Menelaus
tells how he himself came home in the eighth year after the fall of Troy. He
had heard from Proteus, the Old Man of the Sea, that Odysseus was alive, and a
captive on an island of the deep. Menelaus invites Telemachus to Stay with him
for eleven days or twelve, which Telemachus declines to do. It will later appear
that he made an even longer stay at Sparta, though whether he changed his mind,
or whether we have here an inadvertence of the poet's it is hard to determine.
This blemish has been used as an argument against the unity of authorship, but
writers of all ages have made graver mistakes.
On this
same day (the sixth) the wooers in Ithaca learned that Telemachus had really
set out to I cruise after his father.' They sent some of their number to lie in
ambush for him, in a certain strait which he was likely to pass on his return
to Ithaca. Penelope also heard of her son's departure, but was consoled by a
dream.