What Is Kalypso's Relationship In The Odyssey

1157 Words3 Pages

The lovers of Odysseus in Richard Lattimore’s translation of The Odyssey unify together in their care for Odysseus, but differ in the manifestation and intensity of their feelings towards him. Circe, Kalypso, and Penelope each love him, but have differing motives and reasons for holding a relationship with the hero. Circe holds a position in which she loves him for his body in bed, Kalypso’s crazy infatuation for Odysseus blinds her morals, and Penelope has a wholehearted love and devotion for him and being his wife.
Circe appreciates Odysseus as an addition to her life, enjoying a platonic, physical relationship with someone who can keep her bed warm and be with her every night. Before he strikes her, she makes a plea to sleep with him, …show more content…

Emotional heartbreak plagues his days because Kalypso puts her needs first, “...and the sweet lifetime was draining out of him...By nights he would lie beside her, of necessity, in the hollow caverns, against his will, by one who was willing”(92.152-157). The nymph oppresses Odysseus for seven years, forcing him into a sexual relationship with her for her pleasure alone. His days waste away as blankets of sorrow envelop his mind in his wishes to see his homecoming, yet she disregards these feelings and uses her superior status to force her intentions on to him. She extends powers that gods and goddesses do not exercise often, “...stay here with me and be the lord of this household and be an immortal”(93.208-209). She would grant what many men dream of if he would satisfy her desires and need for companionship in her lifetime exile from Olympos. The love they share turns into a one-sided affair, but Kalypso is so motivated by her love for Odysseus that she would make him, a man who is miserable and does not love her, immortal. The relationship they share on her island is much like the relationship he eventually has with Circe, the difference being that she continues their relations after it has gone stale for him while Circe openly lets him go. Her selfishness to keep him is evident in the way she objectifies him by treating him as property whom she has absolute control over. After deciding she needs him in her life, she loses sight in the true meaning of love and greed forces her into doing anything to keep him with her. Penelope’s livelihood is similar in that it is based solely upon Odysseus, consisting of fending off suitors trying to marry for wealth, and hoping for her husband’s glorious

Open Document