Saturday, April 11, 2020
Odyssey Essays (1433 words) - Greek Mythology, Epic Cycle
  Odyssey  When one ponders the Greek mythology and literature, powerful images invariably  come to mind. One relives the heroes' struggles against innumerable odds,  their battles against magical monsters, and the gods' periodic intervention in  mortal affairs. Yet, a common and often essential portion of a heroic epic is  the hero's consultation with an oracle or divinity. This prophecy is usually  critical to the plot line, and also to the well being of the main characters.    Could Priam have survived in the Achaean camp if not at the gods' instruction  (200-201)? Could the Argos have run the gauntlet of the Prowling Rocks if not  for the gods' advice of using a sacrificial bird (349). Moreover, prophecy can  be negative as well as positive. Achilles was prophesied to die gloriously in  battle if he chose his life's way as a warrior. Oedipus was exiled and  condemned by his own words, after he slew his sire and wed his mother. This type  of prophesy can blind even the gods themselves; Chronos was fated to be defeated  and his throne stolen by his son. Demeter loses Persephone periodically every  year because her daughter ate Hades' pomegranates. Prophecy plays an important  role in the whole of Greek folklore. Something this ever-present bears further  examination. In The Odyssey, prophecy in its myriad forms affects nearly every  aspect of the epic. Prophecies are seen in the forms of omens, signs, strict  prediction of the future, divine condemnation, and divine instruction. Though  conceptually these forms are hard to distinguish, they are clearly separate in  the Odyssey. Moreover, prophecies can be interpreted not only on the "plot  device" level, but also on the level of characterization. Whether a  character accepts or denies the gods' prophecies tells the reader something  about the character himself. Omens are brief prophecies intimately connected to  the action at hand, which must be interpreted in terms of that action.    Halitherses comments on the eagle attack after Telemakhos condemns the suitors  (463-464); he correctly interests it to mean that if the suitors keep feeding  off Odysseus's possessions they will be destroyed. Yet the suitors ignore the  omen, inviting their eventual destruction. This haughty treatment of a divine  omen is a justification for their deaths. When Penelope says if Odysseus had  returned he would, with his son, surely slay the suitors, Telemakhos let loose a  great sneeze (429). This omen reinforces the previous one, and simultaneously  prepares the reader for the carnage to follow. However, not all omens are  effective. In the case of Telemakhos we see many bird omens signaling for him to  do something about the suitors. Whether it was his immaturity to interpret the  bird omens or blind arrogance Telemakhos does not act on them. In fact, it's  not until Athena comes to him that he thinks to take action against the suitors  in his house. Signs are similar to omens, but differ in one crucial aspect; the  prophesee is looking for a specific omen in order to decide whether he should or  should not take some action. There is only one good example of a sign in the    Odyssey; on page 460, Odysseus asks Zeus for two divine signs to decide if it is  time to slay the suitors. Zeus answers with a thunderclap from a cloudless sky  and allows Odysseus to overhear a maid's prayer for vengeance. Because of  these signs, Odysseus begins his plan to slay the suitors. Later on, with a  thunderclap Zeus actually signals for the precise time to strike. Signs are  helpful devices; they allow not only a rationalization for when an event occurs  but also shows the approval of the gods on such an action. Not only are signs  and omens plentiful in the Odyssey, but also the type one usually associates  with prophesying, strict prediction of the future, abounds as well. Penelope  states that she will marry the man who can string Odysseus's bow and perform  his famous feat (469). Since Odysseus is the only one to do so, the prophecy is  fulfilled. This "prophesy" is just a statement of the future; it  contains no judgmental quality whatsoever. Theoklymenos's prophesies to    Penelope that Odysseus is at hand on the island and plotting vengeance on the  suitors (417) This, of course, is already true, so the prophecy is technically  true as well. However, it makes no judgement on the rightness or wrongness of  either Odysseus's or the suitors' position. Teiresias shade's speech to    Odysseus (333) is a strictly objective foretelling, but nevertheless crucial to  the plot and character development. He states that Odysseus will land on    Thrinakia; that    
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