All 12 Uses
exile
in
The Odyssey - translated by: Fitzgerald
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- But in the eighth year, back from exile in Attika, Orestes killed the snake who killed his father.†
Chpt 3 *
- His life may not in exile go to waste.†
Chpt 5
- The sweet days of his life time were running out in anguish over his exile, for long ago the nymph had ceased to please.†
Chpt 5
- Look at him now, just offshore of that island that frees him from the bondage of his exile!†
Chpt 5
- God send you see your lady and your homeland soon again, after the pain of exile.†
Chpt 8
- For my part, I have had no heart for inquiry since one year an Aitolian made a fool of me, Exiled from land to land after some killing, he turned up at my door; I took him in.†
Chpt 14exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- The great tactician answered: "You were still a child, I see, when exiled somehow from your parents' land.†
Chpt 15
- In later days a man can find a charm in old adversity, exile and pain.†
Chpt 15
- dear and only son, born to him in exile, reared with labor, has lived ten years abroad and now returns: how would that man embrace his son!†
Chpt 16
- Take action now, or we are in for trouble; we might be exiled, driven off our lands.†
Chpt 16exiled = forced to leave one's homeland
- His crewman, young Peiraios, guided through town, meanwhile, into the Square, the Argive exile, Theoklymenos.†
Chpt 17
- Suppose this exile put his back into it and drew the great bow of Odysseus —could he then take me home to be his bride?†
Chpt 21
Definitions:
-
(1)
(exile) to force someone to live outside of their homeland; or living in such a condition
or more rarely: voluntary absence from a place someone would rather be - (2) (meaning too rare to warrant focus)