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| | Fourth Book. Chapman, George, trans. 1857. The Odysseys of Homer |
 | | All this time in the utter court did stay, With horse and chariot, Telemachus, 25 And Nestor's noble son Pisistratus. |
 | | Whom Eteoneus, coming forth, descried, And, being a servant to the king, most tried In care and his respect, he ran and cried: "Guests, Jove-kept Menelaus, two such men 30 As are for form of high Saturnius' strain. |
 | | And then they led Their guests to the divine house; which so fed Their eyes at all parts with illustrious sights, That admiration seized them. |
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