Odysseus has finally made it home but once he arrives and see the suitors all he can think about is not getting Penelope back.
"Why still awake? The unluckiest man alive! Here is your house, your wife at home, your son, as fine a boy as one could hope to have." (Book 20, Page 336)
Penelope is beginning to give up on the thought of her husband ever returning home. (Odysseus hears Penelope's prayer of death)
"May the gods who rule Olympus blot me out! Artemis with your glossy braids, come shoot me dead—so I can plunge beneath this loadsome earth with the image of Odysseus vivid in my mind." (Book 20, Page 338)
"Father Zeus, if you really willed it so—to bring me home over land and sea-lanes, home to native ground after all the pain your brought me—show me a sign (Book 20, Page 338)
Odysseus is frightened that he might not ever be Penelope's husband again so he prays to Zeus for help. (Zeus answers with a thunderclap)
"My friends, we'll never carry off this plot to kill the prince." (Book 20, Page 343)
They want to kill me
Throw the foot Ctesippus
A suitor named Ctesippus throws an oxhoof at the king but the king ducks and doesn't get hit.
Telemachus tells him mother about the offenses the suitors have done, but gives them another chance.
HAHAHA
These man have done bad things.
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