Early years According to
Callimachus, when she was young, Anticlea served the goddess
Artemis, and accompanied her in hunting, bearing arrow and quiver. According to some later sources, including a fragment of
Aeschylus' lost tragedy
The Judgment of Arms, Odysseus was the child of Anticlea by
Sisyphus, not Laërtes. In this version of the story, Autolycus, an infamous trickster, stole Sisyphus' cattle. At some point, Sisyphus recognized his cattle while on a visit to Autolycus and subsequently seduced Anticlea, Autolycus' daughter. Odysseus was the result of this union, which took place before Anticlea's marriage to Laërtes.
Odyssey In Book XI of the
Odyssey, Odysseus makes a trip to the
underworld to seek the advice of the dead prophet
Tiresias. In the underworld, he encounters many spirits, among them is that of his mother, Anticlea. Initially, he rebuffs her since he is waiting for the prophet to approach. After speaking with Tiresias, however, Odysseus allows his mother to come near and lets her speak. She asks him why he is in the underworld while alive, and he tells her about his various troubles and failed attempts to get home. Then he asks her how she died and inquires about his family at home. She tells him that she died of grief, longing for him while he was at
war. Anticlea also says that Laërtes (Odysseus' father) "grieves continually" for Odysseus and lives in a hovel in the countryside, clad in rags and sleeping on the floor. Anticlea further describes the condition of Odysseus' wife
Penelope and son
Telemachus. Penelope has not yet remarried but is overwhelmed with sadness and longing for her husband while Telemachus acts as magistrate for Odysseus' properties. Odysseus attempts to embrace his mother three times but discovers that she is incorporeal, and his arms simply pass through her. She explains that this is how all ghosts are, and he expresses great sorrow. In some accounts, Anticleia killed herself on hearing a false report about her son from
Nauplius. The encounter between
Odysseus and his mother in the
underworld is also the concept of a work by the Northern Irish poet
Michael Longley, titled
Anticleia. == Notes ==