Athena is the goddess that disguises Odysseus as a beggar
Athena diguises Odysseus as an old beggar so that he could find out wether or not his wife, Penelope, still loved him. He is also disguised to see whether or not his crew remains loyal to him or not as well.
Melanthius, the goatherd kicks at Odysseus when he is disguised as a beggar.
Antinous verbally abuses Odysseus and throws a footstool at him, refusing to give him any food.
Irus, (Arnaeus) insults Odysseus and challenges him to fight.
Melantho, Melanthius' sister and servant of Penelope berates Odysseus and tries to get him to leave the palace.
Eurymachus throws a footstool at Odysseus after Odysseus tells Eurymachus that he (the beggar) is a better man than him.
The goddess Athena disguises Odysseus as a beggar named Mentor in the epic poem "The Odyssey" by Homer.
Athena tells Odysseus to disguise himself after Odysseus asks for her help.
the dogs
Athena disguises Odysseus as a beggar to fool everyone on Ithaca, so that Odysseus can lay his plans.
she dresses him in rags. she disguises him as a beggar.
he is disguised as a beggar. Athena disguises him like that.
Odysseus disguises himself as a beggar upon learning that he is back on Ithaca.
She makes Odysseus disguises as a beggar so no one will know his true identity.
Athena disguised Odysseus as an old beggar with her goddess powers.Athena disguised Odysseus as an old beggar with her goddess powers.
with the cyclops and when he disguises himself as a beggar
Odysseus used the alias, "nobody" with Polyphemos. Odysseus disguised as a beggar with the suitors. Hope this helped :)
He disguises himself as a beggar. Athena helps him do this.
Athene disguises Odysseus as a beggar until he is next to Telemachus on his rightful seat of power, ready to attack.
The beggar, who is actually Odysseus in disguise, is mistreated by the suitors in "The Odyssey." They mock him, insult him, and even throw objects at him. Despite their rude behavior, Odysseus maintains his disguise to observe their behavior before revealing his true identity.
In Book 17 of the Odyssey, Odysseus disguises himself as a beggar to secretly return to his home in Ithaca. He uses this disguise to gather information about the situation in his household and to assess who is loyal to him.