Homer Essay

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    whipping all the gales from every quarter, shrouding over in thunderheads the earth and the sea at once – and night swept down from the sky – East and South winds clashed and the raging West and North, sprung from the heavens, roiled heaving breakers up (Homer 5:321-326). • What happens next? How many days has Odysseus been at sea? Poseidon fills with anger and wants Odysseus to suffer. Poseidon conjures up another

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    In the novel "The Odyssey", the author Homer describes an outcry against death; whereas in the Iliad death is portrayed as an accomplishment., Both were in the times that is also known as Before Common Era, or " BCE". It is known that Iliad begins 10 years before the great "Seige of Troy" and eventually the odyssey had begun a couple years after that(Classical Lit). When Homer had written these novels it is clear that they have numerous lines, and Homer had written both. In the novel "The Iliad"

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    The epic poem, “The Iliad,” written by the Greek poet Homer, contains many occurrences of the psychologist Freud’s approach of the three systems of Superego, Id, and Ego. Superego, the little angel on one’s shoulder, is considered to be the voice of our moral compass (conscience) that speaks from the unconscious mind on the difference between real and ideal situations. It strives for perfection with tracking what we ought to behave like. Id, opposite to Superego, is the little devil on the other

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    In everyone’s life, there is a woman who is very clever and smart. In The Odyssey, written by Homer, women are portrayed in many different ways. The prominent portrayal of women is that women can often be manipulative. Three women in The Odyssey that show this trait include Penelopeia, Calypso, and The Sirens. In The Odyssey, Penelopeia influences the men by a lie. In the novel, Penelope says, “ ‘Young men who seek my hand, now that Odysseus is dead I know you are in hurry of marriage; but

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    from following religion and fear of eternal backlash, pious mortal characters experience an indirect relationship in heeding commands of the Gods and the level of free will–the condition of acting without fate or necessity. Throughout The Odyssey, Homer brings light to the value of piety in Ancient Greece. In good faith, Gods often reward those who are religious, especially heroes. Pious individuals are revered both by their peer mortals and the Gods, causing the emergence of a feedback loop that

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    Instructions In Books 1-16 (and throughout the text), Homer goes to great lengths to present Achilles as an epic hero. In literature, an epic hero is defined as a brave protagonist in an epic (long) poem. Think of a modern day hero. Examples of modern day heroes vary according to what you personally define as heroic. Write 3-5 paragraphs (with 5-7 sentences in each paragraph) in which you compare your modern day hero with the qualities that Homer presents about Achilles.

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    exactly how Homer describes is unlikely, because there is evidence

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    author Homer uses diction to create a tragic and mournful tone. Homer uses a tragic toene in many parts of the Odyssey, especially in book nine, also known as the Cyclops. In the Cyclops, Odysseus and his crew sail to the cyclops island where they eventually have to fight the cyclops Polyphemus. In the quote, “... in one stride he clutched at my companions and caught two in his hands like squirming puppies to beat their brains out, spattering the floor.” (Lines 234-235, The Odyssey). Homer uses the

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    Mortality In The Odyssey

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    In his stories of the Iliad and the Odyssey, Homer alludes to cherished and rewarded values of time and mortality, a concept that the gods often do not consider due to their divine nature and an advantage that mortals have as means for experiencing purer pleasure. Beginning with the Iliad after Athena warns Achilles to listen and have patience with Agamemnon (Iliad, 7), the dialog between Achilles and his mother particularly stands out with his exclamation, "since you bore me for a short life only

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    physical ability during this trial is, he pulls his men away from the addicting lotus flowers. "But I brought them back, back to the hollow ships and streaming tears I forced them" (Homer 214). Also, he has the mental ability to stay away from the lotus flowers. "Quick, no time to lose, embark in the railing ships" (Homer 214). In this trial Odysseus shows resistance, and power to stay away. The trial of The Lotus Eaters shows Odysseus' abilities as a hero.

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