Best Supporting Character-Polyphemus

780 Words2 Pages

“Ooooof!” Yelled Polyphemus as burning timbers penetrate the gooey surface of his iris. Odysseus jumped off the giant creature’s back and landed smoothly on his feet. Blinded by the fiery hot stake, Polyphemus clutched his eye and hit the ground with an audible thump. Groaning and twisting about, the beast knocks down huge boulders that served as tables and the cacophony of sounds frightened the goats that he carefully tends to. However, quickly after his twitching and spasms, he fell into a state of unconsciousness. What led Polyphemus to this treacherous fate? And why did Homer choose to include the famous Cyclops in this tragedy?
The use of Polyphemus is ingenious in the “Odyssey”, because Polyphemus’s lack of intelligence easily contrasts with Odysseus’s quick and rational thinking. Homer builds Polyphemus as means of making Odysseus more multi-dimensional and better liked for his wits and cleverness. The cannibalistic giant was easily fooled when he asked for Odysseus’s name before he threatened to dismember the mighty war hero. When asked about his name, Odysseus replied by saying, “Nobody –that’s my name. Nobody –so my mother and father call me, all my friends,” (9.410). The simple-minded antagonist did not even doubt the legitimacy of that fake name for a second, that even when he shouts for help as Odysseus blinds him, he screams, “Nobody’s killing me now by fraud and not by force!” (9.455). This gullible behavior allows the readers to train the spotlight on Odysseus in terms of intelligence.
However, what Polyphemus lacks in brains, he makes up in brawn. For example, he evidently shows his physical strength as he, “snatched two at once, rapping them on the ground, he knocked them dead like pups –their brains gushed out...

... middle of paper ...

... Revealing his name to Polyphemus is an incredibly unintelligent action that can only be explained by his arrogant nature. However, his bold decision is punished when Polyphemus cursed him and prayed for Odysseus to never reach Ithaca and that if he does by chance return home, that he returns to a world of pain.
Although Polyphemus is not dead like Odysseus hoped for, he surely deserved what misfortune has befallen him. As I am sure that the Greeks detest Polyphemus with a burning passion, but as readers, we must thank Polyphemus for shedding more light on the character of Odysseus. Without Polyphemus, we would not have had as much insight into Odysseus’s intelligence as we do now. In Polyphemus’s encounter, we have arguably learned more about Odysseus than in any other part of the story, therefore, making Polyphemus the best supporting character in the “Odyssey”.

More about Best Supporting Character-Polyphemus

Open Document