[162]
[ See plan of Ulysses’ house in the appendix. It is evident that the open part of the court had no flooring but the natural soil.]
[163]
[ See plan of Ulysses’ house, and note [175].]
[164]
[ i.e. the door that led into the body of the house.]
[165]
[ This was, no doubt, the little table that was set for Ulysses, “Od.” xx. 259.
Surely the difficulty of this passage has been overrated. I suppose the iron part of the axe to have been wedged into the handle, or bound securely to it—the handle being half buried in the ground. The axe would be placed edgeways towards the archer, and he would have to shoot his arrow through the hole into which the handle was fitted when the axe was in use. Twelve axes were placed in a row all at the same height, all exactly in front of one another, all edgeways to Ulysses whose arrow passed through all the holes from the first onward. I cannot see how the Greek can bear any other interpretation, the words being, {Greek}
“He did not miss a single hole from the first onwards.” {Greek} according to Liddell and Scott being “the hole for the handle of an axe, etc.,” while {Greek} (“Od.” v. 236) is, according to the same authorities, the handle itself. The feat is absurdly impossible, but our authoress sometimes has a soul above impossibilities.]