Upload
others
View
0
Download
0
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
COLEGIO VILLA RICA
HIGH SCHOOL
This anthology belongs to _______________________________________
2
Contents
Forms of Literature ................................................................................................................................. 3
Short Stories ....................................................................................................................................... 4
Folk Literature .................................................................................................................................... 7
Narrative Genre .................................................................................................................................. 8
Greek Myths ......................................................................................................................................... 12
The Story of Arachne ....................................................................................................................... 12
The Myth of Prometheus .................................................................................................................. 14
The Myth of Daedalus & Icarus ....................................................................................................... 16
The Myth of Orpheus ....................................................................................................................... 20
Eris and the Apple of Discord .......................................................................................................... 23
The Iliad and The Odyssey ................................................................................................................... 24
The Iliad ........................................................................................................................................... 28
The Odyssey ...................................................................................................................................... 41
Short Stories ......................................................................................................................................... 64
The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe.......................................................................................... 64
The Monkey's Paw by W.W. Jacobs ................................................................................................. 68
3
Forms of Literature
Short Story • Nonfiction • Drama • Poetry • Folk Literature
Just as there are different styles of music, such as classical or rock, so too are there different forms of
literature. Each is called a genre and has its own distinct characteristics. These pages present a brief
explanation and an example of each genre. They will help you understand and appreciate the
literature when you read these various works in their entirety.
Short Story
A short story is a brief work of fiction. In most short stories, one main character faces a conflict that
is resolved in the plot. In addition, a short story usually conveys a theme, or message about life. Good
craftsmanship goes into the writing of a good story, which must accomplish its purpose in relatively
few words.
What do you learn about a character's conflict in this story's opening?
She was one of those pretty, charming young women who are born, as if by an error of Fate, into a
petty official's family. She had no dowry, no hopes, not the slightest chance of being appreciated,
understood, loved, and married by a rich and distinguished man; so she slipped into marriage with a
minor civil servant at the Ministry of Education. From “THE NECKLACE”, Guy de Maupassant.
Nonfiction
Nonfiction is writing that tells about real people, places, objects, events, and ideas. Many of the
nonfiction articles in this book are either essays or biographical or autobiographical sketches. All
discuss the real world as opposed to an imaginary one. The author of a nonfiction article may wish to
convey and explain information, convince readers to accept a particular idea or opinion, or simply
entertain and amuse readers.
Based on its opening, what do you sense is the author's purpose in this nonfiction article?
The essence of childhood, of course, is play, which my friends and 1 did endlessly on streets that we
reluctantly shared with traffic. As a daring receiver in touch football, 1 spent many happy years
running up and down those asphalt fields, hoping that a football would hit me before a Chevrolet did. From “GO DEEP TO THE SEWER”, Bill Cosby.
Drama
Drama is written to be performed by actors. The script is made up of dialogue and monologue-the
words the actors say-and stage directions, which comment on how and where the action occurs.
4
How does the appearance of this dramatic text differ from the appearance of a short story?
HORACE. That's a pretty piece.
MARY CATHERINE. Yes, it is.
[A pause. They dance again. HORACE stops.]
HORACE. I'm ready to go if you are, Mary Catherine.
MARY CATHERINE. I'm ready. [They start out.] Scared? From “THE DANCERS”, Horton Foote.
Poetry
Poetry is literature that appears in verse form. It often has a regular rhythm and, sometimes, a rhyme
scheme. Some poems tell a story, while other poems present a single image or express a single
emotion or thought. Most poems use concise, musical, and emotionally charged language to convey
an idea.
How do the lines of poetry below differ in form from the prose paragraphs on the facing page?
Some say the world will end in fire,
Some say in ice.
From what I've tasted of desire
I hold with those who favor fire. From “FIRE AND ICE”, Robert Frost.
Folk Literature
Folk literature is the unwritten lore of a specific people or culture, passed down through the
generations by word of mouth until, at some point, it is put into writing. Folk literature includes
myths, folk tales, fairy tales, legends, and fables. Such stories express the hopes, fears, loves, dreams,
and values of the people who tell them and pass them on.
What does the beginning of this myth indicate about the values of people in ancient Greece?
King Acrisius of Argos had only one child, a daughter, Danaé, She was beautiful above all the other
women of the land, but this was small comfort to the King for not having a son. From “PERSEUS”, Edith Hamilton.
Short Stories
Plot • Characters • Setting • Point of View • Theme
Short stories invite you to travel to fictional places, meet interesting and unusual people, and get
involved with the problems they face. This book presents a variety of short stories. No two are
5
exactly the same, although all the stories share certain characteristics and follow a prescribed
structure.
Plot
The plot of a short story is its sequence of events. It involves both characters and a problem, or
conflict. The plot begins with an exposition that introduces the characters, setting, and basic story.
The action rises as characters try to resolve the problem. Tension increases as events lead to a climax,
or high point of interest or suspense. The climax is followed by falling action, leading to the
resolution of the conflict.
Which plot details do you learn from the opening sentence of this short story?
I had called upon my friend, Mr. Sherlock Holmes, one day in the autumn of last year and found him
in I deep conversation with a very stout, florid-faced, elderly gentleman with fiery red hair. From “THE RED-HEADED LEAGUE”, Sir Arthur Conan Doyle.
Characters
The characters in a short story are the people or animals who participate in the action. Writers can
develop characters in a variety of ways. Details about characters are revealed through their physical
description and their words and actions. In addition, writers reveal characters through their interaction
with other characters in the story.
What do the details in the following passage tell you about Nat's character?
Nat Hocken, because of a wartime disability, had a pension and did not work full-time at the farm. He
worked three days a week, and they gave him the lighter jobs: hedging, thatching, repairs to the farm
buildings.
Although he was married, with children, his was a solitary disposition; he liked best to work alone. It
pleased him when he was given a bank to build up, or a gate to mend at the far end of the peninsula,
where the sea surrounded the farmland on either side. Then, at midday, he would pause and eat the
pasty that his wife had baked for him, and, sitting on the cliff's edge, watch the birds. From “THE BIRDS”, Daphne Du Maurier.
Exposition Resolution
6
Setting
The setting of a story is the time and place of the action. Time can include not only the historical
period-past, present, or future- but also a specific year, season, or time of day. Place may involve not
only the geographical place-a region, country, state, or town-but also the social, economic, or cultural
environment.
In some stories, setting serves as a decorative but nonessential background. In contrast, the setting of
other stories may drive the action by providing a problem that the characters must face and overcome.
Which details in this passage help you to identify the setting of the story?
I belong in Cleveland, Ohio. One winter's night, two years ago, I reached home just after dark, in a
driving snowstorm, and the first thing I heard when I entered the house was that my dearest boyhood
friend and schoolmate, John B. Hackett, had died the day before, and that his last utterance had been
a desire that I would take his remains home to his poor old father and mother in Wisconsin. I was
gready shocked and grieved, but there was no time to waste in emotions; I must start at once.
From “THE INVALID'S STORY”, Mark Twain.
Point of View
The point of view in a story is the vantage point from which the story is told. In first-person narration,
the storyteller is a character in the action. In third-person narration, the story- teller reports events,
taking no direct part in the action.
Which clues in this sentence indicate the point of view of this short story?
I was six when my mother taught me the art of invisible strength. From “RULES OF THE GAME”, Amy Tan. Theme
The theme of a short story is the central message or insight into life revealed through the work. In
some stories, the theme may be stated directly. In most stories, however, the theme is only implied.
You must use the story's events to help you draw conclusions about its theme.
Based on the following passage, what might be the theme of this story?
He also felt the warmth of the earth. He sensed he was inside someone. Then he understood what Don
Trine was doing. He was not crazy; he simply liked to feel the earth when it was sleeping. From “THE HARVEST”, Tomás Rivera.
7
Folk Literature
Myth • Epic
Not all stories were written down when they were first told. Folk literature comes from generations of
peoples or cultures that passed down their favorite tales orally before ever recording them. Folk
literature includes myths, folk tales, tall tales, and epics. Like a favorite family recipe, folk literature
holds special enjoyment for all those who know it and pass it on.
Myth
A myth is a fictional tale that explains the actions of gods or the causes of natural phenomena. It
involves supernatural elements and has little historical truth to it. Among the most familiar myths
today are those of the ancient Greeks and Romans.
Myths have several purposes. They serve as a cultural history, explaining natural phenomena such as
oceans and mountains. They also reinforce a culture's values. Finally, they are a source of
entertainment.
Which details in this passage indicate that it is from a myth?
King Acrisius of Argos had only one child, a daughter, Danaé. She was beautiful above all the other
women of the land, but this was small comfort to the King for not having a son. He journeyed to
Delphi to ask the god if there was any hope that someday he would be the father of a boy. The
priestess told him no, and added what was far worse: that his daughter would have a son who would
kill him. From “PERSEUS”, Edith Hamilton.
Epic
An epic is a long narrative poem about the deeds of gods or heroes in war or travel. An epic is written
in ornate, poetic language. It incorporates myth, legend, and history and often includes the
intervention of the gods in human affairs.
In an epic, the poet begins by announcing the subject and asking a Muse, one of the nine goddesses of
the arts, literature, and sciences, to help. Homer's epic Odyssey tells the story of the Greek hero
Odysseus, the king of Ithaca.
Which characteristics of an epic do you find in this opening verse of Homer's Odyssey?
Sing in me, Muse, and through me tell the story of that man skilled in the ways of contending, the
wanderer, harried for years on end, after he plundered the stronghold of the proud height of Troy. From “THE ODYSSEY”, Homer.
8
Narrative Genre
A narrative or story is a construct created in a constructive
format (written, spoken, poetry, prose, images, song, theater or
dance) that describes a sequence of fictional or non-fictional
events. It derives from the Latin verb narrare, which means "to
recount" and is related to the adjective gnarus, meaning
"knowing" or "skilled". The word "story" may be used as a
synonym of "narrative", but can also be used to refer to the
sequence of events described in a narrative. A narrative can also
be told by a character within a larger narrative. An important part
of narration is the narrative mode.
Along with exposition, argumentation and description, narration,
broadly defined, is one of four rhetorical modes of discourse.
More narrowly defined, it is the fiction-writing mode whereby
the narrator communicates directly to the reader.
Stories are an important aspect of culture. Many works of art, and most works of literature, tell
stories; indeed, most of the humanities involve stories.
Stories are of ancient origin, existing in ancient Egyptian, ancient Greek, Chinese and Indian culture.
Stories are also a ubiquitous component of human communication, used as parables and examples to
illustrate points. Storytelling was probably one of the earliest forms of entertainment.
For general purposes in semiotics and literary theory, a "narrative" is a story or part of a story. It may
be spoken, written or imagined, and it will have one or more points of view representing some or all
of the participants or observers. In stories told verbally, there is a person telling the story, a narrator
whom the audience can see and/or hear, and who adds layers of meaning to the text non-verbally. The
narrator also has the opportunity to monitor the audience's response to the story and modify the
manner of the telling to clarify content or enhance listener interest. This is distinguishable from the
written form in which the author must gauge the readers' likely reactions when they are decoding the
text and make a final choice of words in the hope of achieving the desired response.
In written forms, the reader hears the narrator's voice both through the choice of content and the style
— the author can encode voices for different emotions and situations, and the voices can be either
overt or covert —, and through clues that reveal the narrator's beliefs, values, and ideological stances,
as well as the author's attitude towards people, events and things. It is customary to distinguish a first-
person from a third-person narrative: Gérard Genette uses the terms intradiegetic and extradiegetic
narrative respectively. An intradiegetic narrator describes his or her personal and subjective
experiences as a character in the story. Such a narrator cannot know anything more about what goes
on in the minds of any of the other characters than is revealed through their actions, whereas an
extradiegetic narrator describes the experiences of the characters who appear in the story and, if the
story's events are seen through the eyes of a third-person internal focalizer, this is termed a figural
narrative. In some stories, the author may be overtly omniscient, and both employ multiple points of
view and comment directly on events as they occur.
9
Tzvetan Todorov (1969) coined the term "narratology" for the structuralist analysis of any given
narrative into its constituent parts to determine their function(s) and relationships. For these purposes,
the story is what is narrated as usually a chronological sequence of themes, motives and plot lines;
hence, the plot represents the logical and causal structure of a story, explaining why its events occur.
The term discourse is used to describe the stylistic choices that determine how the narrative text or
performance finally appears to the audience. One of the stylistic decisions may be to present events in
non-chronological order, using flashbacks, for example, to reveal motivations at a dramatic moment.
Myths, legends, epic poems, fables, short stories and novels are part of the narrative genre, because
you will find a story, told by a narrator and lived by characters.
Narrative Perspective
The Basic Modes of Narration
Since grammar classifies pronouns generally into three persons (1st: I, we; 2nd: you; 3rd: he, she, it,
they), narration also has three basic modes. Each mode of narration — in the first, second, or third
person — has unique characteristics that distinguish it from the other modes and determine what can
and cannot be accomplished when narrating in that mode.
Throughout the history of Western literature, narration in the first or third person has predominated
while the second person has remained, for the most part, a rare and experimental form.
Linguists use a simple diagram to illustrate the elements of what they call a “speech act,” that is, a
spoken utterance or written words:
Addressor —>
Code
|
Message
—> Addressee
The addressor is the speaker or writer.
The code is the spoken or written words
The message is the meaning of the words as encoded by the addressor and decoded by the addressee.
The addressee is the listener or reader.
In a speech act, any one of these elements can be made paramount. Emphasis can be placed:
On the addressor, “I made that!”
On the addressee, such as in the vocative mode, “You told me.”
On the message, such as the word “STOP” in a stop sign,
Or on the code itself, such as in poetry.
Types of narrative
1. Protagonist narrative – The story is told by the protagonist of the story. This narrator uses the first
person point of view.
2. Witness narrative – A character of the story tells it, but he/she is not the main character. This is a
narrator in the first person point of view telling the story of somebody else.
3. Limited or objective narrative – This is a narrator in the third person point of view who does not
know everything that is happening in the story. This narrator will tell the story as he/she learns it.
10
4. Omniscient narrative – This is the narrator that knows everything in the story, events, thoughts,
ideas, past, present and future. The omniscient narrator will tell the story from the third person point
of view.
5. Second person narrative – This is a narrative voice that invites the reader to put themselves in the
place of the characters in a text and also serves as a conscience that the characters speak to in a text.
Characters
Imaginary people created by the writer; perhaps the most important element of literature.
A character is any person, persona, identity, or entity that exists in a work of art.
The process of conveying information about characters in fiction
is called characterization.
Characters may be entirely fictional or based on real, historical
entities. Characters may be human, supernatural, mythical,
divine, animal, or personifications of an abstraction.
Characters are the vehicles that often help to drive the plot. They
make you care about what happens, and you may grow
emotionally attached to them (wishing for their happiness and
success). But, not all characters are very exciting.
There are no limits on the types of characters who can inhabit a
story: male or female, rich or poor, young or old, prince or
pauper. What is important is that the characters in a story all
have the same set of emotions as the reader: happiness, sorrow,
disappointment, pain, joy, and love.
Some characteristics
- Characters may be real or imaginary.
- They express ideas and emotions.
- They portray human attitudes.
- Characters make things happen.
- They are independent.
Classification of characters
Protagonist – Major character at the center of the story.
Antagonist – A character or force that opposes the protagonist.
Minor character – 0ften provides support and illuminates the protagonist.
Incidental character – A character that shows in a specific part of the story and then disappear.
Absent character – He / she does not participate in the story; it is only mentioned or remembered.
Dynamic character – A dynamic character would be a character that changes through the story.
Static character – A character who remains the same.
A static character is one which does not change much during the progression of the text.
They're pretty much the same at the end as they were in the beginning. This is opposed to a
dynamic character who changes dramatically during the story. For example, the prince is
essentially a static character in Romeo and Juliet.
11
Round character – A complex literary character with fully developed and dynamic traits.
Round characters tend to be more fully developed and described than flat, or static, characters. If you
think of the characters you most love in fiction, they probably seem as real to you as people you
know in real life. This is a good sign that they are round characters.
Flat character – A flat character is a character without depth or dimension, like a cardboard cutout.
A flat character has one dimension. They are filling a space in the story and have no life outside their
function. Stereotypes are flat characters. Villains who are totally evil are flat characters. Heroes who
always do the right thing and never have doubts or fears are flat characters. Characters that exist only
to aid or hinder the main character are flat characters.
Classification of time
Time, in a work of literature, is the sequence of events, the order in
which the events in a story take place. You can think of it as ‘how the
story is told?’
Depending on the story, the author may use different techniques to
‘play’ with time. In a story the character could remember and relive
his past, or travel to the future.
Most of the stories will have a chronological order, they will start
with one event, and problems will start, and then resolved, so the
story will end. But this is not a law, because the author may start with
the end, and go back in time to explain how did everything happen,
or just keep changing throughout the story.
Classification of time
1. Objective or chronological – This is the time used when stories are
told from beginning to end. A baby boy is born; he grows up, falls in
love with a girl, gets married, and lives happily ever after.
2. Subjective or psychological – This is the time registered in the mind of the character.
a. Flashback: An interruption in a chronological narrative that tells about something that
happened before that point in the story or before the story began. A flashback gives readers
information that helps to explain the main events of the story.
b. Foreshadowing: The use of clues by an author to prepare readers for events that will happen
in a story.
3. Seasonal games – A story is presented with seasonal games when the author does not respect the
sequence of events at all. The time in the story keeps changing like in Juan Rulfo’s novel “Pedro
Páramo” without a logical order.
4. Absence of time – An absence of time happens when the writer does not include clues about the use
of time in the story. The reader cannot know when things happen.
5. Circular – This is the time used when events keep starting all over again.
12
Greek Myths
The Story of Arachne
Athena, goddess of wisdom, was a proud and talented young goddess. In times of peace, Athena
taught Grecians about the arts. She herself was a skillful weaver and potter and always took pride in
her pupils' work, as long as they respected her.
One of Athena's pupils was a maiden whose name was Arachne. Arachne was a poor, simple girl who
lived in the country. Her father was a quiet man of humble birth. He dyed sheep's wool to earn money
for a living. Arachne wove beautiful fabrics of delicate designs, and people began to comment to her
that surely she had been taught by the goddess Athena. Arachne denied this and stated that she was
certainly better than Athena and that she had learned little or nothing from Athena's teachings. She
even went as far as to say that she was a better weaver than Athena!
Arachne was known to have said, "I have achieved this marvelous skill due to my own talent, hard
work, and efforts."
Soon Athena heard of the boastings of Arachne and decided to speak to her. Athena disguised herself
as an old woman and went before Arachne stating, "It is foolish to pretend that you are like one of the
gods. You're simply a mortal whose talents are paled in comparison to those of the goddess Athena."
Arachne charged back to the old lady, "If Athena doesn't like my words, then let her show her skills
in a weaving contest."
Suddenly, the disguise of the old woman was removed and there stood the radiant goddess Athena
standing in front of Arachne. Athena accepted the contest challenge.
As the contest began, it was clear that the beauty of both Athena's and Arachne's tapestries were
lovely. However, the goddess worked more quickly and skillfully. Arachne's attitude about her work
showed that she felt her weaving was lovelier, but Athena felt it was an insult to the gods. This
angered Arachne especially since Athena requested an apology. Arachne refused, and Athena slapped
Arachne in the face. Almost instantly Arachne felt her head begin to shrink and her nimble fingers
grow into long, thin legs.
"Vain girl, since you love to weave so very
much, why don't you go and spin forever."
Athena had turned Arachne into a spider.
So it is said that all spiders have been punished
for Arachne's boasting, since they are required
to live wit hin their own webs. Since then spiders
have been called arachnids.
13
Arachne’s worksheet
Answer: Why was Arachne punished by Athena?
Who was the better of the two weavers?
In your opinion, why was Athena angry about Arachne's weaving?
Why was Arachne so unkind to Athena?
Why was it that Arachne did not know she was speaking to Athena?
What was wrong with Arachne’s behavior?
Why did people come from all over the world to see Arachne?
What is Arachnophobia?
Unscramble and tell the significance of the words in relation to the story:
aoolpyg
aaerchn
rteyspat
iesprd
dceotcien Arachne
14
The Myth of Prometheus
Prometheus was a Titan from Greek myth, born from the union of the Titan Iapetus and the Nymph
Asia. He was one of four children born to the pair. The siblings of Prometheus included his twin
brother Epimetheus, Menoetius, and Atlas, all of them Titans. The name Prometheus means
“foresight,” and his twin brother's name Epimetheus means “hindsight.”
Their father, Iapetus led the revolt against the Gods. His children Menoetius and Atlas joined with
him, while his other two sons, Prometheus and Epimetheus sided with the Gods. Menoetius was
killed during the revolt and Atlas was given the weight of the world to bear for his actions during the
revolt.
Prometheus and Epimetheus journeyed from Mt. Olympus to Earth
and visited the Greek province of Boitia where they made clay
figures. Athena took the figures and breathed life into them. The clay
figures that Prometheus had created became Man and honored him.
The figures that his brother Epimetheus created became the beasts,
which turned and attacked him.
Zeus was angered by the brothers’ actions of creating people and
animals, and he forbade the pair from teaching Man the ways of
civilization, Athena chose to cross her father Zeus and taught
Prometheus so that he might teach Man.
Zeus was angered by the actions of Man and
Prometheus. He forbade the Gods to give fire to Man. Prometheus
was upset with Zeus' proclamation and was determined to bring fire
to Man, but Zeus had guarded the entrance to Olympus. Athena told Prometheus about an unguarded
back entrance to Olympus where he would be able to enter with ease. Prometheus wanted Man to
have all the benefits and progress that fire would bring.
Prometheus covertly entered Olympus at night through the back entrance that Athena had told him
about. He made his way to the Chariot of the Sun and lit a torch from the fires that burned there. He
touched the torch to coal, and then extinguished the torch. Prometheus then carried the still hot coals
down the mountain in a pithy fennel stalk to prevent anyone from discovering the fiery coals. Upon
reaching the lands of Men, Prometheus gave them the coals, breaking Zeus' order by giving fire to
Man. In some versions of this myth, Athena did not breathe life into Prometheus’ clay figures to
make the people. Instead, the myth explains that Prometheus needed the energy of the fire to give the
clay figures the “spark of life.”
Zeus was extremely angered by Prometheus' actions since he had not wanted fire to be given to Man.
Zeus set out to make a trap for Prometheus. Zeus gathered the gifts of the Gods and created Pandora
and her box. Into the box he placed all the horrors of the world. Pandora was sent to Prometheus as a
gift from Zeus himself.
Prometheus, with his foresight, saw the curse that Pandora and her box carried. He refused the gift,
giving it instead to his brother Epimetheus who opened the box and released the chained horrors upon
the world.
Zeus was upset at having his plan thwarted. Prometheus had refused a direct “gift” from the chief
God, after all. At Zeus order Prometheus was chained to a rock in the Caucasus Mountains where his
15
torture was to be carried out. Every day a great Eagle would
come to Prometheus and eat his liver, leaving only at nightfall
when the liver would begin to grow back once more. At
daybreak, the eagle would return to the chained Prometheus and
again attack his body, eating his liver. The daily ritual would
repeat itself into eternity…or so it seemed.
Zeus offered to free Prometheus (who still had the gift of
foresight) if he would tell the secret of the prophecy that told of
the dethroning of Zeus one day. Prometheus refused. The mother
of Prometheus, the Nymph Asia, also had the gift of foresight.
Her son’s continuing torture plagued her, so she finally went to
Zeus and told him the secret of the prophecy. The prophecy
explained that the offspring of Zeus and the Nymph Clymene
would one day rise up and destroy Zeus and Gods.
Zeus sent Heracles to free Prometheus from the rock once he
learned the revelation of the prophecy. He still required that
Prometheus be bound to a rock for the rest of eternity. A link of the chain he had been bound with
was set with a chip of the rock. Prometheus was required to carry it with him always. Men on Earth
also created rings with stones and gems set into them to commiserate with him and to honor
Prometheus for the actions he had taken on their behalf.
Prometheus’s worksheet
Complete the sentences.
Prometheus and Zeus argued because Prometheus felt that humans should be given the gift of
_________________________________. He believed that this gift would make people
_________________________________. Zeus believed that the humans already suffered from a
swollen sense of _________________________________. He was convinced that giving humans this
would poison them and make them think and act like the ____________________________.
