The Wine Red Sea:
Journeys of Odysseus
© Copyright 2014 -2024
by Peter J Ponzio
Nausicaa, Book VI
Nausicaa, in order to avoid gossip, advises Odysseus to travel alone to her father's estate. There, he should wait for some time in order to allow the girls to arrive
at the palace.
Then when sufficient time passed, Odysseus should make his way to the palace and approach the queen, her mother and “grasp my mother's knees - if you
want/to see the day of your return, rejoicing soon,/even if your home is a world away” (VI, 340-342). Nausicaa's advice is excellent and also more trenchant than she
believes, for Odysseus' house is literally a world away - the Phaeacians homeland is a sort of middle ground straddling the land of the gods and the land of men.
Nausicaa and her companions walk with Odysseus