In works of literature, one of the most difficult aspects of human life to capture is emotion. It is simple for authors to describe a setting, explain actions, or convey thoughts, but to make a reader relate to the emotions of a character to the point that they can also feel the emotion is not an easy task. In order for a reader to understand how a character feels, they must know the character well and develop an attachment to their role in the story. In the case of The Odyssey, however, Homer creates a scene of heartbreak through Penelope, without having introduced her as a vital character. The wife of Odysseus, Penelope is left at home as he leaves for war. Maintaining a front of bravery in the presence of her suitors, who are battling to …show more content…
After her husband has been missing for several years, her son Telemachus leaves her in search of him. Upon hearing this, Penelope is distraught; Homer describes this onset of emotion as, “…a cloud of heartbreak overwhelmed the queen. She could bear no longer sitting on a chair though her room had chairs aplenty. Down she sank on her well-built chamber’s floor, weeping, pitifully, as the women whimpered round her…” (Homer 147). Through this description, the reader truly gets a sense of what Queen Penelope suffers. With the image of Penelope sinking to the floor, Homer is showing that she is so overcome with emotion that she is unable to do anything but simply collapse where she is, even though the resources of chairs are all around her. The inclusion of the number of chairs in the room is an exceptional tactic on Homer’s part, because it intensifies the actions of Penelope. Without it, her breakdown would not have had as strong of an impact as it would not have been clear that there were many places she could have sat if she were able, and that she has everything she could want or need except her family. While the reader may not have been in the situation of losing a loved one as she had, the feeling of uselessness that accompanies an influx of emotion is relatable. Readers may not be attached to Penelope as a character, but they can still share in her
Odysseus's wife, Penelope plays a crucial role in Homer's ‘The Odyssey’, with not only providing the motivation for Odysseus's return to Ithaca, but she is also the center of the plot involving the suitors and the fate of Telemakos and Ithaca itself. Therefore the objective of this essay is to analyze the importance of Penelope’s role in ‘The Odyssey’.
While traditional readers of Homer’s, The Odyssey, view Odysseus as a hero, they often reduce Penelope to Odysseus’s helpless wife, but Penelope is more than just a damsel-in-distress. Penelope proves to be Odysseus’s heroic equal, as through her resilient, witty and strategic actions she ensures Odysseus fighting advantages over the suitors.
After a long journey back from the Trojan War, he encounters superhuman beings, luring traps and sea beasts. Finally he reached his home land of Ithaca, where he kills suitors trying to court his wife. After the suitors are dead, Odysseus confronts his wife, Penelope, but she still refuses to acknowledge his reality. Finally she knows he is real because Odysseus tells her about their
Furthermore, Penelope is an important character as her identity “functions as a stable and unchanging reference point for the adventures of Odysseus” (Katz, 6). As Katz explains, Odysseus’ travels are interwoven with his lust for home and his desire to be with his wife again. As well, her identity becomes a parallel to Odysseus’ identity through her use of polutropus (tricks and turns). She proves, by the end of the poem, that she is the perfect match for Odysseus as both of them share the same skills with rhetoric and language to get what they want. Their like-mindedness is evident during the recognition scene between the two. Penelope tests Odysseus’ knowledge of their marital bed - before blindly trusting his claim of identity - by asking the slaves to move their immovable bed: “[putting] her husband to the proof-but Odysseus/ blazed in fury, lashed out at his loyal wife” (Homer, 23.203-204). In his angry response to Penelope’s test, Odysseus proves his identity to his wife as he explains why the bed cannot move. When she hears their familiar story of the creation of their bed, - which only the two and a slave know about - Penelope submits to her long-lost husband in an emotional reunion. Her caution, before accepting Odysseus’ claim, shows the wary protectionism stance that she had to adopt while her husband was gone so she could protect the kingdom from the suitors.
Crying, the emotion brought upon when life seems to be at its worst. Sadness, failure, anxiety, devastation, all mechanisms that can make wet tears roll down your face. Especially with men, crying is seen as an absolute weakness. Not being able to hide your emotion can be seen as an more than embarrassing feature. In the Odyssey by Homer it seems that only men are the ones that sob and wail. Most commonly, Odysseus and Telemachus cry when they see that life is at its very worst. Odysseus cries more often though, and being the father and “manly” figure in his family it’s an interesting trait that Homer decided to give him. Although crying, the ultimate negative emotion can usually only lead to negative breakdowns; Odysseus’ wails empower him to defeat all imminent adversaries.
