July 1, 2021
Odysseus and his crew return to Circe’s island after their trip to the Underworld. Odysseus tells Circe of his experiences, and she warns him of what lies ahead on his journey. “Your descent to the dead is over, true, [ . . . ] |
Circe tells Odysseus about more trials, specifically Scylla and Charybdis and the cattle on the Island of the Sun which he must leave unharmed or their ship will be destroyed and all his crew will be lost. Odysseus and his me set sail the next day. At last, and sore at heart, I told my shipmates, |
Notes & Comentary
- ↑ From the Odyssey, Book 12 (Homer 1996, pp. 272–277).
- ↑ Despite the many depictions of the Sirens as mermaids or other mythological, sometimes winged, creatures, they are never described by Homer. There are two of them, and they, like Circe, live on an island. Also unlike popular depictions, they do not physically engage would-be victims, but attempt to lure them to their death. They might be best though of as “anonymous and shapeless Demons of High Noon” with “no exact mythology shape or nature” (Germain (1962, p. 92)).
- ↑ As is clear repeatedly throughout the Odyssey and established by Odysseus himself in his recounting of “The Lotos Eaters,” their goal is to reach home, and anything that delays them from that task—especially those things that tempt their desires—would be evil. The Sirens represent a temptation, but of what?
These images of the wife and children should be particularly resonant for Odysseus, especially coming from Circe, the woman who kept Odysseus in thrall for a year in his flawless bed of love. - ↑ Actually, this is not what she said, but she does give him the idea to listen on line 15 above.
Works Cited
- Homer (1996). The Odyssey. Translated by Fagles, Robert. New York: Penguin.
- Germain, Gabriel (1962). "The Sirens and the Temptation of Knowledge". In Steiner, George; Fagles, Robert. Homer: A Collection of Critical Essays. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, Inc.