Odysseus trusted his son, Telemachus to help him defeat the suitors. He also trusted his two faithful servants, Eumaeus and Philoeteus.
Odysseus quickly kills Eurymachus with an arrow through his nipple into his liver. He also relies on Telemachus whom kills Amphinomous from behind with a spear through his back. Odysseus continues shooting the suitors one by one.
Odysseus kills Leoides the sacrificing priest after killing the first batch of suitors. He then kills the rest of the suitors. He kills the unfaithful female staff, and also kills the goat herd Melanthius. Later, after Odysseus reconnects with his father, Odysseus is presumed to kill some of the suitor's family members in a battle before he is stopped by Athena and Zeus, whom throws a thunderbolt down in front of him.
Athena was planning for the suitors to die, and while Odysseus was good, he wasn't good enough to kill more than a hundred people without a little help. So she sent him to an ally- Eumaeus, faithful to Odysseus the whole time, and disgusted by the suitors. That, and it gave Ody a place to rest, recuperate, and gain information.
Antinous blames Penelope for stringing the suitors along and not committing to marry any of them.
-noun Classical Mythology.the son of Odysseus and Penelope who helped Odysseus to kill the suitors of Penelope.-noun Classical Mythology.The son of Odysseus and Penelope who helped Odysseus to kill the suitors of Penelope. in Greek mythology, son of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, and his wife, Penelope. The constant companion of his mother during the long years of Odysseus's wanderings after the fall of Troy, Telemachus watched with increasing unhappiness as the many ill-mannered suitors for the hand of his mother lived riotously on his father's estate. Unable to bear the taunts of these men any longer, the youth set out for Pylos to learn from the old king Nestor the fate of Odysseus. Although the old man could not help him, he sent Telemachus to Menelaus, king of Sparta, from whom the boy learned that his father had been held prisoner by the nymph Calypso. Still uncertain as to whether his father was alive or dead, Telemachus returned to Ithaca only to discover that during his absence Odysseus had returned home. The king had not revealed himself, however, having been disguised as a beggar. After a joyous reunion, Telemachus helped Odysseus kill the suitors and make himself known to Penelope. According to a later legend, Telemachus married the sorceress Circe or her daughter Cassiphone.the son of Odysseus (A+ answer).From Homer's epic poem, 'The Odyssey', Telemachus is the son of Odysseus and Penelope.
It is hard to pinpoint who Odysseus defeated without the specific chapter of the story. However, he defeated almost everyone who went against him and that includes Cyclops, Scylla, the suitors, and the challenger of his wife.
Odysseus defeated the Cyclops Polyphemus, the suitors who had taken over his home in Ithaca, and the monsters Scylla and Charybdis during his journey in the Odyssey.
Odysseus quickly kills Eurymachus with an arrow through his nipple into his liver. He also relies on Telemachus whom kills Amphinomous from behind with a spear through his back. Odysseus continues shooting the suitors one by one.
Odysseus kills Leoides the sacrificing priest after killing the first batch of suitors. He then kills the rest of the suitors. He kills the unfaithful female staff, and also kills the goat herd Melanthius. Later, after Odysseus reconnects with his father, Odysseus is presumed to kill some of the suitor's family members in a battle before he is stopped by Athena and Zeus, whom throws a thunderbolt down in front of him.
Antonous is one of the suitors trying to win over Penelope in Odysseus's absence, whom Odysseus later kills when he is in the form of a beggar, with a powerful bow at his disposal.
Athena was planning for the suitors to die, and while Odysseus was good, he wasn't good enough to kill more than a hundred people without a little help. So she sent him to an ally- Eumaeus, faithful to Odysseus the whole time, and disgusted by the suitors. That, and it gave Ody a place to rest, recuperate, and gain information.
Remember that Penelope told her suitors that she will decide whom she will marry when she has finished weaving her gift to Odysseus' father. But one of her suitors found out that she unwove what she did every night. So, Penelope thought of a plan that would stall her decision-making and set up a contest. The contest was that of the man who could string the bow of Odysseus, she would marry. And the bow was known to be toughest to string. And rumors say that only a man as strong as Odysseus can string it. Of course, no one was able to string it except for Odysseus who was disguised as a hermit. And Odysseus killed all Penelope's suitors.
The correct grammar is 'whom to trust'. I didn't know whom to trust.
Antinous blames Penelope for stringing the suitors along and not committing to marry any of them.
whom
-noun Classical Mythology.the son of Odysseus and Penelope who helped Odysseus to kill the suitors of Penelope.-noun Classical Mythology.The son of Odysseus and Penelope who helped Odysseus to kill the suitors of Penelope. in Greek mythology, son of Odysseus, king of Ithaca, and his wife, Penelope. The constant companion of his mother during the long years of Odysseus's wanderings after the fall of Troy, Telemachus watched with increasing unhappiness as the many ill-mannered suitors for the hand of his mother lived riotously on his father's estate. Unable to bear the taunts of these men any longer, the youth set out for Pylos to learn from the old king Nestor the fate of Odysseus. Although the old man could not help him, he sent Telemachus to Menelaus, king of Sparta, from whom the boy learned that his father had been held prisoner by the nymph Calypso. Still uncertain as to whether his father was alive or dead, Telemachus returned to Ithaca only to discover that during his absence Odysseus had returned home. The king had not revealed himself, however, having been disguised as a beggar. After a joyous reunion, Telemachus helped Odysseus kill the suitors and make himself known to Penelope. According to a later legend, Telemachus married the sorceress Circe or her daughter Cassiphone.the son of Odysseus (A+ answer).From Homer's epic poem, 'The Odyssey', Telemachus is the son of Odysseus and Penelope.
Whom do you trust.I might not Trust My fake friend