The Theme Of Death In The Odyssey

1608 Words4 Pages

Odysseus is often times considered a hero for triumphing, for living through the many challenges that he has to face over the course of The Odyssey. He defeats the mighty cyclops, he braves years away from home fighting one battle after the other and makes it home alive. Many times he has the chance to give in to death, to end his suffering, however he doesn’t take his chance and he continues fighting. He survives. However Homer doesn’t put it in that light, he doesn’t centralize the idea of life in The Odyssey but rather the idea of death, and all that it brings, or fails to bring. Homer brings the idea of death into his work through his word choice, and focusing on what the characters are escaping instead of what they are achieving. Oftentimes …show more content…

In the case of the Cyclops Odysseus realizes “There at a stroke we’d finish off ourselves as well - / how could we with our bare hands heave back/ that slab he set to block his cavern’s gaping maw” (Homer 9.340-342)? In this scene as easy as it would be for Odysseus to kill Polyphemus, and he wants to kill him, he realizes that it would bring his own death as well, so in order to escape death, he must allow the cyclops to live. This again occurs with the cattle of the sun god, when Odysseus is told that if he kills the cattle of the sun god his crew will surely die. So again there is the repetition of the death of one bringing the death of another. The final example is when Odysseus kills the suitors. When the families of the suitors find out what Odysseus has done they come to kill him, however thanks to Athena peace was reached. Once again Odysseus almost caused his own death by killing another. In all of these examples it is not drawing attention to life bringing life but to death bringing death. He doesn’t kill the cyclops because that will kill him. The death of the cattle of the sun is the death of his crew. In no way is life brought into any of these …show more content…

Returning to the quotation “… the great leveler, Death: not even the gods/ can defend a man, not even one they love, that day/ when fate takes hold and lays him out at last’” (Homer 3.269-271). Death is a power that surpasses the gods. In The Odyssey we are introduced to gods who control the water, the wind, and the decisions of men. They can bring peace and war, but the one thing they cannot do is prevent a mortal’s fated death. This alone shows how central death is to The Odyssey. The power that death holds rivals no others in this story, there is “… no escape from death” (Homer 12.483). Death is a constant threat for Odysseus throughout this story, and the future foretold for Odysseus by Tiresias is not one of his life being a good one but of “…your own death will steal upon you…/ a gentle, painless death, far from the sea it comes to take you down…” (Homer 11.153-154). His fortune ends not with his happy life, but with his eventual death. This scene is crucial because it draws the reader back not to the life that Odysseus will have once he has successfully returned home and killed the suitors but the death that he will experience. It draws it back to when and where Odysseus will die and take his place among the

Open Document