It is a matter of opinion. I think she was.
Penelope was known for her cunning and intelligence, using her wits to outsmart suitors during Odysseus' absence. While she may not have been as adventurous as her husband, she displayed her own cleverness in finding ways to delay remarriage and stay faithful to Odysseus.
She tells her suitors that when she finishes the boat that she is weaving she will choose one of them, but each night she undoes what she did by alittle.
I don't know, maybe
Odysseus
marc
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No they are not
Although Eurycleia is considered Odysseus' mistress, she tells Penelope that her husband is home from Troy
Penelope
all
Penelope's husband was Odysseus. She was the daughter of Icarius and Periboea. Her son was Telemachus.
Penelope reprimands him for treating the stranger to the castle roughly. At this time she does not know that the stranger is Odysseus, her husband.
Penelope feels a mix of longing, sadness, and hope when she remembers her husband in "The Odyssey." She is yearning for his return, saddened by his absence, and hopeful that he will eventually come back to her.
True. In the epic poem "The Odyssey," Odysseus, disguised as a beggar, tells Penelope that her husband is alive and well, but has not returned home yet. Penelope is skeptical at first but eventually believes him.
Geoffrey palmer