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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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CHAPTER<br />

20<br />

THE RETURNS AND THE ODYSSEY<br />

The returns of the Greek leaders from Troy were narrated in an epic called Nostoi<br />

(Returns), of which only a brief prose summary and three lines of verse are<br />

extant. 1 It omits the return of Odysseus, which is the subject of Homer's Odyssey.<br />

AGAMEMNON, MENELAÙS, AND NESTOR<br />

Agamemnon and Menelaùs quarreled over the departure and so parted company.<br />

Agamemnon sailed for Greece with part of the fleet, including the contingent<br />

of the Locrians. Near the island of Mykonos, Athena, in her anger at the<br />

sacrilege committed at Troy by the Locrian leader Ajax (pp. 475^76), caused a<br />

storm to wreck many of the ships. Ajax swam to a nearby rock, where he boasted<br />

that not even the gods could prevent his escape from the dangers of the sea. For<br />

this Poseidon struck the rock with his trident, and Ajax was hurled into the sea<br />

and drowned.<br />

During a second storm, which struck Agamemnon's fleet at Cape Caphareus<br />

in Euboea, Nauplius avenged the death of his son Palamedes by luring many<br />

ships onto the rocks with a false beacon. Agamemnon finally reached Mycenae,<br />

only to be murdered by Aegisthus and Clytemnestra.<br />

Meanwhile Menelaùs, Nestor, and Diomedes set sail together from Troy.<br />

Nestor returned to Pylos safely. In the Odyssey he tells Telemachus how<br />

Menelaùs lost all his fleet except for five ships in a storm off Crete and eventually<br />

reached Egypt. On the advice of the sea-nymph Eidothea, he forced her father,<br />

Proteus, to tell him how to appease the gods and secure a safe voyage<br />

home. Thus after seven years he and Helen returned to Sparta, where they resumed<br />

their rule. 2 At the end of his life he was transported to the Elysian Fields,<br />

avoiding the usual fate of going to Hades, because he was the husband of Helen<br />

and the son-in-law of Zeus.<br />

DIOMEDES<br />

Diomedes reached Argos quickly, but there he found that his wife, Aegialia<br />

(daughter of Adrastus) had been unfaithful. Her adulteries were caused by<br />

Aphrodite, angry because Diomedes had wounded her at Troy. Diomedes left<br />

Argos and came to Italy, where the Apulian king, Daunus, gave him land.<br />

482

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