That one, there!
that he was going to be the only one to survive the journey home.
Calypso tells Odysseus about Scylla and tells him how to get past the monster safely. She is the one who tells him to sacrifice six of his men to the monster.
Calypso tells Odysseus about Scylla and tells him how to get past the monster safely. She is the one who tells him to sacrifice six of his men to the monster.
Telemus, son of Eurymus, foretold to Polyphemus that Odysseus would one day blind him.
Macbeth is told by three witches that he will one day be king. This prophecy ultimately leads Macbeth to contemplate committing regicide in order to fulfill the witches' prediction.
Tiresias tells Odysseus he will go to Thrinacia, then to Ithaca, then to a land where no one has heard of the sea. Finally, Odysseus will return to Ithaca.
Percy was given his full prophecy in the last book in the series, The Last Olympian.
on line 420, Odysseus tells Telemachus that he could shoot string the bow because he was still strong....i hope this helped
No one, Calypso wants him to stay because she likes him.
Circe is the witch-goddess that Odysseus and his crew meet after leaving the Cyclops Polyphemus's island. Odysseus sends a party of 23 men to search Aeaea (the name of the island and Circe's home). Circe invited them into her home and gave them food, but they all behaved like pigs, so that's exactly what Circe turns them into. Eurylochus, one of the men, does not eat, and he runs back to Odysseus to tell him. When Odysseus leaves, he meets Hermes, the messenger god who gives him a plant to protect him from the magic of Circe. being unable to defeat Odysseus, frees his men, but persuades Odysseus to stay with her. after the seasons pass though, Odysseus asks her to help him and his men go home. Circe tells him to seek out the blind prophet Teiresias in the land of the dead for a prophecy about his journey.
Lionblaze, Jayfeather, and Dovepaw are all part of the prophecy
Hermes tells Calypso that Zeus wants her to release Odysseus from her island. Calypso is initially resistant, feeling sorrowful and resentful about having to let go of Odysseus, but ultimately agrees to comply with Zeus's command.