Journey Back In The Odyssey

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The Journey Back
In the epic poem, “The Odyssey” by Homer, do you ever wonder if Odysseus would have made it back to Ithaca without the help of the gods, goddesses, and kings? Odysseus’ journey all starts when Helen is kidnapped by Paris of Troy and he and an abundance of other men have to sail to Troy to bring her back which causes the outbreak of the Trojan War. After the war, Odysseus leaves Troy with his mutineers and encounters the master of winds, Aeolus who gives Odysseus a leather bag of wind to ensure them of getting home safely. The men believed the bag had valuable gems in it and when opening it, the winds flew out and the resulting storm drove the ship back the exact way they had came, sadly Ithaca was already in sight. Back where …show more content…

Circe first tells Odysseus two different routes that he could take home, the first one consists of Rovers, moving rocks that are impossible for any ship to pass and the second route consisting of having to pass by a six-headed eating monster named Scylla and a whirlpool named Charybdis that sucks in and vomits out the sea. Odysseus chooses the second route and Circe gives advice, suggesting him that once they pass Scylla, to not give up from rowing and she asserts, “No, no put all your backs into it, row on; invoke Blind Force, that bore this scourge of men, to keep her from a second strike against you” (12. 86-88). Circe hates the fact that Odysseus will have to take this peril and sacrifice six of his men to Scylla so, she encourages him to take his ship on a racing stroke past it. Odysseus asks Circe to instruct him about if it’s possible fighting off Scylla and she responds saying that no power could fight her and to instead pray to the goddess of blind force, who gave birth to Scylla. Not being aware of all these dangers or knowing these tips, Odysseus could have been one of the six …show more content…

Hermes gives a magical plant called Moly to protect Odysseus from Circe’s vile witchcraft and potions. Odysseus arrives at Circe’s palace and she welcomes him to an elegant silver-studded chair then, Odysseus reveales, “The lady Circe mixed me a golden cup of honeyed wine, adding in mischief her unholy drug/I drank, and the drink failed/But she came forward aiming a stroke with her long stick,and whispered: ‘Down in the sty and snore among the rest” (10. 46-51)! If Odysseus wasn’t aware ahead of time about Circe’s stealth trick, he would’ve passed out and possibly even have died depending on how bad the drug would’ve affected him. The drug didn’t do any harm to him, due to him being armed with the Moly so, he avenges Circe who was appalled, pulling out a sword and holding it next to her throat. If it weren't for her to entreat Odysseus not to murder her and turn his men into pigs, he probably would have been implacable and not shown mercy on her, but he forgives her, so that she could turn his men back into humans. Hermes opened Odysseus’ eyes showing that some people could be viewed as “a wolf in a sheeps

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