He compared them to "Fish that fishermen drag from the churning gray surf". You can find this information in Book XXII at line 409
The suitors act more inappropriate in "The Odyssey" because they believe Odysseus is dead and they see Penelope as fair game as she is resisting remarriage. They take advantage of Odysseus' absence to openly pursue Penelope and indulge in excess and debauchery in his home.
Telemachus is a barrier between them and Penelope. Telemachus insults the suitors in the first two books of the Odyssey, and threatens to eventually kill them. If Telemachus is dead, then there will be no man in the house. Penelope will be forced to marry. Further, it is easier to kill him before he is full grown.
Telemachus is a barrier between the suitors and Penelope. Telemachus insults the suitors in the first two books of the Odyssey, and threatens to eventually kill them. If Telemachus is dead, then there will be no man in the house. Penelope will be forced to marry. Further, it is easier to kill him before he is full grown.
The suitors are trying to woo Penelope for her hand in marriage as they believe Odysseus dead (or gone forever).In literary terms, they serve as antagonists, obstacles, the evil against good and the third of a love triangle which parallels to Agamemnon's story.Because she was a rich and beautiful widow (so they thought).
There are two seers mentioned in that work. First, there is the dead seer Tiresias of Thebes visited in the underworld by Odysseus. Secondly, there is Theoclymenus, who arrives at Odysseus' castle and predicts that all the unwanted suitors are about to die.
Charon .
In "The Odyssey," Penelope is human. She is the wife of Odysseus and the queen of Ithaca. Although she faces challenges and tests her loyalty throughout the epic, she is ultimately a mortal character in the story.
The suitors believe Odysseus to be dead. They try to convince her to marry one of them. Whoever she marries will become king.
In medias res in The Odyssey, the story starts in the middle of Odysseus's journey home from the Trojan War. Odysseus is stranded on the island of Ogygia with the nymph Calypso who has kept him captive for seven years. Meanwhile, back in Ithaca, suitors are vying for Penelope's hand in marriage, believing Odysseus to be dead.
Another name for the land of the dead in the Odyssey is "Hades" or the "Underworld."
He was a blind prophet/ dead prince of Thebes. He tells Odysseus in book 9 about what he will do next which is go home, kill all the suitors, then travel to make an alter like thing for Poseidon so he wont be angry at him any more.
Telemachus' problem in Book 1 of Homer's "The Odyssey" is the presence of the suitors who have taken over his home in Ithaca, consuming his family's wealth and pushing for his mother Penelope to choose a new husband. Telemachus struggles with asserting himself against these disrespectful suitors and finding a way to reclaim his father's house.