Theme Of Arrogance In The Odyssey

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Arrogance, this trait embedded in humans, affects everyone—at work, in school, with friends, with families, but to what extent? What happens when people cannot control it? When it takes over their ability to think straight? The hero in the epic poem by Homer, The Odyssey, epitomizes how dangerous uncontrolled arrogance can be. After ten years of fighting in a brutal war, how difficult can a journey across the ocean be for the mighty Odysseus? He finally has the opportunity to return to Ithaca, to his wife, to his son… to home, but it takes him another ten years due to his arrogance. Odyssey exemplifies that his inability to curb his arrogance is his greatest threat because it causes him to make irrational decisions. However, he learns to overcome …show more content…

The hyperboles “broken man” and “world of pain” elucidates Polyphemus’s craving for revenge and foreshadows Poseidon’s hindering for the remainder of Odysseus’s journey home. Odysseus and his crew would have left the Cyclops’ island with no interferences if he was able to contain his pride, but his ineptness to control himself, even with his crew begging him to calm down, angers a god, making it the greatest threat to his voyage (9.558-562). In another instance, Odysseus is successfully able to befriend the master of all the winds, Aeolus, who then propels them home with a winds and gifts Odysseus with a bag of winds. However, Homer displays Odysseus's pride overtaking him again; “never trusting the ropes to any other mate,” he overworks himself till “an enticing sleep [comes] on” (10.37,35). His incompetence to prioritize his trust for his crew above his self-confidence causes him to man the whole ship himself and endangers his crew and himself due to a lack of rest. He believes that controlling the whole ship himself would accelerate his journey home, but it does the exact opposite; it causes his crew to question him and believe there are riches in the bag. Thus, his crew open the bag once the “enticing sleep” overcomes Odysseus, and the winds send them back to Aeolus right as they approach Ithaca (10.52-54). Overall, Odysseus's most impactful challenges on his journey originate from his hubris and his inability to control it, making it the greatest threat that delays his successful

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