But Prometheus went against the wishes of Zeus, which made Zeus furious. Zeus commanded his
giant guards to_________________________________.
After reading the myth answer the following questions using complete sentences. How do Zeus and Prometheus differ in their views of man?
Why does Prometheus want men to have fire?
How has fire changed men’s lives?
What does Zeus predict men will do with fire?
16
Why does Zeus make Prometheus’ punishment so severe?
Who are the gods or goddesses involved in this myth?
What is the problem?
What is the climax?
What is the resolution?
What is the moral of the myth?
Do you agree with consequences / actions of Prometheus?
The Myth of Daedalus & Icarus
Beating his wings harder and harder, Icarus soared up into the sky and out over the Aegean Sea. It
was hard to believe it but the plan had worked. For here he was now, flying alongside his father,
Daedalus, as they left the island of Crete behind them and travelled on towards their freedom. Icarus
glanced over at his father and grinned.
"Come along, Father," he shouted over the sound of the wind rushing past them. "Smile, we’ve done
it, we’ve escaped and we’re free."
“When my feet are back on solid ground and that island is many, many miles behind us, then you will
see me smile,” Daedalus yelled back. “Now, keep your mind on what we have to do and remember,
not too high, not too close to the sun.”
Daedalus thought back to the moment, a few days before, when he had thought up the plan that would
help them escape - not only from the labyrinth but from the kingdom of King Minos as well. He cast
his mind back even further, to the day when he realized that his own life and that of his son were in
great danger. How had they come to this moment?
Only a short time ago Daedalus was being hailed as the great architect, the skilled inventor, the
master craftsman. His incredible inventions and constructions were known and admired throughout
many lands and when he arrived in Crete, many years earlier, King Minos was happy to welcome him
to his land and quickly began to make use of his talents.
One of his first tasks was to construct a huge labyrinth, a vast underground maze of tunnels which
twisted and turned in every possible direction, so that, on entering the labyrinth, a person would very
quickly become lost and would be unable to find their way out again.
This giant maze served one simple purpose. It was to contain the Minotaur, a huge beast, half man,
half bull. Standing twice as high as any man, the Minotaur had horns, as long as a man’s arm, with
17
sharp points, on which it skewered its victims. It had almost unbelievable strength and was constantly
hungry – hungry for the flesh of humans.
King Minos had come up with his own special way of satisfying the Minotaur’s hunger. Every year,
he demanded that Athens send him a tribute of seven young men and seven young women and these
would be sacrificed to satisfy the creature’s hunger.
One by one they would be forced to enter the labyrinth. They would then wander, sometimes only for
hours but sometimes for many days before, somewhere in the pitch black tunnels, they would
encounter the Minotaur.
It goes without saying that none of them was ever seen again. Well, that’s not quite true actually, as
one of the young men, not only found and killed the Minotaur, but also found his way out again.
This superhuman was Theseus, the son of King Aegeus of Athens. He had forced his father to agree
to let him be sent as one of the seven young men, swearing that he would somehow kill the Minotaur
and return home safely.
As their ship docked in the harbour below the mighty palace of Knossos, and the youths were
dragged from the ship, Ariadne, the daughter of King Minos, was watching.
She saw Theseus and found herself falling in love with him there and then. She vowed to herself that
somehow she would help him when it was his turn to enter the maze. And this was the moment when
Daedalus found himself involved, in a way which he knew would not end well for him and his young
son. Ariadne went to him and asked him to help her save Theseus from the jaws of the Minotaur. He
gave her a great ball of flaxen thread.
“Somehow you must get this thread to Theseus. Tell him to tie one end to the door of the labyrinth
and hang on to the other end. He can then use it to find his way back out again. But you must be
ready to flee the moment he escapes, for, when your father finds out what you have done, your life
will be in great danger.”
And so will mine, he thought to himself, so will mine.
Their plan worked well. Theseus found the Minotaur and, after a long battle in the dark passages of
the maze, he killed the beast. Using the thread, he made his way back to the door and to Ariadne.
Making their way quickly to his ship, they set sail for Athens.
Daedalus was left behind to face the consequences and it took very little time for Minos to find him.
The King was angrier than anyone could remember (and this was a man who was noted for his evil
temper). He blamed Daedalus for the whole thing and dragged both him and Icarus to the door of the
labyrinth.
“This is where you two will end your days,” he screamed. “In there, in the dark, along with the rats.”
With that the guards threw them inside and swung the heavy door shut.
Immediately they were plunged into total darkness. They could not see their hands in front of their
faces, let alone the tunnels and passages in which they now found themselves. But all was not lost,
for, of all the people who had ever entered the labyrinth, these two were the only ones who knew its
secrets.
They had designed it, they had taken charge of its construction and Daedalus knew the layout of the
labyrinth like the back of his hand. It took them little or no time to find their way out of the labyrinth
but that was only the first hurdle. They still needed to escape from Crete, if they wanted to survive for
more than a few days.
Daedalus knew there was no way to escape by sea, as Minos controlled all the seas around the island.
So Daedalus, the great inventor, the master craftsmen, drew on all his skills and made, for each of
them, a pair of huge wings. These wings were made from hundreds of feathers they collected from
the birds around the island and were held together with a strong wax.
18
“These wings will take us away from this place and to
freedom,” he told his son. “However, there is one
thing you must not forget. These wings are held
together by wax. If it gets too hot, it will melt and the
wings will fall apart. So do not fly too close to the sun.
Stay low and we will be safe.”
So here they were now, gliding across the brilliant
blue sky, the sun shining above them and the Aegean
sea glinting beautifully far below them. Daedalus
glanced back nervously over his shoulder again, to see
the island of Crete getting smaller and smaller as they
flew away from their prison. But Icarus could not
contain his excitement a moment longer.
“We’re free,” he yelled to the empty sky around him. “Free and we’re flying, we’re flying with the
birds.”
With a whoop of excitement, he soared up and up, gliding around the sky, zooming back down
towards his father and then up again, up, up, up towards the dazzling sun.
“Icarus, not too high, not too close to the sun,” his father screamed in desperation. “The wax on your
wings will melt. Stay close to me and stay low.”
But his words fell on deaf ears. The boy continued to soar up into the bright blue sky, edging nearer
and nearer to the sun and, as Daedalus flew along below him, he saw a bright white feather flutter
through the sky and, looking up, watched in horror as more and more feathers detached themselves
from his son’s wings.
He watched in despair as his son began to lose height and his despair turned to total anguish as he
heard the terrified cry from his son, as he tumbled and spun past him towards the sea below.
It took only seconds, but it seemed like a lifetime, as Daedalus saw his son plummet through the sky
with increasing speed to hit the waters below with a resounding splash.
Daedalus flew low in the hope of seeing the boy appear on
the surface of the churning waters but he knew that nobody
could have survived such a fall and that all hope was lost.
With a heavy heart, and almost exhausted, Daedalus regained
the height he needed and, without looking back, set his
course for the island of Sicily. There he hoped that he would
be welcomed and be allowed to live a trouble-free life for the
rest of his days.
But however long he lived, he would never be able to forget
the sound of his son’s final cry as he sped towards the water.
It was only the briefest of sounds but he heard it clearly, even
above the sound of the foaming waves and crying gulls –
“Father, help me”.
Daedalus and Icarus’ worksheet
Answer: What is at the heart of the maze?
19
What causes Icarus's wings to fall off?
What instructions does Daedalus give Icarus before Icarus flies away?
What happens to Icarus at the end of the story?
Why is Icarus more content with being a prisoner than Daedalus is?
Who is Icarus?
Who is Daedalus?
Where does Daedalus get the idea for his escape?
Where did Daedalus and Icarus live?
Why didn’t Icarus understand his father’s unhappiness?
What did Daedalus make?
What did Daedalus use to stick the wings on Icarus?
Why was Icarus scared?
What warning did Daedalus give to Icarus?
Why did Icarus fly higher?
Why didn’t Icarus hear Daedalus’ reminder not to fly too high?
Why did Icarus keep flying higher and higher?
20
What happened when Icarus flew too high?
Why should Icarus have listened to his dad?
Why did Daedalus and Icarus need to fly?
What risk did Icarus take? Was it a good choice or a poor one?
The Myth of Orpheus
The greatest of all musicians was named Orpheus. He sang a wide
variety of songs. Sometimes he sang high-pitched songs about the
mystical creation of the universe. Other times he played low notes on
his lyre as he sang of the battles of Zeus ad the Olympians gods who
clashed against the Titans. Orpheus even had songs about people who
were changed into flowers or birds.
But whatever he sang, the rich clear words and the silvery notes from
his harp were so enchanting that they always had a magical effect on
everything around him. His songs could charm even rocks and rivers as
well as humans and animals. Once when Orpheus was playing his
splendid music in the forest, the oak trees pulled up their roots. They
followed him down the mountainside and planted themselves by the
seashore where Orpheus ended his song.
When the great adventurer Jason was about to set out on his search for
the Golden Fleece, Orpheus was invited to go along. Orpheus proved to
be of great help on the long journey. When the tempers of the heroes of the ship flared up, Orpheus
would sing a peaceful song and calm those who had been arguing. Sometimes when the rowing was
long and tedious, Orpheus would begin to stroke his lyre. Then time would seem to float by and the
rowers would not feel tired and they listened to the soft rippling music.
The time came when Jason and the Argonauts had to sail past the dangerous isle of the Sirens. The
Sirens were beautiful creatures who were part human, part bird. Their songs were so wonderful that
any person who heard them would become enchanted. All the sailors who heard the Sirens' songs
would hurl themselves overboard and swim to the island of the Sirens'. Lured by these strange
maidens the men would die upon the jagged rocks around the isle. But as the Argonauts came close to
the rocky island of the Sirens, Orpheus began a splendid song of his own. Jason and this crew did not
listen to the Sirens and were able to sail past the island unharmed.
After the Argonauts returned to Greece Orpheus fell in love with a beautiful woman named Eurydice.
They were married and a great feast was held in their honor. On the day of their wedding, Eurydice
strolled through a nearby field and talked joyfully with her friends. But as she walked through the
bright green meadow, she stumbled upon a poisonous snake. The huge serpent bit her and she died.
21
Orpheus was heartbroken over this cruel fate. He had been married and widowed on the same day.
After many weeks of mourning, he decided that he would go to the Underworld, the land of the dead.
There he would plead for his wife.
He came to the gates that lead to the underworld, playing on his harp. No living mortals were allowed
to cross into the shadowy regions of the underworld. But Orpheus' sweet dad music moved the ferry
and of the dead and he gave Orpheus a ride across the dark murky river Styx. Thus Orpheus entered
the purple-darkened realm of the dead. Formless ghosts and spirits gathered around him. But Orpheus
was unfrighten and continued to play his slow music about his lost wife. The Spirits began to weep
and the huge vultures of the underworld listened to his song. The three-headed dog that guarded the
Underworld stopped growling and lay down and whimpered at the dad tine. Orpheus passed by the
coal-black stallions that pulled the chariot of Hades. The horses' ears stood straight up when they
heard the enchanting song. Finally the musician came before the King of the Underworld, called
Hades. All the jewels and precious metals that lie in the ground rightfully belonged to Hade's domain.
Thus he and his wife, Persephone, sat on the most magnificent thrones imaginable. Beside Hades lay
a magic helmet that would make anyone who wore it invisible. Here, before the King and Queen,
Orpheus sang his sad, sweet song and pleaded to have his bride back. Even the rulers of the
underworld were moved by his music. Eurydice was called forth and she came still limping from the
wound where the serpent had bitten her. Hades agreed that Orpheus could have his wife back, but
only on the condition that he did not look back until he had reached the land of the living.
Orpheus began walking up the long steep path that led to the sunlit world of men. The winding
pathway was gloomy and silent. Behind his in the darkness he could hear the soft pad of Eurydice's
bare feet upon the rocky steps. At last Orpheus saw sunlight coming through the opening to the over
world. He forgot himself and turned to look at his wife. There stood Eurydice, as lovely as a spring
morning with her dark wavy hair and her snowy cheeks. But as he
looked Orpheus saw his lovely wife begin to fade. He desperately tried
to embrace her but she only had time to whisper "Farewell" before she
vanished.
Orpheus once again tried to cross the River Styx in hopes of regaining
his wife. But the ferryman would not listen to Orpheus' enchanting
music this time and he could not cross the river. He sadly returned to the
land of Thrace. On a hill in Thrace, Orpheus remained the rest of his
life, singing songs that enchanted the beast and the trees of the forest.
It is said that when Orpheus finally met his death, the birds wept on the
hillside. The trees shed their leaves and the nearby streams were swollen
with their own tears. Orpheus' spirit went down to the Underworld and
he soon found Eurydice. Although it is a shadowy existence the two
walk together for eternity without fear of another separation.
Orpheus’ worksheet
Answer: What instrument did Orpheus play?
How did Orpheus help Jason and the Argonauts?
22
Why was Orpheus ' wedding day such a sad time?
Name several of the underworld creatures that Orpheus encountered in the Underworld?
What happened when Orpheus looked back at his wife?
Write a paragraph telling what would have happened if Orpheus had not looked back at his wife.
Pretend you are a reporter going with Orpheus to the Underworld. Create the report you would give
to explain what happened.
Section A: Answer the following questions about the story in COMPLETE SENTENCES,
punctuation, and spelling.
What magical powers does the lyre have?
How did Eurydice die?
Who are Hades and Persephone?
Why did Orpheus look behind him on the way back to the living world?
How did Orpheus finally die?
Section B: Character Details. Write Orpheus’ good personality characteristics and his bad
personality characteristics.
Good Bad
1. 1.
2. 2.
3. 3.
23
Eris and the Apple of Discord
Eris is a Greek goddess, the Latin form of her name being
Discordia. She is best known as a goddess of chaos; she is
mischievous and something of a trickster. She is sometimes
described as the twin of Ares, daughter of Zeus and Hera, or,
alternately, as the daughter of Nyx.
The most well-known story of Eris recounts how she instigated the
Trojan War. Due to her reputation of spreading discord, she was not
invited to the wedding feast of Peleus and Thetis, the king of Aegina
and a sea-nymph, respectively. Bitter as a result of the snub, she
tossed into the party a golden apple inscribed with the word Kallisti,
which translates “To the Fairest One,” also known as the Apple of
Discord.
Naturally, all the goddesses fought for it, but in the end it came down to three, Hera, Athena, and
Aphrodite. They petitioned Zeus to make the final decision on who it was intended for, but he wisely
declined, and instead pointed to young Paris, son of Priam, the king of Troy’s estranged son. Due to
an unfortunate prophesy, Paris had been banished to Mount Ida and raised as a shepherd.
The three goddesses appeared before Paris with the golden apple, and demanded he make his choice.
In secret, each of the goddesses attempted to sway his opinion in their favor; Hera promised Paris
political power, Athena offered war victories, but clever Aphrodite pledged him the most beautiful
woman on Earth. Being the lusty young fellow that he was, Paris gave Aphrodite the golden apple
and expected to receive Aphrodite, herself. Aphrodite, surely amused, explained that she offered him
the most beautiful woman on Earth, and clearly, she was a goddess. But true to her word, she
maneuvered circumstances so Paris could claim his prize, the beautiful Helen of Sparta, wed to
Menelaus. Paris woos Helen, with the aid of Aphrodite, and they leave for Troy.
Of course, upon discovering the disappearance of Helen and her new whereabouts, Menelaus
demanded of Troy the return of his queen, and everyone knows what happened after that.
24
The Iliad and The Odyssey
Context
Nearly three thousand years after they were composed, The Iliad and The
Odyssey remain two of the most celebrated and widely read stories ever
told, yet next to nothing is known about their composer. He was certainly
an accomplished Greek bard, and he probably lived in the late eighth and
early seventh centuries B.C. Authorship is traditionally ascribed to a blind
poet named Homer, and it is under this name that the works are still
published. Greeks of the third and second centuries B.C., however, already
questioned whether Homer existed and whether the two epics were even
written by a single individual.
Most modern scholars believe that even if a single person wrote the epics,
his work owed a tremendous debt to a long tradition of unwritten, oral
poetry. Stories of a glorious expedition to the East and of its leaders’
fateful journeys home had been circulating in Greece for hundreds of years
before The Iliad and The Odyssey were composed. Casual storytellers and semiprofessional minstrels
passed these stories down through generations, with each artist developing and polishing the story as
he told it. According to this theory, one poet, multiple poets working in
collaboration, or perhaps even a series of poets handing down their work
in succession finally turned these stories into written works, again with
each adding his own touch and expanding or contracting certain episodes
in the overall narrative to fit his taste.
Although historical, archaeological, and linguistic evidence suggests that
the epics were composed between 750 and 650 B.C. they are set in
Mycenaean Greece in about the twelfth century B.C., during the Bronze
Age. This earlier period, the Greeks believed, was a more glorious and
sublime age, when gods still frequented the earth and heroic, godlike
mortals with superhuman attributes populated Greece. Because the two
epics strive to evoke this pristine age, they are written in a high style and
generally depict life as it was believed to have been led in the great
kingdoms of the Bronze Age. The Greeks are often referred to as
“Achaeans,” the name of a large tribe occupying Greece during the Bronze Age.
For centuries, many scholars believed that the Trojan War and its participants were entirely the
creation of the Greek imagination. But in the late nineteenth century, an archaeologist named
Heinrich Schliemann declared that he had discovered the remnants of Troy. The ruins that he
uncovered sit a few dozen miles off of the Aegean coast in northwestern Turkey, a site that indeed fits
the geographical descriptions of Homer’s Troy. One layer of the site, roughly corresponding to the
point in history when the fall of Troy would have taken place, shows evidence of fire and destruction
consistent with a sack. Although most scholars accept Schliemann’s discovered city as the site of the
ancient city of Troy, many remain skeptical as to whether Homer’s Trojan War ever really took place.
Evidence from Near Eastern literature suggests that episodes similar to those described in The Iliad
may have circulated even before Schliemann’s Troy was destroyed. Nonetheless, many scholars now
admit the possibility that some truth may lie at the center of The Iliad, hidden beneath many layers of
poetic embellishment.
25
Of the two epics, The Odyssey is the later both in setting and, probably, date of composition. The
Iliad tells the story of the Greek struggle to rescue Helen, a Greek queen, from her Trojan captors.
The Odyssey takes the fall of the city of Troy as its starting point and crafts a new epic around the
struggle of one of those Greek warriors, the hero Odysseus. It tells the story of his nostos, or journey
home, to northwest Greece during the ten-year period after the Greek victory over the Trojans. A tale
of wandering, it takes place not on a field of battle but on fantastic islands and foreign lands. After the
unrelenting tragedy and carnage of the Iliad, the Odyssey often strikes readers as comic or surreal at
times. This quality has led some scholars to conclude that Homer wrote the Odyssey at a later time of
his life, when he showed less interest in struggles at arms and was more receptive to a storyline that
focused on the fortunes and misadventures of a single man. Others argue that someone else must have
composed the Odyssey, one who wished to provide a companion work to the Iliad but had different
interests from those of the earlier epic’s author.
The Iliad Plot Overview
A young prince of Troy, Paris, has come to Greece and kidnapped Helen, beautiful wife of King
Menelaus of Greece. The Greeks go to Troy to win Helen back and to avenge this dishonorable act.
The war rages for nine years with neither side gaining the upper hand. In the tenth year, King
Agamemnon insults warrior Achilles by taking back a prize given to Achilles during an earlier
victory – the slave girl Briseis. Achilles refuses to go back into battle and Achilles’ mother, Thetis,
convinces the god Zeus to support Achilles in his plan by holding victory back from the Greeks. In
general, the gods are supposed to stay out of these mortal battles but they do have their favorites.
Among the deities favoring the Trojans are Ares, Aphrodite, and Apollo. On the side of the Greeks
are Athena and Hera—the wife of Zeus and there would be great trouble if Zeus were to take a side.
But Zeus is god of thunder and lightning and he knows he can do as he wants. Swayed by the pleas of
Thetis, he gives strength to the Trojans against the Greeks. The Greeks fight hard but with the
support of Zeus going to the Trojans, and in particular to the Trojan warrior, Hector, the Trojans hang
on. Many Greeks and Trojans are killed in battle while Achilles stays out of the fray. Agamemnon
tries to patch things up with Achilles but Achilles refuses to make peace and re-enter the war. That is
until Achilles’ friend Patroclus enters the battle wearing Achilles’ armor so that the Trojans will be
fooled into thinking he’s Achilles and they will flee. Patroclus is killed and Achilles is angry and out
for revenge against Hector, the Trojan who killed him (with Apollo’s help). Hector suffers a
humiliating death at the hand of Achilles. However, King Priam of Troy risks life and limb and goes
to Achilles with “ransom” gifts to claim the body of his son, Hector. Humbly, Priam kisses Achilles’
hand. Deeply moved, Achilles welcomes Priam and orders an attendant to prepare Hector's body.
Troy mourns Hector for nine days, and then buries his remains. Ultimately, when the Greeks enter
Troy using the subterfuge of the Trojan Horse, Troy is destroyed.
List of Characters
The Achaeans (also called the “Argives” or “Danaans”)
Achilles - The son of the military man Peleus and the sea-nymph Thetis. The most powerful warrior
in The Iliad, Achilles commands the Myrmidons, soldiers from his homeland of Phthia in Greece.
Proud and headstrong, he takes offense easily and reacts with blistering indignation when he
26
perceives that his honor has been slighted. Achilles’ wrath at Agamemnon for taking his war prize,
the maiden Briseis, forms the main subject of The Iliad.
Agamemnon (also called “Atrides”) - King of Mycenae and leader of the Achaean army; brother of
King Menelaus of Sparta. Arrogant and often selfish, Agamemnon provides the Achaeans with strong
but sometimes reckless and self-serving leadership. Like Achilles, he lacks consideration and
forethought. Most saliently, his tactless appropriation of Achilles’ war prize, the maiden Briseis,
creates a crisis for the Achaeans, when Achilles, insulted, withdraws from the war.
Patroclus - Achilles’ beloved friend, companion, and advisor, Patroclus grew up alongside the great
warrior in Phthia, under the guardianship of Peleus. Devoted to both Achilles and the Achaean cause,
Patroclus stands by the enraged Achilles but also dons Achilles’ terrifying armor in an attempt to hold
the Trojans back.
Odysseus - A fine warrior and the cleverest of the Achaean commanders. Along with Nestor,
Odysseus is one of the Achaeans’ two best public speakers. He helps mediate between Agamemnon
and Achilles during their quarrel and often prevents them from making rash decisions.
Diomedes (also called “Tydides”) - The youngest of the Achaean commanders, Diomedes is bold and
sometimes proves impetuous. After Achilles withdraws from combat, Athena inspires Diomedes with
such courage that he actually wounds two gods, Aphrodite and Ares.
Great Ajax - An Achaean commander, Great Ajax (sometimes called “Telamonian Ajax” or simply
“Ajax”) is the second mightiest Achaean warrior after Achilles. His extraordinary size and strength
help him to wound Hector twice by hitting him with boulders. He often fights alongside Little Ajax,
and the pair is frequently referred to as the “Aeantes.”
Little Ajax - An Achaean commander, Little Ajax is the son of Oileus (to be distinguished from
Great Ajax, the son of Telamon). He often fights alongside Great Ajax, whose stature and strength
complement Little Ajax’s small size and swift speed. The two together are sometimes called the
“Aeantes.”
Nestor - King of Pylos and the oldest Achaean commander. Although age has taken much of
Nestor’s physical strength, it has left him with great wisdom. He often acts as an advisor to the
military commanders, especially Agamemnon. Nestor and Odysseus are the Achaeans’ most deft and
persuasive orators, although Nestor’s speeches are sometimes long-winded.
Menelaus - King of Sparta; the younger brother of Agamemnon. While it is the abduction of his
wife, Helen, by the Trojan prince Paris that sparks the Trojan War, Menelaus proves quieter, less
imposing, and less arrogant than Agamemnon. Though he has a stout heart, Menelaus is not among
the mightiest Achaean warriors.
Idomeneus - King of Crete and a respected commander. Idomeneus leads a charge against the
Trojans in Book 13.
Machaon - A healer. Machaon is wounded by Paris in Book 11.
Calchas - An important soothsayer. Calchas’s identification of the cause of the plague ravaging the
Achaean army in Book 1 leads inadvertently to the rift between Agamemnon and Achilles that
occupies the first nineteen books of The Iliad.
