Odysseus asked his fellow sailors to tie him tightly with a rope on a ship mast and they put ear plugs made of bee wax to cover his ears.
He tells then to put beeswax to cover their ears so they cant hear the song of the siren and the men protect him by tying him to the mast so he cannot not come down when sirens sings
He has his men bind him to the ship's mast.
Sirens were nymphs who lured sailors to their death with a bewitching song.
Odysseus filled the ears of the sailors with wax before they tied him to the mast. The sailors couldn't hear the siren's song and Odysseus couldn't move.
Sirens did not really have enemies. The only one's may have been an enemy to the siren would be women. They saw the siren as a threat who wanted to steal away their men.
He tells then to put beeswax to cover their ears so they cant hear the song of the siren and the men protect him by tying him to the mast so he cannot not come down when sirens sings
He has his men bind him to the ship's mast.
They are beautiful young ladies who sing songs and try to get men to steer their ships into dangerous rocks and destroy them, then they try to kill the men.
hi its quin here a siren in mythological sense is a being of whos song would lure men at sea to their deaths
Atwood's speaker in "Siren Song" presents the Siren as manipulative and aware of their allure, while in Homer's "Odyssey," the Sirens are depicted as seductive and alluring but unaware of their effect. Atwood's Siren directly addresses the listener and acknowledges her captivity, contrasting with Homer's Sirens whose focus is on luring sailors to their doom without engaging directly with them.
Some Greek myths say they ate those men that they killed by the lure of their song.
see :A_sirens_summary_from_the_Odyssey_that_Homer_wroteThe sirens threatened the lives of Odysseus' men so he had wax put in their ears and had them sail past the island while he alone wanted to hear the siren song, so he was tied to the mast of the...
Sirens were nymphs who lured sailors to their death with a bewitching song.
In Homer's "The Odyssey," Odysseus past Scylla by choosing to sacrifice a few of his crew members to the monster in order to save the rest of his men and his ship. Despite the difficult decision, Odysseus knew that it was the only way to navigate safely through the dangerous strait.
Yes; the Sirens sang their enchanted song, and attempted to lure Odysseus and his men to their doom.
With their song they lured men to drown and ships to wreck upon cliffs in effort to reach the sirens.
Odysseus and his men fought and won the Trojan War with the Trojan Horse. The story is about their journey home and the quests they face, and challenges they must overcome.