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Personification In The Odyssey

Decent Essays

The author of the book, The Single Woman: Life, Love, and a Dash of Sass, once wrote “Sometimes when you lose your way, you find yourself.”(Hale, Mandy) “The Odyssey” is an epic poem written by Homer depicting the adventures of a man named Odysseus who is traveling back to his home of Ithaka. The poem “The Journey” by Mary Oliver features a girl who finally realizes her purpose then journeys out into the world. Personification in each of the poems portrays how people undertake journeys to pursue goals based on greed but instead find themselves during the journey and come to realize that their original purpose was trivial. Odysseus discovers more about himself through his self control, and lack thereof. While overall Odysseus’ goal to make …show more content…

While being taunted by the suitors Odysseus kept his composure, the best choice for protecting his family. Odysseus also sees some of the servants sneak off to have sex with the suitors. He “was stirred by this, and much he pondered in the division of mind and spirit, whether to spring on them and kill each one, or rather to let them lie this one more time with the insolent suitors, for the last and latest time; but the heart was growling within him".(homer,20,9-13) The personification of his growling heart depicts how very angry Odysseus is. He could have unveiled himself then and attempted to kill the suitors and punish them, as well as prove his strength. Instead he waits for a better moment so that he does not risk the lives of his son and wife only to demonstrate his superiority, a mistake he made previously when calling out his name to the cyclops. Odysseus also realizes more about himself while on the journey. He makes the realization that he is no god, only a mere mortal whose imperfect decisions can often put other people at risk. Odysseus and his crew had been trapped by the cyclops due to his own …show more content…

The character in “The Journey” faces doubt and disbelief from the people in her life while she fights to leave. This particularly takes place at the beginning of her voyage after she finally realizes that she must go. “The whole house began to tremble”(Oliver,5). Emotion is given to the house through personification which depicts how the narrator is feeling. She is being held back and frightened to go off alone in fear of abandoning the voices that ask for her help. “You felt the old tug at your ankles. Mend my life! Each voice cried.”(Oliver,9) By giving up her original goals which put others needs before her own and held her back, she can now get in touch with herself. During her journey, “there was a new voice, which was slowly recognized as [her] own”(Oliver,27). By going off on her own and forgetting the distractions and doubts of her past the narrator was able to get in touch with herself and learned who she is as a person. The character’s journey begins with her overcoming the doubt that she receives but she can finally be released of those pressures and discover herself when she leaves behind the voices to find her

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