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Odysseus True Identity In Homer's Odyssey

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When at long last in the sixteenth book of the Odyssey the disguised Odysseus reveals his true identity to Telemachus his son at first refuses to believe his father is really alive and present before him.
1 Odysseus presents no special sign to confirm his claim as he will when reunited with his servants wife and father later in the poem but patiently relies instead on the awe inspiring physical transformation wrought by Athena to restore him to his wonted appearance. Finally convinced after another speech from his father Telemachus embraces Odysseus and both men begin to weep and mourn uncontrollably with such intensity that the narrator tells us they might have gone on lamenting indefinitely Before their lamentation can continue howeve

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