During the course of history, the world has seen many fine works of literature like Homer’s epic, Odyssey. This book is a standard against which to compare all literary novels. The symbolism permeates the pages drawing the reader into the intriguing plot that includes twists within the central theme. Also, the author intelligently uses imagery and diction painting dramatic images in the reader's mind - building upon major the themes.
In Homer's epic, The Odyssey, Odysseus is an epic hero with an epic wife, Penelope. Penelope is also the Queen of Ithaca, a vital role indeed. Penelope's love and devotion towards Odysseus is proven when she waits nineteen years for her husband to return from the wine dark sea, rather than losing faith and marrying another man. Penelope's character is strong and solid, and her personality remains consistent throughout Homer's Odyssey.
Penelope acts as the damsel in distress. She is unable to keep the suitors away from her house because she is a woman, and that makes her vulnerable. She also provides Odysseus with a reason to return home because she is his wife. She has no choice but to pick one of the suitors, and soon. Penelope says she is “wasted with longing for Odysseus, while here they press for marriage”(1004). She still loves her husband, which gives him hope that he will be accepted once he makes his return, and gives him a reason to continue trying. She also cannot turn the suitors away, preventing her from being able to protect herself. This once again proves that, as the damsel in distress, Penelope needs Odysseus for protection.
After twenty years of her husband missing she never gave in to the numerous suitors who tried to have her for themselves. She had no husband to rule the palace so she did it by herself. Not only did she rule the palace by herself, she also weaved and said that she would marry when she was done but every night she would undo her work, “she set up a great loom in her palace, and set to weaving a web of threads long and fine. Then she said to us: "Young men, my suitors now that the great Odysseus has perished, wait, though you are eager to marry me, until I finish this web, so that my weaving will not be useless and wasted… Thereafter in the daytime she would weave at her great loom, but in the night she would have torches set by, and undo it. So for three years she was secret in her design” (page 96). Most women in the shoes of Penelope would have felt obligated to be in a relationship with one of the suitors. Penelope on the other hand was able to ward off the suitors for an entire twenty years by doing whatever she could, such as undoing her weaving work at night. Along with this she was also the motivation for Odysseus to return home. For this reason Penelope serves as an independent and powerful woman who treats men in uncommon ways unlike many women during this time
Helen puts men under the influence and rejoins the group as if she has done nothing to change them. She forces the men’s hands all for the hero of the moment, Telemachus. Penelope is the “widow” of Odysseus. After his “death”, suitors fill the halls of her palace in hopes of becoming her husband and ultimately the new king of Ithaca. Penelope does not want to remarry because she still has a great love for Odysseus.
To begin, Penelope thinks of Odysseus and immediately lets her emotions out: “Odysseus—if he could return to tend my life / the renown I had would only grow in glory. / Now my life is torment … / look at the griefs some god has loosed against me!” (The Odyssey, 18.285-288). Furthermore, Homer expresses Penelope’s sadness by making her sink “on her well-built chamber’s floor” and through her “sobbing uncontrollably” (The Odyssey, 4.810-813). Clearly in Penelope’s mind, Odysseus’ absence is not something she can easily forget. Homer introduces Penelope as a very caring and devoted wife.
Penelope, just as Odysseus, portrayed the great human trait of patience. She did what it took to fend off the suitors with hope that her husband would come back for her. Penelope didn’t give up hope because she felt in heart that Odysseus would come
Homer’s epic poem The Odyssey follows Odysseus on his long journey home. The Epic also includes the stories of Odysseus’ family left behind: the travels of his son, Telemachus, and how plenty, of what we would now call “home wreckers”, suitors pressured his wife, Penelope, into marrying one of them. The characters are beautifully crafted and the story is truly epic. All the elements presented can bring in any reader from any century, the Cyclops, the Gods, the trickery of Penelope, and the disguises of Odysseus, are all legendary literary hooks . There are many things to learn—about writing, about the world around us, the world ahead of us, and the past behind us—from The Odyssey. (26) It is undeniably evident that this ancient text has
After Odysseus becomes enraged when Penelope asks the maid to make his bed outside, she realizes that he knows the secret that only Odysseus and her share. She embraces him and praises his homecoming. Once again, Penelope is wise and patient in her decision-making. The suitors pursued her, overtook her home and aggressively pushed her to remarry as she was supposed to. If Penelope would have given in, The Odyssey would not have ended with Odysseus returning to a loyal home. Through cunning, independence and loyalty, Penelope is able to create a positive image as a woman. Chaucer’s Wife of Bath has similar independence and cunning, but she makes her name as a domineering lady that chooses who she wants, and when she wants them.
Penelope spends her days in the palace waiting for the husband who left Ithaca to fight in Troy for twenty years. She is a very loving wife and loyal to her husband.