Lessons From Telemachus

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Lessons for Telemachus from Telemachy The most important lesson that Telemachus stands to learn from the Telemachy is that not everyone in Ithaca wished for the safe return of his father. This is because while Telemachus was moaning for the loss of his father, the suitors were devouring his father’s wealth and wooing Penelope, Telemachus’s mother. In his moaning, Telemachus says “But evil days the gods have brought upon it, making him vanish, as they have, so strangely. Were his death known, I could not feel such pain” (Robert Fitzgerald translation, Book one, page, 270). Telemachus is distraught because he does not get closure on his father’s dead but his distress is not shared by everyone in his Ithaca. Only his other and a few people remain

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