Wine In The Odyssey

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In Homer’s epic poem, “The Odyssey,” the protagonist Odysseus’ decision to bring wine with him to offer to the Cyclops, whose home he and his men were invading, was crucial to his entire journey being set in motion. After Odysseus, a Greek hero who fights in the Trojan War, wins, he and his men have to return to their home of Ithaca. On their way, they find themselves in what is known as the Land of the Cyclops. The Cyclops, as Odysseus describes them, were “giants, louts, without a law to bless them” (Homer 10). The creatures’ lives were spent dwelling in caves and tending to their herds of sheep. Although Odysseus wanted to bargain with these barbarians, since in his previous stops he’s had multiple supporters who assisted him along the …show more content…

The hero decided to tell the creature his name was Nohbdy, so the Cyclops would not know his true name, get the creature drunk on the fine wine he brought with him, stab him in his one eye while he is essentially hungover, and escape the cave with the sheep when the cave door is opened for them to go out and roam in the pastures. Had Odysseus not brought this wine, the Cyclops would have never fell so soundly asleep to allow Odysseus and four of his strongest men to ram the spike into the eye of the Cyclops. When Odysseus harmed the Cyclops and escaped with his men, they all boarded their ships. The hero’s flaw came into play, when his pride led Odysseus to shout back at the Cyclops while he was a decent distance away, and let that savage being know who hurt and defeated him. Odysseus tells the creature, “‘Cyclops, if ever mortal man inquire how you were put to shame and blinded, tell him Odysseus, raider of cities, took your eye: Laertes’ son, whose home’s on Ithaca!’” (Homer 457-460). This essential information permitted the Cyclops to pray to his father Poseidon, the god of the sea, and curse Odysseus; “Should destiny intend that he shall see his roof again among his family in his father land, far be that day, and dark the years between. Let him lose all companions, and return under strange sail to bitter days at home.” (Homer 488-493). Odysseus

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