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According to ancient Greek Mythology,
Penelope was the daughter of Icarus and a first cousin of Helen of Troy.
She was the wife of Odysseus and was famous for her cleverness and for
her faithfulness to her husband.
When Odysseus failed to return from the Trojan War (he was delayed for ten
years on his way home), Penelope was beset by suitors who wanted her to remarry.
In order to delay them, she insisted that she could not remarry until she
had finished weaving a shroud for Odysseus' father, Laertes. She worked each
day at her loom, and then unravelled the cloth each night. After three years
of successful delay, one of her servants revealed her deception, and the impatient
suitors angrily demanded that she choose one of them for her husband immediately.
At the prompting of Athena, Penelope said that she would marry the man who
could string Odysseus' bow and shoot an arrow through twelve axes. By this
time, Odysseus himself had secretly returned, disguised as a beggar; he passed
the test of the bow, and then proceeded to slaughter the suitors who had tormented
his wife.
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