Odysseus blinds the cyclopes by putting a giant stick in his one eye.
yes
The Cyclops ate Odysseus' men.
He ate Odysseus's men.
I think I remember Odysseus poked the Cyclops in the eye to make him blind for a moment and then he and his men crawled on the floor that had sheep in it and made sheep noises so the Cyclops wouldn't notice them with his bad vision. I don't really remember for sure. . .
Odysseus and his men wait in the cyclops cave, as Odysseus is curious as to who the cyclops is. As Polyphemus brings in his sheep, he spots the men in the cave.
They poke him in his only eye and blind him.
Blinding the cyclops instead of killing it allows Odysseus and his men to escape undetected, as they can only be released from the cave by the cyclops. If they had killed the cyclops, they would have been trapped in the cave with no way out. Blinding the cyclops is a strategic move to ensure their own safety and freedom.
Odysseus and his men find the Cyclops Polyphemus in a cave. The Cyclops traps them inside and proceeds to eat some of the men before Odysseus devises a plan to blind Polyphemus and escape.
In The Cyclops, when he and his men are trapped in Polyphemus's cave, Odysseus stabs him in the eye to blind him. Once he is blinded he ties his men and himself to the Cyclops animals and when the Cyclops lets the animals outside they escape.
No, they had one eye. Odysseus and his men ran a pole into the only eye of Polyphemus, so he went blind.
yes
The Cyclops ate Odysseus' men.
He ate Odysseus's men.
Polyphemus is the name of the giant cyclops that Odysseus and his men encounter.
Odysseus and his men wait in the cyclops cave, as Odysseus is curious as to who the cyclops is. As Polyphemus brings in his sheep, he spots the men in the cave.
I think I remember Odysseus poked the Cyclops in the eye to make him blind for a moment and then he and his men crawled on the floor that had sheep in it and made sheep noises so the Cyclops wouldn't notice them with his bad vision. I don't really remember for sure. . .
The cyclops Polyphemus imprisons Odysseus and his men because to him, the men are tasty.