Only two lines of the poem's original text survive. For its storyline, we are dependent primarily on a summary of the Telegonus myth in the
Chrestomathy of one "Proclus". The
Telegony comprises two distinct episodes:
Odysseus' voyage to
Thesprotia, and the story of
Telegonus. Probably each of the two books of the
Telegony related one of these episodes. The poem opens after the events depicted in the
Odyssey. According to Proclus' summary, the
Telegony opens with the burial of
Penelope's suitors. Odysseus makes sacrifices to the
Nymphs. He makes a voyage to
Elis, where he visits an otherwise unknown figure Polyxenos, who gives him a bowl depicting the story of
Trophonius. Odysseus returns to Ithaca and then travels to
Thesprotia, presumably to make the sacrifices commanded by
Tiresias in
Odyssey 11. There, he weds the Thesprotian queen
Callidice, who bears him a son,
Polypoetes. Odysseus fights for the Thesprotians in a war against the neighbouring
Brygoi; the gods participate in the war,
Ares routing Odysseus and the Thesprotians, countered by
Athena, ever Odysseus' patron;
Apollo intervenes between the battling gods. Later, after the death of Callidice, Odysseus makes their son Polypoetes king of Thesprotia and returns to Ithaca. Meanwhile, it transpires that
Circe, with whom Odysseus had an affair for a year in the
Odyssey (books 10–12), has borne his son,
Telegonus (Τηλέγονος, "born far away"). He grows up living with Circe on the island of
Aeaea. On the goddess
Athena's advice, Circe tells him the name of his father. In a detail inserted into the account in the Epitome of the
Bibliotheke, she gives him a supernatural spear to defend himself, which is tipped with the sting of a poisonous
stingray and was made by the god Hephaestus. A storm forces Telegonus onto Ithaca without his realizing where he is. As is customary for Homeric heroes in unfriendly land, he commits piracy, and unwittingly begins stealing Odysseus' cattle. Odysseus comes to defend his property. During the ensuing fight, Telegonus kills Odysseus with his unusual spear, thereby partially fulfilling Tiresias' prophecy in
Odyssey 11 that death would come to Odysseus "out of the sea" (i.e., the poison of the ray). (In another respect, however, Odysseus' death contradicts the prophecy of Tiresias, who predicted (
Od. 11.135) that a "gentle death" would come to Odysseus "in sleek old age.") As Odysseus lies dying, he and Telegonus recognize one another, and Telegonus laments his mistake. Telegonus brings his father's corpse,
Penelope, and Odysseus' other son
Telemachus, back to
Aeaea, where Odysseus is buried and Circe makes the others immortal. Telegonus marries Penelope, and Telemachus marries Circe. == Later traditions ==