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Which excerpt from The Odyssey best shows that the ancient Greeks greatly valued the idea of home?

My home is on the peaked sea-mark of Ithaca
under Mount Neion's wind-blown robe of leaves,
in sight of other islands—Dulichium,
Same, wooded Zacynthus—Ithaca
being most lofty in that coastal sea,
And this new grief we bore with us to sea:
our precious lives we had, but not our friends.
No ship made sail next day until some shipmate
had raised a cry, three times, for each poor ghost
unfleshed by the Cicones on that field.
They fell in, soon enough, with Lotus-Eaters,
who showed no will to do us harm, only
offering the sweet Lotus to our friends—
but those who ate this honeyed plant, the Lotus,
never cared to report, nor to return:
I drove them, all three wailing, to the ships,
tied them down under their rowing benches,
and called the rest: ‘All hands aboard;
come, clear the beach and no one taste
the Lotus, or you lose your hope of home.’

User Jolina
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2 Answers

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Answer:

Its D --> " I drove them, all three wailing, to the ships,

tied them down under their rowing benches,

and called the rest: ‘All hands aboard;

come, clear the beach and no one taste

the Lotus, or you lose your hope of home."

Step-by-step explanation:

User Brouxhaha
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I’m no literary expert, but I think it is “All hands aboard, come, clear the beach and no one taste the Lotus, or you loose your hope of home,” because it shows that the characters are willing to not taste the Lotus in order to return home.
User Vincas Stonys
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