Susie Berta

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great deal of weeping ensues as Menelaus, Helen, and Telemachus recall the absent Odysseus. Even young Peisistratus, Nestor’s son, works up a few tears—not about Odysseus, of course, since he never knew him, but about a brother of his who died at Troy; weeping, the Greeks knew, can be a kind of pleasure.
An Odyssey: A Father, a Son, and an Epic
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