Social And Religious Practices In Homer's The Odyssey

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In the first stanza of Homer’s The Odyssey we travel back to the old world of ancient Greece. Although the era of ancient Greece is no longer alive, we are still able to access their lost world though the surviving literature which stands today. From the tale of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, we can uncover aspects of their social and religious values. Within only the first stanza, we can determine Homer’s world was warrior oriented, but also sought intelligence in leaders. Though Odysseus’s dialog, we discover religious practices in appeasing the gods. In only a few lines we see what his society considered to be the highest form of praise. Through the poem Homer has left us, we can hear the forgotten song of ancient Greece.
The ancient Greeks

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