Natasha Nehra, EPIC MYTHOMEMOLOGY Book One In book one of the odyssey, the timeline starts 10 years after the Trojan War ending. To begin, Homer invokes the Muse and asks for inspiration for the story of Odysseus. It simultaneously starts with two storylines, one in Ithaca and on the island of Ogygia. In Ithaca, suitors are taking over Odysseus’ estate and are trying to get his wife. Odysseus being trapped on the island Ogygia with the goddess, Calypso. Calypso falls in love with him and does not let him leave the island. However, in both situations, his son does not help him because he thinks he is dead. Athena tells his son, Telemachus that Odysseus is still alive by taking the form of an old friend of Odysseus. She tells his son to tell the suitors to leave and tells him to go to Sparta and Pylos. Penelope was crying because she was sad about the music the Bard was playing and then her son went and told her to look at suitors. He tells the suitors that there is a visitor coming, like Athena in disguise had told him. This quote describes how Calypso held Odysseus on her island and wanted him to be her husband. “Now all the rest, as many as had escaped sheer destruction, were at home, safe from both war and sea, but Odysseus alone, filled with longing for his return and for his wife, did the queenly nymph Calypso, that bright goddess, keep back in her hollow caves, yearning that he should be her husband.” Odyssey, 1.11 Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Murray, A T. Loeb Classical Library Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1919. Book Two When the suitors meet each other the next day, Aegyptius talks first. Aegyptius is and old and wise elder from Ithaca. He told Telemachus that he was doing great because this was the first time that someone called an assembly since Odysseus had left Ithaca. His son gave a long speech about his father being gone and his home being taken over by his mom’s suitors. He talks down upon them and gets mad about how the suitors are trying to court Penelope. The suitors blame Penelope because she would seduce each of the suitors but not court them. Penelope told them that she would pick a suitor when she finishes weaving her bridal shroud but them she would unravel whatever she knit every the previous day so she never finishes. One of the suitors says if she doesn’t choose, then Penelope should be taken back to Icarus. Then, Halitheres interrupts the meeting and told the suitors that if they don’t leave they would face a massacre. When Telemachus is about leave, Athena visits him in the form of Mentor and tells him that his journey would give him reward. She also gets a loyal crew and Telemachus leaves with his ship and does not tell anyone so that his mother is not sad. The only person he told was Eurycleia, the nurse. The quote describes how Penelope would fool the suitors by weaving the veil and then unraveling it at night “`Young men, my wooers, since goodly Odysseus is dead, be patient, though eager for my marriage, until I finish this robe -- I would not that my spinning should come to naught—a shroud for the lord Laertes, against the time when the fell fate of grievous death shall strike him down; lest any of the Achaean women in the land should be wroth with me, if he, who had won great possessions, were to lie without a shroud.’ So she spoke, and our proud hearts consented. Then day by day she would weave at the great web, but by night would unravel it, when she had let place torches by her.” Odyssey, 2.90 Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Murray, A T. Loeb Classical Library Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1919. Book Three When they reach Pylos, Telemachus and Athena under the disguise of Mentor both see a ceremony in which 81 bulls are being sacrificed to Poseidon. Telemachus then goes to Nestor, the king of Pylos, and inquires him about Odysseus. All that Nestor hold him was that after the fall of Troy, Agamemnon and Menelaus, the leaders of the expedition, had a fight and it ended with Menelaus setting sail for Greece and Agamemnon continuing to sacrifice at Troy, with whom Odysseus had stayed. Telemachus then asks about what happened to Agamemnon and Nestor told him that he had returned from Troy to fight Aegisthus. Aegisthus has not gone to battle and instead seduced Agamemnon’s wife. Agamemnon’s wife had told Aegisthus to murder Agamemnon. Orestes then came back and killed both Aegisthus and his wife because they were about to take over Agamemnon’s kingdom. Nestor sends Pisistratus along with Telemachus to Sparta. Athena also changes into an eagle and protects his ship and crew. The following quote describes the sacrifice of the bulls that Telemachus witnessed. “Here the townsfolk on the shore of the sea were offering sacrifice of black bulls to the dark- haired Earth-shaker. Nine companies there were, and five hundred men sat in each, and in each they held nine bulls ready for sacrifice. Now when they had tasted the inner parts and were burning the thigh-pieces to the god, the others put straight in to the shore, and hauled up and furled the sail of the shapely ship, and moored her, and themselves stepped forth.” Odyssey, 3.4 Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Murray, A T. Loeb Classical Library Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1919. Book Four When they reach Sparta, they meet Menelaus and Helen. Menelaus and Helen are both celebrating marriages of their children. When Telemachus meets Menelaus, he recognizes him as Odysseus’ son. At the feast, Menelaus and Helen talk about the ways Odysseus fought with cleverness at Troy. One time, Odysseus had dressed as a beggar to get into the walls of the city. Menelaus also tells about the story of the Trojan Horse. In the story he talks about how Odysseus mastered the plan and allowed Greeks to sneak into Troy. Menelaus also talked about how he was left alone in Egypt and had to capture Proteus. Proteus was the Old Man of the Sea. Proteus had told Menelaus about Odysseus and how he was alive but imprisoned by Calypso. Thus, Telemachus go back to Pylos and sail towards Ithaca next. Because Penelope was sad about her son and husband being gone, Athena sends a message to Penelope that she will protect Telemachus. The quote describes how Odysseus and the army waited in the Trojan Horse to overthrow the Trojans. “What a thing was this, too, which that mighty man wrought and endured in the carven horse, wherein all we chiefs of the Argives were sitting, bearing to the Trojans death and fate! Then thou camest thither, and it must be that thou wast bidden by some god, who wished to grant glory to the Trojans, and godlike Deiphobus followed thee on thy way.” Odyssey, 4.234 Homer. The Odyssey. Translated by Murray, A T. Loeb Classical Library Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1919. Book Five The gods are gathering around Mount Olympus, but Poseidon is not there. They are deciding about the fate of Odysseus. Athena tells a speech in favor of Odysseus and thus Zeus gets involved and intervenes with Odysseus. He tells Hermes to tell Calypso that Odysseus is allowed to leave so that he can go back home. Although Calypso was against it because the gods’ double standards, she agrees to the will of Zeus. Calypso helped Odysseus build a raft to leave the island. After many days, Odysseus sees Scheria and he sails towards it. Poseidon, who is against Odysseus, spots Odysseus and almost drags him under the sea, but Ino comes to rescue him. Athena also comes to his rescue because he was heading towards the coast where there were a lot of rocks. A river on the island lets him swim safely by going into its waters and ends up resting in the forest. The following quote describes how Ino saved Odysseus from the rage Poseidon was bringin down upon him. “But the daughter of Cadmus, Ino of the fair ankles, saw him, even Leucothea, who of old was a mortal of human speech, but now in the deeps of the sea has won a share of honor from the gods. She was touched with pity for Odysseus, as he wandered and was in sore travail, and she rose up from the deep like a sea-mew on the wing, and sat on the stoutly-bound raft, and spoke, saying: “Unhappy man, how is it that Poseidon, the earth-shaker, has conceived such furious wrath against thee, that he is sowing for thee the seeds of many evils? Yet verily he shall not utterly destroy thee for all his rage. Nay, do thou thus; and methinks thou dost not lack understanding. Strip off these garments, and leave thy raft to be driven by the winds, but do thou swim with thy hands and so strive to reach the land of the Phaeacians, where it is thy fate to escape. Come, take this veil, and stretch it beneath thy breast. It is immortal; there is no fear that thou shalt suffer aught or perish. But when with thy hands thou hast laid hold of the land, loose it from thee, and cast it into the wine-dark sea far from the land, and thyself turn away.”” Odyssey, 5.333 Homer.
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