Preview

Odysseus Use Of Deception In Homer's Odyssey

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
802 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Odysseus Use Of Deception In Homer's Odyssey
The use of deception in different ways shows the contrasting interests of its users. For one it can be used for good, to protect others and uphold the values of loyalty and honor, whereas in other cases it can be used to promote greed and selfishness. Within the odyssey, Odysseus utilizes it for good, while others choose to use it for evil. Antinous and Eurymachus use deception to promote their own selfish desires and attempt to exploit others for their own personal gain. When word of the return of Telemachus reached the suitors, the suitors needed a way to secure the hand of Penelope. Becoming greedy for the throne, and with hope of gaining what they sought regardless of the jeopardy those wishes due to the return of Telemachus, Antinous knows …show more content…
Though this, Eurymachus lies to Penelope and tells her the boy should not fear dying “from the suitors at least,” (Odyssey 16.495) and this lie is deceptive, for Eurymachus has not such plan of keeping Telemachus alive, and is in fact plotting his murder. While on the surface his intentions may have looked good. Eurymachus attempted to deceive Penelope by attempting to provide her with false reassurance, so that she would not suspect his plot to kill his son, and to differentiate him from the other suitors. Eurymachus used deception to lead Penelope to believe that he truly cared about the well-being of Penelope and Telemachus, and was not attempting to just gain her hand in marriage and gain the wealth of Odysseus' kingdom. As demonstrated by the suitors, deception can be used maliciously, in efforts to promote one’s personal agenda, even at the expense of another person’s well-being. Hades has a desire to make Persephone his wife, and as depicted by the plan that Hades and Zeus created “without the knowledge of Demeter and the golden sword,” (Demeter 4). Initially taking Persephone for his own enjoyment and pleasure at the expense of Persephone being unable to see her mother, as well as the comforts and lush pastures of the world above, Hades also deprives Demeter of her daughter, inhibiting the plants from

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    I believe that Odysseus fits the stereotype when it comes to following the man box. I say this because he does cry but he also doesn’t back down from a challenge. Odysseus is weeping on the island of Ogygia and showing his emotions. The book picks up when they “found him there on the the head land, sitting still, weeping, his eyes never dry.”(Book 5 line 167) This quote shows that he is not listening to the ingredients that are in the man box, which is to never cry and express his emotions. He does show that he is a superior man even after being beat up by the waves. He shows that he’s not afraid and he will stand up to challengers “ up he sprang, cloak and all, sized a discus, huge and heavy, more weight by far than those.”(Book 8 line 216-217)…

    • 197 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Bias In The Odyssey

    • 1096 Words
    • 5 Pages

    The first person perspective is limited and often times truths will be stretched and personal biases will be present in their testimonies. This idea can best be summed up by literary critic, M.H Abrams, who wrote in his 1957 book, A Glossary of Literary Terms, that the first person narrative, “limits the matter of the narrative to what the first-person narrator knows, experiences, infers, or can find out by talking to other characters” (Abrams 233). The limited nature of the first person means that the entire story cannot be told from just one perspective. It is ironic that Penelope chooses to berate her husband for being a liar and questioning the legitimacy of her story when her own narrative is just as dubious. Odysseus and Penelope are what Abrams would call a “fallible or unreliable narrator” (Abrams, 235). These types of narrators are ones whose “perception, interpretation, and evaluation of the matters he or she narrates do not coincide with the opinions and norms implied by the author.” Penelope’s biases are prevalent throughout the text. After being thrown into the sea by her father, she became unable to fully trust anyone and saw people only for their flaws such as Odysseus lies and Menelaus’s “very loud voice” (Atwood, 34). Her reliability is constantly in question, especially due to her personal vendetta against Helen, who she claims ruined her life by taking away her husband. It is sometimes difficult to differentiate between the truth and hyperbole in Penelope’s narration. The bias Penelope has against Helen is blatant and bitter. She is deeply jealous of Helen who was “...much in demand.” what she, “never got summed much by magicians” (Atwood, 20). Penelope is hurt by the idea that she has been constantly overshadowed by Helen, in life and in death. Due to this jealousy,…

    • 1096 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Odysseus not mentioning his name is related to the series of events in that he has to find his identity before he can reveal it. Even once he reached the hall of Alkinoos he had to try to remain hidden because his journey was not yet over. In each episode there was some kind of challenge he had to face before he could reveal who he was. In the Cyclops episode he reveals his name when they are sailing away. In the Circa episode, he reveals his identity after he overcomes the witch’s spell. In order for him to reveal his identity, he must first discover it for himself. This shows that he is not worthy of being Odysseus, hero of Troy, unless he can first overcome the obstacles placed in his journey by the gods. For each challenge he…

    • 527 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the epic myth The Odyssey, written by Homer, Odysseus takes a twenty year long and perilous journey back to his homeland Ithaka. He must face many physical and mental challenges that makes him worthy of being a hero. The physical qualities that possess an epic hero include immense gallantness and dexterity. This can be seen when “Odysseus had blinded god-like Polyphemus, the mighty cyclops who was Poseidon’s son” (Rosenberg 78). Cyclopes are gigantic and man-eating. To face such a powerful, terrifying monster one must be extremely valiant, a trait that as you can see Odysseus possesses. A task like this also reguires a lot of skill, one must be clever because strength alone will not suffice against a Cyclops. The mental traits that epic…

