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The Odysseus of Legend & Myth ...
Odysseus (called
Ulysses in Latin) was the son of Laertes and was the ruler of the
island kingdom of Ithaca. He was one of the most prominent Greek
leaders in the Trojan War, and was the hero of Homer's Odyssey.
He was known for his cleverness and cunning, and for his eloquence
as a speaker.
Odysseus was
one of the original suitors of Helen of Troy. When Menelaus succeeded
in winning Helen's hand in marriage, it was Odysseus who advised
him to get the other suitors to swear to defend his marriage rights.
However, when Menelaus called on the suitors to help him bring Helen
back from Troy, Odysseus was reluctant to make good on his oath.
He pretended to have gone mad, plowing his fields and sowing salt
instead of grain. Palamedes placed Odysseus' infant son in front
of the plow, and Odysseus revealed his sanity when he turned aside
to avoid injuring the child.
However reluctant
he may have been to join the expedition, Odysseus fought heroically
in the Trojan War, refusing to leave the field when the Greek troops
were being routed by the Trojans, and leading a daring nocturnal
raid in company with Diomedes. He was also the originator of the
Trojan horse, the strategem by which the Greeks were finally able
to take the city of Troy itself. After the death of Achilles, he
and Ajax competed for Achilles' magnificent armor; when Odysseus'
eloquence caused the Greeks to award the prize to him, Ajax went
mad and killed himself.
Odysseus' return
from Troy, chronicled in the Odyssey, took ten years and was beset
by perils and misfortune. He freed his men from the pleasure-giving
drugs of the Lotus-Eaters, rescued them from the cannibalism of
the Cyclopes and the enchantments of Circe. He braved the terrors
of the underworld with them, and while in the land of the dead Hades
allowed Thiresias, Odysseus' mother, Ajax and others to give him
adivice on his next journey. They gave him important advice about
the cattle of the sun (which Apollo herds), Scylla and Charybdis
and the Sirens. From there on the travels were harder for Odysseus,
but they would have been much worse of it wasn't for the help of
the dead.
With this newly acquired knowledge, he steered them past the perils
of the Sirens and of Scylla and Charybdis. He could not save them
from their final folly, however, when they violated divine commandments
by slaughtering and eating the cattle of the sun-god. As a result
of this rash act, Odysseus' ship was destroyed by a thunderbolt,
and only Odysseus himself survived. He came ashore on the island
of the nymph Calypso, who made him her lover and refused to let
him leave for seven years. When Zeus finally intervened, Odysseus
sailed away on a small boat, only to be shipwrecked by another storm.
He swam ashore on the island of the Phaeacians, where he was magnificently
entertained and then, at long last, escorted home to Ithaca.
There were problems
in Ithaca as well, however. During Odysseus' twenty-year absence,
his wife, Penelope, had remained faithful to him, but she was under
enormous pressure to remarry. A whole host of suitors were occupying
her palace, drinking and eating and behaving insolently to Penelope
and her son, Telemachus. Odysseus arrived at the palace, disguised
as a ragged beggar, and observed their behavior and his wife's fidelity.
With the help of Telemachus and Laertes, he slaughtered the suitors
and cleansed the palace. He then had to fight one final battle,
against the outraged relatives of the men he had slain; Athena intervened
to settle this battle, however, and peace was restored.
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