Sunday, August 4, 2019
Free Essay on Homers Odyssey: Odyssey as Epic Poem :: Homer Odyssey Essays
            The Odyssey as Epic Poem                 For thousands of years, people have enjoyed the entertainment of epic  poems.  The "Odyssey" is an epic poem.  The "Odyssey" contains  characteristics of an epic poem.  The setting of the ""Odyssey" is  immense.  The gods and goddesses of ancient Greece intervene frequently in  the "Odyssey".  Odysseus exemplifies a special kind of pride.   Throughout the "Odyssey", Odysseus undertakes a difficult journey.  .                        The "Odyssey" has an big  setting.  Odysseus starts off by traveling to Troy, which is the known  world.  On his quest home he comes face to face with the unknown  world.  Included in the unknown world is the underworld.  Very few  mortals had ever made it to the underworld and back safely. Odysseus travels to  many different islands, and civilizations throughout the duration of the  "Odyssey".  Thus, creating many smaller, different settings that all fit  into vast setting.                   The gods and goddesses constantly  intervene in the "Odyssey".  There are many examples of divine intervention  in the "Odyssey".  One of the most influential gods in the "Odyssey" is  Poseidon.  Poseidon causes Odysseus's journey to be so difficult.   Poseidon is mad at Odysseus because of what he did to his son Polyphemus.   Polyphemus asked his father to avenge him.  This resulted in only Odysseus  reaching Ithaca.                     Circe was a minor goddess who had a  great influence in the "Odyssey".  She helped Odysseus by giving some  advice on certain matters.  She told Odysseus that she must go to "the cold  homes of Death and Persephone..." meaning the underworld.  She also tells  them of the danger which lies ahead in Scylla and  Charybdis.                      Odysseus's pride led him to make blind, rash decisions.  Hubris, a Greek  word, is the best way to describe Odysseus's pride.  Hubris is a unique  type of pride that is almost arrogance. Odysseus demonstrates this when he is  leaving the island of the Cyclopes.  `Cyclopes, if ever mortal man inquire  how you were put to shame and blinded, tell him Odysseus, raider of cities, took  your eye: Laertes' son, whose home's on Ithaca!'  If Odysseus would have  kept his mouth shut he may have escaped Poseidon, and all of men wouldn't have  been killed.  					    
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