    • 208 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    I think that if Telemachus was a good leader and took care of the suitors, Odysseus wouldn’t make his dining hall into a bloodbath. But because he didn’t take care of the suitor problem, Penelope was bribed by suitors to marry them. And maids of Odysseus slept with other suitors. The suitors who died from Odysseus deserved to die from Odysseus because not only did they try to marry Penelope they also planned to kill Odysseus and Telemachus as well. And for the maids, they also deserved to die because they were not loyal to not only penelope but Odysseus as well, because they were with the idea of suitors killing odysseus.…

    • 384 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Level 1: What do the gods decide on when Poseidon is away for the fate of Odysseus?…

    • 475 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the story Odyssey by Homer Odysseus action against the wooers and the people that were involved were justified. The wooers technically exiled there king. Then the wooers wanted to get rid of everything and everyone who were loyal to Odysseus and they wanted to cover up that Odysseus was actually gone.…

    • 437 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The gods have played their part altering the course of the hero’s voyage. Seemingly, in the epic harmony does not last long and challenges follow Odysseus like a plague. Calypso, the audience believes holds the last installment of the global journey, our hero has yet more battles ahead of him. In fact, the king of Ithaca wandered the Mediterranean and its coastal lands for 10 years before finally arriving home. As waves crash against the raft, “he was seen sailing the ocean”(284). The sea near the land of the Phaeacians is only one region Odysseus has been driven to. All these occurs as a number of loyal citizens and a hopeful family await his return, a period when others dependence on him shines through. As Odysseus is under the angry waters…

    • 269 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Deception, or the act of deceiving or defrauding, is a prominent theme in the Odyssey. Though inherently dishonest, deception can be used to gain information and knowledge. Different characters (and people) use it different ways. This essay will establish that, whereas Odysseus uses deception to help him progress from Nobody back to Odysseus, king of Ithaca, Athena does so to keep her identity secret when she disguises herself.…

    • 744 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Odysseus revolts against them due to the trouble Penelope faced all these years . Odysseus forewarns the…

    • 716 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Adventures of the Odyssey The Odyssey, written by Homer and translated by Robert Fitzgerald, shows the true bravery of Odysseus and his men throughout the whole book. Filled with many adventures, some that are more know were Odysseus’ interactions with the Lotus Eaters, Kyklops, and Seirenes . Through these adventures, he shows a positive and negative trait. When Odysseus and his men met the Lotus Eaters, they were all hungry for their mid-day meal.…

    • 548 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Odysseus overcomes the perilous positions that he happens to be engulfed into. During part one of the Odyssey the text states, “Then Scylla made her strike/ whisking six of my best men from the ship”(12.809-810). This quote captures how alarmingly perilous the situation Odysseus finds himself in is. Scylla easily snatches up some of Odysseus's best and strongest men. How easily this deadly sea monster plucks up Odysseus’ most able men easily killing them hammers home how truly treacherous this situation really is. The fact that these strong experienced men are being killed so easily in the first place speaks for itself how dangerous every day is for Odysseus. Odysseus survives this against all odds, proving he has the ability and capacity…

    • 127 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Odysseus played both the hero and villain role in The Odyssey; it all depends on whose perspective you see him through. Penelope saw her husband as a hero who fought hard to get back home to her. To Polyphemus, Odysseus was a villain who tricked him and blinded him. During the Trojan War he expressed an enormous amount of hero traits, but later in his journey, especially in books 9-12 his heroic behavior diminished.…

    • 571 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Penelope is shown to be contsently in emotional termilol over odyessus throughout the Odyssey. For much of the book she is seen to be crying until a god take pity on her and allows her to fall asleep. But while Penelope is seen to be very leaky, she is also shown to be very rational, and very bounded to many things. One of this things is the funeral shroud that she uses to trick the suitors for three years by unraveling it at night. This was a very interseting part, because in some way it reence backs to Zues putting a viel on chaos and giving it form. Rather in this intsence the viel is a shroud, Penople is Zeus, and the chaos she is bounding is her solution to keep her husbands home without remarrying, or having to give it up, and to move back in with her parents. Penelope is and intersecting character because she mirrors Zeus first wife in many ways, such as tricking her suitors for three years, and by rational finding out that is Odysseus was the true Odysseus, and not and…

    • 604 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    After the war of Troy, Odysseus was lost at sea and Penelope gave up most of her hope after years of waiting for her husband to return home. Later on Suitors came to court her in the castle where Penelope and her son Telemachus lived. There are so many ways that Penelope showed her loyalty to her husband while he was away. One way Penelope shows her loyalty is no matter how the suitors courted her and wanted to marry her she never went with a suiter. Another reason is that she never completely gave up hope that her husband was alive. The final reason is that she defended Odysseus's memory. In The Odyssey, Penelope showed her loyalty to her husband multiple times throughout the epic poem.…

    • 847 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays