came through the hall godlike Telemachus was far the first to see him, and quickly [330] with a nod he called him and to his side. And Eumaeus looked about him and took a stool that lay near, on which the carver was wont to sit when carving for the wooers the many joints of meat, as they feasted in the hall. This he took and placed at the table of Telemachus, over against him, and there sat down himself. And a herald [335] took a portion of meat and set it before him, and bread from out the basket.



    There is one comment on or cross reference to this page.

    Further comments from W. Walter Merry, James Riddell, D. B. Monro, Commentary on the Odyssey (1886):
    book 17 (general note)


    Preferred URL for linking to this page: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Hom.+Od.+17.290

    The Annenberg CPB/Project provided support for entering this text.

    This text is based on the following book(s):
    Homer. The Odyssey with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, PH.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1919.
    OCLC: 22584673
    ISBN: 0674995619, 0674995627

    Buy a copy of this text (not necessarily the same edition) from Amazon.com: vol. 1; vol. 2

    Previous Next