| Book Twenty
The next morning Odysseus asks for a sign, and Zeus sends
a clap of thunder out of the clear blue sky. A servant recognizes it as a
portent and prays that this day be the last of the suitors' abuse. Odysseus
encounters another herdsman. Like the swineherd Eumaeus, this man, who tends
the realm's cattle, swears his loyalty to the absent king. A prophet, an
exiled murderer whom Telemachus has befriended, shares a vision with the
suitors: "I see the walls of this mansion dripping with your blood." The
suitors respond with gales of laughter. |
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