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THE ODYSSEY.

without murmuring. Goddess-like or woman-like, however, she cannot fail to be mortified at the want of any reluctance on her lover's part to leave her. There is something touching in her expostulation:—

"Child of Laertes, wouldst thou fain departHence to thine own dear fatherland? Farewell!Yet, couldst thou read the sorrow and the smart,With me in immortality to dwellThou wouldst rejoice, and love my mansion well.Deeply and long thou yearnest for thy wife;Yet her in beauty I perchance excel.Beseems not one who hath but mortal lifeWith forms of deathless mould to challenge a vain strife."

Ulysses' reply is honest and manful:—

"All this I know and do myself avow.Well may Penelope in form and browAnd stature seem inferior far to thee,For she is mortal, and immortal thou.Yet even thus 'tis very dear to meMy long-desired return and ancient home to see.
"But if some god amid the wine-dark-floodWith doom pursue me, and my vessel mar,Then will I bear it as a brave man should.Not the first time I suffer. Wave and warDeep in my life have graven many a scar."

It cannot but be observed, however, that while Penelope's whole thoughts and interests are concentrated upon her absent husband, the longing of Ulysses is rather after his fatherland than his wife. She is only one of the many component parts of the home-scene which is ever before the wanderer's eyes; and not always the most important part, for his aged father and mother and his young son seem to be at least equal