Peleus - Achilles’ father and the grandson of Zeus. Although his name often appears in the epic,
Peleus never appears in person. Priam powerfully invokes the memory of Peleus when he convinces
Achilles to return Hector’s corpse to the Trojans in Book 24.
Phoenix - A kindly old warrior, Phoenix helped raise Achilles while he himself was still a young
man. Achilles deeply loves and trusts Phoenix, and Phoenix mediates between him and Agamemnon
during their quarrel.
The Myrmidons - The soldiers under Achilles’ command, hailing from Achilles’ homeland, Phthia.
27
The Trojans
Hector - A son of King Priam and Queen Hecuba, Hector is the mightiest warrior in the Trojan army.
He mirrors Achilles in some of his flaws, but his bloodlust is not as great as that of Achilles. He is
devoted to his wife, Andromache, and son, Astyanax, but resents his brother Paris for bringing war
upon their family and city.
Priam - King of Troy and husband of Hecuba, Priam is the father of fifty Trojan warriors, including
Hector and Paris. Though too old to fight, he has earned the respect of both the Trojans and the
Achaeans by virtue of his level-headed, wise, and benevolent rule. He treats Helen kindly, though he
laments the war that her beauty has sparked.
Hecuba - Queen of Troy, wife of Priam, and mother of Hector and Paris.
Paris (also known as “Alexander”) - A son of Priam and Hecuba and brother of Hector. Paris’s
abduction of the beautiful Helen, wife of Menelaus, sparked the Trojan War. Paris is self-centered
and often unmanly. He fights effectively with a bow and arrow (never with the more manly sword or
spear) but often lacks the spirit for battle and prefers to sit in his room making love to Helen while
others fight for him, thus earning both Hector’s and Helen’s scorn.
Helen - Reputed to be the most beautiful woman in the ancient world, Helen was stolen from her
husband, Menelaus, and taken to Troy by Paris. She loathes herself now for the misery that she has
caused so many Trojan and Achaean men. Although her contempt extends to Paris as well, she
continues to stay with him.
Aeneas - A Trojan nobleman, the son of Aphrodite, and a mighty warrior. The Romans believed that
Aeneas later founded their city (he is the protagonist of Virgil’s masterpiece the Aeneid).
Andromache - Hector’s loving wife, Andromache begs Hector to withdraw from the war and save
himself before the Achaeans kill him.
Astyanax - Hector and Andromache’s infant son.
Polydamas - A young Trojan commander, Polydamas sometimes figures as a foil for Hector, proving
cool-headed and prudent when Hector charges ahead. Polydamas gives the Trojans sound advice, but
Hector seldom acts on it.
Glaucus - A powerful Trojan warrior, Glaucus nearly fights a duel with Diomedes. The men’s
exchange of armor after they realize that their families are friends illustrates the value that ancients
placed on kinship and camaraderie.
Agenor - A Trojan warrior who attempts to fight Achilles in Book 21. Agenor delays Achilles long
enough for the Trojan army to flee inside Troy’s walls.
Dolon - A Trojan sent to spy on the Achaean camp in Book 10.
Pandarus - A Trojan archer. Pandarus’s shot at Menelaus in Book 4 breaks the temporary truce
between the two sides.
Antenor - A Trojan nobleman, advisor to King Priam, and father of many Trojan warriors. Antenor
argues that Helen should be returned to Menelaus in order to end the war, but Paris refuses to give her
up.
Sarpedon - One of Zeus’s sons. Sarpedon’s fate seems intertwined with the gods’ quibbles, calling
attention to the unclear nature of the gods’ relationship to Fate.
Chryseis - Chryses’ daughter, a priest of Apollo in a Trojan-allied town.
Briseis - A war prize of Achilles. When Agamemnon is forced to return Chryseis to her father, he
appropriates Briseis as compensation, sparking Achilles’ great rage.
Chryses - A priest of Apollo in a Trojan-allied town; the father of Chryseis, whom Agamemnon
takes as a war prize.
The Gods and Immortals
28
Zeus - King of the gods and husband of Hera, Zeus claims neutrality in the mortals’ conflict and
often tries to keep the other gods from participating in it. However, he throws his weight behind the
Trojan side for much of the battle after the sulking Achilles has his mother, Thetis, ask the god to do
so.
Hera - Queen of the gods and Zeus’s wife, Hera is a conniving, headstrong woman. She often goes
behind Zeus’s back in matters on which they disagree, working with Athena to crush the Trojans,
whom she passionately hates.
Athena - The goddess of wisdom, purposeful battle, and the womanly arts; Zeus’s daughter. Like
Hera, Athena passionately hates the Trojans and often gives the Achaeans valuable aid.
Thetis - A sea-nymph and the devoted mother of Achilles, Thetis gets Zeus to help the Trojans and
punish the Achaeans at the request of her angry son. When Achilles finally rejoins the battle, she
commissions Hephaestus to design him a new suit of armor.
Apollo - A son of Zeus and twin brother of the goddess Artemis, Apollo is god of the sun and the
arts, particularly music. He supports the Trojans and often intervenes in the war on their behalf.
Aphrodite - Goddess of love and daughter of Zeus, Aphrodite is married to Hephaestus but maintains
a romantic relationship with Ares. She supports Paris and the Trojans throughout the war, though she
proves somewhat ineffectual in battle.
Poseidon - The brother of Zeus and god of the sea. Poseidon holds a long-standing grudge against the
Trojans because they never paid him for helping them to build their city. He therefore supports the
Achaeans in the war.
Hephaestus - God of fire and husband of Aphrodite, Hephaestus is the gods’ metalsmith and is
known as the lame or crippled god. Although the text doesn’t make clear his sympathies in the
mortals’ struggle, he helps the Achaeans by forging a new set of armor for Achilles and by rescuing
Achilles during his fight with a river god.
Artemis - Goddess of the hunt, daughter of Zeus, and twin sister of Apollo. Artemis supports the
Trojans in the war.
Ares - God of war and lover of Aphrodite, Ares generally supports the Trojans in the war.
Hermes - The messenger of the gods. Hermes escorts Priam to Achilles’ tent in Book 24.
Iris - Zeus’s messenger.
The Iliad
Book 1
The poet invokes a muse to aid him in telling the story of the rage of Achilles, the greatest Greek hero
to fight in the Trojan War. The narrative begins nine years after the start of the war, as the Achaeans
sack a Trojan-allied town and capture two beautiful maidens, Chryseis and Briseis. Agamemnon,
commander-in-chief of the Achaean army, takes Chryseis as his prize. Achilles, one of the Achaeans’
most valuable warriors, claims Briseis. Chryseis’ father, a man named Chryses who serves as a priest
of the god Apollo, begs Agamemnon to return his daughter and offers to pay an enormous ransom.
When Agamemnon refuses, Chryses prays to Apollo for help.
Apollo sends a plague upon the Greek camp, causing the death of many soldiers. After ten days of
suffering, Achilles calls an assembly of the Achaean army and asks for a soothsayer to reveal the
cause of the plague. Calchas, a powerful seer, stands up and offers his services. Though he fears
retribution from Agamemnon, Calchas reveals the plague as a vengeful and strategic move by
29
Chryses and Apollo. Agamemnon flies into a rage and says that he will return Chryseis only if
Achilles gives him Briseis as compensation.
Agamemnon’s demand humiliates and infuriates the proud Achilles. The men argue, and Achilles
threatens to withdraw from battle and take his people, the Myrmidons, back home to Phthia.
Agamemnon threatens to go to Achilles’ tent in the army’s camp and take Briseis himself. Achilles
stands poised to draw his sword and kill the Achaean commander when the goddess Athena, sent by
Hera, the queen of the gods, appears to him and checks his anger. Athena’s guidance, along with a
speech by the wise advisor Nestor, finally succeeds in preventing the duel.
That night, Agamemnon puts Chryseis on a ship back to her father and sends heralds to have Briseis
escorted from Achilles’ tent. Achilles prays to his mother, the sea-nymph Thetis, to ask Zeus, king of
the gods, to punish the Achaeans. He relates to her the tale of his quarrel with Agamemnon, and she
promises to take the matter up with Zeus—who owes her a favor—as soon as he returns from a
thirteen-day period of feasting with the Aethiopians. Meanwhile, the Achaean commander Odysseus
is navigating the ship that Chryseis has boarded. When he lands, he returns the maiden and makes
sacrifices to Apollo. Chryses, overjoyed to see his daughter, prays to the god to lift the plague from
the Achaean camp. Apollo acknowledges his prayer, and Odysseus returns to his comrades.
But the end of the plague on the Achaeans only marks the beginning of worse suffering. Ever since
his quarrel with Agamemnon, Achilles has refused to participate in battle, and, after twelve days,
Thetis makes her appeal to Zeus, as promised. Zeus is reluctant to help the Trojans, for his wife,
Hera, favors the Greeks, but he finally agrees. Hera becomes livid when she discovers that Zeus is
helping the Trojans, but her son Hephaestus persuades her not to plunge the gods into conflict over
the mortals.
Book 2
To help the Trojans, as promised, Zeus sends a false dream to Agamemnon in which a figure in the
form of Nestor persuades Agamemnon that he can take Troy if he launches a full-scale assault on the
city’s walls. The next day, Agamemnon gathers his troops for attack, but, to test their courage, he lies
and tells them that he has decided to give up the war and return to Greece. To his dismay, they
eagerly run to their ships.
When Hera sees the Achaeans fleeing, she alerts Athena, who inspires Odysseus, the most eloquent
of the Achaeans, to call the men back. He shouts words of encouragement and insult to goad their
pride and restore their confidence. He reminds them of the prophecy that the soothsayer Calchas gave
when the Achaeans were first mustering their soldiers back in Greece: a water snake had slithered to
shore and devoured a nest of nine sparrows, and Calchas interpreted the sign to mean that nine years
would pass before the Achaeans would finally take Troy. As Odysseus reminds them, they vowed at
that time that they would not abandon their struggle until the city fell.
Nestor now encourages Agamemnon to arrange his troops by city and clan so that they can fight side
by side with their friends and kin. The poet takes this opportunity to enter into a catalog of the army.
After invoking the muses to aid his memory, he details the cities that have contributed troops to the
Greek cause, the number of troops that each has contributed, and who leads each contingent. At the
end of the list, the poet singles out the bravest of the Achaeans, Achilles and Ajax among them.
When Zeus sends a messenger to the Trojan court, telling them of the Greeks’ awesome formation,
the Trojans muster their own troops under the command of Priam’s son Hector. The poet then
catalogs the Trojan forces.
Book 3
30
The Trojan army marches from the city gates and advances to meet the Achaeans. Paris, the Trojan
prince who precipitated the war by stealing the beautiful Helen from her husband, Menelaus,
challenges the Achaeans to single combat with any of their warriors. When Menelaus steps forward,
however, Paris loses heart and shrinks back into the Trojan ranks. Hector, Paris’s brother and the
leader of the Trojan forces, chastises Paris for his cowardice. Stung by Hector’s insult, Paris finally
agrees to a duel with Menelaus, declaring that the contest will establish peace between Trojans and
Achaeans by deciding once and for all which man shall have Helen as his wife. Hector presents the
terms to Menelaus, who accepts. Both armies look forward to ending the war at last.
As Paris and Menelaus prepare for combat, the goddess Iris, disguised as Hector’s sister Laodice,
visits Helen in Priam’s palace. Iris urges Helen to go to the city gates and witness the battle about to
be fought over her. Helen finds the city’s elders, including Priam, gathered there. Priam asks Helen
about the strapping young Achaeans he sees, and she identifies Agamemnon, Ajax, and Odysseus.
Priam marvels at their strength and splendor but eventually leaves the scene, unable to bear watching
Paris fight to the death.
Paris and Menelaus arm themselves and begin their duel. Neither is able to fell the other with his
spear. Menelaus breaks his sword over Paris’s helmet. He then grabs Paris by the helmet and begins
dragging him through the dirt, but Aphrodite, an ally of the Trojans, snaps the strap of the helmet so
that it breaks off in Menelaus’s hands. Frustrated, Menelaus retrieves his spear and is about to drive it
home into Paris when Aphrodite whisks Paris away to his room in Priam’s palace. She summons
Helen there too. Helen, after upbraiding Paris for his cowardice, lies down in bed with him. Back on
the battlefield, both the Trojans and the Greeks search for Paris, who seems to have magically
disappeared. Agamemnon insists that Menelaus has won the duel, and he demands Helen back.
Book 4
Meanwhile, the gods engage in their own duels. Zeus argues that Menelaus has won the duel and that
the war should end as the mortals had agreed. But Hera, who has invested much in the Achaean
cause, wants nothing less than the complete destruction of Troy. In the end, Zeus gives way and sends
Athena to the battlefield to rekindle the fighting. Disguised as a Trojan soldier, Athena convinces the
archer Pandarus to take aim at Menelaus. Pandarus fires, but Athena, who wants merely to give the
Achaeans a pretext for fighting, deflects the arrow so that it only wounds Menelaus.
Agamemnon now rallies the Achaean ranks. He meets Nestor, Odysseus, and Diomedes, among
others, and spurs them on by challenging their pride or recounting the great deeds of their fathers.
Battle breaks out, and the blood flows freely. None of the major characters is killed or wounded, but
Odysseus and Great Ajax kill a number of minor Trojan figures. The gods also become involved,
with Athena helping the Achaeans and Apollo helping the Trojans. The efforts toward a truce have
failed utterly.
Book 5
As the battle rages, Pandarus wounds the Achaean hero Diomedes. Diomedes prays to Athena for
revenge, and the goddess endows him with superhuman strength and the extraordinary power to
discern gods on the field of battle. She warns him, however, not to challenge any of them except
Aphrodite. Diomedes fights like a man possessed, slaughtering all Trojans he meets. The
overconfident Pandarus meets a gruesome death at the end of Diomedes’ spear, and Aeneas, the noble
Trojan hero immortalized in Virgil’s Aeneid, likewise receives a wounding at the hands of the
divinely assisted Diomedes. When Aeneas’s mother, Aphrodite, comes to his aid, Diomedes wounds
her too, cutting her wrist and sending her back to Mount Olympus. Aphrodite’s mother, Dione, heals
her, and Zeus warns Aphrodite not to try her hand at warfare again. When Apollo goes to tend to
31
Aeneas in Aphrodite’s stead, Diomedes attacks him as well. This act of aggression breaches
Diomedes’ agreement with Athena, who had limited him to challenging Aphrodite alone among the
gods. Apollo, issuing a stern warning to Diomedes, effortlessly pushes him aside and whisks Aeneas
off of the field. Aiming to enflame the passions of Aeneas’s comrades, he leaves a replica of
Aeneas’s body on the ground. He also rouses Ares, god of war, to fight on the Trojan side.
With the help of the gods, the Trojans begin to take the upper hand in battle. Hector and Ares prove
too much for the Achaeans; the sight of a hero and god battling side by side frightens even Diomedes.
The Trojan Sarpedon kills the Achaean Tlepolemus. Odysseus responds by slaughtering entire lines
of Trojans, but Hector cuts down still more Greeks. Finally, Hera and Athena appeal to Zeus, who
gives them permission to intervene on the Achaeans’ behalf. Hera rallies the rest of the Achaean
troops, while Athena encourages Diomedes. She withdraws her earlier injunction not to attack any of
the gods except Aphrodite and even jumps in the chariot with him to challenge Ares. The divinely
driven chariot charges Ares, and, in the seismic collision that follows, Diomedes wounds Ares. Ares
immediately flies to Mount Olympus and complains to Zeus, but Zeus counters that Ares deserved his
injury. Athena and Hera also depart the scene of the battle.
Book 6
With the gods absent, the Achaean forces again overwhelm the Trojans, who draw back toward the
city. Menelaus considers accepting a ransom in return for the life of Adrestus, a Trojan he has
subdued, but Agamemnon persuades him to kill the man outright. Nestor senses the Trojans
weakening and urges the Achaeans not to bother stripping their fallen enemies of their weapons but to
focus instead on killing as many as possible while they still have the upper hand. The Trojans
anticipate downfall, and the soothsayer Helenus urges Hector to return to Troy to ask his mother,
Queen Hecuba, along with her noblewomen, to pray for mercy at the temple of Athena. Hector
follows Helenus’s advice and gives his mother and the other women their instructions. He then visits
his brother Paris, who has withdrawn from battle, claiming he is too grief-stricken to participate.
Hector and Helen heap scorn on him for not fighting, and at last he arms himself and returns to battle.
Hector also prepares to return but first visits his wife, Andromache, whom he finds nursing their son
Astyanax by the walls of the city. As she cradles the child, she anxiously watches the struggle in the
plain below. Andromache begs Hector not to go back, but he insists that he cannot escape his fate,
whatever it may be. He kisses Astyanax, who, although initially frightened by the crest on Hector’s
helmet, greets his father happily. Hector then departs. Andromache, convinced that he will soon die,
begins to mourn his death. Hector meets Paris on his way out of the city, and the brothers prepare to
rejoin the battle.
Book 7
With the return of Hector and Paris the battle escalates, but Apollo and Athena soon decide to end the
battle for the day. They plan a duel to stop the present bout of fighting: Hector approaches the
Achaean line and offers himself to anyone who will fight him. Only Menelaus has the courage to step
forward, but Agamemnon talks him out of it, knowing full well that Menelaus is no match for Hector.
Nestor, too old to fight Hector himself, passionately exhorts his comrades to respond to the challenge.
Nine Achaeans finally step forward. A lottery is held, and Great Ajax wins.
Hector and Ajax begin their duel by tossing spears, but neither proves successful. They then use their
lances, and Ajax draws Hector’s blood. The two are about to clash with swords when heralds, spurred
by Zeus, call off the fight on account of nightfall. The two heroes exchange gifts and end their duel
with a pact of friendship.
32
That night, Nestor gives a speech urging the Achaeans to ask for a day to bury their dead. He also
advises them to build fortifications around their camp. Meanwhile, in the Trojan camp, King Priam
makes a similar proposal regarding the Trojan dead. In addition, his advisor Antenor asks Paris to
give up Helen and thereby end the war. Paris refuses but offers to return all of the loot that he took
with her from Sparta. But when the Trojans present this offer to the Achaeans the next day, the
Achaeans sense the Trojans’ desperation and reject the compromise. Both sides agree, however, to
observe a day of respite to bury their respective dead. Zeus and Poseidon watch the Achaeans as they
build their fortifications, planning to tear them down as soon as the men leave.
Book 8
After prohibiting the other gods from interfering in the course of the war, Zeus travels to Mount Ida,
overlooking the Trojan plain. There he weighs the fates of Troy and Achaea in his scale, and the
Achaean side sinks down. With a shower of lightning upon the Achaean army, Zeus turns the tide of
battle in the Trojans’ favor, and the Greeks retreat in terror. Riding the Trojans’ surge in power,
Hector seeks out Nestor, who stands stranded in the middle of the battlefield. Diomedes scoops
Nestor into his chariot just in time, and Hector pursues the two of them, intent on driving them all the
way to the Greek fortifications, where he plans to set fire to their ships. Hera, seeing the Achaean
army collapsing, inspires Agamemnon to rouse his troops. He stirs up their pride, begs them to have
heart, and prays for relief from Zeus, who finally sends a sign—an eagle carrying a fawn in its talons.
The divine symbol inspires the Achaeans to fight back.
As the Achaeans struggle to regain their power, the archer Teucer fells many Trojans. But Hector
finally wounds him, reversing the tide of battle yet again. Hector drives the Greeks behind their
fortifications, all the way to their ships. Athena and Hera, unable to bear any further suffering on the
part of their favored Greeks, prepare to enter the fray, but Zeus sends the goddess Iris to warn them of
the consequences of interfering. Knowing that they cannot compete with Zeus, Athena and Hera
relent and return to Mount Olympus. When Zeus returns, he tells them that the next morning will
provide their last chance to save the Achaeans. He notes that only Achilles can prevent the Greeks’
destruction.
That night, the Trojans, confident in their dominance, camp outside their city’s walls, and Hector
orders his men to light hundreds of campfires so that the Greeks cannot escape unobserved. Nightfall
has saved the Greeks for now, but Hector plans to finish them off the next day.
Book 9
With the Trojans poised to drive the Achaeans back to their ships, the Achaean troops sit
brokenhearted in their camp. Standing before them, Agamemnon weeps and declares the war a
failure. He proposes returning to Greece in disgrace. Diomedes rises and insists that he will stay and
fight even if everyone else leaves. He buoys the soldiers by reminding them that Troy is fated to fall.
Nestor urges perseverance as well, and suggests reconciliation with Achilles. Seeing the wisdom of
this idea, Agamemnon decides to offer Achilles a great stockpile of gifts on the condition that he
return to the Achaean lines. The king selects some of the Achaeans’ best men, including Odysseus,
Great Ajax, and Phoenix, to communicate the proposal to Achilles.
The embassy finds Achilles playing the lyre in his tent with his dear friend Patroclus. Odysseus
presents Agamemnon’s offer, but Achilles rejects it directly. He announces that he intends to return to
his homeland of Phthia, where he can live a long, prosaic life instead of the short, glorious one that he
is fated to live if he stays. Achilles offers to take Phoenix, who helped rear him in Phthia, with him,
but Phoenix launches into his own lengthy, emotional plea for Achilles to stay. He uses the ancient
story of Meleager, another warrior who, in an episode of rage, refused to fight, to illustrate the
33
importance of responding to the pleas of helpless friends. But Achilles stands firm, still feeling the
sting of Agamemnon’s insult. The embassy returns unsuccessful, and the army again sinks into
despair.
Book 10
The Greek commanders sleep well that night, with the exception of Agamemnon and Menelaus.
Eventually, they rise and wake the others. They convene on open ground, on the Trojan side of their
fortifications, to plan their next move. Nestor suggests sending a spy to infiltrate the Trojan ranks,
and Diomedes quickly volunteers for the role. He asks for support, and Odysseus steps forward. The
two men arm themselves and set off for the Trojan camp. A heron sent by Athena calls out on their
right-hand side, and they pray to Athena for protection.
Meanwhile, the Trojans devise their own acts of reconnaissance. Hector wants to know if the
Achaeans plan an escape. He selects Dolon, an unattractive but lightning-quick man, to serve as his
scout, and promises to reward him with Achilles’ chariot and horses once the Achaeans fall. Dolon
sets out and soon encounters Diomedes and Odysseus. The two men interrogate Dolon, and he,
hoping to save his life, tells them the positions of the Trojans and all of their allies. He reveals to
them that the Thracians, newly arrived, are especially vulnerable to attack. Diomedes then kills Dolon
and strips him of his armor.
The two Achaean spies proceed to the Thracian camp, where they kill twelve soldiers and their king,
Rhesus. They also steal Rhesus’s chariot and horses. Athena warns them that some angry god may
wake the other soldiers; Diomedes and Odysseus thus ride Rhesus’s chariot back to the Achaean
camp. Nestor and the other Greeks, worried that their comrades had been killed, greet them warmly.
Book 11
The next morning, Zeus rains blood upon the Achaean lines, filling them with panic; they suffer a
massacre during the first part of the day. But, by afternoon, they have begun to make progress.
Agamemnon, splendidly armed, cuts down man after man and beats the Trojans back to the city’s
gates. Zeus sends Iris to tell Hector that he must wait until Agamemnon is wounded and then begin
his attack. Agamemnon soon receives his wound at the hands of Coon, Antenor’s son, just after
killing Coon’s brother. The injured Agamemnon continues fighting and kills Coon, but his pain
eventually forces him from the field.
Hector recognizes his cue and charges the Achaean line, driving it back. The Achaeans panic and
stand poised to retreat, but the words of Odysseus and Diomedes imbue them with fresh courage.
Diomedes then hurls a spear that hits Hector’s helmet. This brush with death stuns Hector and forces
him to retreat. Paris answers the Achaeans’ act by wounding Diomedes with an arrow, thus sidelining
the great warrior for the rest of the epic. Trojans now encircle Odysseus, left to fight alone. He beats
them all off, but not before a man named Socus gives him a wound through the ribs. Great Ajax
carries Odysseus back to camp before the Trojans can harm him further.
