Beware of Greeks Telling Tales
By luigi_pagano
Sun, 24 Jan 2021
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4 comments
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Hiya Homer, old bean.
What's this I hear about being blinded by the gleam of Achilles' weapon? Either you are kidding me or it is a PR exercise to bolster your popularity.
The last time we met, your eyesight was 20/20.
The last time we met, your eyesight was 20/20.
We all know that sometimes you let your imagination run away with you and you tend to embroider your chronicles, even bending the truth at times, depending on the market you are aiming at. So let me put the record straight.
Take your latest work, the “Odyssey”. It is obvious that the character of Penelope, whose chastity you emphasise at length, is intended to appeal to young, romantic adolescents who believe in platonic love and hang on to their virtue, following the example of a woman who is the epitome of respectability in Ithaca.
What you fail to mention is your heroine's dual personality and that while she exhibits the characteristics of Artemis, the goddess of virginity, she's also a hot, passionate woman in the mould of Aphrodite.
The sexual pleasure that she has experienced with Odysseus is still fresh in her memory but the last time she had intercourse with him had been twenty years earlier and she’s been waiting ever since for a repeat performance.
News of Odysseus gallivanting around the world, sleeping around with various females, like the nymph Calypso or the witch Circe, been captivated by the song of those terrible twins Scilla and Charybdis and his prolonged stay with the 'motherly' Nausicaa, were regularly being relayed to the island of Ithaca by Hermes.
Penelope had been left to her own devices for far too long and she decided that enough was enough and that the time was ripe to make a cuckold of her husband and repay him in kind.
“Blow this for a game of soldiers”, she said, “the old sod has only himself to blame.”
There was no lack of opportunities; a lot of prospective candidates were salivating at the thought that they could breach the defences of this beautiful, but stubborn, woman who up to now had resisted their advances.
She could have taken her pick but they were a bunch of wimps only in search of a quick grope or a cheap thrill; nothing to be excited about.
Their intentions were so obvious that she didn’t need to be told which way the wind was blowing.
Of course, Zeus had to get into the act. In a blatant attempt to seduce her he used the same trick he had tried with Leda by appearing in the guise of a swan but Penelope was far too wise to fall for it.
Penelope wasn’t afraid of these ruffians, her fierce dog Cerberus deterred any would-be aggressor.
It wasn’t only men who were interested in this succulent peach, waiting to be savoured; the visiting poet Sappho had made a pass at her but yet again she experienced unrequited love.
The only one who didn’t seem at all bothered was a man recently arrived on the island. With long hair, a bushy beard and scruffily dressed he looked like a tramp.
He had called on Penelope one day begging for something that her husband did not use any longer. She understood that he wanted some clothes but could not help seeing the funny side of it.
Facing him was the living example of what Odysseus had discarded!
Facing him was the living example of what Odysseus had discarded!
She employed the vagrant to do odd jobs and while he was chopping some logs with a big axe she noticed his muscular arms and body and resolved that he was perfect for what she had in mind.
An intimate dinner for two and lots of wine, to which a love potion had been added, was enough to overcome his reluctance.
They lay on the bed in their birthday suit and she was delighted to see that he was as well endowed as Odysseus was and wondered if the magic that she had experienced on the night prior to her husband’s departure to Troy could be recreated.
She had been orgasmic so many times that she had lost count.
She had been orgasmic so many times that she had lost count.
She needn’t have worried: it was a 100% replica of that long-ago sexual gratification.
She was considering that adultery with this stranger had been so satisfying that a permanent relationship could be envisaged when she noticed the tattoo on his back: a heart pierced by an arrow and the name ‘Penelope’ under it.
“Odysseus, you old fraud!”, she exclaimed and wondered if she had been deceived by this man who claimed to have lost his memory or that Fate had decided to play ball and returned her husband ‘incognito’.
© Luigi Pagano 2021
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