Introduction
Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey tells of the many adventures of Odysseus, King of the island of Ithaca in the Ionian Sea, as he returned home from the Trojan War after almost two decades away. Penelope, his grieving queen, has all but given up hope of seeing him again, and is under increasing pressure from Odysseus’s greedy earls to marry again.
THERE was much grumbling among the lords of Ithaca when prince Telemachus insisted on bringing a ragged, heavily bearded stranger into the royal hall. However, the boy’s mother Penelope had welcomed him, thinking that a man so widely travelled must have some news of her husband, King Odysseus, who had gone to the Trojan War nineteen years before.* Moreover, the stranger had given their lordships some welcome entertainment, brawling with a fellow beggar, Irus, at the hall’s doors. The sport-loving earls had laughingly promised that the winner could join their company at table, and the stranger had secured his seat by felling Irus with a single blow of surprising strength.
This wanderer, it seemed, had fought alongside Odysseus many times; but glad as she was to hear his tales, Penelope did not feel that she had heard anything to make her believe that her husband would return. So it was that she resolved to carry on with a desperate plan she had formed some time before, at the prompting of the goddess Athene. The lords of the hall, she knew, wished to marry her, or at any rate her great wealth; so she would give one of her greedy suitors his heart’s desire.
* The traditional date for the Fall of Troy is April 24th, 1184 BC. Odysseus is said to have taken ten years to reach Ithaca, thanks to a catalogue of adventures, so he came back in about 1174 BC. (This would be roughly the time of Gideon.) Troy was a city in what is now northwest Turkey. In his companion poem The Iliad, Homer tells how Paris, Prince of Troy, took the surpassingly lovely Helen, Queen of Sparta, home with him, provoking the Achaeans (i.e. the Greeks) to come after her with an army. Ten years of diplomatic standoff were followed by ten years of siege, which the Greeks eventually won. Odysseus, King of the Ionian island of Ithaca on Greece’s western coast, joined the campaign early on. After the war ended, he then made his way home, as told in The Odyssey. See The Siege of Troy.
Précis
The lords of Ithaca invited to their table a travel-weary beggar, partly for amusement but chiefly to please Queen Penelope, who was eager to hear news of her missing husband Odysseus. The stranger encouraged her to hope, but without avail; and she resolved to marry one of the grasping and lustful lords. (52 / 60 words)
The lords of Ithaca invited to their table a travel-weary beggar, partly for amusement but chiefly to please Queen Penelope, who was eager to hear news of her missing husband Odysseus. The stranger encouraged her to hope, but without avail; and she resolved to marry one of the grasping and lustful lords.
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Variations: 1.increase the length of this precis to exactly 55 words. 2.reduce the length of this precis to exactly 45 words. 3.introduce one of the following words into the precis: although, because, besides, despite, may, must, ought, until.
Word Games
Sevens Based on this passage
Suggest answers to this question. See if you can limit one answer to exactly seven words.
Why did the lords of Ithaca allow the beggar into the royal hall?
Suggestion
Because it amused them, and pleased Penelope. (7 words)
Variations: 1.expand your answer to exactly fourteen words. 2.expand your answer further, to exactly twenty-one words. 3.include one of the following words in your answer: if, but, despite, because, (al)though, unless.
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