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Book XVIII - Despite Idomeneus' pleas, Telemachus and Mentor leave Salente; Mentor gives his final advice about good government to Telemachus, then reveals himself to be Minerva, goddess of wisdom. Telemachus returns to Ithaca, where he finds his recently returned father, Ulysses

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 June 2012

Patrick Riley
Affiliation:
University of Wisconsin, Madison
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Summary

During the voyage, Telemachus makes Mentor explain several difficulties to him, concerning the manner of knowing men, in order to be able to choose the good, and avoid being deceived by the bad. When their discourse on that point was almost at an end, they were becalmed, and obliged to put into an isle where Ulysses had arrived just before them. There Telemachus sees him, and speaks to him without knowing him: but after he had seen him embark, he feels a secret emotion, the cause of which he cannot conceive, till it is explained by Mentor, who consoles him by assuring him that he would be soon with his father again, and puts his filial affection and patience to the test by delaying his departure, in order to offer sacrifice to Minerva. At last the goddess Minerva, reassuming her form, makes herself known; and having given Telemachus her last instructions, disappears. Telemachus afterwards arrives at Ithaca, where he finds his father at the house of the faithful Eumeus.

The anchors are now weighed, and the wind swells the sails: the land seems to retreat. The experienced pilot descries at a distance the mountains of Leucate, whose tops are hidden by frozen fogs, together with the Acroceraunian heights, which still present a proud lofty front to heaven, after having been so often shattered with thunderbolts.

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Fénelon: Telemachus , pp. 317 - 333
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1994

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