The Odyssey, written by Homer has a protagonist that are brave and clever and “The Most Dangerous Game” written by Richard Connell has protagonists that are clever and intelligent. Rainsford and Odysseus went on a epic journey. On the epic journey they face the antagonists and they must survive. To begin with, Rainsford’s journey begins when he is going on a hunting trip and ends up get trapped on a island called Ship-Trap island. While he on the island he hears gunshots and fell off a boat. He seen footprints so he swims to shore to look at the footprints. While following footprints, it leads him to General Zaroff’s house. The General recognizes him from his books. Rainsford finds out that the General doesn't only hunt animals, he hunts On the way coming back home he goes back to war. Poseidon curses Odysseus for him not to go home. Odysseus sees the land of Cyclops and he wanted to know what kind of people they were. Odysseus is trapped in a cave with the cyclops. One scene Odysseus show he clever when he tell the cyclops that his name Nohbdy’.”My name is Nohbdy: mother, father, and friends, everyone calls me Nohbdy” (Homer 220). The protagonist Odysseus devises an intelligent plan to kill the monster. The monster, called by the name Polyphemus or Cyclops, kills and eats Odysseus men in the cave. The way Odysseus and his man escape was that they got they Cyclops drunk. Then they sharpen a large stake and blind him. Then they tie themselves under sheepskin so they can escape, the Cyclops feeling every animal make sure there’s no humans in the cave. How he developed was that he was selfish and now he not. In conclusion these two protagonist characters developed by Rainsford thought animals ain't had no feelings. So whenever Rainsford was being hunt he see how feeling if an animal getting hunted. Odysseus change because at one point he was selfish but now he know what
After falling off his ship and forced to swim to a mysterious island, Rainsford is faced with a challenge. General Zaroff traps him in a “game” that requires Rainsford to use his skills to survive. He is hunted for three days; where he was chased, tracked down, and shot at. General Zaroff led the hunt to try to kill Rainsford. General was equipped with more firepower and help from his henchman and dogs. But even with his much greater opponent, he was able to survive. Rainsford used his many skills to defeat and kill his enemy. He used quick wit to make traps that would slow Zaroff and kill his dogs and henchman. Then he used his intelligence to escape Zaroff by swimming away, but sneaking back into his own mansion.
In the beginning of the story, Rainsford has a conversation with his friend, Whitney, about hunting animals. Rainford does not care about the animals that he hunts. He believes hunting is only a sport to kill innocent creatures. “‘Who cares how a jaguar feels?’” (1) Showing the reader exactly what he thinks of hunting. Rainsford does not understand that the animals he hunts are like the people that Zaroff hunts. They are innocent, and he is murdering them when he hunts them. Rainsford thinks that Zaroff is insane for murdering people, but Rainsford is also a murderer. When Zaroff hunts Rainsford, the protagonist realizes the terror and pain the jaguars must have felt when he hunted them. Now the roles are reversed, and Rainsford is the one being hunted. “The Cossack was the cat; he was the mouse. The general was saving him for another day’s sport! Then it was that Rainsford knew the full meaning of terror.” (17) Rainsford has changed his feelings about hunting animals now, and he has become a better person. He now takes into account how his prey feels. His interactions with people will also be different, because instead of being extremely overconfident, he realizes that he is not perfectly adept at hunting, and everyone has feelings that matter. In conclusion, Rainsford is now more humble and less overconfident than he was when he began his
Like Jacob, Odysseus connived, manipulated, and deceived. On his journey home from the Trojan War, Odysseus uses his trickster ways to get himself out of trouble. One famous tail was his encounter with the one-eyed Cyclopes Polyphemous. Odysseus and his crew landed on the land of they Cyclopes. They made themselves at home, eating the cheese and goats of the Cyclopes, fully expecting him to be hospitable. Instead, Cyclops began eating then men as though they were animals themselves. Odysseus and his men were trapped in the cave and Polyphemous rolled a stone over the entrance so no one could exit. Odysseus connived a plan and gave the Cyclopes some wine. When he got drunk and passed out, Odysseus poked out the eye of Polyphemous and completely blinds him. Odysseus and his men escape the cave by clinging to the bellies of sheep (Odyssey, Ch. 9). He also disguised himself as a veteran of a Trojan war to Eumaios, a loyal servant, and as a beggar to his wife and son.
To start, within the course of The Odyssey, Odysseus displays hubris through many of his actions. The most prominent instance in which Odysseus shows hubris is while he and his men are trying to escape from the Cyclops Polyphemus. They drug the monster until it passes out, and then stab him with a timber in his single eye. Polyphemus, now blinded, removes the gigantic boulder blocking Odysseus’ escape, and waits for the men to move, so he can kill them. The men escape from the cave to their boat by tying themselves under flocks of rams, so they can easily slip by. Odysseus, now proud after beating the giant, starts to yell at Polyphemus, instead of making a silent escape. Odysseus’ men ask him to stop before Polyphemus would “get the range and lob a boulder” (436). But Odysseus shows hubris by saying that if they were to meet again, Odysseus would “take your life” and “hurl you down to hell!” (462; 463). Polyphemus, now extremely angry with Odysseus, prays to his father, Poseidon, to make Odysseus “never see his home” again, and after which, throws a mountain towards the sound of Odysseus’ voice. (470). Because of Odysseus’ hubris after blinding Polyphemus, Poseidon grants the prayer, and it takes Odysseus 20 years to return home, at the cost of the lives of all his men.
In the Odyssey, written by Homer, Odysseus learned a lot about himself and what he had to do to become a better overall human. The adventures he goes on, I think, opens his eyes to a world in which he thought he was invincible.
The Odyssey is a tale that has changed literature and storytelling. In this tale Odysseus is a Soldier from the battle of Troy trying to get home to his island of Ithaca, where he is king. His wife and son must wait ten years while he is trying to make his way home. In Odysseus’s absence wooer’s, or better known as suitors, learn of his absence and travel to Ithaca to win his wife’s hand in marriage. These men come every day feasting on Odysseus’s food and wine, and give his servant’s orders. His son Telemachus, does his best to keep the suitors from ruining his fathers house but he is only a boy, and doesn’t receive the respect of an adult. Telemachus then has a visit from the god Athena, whom Odysseus is friends with, who advises him to travel to find out about his father. In his travels he hears that Odysseus may still be alive. Meanwhile Odysseus goes through a series of adventures and hardships that prove his wisdom. It is interesting in contrast of the Iliad, even though Achilles was much stronger and a better warrior, Odysseus was portrayed as a greater hero due to his wisdom. He uses this wisdom to escape from the Cyclops.
In the story of the Odyssey, Odysseus’ son, Telemachus journey was to find his father which forces him to become a man along the way. Telemachus being the son of King Odysseus and Queen Penelope, he knew one day his would become king to the throne. But while, his father, Odysseus was away on his own personal adventure; there was no one in the house whole to teach Telemachus to be a true man or be able to the place of king of the throne. And just like any other young man, he would needed a significant male role model to help him go through his evolution to become a true man. In the beginning of the story, Telemachus was just a 19/20 year old young man, who had never seen his father. So at that point in his life, he was a bit immature and inexperience. In addition, he also didn’t know whether to think his father is alive or died. But when he begin his adventure the grown and changes in Telemachus evolution is displayed.
Picture this: a hero of great legends who travels to the underworld and back to get directions to his home from a blind prophet. It sounds like quite an impossible journey, but that is exactly what makes Odysseus all the more fascinating. The Odyssey, an epic poem orally transmitted by Homer, a Greek poet who wrote The Iliad, had to contain some variety of attributes that Greeks valued in a person. That one embodiment of what the Greeks found intriguing in a character is Odysseus. Odysseus is known as what is called an epic hero. An epic hero is a protagonist of a story that represents the most important attributes of a civilization. Odysseus, being based in ancient Greece, is the embodiment of intelligence, loyalty, and strength.
