Which part of this excerpt from Homer’s Odyssey depicts Ulysses revealing his true identity to his faithful servants Eumaeus and Philaetius?

1) At length he comes; but comes despised, unknown, And finding faithful you, and you alone.
2) Hear then, my friends: If Jove this arm succeed, And give yon impious revellers to bleed, My care shall be to bless your future lives
3) To give you firmer faith, now trust your eye; Lo! the broad scar indented on my thigh,
4) His ragged vest then drawn aside disclosed The sign conspicuous, and the scar exposed:
5) The king too weeps, the king too grasps their hands; And moveless, as a marble fountain, stands.

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Respuesta :

There are two sentences in these excerpts from Homer's Odyssey that depict Ulysses revealing his true identity to his faithful servants Eumaeus and Philaetius, and those are:
1) At length he comes; but comes despised, unknown, And finding faithful you, and you alone.
4) His ragged vest then drawn aside disclosed The sign conspicuous, and the scar exposed.
Hagrid
The of this excerpt from Homer’s Odyssey depicts Ulysses revealing his true identity to his faithful servants Eumaeus and Philaetius are 
2) Hear then, my friends: If Jove this arm succeed, And give yon impious revellers to bleed, My care shall be to bless your future lives
3) To give you firmer faith, now trust your eye; Lo! the broad scar indented on my thigh,
4) His ragged vest then drawn aside disclosed The sign conspicuous, and the scar exposed: