Transcript the-odyssey

The Odyssey
Background
Ithaca, home of
Odysseus
Odysseus’ familial relationships:
• Son of Anticlea and Laertes
(or Sisyphus)
• Husband of Penelope
• Father of Telemachus
Odysseus woos Helen
• He knows he has no chance, as he is
not rich enough
• He gives Tyndareus, father of Helen, a
good plan (make all the suitors swear
to support whatever decision
Tyndareus makes and protect Helen
should someone else attempt to take
her
• Tyndareus, in return, puts in a good
word for him with Penelope’s father
Little does he know that his simple
plan will have such a profound
impact on his life
Paris and Helen
Odysseus is Summoned
• When Paris takes Helen, Menelaus calls on all the
former suitors to fulfill their pledge. Palamedes and
Menelaus come to fetch Odysseus. Not wanting to
leave his wife and young son, Odysseus feigns
madness by plowing the seashore.
Palamedes nearly kills Odysseus’ young son,
Telemachus, when he throws him in front of the
plow. Odysseus turns aside the plow and
reveals his sanity.
Odysseus never forgives Palamedes and gets
revenge during the war.
Who is Palamedes? Palamedes is the son of Nauplius
and Clymene, and is a grandson of Poseidon. His
name means “clever”.
He is credited with various inventions, including
coinage, measures and weights, some letters of the
Greek alphabet, and pessoi (checkers)
Odysseus gets revenge by placing gold in Palamedes’
tent and forging a letter from Priam to Palamedes
stating he would give him the same amount of gold
planted in Palamedes’ tent in exchange for Palamedes’
betrayal of the Greek camp. Palamedes is killed.
Departure Difficulties and on the Way
Because Agamemnon had
offended Artemis, she sends
contrary winds keep the Greeks
from sailing from the port of Aulis
to Troy.
• Calchas, the Greek soothsayer, tells the
Greeks that Artemis will only be
appeased by the sacrifice of a virgin –
Agamemnon’s daughter Iphigenia.
Odysseus suggests that they tell
Clytemnestra, wife of Agamemnon, that
her daughter is to be married to Achilles.
The sacrifice of Iphigenia appeases
Artemis, and the Greeks are able to
sail to Troy.
Odysseus suggests to the Greeks
that they abandon Philoctetes on
Lemnos
(stinky wound)
In Troy
At Troy, Odysseus
increases his reputation for
being wily.
1. Raid against Rhesus at
night – kills Rhesus and
takes his horses.
2. Enters Troy in disguise
and steals the Palladium.
3. Comes up with the idea
for the Trojan Horse.
The Return Home
The first stop of
Odysseus and his
crew is at
Ismarus.
Odysseus and his men sack
Ismarus, city of the Ciconians
Only Maron, priest of Apollo is
spared.
• He gives them 12 amphorae of
wine, which will come in handy
later.
The next
stop brings
them to the
land of the
lotus-eaters,
called the
Lotiphagi
Some of Odysseus’ crew tasted the fruit, and thus forgot
everything and only wanted to stay and continue eating.
They had to be dragged back to the ships.
Polyphemus
• Odysseus and his men
land on Sicily, where the
cyclops Polyphemus
imprisons Odysseus and
12 of his men. He eats
two of Odysseus’ men
the first day, and four the
next.
“My name
is Nobody
(Outis).
Have
some
wine.”
The blinding of Polyphemus – Odysseus and his men give
Polyphemus some of Maron’s wine. He gets drunk and
they poke his eye out. The other cyclopes hear him but
don’t help because he yells “No one is killing me!”
Later, Polyphemus rolled the stone
away from the entrance of the cave
to let his sheep graze.
Odysseus and his men escaped by
clinging to the bellies of sheep.
“I am Odysseus!” As Odysseus left,
he shouted his real name to Polyphemus
Polyphemus asked
Poseidon to curse
Odysseus, and
Poseidon sent
stormy winds to
hinder Odysseus’
trip home.
“No one will
keep me from
returning
home!”
Odysseus’
arrogance
doesn’t help
matters.
Odysseus and his men arrive in Aeolia, land of Aeolus,
King of the Winds. Here Aeolus gives Odysseus a bag
which contains all the winds except the one which will
blow him home. Odysseus refuses to tell the men what is in
the bag. They assume it is gold, and just before they reach
Ithaca, they open the bag and are blown far from home.
Aeolus
Antiphates,
king of the
Laestrygonians
After 7 days of travel from the island of Aeolus,
Odysseus and his men land on the island of the
Laestrygonians.
The Laestrygonians were a tribe of giant cannibals,
ruled by their king, Antiphates.
The capital city was Telepylus, founded by Lamus, a
son of Poseidon and Gaea. There was a good harbor
there, and the night was especially, and strangely,
short.
Antiphates’ daughter led the embassy of Odysseus
to her father. He promptly picked up one of
Odysseus’ men and ate him! The others fled, with
all the Laestrygonians in hot pursuit!
The Laestrygongians hurled rocks at the ships,
destroying 11 of the 12, and then they speared the
floundering sailors like fish.
Only Odysseus’ own ship survived, as he had wisely
anchored it at the entrance to the harbor.
