Because Ulysses angered the Gods, mainly Poseidon, he was told he would never return home to his loving wife Penelope and his homeland of Ithaca. Throughout the poem, many women play very important roles that make this story what it is, an epic journey. If even one of these women were not there it would have altered the whole story greatly. From start to finish Penelope is always on Ulysses mind and in his heart.
Penelope is the loving and always faithful wife of Ulysses. She is left at home while Ulysses goes off to war in Troy. She vows the remain loyal and faithful until his return or until their son is a full grown man. To do this becomes very hard for her as suitors show up believing Ulysses is dead. They try everything to get her to
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They mad him lose track of time and making the journey take ten years. Circe used her magic to turn his men into the animals they acted like. She could make herself look like his beloved wife and offered Uylesses to stay there with her. However, he managed to trick her into turning his men human again and left after a short period of time passed. He then lost his men to unfortunate ends. He was adrift and alone.
Rescued basically from the sea defying Posiden came Calypso. She gave him love and tricked him into thinking he was on her island for only a few days not years. She offered him herself as well as never would he age if he stayed. After like seven years he managed to leave and continued on his way home to his beloved wife.
All these women were important to the Odyssey. Without any one of them, things could have been different. Ulysses could have not had Athens protection and never survived the battle in Troy or been changed into an old man walking into a trap. Without Circe, he may not have fought so hard to get back to his wife. Without Calypso, the sea may have claimed his life. Finally, without Penelope he may not have come home he could have stayed and lived forever on an island with a nymph forever rather than being immortalized as a hero who defied all odds to return to his one true love HIS
Penelope was left behind when Odysseus left for the trojan war, but he didn’t come back after that. Penelope had to take care of their son, their estate, and their servants for 20 years. On top of all of that she had suitors demanding her attention. In all of this she stayed strong and independent, and despite the pressure of the suitors she stayed loyal to Odysseus, even when she didn’t even know if he was alive or not. Penelope’s character is also very clever and sly. She told the suitors that she would remarry after she finishes her weaving project, but each night she undoes everything she did that day. When the suitors find out about it they demand she choose someone to remarry. Penelope uses her intelligence and slyness again as she tells them whoever wins an archery contest using Odysseus bow, which only he could use, she would marry. Penelope is also very kind, which we see when she interacts with the servants and her son. Penelope is a very well portrayed character and she is needed in the story to be someone Odysseus could always be someone to come back
The cultural role of women in the Odyssey In Homer’s Odyssey the cultural relevance of a preferred woman’s role in society generally stands out in the roles of the female characters of Athena and Penelope simultaneously rejecting the negatively viewed characteristics of Calypso and Circe. The entire structure of Ancient Greek culture boasts its men in more superior roles than that of women. Greek society was largely built upon an idea that good women were only around to faithfully serve and support their husband and that it was very important not to stray from those essential traits. Athena is a very involved character from the beginning of the book when she wants to help Odysseus get back home to Ithaca. However, as fate would put it
Penelope and Helen are the real human women who can steal men's hearts with their own feminine ways and they never let their man go. Helen stole the heart of Paris and later married Menelaus-the love that Paris had for Helen began the long Trojan War. Even with her shaded past, Helen is able to live her life as a proper adjusted middle-class matron. Penelope and Odysseus were only together for a few years before he was sent off to war and, while he was gone for over twenty years, his love for her lasted. Penelope is the symbol of marital fidelity, of trust, honor and devotion.
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.
Women play an influential role in The Odyssey. Women appear throughout the story, as goddesses, wives, princesses, or servants. The nymph Calypso enslaves Odysseus for many years. Odysseus desires to reach home and his wife Penelope. It is the goddess Athena who sets the action of The Odyssey rolling; she also guides and orchestrates everything to Odysseus’ good. Women in The Odyssey are divided into two classes: seductresses and helpmeets. By doing so, Homer demonstrates that women have the power to either hinder of help men. Only one woman is able to successfully combine elements of both classes: Penelope. She serves as a role model of virtue and craftiness. All the other women are compared to and contrasted with Penelope.
