Odysseus Mistakes In Homer's The Odyssey

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Men are not perfect all the time and can make mistakes that they regret later on. In The Odyssey, Odysseus and his men make mistakes that have effects on them. To begin, one mistake Odysseus makes is when he was so proud of himself for defeating the cyclops. After he got his ship ready and thought that he won he kept on taunting Polyphemus, who was the son of the Poseidon. Odysseus was so amused about how they just defeated cyclops that he didn't know what he was saying which is the mistake he was doing. He reveals to Polyphemus that he was the Odysseus, raider of the cities, Laertes’ son, and the man from Ithaka. Polyphemus then tells his father, Poseidon, to cast a curse upon Odysseus and his journey back home. Since Odysseus was on a ship in the sea, Poseidon had a great way to make sure his journey wasn't as great since he was the god of the sea. …show more content…

Homer states in book 9 line 587-590 “ If I really am your son and you claim to be my father- come, grant that Odysseus, raider of cities, Laertes’ son who makes his home in Ithaca, never reaches home”. This quote shows the effect of Odysseus after thinking that his problem was all fixed even though by taunting Polyphemus he made it worse again. Odysseus and his men also fall for things that men would fall into. Such as when the witch Circe invites the men and drugs them, the men all turn into pigs. The mistake here that the men created was falling for someone on their looks even though they really didn't know who she was or what she did. Homer states on book 9, line 261-265 “ Once they’d drained the bowls she filled, suddenly she struck with her wand, drove them into her pigsties, all of them bristling into swine-with grunts, snouts- even their bodies, yes, and only the men’s minds stayed steadfast as

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