When Odysseus and his men reach the island, Aiolos is hesitant at first to seek out Kirke and he wants to turn back. However, some of Odysseus’ men decide to seek her out anyways. When they go to her place, she greets them with a feast and wine. However, even though it looked like she was being nice, she was actually drugging them and she turned them into pigs. “bodies, voices, heads, and bristles, all swinish now, though minds were still unchanged” (264-265). So, even though their bodies appeared as swine, their minds were still as they were before. This could be more creul because they still felt that they were human, and they still had all of their memories, but they were still pigs. After she turns them into pigs, she then violates xenia even more by feeding them pig food, rather than human food.
middle of paper ... ... In Homer’s Odyssey, both Odysseus and his son Telemachus embark on long, difficult journeys; Odysseus trying to return from Troy to his home in Ithaca, escaping Calypso and the island of Ogygia, and Telemachus from Ithaca to Pylos and Sparta in search of his lost father. While The Odyssey tells of the courage both men demonstrate during their respective travels, their quests are the results of the intentions and desires of gods. Odysseus is trapped in exile on Ogygia by the will of Poseidon, whose anger Odysseus attracts when he blinds the Cyclops Polyphemus, son of Poseidon, and by the love of Calypso, who wishes to make Odysseus her husband.
Throughout the course of his journey, Odysseus is haunted by the thought of his enemy, Poseidon, who has far more power than Odysseus and strives to keep him from returning to Ithaca. Poseidon still holds a grudge against Odysseus for blinding Polyphemus at his cave. Soon before Odysseus reaches Phaeacia’s shores with hope of rescue, Poseidon notices that “he’s [Odysseus] fated to escape his noose of pain” if he makes it to Phaeacia, and threatens to “give that man [Odysseus] his swamping full of trouble” to prevent him from reaching his destination (Homer 5:318-320). While Odysseus is among the most powerful mortals, he is not comparable to Poseidon. This is why, in a situation like this, it is an important skill to know your strengths, and act intelligently.
In Homer’s Odyssey Book 9, Odysseus and his men unknowingly landed on the island of the Cyclopes and begin exploring. They first encounter Polyphemus when they are exploring his cave full of luscious lambs, milk, and cheese. Polyphemus was not bothered by these strangers in his cave at first but this changed very fast when he made supper of two of Odysseus’s men. Odysseus knew he had to take some action in order to get out of this cave alive, so he puts his plan into motion by getting the Cyclops Polyphemus to drink three bowls of very potent wine to get him drunk. After the Cyclops Polyphemus was very drunk, Odysseus told him that his name was Noman, which will help him later on with his plan. Once the Cyclops Polyphemus was sleeping, Odysseus and a select few of his men drove a heated up olive-wood stake into his one large eye, and when other Cyclopes arrived at the commotion Cyclops Polyphemus told them that Noman was killing him. Odysseus then tied his men to the bottom of sheep to allow them to escape the cave. Upon sailing off, Odysseus shouted insults at the Cyclops Polyphemus causing him to hurl large boulders at Odysseus's ship, but he missed. He then prayed to his father, Poseidon, to never allow Odysseus to reach his home on Ithaca or if he is fated to return to have him come late, without his companions, in another’s ship, and to find trouble at
...s was not there to parent his child, his son accepts him as if he'd known him all of his life. They stand side by side when Odysseus returns home, and together they defeat all of the suitors that tried to take over his kingdom, wife, and fortune. While sailing across the different seas, he does not have the love and support of his family. Now Odysseus sees the bigger picture, his family, kingdom and comfort are his home.
The first heroic characteristic of Odysseus is his cleverness. In The Odyssey, one of the instances where Odysseus displays cleverness is in his encounter with the Cyclops, Polyphemus. Polyphemus captures Odysseus and his men in the island Cyclopes, which was filled with other giants. Although it is expected among the Greeks to display hospitality to strangers, Polyphemus ends up eating some of Odysseus men. In order to escape the giant, Odysseus comes up with a clever plan. He offers Polyphemus wine in order to get the giant drunk. When the giant falls asleep, Odysseus stabs Polyphemus’ singular eye, blinding the giant. The giant naturally wakes up, and starts to try and recapture Odysseus and his men. Knowing that the giant’s shouting would most likely attract the attention of the other giants in the island, Odysseus replies to Polyphemus when the giant asks him his name that his name was “Noman.” But when Polyphemus shouts for help, none of the other giants come to his aid, since he is shouting “My friends, N...
"Your intelligence may get you far in your life." In the poem The Odyssey, written by Homer, Odysseus was the main character. He was a young man in search for his home at Ithaca. By the end of his long journey, he had spent approximately twenty years in search for his family and friends. During the lengthy trip, Odysseus shows how determined and extremely intelligent he can be by fighting through unbelievable things throughout the story.