Odysseus
and his men
reach
Aeaea, the
island of the
enchantress
Circe.
Circe and her swine
Only Eurylochus and Odysseus are
not turned into swine – thanks to
Hermes and his Holy Moly.
Odysseus stays with Circe for a year.
She bears him a son, Telegonus.
Odysseus in
the
Underworld
• Odysseus meets a lot of heroes, beautiful
women, etc.
• He meets his mom, who has died from
longing for him, Agamemnon, and even
Heracles.
• He meets Achilles, who says it’s better to be
a slave on earth than king of all the dead
Tiresias and Odysseus
* suitors
* avoid Scylla and
Charybdis
* don’t eat Helios’
cattle
* carry an oar around
until someone asks if it’s
a winnowing fan and then
make a sacrifice to
Poseidon
The Ghost of Elpenor begs
Odysseus to bury his body.
Odysseus and the Sirens
Scylla and Charybdis
Scylla’s six heads each pluck a sailor from
Odysseus’ ship.
Island of Thrinacia, home of the
cattle of Helios, the sun god.
Odysseus warns his men not to eat
the cattle of Helios, but he falls
asleep and they do it anyway!!!
Helios complains to Zeus, who
causes a storm which wrecks the
ship.
• Only Odysseus survives
• He floats to the island of
Ogygia
Island of Ogygia, home of the
nymph Calypso
Odysseus stays on Ogygia for seven
years. Calypso promises Odysseus
eternal life if he will stay with her.
At last Hermes comes and tells
Calpyso she must let Odysseus go.
She helps
Odysseus
build a raft,
and he sets
out,
tormented by
Poseidon.
Leucothea helps Odysseus reach
Scheria, the land of the Phaeacians
• A peaceful and prosperous
kingdom
• Ruled by King Alcinous and
Queen Arete
• Odysseus declines marriage with
their helpful daughter, Nausicaa
• The Scherians take Odysseus back
to Ithaca
Odysseus
and Nausicaa
A Phaeacian ship
Odysseus Returns Home
• Athena disguises Odysseus as a beggar and
protects him and Telemachus.
• Several things happen repeatedly:
–
–
–
–
The suitors throw things at him
His servants treat him insolently
The suitors plot to kill Telemachus
Odysseus repeats his story about being from
Crete, and several times his cover is nearly
blown
Eumaeus, the
swineherd, takes in the
disguised Odysseus, and
his conversation reveals
that he is loyal. When
Telemachus returns
from Sparta, he sends
Eumaeus to tell his
mother of his return. At
this point Athena
reveals Odysseus to
Telemachus, and they
begin plotting the death
of the suitors.
Odysseus and
Argus – Argus
recognizes his
master, wags
his tail, and
dies.
Penelope has been putting off the suitors for
three years by telling them that she will marry
when she completes the death shroud for
Laertes – but she secretly undoes her work at
night.
The Suitors
• Athena urges them on in their evilness
• Antinous – leader of the evil suitors who pushes the
plan to kill Telemachus. The first to die.
• Amphinomus- shows pity towards disguised
Odysseus. Does not heed Odysseus’ warning about
staying, and so is killed.
• Eurymachus – tries to arrange for the death of
Telemachus. Offers to repay Odysseus. Before his
death he blames Antinous, then attacks Odysseus.
• Ctesippus – speaks arrogantly to beggar Odysseus
and throws a cow’s hoof at him. Telemachus kills
him.
Evil Suitor Sympathizers
• Melanthius, the disloyal goatherd. Supplies
the suitors with weapons in their battle with
Odysseus and Telemachus.
• Melantho, insults Odysseus. She is one of
the 12 disloyal maids who sleep with the
suitors. She is Eurymachus’ girlfriend.
• Leiodes – Sacrificial priest to the suitors.
Though he hated their deeds, he served
them and so Odysseus killed him.
The arrogant
beggar, Irus,
insults Odysseus
and challenges
him to a boxing
match. Irus
regrets this when
Odysseus nearly
kills him.
• Eurycleia, Odysseus’ old nurse, while
washingi his feet, recognizes him by a scar
caused by a wild boar.
• Penelope’s trick is revealed to the suitors. They
demand that she choose a husband the next day.
• Penelope has a dream that an eagle swoops
down and kills her 20 pet geese. The
disguised Odysseus tell her it means her
husband is about to come home and kill the
suitors.
Penelope declares
that whoever can
string Odysseus’
bow and shoot an
arrow through the
holes of a dozen axe
heads set in a line
will be her new
husband.
The suitors fail in
the task. Odysseus
demands a try, and
the suitors mock
him. He succeeds,
and they marvel. He
then shoots
Antinous, and the
slaughter begins.
Slaughter
of the
suitors
• The suitors are all killed.
• Melanthius is killed.
• The twelve disloyal maids are hanged.
• Penelope refuses to believe that Odysseus is
really her husband returned (is it a god, like
happened to Alcmene), and to test Odysseus
tells Eurycleia to move the bed in their
room. Odysseus protests that that is not
possible, for one leg of the bed was carved
from a living olive tree!
Odysseus
and
Penelope
reunited.