Loyalty As Depicted In Homer's The Odyssey

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The poem, “The Odyssey”, by Homer, was written around 720 B.C. just before the downfall of Samaria. It had been ten years since the fall of Troy when Calypso was forced to let Odysseus leave her island. Poseidon attempted to stop Odysseus by delivering a storm to him to demolish his boat because earlier in Odysseus’s travels he blinded Polyphemus, Poseidon’s son. He spends the entire middle portion of the poem telling the Phaeacians his story about the cyclops, Scylla, the lotus eaters, his temptation to listen to the sirens’ song, and his stay with the Circe, the witch goddess. By the time he finishes his story he is back home in Ithaca where he plans to deal with the suitors once and for all. With the help of Athena, the swineherd, the cowherd, and …show more content…

The suitors’ parents were enraged at Odysseus and tried to form an attack on him and those who were loyal to him, but peace was restored through Athena. With all this said, this poem isn't really about Odysseus, his journey home, his homecoming, or even about his family and friends; it's about the importance of loyalty. Loyalty is key, especially in the case of Eumaeus. Eumaeus tended to his master’s pigs for twenty years even though he thought Odysseus was dead. (“The Odyssey”). Eumaeus could be described as quite similar to a dog, as he is loyal to his master and loves and misses him when he isn't around. Loyalty in most cases delivers you great reward. In Eumaeus’s case, his reward was a house built right next to Odysseus’s house. In the book, Elephant Run, by Roland Smith, there was an American boy and his father that got caught up in the middle of World War Two when it came to the doorstep of their teak

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