Hector resumes his assault on another part of the Achaean line. The Greeks initially hold him off, but
they panic when the healer Machaon receives wounds at Paris’s hands. Hector and his men force
Ajax to retreat as Nestor conveys Machaon back to his tent. Meanwhile, behind the lines, Achilles
sees the injured Machaon fly by in a chariot and sends his companion Patroclus to inquire into
Machaon’s status. Nestor tells Patroclus about all of the wounds that the Trojans have inflicted upon
the Achaean commanders. He begs Patroclus to persuade Achilles to rejoin the battle—or at least
enter the battle himself disguised in Achilles’ armor. This ruse would at least give the Achaeans the
benefit of Achilles’ terrifying aura. Patroclus agrees to appeal to Achilles and dresses the wound of a
man named Eurypylus, who has been injured fighting alongside Ajax.
34
Book 12
We learn that the Achaean fortifications are doomed to be destroyed by the gods when Troy falls.
They continue to hold for now, however, and the trench dug in front of them blocks the Trojan
chariots. Undaunted, Hector, acting on the advice of the young commander Polydamas, orders his
men to disembark from their chariots and storm the ramparts. Just as the Trojans prepare to cross the
trenches, an eagle flies to the left-hand side of the Trojan line and drops a serpent in the soldiers’
midst. Polydamas interprets this event as a sign that their charge will fail, but Hector refuses to
retreat.
The Trojans Glaucus and Sarpedon now charge the ramparts, and Menestheus, aided by Great Ajax
and Teucer, struggles to hold them back. Sarpedon makes the first breach, and Hector follows by
shattering one of the gates with a boulder. The Trojans pour through the fortifications as the
Achaeans, terrified, shrink back against the ships.
Book 13
Zeus, happy with the war’s progress, takes his leave of the battlefield. Poseidon, eager to help the
Achaeans and realizing that Zeus has gone, visits Little Ajax and Great Ajax in the form of Calchas
and gives them confidence to resist the Trojan assault. He also rouses the rest of the Achaeans, who
have withdrawn in tears to the sides of the ships. Their spirits restored, the Achaeans again stand up
to the Trojans, and the two Aeantes (the plural of Ajax) prove successful in driving Hector back.
When Hector throws his lance at Teucer, Teucer dodges out of the way, and the weapon pierces and
kills Poseidon’s grandson Amphimachus. As an act of vengeance, Poseidon imbues Idomeneus with a
raging power. Idomeneus then joins Meriones in leading a charge against the Trojans at the
Achaeans’ left wing. Idomeneus cuts down a number of Trojan soldiers but hopes most of all to kill
the warrior Deiphobus. Finding him on the battlefield, he taunts the Trojan, who summons Aeneas
and other comrades to his assistance. In the long skirmish that ensues, Deiphobus is wounded, and
Menelaus cuts down several Trojans.
Meanwhile, on the right, Hector continues his assault, but the Trojans who accompany him, having
been mercilessly battered by the two Aeantes, have lost their vigor. Some have returned to the Trojan
side of the fortifications, while those who remain fight from scattered positions. Polydamas persuades
Hector to regroup his forces. Hector fetches Paris and tries to gather his comrades from the left end of
the line—only to find them all wounded or dead. Great Ajax insults Hector, and an eagle appears on
Ajax’s right, a favorable omen for the Achaeans.
Book 14
Nestor leaves the wounded Machaon in his tent and goes to meet the other wounded Achaean
commanders out by the ships. The men scan the battlefield and realize the terrible extent of their
losses. Agamemnon proposes giving up and setting sail for home. Odysseus wheels on him and
declares this notion cowardly and disgraceful. Diomedes urges them all to the line to rally their
troops. As they set out, Poseidon encourages Agamemnon and gives added strength to the Achaean
army.
Hera spots Zeus on Mount Ida, overlooking Troy, and devises a plan to distract him so that she may
help the Achaeans behind his back. She visits Aphrodite and tricks her into giving her an enchanted
breastband into which the powers of Love and Longing are woven, forceful enough to make the
sanest man go mad. She then visits the embodiment of Sleep, and by promising him one of her
daughters in marriage, persuades him to lull Zeus to sleep. Sleep follows her to the peak of Mount
Ida; disguised as a bird, he hides in a tree. Zeus sees Hera, and the enchanted band seizes him with
35
passion. He makes love to Hera and, as planned, soon falls asleep. Hera then calls to Poseidon, telling
him that he now has free rein to steer the Achaeans to victory. Poseidon regroups them, and they
charge the Trojans. In the ensuing scuffle, Great Ajax knocks Hector to the ground with a boulder,
and the Trojans must carry the hero back to Troy. With Hector gone, the Achaeans soon trounce their
enemies, and Trojans die in great numbers as the army flees back to the city.
Book 15
Zeus wakes and sees the havoc that Hera and Poseidon have wreaked while he dozed in his enchanted
sleep. Hera tries to blame Poseidon, but Zeus comforts her by making clear that he has no personal
interest in a Trojan victory over the Achaeans. He tells her that he will again come to their aid, but
that Troy is still fated to fall and that Hector will die after he kills Patroclus. He then asks Hera to
summon Iris and Apollo. Iris goes to order Poseidon to leave the battlefield, which Poseidon
reluctantly agrees to do, while Apollo seeks out Hector and fills him and his comrades with fresh
strength. Hector leads a charge against the Achaeans, and while their leaders initially hold their
ground, they retreat in terror when Apollo himself enters the battle. Apollo covers over the trench in
front of the Greek fortifications, allowing the Trojans to beat down the ramparts once again.
The armies fight all the way to the ships and very nearly into the Greek camp. At the base of the
ships, furious hand-to-hand fighting breaks out. Great Ajax and Hector again tangle. The archer
Teucer fells several Trojans, but Zeus snaps his bowstring when he takes aim at Hector. Ajax
encourages his troops from the decks of the ships, but Hector rallies the Trojans, and inch by inch the
Trojans advance until Hector is close enough to touch a ship.
Book 16
Meanwhile, Patroclus goes to Achilles’ tent and begs to be allowed to wear Achilles’ armor if
Achilles still refuses to rejoin the battle himself. Achilles declines to fight but agrees to the exchange
of armor, with the understanding that Patroclus will fight only long enough to save the ships. As
Patroclus arms himself, the first ship goes up in flames. Achilles sends his Myrmidon soldiers, who
have not been fighting during their commander’s absence, out to accompany Patroclus. He then prays
to Zeus that Patroclus may return with both himself and the ships unharmed. The poet reveals,
however, that Zeus will grant only one of these prayers.
With the appearance of Patroclus in Achilles’ armor the battle quickly turns, and the Trojans retreat
from the Achaean ships. At first, the line holds together, but when Hector retreats, the rest of the
Trojans become trapped in the trenches. Patroclus now slaughters every Trojan he encounters. Zeus
considers saving his son Sarpedon, but Hera persuades him that the other gods would either look
down upon him for it or try to save their own mortal offspring in turn. Zeus resigns himself to
Sarpedon’s mortality. Patroclus soon spears Sarpedon, and both sides fight over his armor. Hector
returns briefly to the front in an attempt to retrieve the armor.
Zeus decides to kill Patroclus for slaying Sarpedon, but first he lets him rout the Trojans. Zeus then
imbues Hector with a temporary cowardice, and Hector leads the retreat. Patroclus, disobeying
Achilles, pursues the Trojans all the way to the gates of Troy. Homer explains that the city might
have fallen at this moment had Apollo not intervened and driven Patroclus back from the gates.
Apollo persuades Hector to charge Patroclus, but Patroclus kills Cebriones, the driver of Hector’s
chariot. Trojans and Achaeans fight for Cebriones’ armor. Amid the chaos, Apollo sneaks up behind
Patroclus and wounds him, and Hector easily finishes him off. Hector taunts the fallen man, but with
his dying words Patroclus foretells Hector’s own death.
36
Book 17
A fight breaks out over Patroclus’s body. Euphorbus, the Trojan who first speared him, tries to strip
him of Achilles’ armor but is killed by Menelaus. Hector, spurred on by Apollo, sees Euphorbus’s
fall and comes to help. Menelaus enlists the help of Great Ajax, who forces Hector to back down and
prevents the body from being removed or desecrated. He arrives too late to save the armor, however,
which Hector dons himself. Glaucus rebukes Hector for leaving Patroclus’s body behind and suggests
that they might have traded it for Sarpedon’s. Hector reenters the fray, promising to give half of the
war’s spoils to any Trojan who drags Patroclus’s corpse away.
Aware of Hector’s impending doom and perhaps pitying it, Zeus temporarily gives Hector great
power. Ajax and Menelaus summon more Achaeans to help them, and they soon force the Trojans,
including mighty Hector, to run for the city’s walls. Aeneas, invigorated by Apollo, rallies the fleeing
men to return to the fight, but after much effort they remain unable to take the corpse. Achilles’
charioteer, Automedon, becomes involved in the fighting as Zeus imbues his team with fresh
strength. Hector tries to kill Automedon so that he can steal the chariot, but Automedon dodges
Hector’s spear and brings a Trojan down in the process. He strips the Trojan of his armor, claiming
that in doing so he eases the grief of Patroclus’s spirit, though this present victim could hardly
compare to the great Patroclus.
Athena, disguised as Phoenix, gives fresh strength to Menelaus, while Apollo, himself disguised as a
Trojan, lends encouragement to Hector. Menelaus sends Antilochus for help from Achilles, who still
doesn’t know of Patroclus’s death. Zeus begins moving the battle in the Trojans’ favor but relents
long enough for Menelaus and Meriones to carry away Patroclus’s body.
Book 18
When Antilochus brings word to Achilles of Patroclus’s death, Achilles loses control of himself. He
weeps and beats the ground with his fists and covers his face with dirt. He utters a “terrible,
wrenching cry” so profound that Thetis hears him and comes with her water-nymph sisters from the
ocean to learn what troubles her son (18.39). Achilles tells her of the tragedy and insists that he shall
avenge himself on Hector, despite his knowledge that, should he choose to live the life of a warrior,
he is fated to die young. Thetis responds that since Hector now wears Achilles’ armor, she will have
the divine metalsmith Hephaestus make him a new set, if Achilles will delay exacting his revenge for
one day.
Thetis departs, and Iris, sent by Hera, comes to tell Achilles that he must go outside and make an
appearance on the battlefield. This appearance alone will scare the Trojans into abandoning the fight
for Patroclus’s body. Achilles leaves his tent, accompanied by Athena, and lets loose an enormous
cry that does indeed send the Trojans fleeing.
That night, each army holds an assembly to plan its next move. In the Trojan camp, Polydamas urges
his comrades to retreat to the city now that Achilles has decided to return to battle. Hector dismisses
the idea as cowardly and insists on repeating the previous day’s assault. His foolhardy plan wins the
support of the Trojans, for Athena has robbed them of their wits. Meanwhile, in the Achaean camp,
the men begin their mourning for Patroclus. Achilles has men clean Patroclus’s wounds to prepare
him for burial, though he vows not to bury him until he has slain Hector. Thetis goes to Hephaestus’s
mansion and begs him to make Achilles a new set of armor. Hephaestus forges a breastplate, a
helmet, and an extraordinary shield embossed with the images of constellations, pastures, dancing
children, and cities of men.
37
Book 19
Thetis presents Achilles with the armor that Hephaestus has forged for him. She promises to look
after Patroclus’s body and keep it from rotting while Achilles goes to battle. Achilles walks along the
shore, calling his men to an assembly. At the meeting, Agamemnon and Achilles reconcile with each
other, and Agamemnon gives Achilles the gifts that he promised him should Achilles ever return to
battle. He also returns Briseis.
Achilles announces his intention to go to war at once. Odysseus persuades him to let the army eat
first, but Achilles himself refuses to eat until he has slain Hector. All through breakfast, he sits
mourning his dear friend Patroclus and reminiscing. Even Briseis mourns, for Patroclus had treated
her kindly when she was first led away from her homeland. Zeus finds the scene emotionally moving
and sends Athena down to fill Achilles’ stomach with nectar and ambrosia, keeping his hunger at bay.
Achilles then dons his armor and mounts his chariot. As he does so, he chastises his horses, Roan
Beauty and Charger, for leaving Patroclus on the battlefield to die. Roan Beauty replies that it was
not he but a god who let Patroclus die and that the same is fated for Achilles. But Achilles needs no
reminders of his fate; he knows his fate already, and knows that by entering battle for his friend he
seals his destiny.
Book 20
While the Achaeans and Trojans prepare for battle, Zeus summons the gods to Mount Olympus. He
knows that if Achilles enters the battlefield unchecked, he will decimate the Trojans and maybe even
bring the city down before its fated time. Accordingly, he thus removes his previous injunction
against divine interference in the battle, and the gods stream down to earth. But the gods soon decide
to watch the fighting rather than involve themselves in it, and they take their seats on opposite hills
overlooking the battlefield, interested to see how their mortal teams will fare on their own.
Before he resigns himself to a passive role, however, Apollo encourages Aeneas to challenge
Achilles. The two heroes meet on the battlefield and exchange insults. Achilles is about to stab
Aeneas fatally when Poseidon, in a burst of sympathy for the Trojan—and much to the chagrin of the
other, pro-Greek gods—whisks Aeneas away. Hector then approaches, but Apollo persuades him not
to strike up a duel in front of the ranks but rather to wait with the other soldiers until Achilles comes
to him. Hector initially obeys, but when he sees Achilles so smoothly slaughtering the Trojans,
among them one of Hector’s brothers, he again challenges Achilles. The fight goes poorly for Hector,
and Apollo is forced to save him a second time.
Book 21
Achilles routs the Trojans and splits their ranks, pursuing half of them into the river known to the
gods as Xanthus and to the mortals as Scamander. On the riverbank, Achilles mercilessly slaughters
Lycaon, a son of Priam. The Trojan Asteropaeus, given fresh strength by the god of the river, makes a
valiant stand, but Achilles kills him as well. The vengeful Achilles has no intention of sparing any
Trojans now that they have killed Patroclus. He throws so many corpses into the river that its
channels become clogged. The river god rises up and protests, and Achilles agrees to stop throwing
people into the water but not to stop killing them. The river, sympathetic to the Trojans, calls for help
from Apollo, but when Achilles hears the river’s plea, he attacks the river. The river gets the upper
hand and drags Achilles all the way downstream to a floodplain. He very nearly kills Achilles, but the
gods intervene. Hephaestus, sent by Hera, sets the plain on fire and boils the river until he relents.
A great commotion now breaks out among the gods as they watch and argue over the human warfare.
Athena defeats Ares and Aphrodite. Poseidon challenges Apollo, but Apollo refuses to fight over
38
mere mortals. His sister Artemis taunts him and tries to encourage him to fight, but Hera overhears
her and pounces on her.
Meanwhile, Priam sees the human carnage on the battlefield and opens the gates of Troy to his
fleeing troops. Achilles pursues them and very nearly takes the city, but the Trojan prince Agenor
challenges him to single combat. Achilles’ fight with Agenor—and with Apollo disguised as Agenor
after Agenor himself has been whisked to safety—allows the Trojans enough time to scurry back to
Troy.
Book 22
Hector now stands as the only Trojan left outside Troy. Priam, overlooking the battlefield from the
Trojan ramparts, begs him to come inside, but Hector, having given the overconfident order for the
Trojans to camp outside their gates the night before, now feels too ashamed to join them in their
retreat. When Achilles finally returns from chasing Apollo (disguised as Agenor), Hector confronts
him. At first, the mighty Trojan considers trying to negotiate with Achilles, but he soon realizes the
hopelessness of his cause and flees. He runs around the city three times, with Achilles at his heels.
Zeus considers saving Hector, but Athena persuades him that the mortal’s time has come. Zeus places
Hector’s and Achilles’ respective fates on a golden scale, and, indeed, Hector’s sinks to the ground.
During Hector’s fourth circle around the city walls, Athena appears before him, disguised as his ally
Deiphobus, and convinces him that together they can take Achilles. Hector stops running and turns to
face his opponent. He and Achilles exchange spear throws, but neither scores a hit. Hector turns to
Deiphobus to ask him for a lance; when he finds his friend gone, he realizes that the gods have
betrayed him. In a desperate bid for glory, he charges Achilles. However, he still wears Achilles’ old
armor—stolen from Patroclus’s dead body—and Achilles knows the armor’s weak points intimately.
With a perfectly timed thrust he puts his spear through Hector’s throat. Near death, Hector pleads
with Achilles to return his body to the Trojans for burial, but Achilles resolves to let the dogs and
scavenger birds maul the Trojan hero.
The other Achaeans gather round and exultantly stab Hector’s corpse. Achilles ties Hector’s body to
the back of his chariot and drags it through the dirt. Meanwhile, up above on the city’s walls, King
Priam and Queen Hecuba witness the devastation of their son’s body and wail with grief.
Andromache hears them from her chamber and runs outside. When she sees her husband’s corpse
being dragged through the dirt, she too collapses and weeps.
Book 23
At the Achaean camp, Achilles and the Myrmidons continue their mourning for Patroclus. Achilles
finally begins to accept food, but he still refuses to wash until he has buried Patroclus. That night, his
dead companion appears to him in a dream, begging Achilles to hold his funeral soon so that his soul
can enter the land of the dead. The next day, after an elaborate ceremony in which he sacrifices the
Achaeans’ twelve Trojan captives, Achilles prays for assistance from the winds and lights Patroclus’s
funeral pyre.
The day after, following the burial of Patroclus’s bones, Achilles holds a series of competitions in
Patroclus’s honor. Marvelous prizes are offered, and both the commanders and the soldiers compete.
The events include boxing, wrestling, archery, and a chariot race, which Diomedes wins with some
help from Athena. Afterward, Achilles considers stripping the prize from the second-place finisher,
Antilochus, to give as consolation to the last-place finisher, whom Athena has robbed of victory so
that Diomedes would win. But Antilochus becomes furious at the idea of having his prize taken from
him. Menelaus then adds to the argument, declaring that Antilochus committed a foul during the race.
After some heated words, the men reconcile with one another.
39
Book 24
Achilles continues mourning Patroclus and abusing Hector’s body, dragging it around his dead
companion’s tomb. Apollo, meanwhile, protects Hector’s corpse from damage and rot and staves off
dogs and scavengers. Finally, on the twelfth day after Hector’s death, Apollo persuades Zeus that
Achilles must let Hector’s body be ransomed. Zeus sends Thetis to bring the news to Achilles, while
Iris goes to Priam to instruct him to initiate the ransom. Hecuba fears that Achilles will kill her
husband, but Zeus reassures her by sending an eagle as a good omen.
Priam sets out with his driver, Idaeus, and a chariot full of treasure. Zeus sends Hermes, disguised as
a benevolent Myrmidon soldier, to guide Priam through the Achaean camp. When the chariot arrives
at Achilles’ tent, Hermes reveals himself and then leaves Priam alone with Achilles. Priam tearfully
supplicates Achilles, begging for Hector’s body. He asks Achilles to think of his own father, Peleus,
and the love between them. Achilles weeps for his father and for Patroclus. He accepts the ransom
and agrees to give the corpse back.
That night, Priam sleeps in Achilles’ tent, but Hermes comes to him in the middle of the night and
rouses him, warning him that he must not sleep among the enemy. Priam and Idaeus wake, place
Hector in their chariot, and slip out of the camp unnoticed. All of the women in Troy, from
Andromache to Helen, cry out in grief when they first see Hector’s body. For nine days the Trojans
prepare Hector’s funeral pyre—Achilles has given them a reprieve from battle. The Trojans light
Hector’s pyre on the tenth day.
The Iliad character map
40
The Iliad Study Guide
1. How did Paris, Prince of Troy, start the Trojan War?
2. What did Agamemnon do that angered the god, Apollo?
3. How did Agamemnon anger Achilles and what did Achilles do in response?
4. What did Thetis ask Zeus to do?
5. What did Achilles do when the Greeks returned to the war?
6. Describe the action in the fight between Paris and Menelaus.
7. Pandarus saw one of King Priam’s sons who told him to shoot an arrow at Menelaus. Who
was it really?
8. Why did Agamemnon want to start the war again?
9. Which side did Hera and Athena want to help?
10. Why does Hector ask his mother to pray to Athena?
11. What reasons does Hector give to Paris for returning to the battle?
12. What does Hector do before returning to battle?
13. What do Apollo and Athena agree to do?
14. When no Greeks step up to Hector’s challenge, how is a warrior chosen?
15. What happens when Ajax and Hector fight?
16. What did Zeus command the gods and goddesses to do?
17. What does Diomedes not want Hector to think of him?
18. Hera and Athena decide to help the Greeks but before they reach the battlefield, they change
their minds. Why?
19. What does Agamemnon realize?
20. What does Agamemnon decide to do?
21. What does Achilles answer?
22. Did hearing Phoenix’s story change Achilles’ mind?
23. When does Achilles say he will return to battle?
24. Why did Menelaus suggest sending a spy to the Trojans?
25. Why did Odysseus and Diomedes have an advantage over Dolon?
26. Was the spying mission successful?
27. Why didn’t Hector stand up to Agamemnon?
28. After Agamemnon was hurt and then Diomedes, why wouldn’t the other Greek chiefs fight
beside Odysseus?
29. Why did Achilles send Patroclus to see what was happening?
30. What was the “bird sign” that the Trojans found so frightening?
31. Discussion Point: Why does Achilles watch the battle so closely if he doesn’t want to fight
with his fellow Greeks? Why does he care about what’s happening?
32. Poseidon is Zeus’s brother and yet he disobeyed an order given by Zeus. What did he do?
33. Did Poseidon back down when Zeus sent the messenger Iris to him?
34. How did Hector recover from his wound?
35. Does Patroclus think that Achilles has made a good choice in staying away from the battle?
36. Achilles agrees to let Patroclus go to battle wearing Achilles’ armor but he gives him one
order. What is it?
37. Who killed Patroclus?
38. Why is Achilles so distraught?
39. Who does Thetis go to for new armor for Achilles?
40. What does Achilles say to make up with Agamemnon?
41. How does Agamemnon react?
41
42. Why did Athena disguise herself as Hector’s brother?
43. What was Hector’s dying request?
44. Why does Achilles agree to return Hector’s body to his family?
45. How does the reader know that Achilles is touched by King Priam?
46. How did the Greeks use deception to win the war?
Organization and structure of The Iliad
Iliad Book Time Event
Book One 1 + 9 + 1 days Supplication + Plague + Quarrel
12 days divine absence (inert time)
Books 2-7 Day 1 1st battle (7.475 night falls)
Book 8 Day 2 2nd battle; Greeks beaten back
Book 9 Night 2 Embassy, Doloneia (Hector warned)
Books 11-18 Day 3 3rd battle; the big one; mist changes tone at end
17 Death of Sarpedon
18 Death of Patroclus
Book 18 Night 3 Thetis and Achilles; shield
Books 19-22 Day 4 19: reconciliation with Agamemnon
20: Theomachia
21: River
22: Death of Hector
Book 23 Night 4 psyche of Patroclus visits Achilles
Book 23 Day 5 Funeral Games
Book 24 Night 5 Achilles sleepless
12 days Hector exposed, Priam visits Achilles at night
9 days mourning for Hector (inert time)
Hector buried
The Odyssey
The Odyssey Plot Overview
Ten years have passed since the fall of Troy, and the Greek hero Odysseus still has not returned to his
kingdom in Ithaca. A large and rowdy mob of suitors who have overrun Odysseus’ palace and
pillaged his land continue to court his wife, Penelope. She has remained faithful to Odysseus. Prince
Telemachus, Odysseus’ son, wants desperately to throw them out but does not have the confidence or
experience to fight them. One of the suitors, Antinous, plans to assassinate the young prince,
eliminating the only opposition to their dominion over the palace.
Unknown to the suitors, Odysseus is still alive. The beautiful nymph Calypso, possessed by love for
him, has imprisoned him on her island, Ogygia. He longs to return to his wife and son, but he has no
ship or crew to help him escape. While the gods and goddesses of Mount Olympus debate Odysseus’s
future, Athena, Odysseus’s strongest supporter among the gods, resolves to help Telemachus.
Disguised as a friend of the prince’s grandfather, Laertes, she convinces the prince to call a meeting
of the assembly at which he reproaches the suitors. Athena also prepares him for a great journey to
Pylos and Sparta, where the kings Nestor and Menelaus, Odysseus’s companions during the war,
42
inform him that Odysseus is alive and trapped on Calypso’s island. Telemachus makes plans to return
home, while, back in Ithaca, Antinous and the other suitors prepare an ambush to kill him when he
reaches port.
