In book 1, Telemachus tells the suitors that he will officially give them notice to leave in the morning. He tells the suitors that if they persist in eating at his house, Jove will reckon with them and they will eventually fall in his house (thinly veiled death-threats), with no man left to avenge them.
He also tells the suitors to enjoy themselves and not fight, so that they can heard the bard Phemius. He also tells them that the visitor was an old friend of his father Odysseus; Mentes, son of Anchialus, chief of the Taphians.
he's laying down the law.
Keeping them at bay
Odysseus had asked his son to lock the armory so that the suitors cannot defend themselves. After successfully shooting an arrow through the holes of the twelve axes, Odysseus shoots Antinous in the throat, and the suitors realize who the beggar - Odysseus - is. They try to flee, then attempt to get Odysseus away from the door so that they can escape. While Odysseus continues to shoot the suitors down, his son, Telemachus, gets spears and shields from the armory. After Odysseus runs out of arrows, he and his son use the spears to kill the suitors. They are helped by two servants. Eventually, Athena, goddess of war, makes her presence known in the form of a shield, and the suitors give up hope, and are slaughtered. Odysseus had killed 108 men, including 12 servants who had betrayed Odysseus (the maids had slept with the suitors, and a servant had mocked Odysseus when he was a beggar).
Book 11: lines 115 -121 of the Odyssey. Odysseus converses with Teiresias, the blind prophet, who gives him the knowledge of the suitors "You will find trouble too in your house - insolent men eating up your livelihood, courting your royal wife and offering wedding gifts".
The Odyssey begins in the present with the invocation of the poet asking for help from the muse.The story begins in Mount Olympus, where the gods (with the exception of Poseidon) are meeting.Later in book 1, we join Telemachus on the island of Ithaca. However, the direct story of Odysseus begins in book 6 with Odysseus being found in Scheria by Nausicaa, a Phaeaician princess who takes him to her father, where he begins telling the tale of his return from Troy.
Telemachus is upset that the suitors are eating him out of house and home as well as courting his mother.
Odysseus begins plotting his revenge once he learns of the suitors, but he does not start killing them until Book XXII, after threading his bow, and shooting it through the twelve axes' handles.
Telemachus is the son of Odysseus
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.
he's laying down the law.
he's laying down the law.
Elmo
Keeping them at bay
Penelope confronts and scolds the suitors in the epic poem "The Odyssey" by Homer. At the beginning of Book 21, she directly addresses the suitors to let them know that they have crossed the line with their behavior in her household.
a singer amongst the group of suitors in odysseus' house while he is away
While the suitors may have their own reasons for pursuing Penelope, their disrespectful behavior towards her, their squandering of Odysseus' wealth, and their violent intentions towards Telemachus do not garner sympathy. Their actions are immoral and unjust, leading to their eventual punishment by Odysseus upon his return.
Odysseus returns to Ithaca in Book 13 of The Odyssey. This is where he meets with his loyal swineherd, Eumaeus, and begins to plan out his revenge against the suitors.