Homer's The Odyssey

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Hu•bris /ˈ(h)yo͞obris/ noun: excessive pride or self-confidence. Hubris is believed to be the most serious of all seven deadly sins. Some say it was the original sin that led to all others. A word with such loathsome synonyms like arrogance, conceit, haughtiness, pomposity, and egotism was seen as one of the worst possible sins in Greek culture. They believed that no matter your social status those who exhibited it were destined to fall down into damnation. Yet some Grecian heroes seemed to ooze hubris in the form of confidence or cockiness. There was a fine line between the two that they should never cross. One hero in particular showed this sin on more than one account. Throughout The Odyssey, Odysseus, shows the sinful trait of hubris, in the form of cockiness when he talks to Polythemus, his crewmen, his wife, and his son.
The first time Odysseus exhibits hubris is in the very beginning of his journey. Odysseus and his crewmen decide to visit the island of Polythemus simply out of curiosity. They run into a predicament inside the cave since Polythemus won’t let them escape. Odysseus is keen and cunning when he comes up with a plot to blind Polythemus and escape under the bellies of the flock of ewes brought in and out of the cave every day. After escaping Odysseus cannot resist pumping himself up, so he explains how after his men are out of the cave he yells in anger back at Polythemus:
“I would not heed them in my glorying spirit, / but let my anger flare and yelled: / ‘Cyclops, / 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!’” (500-505, 769).
In Odysseus fit of hubris and rage he has given away his identity...

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...ily have the right to take all of these men’s lives. However, through hubris Odysseus feels righteous and powerful, enough to simply slaughter the suitors only moments after bragging.
The sin of hubris is one of the evilest sins and rightly so. It ends up costing Odysseus twenty years at sea all because he told Polythemus his name. Hubris caused Odysseus’s crew to have unjustifiable faith in him even when Odysseus stood by while six men got gobbled up. The sin caused Odysseus to lie to his own wife just to get emotion out of her and feel better about himself. Odysseus used hubris to make himself feel superior enough to bring death upon suitors when gods are usually the ones to enact such a deed. Throughout Odysseus’s long and treacherous odyssey, he shows the corrupt trait of hubris, in the form of cockiness when he talks to key characters on his expedition home.

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