He uses it to stab the Cyclops in the eye so him and his crew could later escape.
Odysseus used a flaming stake to poke out the cyclops Polyphemus' eye in Homer's epic poem "The Odyssey."
Odysseus injures the Cyclops by stabbing him in the eye with a sharpened olive stake, blinding him.
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Odysseus uses a sharpened stake, referred to as a "staff" or "pole," to blind the Cyclops Polyphemus. He first gets the Cyclops drunk on wine and then drives the stake into Polyphemus's single eye while he sleeps, rendering him blind. This clever tactic allows Odysseus and his men to escape from the Cyclops' cave afterward.
Odysseus uses a sharpened wooden stake to wound the Cyclops Polyphemus. After getting the Cyclops drunk on wine, he and his men drive the stake into Polyphemus's single eye, blinding him. This clever tactic allows them to escape from the cave, as the blinded Cyclops can no longer see them.
Odysseus and his men hide the wooden stake in the cave where Polyphemus the Cyclops kept his sheep, by sharpening one end and hiding it in a corner. They plan to use it to blind Polyphemus and escape.
Polyphemus reveals that his wounded eye was caused by Odysseus and his men when they pierced it with a sharpened wooden stake. This act led Polyphemus to seek revenge on Odysseus and his crew.
They gave him wine so he passed out then stab his eye with a big stake.
Polyphemus, the Cyclops, captured Odysseus and his men when they ventured into his cave. He trapped them inside and began to eat Odysseus's crew one by one. To escape, Odysseus cleverly devised a plan, getting Polyphemus drunk and blinding him with a sharpened stake. After escaping, Odysseus taunted Polyphemus, revealing his true identity, which led to further consequences from the Cyclops's father, Poseidon.
In the story of Odysseus and Polyphemus from Greek mythology, Odysseus and his men blind Polyphemus by stabbing a large wooden stake into his eye while he is sleeping. This causes Polyphemus great pain and allows Odysseus and his men to escape from the cyclops' cave.
He didn't do anything horrible to him, he ate most of his men, and swore he would eat Odysseus later. But then Odysseus drove a stake into his eye, and escaped by holding onto the undersides of the sheep while they were walking out of the cave.
No! A red hot brand from the fire. It's Odysseus we're talking about here, not MacGyver.