Character Analysis Of Odysseus In Homer's Odyssey '

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Books 18—24 Odysseus has had more than just ups and downs; he has been through war, separation from loved ones and dealing with needy gods, but most of all dealing with Irus, the beggar. Irus is not a given name, for this fat beggar received his nickname from the fact “he was always running errands for someone.”(18.8). Giving him recognition amongst the town folk, just like Polyphmeus, being recognized as Poseidon’s son. In a way it was a repeat of the earlier trial given to Odysseus, seeing if he can pass it again without letting his pride get in his way again. As for issues at his home, he had a plan meant for every suitor and the maids in which betrayed him. He would exterminate the foul vermin which nested and infested his home while he was away at war. Anger, and rage, from the earlier version of the battle of Troy, was two things that filled Odysseus. He had full right to remove them in …show more content…

What woman who had been told her husband has passed on, and been gone for twenty full years would believe he had returned without wanting to confirm such with a test or two? Even Telemachus and the maid tell her to believe, she still doubts, and states “Will be sure of each other, very sure. /There will be secrets between us no one else knows.” (23.114-115). She then starts by telling the maid to move the bed from their room, which seems fair enough until Odysseus yells out “ By God, woman, now you’ve cut deep./ Who moved my bed? It would be hard/ For anyone, no matter how skilled, to move it easily,/…Whether my bed is still firmly in place, or it/ Some other man has cut through the olive’s trunk.”(23.190-210), in other words, their secret is the bed, and its creation and immobility. Odysseus himself had too, tested his family in order to confirm if they have not changed or have given up their faith in

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