Aeolus bottled up all winds but the west winds and put them in an ox-hide bag for Odysseus.
King Aeolus gave Odysseus a bag of winds.
King Aeolus
hes the keeper of winds where Aeolus gives him a bag of wind. Odysseus men think hes hiding something from them so they open the bag and the winds rush out where it brings them back to Aeolus who refuses to help them again :)
They thought that the bag was full of treasure.
A bag that, is opened, will release all the winds.
there is pungent wine
Aeolus gives Odysseus a bull's hide sewn into a bag. It contains the destructive strom winds. As long as the bag remains closed Odysseus will have smooth sailing
As far as I know I don't think Aeolus is a king, though I may be wrong. He is definitely however a God. He the god of the winds. What he gives Odysseus in the bag is all the 'wrong' winds that are blowing the opposite way to Ithaca. By giving Odysseus the bag of winds, Aeolus is making it easier for Odysseus to get home quicker.
The floating island of Aiolia.
Aeolus was the Greek god of the winds, which he kept stored in a bag by his side. He was sometimes called Hippotades, which means "the Reiner of horses."
Aeolus is introduced in Book X of the Odyssey. He is the ruler of the winds and helps Odysseus by giving him a bag of winds to help him on his journey home.