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PENELOPE , in See also: Greek See also: legend, wife of Odysseus, daughter of Icarius and the nymph Periboea
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During the long See also: absence of her See also: husband after the fall of Troy many chieftains of See also: Ithaca and the islands round about became her suitors; and, to rid herself of the importunities of the wcoers, she bade them wait till she had See also: woven a winding-See also: sheet for old Laertes, the See also: father of Odysseus
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But every See also: night she undid the piece which she had woven by See also: day
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This she did for three years, till her maids revealed the secret
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She was relieved by the arrival of Odysseus, who returned after an absence of twenty years, and slew the wooers
.
The character of Penelope is less favourable in See also: late writers than in the Homeric See also: story
.
During her husband's absence she is said to have become the See also: mother of See also: Pan by See also: Hermes, and Odysseus, on his return, repudiated her as unfaithful (See also: Herodotus H
.
145 and schol.)
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She thereupon withdrew to See also: Sparta and thence to See also: Mantineia, where she died and where her See also: tomb was shown
.
According to another account she married Telegonus the son of Odysseus and See also: Circe, after he had killed his father, and dwelt with him in the See also: island of Aeala or in the Islands of the Blest (See also: Hyginus, Feb
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127)
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