On Mount Olympus, Zeus sends Hermes to rescue Odysseus from Calypso. Hermes persuades
Calypso to let Odysseus build a ship and leave. The homesick hero sets sail, but when Poseidon, god
of the sea, finds him sailing home, he sends a storm to wreck Odysseus’s ship. Poseidon has harbored
a bitter grudge against Odysseus since the hero blinded his son, the Cyclops Polyphemus, earlier in
his travels. Athena intervenes to save Odysseus from Poseidon’s wrath, and the beleaguered king
lands at Scheria, home of the Phaeacians. Nausicaa, the Phaeacian princess, shows him to the royal
palace, and Odysseus receives a warm welcome from the king and queen. When he identifies himself
as Odysseus, his hosts, who have heard of his exploits at Troy, are stunned. They promise to give him
safe passage to Ithaca, but first they beg to hear the story of his adventures.
Odysseus spends the night describing the fantastic chain of events leading up to his arrival on
Calypso’s island. He recounts his trip to the Land of the Lotus Eaters, his battle with Polyphemus the
Cyclops, his love affair with the witch-goddess Circe, his temptation by the deadly Sirens, his journey
into Hades to consult the prophet Tiresias, and his fight with the sea monster Scylla. When he
finishes his story, the Phaeacians return Odysseus to Ithaca, where he seeks out the hut of his faithful
swineherd, Eumaeus. Though Athena has disguised Odysseus as a beggar, Eumaeus warmly receives
and nourishes him in the hut. He soon encounters Telemachus, who has returned from Pylos and
Sparta despite the suitors’ ambush, and reveals to him his true identity. Odysseus and Telemachus
devise a plan to massacre the suitors and regain control of Ithaca.
When Odysseus arrives at the palace the next day, still disguised as a beggar, he endures abuse and
insults from the suitors. The only person who recognizes him is his old nurse, Eurycleia, but she
swears not to disclose his secret. Penelope takes an interest in this strange beggar, suspecting that he
might be her long-lost husband. Quite crafty herself, Penelope organizes an archery contest the
following day and promises to marry any man who can string Odysseus’s great bow and fire an arrow
through a row of twelve axes—a feat that only Odysseus has ever been able to accomplish. At the
contest, each suitor tries to string the bow and fails. Odysseus steps up to the bow and, with little
effort, fires an arrow through all twelve axes. He then turns the bow on the suitors. He and
Telemachus, assisted by a few faithful servants, kill every last suitor.
Odysseus reveals himself to the entire palace and reunites with his loving Penelope. He travels to the
outskirts of Ithaca to see his aging father, Laertes. They come under attack from the vengeful family
members of the dead suitors, but Laertes, reinvigorated by his son’s return, successfully kills
Antinous’ father and puts a stop to the attack. Zeus dispatches Athena to restore peace. With his
power secure and his family reunited, Odysseus’ long ordeal comes to an end.
List of characters
Alcinoos: King of the Phaiacians
Anticleia: Odysseus’ mother who died while he was away from Ithaca
Antinoos: “Ringleader” of Penelope’s suitors
Arete: King Alcinoos’ wife, known for her kindness and beauty
Argos: Odysseus’ old hunting dog
Athena: Goddess of wisdom; Odysseus’ helper
Calypso: Witch/nymph who wanted Odysseus as her husband
Circe: “Terrible goddess with lovely hair, who spoke in the language of men”; daughter of Helios
Demodocos: Blind minstrel
43
Eumaios: Swineherd; a faithful servant of Odysseus
Eupeithes: Father of Antinoos
Eurycleia: Faithful old servant of Odysseus and his family; “she loved him [Telemachus] more than
any other of the household, and she had been his nurse when he was a little tot.”
Eurymachos: One of Penelopeia’s cruelest suitors
Hyperion: Sun-god
Iros: Beggar at Odysseus’s home
Laertes: Odysseus’s father; lives in seclusion in the country
Odysseus: Protagonist unable to reach home after the Trojan War; “wise beyond all mortal men”
Melanthios: One of Penelopeia’s cruelest suitors; a goatherd
Nausicaa: Daughter of King Alcinovs; “tall and divinely beautiful”
Penelope: Odysseus’s faithful wife
Philoitios: Faithful cattle drover
Poseidon: God of the sea; bore a lasting grudge against Odysseus; often called “Earthshaker”
Polyphemos: “Most powerful of all the Cyclopians”; son of Poseidon
Telemachus: Odysseus’s son; “a fine-looking boy”; approximately twenty years old
Theoclymenos: Prophet who returns to Ithaca with Telemachus
Teiresias: Blind Theban prophet
Introduction
The Greek myths were first passed on by word of mouth, down through the violence of a dark age.
The two or three centuries beginning about 1125 B.C.E. were marked by strife and turmoil. The
course of civilization was set back by centuries. Later Greeks, looking back through the dim prism of
the centuries of violence, spoke of a time when heroes walked the earth. These exceptional men and
women fought monsters, performed superhuman feats and consorted with the gods themselves.
The Ancient Greeks were polytheists and believed in a multitude of immortal deities. The greatest of
these lived on the remote heights of Mount Olympus but were by no means aloof from the mortals
below. The Olympian gods communicated with their subjects by omens and oracles. Spokespersons
for the divine, oracles answered questions, often in riddles. The greatest was at Delphi. The gods
decided the outcome of athletic contests and battles. They even took up arms themselves. And they
aided or hindered the heroes in their quests.
A hero’s lot was out of the ordinary from the very outset. He or she might be the offspring of an
immortal deity. Some heroes were abandoned in the wilderness as babies. Oedipus and the heroine
Atalanta were thrown to fate in this way. Oedipus was saved from certain death by the kindness of a
shepherd. Atalanta was nursed by a bear. When she grew up, she could outrun, outshoot and
outwrestle most men, fellow heroes included.
Heroes often received an unusual education. Some were tutored by Chiron, greatest of the centaurs.
The centaurs were half man, half horse. Notoriously uncivilized, they were prone to such behavior as
disrupting wedding feasts by trying to carry off the bride. Chiron was distinguished from the other
centaurs by his civility and cultivation of the healing arts. Among other skills, he taught young heroes
the medicinal value of herbs and plants.
Back before the Dark Age, kingdoms had produced glorious arts and crafts, typified by the golden
masks found on the site of ancient Mycenae. The myths go back at least as far as this era, known as
the Mycenaean. It is also known as the Heroic Age.
As the time of the heroes gave way to the dim centuries of violence, ruins and abandoned dwellings
lay scattered upon the land. The kingdoms that had seen the exploits sung about by bards like Homer
44
now lay in shambles. Some speculate that Dorian invaders from the north with iron weapons laid
waste the Bronze Age culture. Others look to internal dissent, uprising and rebellion. Or perhaps
some combination brought the era to an end.
One thing is certain, civilization had taken a giant backward step. Material culture and the life of the
mind were reduced to a lower common denominator. And when the flame of learning and the aspiring
spirit was kindled anew, people looked back across the time of darkness to what seemed a golden age.
Then it was, they thought, that a special breed of men and women had trod the earth, not quite gods
but not quite human either. They made up stories about them, some based perhaps on faint
recollections of real individuals.
These were the heroes of Greek mythology.
Background
The Trojan War was over. The clever Greek Odysseus had tricked the enemy into bringing a colossal
wooden horse within the walls of Troy. The Trojans had no idea that Greek soldiers were hidden
inside, under the command of Odysseus.
The Greeks had been laying siege to Troy for nine long years, but suddenly it looked like their whole
army had departed, leaving the horse behind.
That night, while the Trojans slept, Odysseus and his men emerged from the horse's belly. Opening
the city gates, they admitted their comrades, who had snuck back in the dark.
Troy was sacked and the Trojans utterly vanquished. Now it was time for Odysseus and his fellow
warriors to return to their kingdoms across the sea. Here begins the tale of the Odyssey, as sung by
the blind minstrel Homer.
Book 1
"Oh Goddess of Inspiration, help me sing of wily Odysseus, that master of schemes!" So Homer
begins his epic, though the hero himself is still offstage. We are treated to a glimpse of life among the
supreme gods on Mount Olympus.
Grey-eyed Athena, the goddess of war, is addressing an assembly headed by Zeus, the king of gods:
"Even though we all love Odysseus, he alone of the Greek heroes has been waylaid on his journey
home from Troy. When he put out the eye of the giant Cyclops, he provoked the wrath of the God of
Earthquakes."
The Olympians know she refers to Poseidon, the Ruler of the Sea, who is off enjoying a banquet
elsewhere.
"And now Odysseus languishes on the lonely island of the nymph Calypso, pining for home. Is that
your will, Zeus?"
"You know very well it isn't," replies the god of gods.
"Then send your herald, Hermes, flying to Calypso. Make her let Odysseus go. I myself will inspire
the hero's son." Athena departs to fulfill this vow.
Adopting a mortal guise, she appears at the gate of Odysseus' mansion on the island of Ithaca.
Odysseus' son, Telemachus, does not recognize the goddess in her human form but invites the
stranger in as a guest. Over food and wine they discuss the fact that Telemachus and his mother
Penelope are plagued by suitors for Penelope's hand in marriage.
All the eligible young nobles of Ithaca and the neighboring islands, assuming that Odysseus is dead,
are vying for Penelope. And while they wait to see which one of them she will choose, they help
themselves to her hospitality, feasting through her herds and guzzling her wine. Telemachus is
powerless to do anything about it.
45
"Warn them off," counsels Athena. "Then fit out a ship that will carry you to the mainland. There you
must seek tidings of your father."
Book 2
Inspired by Athena, Telemachus calls a council of all the men of Ithaca. He asks them how they can
stand idly by and allow his mother's hospitality to be abused. Antinous, one of the ringleaders of the
suitors, brazenly puts the blame on Penelope, for not choosing one of them as husband.
"She has even resorted to trickery," claims Antinous. "At first she said she'd choose among us just as
soon as she finished her weaving. But she secretly unraveled it every night."
Hot words are exchanged, and Zeus sends an omen. Two eagles swoop down on the congregation,
tearing cheeks and necks with their talons. A wise man interprets this as impending doom for the
suitors.
In closing, Telemachus asks his countrymen to fit him out with a ship so that he might seek news of
his father.
Back in his own hall, Telemachus is greeted by Antinous, who suggests that they share a feast
together just as they did when Telemachus was still a boy. Telemachus replies that he'll see him dead
first. The other suitors mock the young man for his fighting words.
Seeking out his aged nursemaid, Eurycleia, Telemachus instructs her to prepare barley meal and wine
for the crew of his ship. He makes her swear an oath that she will not tell his mother of his departure
until he is ten days gone.
That night a sleek black vessel crewed by twenty oarsmen puts out to sea, with Telemachus and
Athena, his godly patron in disguise, seated in the stern.
Book 3
Dawn finds the travelers at Pylos, in the kingdom of Nestor, who at the age of ninety led a contingent
in the Trojan War. Telemachus asks the wise old king to tell him how and where his father died, for
he cannot help but assume the worst. In reply, Nestor tells what he knows of the Greeks' return from
Troy.
"It started out badly because of Athena's anger. She caused dissension between our leader
Agamemnon and his brother Menelaus. Menelaus was for setting sail immediately, while
Agamemnon insisted that a sacrifice be held first to pacify the goddess. In the end, half the army left
while the others remained with Agamemnon.
"Those of us who sailed with Menelaus made good speed at first, but then we were at each other's
throats again. One group, under Odysseus, broke off and rejoined Agamemnon. I'm sure that even in
Ithaca you've heard what eventually happened to him."
"To Agamemnon? Yes," responds Telemachus. He knows that the great king's wife fell in love with
another. Together they murdered Agamemnon upon his homecoming. Then, seven years later, he was
avenged by his son, Orestes.
"But tell me, Nestor, if you will, why did Menelaus not slay his brother's killer with his own hand and
throw his body to the dogs?"
Nestor explains how the fair winds that brought that first party of Greeks safely home from Troy
failed Menelaus. A storm blew him all the way to Egypt. There he lingered, unable to return home
until it was too late.
"Journey to Sparta," suggests Nestor. "Seek further news from Menelaus. I will loan you a chariot
and one of my sons to accompany you."
And so in the morning, after participating in a sacrifice to Athena, Telemachus sets out for the
kingdom of Menelaus.
46
Book 4
Telemachus and Nestor's son are welcomed by King Menelaus with great hospitality. Queen Helen
immediately recognizes Telemachus as the spitting image of Odysseus.
"You must be the boy he left behind when he took ship for Troy -- all because of me and my mad
passion for Trojan Paris. Aphrodite's curse was already wearing off when last I saw your father. What
a man! I'll never forget his daring and his guile.
"He had beaten himself black and blue and dressed up in a beggar's rags to sneak into Troy. But I
recognized him when he spoke to me there in the house of Paris. I bathed him and gave him a fresh
robe, and he made his escape, killing many a Trojan on his way. I rejoiced, for I missed my home and
the blameless husband I had forsaken."
"And remember, my dear, how you suspected that we were hiding inside the wooden horse?" asks
Menelaus. "Odysseus was in command. It was everything he could do to keep us quiet when you
started calling out to us, imitating the voice of each man's wife."
These reminiscences are mixed with tears for fallen comrades, and at length Telemachus seeks respite
in sleep. In the morning, Menelaus relates what he can of Odysseus.
"As you know, I was held down for seven long years in Egypt. And when at last the gods relented and
sent a homeward breeze, I only made it as far as an island off the mouth of the Nile before I was
becalmed. A goddess took pity on me as I paced the beach in desperation.
"'My father is the Old Man of the Sea,' she said.' You and three picked men of your crew must catch
him and pin him down.' She helped us with disguises, the hides of seals which stank to high heaven.
She even rubbed ambrosia under our noses against the stench.
"And when the Ancient came for his midday nap amongst the seals, as was his custom, we jumped
him and held on for dear life. He had an awesome power, you see, to change his form -- to lion, to
snake, to boar, to gushing fountain and towering tree. But when he saw that we weren't about to let
go, he reverted to his original shape and began to speak.
"He said that Zeus himself was furious because we had failed to sacrifice before setting sail. We'd
have to slog back up the Nile and start all over. And as he was an all-knowing god, I asked which of
our comrades had perished on the journey home from Troy.
"'Only two high officers,' he replied.' And one of them might have lived but for his insolence. Even
though he had been the cause of Athena's wrath in the first place, Ajax made it safely ashore on a
promontory. At which point he had the audacity to brag that he had beaten the gods. His boast was
heard by Poseidon, and the Lord of Earthquakes swung his mighty trident and knocked the earth right
out from under Ajax, who fell into the sea and perished.'
"And the other?" we asked, for he had spoken of two high officers.
"'Odysseus lives still, though marooned, without a crew of oarsmen to stroke him home.'
And so Telemachus received the news that he had sought. But meanwhile his situation had become
still more perilous. For back at home on Ithaca, the suitors had gotten wind of his departure. Spurred
on by Antinous, they plotted to ambush him at sea upon his return.
Book 5
Soon after dawn breaks on Mount Olympus, Athena puts the case of Odysseus once more before the
gods. At her prompting, Zeus dispatches Hermes with a message for Calypso.
Binding on his magic sandals, Hermes skims over the waves to the island paradise where the nymph
has detained Odysseus. He finds her at her hearth in the midst of a forest redolent with cedar smoke
and thyme.
47
She's surprised by the visit but extends hospitality before asking its cause. Seating Hermes, she puts
before him nectar and ambrosia, the sustenance of the gods.
"I'm not here because I enjoy crossing the desolate sea," says Hermes. "I bring a message from Zeus:
Send Odysseus home."
"You jealous gods! Can't you bear to see one of us keep a mortal of her own?" cries Calypso. "Oh
very well, there's no arguing with Zeus."
Hermes rises to take his leave. "And next time, do God's bidding with a better grace."
Calypso knows where to find Odysseus. Every day for the last seven years he's sat on the same rock
gazing out to sea, weeping for home and Penelope.
"If I told you that there's heartbreak and shipwreck in store," asks the goddess, "would you trade
immortality and me for that mortal wench?"
"Yes, though she's nothing in comparison to your radiant self, I'd gladly endure what the sea deals
out."
"Very well then, you may go."
"What kind of trick is this?" asks Odysseus, who is famous for tricks himself. "You'll understand if
I'm suspicious."
"No trick. I swear by Styx."
And so the next morning she leads him to a pine wood and gives him tools to build a raft. Five days
later, provisioned with food and drink, he sets sail. Instructed by Calypso, he keeps Orion and its
companion constellations on his left and sails for seventeen days without sight of land. Then, just as
an island appears on the horizon, Poseidon notices what is afoot.
"So, my fellow gods have taken pity on Odysseus. If Zeus wills it, then he's headed home. But not
before I give him a voyage to remember."
Taking his trident in both hands, Poseidon stirs the sea into a fury and lashes up rain and squall. Mast
and sail are torn away, Odysseus is thrown overboard and buried under a wall of water. When he
emerges gasping and sputtering, he somehow manages to clamber back aboard.
A goddess, Leucothea, appears to him in the form of a bird. She counsels him to swim for it. "Take
my veil, tie it around your waist as a charm against drowning. When you reach shore, be sure to
throw it back into the sea."
Odysseus doubts. Surely it is safer to keep to the boat. But Poseidon soon solves his dilemma by
smashing it to bits. Satisfied, the Sea God drives off in his chariot. Odysseus swims and drifts for two
days, until he hears surf breaking on a rockbound coast.
A strong wave bears him in, straight onto the rocks. Desperately he clings to a ledge, until torn off by
the undertow. He has the presence of mind to swim back out to sea. It is then he sees a break in the
reefs, the mouth of a river just up the coast. He prays to the deity of this stream to take him in. And
the god has mercy on him.
Battered and half-drowned as he is, he remembers to throw the veil back to Leucothea. Then he
staggers to the bank and falls face down in the mud. Still he can't rest, for he knows that river air
grows deathly cold at night and anywhere he'll be easy prey to beasts.
Then he finds a clump of olive trees, so thickly tangled as to make a cage. And, drawing leaves up
over himself for a blanket, he sleeps the sleep of the dead.
Book 6
Odysseus had washed up in the land of the Phaeacians. Athena now intervened to make these people
foster his journey home. She went by night to the palace of their king and appeared in a dream to the
princess, Nausicaa.
48
The goddess prompted her to give thought to her wedding day. Shouldn't she journey to the pools
down by the river and wash her bridal gown?
In the morning Nausicaa awoke with this idea in mind. But being modest, she asked her father instead
if she might launder the family linen. Could she have the mule cart for the day? This was ordered and
Nausicaa departed with her serving maids.
At the river, they soaked and thrashed the linen and laid it out to dry. Then they bathed in the river
and anointed themselves with oil. After lunch they began to toss around a ball.
It was while they were playing that Odysseus woke to the sound of their laughter. Tearing off an
olive branch to cloak his nakedness, he approached the group.
The maids ran away at the sight of the brine-encrusted stranger, but Nausicaa stood her ground.
Odysseus had to choose between touching her knees in the gesture of a suppliant or staying back and
trusting to words. He decided that words were the safer course.
"Are you a goddess or a mortal?" he inquired. "If the latter, your parents must be proud. I've never
seen your like in beauty. I don't dare embrace your knees. Could you just tell me the way to town?"
In her candid way, Nausicaa sized him up and saw that he meant no harm. "As strangers and beg-
gars are in the hands of Zeus, I'll not refuse comfort to a castaway." She called back her maids and
told them to feed and clothe Odysseus. They gave him oil to rub on after he had bathed in the river.
And now Athena added further luster to the hero's freshly anointed skin and made him seem almost a
god. So the princess wished that her own husband might in some way resemble Odysseus.
"Now here is what you must do," she told him. "On the way to my father's palace we will pass
between the boatyards. The last thing I want is for some shipwright to see you following along behind
my cart and think that there is something going on between us.
"But just before town is a roadside grove, sacred to Athena. Wait there until you're sure I'm gone,
then enter the city gate. Ask directions to the palace, and when you've found it do not hesitate. Come
straight into the hall and seek out my mother.
"She'll be seated by the fire. Clasp her knees. If she accepts your supplication, you're as good as
home."
Book 7
Odysseus waited in the grove as instructed and then entered the city of the Phaeacians. When he
asked directions to the palace, it was Athena in the form of a little girl who showed him the way.
Odysseus stopped on the threshold, dazzled. The very walls of the interior were covered in shining
bronze and trimmed with lapis lazuli.
The king and his courtiers were banqueting in this splendor, but Athena wrapped Odysseus in a mist
so that he passed by unseen. Straight up to the queen he went and wrapped his huge arms around her
knees.
"Blessings upon you and this company," he said, "if you but grant my plea -- safe passage to my
homeland." With this he rose and sat down again in the ashes of the fire.
"A supplicant with honorable intentions, humbled in the ashes!" exclaimed a wise counselor to the
king. "My lord, this will not do."
At which King Alcinous himself arose and took Odysseus by the hand, raising him to his feet. Next to
the king's throne sat his eldest son, who now moved aside. Odysseus was guided to this place of
honor.
"Tomorrow shall be a holiday," declared the king. "And when we have made sacrifice to the gods and
entertained our visitor, we will give thought to speeding his journey home.
"Who knows, he might even be a god, although in the past the gods haven't bothered with disguise in
visiting our realm. They've always appeared to us in all their glory, since we are their kin."
49
Odysseus assured him that he was no god, but a mortal man, and a hungry one at that. When the other
guests had left, the queen asked him how it came to be that he was wearing clothes that she herself
had trimmed.
Odysseus related the events since his departure from Calypso's island, sparing no detail but one. He
described how he had approached the princess and her maids by the river, and how Nausicaa had
kindly given him clothing. But he said that it had been his own idea to enter town separately.
That night he slept on a deep pile of rugs beneath clean sheets and fleeces.
Book 8
The next morning King Alcinous addressed an assembly of his people: "My guest's name is still
unknown to me, but I have promised him passage home. Therefore prepare our fastest ship. When all
is done, let the crew join me and my nobles for a banquet at the palace."
To entertain the banqueters, Alcinous summoned his minstrel, Demodocus. This bard could sing of
all life had to offer, having himself been favored with the gift of song but cursed with blindness. And
Demodocus' chosen theme that day was the Trojan War.
He began by singing of Achilles and Odysseus, and this brought tears to that hero's eyes. He managed
to hide them by burying his face in his cloak, though the king heard his sobs.
He spoke up at once: "Demodocus, put aside your harp for now. It is time for athletics."
And so the Phaeacians did their best to impress their guest with the discus, foot races and wrestling.
And indeed their feats were prodigious. At length they noticed that Odysseus himself was well-
muscled and fit. Perhaps he would care to join their contest?
Odysseus replied that he had other things than sport on his mind. But one of the competitors, a sailor
like all the Phaeacians, took this as an excuse. "No doubt he's been to sea," he sneered, "but only as a
purser."
The hero's eyes went cold. He picked up a discus and threw it with such a rush of wind that the
Phaeacians hit the deck. It landed far beyond their own best shots.
Alcinous acknowledged that the guest had proven his point. "Perhaps there's another way we can
impress him." He called for Demodocus to play a tune, and various dances were performed,
culminating in one featuring a carved wooden ball.
This was tossed high in the air, and a dancer leapt up and deflected it. Then two dancers passed it
back and forth, keeping it low to the ground. Odysseus was indeed impressed.
Now the king proposed that each of his senior lords go home and bring back a bar of gold for the
still-nameless guest. The sailor who had taunted Odysseus earlier gave him his own sword in
apology. The gold was brought and the queen herself stored it in a chest for Odysseus.
That evening, on his way to the banquet hall, Odysseus passed Nausicaa in the corridor. "When you
are safely home," she said, "you might remember me."
"Princess," replied Odysseus, "I will give thanks to you, as to a goddess, each day until I die."
At table the minstrel was called upon once more, and this time it was Odysseus himself who
suggested the theme. Demodocus began to sing of the Trojan Horse, how the men of Troy had
brought it within their walls and then debated what to do. Should they smash it to pieces with axes, or
push it over a cliff? Or should they preserve it as an offering to the gods? Fate, of course, made them
choose the latter course.
Once more Odysseus cried into his mantle, and once more the king ordered a halt to the
entertainment.
"Enough! Our guest is weeping. He came to us as a suppliant, and his conduct was proper in all
respects. So we are doing as he asked. Now it is his turn. Tell us your name, stranger, and tell us your
home. After all, our ship will need to set a course."
50
Book 9
"I am Odysseus of Ithaca. And here is my tale since setting out from Troy:
Our first landfall was Ismarus, in the land of the Cicones. We sacked the town, killed the men and
took the women captive. I was for putting out right then, but my men would not hear of it.
Carousing on the beach, they feasted and dawdled while survivors of our plundering raised the
hinterlands. The main force of the Cicones swept down on us in a black tide. These were fighting
men, and it was all we could do to hold the ships until, outnumbered, we cut our losses and put back
out to sea.
And while we still grieved for our fallen comrades, Zeus sent a storm that knocked us to our knees.
We rode it out as best we could. I might even then have rounded the southern cape and made for
home had not a new gale driven us across seventeen days of open sea.
We found ourselves at last in the land of the Lotus-eaters. These folk are harmless enough, but the
plant on which they feast is insidious. Three of my men tasted it and all they wanted was more. They
lost all desire for home. I had to force them back to the ships and tie them down while we made our
getaway.
Next we beached in the land of the Cyclopes. We'd put in at a little island off their coast. And since
they don't know the first thing about sailing they'd left it uninhabited, though it teamed with wildlife.
We made a pleasant meal of wild goat, then next day I left everyone else behind and took my own
crew over to the mainland. The first thing we saw was a big cave overlooking the beach. Inside were
milking pens for goats and big cheeses aging on racks.
My men were for making off with the cheeses and the lambs that we found in the cave, but I wanted
to see what manner of being made this his lair.
When the Cyclops -- Polyphemus was his name -- came home that afternoon, he blotted out the light
in the doorway. He was as tall and rugged as an alp. One huge eye glared out of the center of his
forehead.
He didn't see us at first, but went about his business. The first thing he did was drag a huge boulder
into the mouth of the cave. Twenty teams of horses couldn't have budged it. Then he milked his ewes,
separating out the curds and setting the whey aside to drink with his dinner. It was when he stroked
his fire for the meal that he saw us.
'Who are you?' asked a voice like thunder.
'We are Greeks, blown off course on our way home from Troy,' I explained. 'We assume you'll extend
hospitality or suffer the wrath of Zeus, protector of guests.'
'Zeus? We Cyclopes are stronger than Zeus. I'll show you hospitality.'
With that he snatched up two of my men and bashed their brains out on the floor. Then he ate them
raw, picking them apart and poking them in his mouth, bones and guts and all.
We cried aloud to Zeus, for all the good it did our comrades. The Cyclops washed them down with
great slurps of milk, smacked his lips in satisfaction and went to sleep. My hand was on my sword,
eager to stab some vital spot. But I realized that only he could unstopped the mouth of the cave.
We passed a miserable night and then watched the Cyclops make breakfast of two more of our
companions. When he went out to pasture his flock, he pulled the boulder closed behind him.
It was up to me to make a plan. I found a tree trunk that the Cyclops intended for a walking stick. We
cut off a six-foot section, skinned it, put a sharp point on one end and hardened it in the fire. Then we
hid it under a pile of manure.
When the Cyclops came home and made his usual meal, I spoke to him. 'Cyclops, you might as well
take some of our liquor to savor with your barbarous feast.'
51
I'd brought along a skin of wine that we'd been given as a gift. It was so strong that we usually diluted
it in water twenty to one. The Cyclops tossed it back and then demanded more.
'I like you, Greek,' he said. 'I'm going to do you a favor. What's your name?'
'My name is Nobody,' I told him.
It turned out that the favor he intended was to eat me last. But when the wine had knocked him out, I
put my plan into effect. Heating the end of the pole until it was glowing red, we ran it toward the
Cyclops like a battering ram, aiming it for his eye and driving it deep. The thing sizzled like hot metal
dropped in water while I twisted it like an auger.
Polyphemus came awake with a roar, tore the spike from his eye and began groping for us in his
blindness.
His screams of frustration and rage brought the neighboring Cyclopes to the mouth of the cave.
'What is it, brother?' they called inside. 'Is someone harming you?'
'It's Nobody!' bellowed Polyphemus.
'Then for the love of Poseidon pipe down in there!'
They went away, and Polyphemus heaved the boulder aside and spent the night by the open door,
hoping we'd be stupid enough to try to sneak past him. Getting past him was the problem alright, but
by morning I'd worked out a solution.
Tying goats together with ropes of willow, I hid a man under each group of three. When it was time
to let them out to pasture, the Cyclops ran his hands over their backs but did not notice the men
underneath. Myself, I clutched to the underbelly of the biggest ram.
'Why aren't you leading the flock as usual?' asked Polyphemus, detaining this beast at the door and
stroking its fleece. 'I wish you could talk, so you could point out those Greeks.'
He let the ram go, and we beat it down to the ship as fast as our legs would carry us. When we were a
good way out to sea, I could not resist a taunt. I called out, and Polyphemus came to the edge of the
seaside cliff. In his fury he tore up a huge boulder and flung it at us.
It landed in front of our bow, and the splash almost drove us back onto the beach. This time I waited
until my panicked men had rowed a good bit further before I put my hands to my mouth to call out
again. The men tried to hush me, but I was aquiver with triumph.
'If someone asks who did this, the name is Odysseus!'
That brought another boulder hurtling our way, but this one landed astern and only hastened our
departure. The Cyclops was left howling on the cliff, calling out to his father Poseidon for vengeance.
Book 10
"We next put in at the island of Aeolus. Zeus had made him Keeper of the Winds. So when I'd
entertained Aeolus for a month with tales of Troy, he was kind enough to provide a steady breeze to
blow us home. He even gave me an assortment of storm winds to stow on board, tied up in a leather
bag.
Nine days later we were just off Ithaca, so close that people could be seen ashore going about their
work. I had dozed off, exhausted by manning the sail myself the whole way. Now my men noticed
the bag that Aeolus had given me.
'Why does the captain get all the booty?' they wanted to know. 'What have we got to show for our sea
roving?'
So they opened it and let loose a hurricane that blew us all the way back to Aeolus's island. Hangdog,
I appeared once more before him and asked if he would send us home again. He kicked me right out
of there.
52
Back at sea, six days and nights we were becalmed. Then we fetched up in the land of the
Laestrygonians. There it's daylight around the clock. A shore patrol was dispatched to scout the
countryside.
They came upon a husky young girl who directed them to her mother, the queen of those people. She
proved to be hideous and huge as a mountain, and her husband was hot for blood. He grabbed the
first man, tore him in half and chomped him down. The others made a break for it.
They came screaming back to the shore, followed by the entire clan of Laestrygonians. As the men
scrambled to cast off, they were bombarded by boulders pelted from the heights. It was like shooting
fish in a barrel. The Laestrygonians smashed ships and men and gorged on lumps of Greek.
I'd had the presence of mind to cut away the hawser with my sword, and I urged my men to row for
their lives. We made it, the only ship to escape. Our relief was overwhelmed in grief for the comrades
left behind.
When we came to Circe's island, no one was eager to go exploring, but I divided the company in two
and we drew lots.
My group stayed behind while the other set out under my kinsman Eurylochus to reconnoiter.
Before long they came to a stone house in the middle of a tangled wood. Strange to tell, it was
surrounded by lions and wolves of extraordinary meekness. Hearing singing from within, the men
saw no harm in making their presence known.
Circe came out and welcomed them inside. All but Eurylochus accepted the invitation. He had a
premonition. And sure enough, after she had given them food and honeyed wine mixed with a pinch
of something, she waved her wand and turned them into swine.
Eurylochus came running back to the ship and spread the alarm. I now shouldered the burden of
command and set out to investigate.
Fortunately I met Hermes along the way. Zeus's herald warned me that I too would be transformed by
Circe's witchery unless I followed his instructions. I was to accept the potion that she gave me,
knowing that I would be protected by a godly charm -- a sprig of herb called moly that mortals dare
not harvest. Then when she raised her wand I was to draw my sword.
Hermes gave me the moly, then departed. I made my way to the house in the clearing and Circe bade
me enter. I downed the potion. Then just as she showed her wand, I unsheathed my sword and held it
to her throat.
She fainted to the ground and clutched my knees. 'You can only be Odysseus. Hermes warned me
that this day would come. Let me be your friend and lover.'
First I made her swear an oath.
Later we feasted splendidly and her servants danced attendance. But she could see that I was in no
mood for levity. Divining the cause, she waved her wand once more and restored my shipmates to
human form. She even sent me to summon the men from the ship, who never thought they'd see me
again alive.
When many months had passed, the crew reminded me of home. Now it was my turn to take Circe's
knees in supplication. The goddess was willing to let me go, but it was not as simple as that.
'You will never see your home again,' she said, 'by sailing there directly. You must detour to the land
of Death, there to consult the blind prophet Tiresias. He alone can chart your course.'
Book 11
"At the furthest edge of Ocean's stream is the land to which all journey when they die. Here their
spirits endure a fleshless existence. They can't even talk unless reanimated with blood.
53
Accordingly, I did as Circe instructed, bleeding a sacrificed lamb into a pit. Tiresias, the blind
prophet who had accompanied us to Troy, was the soul I had to talk to. So I held all the other shades
at bay with my sword until he had drunk from the pit.
He gave me warnings about my journey home and told me what I must do to ensure a happy death
when my time came. I met the shades of many famous women and heroes, including Achilles, best
fighter of the Greeks at Troy.
Book 12
"At sea once more we had to pass the Sirens, whose sweet singing lures sailors to their doom. I had
stopped up the ears of my crew with wax, and I alone listened while lashed to the mast, powerless to
steer toward shipwreck.
Next came Charybdis, who swallows the sea in a whirlpool, then spits it up again. Avoiding this we
skirted the cliff where Scylla exacts her toll. Each of her six slavering maws grabbed a sailor and
wolfed him down.
Finally we were becalmed on the island of the Sun. My men disregarded all warnings and sacrificed
his cattle, so back at sea Zeus sent a thunderbolt that smashed the ship. I alone survived, washing up
on the island of Calypso."
Book 13
When Odysseus has finished his tale, the king orders him sped to Ithaca. A rug is spread on the deck
of the ship, and he sleeps the whole way.
The sailors put him down on the beach still sleeping, together with the magnificent gifts of the
Phaeacians. Upon awakening he spends a good deal of time wondering how he is going to protect this
treasure.
Athena casts a protective mist about him that keeps him from recognizing his homeland. Finally the
goddess reveals herself and dispels the mist. In joy Odysseus kisses the ground.
Athena transforms him into an old man as a disguise. Clad in a filthy tunic, he goes off to find his
faithful swineherd, as instructed by the goddess.
Book 14
Eumaeus the swineherd welcomes the bedraggled stranger. He throws his own bedcover over a pile
of boughs as a seat for Odysseus, who does not reveal his identity.
Observing Zeus's commandment to be kind to guests, Eumaeus slaughters a prime boar and serves it
with bread and wine. Odysseus, true to his fame as a smooth-talking schemer, makes up an elaborate
story of his origins.
That night the hero sleeps by the fire under the swineherd's spare cloak, while Eumaeus himself
sleeps outside in the rain with his herd.
Book 15
Athena summons Telemachus home and tells him how to avoid an ambush by the suitors. Meanwhile
back on Ithaca, Odysseus listens while the swineherd Eumaeus recounts the story of his life.
Eumaeus was the child of a prosperous mainland king, whose realm was visited by Phoenician
traders. His nursemaid, a Phoenician herself, had been carried off by pirates as a girl and sold into
slavery. In return for homeward passage with her countrymen, she kidnapped Eumaeus. He was
bought by Odysseus' father, whose queen raised him as a member of the family.
54
Book 16
Telemachus evades the suitors' ambush and, following Athena's instructions, proceeds to the
farmstead of Eumaeus. There he makes the acquaintance of the tattered guest and sends Eumaeus to
his mother to announce his safe return.
Athena restores Odysseus' normal appearance, enhancing it so that Telemachus takes him for a god.
"No god am I," Odysseus assures him, "but your own father, returned after these twenty years." They
fall into each other's arms.
Later they plot the suitors' doom. Concerned that the odds are fifty-to-one, Telemachus suggests that
they might need reinforcements.
"Aren't Zeus and Athena reinforcement enough?" asks Odysseus.
Book 17
Disguised once more as an old beggar, Odysseus journeys to town. On the trail he encounters an
insolent goatherd named Melanthius, who curses and tries to kick him.
At his castle gate, the hero is recognized by Argos, a broken-down old dog that he had raised as a
pup. Having seen his master again, the faithful hound dies.
At Athena's urging Odysseus begs food from the suitors. One man, Antinous, berates him and refuses
so much as a crust. He hurls a footstool at Odysseus, hitting him in the back. This makes even the
other suitors nervous, for sometimes the gods masquerade as mortals to test their righteousness.
Book 18
Now a real beggar shows up at the palace and warns Odysseus off his turf. This man, Irus, is always
running errands for the suitors. Odysseus says that there are pickings enough for the two of them, but
Irus threatens fisticuffs and the suitors egg him on.
Odysseus rises to the challenge and rolls up his tunic into a boxer's belt. The suitors goggle at the
muscles revealed. Not wishing to kill Irus with a single blow, Odysseus breaks his jaw instead.
Another suitor, Eurymachus, marks himself for revenge by trying to hit Odysseus with a footstool as
Antinous had done.
Book 19
Odysseus has a long talk with his queen Penelope but does not reveal his identity. Penelope takes
kindly to the stranger and orders her maid Eurycleia to bathe his feet and anoint them with oil.
Eurycleia, who was Odysseus' nurse when he was a child, notices a scar above the hero's knee.
Odysseus had been gored by a wild boar while hunting on Mount Parnassus as a young man. The
maid recognizes her master at once, and her hand goes out to his chin. But Odysseus silences her lest
she give away his plot prematurely.
Book 20
The next morning Odysseus asks for a sign, and Zeus sends a clap of thunder out of the clear blue
sky. A servant recognizes it as a portent and prays that this day be the last of the suitors' abuse.
Odysseus encounters another herdsman. Like the swineherd Eumaeus, this man, who tends the
realm's cattle, swears his loyalty to the absent king.
A prophet, an exiled murderer whom Telemachus has befriended, shares a vision with the suitors: "I
see the walls of this mansion dripping with your blood." The suitors respond with gales of laughter.
55
Book 21
Penelope now appears before the suitors in her glittering veil. In her hand is a stout bow left behind
by Odysseus when he sailed for Troy. "Whoever strings this bow," she says, "and sends an arrow
straight through the sockets of twelve ax heads lined in a row -- that man will I marry."
The suitors take turns trying to bend the bow to string it, but all of them lack the strength. Odysseus
asks if he might try. The suitors refuse, fearing that they'll be shamed if the beggar succeeds. But
Telemachus insists and his anger distracts them into laughter.
As easily as a bard fitting a new string to his lyre, Odysseus strings the bow and sends an arrow
through the ax heads. At a sign from his father, Telemachus arms himself and takes up a station by
his side.
Book 22
Antinous, ringleader of the suitors, is just lifting a drinking cup when Odysseus puts an arrow through
his throat.
The goatherd sneaks out and comes back with shields and spears for the suitors, but now Athena
appears. She sends the suitors' spear thrusts wide, as Odysseus, Telemachus and the two faithful
herdsmen strike with volley after volley of lances.
They finish off the work with swords. Those of the housemaids who had consorted with the suitors
are hung by the neck in the courtyard, while the treacherous goatherd is chopped to bits.
Book 23
The mansion is purged with fire and brimstone. Odysseus tells everyone to dress in their finest and
dance, so that passersby won't suspect what's happened. Even Odysseus could not hold vengeful
kinfolk at bay.
Penelope still won't accept that it's truly her husband returned unless he gives her some secret sign.
She tells a servant to make up his bed in the hall.
"In the hall!" storms Odysseus. "Who had the craft to move my bed? I carved the bedpost myself
from the living trunk of an olive tree and built the bedroom around it."
Penelope rushes into his arms. The joy they share is like that of a drowning man who feels solid
ground beneath his feet once more.
Book 24
The next morning Odysseus goes upcountry to the vineyard where his father, old King Laertes, labors
like a peasant. Ever since his wife died of heartbreak for Odysseus, the miserable man has lived with
his field hands. Odysseus cannot resist testing his father with a tall tale before their fond reunion.
Meanwhile, the kin of the suitors have borne off their dead and gathered at the assembly ground. The
father of the suitor Antinous fires them up for revenge. Odysseus, Telemachus, the loyal herdsmen,
Laertes and the field hands arm themselves to meet the challenge.
Inspired by Athena, Laertes casts a lance through the helmet of Antinous' father, who falls to the
ground in a clatter of armor.
But at the command of Zeus, the fighting stops right there. Athena, in the guise of an old family
friend, tells the contending parties to live together in peace down through the years to come.
56
The Odyssey character map
57
Odyssey Chronology Based on W.B. Stanford's commentary, pages x-xii (London 1959)
Day Event Odyssey Book
Day 1 Assembly of gods, Athena visits Telemachus Book 1
Day 2 Assembly on Ithaca, Telemachus sails Book 2
Day 3 He arrives in Pylos Book 3
Day 4 He leaves Pylos Book 3
Day 5 He goes to Sparta; Menelaus receives him Books 3-4
Day 6 He stays at Sparta; hears Menelaus' story, while in Ithaca suitors
learn he's left and plot his murder. Penelope dreams
Book 4
Day 7 2nd assembly of gods Book 5
Days 8-
11
Odysseus builds his boat Book 5
Days
12-28
Odysseus voyages safely Book 5
Day 29 Poseidon wrecks him Book 5
Days
30-31
Odysseus drift to Scheria Book 5
Day 32 Athena sends Nausicaa to shore; she meets Odysseus, who is
received hospitably at palace
Books 6-7
Day 33 Entertainment of Odysseus, who tells his adventures Books 8-13
Day 34
Odysseus voyages home to Ithaca Book 13
Day 35 Odysseus lands and stays with Eumaeus; Telemachus travels back
to Pherai
(O) Books 13-14;
(T) Book 15
Day 36 Telemachus reaches Pylos and sails home Book 15
Day 37 Telemachus lands on Ithaca and joins Odysseus and Eumaeus Books 15-16
Day 38 Odysseus, disguised as beggar, goes among suitors, fights a rival
beggar, talks with Penelope, is recognized by Nurse
Books 17-19
Day 39 The contest with the bow. Odysseus kills suitors. Penelope at last
accepts Odysseus
Books 20-23
Day 40 The suitors' souls go to Hades; Odysseus visits his father; Athena
makes peace between Odysseus and the suitors' kinsmen
Books 23-24
Odyssey Study Guide
BOOK I: WHAT WENT ON IN THE HOUSE OF ODYSSEUS
Athena appeals to Zeus for permission to help Odysseus reach home. Odysseus’s home in Ithaca is
overrun with suitors who are trying to win Penelopeia’s hand. With the help of Athena disguised as
Mentes, Telemachus finds the courage to confront the suitors.
1. Where is Odysseus?
2. What or whom is Athena disguised as?
3. Why do Telemachus and his mother need Odysseus?
4. Why does Odysseus’s wife have suitors?
5. What does Athena advise Telemachus to do?
58
BOOK II: HOW THE COUNCIL MET IN THE MARKET-PLACE OF ITHACA; AND WHAT CAME
OF IT
In a town meeting, Telemachus announces his intentions to locate his father and rid his house of the
suitors. He is met with ridicule and doubt, especially from Antinoos who confronts Telemachus
twice. Athena helps Telemachus prepare for his journey, and he sets sail in secret that night.
1. Describe the trick that Penelope plays on her suitors.
2. What specifically does Athena do to help Telemachus in this book?
BOOK III: WHAT HAPPENED IN SANDY PYLOS
Following Athena’s advice, Telemachus visits King Nestor of Pylos to get information about his
father. Athena accompanies him disguised as an old family friend, Mentor. Nestor tells Telemachus
stories about Odysseus. Telemachus continues his search on horseback with Nestor’s son
Megapenthes.
1. What is Nestor’s opinion of Odysseus?
2. Describe Nestor’s reaction when he realizes that Telemachus’ companion is Athena.
BOOK IV: WHAT HAPPENED IN LACEDAIMON
Telemachus and Megapenthes arrive at and are welcomed into the home of Menelaus and Helen.
Menelaus tells Telemachus of his travels with Odysseus and that Odysseus is trapped on an island by
Calypso. Meanwhile, Antinoos has learned that Telemachus has embarked on his journey and plots
with the other suitors to kill him upon his return to Ithaca. Penelope learns of Telemachus’ leaving
and is upset.
1. What clues cue Menelaus and Helen that Telemachus is Odysseus’s son?
2. What is Menelaus’ opinion of Odysseus?
3. Describe Antinoos’ plan to destroy Telemachus.
BOOK V: HERMES IS SENT TO CALYPSO’S ISLAND; ODYSSEUS MAKES A RAFT AND IS
CARRIED TO THE COAST OF SCHERIA
Athena again pleads to Zeus for Odysseus’s release. Zeus sends Hermes to Calypso with orders that
she release Odysseus. Calypso grudgingly complies. Odysseus is given much trouble by Poseidon,
but with the help of Leucothea and Athena, he finally reaches the land of the Phaeacians, where he
collapses, exhausted.
1. Who is Hermes, and what is his mission?
2. What can Hermes do with his wand?
3. Who is holding Odysseus captive?
4. What is Calypso’s reaction to having to let Odysseus go?
5. What is the main problem Odysseus faces while traveling by sea?
6. What happens to Odysseus at the end of Book 5?
BOOK VI: HOW ODYSSEUS APPEALED TO NAUSICAA, AND SHE BROUGHT HIM TO HER
FATHER’S HOUSE
Athena appears in Nausicaa’s dream, telling her to go to the river and wash clothes. Nausicaa and her
maids meet Odysseus at the river, and all but Nausicaa are frightened of him because of his
appearance. He begs her to help him and she agrees. He bathes and follows Nausicaa’s instructions
for asking her parents for assistance.
1. What “subliminal” message does Athena give to Nausicaa while she lies sleeping?
59
2. Who is the only person who doesn’t run away from the terrifying Odysseus? Why doesn’t she run
away?
3. Is it pure luck that Nausicaa helps Odysseus? Explain.
4. What does the fact that Odysseus won’t bathe in front of the girls tell us about the kind of person
he is?
5. Does Nausicaa believe her parents will help Odysseus?
6. Why won’t Nausicaa let Odysseus ride in her cart?
7. What instructions does she give Odysseus?
BOOK VII: WHAT HAPPENED TO ODYSSEUS IN THE PALACE OF ALCINOOS
Odysseus arrives at the palace of Alcinoos and Arete and begs for their help in getting him home.
They feed him, ask about his situation, and agree to give him the help he needs.
1. What craft are the Phaiacians best known for?
2. How is Odysseus treated as a guest?
BOOK VIII: HOW THEY HELD GAMES AND SPORTS IN PHAIACIA
The next day Alcinoos sends the boys of the town to construct a ship for Odysseus’s voyage and
gathers the men for a day of entertainment for Odysseus. Demodocos sings of famous men, including
Odysseus. When Alcinoos sees Odysseus crying during the minstrel’s story, he commences the
games and dancing to keep his guest happy. At dinner, Odysseus again weeps when Demodocos
sings about the Trojan War. At this point, Alcinoos finally demands to know who Odysseus is.
1. Describe the activities that King Alcinoos arranges to entertain Odysseus.
2. Who is Demodocos?
3. How is King Alcinoos helping Odysseus to get home?
4. What is Odysseus’s reaction whenever Demodocos sings about the Trojan War?
BOOK IX: HOW ODYSSEUS VISITED THE LOTUS-EATERS AND THE CYCLOPS
Odysseus tells Alcinoos who he is and what things have happened to him since he left Troy. He tells
of his adventures in Ismaros, in the land of the Lotus-Eaters, and in the land of the Cyclopians. He
describes the Cyclopians as “violent and lawless”, and he and his men run into trouble with one of the
Cyclopians. Men are killed and Poseidon’s vendetta against Odysseus begins.
1. What was the effect of the Lotus plant?
2. How heavy is the door of the Cyclops’ cave?
3. What is the first villainous thing the Cyclops does?
4. Why doesn’t Odysseus kill the Cyclops when he has the chance?
5. What does Odysseus give the Cyclops as a gift?
6. What gift does the Cyclops give in return?
7. What does Odysseus tell the Cyclops that his name is?
8. How do Odysseus and his men sneak out of the Cyclops’ cave?
9. What foolish thing does Odysseus do?
10. What did a soothsayer once predict would happen to the Cyclops?
11. What does the Cyclops ask his father Poseidon to do for him?
BOOK X: THE ISLAND OF THE WINDS; THE LAND OF THE MIDNIGHT SUN; CIRCE
Odysseus tells of his visit to Aiolia, where Aiolos Hippotades, manager of the winds, helps Odysseus
and his crew get home. He puts wind in a bag, which Odysseus carries on board the ship.
Unfortunately, his curious crew decides to open the bag, and the released winds drive them away
60
from home. They arrive at the land of the Laestrygonians, who eat most of Odysseus’s crew before
his ship escapes. Then they land on the island of Aiaia, the home of Circe. She traps some of the men
and turns them into pigs. Odysseus, with the help of Hermes, gets her to release his men and help him
reach home. She instructs him to visit Hades, where he will meet Tieresias, who will tell him how to
get home.
1. Who is the god of wind?
2. What favor does he do for Odysseus and his men?
3. What stupid mistake do some of the men make on the ship?
4. How do even more men die after the bag accident?
5. What does Circe do to some of Odysseus’s men?
6. How does Odysseus get her to release his men?
7. What instructions does Circe give Odysseus?
BOOK XI: HOW ODYSSEUS VISITED THE KINGDOM OF THE DEAD
Odysseus follows Circe’s instructions. In Hades, he first sees a dead shipmate, Elpenor, then his
mother, Anticleia, then Tieresias. Tieresias tells him what will happen to him next, including a
warning about the cattle of Helios and how to reconcile with Poseidon. He then gets to talk with his
mother, and she answers many questions for him. At this point, Odysseus tries to conclude his
storytelling, but Alcinoos begs him to continue. Odysseus says only that he met the souls of many
who passed away, then he left Hades.
1. What does Odysseus do to call the souls of the dead to him?
2. Who is Teiresias and what does Odysseus want from him?
3. What does Teiresias predict for Odysseus?
4. What should Odysseus do to the suitors at his house?
5. What does Teiresias say Odysseus should do after dealing with the suitors?
6. What is the name of Odysseus’s mother and how did she die?
7. Why can’t Odysseus hug his dead mother?
BOOK XII: THE SINGING SIRENS, AND THE TERRORS OF SCYLLA AND CHARYBDIS
Odysseus tells of their return to Aiaia to bury Elpenor and of Circe’s warning of the dangers to come:
the Sirens, Scylla, Charybdis, and Helios’s cattle. The men make it through the perils of the sea, as
predicted. On land, when they run out of provisions, they eat Helios’s cattle even though Odysseus
made them promise not to. At sea, all except Odysseus are killed as punishment. Odysseus is adrift
for nine days before landing on the island of Ogygia, Calypso’s home. Alcinoos and the other
listeners are now up-to-date on the travels of Odysseus.
1. Why should Odysseus be wary of the Sirens?
2. What should he and his men do to keep safe from the Sirens?
3. Describe Scylla.
4. What will Charybdis do if Odysseus’s ship gets too close?
5. What does Odysseus keep secret from his men?
6. Describe the circumstances of Odysseus’s shipmates’ deaths. Is it Odysseus’s fault?
BOOK XIII: HOW ODYSSEUS CAME TO ITHACA
Odysseus is done telling his story. King Alcinoos gives Odysseus a ship with a crew and supplies,
and the townspeople all give him gifts. The crew delivers Odysseus to Ithaca and returns home.
Poseidon, who is mad that anyone would make Odysseus’s travels by sea so easy, turns the ship and
61
crew into stone as they return to their harbor. Odysseus does not believe he is home until Athena
convinces him. She disguises him as an old beggar and sends to him to his faithful pigkeeper.
1. Describe Odysseus’s journey home from Scheria.
2. What does Poseidon initially want to do to the Phaeacian ship?
3. What decision does Alcinovs make because of the wrath of Poseidon?
4. Why and for how long does Athena want Odysseus to be in disguise?
5. What does Athena instruct Odysseus to do now that he has returned to Ithaca?
6. Whom does Athena instruct Odysseus to visit first?
BOOK XIV: ODYSSEUS AND THE SWINEHERD
Athena goes to Lacedaimon to bring Telemachus home. Odysseus goes to the swineherd Eumaios’
house. Odysseus is made welcome and is pleased to see how faithful Eumaios has been during his
absence.
1. What is the name of the swineherd?
2. What does Odysseus tell the swineherd about himself?
3. Describe Odysseus’s disguise.
BOOK XV: HOW TELEMACHUS SAILED BACK TO ITHACA
Athena finds Telemachus at the mansion of Menelaus and instructs him to return home. Odysseus
learns from Eumaios about his (Odysseus’s) parents and how Eumaios was bought by Laertes when
he was a child. Telemachus lands safely back in Ithaca and, by Athena’s instructions, goes straight to
Eumaios.
1. How has Eumaios proven his faithfulness in this and previous books?
2. Who do you think will be the first person to know Odysseus for who he really is?
BOOK XVI: HOW TELEMACHUS MET HIS FATHER
Athena instructs Odysseus to reveal his identity to Telemachus and to plan their revenge on the
suitors. Eumaios tells Penelopeia that Telemachus has returned safely to Ithaca. When the suitors, led
by Antinoos, learn that their plan to kill Telemachus has failed, they plot to kill him another way.
1. What does Telemachus call Eumaios? Why?
2. Describe Athena’s changes to Odysseus’s appearance.
3. Who does Telemachus think Odysseus is when Athena removes his disguise?
4. What do Odysseus and Telemachus plan to do?
5. Describe Penelopeia’s confrontation with Antinoos.
BOOK XVII: HOW ODYSSEUS RETURNED TO HIS OWN HOME
Telemachus returns home, accompanied by Theoclymenos. Eumaios brings the disguised Odysseus
to his home where the suitors are entertaining themselves as usual. Odysseus is recognized only by
Argos, his old hunting dog, who dies after hearing his master’ s voice one last time. Odysseus tests
the suitors by begging for food from each one. Penelopeia tells Eumaios to bring the beggar to her;
she wants to know if he has any news about Odysseus.
1. What does Theoclymenos prophesy to Penelopeia?
2. How does Odysseus test the suitors?
3. Who recognizes Odysseus right away? How does he recognize him?
4. Describe Melanthios.
5. Who makes Odysseus extremely angry?
6. Why does Odysseus want to test his servants and his wife before revealing his identity?
62
BOOK XVIII: HOW ODYSSEUS FOUGHT THE STURDY BEGGAR
Odysseus fights with another beggar, Iros, who is used to being the only beggar at the castle.
Penelopeia decides to address the suitors, saying she will choose a husband according to who brings
her the best gift. Odysseus recognizes this as a trick on the suitors. Odysseus is further antagonized
by Melantho, a maid, and Eurymachos.
1. Why does Odysseus get in a fight with Iros? Who wins?
2. What trick does Penelopeia play on the suitors in this book?
3. Which three characters anger Odysseus in this book?
BOOK XIX: HOW THE OLD NURSE KNEW HER MASTER
The women are shut up in their rooms, and Odysseus and Telemachus hide all the weapons in a
storeroom. Odysseus, still disguised as a beggar, goes to see Penelopeia. He convinces her that he did
meet Odysseus and that he has heard also that Odysseus is on his way home. Penelopeia is grateful
and orders Eurycleia to bathe and clothe the beggar. Eurycleia recognizes Odysseus by a scar on his
leg, but he swears her to secrecy. Penelopeia, discouraged, decides to go ahead and marry whomever
can meet the challenge that she will put forth to the suitors: to string Odysseus’s bow and shoot an
arrow through twelve axe-heads in a row.
1. What does Odysseus the beggar tell Penelopeia about Odysseus?
2. How does Eurycleia recognize Odysseus?
3. How did Odysseus get the scar on his leg?
4. Describe Penelopeia’s challenge for the suitors.
BOOK XX: HOW GOD SENT OMENS OF THE WRATH TO COME
It is a new day and Telemachus receives the beggar (Odysseus) into his house. The beggar is
ridiculed by many, but he remains calm. Philoitios proves himself a faithful and kind servant.
1. Name two people who are cruel to Odysseus the beggar.
2. Who proves himself to be a kind and faithful servant?
3. What do you think Odysseus is going to do to the suitors?
BOOK XXI: THE CONTEST WITH THE GREAT BOW
Penelopeia issues her challenge to the suitors, but none of the men can bend the bow to string it.
Odysseus finds a chance to confide in Philoitios and Eumaios and to include them in his plans for
revenge. Odysseus easily strings the bow and shoots an arrow through the twelve axe-heads. Eumaios
tells the women to lock themselves in the bedrooms, and Telemachus and Odysseus arm themselves
against the suitors.
1. Whom does Odysseus trust to help him defeat the suitors?
2. Why don’t the men want Odysseus to try to string the bow?
3. How does Odysseus prove his true identity?
BOOK XXII: THE BATTLE IN THE HALL
Immediately Odysseus reveals himself and kills Antinoos with an arrow. Eurymachos tries to
convince Odysseus that Antinoos is to blame for everything and that he shouldn’t kill the other
suitors. Odysseus gives them a chance to run away, but they choose to fight, led by Eurymachos.
Odysseus, Telemachus, and the two servants kill everyone except Phemios and Medon. Odysseus
asks Eurycleia to identify the maids who have been unfaithful and bring them to him. He makes them
63
clean up the blood and dead bodies in the hall and then Telemachus hangs them. Melanthios is cut up
and fed to the dogs. The maids and servants come and celebrate the return of Odysseus.
1. What did Odysseus prove about his abilities when he shot the arrow through the twelve axes? Why
is that important now?
2. Whom does Odysseus kill first and why?
3. How does Eurymachos plead his case with Odysseus?
4. Whom does Telemachus catch raiding the storeroom of weapons and what do they do with him?
6. Which two servants who spared?
7. How does Odysseus identify the unfaithful maids?
8. What does Odysseus do to the unfaithful maids?
9. What is done to Melanthios?
BOOK XXIII: HOW ODYSSEUS FOUND HIS WIFE AGAIN
Odysseus reveals his identity to Penelope, but she is skeptical. She tests Odysseus by having
Eurycleia provide Odysseus a place to sleep by moving a bed into the hallway. Odysseus becomes
angry because he built this bed out of a tree trunk so that it could not be moved. Penelope then knows
that he is truly her husband. He tells her that, according to Tiresias, he must carry an oar inland and
make sacrifices to Poseidon. He also feels he must regain all the livestock and goods that he lost
because of the suitors. He sets out to see his father and tells Penelope to stay locked in her room with
her maids until he returns.
1. How does Penelope test Odysseus?
2. Why does she test him?
3. Describe the one last task that Tiresias told Odysseus to complete. What will be his reward for this
task?
4. After Odysseus tells Penelope about all his adventures, he sets off again. What does he go to do?
What does he tell Penelope to do?
BOOK XXIV: HOW ODYSSEUS FOUND HIS OLD FATHER AND HOW THE STORY ENDED
The souls of the dead men pass to Hades, led by Hermes. Odysseus goes to see Laertes, pretending to
be someone else at first, but then he reveals his identity. Laertes asks for proof that he is Odysseus.
He tells about the scar on his leg and spending time in his father’s orchard. Relatives of the suitors,
led by Eupeithes, Antinoos’ father, come to battle Odysseus. Odysseus kills Eupeithes, then Athena
stops the battle and makes peace between the two sides.
1. How does Odysseus prove that he is really Laertes’ son?
2. What is Laertes afraid of?
3. Who comes to battle Odysseus? Whom are they led by?
4. Whom does Odysseus kill?
5. Who stops the battle?
64
Short Stories
The Tell-Tale Heart by Edgar Allan Poe
TRUE!—nervous—very, very dreadfully nervous I had been and am; but why will you say that I am
mad? The disease had sharpened my senses—not destroyed—not dulled them. Above all was the sense
of hearing acute. I heard all things in the heaven and in the earth. I heard many things in hell. How,
then, am I mad? Hearken! and observe how healthily—how calmly I can tell you the whole story.
It is impossible to say how first the idea entered my brain; but once conceived, it haunted me day
and night. Object there was none. Passion there was none. I loved the old man. He had never wronged
me. He had never given me insult. For his gold I had no desire. I think it was his eye! yes, it was this!
He had the eye of a vulture—a pale blue eye, with a film over it. Whenever it fell upon me, my blood
ran cold; and so by degrees—very gradually—I made up my mind to take the life of the old man, and
thus rid myself of the eye forever.
Now this is the point. You fancy me mad. Madmen know nothing. But you should have seen me.
You should have seen how wisely I proceeded—with what caution—with what foresight—with what
dissimulation I went to work! I was never kinder to the old man than during the whole week before I
killed him. And every night, about midnight, I turned the latch of his door and opened it—oh so gently!
And then, when I had made an opening sufficient for my head, I put in a dark lantern, all closed, closed,
that no light shone out, and then I thrust in my head. Oh, you would have laughed to see how cunningly
I thrust it in! I moved it slowly—very, very slowly, so that I might not disturb the old man's sleep. It
took me an hour to place my whole head within the opening so far that I could see him as he lay upon
his bed. Ha! would a madman have been so wise as this? And then, when my head was well in the
room, I undid the lantern cautiously—oh, so cautiously—cautiously (for the hinges creaked)—I undid
it just so much that a single thin ray fell upon the vulture eye. And this I did for seven long nights—
every night just at midnight—but I found the eye always closed; and so it was impossible to do the
work; for it was not the old man who vexed me, but his Evil Eye. And every morning, when the day
broke, I went boldly into the chamber, and spoke courageously to him, calling him by name in a hearty
tone, and inquiring how he has passed the night. So you see he would have been a very profound old
man, indeed, to suspect that every night, just at twelve, I looked in upon him while he slept.
Upon the eighth night I was more than usually cautious in opening the door. A watch's minute hand
moves more quickly than did mine. Never before that night had I felt the extent of my own powers—
of my sagacity. I could scarcely contain my feelings of triumph. To think that there I was, opening the
door, little by little, and he not even to dream of my secret deeds or thoughts. I fairly chuckled at the
idea; and perhaps he heard me; for he moved on the bed suddenly, as if startled. Now you may think
that I drew back—but no. His room was as black as pitch with the thick darkness, (for the shutters were
close fastened, through fear of robbers,) and so I knew that he could not see the opening of the door,
and I kept pushing it on steadily, steadily.
I had my head in, and was about to open the lantern, when my thumb slipped upon the tin fastening,
and the old man sprang up in bed, crying out—"Who's there?"
I kept quite still and said nothing. For a whole hour I did not move a muscle, and in the meantime I
did not hear him lie down. He was still sitting up in the bed listening;—just as I have done, night after
night, hearkening to the death watches in the wall.
65
Presently I heard a slight groan, and I knew it was the groan of mortal terror. It was not a groan of
pain or of grief—oh, no!—it was the low stifled sound that arises from the bottom of the soul when
overcharged with awe. I knew the sound well. Many a night, just at midnight, when all the world slept,
it has welled up from my own bosom, deepening, with its dreadful echo, the terrors that distracted me.
I say I knew it well. I knew what the old man felt, and pitied him, although I chuckled at heart. I knew
that he had been lying awake ever since the first slight noise, when he had turned in the bed. His fears
had been ever since growing upon him. He had been trying to fancy them causeless, but could not. He
had been saying to himself—"It is nothing but the wind in the chimney—it is only a mouse crossing
the floor," or "It is merely a cricket which has made a single chirp." Yes, he had been trying to comfort
himself with these suppositions: but he had found all in vain. All in vain; because Death, in approaching
him had stalked with his black shadow before him, and enveloped the victim. And it was the mournful
influence of the unperceived shadow that caused him to feel—although he neither saw nor heard—to
feel the presence of my head within the room.
When I had waited a long time, very patiently, without hearing him lie down, I resolved to open a
little—a very, very little crevice in the lantern. So I opened it—you cannot imagine how stealthily,
stealthily—until, at length a simple dim ray, like the thread of the spider, shot from out the crevice and
fell full upon the vulture eye.
It was open—wide, wide open—and I grew furious as I gazed upon it. I saw it with perfect
distinctness—all a dull blue, with a hideous veil over it that chilled the very marrow in my bones; but
I could see nothing else of the old man's face or person: for I had directed the ray as if by instinct,
precisely upon the damned spot.
And have I not told you that what you mistake for madness is but over-acuteness of the sense?—
now, I say, there came to my ears a low, dull, quick sound, such as a watch makes when enveloped in
cotton. I knew that sound well, too. It was the beating of the old man's heart. It increased my fury, as
the beating of a drum stimulates the soldier into courage.
But even yet I refrained and kept still. I scarcely breathed. I held the lantern motionless. I tried how
steadily I could maintain the ray upon the eve. Meantime the hellish tattoo of the heart increased. It
grew quicker and quicker, and louder and louder every instant. The old man's terror must have been
extreme! It grew louder, I say, louder every moment!—do you mark me well I have told you that I am
nervous: so I am. And now at the dead hour of the night, amid the dreadful silence of that old house,
so strange a noise as this excited me to uncontrollable terror. Yet, for some minutes longer I refrained
and stood still. But the beating grew louder, louder! I thought the heart must burst. And now a new
anxiety seized me—the sound would be heard by a neighbour! The old man's hour had come! With a
loud yell, I threw open the lantern and leaped into the room. He shrieked once—once only. In an instant
I dragged him to the floor, and pulled the heavy bed over him. I then smiled gaily, to find the deed so
far done. But, for many minutes, the heart beat on with a muffled sound. This, however, did not vex
me; it would not be heard through the wall. At length it ceased. The old man was dead. I removed the
bed and examined the corpse. Yes, he was stone, stone dead. I placed my hand upon the heart and held
it there many minutes. There was no pulsation. He was stone dead. His eye would trouble me no more.
If still you think me mad, you will think so no longer when I describe the wise precautions I took for
the concealment of the body. The night waned, and I worked hastily, but in silence. First of all I
dismembered the corpse. I cut off the head and the arms and the legs.
I then took up three planks from the flooring of the chamber, and deposited all between the scantlings.
I then replaced the boards so cleverly, so cunningly, that no human eye—not even his—could have
66
detected any thing wrong. There was nothing to wash out—no stain of any kind—no blood-spot
whatever. I had been too wary for that. A tub had caught all—ha! ha!
When I had made an end of these labors, it was four o'clock—still dark as midnight. As the bell
sounded the hour, there came a knocking at the street door. I went down to open it with a light heart,—
for what had I now to fear? There entered three men, who introduced themselves, with perfect suavity,
as officers of the police. A shriek had been heard by a neighbour during the night; suspicion of foul
play had been aroused; information had been lodged at the police office, and they (the officers) had
been deputed to search the premises.
I smiled,—for what had I to fear? I bade the gentlemen welcome. The shriek, I said, was my own in
a dream. The old man, I mentioned, was absent in the country. I took my visitors all over the house. I
bade them search—search well. I led them, at length, to his chamber. I showed them his treasures,
secure, undisturbed. In the enthusiasm of my confidence, I brought chairs into the room, and desired
them here to rest from their fatigues, while I myself, in the wild audacity of my perfect triumph, placed
my own seat upon the very spot beneath which reposed the corpse of the victim.
The officers were satisfied. My manner had convinced them. I was singularly at ease. They sat, and
while I answered cheerily, they chatted of familiar things. But, ere long, I felt myself getting pale and
wished them gone. My head ached, and I fancied a ringing in my ears: but still they sat and still chatted.
The ringing became more distinct:—It continued and became more distinct: I talked more freely to get
rid of the feeling: but it continued and gained definiteness—until, at length, I found that the noise was
not within my ears.
No doubt I now grew very pale;—but I talked more fluently, and with a heightened voice. Yet the
sound increased—and what could I do? It was a low, dull, quick sound—much such a sound as a watch
makes when enveloped in cotton. I gasped for breath—and yet the officers heard it not. I talked more
quickly—more vehemently; but the noise steadily increased. I arose and argued about trifles, in a high
key and with violent gesticulations; but the noise steadily increased. Why would they not be gone? I
paced the floor to and fro with heavy strides, as if excited to fury by the observations of the men—but
the noise steadily increased. Oh God! what could I do? I foamed—I raved—I swore! I swung the chair
upon which I had been sitting, and grated it upon the boards, but the noise arose over all and continually
increased. It grew louder—louder—louder! And still the men chatted pleasantly, and smiled. Was it
possible they heard not? Almighty God!—no, no! They heard!—they suspected!—they knew!—they
were making a mockery of my horror!-this I thought, and this I think. But anything was better than this
agony! Anything was more tolerable than this derision! I could bear those hypocritical smiles no longer!
I felt that I must scream or die! and now—again!—hark! louder! louder! louder! louder!
"Villains!" I shrieked, "dissemble no more! I admit the deed!—tear up the planks! here, here!—It is
the beating of his hideous heart!"
"The Tell-Tale Heart" Worksheet
Vocabulary
Foresight: Thoughtful regard for the future
Dissimulation: Hidden under a false appearance
Vexed: Troubled, distressed, caused agitation
Sagacity: Sound judgment
Hearkening: Giving careful attention
Awe: A mixed feeling of reverence, fear, and wonder
67
Distinctness: Unmistakable, clearly defined
Over-acuteness: Very keen
Concealment: A means of hiding
Waned: To grow gradually less
Scantlings: Small quantities or amounts
Suavity: Gracefulness, politeness
Bade: Urged, compelled
Audacity: Bold courage, daring
Reposed: To lay at rest
Derision: Contempt, ridicule
Prediction Questions
Title: Based on the title, predict what you think this story will be about.
First paragraph: Who do you think the narrator is speaking to?
Third paragraph: Write down what you think the author means by “the work.”
Third paragraph: Why does the narrator treat the old man so well in the mornings?
Fourth paragraph: Why doesn’t the narrator leave when he realizes the old man is awake?
Fifth paragraph: Would you like to change your original prediction of what this story is
about?
Sixth and seventh paragraphs: Whose heart do you think the narrator is hearing?
Seventh paragraph: In one sentence, predict the ending of the story.
Midway through eighth paragraph: Who is at the door?
Ninth paragraph: What is the noise?
Tenth paragraph: What is the narrator feeling right now?
End of story: Were any of your original predictions about the story correct?
Writing Activity
"The Tell-Tale Heart" is primarily a story of foreshadowing, where even the title gives a clue
as to how the story will end. But you can easily change this story into a flashback. How? Tack
on a new beginning and end to the story.
Write a new beginning to "The Tell-Tale Heart" that happens at the present time. What
happens to trigger the flashback?
Now bring the story back to the present. What happens when the killer finishes his narration?
Write a new ending?
68
The Monkey's Paw (1902) by W.W. Jacobs
I.
WITHOUT, the night was cold and wet, but in the small parlour of Laburnam Villa the blinds were
drawn and the fire burned brightly. Father and son were at chess, the former, who possessed ideas
about the game involving radical changes, putting his king into such sharp and unnecessary perils that
it even provoked comment from the white-haired old lady knitting placidly by the fire.
"Hark at the wind," said Mr. White, who, having seen a fatal mistake after it was too late, was
amiably desirous of preventing his son from seeing it.
"I'm listening," said the latter, grimly surveying the board as he stretched out his hand. "Check."
"I should hardly think that he'd come to-night," said his father, with his hand poised over the board.
"Mate," replied the son.
"That's the worst of living so far out," bawled Mr. White, with sudden and unlooked-for violence; "of
all the beastly, slushy, out-of-the-way places to live in, this is the worst. Pathway's a bog, and the
road's a torrent. I don't know what people are thinking about. I suppose because only two houses on
the road are let, they think it doesn't matter."
"Never mind, dear," said his wife soothingly; "perhaps you'll win the next one."
Mr. White looked up sharply, just in time to intercept a knowing glance between mother and son. The
words died away on his lips, and he hid a guilty grin in his thin grey beard.
"There he is," said Herbert White, as the gate banged to loudly and heavy footsteps came toward the
door.
The old man rose with hospitable haste, and opening the door, was heard condoling with the new
arrival. The new arrival also condoled with himself, so that Mrs. White said, "Tut, tut!" and coughed
gently as her husband entered the room, followed by a tall burly man, beady of eye and rubicund of
visage.
