Odyssey Final Essay
Odyssey Final Essay
Odyssey Final Essay
Section 9G
1/13/12
help him, he spurns the words of the goddess, Athena, in the form of Mentor:
Mentor has mouthed some empty boasts and flitted off/ just
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four are left to fight at their front doors. (22.261-62). They still believe that
the gods favor them no matter what, however they have not expressed time,
and therefore they will get their dues. The suitors just do not have the metis
to see that Mentor is a god in disguise, and yet they still attack on and on.
Return to thesisconnect these points together
The suitors lack one of the most important values in ancient Greek
culture: xenia. The suitors here nearly directly contrast with the lowly
servants in The Odyssey. The swineherd and cowherd, Eumaeus and
Philoteus respectively, obey the guidelines of xenia, and welcome and feed
and guests, even if they are as dirty and suspicious-looking as Odysseus.
They do this because they know that when one receives a traveler in their
home, it is perfectly likely that the said traveler is a god. If they are bad
hosts to a god, their lives will end sooner, and much more painfully. That is
why they are good hosts. However, the suitors like to do the opposite. They
tend to disrespect whomever they like, and take the consequences, as they
did with Odysseus. The suitors disrespect Odysseus, as he comes in to his
own house, and joke about his guest gift: grabbing an oxhoof out of a
basket where it lay, / with a brawny hand he flung it straight at the king
coming soon. (2.200-01). Their deep-seated malice negates any good arte,
and makes Odysseus, Telemachus, and the rest of the heroes further good
Greek citizens in comparison, serving the rhapsodes purpose. Those darn
suitors.
Works Cited
Homer. The Odyssey. New York: Penguin Classics, 1996.