| Book Fourteen
Eumaeus the swineherd welcomes the bedraggled stranger. He throws his own
bedcover over a pile of boughs as a seat for Odysseus, who does not reveal
his identity. Observing Zeus's commandment to be kind to guests, Eumaeus
slaughters a prime boar and serves it with bread and wine. Odysseus, true to
his fame as a smooth-talking schemer, makes up an elaborate story of his
origins. That night the hero sleeps by the fire under the swineherd's spare
cloak, while Eumaeus himself sleeps outside in the rain with his herd. |
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