"Sergeant-Major Morris," he said, introducing him.
The sergeant-major shook hands, and taking the proffered seat by the fire, watched contentedly while
his host got out whisky and tumblers and stood a small copper kettle on the fire.
At the third glass his eyes got brighter, and he began to talk, the little family circle regarding with
eager interest this visitor from distant parts, as he squared his broad shoulders in the chair and spoke
of strange scenes and doughty deeds; of wars and plagues and strange peoples.
"Twenty-one years of it," said Mr. White, nodding at his wife and son. "When he went away he was a
slip of a youth in the warehouse. Now look at him."
"He don't look to have taken much harm," said Mrs. White, politely.
"I'd like to go to India myself," said the old man, "just to look round a bit, you know."
"Better where you are," said the sergeant-major, shaking his head. He put down the empty glass, and
sighing softly, shook it again.
"I should like to see those old temples and fakirs and jugglers," said the old man. "What was that you
started telling me the other day about a monkey's paw or something, Morris?"
"Nothing," said the soldier hastily. "Leastways, nothing worth hearing."
"Monkey's paw?" said Mrs. White curiously.
"Well, it's just a bit of what you might call magic, perhaps," said the sergeant-major off-handedly.
His three listeners leaned forward eagerly. The visitor absentmindedly put his empty glass to his lips
and then set it down again. His host filled it for him.
69
"To look at," said the sergeant-major, fumbling in his pocket, "it's just an ordinary little paw, dried to
a mummy."
He took something out of his pocket and proffered it. Mrs. White drew back with a grimace, but her
son, taking it, examined it curiously.
"And what is there special about it?" inquired Mr. White, as he took it from his son and, having
examined it, placed it upon the table.
"It had a spell put on it by an old fakir," said the sergeant-major, "a very holy man. He wanted to
show that fate ruled people's lives, and that those who interfered with it did so to their sorrow. He put
a spell on it so that three separate men could each have three wishes from it."
His manner was so impressive that his hearers were conscious that their light laughter jarred
somewhat.
"Well, why don't you have three, sir?" said Herbert White cleverly.
The soldier regarded him in the way that middle age is wont to regard presumptuous youth. "I have,"
he said quietly, and his blotchy face whitened.
"And did you really have the three wishes granted?" asked Mrs. White.
"I did," said the sergeant-major, and his glass tapped against his strong teeth.
"And has anybody else wished?" inquired the old lady.
"The first man had his three wishes, yes," was the reply. "I don't know what the first two were, but the
third was for death. That's how I got the paw."
His tones were so grave that a hush fell upon the group.
"If you've had your three wishes, it's no good to you now, then, Morris," said the old man at last.
"What do you keep it for?"
The soldier shook his head. "Fancy, I suppose," he said slowly.
"If you could have another three wishes," said the old man, eyeing him keenly, "would you have
them?"
"I don't know," said the other. "I don't know."
He took the paw, and dangling it between his front finger and thumb, suddenly threw it upon the fire.
White, with a slight cry, stooped down and snatched it off.
"Better let it burn," said the soldier solemnly.
"If you don't want it, Morris," said the old man, "give it to me."
"I won't," said his friend doggedly. "I threw it on the fire. If you keep it, don't blame me for what
happens. Pitch it on the fire again, like a sensible man."
The other shook his head and examined his new possession closely. "How do you do it?" he inquired.
"Hold it up in your right hand and wish aloud,' said the sergeant-major, "but I warn you of the
consequences."
"Sounds like the Arabian Nights," said Mrs White, as she rose and began to set the supper. "Don't you
think you might wish for four pairs of hands for me?"
Her husband drew the talisman from his pocket and then all three burst into laughter as the sergeant-
major, with a look of alarm on his face, caught him by the arm.
"If you must wish," he said gruffly, "wish for something sensible."
Mr. White dropped it back into his pocket, and placing chairs, motioned his friend to the table. In the
business of supper the talisman was partly forgotten, and afterward the three sat listening in an
enthralled fashion to a second instalment of the soldier's adventures in India.
"If the tale about the monkey paw is not more truthful than those he has been telling us," said Herbert,
as the door closed behind their guest, just in time for him to catch the last train, "we shan't make
much out of it."
"Did you give him anything for it, father?" inquired Mrs. White, regarding her husband closely.
70
"A trifle," said he, colouring slightly. "He didn't want it, but I made him take it. And he pressed me
again to throw it away."
"Likely," said Herbert, with pretended horror. "Why, we're going to be rich, and famous, and happy.
Wish to be an emperor, father, to begin with; then you can't be henpecked."
He darted round the table, pursued by the maligned Mrs. White armed with an antimacassar.
Mr. White took the paw from his pocket and eyed it dubiously. "I don't know what to wish for, and
that's a fact," he said slowly. "It seems to me I've got all I want."
"If you only cleared the house, you'd be quite happy, wouldn't you?" said Herbert, with his hand on
his shoulder. "Well, wish for two hundred pounds, then; that'll just do it."
His father, smiling shamefacedly at his own credulity, held up the talisman, as his son, with a solemn
face somewhat marred by a wink at his mother, sat down at the piano and struck a few impressive
chords.
"I wish for two hundred pounds," said the old man distinctly.
A fine crash from the piano greeted the words, interrupted by a shuddering cry from the old man. His
wife and son ran toward him.
"It moved, he cried, with a glance of disgust at the object as it lay on the floor. "As I wished it twisted
in my hands like a snake."
"Well, I don't see the money," said his son, as he picked it up and placed it on the table, "and I bet I
never shall."
"It must have been your fancy, father," said his wife, regarding him anxiously.
He shook his head. "Never mind, though; there's no harm done, but it gave me a shock all the same."
They sat down by the fire again while the two men finished their pipes. Outside, the wind was higher
than ever, and the old man started nervously at the sound of a door banging upstairs. A silence
unusual and depressing settled upon all three, which lasted until the old couple rose to retire for the
night.
"I expect you'll find the cash tied up in a big bag in the middle of your bed," said Herbert, as he bade
them good-night, "and something horrible squatting up on top of the wardrobe watching you as you
pocket your ill-gotten gains."
He sat alone in the darkness, gazing at the dying fire, and seeing faces in it. The last face was so
horrible and so simian that he gazed at it in amazement. It got so vivid that, with a little uneasy laugh,
he felt on the table for a glass containing a little water to throw over it. His hand grasped the
monkey's paw, and with a little shiver he wiped his hand on his coat and went up to bed.
II.
IN the brightness of the wintry sun next morning as it streamed over the breakfast table Herbert
laughed at his fears. There was an air of prosaic wholesomeness about the room which it had lacked
on the previous night, and the dirty, shriveled little paw was pitched on the sideboard with a
carelessness which betokened no great belief in its virtues.
"I suppose all old soldiers are the same," said Mrs. White. "The idea of our listening to such
nonsense! How could wishes be granted in these days? And if they could, how could two hundred
pounds hurt you, father?"
"Might drop on his head from the sky," said the frivolous Herbert.
"Morris said the things happened so naturally," said his father, "that you might if you so wished
attribute it to coincidence."
"Well, don't break into the money before I come back," said Herbert, as he rose from the table. "I'm
afraid it'll turn you into a mean, avaricious man, and we shall have to disown you."
71
His mother laughed, and following him to the door, watched him down the road, and returning to the
breakfast table, was very happy at the expense of her husband's credulity. All of which did not
prevent her from scurrying to the door at the postman's knock, nor prevent her from referring
somewhat shortly to retired sergeant-majors of bibulous habits when she found that the post brought a
tailor's bill.
"Herbert will have some more of his funny remarks, I expect, when he comes home," she said, as
they sat at dinner.
"I dare say," said Mr. White, pouring himself out some beer; "but for all that, the thing moved in my
hand; that I'll swear to."
"You thought it did," said the old lady soothingly.
"I say it did," replied the other. "There was no thought about it; I had just----What's the matter?"
His wife made no reply. She was watching the mysterious movements of a man outside, who, peering
in an undecided fashion at the house, appeared to be trying to make up his mind to enter. In mental
connection with the two hundred pounds, she noticed that the stranger was well dressed and wore a
silk hat of glossy newness. Three times he paused at the gate, and then walked on again. The fourth
time he stood with his hand upon it, and then with sudden resolution flung it open and walked up the
path. Mrs. White at the same moment placed her hands behind her, and hurriedly unfastening the
strings of her apron, put that useful article of apparel beneath the cushion of her chair.
She brought the stranger, who seemed ill at ease, into the room. He gazed at her furtively, and
listened in a preoccupied fashion as the old lady apologized for the appearance of the room, and her
husband's coat, a garment which he usually reserved for the garden. She then waited as patiently as
her sex would permit, for him to broach his business, but he was at first strangely silent.
"I--was asked to call," he said at last, and stooped and picked a piece of cotton from his trousers. "I
come from Maw and Meggins."
The old lady started. "Is anything the matter?" she asked breathlessly. "Has anything happened to
Herbert? What is it? What is it?"
Her husband interposed. "There, there, mother," he said hastily. "Sit down, and don't jump to
conclusions. You've not brought bad news, I'm sure, sir" and he eyed the other wistfully.
"I'm sorry----" began the visitor.
"Is he hurt?" demanded the mother.
The visitor bowed in assent. "Badly hurt," he said quietly, "but he is not in any pain."
"Oh, thank God!" said the old woman, clasping her hands. "Thank God for that! Thank----"
She broke off suddenly as the sinister meaning of the assurance dawned upon her and she saw the
awful confirmation of her fears in the other's averted face. She caught her breath, and turning to her
slower-witted husband, laid her trembling old hand upon his. There was a long silence.
"He was caught in the machinery," said the visitor at length, in a low voice.
"Caught in the machinery," repeated Mr. White, in a dazed fashion, "yes."
He sat staring blankly out at the window, and taking his wife's hand between his own, pressed it as he
had been wont to do in their old courting days nearly forty years before.
"He was the only one left to us," he said, turning gently to the visitor. "It is hard."
The other coughed, and rising, walked slowly to the window. "The firm wished me to convey their
sincere sympathy with you in your great loss," he said, without looking round. "I beg that you will
understand I am only their servant and merely obeying orders."
There was no reply; the old woman's face was white, her eyes staring, and her breath inaudible; on
the husband's face was a look such as his friend the sergeant might have carried into his first action.
72
"I was to say that Maw and Meggins disclaim all responsibility," continued the other. "They admit no
liability at all, but in consideration of your son's services they wish to present you with a certain sum
as compensation."
Mr. White dropped his wife's hand, and rising to his feet, gazed with a look of horror at his visitor.
His dry lips shaped the words, "How much?"
"Two hundred pounds," was the answer.
Unconscious of his wife's shriek, the old man smiled faintly, put out his hands like a sightless man,
and dropped, a senseless heap, to the floor.
III.
IN the huge new cemetery, some two miles distant, the old people buried their dead, and came back
to a house steeped in shadow and silence. It was all over so quickly that at first they could hardly
realize it, and remained in a state of expectation as though of something else to happen--something
else which was to lighten this load, too heavy for old hearts to bear.
But the days passed, and expectation gave place to resignation--the hopeless resignation of the old,
sometimes miscalled, apathy. Sometimes they hardly exchanged a word, for now they had nothing to
talk about, and their days were long to weariness.
It was about a week after that that the old man, waking suddenly in the night, stretched out his hand
and found himself alone. The room was in darkness, and the sound of subdued weeping came from
the window. He raised himself in bed and listened.
"Come back," he said tenderly. "You will be cold."
"It is colder for my son," said the old woman, and wept afresh.
The sound of her sobs died away on his ears. The bed was warm, and his eyes heavy with sleep. He
dozed fitfully, and then slept until a sudden wild cry from his wife awoke him with a start.
"The paw!" she cried wildly. "The monkey's paw!"
He started up in alarm. "Where? Where is it? What's the matter?"
She came stumbling across the room toward him. "I want it," she said quietly. "You've not destroyed
it?"
"It's in the parlour, on the bracket," he replied, marvelling. "Why?"
She cried and laughed together, and bending over, kissed his cheek.
"I only just thought of it," she said hysterically. "Why didn't I think of it before? Why didn't you think
of it?"
"Think of what?" he questioned.
"The other two wishes," she replied rapidly. "We've only had one."
"Was not that enough?" he demanded fiercely.
"No," she cried, triumphantly; "we'll have one more. Go down and get it quickly, and wish our boy
alive again."
The man sat up in bed and flung the bedclothes from his quaking limbs. "Good God, you are mad!"
he cried aghast.
"Get it," she panted; "get it quickly, and wish---- Oh, my boy, my boy!"
Her husband struck a match and lit the candle. "Get back to bed," he said, unsteadily. "You don't
know what you are saying."
"We had the first wish granted," said the old woman, feverishly; "why not the second."
"A coincidence," stammered the old man.
"Go and get it and wish," cried the old woman, quivering with excitement.
73
The old man turned and regarded her, and his voice shook. "He has been dead ten days, and besides
he--I would not tell you else, but--I could only recognize him by his clothing. If he was too terrible
for you to see then, how now?"
"Bring him back," cried the old woman, and dragged him toward the door. "Do you think I fear the
child I have nursed?"
He went down in the darkness, and felt his way to the parlour, and then to the mantelpiece. The
talisman was in its place, and a horrible fear that the unspoken wish might bring his mutilated son
before him ere he could escape from the room seized upon him, and he caught his breath as he found
that he had lost the direction of the door. His brow cold with sweat, he felt his way round the table,
and groped along the wall until he found himself in the small passage with the unwholesome thing in
his hand.
Even his wife's face seemed changed as he entered the room. It was white and expectant, and to his
fears seemed to have an unnatural look upon it. He was afraid of her.
"Wish!" she cried, in a strong voice.
"It is foolish and wicked," he faltered.
"Wish!" repeated his wife.
He raised his hand. "I wish my son alive again."
The talisman fell to the floor, and he regarded it fearfully. Then he sank trembling into a chair as the
old woman, with burning eyes, walked to the window and raised the blind.
He sat until he was chilled with the cold, glancing occasionally at the figure of the old woman peering
through the window. The candle end, which had burnt below the rim of the china candlestick, was
throwing pulsating shadows on the ceiling and walls, until, with a flicker larger than the rest, it
expired. The old man, with an unspeakable sense of relief at the failure of the talisman, crept back to
his bed, and a minute or two afterward the old woman came silently and apathetically beside him.
Neither spoke, but both lay silently listening to the ticking of the clock. A stair creaked, and a
squeaky mouse scurried noisily through the wall. The darkness was oppressive, and after lying for
some time screwing up his courage, the husband took the box of matches, and striking one, went
downstairs for a candle.
At the foot of the stairs the match went out, and he paused to strike another, and at the same moment
a knock, so quiet and stealthy as to be scarcely audible, sounded on the front door.
The matches fell from his hand. He stood motionless, his breath suspended until the knock was
repeated. Then he turned and fled swiftly back to his room, and closed the door behind him. A third
knock sounded through the house.
"What's that?" cried the old woman, starting up.
"A rat," said the old man, in shaking tones--"a rat. It passed me on the stairs."
His wife sat up in bed listening. A loud knock resounded through the house.
"It's Herbert!" she screamed. "It's Herbert!"
She ran to the door, but her husband was before her, and catching her by the arm, held her tightly.
"What are you going to do?" he whispered hoarsely.
"It's my boy; it's Herbert!" she cried, struggling mechanically. "I forgot it was two miles away. What
are you holding me for? Let go. I must open the door."
"For God's sake, don't let it in," cried the old man trembling.
"You're afraid of your own son," she cried, struggling. "Let me go. I'm coming, Herbert; I'm coming."
There was another knock, and another. The old woman with a sudden wrench broke free and ran from
the room. Her husband followed to the landing, and called after her appealingly as she hurried
downstairs. He heard the chain rattle back and the bottom bolt drawn slowly and stiffly from the
socket. Then the old woman's voice, strained and panting.
74
"The bolt," she cried loudly. "Come down. I can't reach it."
But her husband was on his hands and knees groping wildly on the floor in search of the paw. If he
could only find it before the thing outside got in. A perfect fusillade of knocks reverberated through
the house, and he heard the scraping of a chair as his wife put it down in the passage against the door.
He heard the creaking of the bolt as it came slowly back, and at the same moment he found the
monkey's paw, and frantically breathed his third and last wish.
The knocking ceased suddenly, although the echoes of it were still in the house. He heard the chair
drawn back and the door opened. A cold wind rushed up the staircase, and a long loud wail of
disappointment and misery from his wife gave him courage to run down to her side, and then to the
gate beyond. The street lamp flickering opposite shone on a quiet and deserted road.
"The Monkey's Paw" Worksheet
Vocabulary
1. placidly adv.– pleasantly calm or peaceful; unruffled; tranquil; serenely quiet or undisturbed:
placid waters.
2. amiably adv. – having or showing pleasant, good-natured personal qualities; affable: an
amiable disposition.
3. desirous adj. – having or characterized by desire; desiring: desirous of high political office.
4. condoled v.t. – to express sympathy with a person who is suffering sorrow, misfortune, or
grief (usually fol. by with): to condole with a friend whose father has died.
5. rubicund adj. – red or reddish; ruddy: a rubicund complexion.
6. proffered v.t. – to put before a person for acceptance; offer.
7. doughty adj. – steadfastly courageous and resolute; valiant
8. fakir n. – a Muslim or Hindu religious person or monk commonly considered a wonder-
worker.
9. jarred v.i. – to have a harshly unpleasant or perturbing effect on one's nerves, feelings,
thoughts, etc.: The sound of the alarm jarred.
10. presumptuous adj. – unwarrantedly or impertinently bold; forward
11. fancy n. – a caprice; whim; vagary: It was his fancy to fly to Paris occasionally for dinner.
12. doggedly adv. – persistent in effort; stubbornly tenacious: "I won't let you share my dessert! I
won't! I won't!" the toddler said doggedly.
13. talisman n. – anything whose presence exercises a remarkable or powerful influence on
human feelings or actions.
14. enthralled v.t. – to captivate or charm: the performer's grace and skill enthralled her audience.
15. maligned v.t. – to speak harmful untruths about; speak evil of; slander; defame: to malign an
honorable man.
16. antimacassar n. – a small covering, usually ornamental, placed on the backs and arms of
upholstered furniture to prevent wear or soiling; a tidy.
17. dubiously adv. – of doubtful quality or propriety; questionable: a dubious compliment; a
dubious transaction.
18. shamefacedly adv. – 1) modest or bashful, 2) showing shame: shamefaced apologies.
19. credulity n. – willingness to believe or trust too readily, esp. without proper or adequate
evidence; gullibility
75
20. marred v.t. – to damage or spoil to a certain extent; render less perfect, attractive, useful, etc.;
impair or spoil: That billboard mars the view. The holiday was marred by bad weather.
21. ill-gotten adj. – acquired by dishonest, improper, or evil means: ill-gotten gains.
22. prosaic adj. – commonplace or dull; matter-of-fact or unimaginative: a prosaic mind.
23. betokened v.t. – to give evidence of; indicate: to betoken one's fidelity with a vow; a kiss that
betokens one's affection.
24. frivolous adj. – characterized by lack of seriousness or sense: frivolous conduct.
25. attribute v.t. – to regard as resulting from a specified cause; consider as caused by something
indicated (usually fol. by to): She attributed his bad temper to ill health.
26. coincidence n. – a striking occurrence of two or more events at one time apparently by mere
chance: Our meeting in Venice was pure coincidence.
27. avaricious adj. – characterized by avarice; greedy; covetous
28. disown v.t. – to refuse to acknowledge as belonging or pertaining to oneself; deny the
ownership of or responsibility for; repudiate; renounce: to disown one's heirs; to disown a
published statement.
29. scurrying v.i. – to go or move quickly or in haste.
30. at the expense of n. – at the sacrifice of; to the detriment of: quantity at the expense of quality.
31. bibulous adj. – fond of or addicted to drink.
32. resolution n. – a resolve or determination: to make a firm resolution to do something.
33. apparel n. – clothing, esp. outerwear; garments; attire;
34. broach to mention or suggest for the first time: to broach a subject.
35. resignation n. – an accepting, unresisting attitude, state, etc.; submission; acquiescence: to
meet one's fate with resignation
36. apathy n. – absence or suppression of passion, emotion, or excitement.
37. shudderingly adv. – trembling or quivering with fear, dread, cold, etc.
38. scarcely adv. – barely; hardly; not quite: The light is so dim we can scarcely see.
39. audible adj. – capable of being heard; loud enough to be heard; actually heard.
40. resounded adj. – uttered loudly: resounding speech.
41. appealingly adv. – evoking or attracting interest, desire, curiosity, sympathy, or the like;
attractive.
42. fusillade n. – a general discharge or outpouring of anything: a fusillade of questions.
43. reverberated v.i. – to reecho or resound: Her singing reverberated through the house.
Reading for Meaning: "The Monkey's Paw"
1. Why does the story start with the father and son playing chess? Does the father’s strategy at the
chess game tell you anything about his personality? If so, what?
76
2. Note any of the characters’ actions you feel are significant on the chart below. What conclusions
can you draw about each of the characters from analyzing their actions?
Character Action Conclusion
Mr. White Yells about the foul weather and
the poor condition of the road they
live on.
He’s frustrated because he has lost at
chess and he is getting rid of his
emotions.
Mr. White
Mrs. White
Mrs. White
Herbert White
Herbert White
Major Morris
Major Morris
3. Sergeant Major Morris describes the monkey's paw in this way: "It had a spell put on it by an old
fakir, a very holy man. He wanted to show that fate ruled people’s lives, and that those who interfered
with it did so to their sorrow." What does Morris’ statement mean when you first read it? What does
it mean after you have read the entire story? Is his comment significant? If so, why?
4. Why does Major Morris throw the monkey's paw onto the fire and why do the Whites react so
strongly?
5. What happens to Herbert White?
6. What do you think happened at the end of the story? Why does Mr. White beg his wife not to let
"it" into the house? What does he mean? What is he afraid of? Who or what was outside of the
house?
77
7. What makes Jacobs' style of writing unique? Read the following passage and think about how he
puts his words together to create a mood. Underline words or passages that seem important to you.
"…and a horrible fear that his wish would bring his mangled son before him ere he could
escape from the room seized upon him , and he caught his breath as he found he had lost the
direction of the door. His brow cold with sweat, he felt his way around the table, and groped
along the wall until he found himself in the small passage with the unwholesome thing in his
hand."
8. How does Jacobs set the mood and/or tone of the story? How does he build suspense? Think about
the way he uses silence as a way to create a mood. What does he describe at the end as the husband
and wife lie in bed waiting for their wish to come true?
Discussion Questions
Change the result of the story by changing the plot (for example, change one of the three wishes).
How and why would the story change?
What would three wishes be that you make? Why would you choose those wishes?
What do you think three wishes would be that other people in a similar social setting to yourself
would choose?
Consider a specific person or group of people who are undergoing a crisis. What do you think their
three wishes would be?
What could someone do in order to achieve a wish?
Many people believe in other people who have the ability to predict our fate (for example, palmistry,
horoscope, psychics, etc.). Discuss and exchange opinions or experiences in relation to fate, the
validity of such practices and/or superstition.
78
Organizing Your Thoughts as You Read
1. What is the first clue that the monkey’s paw is not a good thing?
2. What are the warning signs that something bad is going to happen?
3. What is ironic about the wish? (something is ironic when the thing that happens is the exact
opposite from what you had expected.)
4. Why does the mother think that the second wish will make everything alright?
5. Why is the father afraid to make the second wish?
6. What do you think the third wish was? Why do you think this?
7. What do you recommend the Whites do with the paw?
8. The story begins with an anonymous quote, “Be careful what you wish for…”. How does this
story illustrate the need for caution in wishing?
79
After You Read
“Be careful what you wish for, you just might get it!”
In “The Monkey’s Paw”, the characters found their wishes coming true in unexpectd and unpleasant
ways. Look over the following list of common wishes. Complete the chart, showing the possible
positive and negative outcomes of each wish. Then, in the final column, see if you can phrase your
wish so that all of the negative effects are ruled out.
Wish Positive
Effects
Negative
Effects “Ideal” Wish
Money
World Peace
Live Forever
Intelligence
Beauty
Athletic
Abilities