While mourning for her husband (which the reader can only assume is sincere) Penelope is also leading on these suitors in order to gain material objects. She promises that she will marry one of them once she finishes her sewing her wedding veil, but each night she destroys the previous night’s work so that the task will never be accomplished. Even if she is using this ruse to attain riches, the fact remains that she is still acting as a seductress. She is very much like a Siren, typical of those present in Book XI, always singing out to encourage men but not intending to fulfill any promise of love or sex. Penelope presents both sides of the two distinct divisions of women characters in the text. Although the Sirens and Circe represent the ultimate seductress, it is important to notice the way the story of Agamemnon and Clymenestra reappears in the text. This is a legend told about how the strong female character Clymenestra was, much like Penelope, dogged by suitors in her husband’s absence, the only difference being that Clymenestra gives over the temptation of one suitor in particular and she and this new lover plot to kill Agamemnon upon his glorious return. The description of Clymenestra almost seems to echo Penelope’s situation as Ulysses is told the story. “At first she would have
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.
In direct contrast with the seductress is the good hostess or wife. Penelope, Odysseus' wife, is the most important of these characters. She is the image of steadfastness, waiting and hoping for years for Odysseus'return. Even the intimidating suitors do not bend her from her constancy. Along with Penelope is Eurykleia who matches
The Odyssey includes many women characters, differing from strong, powerful women to women that don’t have a meaningful role in the story. Some women in the story include Penelope, Athena, and Leucothea. These women play a role in Odysseus’s journey and life.
This juxtaposition shows the effects of faithfulness to a husband, and displays how fidelity to the husband can bring great benefits and unity to the family, while infidelity will bring many negative consequences. The juxtaposition between Penelope and Helen is used to teach Greek woman reasons on why to be loyal to the husband. Penelope lastly serves a role in inspiring Odysseus as well, in addition to her role of portraying the ideal Greek woman. Odysseus uses Penelope as a reason to continue repeatedly throughout the journey and in times of hardship, such as when leaving Calypso, when he mentions “My quiet Penelope-how well I know-/would seem a shade before your majesty,/ death and old age being unknown to you,/while
Finally, out of the three women Odysseus meets in his journey, his wife Penelope is the most powerful of them all after her display of bravery and risk-taking. Shortly before Odysseus arrives at his old home on Ithaca, the story recites this, “[Penelope is speaking] My lords, hear me: suitors indeed... You found no justification for yourselves---none except your lust to marry me...” (1109).
There were far more restrictions placed on the women of the ancient world than on the men. To many, this may appear to be an obvious fact. However, the comparison of women to men in the Odyssey does not show such a discrepancy. The women created by Homer had certain characteristics that set them apart from ordinary women. Penelope was a woman who did not give in to the demands of her surroundings. She suffered throughout the twenty year absence of her husband, Odysseus. She maintained her dignity and her chastity through her refusal of the hoards of suitors that flocked to her home. Penelope represents the ideal woman for balancing her refusals of marriage and the preservation of her respect. When ready to address her suitors, Eurymachus, a suitor himself, speaks out from the crowd in praise of Penelope. He states, "Ah, daughter of Icarius, wise Penelope . . . You surpass all women in build and beauty, refined and steady mind" (18. 276,280). The acts of Penelope would not have been allowed of an ordinary woman of those times. Her loyalty to Odysseus was unflagging and quite contrary to Clytaemestra's loyalty, another character in the Odyssey, though she is never mentioned by name.
Penelope is portrayed as a strong woman because she stays homebound for 20 years and raises her child by herself. She is not only strong, but also faithful and hopeful. She is faithful to Odysseus
In the text, Homer arranges and describes women of different statuses or prestige. He gives us the depictions of the goddesses, a wife, and last servants. Each of these three are an important pieces of the story of The Odyssey and helps understand what women were like in ancient Greek times. As we have seen in our own cultures women prominently fall into low categories of prestige such as that of servants. They are expected to simply perform service to the suitors and to withstand their rudeness and disrespect.
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.