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- Laertes – Mythopedia
Laertes was the king of Ithaca and a hero who participated in the voyage of the Argonauts He is best remembered as the father of Odysseus
- Odysseus – Mythopedia
Overview Odysseus, son of Laertes and Anticleia, was a Greek hero and the king of the island of Ithaca He married the beautiful princess Penelope and had one son by her, Telemachus Described by Homer as the “man of twists and turns,” Odysseus was noted above all for his intelligence and cunning He used these attributes to great effect during the Trojan War, devising the trick of the
- Odyssey: Book 24 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
Argument The souls of the suitors are conducted by Mercury to the infernal shades Ulysses in the country goes to the retirement of his father, Laertes; he finds him busied in his garden all alone; the manner of his discovery to him is beautifully described They return together to his lodge, and the king is acknowledged by Dolius and the servants The Ithacensians, led by Eupithes, the father
- Odyssey: Book 17 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
Argument Telemachus returning to the city, relates to Penelope the sum of his travels Ulysses is conducted by Eumaeus to the palace, where his old dog Argus acknowledges his master, after an absence of twenty years, and dies with joy Eumaeus returns into the country, and Ulysses remains among the suitors, whose behaviour is described Soon as Aurora, daughter of the dawn, Sprinkled with
- Polyphemus – Mythopedia
Polyphemus was a son of Poseidon and one of the feared Sicilian Cyclopes He was eventually blinded by Odysseus
- Odyssey: Book 10 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
“‘Son of Laertes! (then the queen began) Oh much-enduring, much experienced man! Haste to thy vessel on the sea-beat shore, Unload thy treasures, and the galley moor; Then bring thy friends, secure from future harms, And in our grottoes stow thy spoils and arms,’ “She said Obedient to her high command I quit the place, and hasten to
- Odyssey: Book 9 (Full Text) - Mythopedia
Laertes’ son, of Ithaca the fair If to review his country be his fate, Be it through toils and sufferings long and late; His lost companions let him first deplore; Some vessel, not his own, transport him o’er; And when at home from foreign sufferings freed, More near and deep, domestic woes succeed!’ With imprecations thus he fill’d
- Anticleia – Mythopedia
Anticleia was the daughter of Autolycus, the wife of Laertes, and the mother of Odysseus Anticleia died of sorrow while waiting for her son Odysseus to return from Troy; in the Odyssey, Odysseus speaks to her shade when he travels to the Underworld
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